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Allan Pinkerton - The Burglars Fate, and The Detectives

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THE BURGLARS FATE AND THE DETECTIVES BY ALLAN PINKERTON AUTHOR OF - photo 1

THE
BURGLAR'S FATE
AND
THE DETECTIVES.
BY
ALLAN PINKERTON,
AUTHOR OF
"EXPRESSMAN AND DETECTIVE," "MELNOTTE AND DETECTIVES,"
"PROFESSIONAL THIEVES AND DETECTIVES,"
"RAILROAD FORGER AND DETECTIVES,"
"MOLLIE MAGUIRES AND DETECTIVES,"
"SPIRITUALISTS AND DETECTIVES,"
ETC., ETC., ETC.
Logo G.W. Carleton
NEW YORK:
G.W. Carleton & Co., Publishers
LONDON: S. LOW, SON & CO.
MDCCCLXXXIV.
Copyright,
by
ALLAN PINKERTON.
Stereotyped by
Samuel Stodder,
42 Dey Street , N.Y.
Trow's
Printing and Book-Binding Co.,
N.Y.

PREFACE.
In the pages which follow I have narrated a story of actual occurrence. No touch of fiction obscures the truthful recital. The crime which is here detailed was actually committed, and under the circumstances which I have related. The four young men, whose real names are clothed with the charitable mantle of fiction, deliberately perpetrated the deed for which they suffered and to-day are inmates of a prison. No tint or coloring of the imagination has given a deeper touch to the action of the story, and the process of detection is detailed with all the frankness and truthfulness of an active participant. As a revelation of the certain consequences which follow the perpetration of crime, I send this volume forth, in the fervent hope that those who may read its pages, will glean from this history the lessons of virtue, of honor, and of the strictest integrity. If in the punishment of Eugene Pearson, Dr. Johnson, Newton Edwards and Thomas Duncan, the young men of to-day, tempted by folly or extravagance, will learn that their condemnation was but the natural and inevitable result of thoughtless crime, and if their experience shall be the means of deterring one young man from the commission of a deed, which the repentance of years will not obliterate, I shall feel that I have not labored in vain. As a true story of detective experience, the actors in which are still living, I give this volume to the world, trusting that its perusal may not fail in its object of interesting and instructing the few or many who may read its pages.
ALLAN PINKERTON.

CONTENTS.
PREFACE
CHAPTER I.
GenevaThe RobberySearch for the BurglarsMy Agency notified
CHAPTER II.
The Investigation begunJohn Manning's Visit to GenevaEugene Pearson's StoryThe Detective's IncredulityA Miraculous Deliverance with a Ten-Cent Coin
CHAPTER III.
An Interview with Miss PattonImportant RevelationsDoubts StrengthenedMr. Bartman's StoryWilliam Resolves to seek Newton Edwards
CHAPTER IV.
The Work ProgressesEugene Pearson's Early LifeOn the Trail of Newton Edwards
CHAPTER V.
New DevelopmentsTidings of Newton EdwardsSuspicions Strengthening against Eugene PearsonMr. Silby's Confidence
CHAPTER VI.
The Detective at WoodfordAn Interview with the Discarded Wife of Newton Edwards
CHAPTER VII.
A Fire and a Talkative FiremanMrs. Edwards Receives a Letter
CHAPTER VIII.
A Plan to Intercept CorrespondenceEdwards fully Identified A pretty Servant Girl and a Visit to Church
CHAPTER IX.
Waiting and WatchingTwo LettersNewton Edwards' Hiding-Place Discovered
CHAPTER X.
The Burglar Tracked to his LairThe old Stage DriverA Fishing PartyA Long WaitA Sorrowful SurpriseThe Arrest of Newton Edwards
CHAPTER XI.
Newton Edwards brought back to ChicagoAttempt to Induce a Confessiona Visit to his RelativesThe Burglar Broken Down
CHAPTER XII.
The Confession of Newton EdwardsThe foul Plot fully Explained Eugene Pearson's Guilt clearly ProvenA Story of Temptation and Crime
CHAPTER XIII.
Edwards taken to GenevaThe Arrest of Eugene Pearson His ConfessionMore Money RecoveredDr. Johnson Arrested
CHAPTER XIV.
Proceedings at GenevaSpeculations as to the Missing Five Thousand DollarsJohn Manning Starts in Search of Thomas Duncan
CHAPTER XV.
On the Track of the fleeing BurglarDuncan's HomeSome Reflections
CHAPTER XVI.
Bob King meets with a SurpriseHis Story of Duncan's Flight The Detective starts Westward
CHAPTER XVII.
Manning Strikes the TrailAn Accommodating TailorTemporary Disappointment and final SuccessThe Detective reaches Minneapolis
CHAPTER XVIII.
The Detective at BismarckFurther Traces of the Fugitive A Protracted OrgieA Jewish Friend of the Burglar in Trouble
CHAPTER XIX.
From Bismarck to BozemanThe trail Growing WarmerDuncan Buys a PonyA long Stage Ride
CHAPTER XX.
The Stage Driver's Story
CHAPTER XXI.
False Information which nearly Proves FatalA Night Ride to HelenaDangers by the Wayside
CHAPTER XXII.
In HelenaA Fruitless QuestJerry Taylor's BagnioReliable TidingsA Midnight RideArrival at Butte City
CHAPTER XXIII.
The Long Trail EndedDuncan Traced to his LairCaught at last The Escaping Burglar a prisoner
CHAPTER XXIV.
The Burglar Returns to ChicagoRevelations by the Way The Missing Five Thousand Dollars
CHAPTER XXV.
The Mystery of the Missing Five Thousand Dollars Solved at Last The Money RecoveredDuncan at Geneva
CHAPTER XXVI.
ConclusionRetribution

THE
BURGLAR'S FATE
AND
THE DETECTIVES.

CHAPTER I.
GenevaThe RobberySearch for the BurglarsMy Agency Notified.
Geneva is one of the prettiest and most thriving little towns in the west. Situated, as it is, in the midst of one of the finest agricultural districts in the country, its growth has been rapid beyond expectation, while its social progress has been almost phenomenal. Stretching for miles in all directions, over a country beautifully interspersed with gentle elevations and depressions, lie the well-cultivated farms of the honest tillers of the soil. The farm-houses, which nestle down beneath the tall trees, present an appearance of comfort and beauty rarely witnessed, while the commodious and substantial out-buildings evince the thorough neatness of systematic husbandry. Standing upon a high knoll, and gazing over the scene upon a bright sunny morning, the eye lights upon a panorama of rustic splendor that delights the vision and entrances the senses. The vast fields, with their varied crops, give indications of a sure financial return which the gathered harvests unfailingly justify, and the rural population of Geneva are, in the main, a community of honest, independent people, who have cheerfully toiled for the honest competence they so fully enjoy.
Nor is the town dependent alone upon the farmer and the herdsman for its success in a financial sense. Nature has been bounteous in her gifts to this locality, and in addition to the fertile and fruitful soil, there is found imbedded under the surface, great mines of coal, of excellent quality, and seemingly inexhaustible in quantity. This enterprise alone affords employment to hundreds of men and boys, who, with their begrimed faces and brawny arms, toil day and night in the bowels of the earth for the "black diamonds," which impart warmth and light to countless happy homes, and materially add to the wealth of the miners.
Numerous manufacturing industries also find a home here. Large buildings, out of whose huge chimneys the black smoke is pouring forth in dense volumes, and whose busy wheels and roaring furnace fires, mingled with the sound of scores of ringing hammers, make merry music throughout the day.
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