True Stories of Crime From the District Attorney's Office eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 258 pages of information about True Stories of Crime From the District Attorney's Office.

True Stories of Crime From the District Attorney's Office eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 258 pages of information about True Stories of Crime From the District Attorney's Office.
Jan. 4, Trip to Tuxpan ........... $ 2.50 " 5, Return to Vera Cruz ........... $ 2.50 " 6, Sudden night trip to Halifax, Nova Scotia, via Buffalo and Niagara Falls ........... $50.50 " 18, Laundry for three months ......... $ 5.00 Etc., etc.

EXTRAORDINARY EXPENSES

To Agent Pushyt John, a meerschaum and amber
cigar-holder and pipe       ...........  $ 7.00
Tobacco jar of shell and silver ...........  $ 4.00
To Indian Peter South-Go, a watch, a suit,
and a pair of shoes         ...........  $16.50
To my general agent of confidential reports
for his daughter, a gold ring and a
feather fan                 ...........  $ 7.00
A necktie for himself and scarf pin in
gold and with stone for the necktie ...  $ 8.60
To the letter-carrier to bring me my
correspondence and not give it to any
one else when I should change address .  $ 4.00
Invitation to the Consul and his two
agents in Washington hotel  ...........  $12.00
Several invitations to cafes and saloons
to the Police Agents        ...........  $ 2.00
Invitations to old employees of Jean
Tessier, to tear from them the
declarations                ...........  $ 1.50
Barber expenses                 ...........  $11.50
Tobacco and matches, July to December,
three packages each week, ten cents
each                        ...........  $ 7.80
Changing hotels to lead astray the agents
of the impostors            ...........  $ 9.50
Etc., etc.

“To obtain a collossal fortune as yours will be, it is necessary to spend money unstintingly and to have lots of patience.  Court proceedings will be useless, as trickery and lies are necessary to get the best of the scoundrels.  It is necessary also to be a scoundrel.”

“That he might well say,” interpolates Lapierre.  “He succeed, c’est sure.”

I rapidly glanced over the remaining letters.  The General seems always to be upon the verge of compelling a compromise.  “I have already prepared my net and the meshes are tightly drawn so that the fish will not be able to escape....  For an office like this one needs money—­money to go quickly from one place to another, prosecute the usurpers, not allow them an instant’s rest.  If they go to some city run after them at once, tire them with my presence and constantly harass them, and by this means compel them to hasten a compromise—­”

The General is meeting with superhuman obstacles.  In addition to his enemies he suffers all sorts of terrible bodily afflictions.  Whenever the remittances from the Lapierres do not arrive the difficulties and diseases increase.

At last, however, after an interval of two years, things took a turn for the better.  A “confidential representative” of the conspirators—­one “Mr. Benedict-Smith”—­arrived to make a bona fide offer of one hundred and fifty million dollars in settlement of the case.  The General writes at great length as to exactly in what proportion the money should be divided among the heirs.  The thing is so near a culmination that he is greatly exercised over his shabby appearance.

Copyrights
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True Stories of Crime From the District Attorney's Office from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.