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The Fatal Potato


“One of the queerest cases I ever had,” said the old detective, “occurred something over twenty years ago. Then I still had much to learn in my business, and, fortunately for me, knew that I had. It was memorable as an illustration of the importance of small things, and I have pigeon holed it in my memory as the ‘affair of the fatal potato.’

 

“A red headed servant girl, so scared that her eyes stood out like lobster’s, rushed into the station house early one morning, howling that all the police were wanted around at Mr. Morton’s. The sergeant at the desk, supposing there was probably just some row among the servants, grinned at the sight of her and asked what was the matter.

 

“She gave a whoop of ‘murder’ that raised his hair and startled everyone in the station. The idea of murder in the aristocratic mansion of Mr. Samuel Morton, on Fifth avenue, within five blocks of the station, naturally rather excited us. Two detailed men and myself—I was then ward detective—ran around there as quickly as we could.

 

“Sure enough, there had been a murder. The cook, a sturdy built, middle aged Englishwoman named Harriet Wardrop, lay on the kitchen floor, in the back basement, with a dirty cotton handkerchief twisted and knotted about her neck,… Read More