A Woman of Mystery
Remarkable Story of New York’s Great Female Detective
The Daughter of a United States Senator as a Ferreter of Crime
[From the New York Mercury]
People moving in the best society of this city have been puzzled during the present and the previous three or four winters about a mysterious lady who had appeared at most of the select soirees, parties and gatherings which have taken place. She has been the cynosure of all eyes at both public and private establishments in which the bon-ton have been guests. In the Fifth Avenue, Twenty-Third Street or Thirty-Fourth Street mansions she has been the envy of the ladies and the admiration of the gentlemen equally as at the balls and concerts at the Academy or at Irving Hall. She dresses handsomely, in the richest apparel, without ostentatious display, and yet diamonds and precious stones glisten from her ear-drops and upon her fingers. She is tall, slim, with well-developed bust, tapering waist, and a queenly head appropriately adorned with luxuriant tresses, set upon well-rounded and sloping shoulders. She is most graceful and agile in her movements, perfectly at ease in society, indicating that she has been accustomed to the companionship of the cultured, opulent and refined. When she smiles she displays two rows of pearly teeth, and those who are intimate with her declare she is a most remarkable conversationalist. She is a brunette, and her rapid speech, frequent gesticulation and sibilant utterance would indicate foreign birth. She speaks
ENGLISH, FRENCH, GERMAN AND SPANISH EQUALLY
well, and conjectures as to her nationality are numerous and indeterminate. It has been gravely asserted… Read More