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The Poisoner


by Johnson B. Turner


It was a badly frightened and very nervous woman that was ushered into a detective’s presence early one morning in June, 1865.

Her name was Mrs. Bertha Schwinke; her occupation that of a boarding house keeper. Her complaint was of a very serious nature, being an accusation of contemplated poisoning on the part of one of her favorite boarders, a gentleman by the name of Frederick Sellers.

The story she told the detective in a tremulous voice may be briefly summed up as follows:

[Sellers] was a dry-goods clerk, and had for a roommate a young man named Abel Luther, a druggist’s clerk. Both were American-born, but of German descent, the same as Mr. Schwinke.… Read More