[Courts and Criminals by Arthur Train]@TWC D-Link book
Courts and Criminals

CHAPTER VI
16/45

Their exposure, if true, would not be libellous, and it would seem that he had performed but half his duty to the public in refraining from giving this important, if not vital, information.
I know several of these gentlemen whose pictures I feel confident do not appear in the Rogues' Gallery, and who have not been, as yet, convicted of crime.

A client is as safe in the hands of a good detective agency as he is in the hands of a good attorney; he should know his agency, that is all--just as he should know his lawyer.

The men at the head of the big agencies generally take the same pride in their work as the members of any other profession.

They know that a first-class reputation for honesty is essential to their financial success and that good will is their stock in trade.

Take this away and they would have nothing.
In 1878 the founder of one of the most famous of our national agencies promulgated in printed form for the benefit of his employees what he called his general principles.


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