[Bucholz and the Detectives by Allan Pinkerton]@TWC D-Link book
Bucholz and the Detectives

CHAPTER V
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This frightened me so that I turned, and leaping over the wall, I ran as fast as I could towards the house.

One of the men, who was tall and stoutly built, chased me till I got within a short distance of the barn.

He then stopped, and calling out, 'Greenhorn, I catch you another time,' he went back in the direction of the woods.
He spoke in English, but from his accent I should think he was a Frenchman.

I did not stop running until I reached the house, and calling for help to Sammy Waring, I opened the door and fell down.

I was exhausted, and the blow I received had hurt me very much." He then proceeded to detail the incidents which followed, all of which the reader has already been made aware of.
He told his story in German, and, through one of the citizens present, who acted as interpreter, it was translated into English.
While he was speaking, a boy hurriedly entered the room, and pushing his way toward the coroner, who was conducting the examination, he handed to him a sealed envelope.
Upon reading the meager, but startling, contents of the telegram, for such it proved to be, Mr.Craw gazed at Bucholz with an expression of pained surprise, in which sympathy and doubtfulness seemed to contend for mastery.
The telegram was from the State's Attorney, Mr.Olmstead, who, while on the train, going from Stamford to Bridgeport, had perused the account of the murder of the night before, in the daily journal.
Being a man of clear understanding, of quick impulse, and indomitable will, for him to think was to act.


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