Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:05):
However, I must just get this small Portmanta ready.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Not being used for so long, these buckles are readfully difficult.
Ah there you are, my goodness. Just give me a
hand with this battle if you plan.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
What gentlemen.
Speaker 2 (00:39):
The murderer of the Enoch Drebber and Joseph Stangers, they.
Speaker 4 (00:43):
Were always surprised in the adventures of Sherlock Holmes. My
name is Watson, doctor Watson, and this was the first
case I was privileged to share with him. I've told
you how it began, how he developed, and here I
will tell you how Shelock Holmes found the salute.
Speaker 3 (01:00):
To his study in scarlet.
Speaker 4 (01:03):
Just the moment to arrange my note.
Speaker 5 (01:09):
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Speaker 4 (02:31):
Inspector Gregson of Scotland Yard had been crying over his
colleague in Austrade.
Speaker 3 (02:37):
While he Gregson had acted so decisively.
Speaker 4 (02:39):
In arresting young Arthur Chapontier for the murder of you,
Jebba Lestrade, with the mere duty of questioning.
Speaker 3 (02:46):
Stankston, the dead man said.
Speaker 4 (02:48):
For dread had returned two to one bee Bega seet
with failure written all over his face. But then Holmes
and I had been as astonished as Gregson to hear
that he found standers.
Speaker 3 (03:01):
And murdered too.
Speaker 4 (03:04):
The straight had brought a box containing two pills which
he had found near the body.
Speaker 3 (03:10):
Exclaiming that at last his case was complete, Elmes wasted.
Speaker 4 (03:14):
No time in feeding one of the poor aging dog,
which our landlady had asked us that morning to have destroyed.
To his dismay, the effect was nil. With his whole
case hanging upon the consequences, Elmes proceeded to grind the
only remaining pilloll into some.
Speaker 3 (03:32):
Milk, and watched angstous.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
As the dog drank.
Speaker 4 (03:50):
A poor old chap he worked. I should have had
more faith.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
Of the two pills in that bus, one was of
the most dead poison, and the other was entirely harmless.
I ought to have known that before ever I saw
the box at all.
Speaker 4 (04:06):
If I may say so, any delay in arresting the
murderer might give him time to perpetrate some fresh atrocity.
Speaker 2 (04:11):
There'll be no more murders, you've asked me. If I
know the name of the murderer, I do. The mere
knowing of his name is a small thing, however, compared
to the power of laying our hands upon him.
Speaker 3 (04:24):
This I expect that it ish want it to do.
Speaker 2 (04:26):
But I have good hopes of managing it through my
own arrangements. But it's a thing which needs delicate handling.
We have a shrewd and desperate man to deal with
at present. I'm ready to promise that the instant I
can communicate with you without endangering my own arrangements, I
shall do so well.
Speaker 3 (04:45):
I don't know about that, would you, sir.
Speaker 2 (04:50):
I've got the cat downstairs, sir, good boy, let's say it. Gregson,
why don't you introduce this pattern of handcuffs and scotton? Yeah,
you see how beautifully the spring works. The cabman may
as well help me with my boxes.
Speaker 3 (05:07):
Just ask him to step up. Wiggins. Yes, sir Films,
you never said anything about sitting out on a journey.
Speaker 4 (05:12):
No I did.
Speaker 2 (05:13):
But however, I must just get this small portmanteau ready.
Speaker 4 (05:17):
What is this, mister Hope?
Speaker 3 (05:19):
Yes, and I really think you wouldn't.
Speaker 2 (05:21):
Oh, it's not the youth for so love. These buckles
are breadfully difficult.
Speaker 3 (05:25):
Let me help you. No, the cabman can do it.
Speaker 2 (05:29):
Ah, there you are, my good man. Yes, just give
me a hand with this buckle.
Speaker 3 (05:35):
If you've been.
Speaker 4 (05:39):
What what.
Speaker 2 (05:48):
Gentlemen, Let me introduce you to mister Jefferson's folks, the
murderer of Enoch Drebber and Joseph Stankers.
Speaker 4 (05:56):
We have his cab.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
He prefers to take him discussing.
Speaker 4 (05:59):
Yeah, Jefferson, hope, I arrest you in the Queen's name
for the murders of Enoch Gregord and Joseph Stangerson. And
I must caution you that anything you say will be
taken down and maybe put in evidence. I've got a
good deal to say. You're a doctor, aren't you here
the am? Then put your hand here on my chest
(06:21):
well as you wish. Well, Well, this.
Speaker 6 (06:27):
Man hasn't organ Nelson.
Speaker 4 (06:29):
Yes, that's what they call it. I went to a
doctor last week about it, and he told me if
it's bound to burst before many days have passed, and
it has been getting worse for years, Doctor Watson.
Speaker 3 (06:40):
He isn't victim.
Speaker 4 (06:41):
You consider there is in Egypt danger?
Speaker 3 (06:43):
Most certainly there is.
Speaker 4 (06:45):
In that case. It's clearly our duty and the interests
of justice to take his statement. Will you write it down?
Business in less trade? I have cautioned you, and you
are at liberty to give your.
Speaker 3 (06:55):
Account, which this opposite will take down.
Speaker 4 (06:57):
I understand. I'll sit down with your leaves by all me.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
Thank you.
Speaker 4 (07:05):
This aneurism of mine makes me easily tired, and that
tussle we had just now hasn't mended matters. I am
on the brink of the grave, and I am not
likely to lie to you, gentlemen.
Speaker 3 (07:16):
Right I'm ready close.
Speaker 4 (07:18):
He did. It doesn't much matter to you why I
hated those two men. It's enough that they were guilty
of the death of two human beings, a father and
a daughter, and that they have therefore forfeited their own lives.
That girls who have married me in America twenty years ago,
(07:39):
she was forced into marrying that same.
Speaker 3 (07:41):
Drebber and broke her heart over it.
Speaker 4 (07:44):
I took the marriage ring from her dead finger, and
I bowed that his dying eyes should rest upon that
very ring, and that his last thoughts should be of
the crime for which he was punished. I had carried
it about with me and followed him and his accomplice
over two continents until I coughed. I died tomorrow, I says,
(08:08):
like I die knowing that my work in this world
is done. When I got to London, my pocket was
about empty, and I found that I must turn my
hand to something for my living, driving and riding or
as natural to me as walking. So I applied of
a cab on in his office. Soon got a blund
(08:29):
for some time before I found out where my two
gentlemen were living. They were at a boarding I was
a camberwell over on the other side of the river.
I had grown my beard, and there was no chance
of their recognizing me. Go where they would about London.
I was always at their heels. At last one evening
I was driving up and down torquey Terrace when I
(08:51):
saw a cab draw up at their door. Presently, some
luggage was brought out, and after a time tebber and
stangers and followed it and drove off. I whipped up
my horse and kept it inside of them, feeling very
ill at ease, but I fear that they were going
to shift their quarries. At Euston station, they got out
(09:12):
and I left the boy to hold my horse and
followed them on the platform. We got near enough to
hear what they were saying. Would I tell you there
isn't another Liverpool train for hours, So who cares I care?
A sooner? We're on a train to Liverpool and getting
out of here. My happier.
Speaker 7 (09:32):
I'll be well, Stangerson, we'll just have to wait, won't wait.
Speaker 4 (09:37):
I'll come to think of it. I have a little
business on my own to do.
Speaker 7 (09:41):
Now, if you just hang around here someplace, I'll go
off and i'll join you later.
Speaker 4 (09:47):
If you go, I'm going with you.
Speaker 3 (09:49):
Will you see this?
Speaker 7 (09:50):
Little Maddy's kind of delicate?
Speaker 4 (09:53):
You will? You'd be in the way?
Speaker 6 (09:56):
Here's that?
Speaker 7 (09:57):
So?
Speaker 4 (09:58):
Well? Either I go with you or they both stay here.
Speaker 3 (10:01):
You can take it or leave it.
Speaker 7 (10:02):
Revel dear Stangerson, It's about time he remembered. You're nothing
more than a paid servant around here. The hell do
you think you are trying.
Speaker 3 (10:10):
To dictate to me?
Speaker 4 (10:12):
I didn't mean it that way. How sounded to mean
I'll cut it out once and for all. Okay, then,
but look, supposing you're not back in time for the train,
HiT's the last one tonight.
Speaker 7 (10:24):
Oh, I'll be back here before eleven, and tell you what.
If I'm not, we'll meet up again at Halliday's Hotel.
Let's suit you.
Speaker 6 (10:35):
I guess it will happen.
Speaker 4 (10:39):
A moment for which I had waited so long had
come at last. My plans were already formed. It chanced
that some days before a gentleman who had been looking
over some empty houses off the Brixton Road and dropped
the key of one of them in my carriage. How
to get rever to that house was the problem? Handsome
(11:00):
in front of mine and he hailed it. I followed
it for mile until, to my astonishment, we found ourselves
back in the terrace where he had bought it. I
went on and pulled up my cab one hundred yards
or so from the house. He entered it, and his
handsome drove away. Well. I waited for a quarter of
an hour or more, when suddenly there came a noise
(11:23):
like people struggling inside the house. Next moment the door
was flung open and two men appeared. One of them
was Drebber and the other was a young chap whom
I'd never seen before.
Speaker 3 (11:34):
He armed a teacher dread talking on his g got
your hands off me.
Speaker 4 (11:39):
If you're out of this road.
Speaker 3 (11:41):
In quite tenth seconds, I'll mad this. I still across
you for your work here with a.
Speaker 7 (11:45):
Walk now, get already, okay, okay, I'm going hey you.
Speaker 3 (11:54):
Dammy has come now. He is a nowadays protel.
Speaker 4 (12:10):
I mean I had him fairly inside my cab. My
heart jumped so much with joy that I feared lest
at this last moment my aneurysm might go wrong. I
was once jam at her and.
Speaker 3 (12:23):
Sleeper out of a laboratory in the State.
Speaker 4 (12:26):
One day professor was lecturing on some alkaloid which was
so powerful that the least grain meant instant death. When
they were all gone, I helped myself to a little
of it. I was a fairly good dispenser, so I
worked this alkaloid into small soluble pills, and each pill
I put in a box with a similar pill made
(12:49):
without the poison. I determined that when I.
Speaker 2 (12:53):
Had my chance, my gentleman should eat have a.
Speaker 4 (12:56):
Draw out of one of those boxes while I ate
the pill from From that day I had always my
pillboxes about with me, and the time had now come
when I was the use was nearer. One twelve, the
wild bleak night blowing hard, my hands were tumbling, my
(13:20):
company pobbing with excitement. Was not a soul to be
seen when I looked in at the cabin, though, I
found wherever huddle run and sea, come on ere, come on,
wake up, wake up on sight.
Speaker 7 (13:38):
Oh it was wasn't marry time to get out.
Speaker 4 (13:43):
M oh, alright, I mean you better follow metes. Uh
is this a hotel? Holidays?
Speaker 3 (13:52):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (13:52):
Come along now say it's all up jump.
Speaker 6 (14:09):
M's infernally dark. Say what kind of a hotel is it?
Speaker 4 (14:18):
We'll soon have a lunch just like this camping? Yeah?
Now eno, drebber, Oh my, what do you mean?
Speaker 6 (14:34):
I don't no, no, yes, you dog.
Speaker 4 (14:39):
I have wanted you from Salt Lake City to Saint Petersburg,
and you've always escaped me.
Speaker 3 (14:45):
But now you're wanderings.
Speaker 4 (14:46):
I've come to an end. No, keep awake. Well what
do you think of poor Lucy Betrier? Now?
Speaker 3 (14:53):
Punishment has been slow in coming, but it has overtaken
you at last. Would would you murder me?
Speaker 6 (15:00):
Boat talks?
Speaker 3 (15:00):
I'm murdering a mad daughter?
Speaker 5 (15:03):
What am I saying?
Speaker 4 (15:04):
You up on my poor darling.
Speaker 3 (15:05):
When you're dragging her a slaughtered father and.
Speaker 4 (15:08):
Bor her away?
Speaker 3 (15:09):
Wasn't I killed her father? But it was you who
broke her innocent heart?
Speaker 2 (15:14):
Let not kind god gas See this box?
Speaker 5 (15:22):
What is it?
Speaker 4 (15:23):
What are they just a couple of kill two deeps?
There is depth in one and life from the other.
Eyes shall take what you leave. Let us see if
it is justice up there or if we are used by.
Speaker 3 (15:42):
Trance, who is we are married? I won't do home,
just wild with my bif can say, don't take away.
Speaker 4 (15:51):
I didn't do what I say too. And this way
you have an epid defense. Get don't take it in
all my knife, no chance for you all.
Speaker 6 (16:04):
Anyway.
Speaker 4 (16:06):
Ali, Now I'll take the other you've got you.
Speaker 5 (16:21):
You're listening to the Adventures of Sherlock Holmes being brought to.
Speaker 3 (16:36):
You from the BDC over.
Speaker 5 (16:38):
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(17:00):
top left corner Barclay's Bank International at two o eight
South Lassal.
Speaker 4 (17:14):
I turned them over with my foot and placed my
hand a funny heart. There was no movement. He was dead.
The pulses in my temples were beating like sledgehammers. And
I believe by what I've had a fit of some sort.
It's the blood knocked gushed from my nose, and believe me.
I remember the German being found in New York with
(17:37):
rash written up above him, and it was argued that
the secret societies must have done it. I guess that
what puzzled the New York Is would puzzled under it.
So I dipped my finger in my own blood and
printed it on the wall, and then I walked down
to my cap. I had driven some distance. When I
put my hand into the pocket in which I usually
(17:59):
kept Lucy's ring, found it was not there. It was
the only memento I had a thinking that I might
have dropped it when I stooped over Trevor's body. I
drove back, and, leaving my cap on the side street,
I went boldly up to the house and walked right
into the arms of a police officer who was coming out.
(18:21):
I managed to fool him by pretending to be hopelessly drunk,
but I had to go away about the.
Speaker 3 (18:30):
River there. How about sigt Ooh.
Speaker 4 (18:33):
I knew that he was staying in the Holiday's hotel.
Early next morning, I took advantage of some ladders which
were lying in the lane behind the hotel, and so
made my way into his room. In the gray of
the dawn. I woke him up and told him he
was to answer for the life he had taken so
long before. I gave him the same choice of poisoned pills,
(18:57):
and he sprang from his bed and float my throat
and self defense IE tab him to the heart. I
see you got all that, mister Lestrade. Ivery work well?
Speaker 6 (19:09):
Is there anything you like to ask, mister Holmes.
Speaker 2 (19:11):
There's only one point on which I should like a
little more information. Who wish at a compass? Who came
for the ring which I advertised.
Speaker 4 (19:18):
I can tell you my own secrets, but I don't
get other people to crumble. He had no hand in
the deaths of those two men, and knows nothing of them.
I think we can accept the truth of that graves
very welmstones. But now, gentlemen, the forms of the law
must be complied with. On Thursday, the prisoner will be
(19:38):
booked before the menstress, and your attendance will be required.
Left understood, inspector. Until then, I will be responsible for him.
Come along if appears, mister Lestrade, we may as well
use his own cab. But I'm afraid we've known they
did him bribe. It that you'll have to oblige. Oh,
never mind, at least a camp I have a cab
(20:01):
came along. Hope, let's be moving here.
Speaker 2 (20:10):
What Gregson and less Trade will be furious about his death.
Speaker 6 (20:15):
Well, it was better for the poor devil to die.
Speaker 3 (20:17):
In his soul than on the scaffold.
Speaker 4 (20:19):
His life was hanging worth rid.
Speaker 2 (20:22):
I then say, they won't see it that way. Where
will their grand advertisement be?
Speaker 4 (20:26):
Now? How they must have been looking forward to the trial?
Speaker 3 (20:31):
I must admit it have been pretty interesting.
Speaker 2 (20:33):
Never Mind, I wouldn't have missed the investigation for enity.
There's been no better case within my recollection, simple as
it was import and let me see if I can
make it clear now this was a case in which
you were given the result and had to find everything
else to yourself.
Speaker 3 (20:52):
I approached the house with.
Speaker 2 (20:53):
My mind entirely free from all impressions. I began by
examining the roadway, and there, as I've already explained to you,
I saw clearly the marks of a cab, which, as
I ascertained by inquiry, must have been there during the.
Speaker 5 (21:06):
Night just a moment.
Speaker 3 (21:08):
How could you know was a cab but not a
private carriage? By the narrow gage of the wheel.
Speaker 2 (21:12):
The ordinary London growler is considerably less wide than a
gentleman's broom. I then walked slowly down the garden path,
which happened to be composed of a clay soil peculiarly
suitable for taking impressions. There's no branch of detective science
which is so important and so much neglected as the
art of tracing footsteps. I saw the heady footmarks of
(21:34):
the constables. That I saw also the track of the
two men who had first passed.
Speaker 4 (21:37):
Through the garden.
Speaker 2 (21:39):
It was easy to tell that they had been before
the others, because in places their marks had been entirely
obliterated by the others coming upon the top of them.
Speaker 4 (21:48):
In this way, my.
Speaker 2 (21:49):
Second link was formed, which told me that the nocturnal
visitors were two in number, one remarkable for a fight,
as I calculated from the length of the stride, and
the other fashionably dressed. To judge from the small and
elegant impression left by his boots.
Speaker 4 (22:05):
What next?
Speaker 3 (22:06):
On entering the.
Speaker 2 (22:07):
House, this last inference was confirmed. My well booted man
lay dead before me. The tall one then had done
the murder.
Speaker 4 (22:14):
If murderer was.
Speaker 2 (22:17):
Having sniffed the dead man's lips, I detected a slightly
sour smell, and I came to the conclusion that he'd
been poisoned. I argued from the hatred and tear expressed
upon his faith that the poison had.
Speaker 3 (22:28):
Been forced upon him.
Speaker 2 (22:30):
And now came the great question as to the reason
why robbery had not been the object of the murder,
for nothing was taken. Political assassins, on the other hand,
are only too glad to do their work and to fly.
This murder had been done most deliberately, and the perpetrator
had left his tracks all over the room, and the
inscription on the wall was too obviously a blind No,
(22:53):
it must have been a private wrong, and not a
political one which called for such a methodical revenge. I
was a time from the first to suspect that a
woman was in some way connected ah.
Speaker 3 (23:04):
Finding the waiting room death set of the question.
Speaker 2 (23:07):
However, I proceeded to make a careful examination of the room,
which confirmed me in my opinion as to the murderer's height,
and furnished me with the additional details as to the
trichinopoly cigar. I had already come to the conclusion, since
there were no signs of a struggle.
Speaker 4 (23:22):
That the blood which covered the.
Speaker 2 (23:24):
Floor had burst from the murderer's nose in his excitement.
I could see that the track of blood coincided with
the track of his feet. Now, as a medical man, Watson,
you will agree that it is seldom that any man
breaks out in such a way through emotion, unless he's
very full blooded.
Speaker 3 (23:41):
It's quite true.
Speaker 2 (23:42):
So I hazarded the opinion that the criminal was a
robust and ruddy faced man, as indeed he was quite
Now you will remember that I ascertained that when Gregson
telegraphed to America, he had not inquired as to any
particular point which might.
Speaker 4 (23:57):
Appear to be critical.
Speaker 2 (23:58):
Yes, well, had he left the house, I telegraphed to
the head of the police at Cleveland, limiting my inquiry
of the sircumstance disconnected with the marriage of Enoch J.
Speaker 3 (24:08):
Drebber. The answer was conclusive.
Speaker 2 (24:12):
It told me that Drebber had already applied for the
protection of the law against an old rival in love
named Jefferson Hope, and that this same Hope was a
present in Europe. I knew now that I held the
two to the mystery in my hand, and all that
remained was.
Speaker 6 (24:27):
To secure the murderer.
Speaker 2 (24:28):
For all that remained, for it wasn't so difficult. I
had already determined in my own mind that the man
who had walked into the house with Drever was none
other than the man who had driven the cab. The
monks in the road showed me that the horse had
wandered on in a way which would have been impossible
had there been any one in charge of it. Where
then could the driver be unless he were inside the house.
(24:51):
And my dear Watson, supposing one man wished to dog
another through London, what better means could he adopt than.
Speaker 3 (24:58):
The term cab driver?
Speaker 8 (25:00):
So you came to the conclusion that jefferson hope was
to be found among the job isn't metropolis?
Speaker 2 (25:04):
Oh brilliant, Quite brilliant, thank you.
Speaker 4 (25:09):
But what made you assume that, having achieved his object,
Jefferson's Hope would go on being a cabby? Why he
would have been foolish, not too any sudden change on
his part might have drawn attention to himself. I therefore
organized my street Arab detective Corps and sent them systematically
to every cab proprietor in London until they sell it
without the men I wanted certainly succeeded.
Speaker 3 (25:31):
But Holmes, how about the murder of the other man.
Speaker 4 (25:35):
Stangerson.
Speaker 2 (25:36):
Ah, that incident was entirely unexpected. Through it, I came
into possession of the pills, the existence of which I
had already submised. You see, the whole thing is a
chain of logical sequences without a break or flaw.
Speaker 8 (25:52):
It's wonderful, remarkable. You should be publicly recognized for this home.
You should publish account of the case.
Speaker 4 (26:01):
Well, if you weren't, I'll do it for you. I
have all the facts in my journal. The public will
know them. You may do what you like that, yes,
missus Hudson. Oh, just sorry, down there, missus Hudson, and
I'll look at it.
Speaker 3 (26:18):
No, no, I'll have it. Pea. Shall you be into lunch, gentlemen,
I fancy we shall thank you, sir.
Speaker 4 (26:30):
I say, listen to this, Holmes, the public have lost
the sensational treat through the sudden death of the man Hope,
who was suspected to the murdered mister.
Speaker 3 (26:40):
Enough Drebber and mister Joseph Stangerson.
Speaker 4 (26:44):
The details of the case will probably never now be known,
though we are informed upon good authority that the crimes
were the results of.
Speaker 3 (26:50):
An old standing and romantic fuel.
Speaker 4 (26:53):
If the case has no other effect, it at least
brings out, in the most striking manner, the efficiency of
our detective. It is an open secret that the credit
for this smart capture belongs and Tiler, the well known
Scotland Yard officials Mesas Gregson.
Speaker 3 (27:13):
It is expected that the testimonials some.
Speaker 4 (27:15):
Sort will be presented to these two officers as a
fitting recognition of their services.
Speaker 3 (27:21):
Ha ha, well Holmes, what about that? Didn't I tell
you so when we started?
Speaker 4 (27:27):
What that's the result of all our study in Scarlett
to get them a testimodial.
Speaker 5 (27:47):
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around the world, all strategically located to serve you, they
can easily be replaced at no cost to you should
they be misplaced for stolen. Best of all, they're free
at Barclay's as part of Barclay's good neighbor policy. You
can get Barklay's travelers checks without paying a penny extra
(28:33):
for commission. And when you think of all the places
you plan to stay, the things you plan to do,
and the things you plan to buy, that could come
to quite a saving.
Speaker 4 (28:43):
So before you.
Speaker 5 (28:44):
Leave the country, come to Barclays for your free of
commission travelers checks. Your longest journey can begin with one
short step to Barclay's Bank, two o eight South Lestle Street,
Chicago and the world.
Speaker 4 (29:09):
Well, now you've heard part three, you know the ending.
It was one of the stories of Shellock Holmes, from
the inspired pen of Saratha Conan Doyle. My name, my
real name is Norman Shelley ol friend Carson Hobbs played
Sherlock Holmes, and I was doctor on Michael Hodwick wrote
(29:30):
our script for this BBC production from London, And of
course I look forward to the pleasure of your company
again soon for more of the Adventures of Sherlock Holmes.
Speaker 5 (29:52):
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes has been presented by Barclay's
Bank International at two o eight South of South Street
in Chicago Ago. Barclays not so much a bank as
a