When Inspector Lestrade consults Holmes about a murder, Holmes recognizes the name of the dead man and also of the step-father. Holmes quickly forms a theory about the murder, and sets out to prove it.
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Irate over a robbery of his family’s precious jewels, Sir Arthur Treadley accuses Sherlock Holmes of giving him bad advice during a consultation. However, the detective was out of town when the advice was supposedly given.
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Sherlock Holmes helps one of Dr. Watson’s old friends by explaining the source of an odd noise in the man's home, but in doing so Holmes uncovers a more serious mystery.
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A woman comes to consult Sherlock Holmes because her fiancé John has disappeared after he made an important discovery. Holmes investigates and finds a copy of a historical inscription that he then takes with him to Greystone Castle.
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Holmes and Watson investigate murders and the trail leads to a society of hypnotists and a beautiful woman. It also looks as if the notorious Moriarty is involved.
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Sir Charles Farnsworth is found dead in his mysterious Farnsworth Castle. It turns out that Farnsworth had a clause inserted in this will that his death, no matter what the apparent cause, would be investigated by Sherlock Holmes.
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A condemned man scheduled to hang the next day uses his last request to ask Sherlock Holmes to prove his innocence of the murder for which he is about to be executed.
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A boy and his father are on a train, and after they have a fight, the boy seems to have vanished. Although his governess thinks he has simply run away, Holmes begins to suspect something a bit more serious.
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Sherlock Holmes seeks a rational explanation for the Winthrop family legend, which foretells the death of any family member who unexpectedly finds silver coins in his possession.
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Sherlock Holmes investigates a strange story told to him by a shopkeeper, who claims to have been a member of the 'League of Red-Headed Men' until it unexpectedly dissolved.
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