The Victory
A Strange Crime and Its Solution
The town of Doncaster, in England, is famous as being the scene from year to year of the celebrated St. Leger race. Ordinarily it is a staid, dull enough place, with its chief business on market days, when the neighboring farmers and families throng the town. During the race week, however, it presents a lively aspect being literally crowded with visitors from all parts of the world. The hotels and inns are filled, private boarding-houses find all the guests they can accommodate, and many families vacate their residences entirely, renting them for ten days or so to wealthy visitors who pay a large sum for their exclusive use. Among the visitors to the town during the races are multitudes of the criminal class, who flock thither from London, Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool, Leeds, Glasgow, Dublin and all the large centers, for the purpose of pursuing their nefarious calling. From all the places named likewise come a body of police detectives on purpose to take care of thieves and rogues with whom for the most part they are well acquainted.
In the first place, the railroad depots are watched, and all recognized criminals are captured there and returned by the next train to the place whence they came; but, in spite of this admirable scheme, thousands of them are smuggled into the town, some of them taking up their abode there long before the races open, and others landing at roadside stations a few miles distant, and proceeding to their destination by secret paths or by night. Many of them also adopt clever disguises, and thus evade the vigilance of the officer of the law.
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