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The Hotel Thief


A Curious Incident


by Sylvanus Cobb, Jr.


A few evenings since, a small party of us were assembled in a snug parlor, discussing the various topics of the day. We had run the “Hard Times” till nothing more was to be said upon the subject, and then we turned our attention to the criminal cases detailed in the various newspapers. There were thefts, robberies, murders, arsons, and all sorts of misdeeds brought before us, and we gave them such consideration as we could afford.

“Speaking of thefts,” remarked one of the party, “puts me in mind of a curious circumstance that once happened in my own house. I will relate it if you choose to hear it.”

The speaker’s name was Barton—“Uncle Sim” we always called him—his Christian name being Simeon. He was well advanced in years, and had been engaged in hotel-keeping during most of his life. We were anxious to hear his story, and he related it as follows:—

“Something over twenty years ago, I kept a hotel in the western part of this State. The location was a good one, for there was considerable travel, but I had many good boarders.

“It was somewhere near the first of July, along towards evening, that a splendid carriage drew up at my door, and as the driver leaped from his seat, he asked one of my men to come and help him. The carriage was opened, and a young girl—a bright, pretty thing, not over fifteen—was the first to alight. After this, the driver reached in, and, with the assistance of my porter, handed out the sickliest looking man for a traveller, I had ever seen. He was tall and bent, and seemed more like a living skeleton than a thing of flesh and blood. The bones were all clearly defined, through the… Read More