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A Detective’s Story


What life is more thrilling than that of a police detective, what more full of startling adventure? An incident in the experience of two men well known in the city of New Orleans, as the most skillful and accomplished detectives in the Southern country, has been related to the reporter. It is useless to say who they are, their names are household words throughout the valley of the Mississippi. The event about to be related is of recent occurrence. It is one of the unpublished histories of crime, one of the heart-beats underneath the social current of the great city – But the words of the detective invests the relation with an interest more potent than the reporter can accord it.

Let him tell the story:

A robbery had been committed in one of our large commercial houses under very singular circumstances. The day preceding the crime a large amount of money had been received and left in the safe over night. Part of this money consisted of $20 and $50 bills. Unknown to any one but the proprietor, they were marked with a small cross of red ink in the left hand corner. The safe was locked at night, in the morning it was open, the night clerk asleep under the influence of chloroform and the money gone. The cashier was a young man of high social position, and about to be married to the daughter of the proprietor. He alone carried the keys of the safe. It was evident that the lock had been picked or opened with the key. Our observation convinced us that it was the latter. Still we kept our own council. At the request of the merchant the whole matter was kept a profound secret. It furthered our chances of detecting the robber that it should be so. Before we had left the store, we had settled in our minds the identity of the thief; but it was necessary to obtain the proof before our suspicions were divulged, or arrest attempted. Description of the money stolen was left with certain parties, under… Read More