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The Village Thief


The people of the village of M— were alarmed. They could scarcely retire at night without being robbed. Stores, houses and families were pilfered, but who performed the nefarious deed or deeds could not be discovered. Guns and other warlike weapons were in demand; but these were ineffectual, for the guilty party still exercised his vocation with impunity. Police had been placed upon his track, but their efforts to discover him were unsuccessful; no clue to the appearance of the thief could be obtained from his victims; all of the latter agreed that they were plundered, not by an established band, but by one individual. Some said that immediately before they were robbed, they had noticed “a large fierce-looking fellow” prowling around their premises; others affirmed that the guilty party was “a small, fine-looking man” and, lastly, there were a few superstitious ones who declared that the robber was not a man, but the emissary of a certain individual supposed to govern the warm regions. With these conflicting reports, it would puzzle the last-named gentleman himself to discover the thief. It was for these reasons that the villagers were alarmed.

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