Select Story

A Detective Story


 The Ruse Once Employed to Trap a Shrewd Thief


 Who Was at One Time Confined In Denver


“Have you been to the county jail lately?’ asked an old-time detective of a News reporter yesterday.

“No, I have not,” was the reply. “What is over there—anything of any account?”

“No, nothing of any importance that I know of. Do you remember an elderly man who was confined there about four or five months ago? He was a Frenchman, I think, and I heard that he had died somewhere in Missouri. He told me something in his history that would make mighty interesting reading, I tell you.”

THE NEWS MAN was eager to know what was the most interesting or remarkable thing the prisoner had told him.

“Well, I’ll tell you all about it. This chap—I’ve forgotten his name—was for a long time in Paris. He was a thief and a slick one, too, or he would have been picked up long before he actually was. The Parisian police, you doubtless know, is one of the most perfect working institutions in the world. It is necessary that it should be so, for in so large and gay a city, the amount of crime committed every day is most remarkable.

“Well, this man, as I told you before, was very clever. The police had had its eye upon him for a long time, but had never been able to detect him in any positive shortcoming. His house had undergone repeated searches without any effect resulting from the most diligent inquiry—nothing even of the most trifling nature could be found to use in evidence against him. Nevertheless he was known to traffic with the thieves, and did confess to me that he had successfully evaded the vigilance of even the secret agents.

“One evening as he was going out of his house and had gone some distance down the street, a gentleman whom he had never before seen stepped up to him and addressed him by a name other than… Read More