The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, January 15, 1904, Image 1
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VOL. L1V. NO. 3. ONION, SOUTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 15. 1904. #1.00 A YEAR;
Wm. A. Nich<
BANK
SOLICIT YOU
COME T(
OUR TERM9 ARE AS LIBER
OUR FACILITIES AND RESO
rr~ -==r HDONALDS
1 ' ?
Copyright, irOB, by oA,
Charles W. Hooko ~^T
v !
"It appeared that be had gone from
this country to Japan and bad lived in
one of the smaller cities. lie brought
photographs of his abode there and of
II view from a certain window. I have
never been able to he a skeptic upon
things occult since seeing that photograph.
lie told us ttyat he had lived
almost in secretL-that he had never
dared communicate with Donald for
fear that the message would fall into
wrong hands and reveal his hiding
place. f *
"One day he was amazed to see Jos
Vlnal at his door. How this man
traced him be never learned. Vlnal,
was dying. Only his purpose had supported
him through the latter part of '
the journey. .He made a complete rev?
elatioVrof thtrlnner facts of the bani
robbery, ih which he himself was the
principal criminal. This statement was
sworn to before the American consul,
and a few days later Vinal died. Henry
Donaldson went to Hougkong and
thence home, bringing the statement
which was put into the hands of the
baud's officials, who used it to extort
as complete restitution as possible from
VInn l*o nnAAmnll/iAa nr?/I 4 Im n
t *"? ? uv?.vujj/?iv?;o, ?uu iuu ujuhcl
was kept quiet through tho usual influences,
except that a card was published
exonerating Donald's brother.
He seemed to be perfectly satisfied
with this, though/it was not very definite,
Really the poor fellow Was done
with earth. He died as many men and
women die who might live, but have
not the will. -
"In ^conclusion I have only this to
say: So fas as wo can learn Donald's
vision was perfectly accurate. It showed
Vina! laying his written confession
before Henry Donaldson. But the vl *
sion occurred about eight hours before
the event I leave the explanation of
this phenomenon to any one who
thinks himself competent. I am not.
"You may be disposed to suggest
that Henry Donaldson had communicated
with his brother unknown to
me. In regard to this I have not only
Donald's word, but nenry's, and you
will bear in mind that I attended Ilen.
ry in his last Illness, so that, aside
from the lack of motive for his telling
me 4 falsehood, we must consider also
the respect that is usually accorded to
tbe statement of a dying man.
"Moreover. Henry could not have
communicated the fact of the ennfea
slon, because be knew nothing about
it himself until some hours uftcr it
was-kuown to us. It must be remembered
also that Donald was entirely
lgncfrant of his brother's whereabouts
even bfter bb bad'bad the vision. Ho
*bad~'th6 sensation of being in that
rooui'and bf looking across the tablo
tow^fd the window, add from the asct
tji.e cpuntry be supposed that
scen6 was in China.''
? _ CUAPTlSlt IV.
AJt..EXCEPTIONAL MATCH.8
Whiting censed Ilnckett drew
1A a long breath and looked at
Mm me.
little-ahead of Anything
we've found yet, John." said he. "Havo
yon ever tried to figure the thing out
In y6bt own mind, Mr. Donaldson?"
The ytf\jti# tnan shook his head,
"I'knpW what I saw," he said, "but
I dofi't fcrfov^ what Was back of It, and I
I am inclined to think." he added, with I
n srt^W,. "that it ia much the same
WitbgH.wg see, Jioweyer simple. There
is n mystery behind that teacup which
no man alive can, solve." > >
' "We know that it wllj beid our ten,"'*
snld ii||Qbettr 'toot this psychic business
.doesn't seem to have any bottom."
-I nskcd whether any one knew why
Ylnnl.hn^ not, made bis confession in.
this cbrAtry.- * 1 9k "
"He went to beglHproBQtber's Mrdon
and to die forgiven," said Donaldson.
"He put his confession into the
hands 'of the man who had been
yfamfsd." '
A general' conversation fallowed in
I
olson & Son,
:ers,
r business
) SEE US.
ALAS ANY CAN CIVE YOU.
URCES ARE UNSURPASSED.
ig a Iruc Record and f xpljiwtion of the Seven
Mysteries Now Associated With ills Name In
the PutPc Mind, and of an llghth.
Which Is the Key of the Seven
ON. JR.
By HOWARD FIELDING |
wblcli Donaldson appeared to far
greater advantage than before. The
telling of tpe story seemed to have taken
a weight off his mind. Doth IlacU?
ett and myself were pleased with him,
and we resolved to carry out .our original
Intention of taking him into our
employ. W'e did not speak of the matter
until nftcr Whiting had left us.
He had said in the beginning that be
could be with us not more than hulf on
hour. When he had gone, I explained
to Donaldson that we been considering
him withfl^^HBttto a position
of importanctiggpFvdUsincss, and
I named the dutle^zJSe salary and the
prospects.
' Ho wa?4o be Mr. Ilackett'a assistant
inourdepATtmcntof soles. We were then
introdurthg a system.of disposing ot
our goods which wus entirely unique in
this qpuntry, and we required a young
tnau of good appearance, of cultivated
mind and manner and especially of
that quiek, intuitive perception which
is so Valuable In dealing with the highest
grade of merchants. The right
man, coming to us with the proper energy
and abiHty, might hope for anything,
up to an Interest in our business,
uiiit ?uuiu niaivL- unit luuru iiiuu cii
to do. It all depended upon himself.
Donaldson received this proposal
with a solemnity which justiiled his
college nickname of "deacon," by
which we hud heard Dr. Whiting address
him. | .
"It is useless for me to deny," said
he, "that what you suggest is a great
advance for me. In my pregent place
I am like a diver walking with leaden
soled shoes in a medium of high resistance
and. having everything pumped
down to me from above. 1 can't get to
the top, and nobody is going to pull
mc up. 1 make a few signup by pulling
oq a string, but nobody answers
them. I'm sunk; that's the truth about
me.
"Therefore," liecontinued, looking first
to Haekett and then to ma, "I am more
than ready to accept your offer, but
there is one difficulty?1 perceive that
you have another motive in making It.".
"Another motiveV" said I, looking
across at my partner.
Young Mr. Donaldson laid his clinched
right hand upon the table.
"Prom this day forth," said he, "if 1
have any power or means of knowledge
that is different from the average
I will make no display of it and
no use of it. That is my irrevocable
decision. You will never leurn more
of that subject from me than you will
know tonight when the sun goes down.
But, since I have cost away restraint
today, let mecontinuc in that folly.
"I know perfectly well that you have
another object in making this proposal
to me; that it is a part of a fantastic
dream. You hope to mate mo with
a young woman whom you believe to
possess the same powers that are in
me. You think that you are acting in
the interests of the advance of human
knowledge and that posterity, with
the probable exception of my posterity,
will rise up and call you blessed."
I was motionless, dumfounded. I
could not have cried "Fire!" if the
blaze bad broken out in my own pockI
th<\uann/l nxncion fw/\m T n
vti ? VII lUUUrNIUU UJCOOJI^CO ItUUI UU"
pan were not to be thought of in comparison
with this phenomenon.
For the secret that ho had touched
upon was absolutely ours. My own
private speculations upon the subject
and my brief and inconsequential
talks with Hackett summed up the
whole of It. Neither of us had ever
suggested that Donaldson and Miss
Vaughn might make q match of it, yet
thOildea had ty sd through my mind
now and tlief* / I found out afterward
that it Jbttn in Hackett's%
"J don't p* , io say," continued Donp
Id son, "y /on would use any influence
or v.,V out any Inducements to
. bring sacb a marriage about, hut you
wll) Jook for It, and you will bo dtsapI
pointed. Why, Mr. Harrington, If I
i - . "
#
* ' \ '
knew that a girl was what Is called a
psychic 1 could no more love her thifn
I could love a girl with two noses. No,
sir; I am opposed to superfluity. The
ordihary mental and physical endowments
are enough for me. If you attempt
to make any such match for me,
I shall run."
"But have you any reason to suppose
that such a girl exists?" I demanded.
"Who Is she?"
"I have no Intimation as to who she
is," he replied, addressing me directly.
"I perceive no more than that she is
some one for whom you have a high
regard, and It Is doubtless a great honor
for me to be coupled with her in
your thoughts. But I ask you to think
of It no more."
"You have read from a closed book,"
said I, "and it is a marvelous thing to
do. But you have read only a single
paragraph and have failed to grasp the
sense of the whole volume. We want
your head In our business, Mr. Donaldson,
and are willing to pay for it, but
your heart Is your own, and I should be
the first to dissuade you from a marriage,
however advantageous it might
seem to be, that was based upon any
other impulse than the love of a good
woman."
"I am a melaqcholy fellhw," said
Donaldson, with evident feeling, "and
unfit for matrimony. Only cheerful
people should marry. A rich man's
money may bless or curse his children.
At the best, it Is not so good as a happy
disposition: at the wemt it londa
added to our working force at Tun- '
bridge and became a member of my ;
household, and there a singular and
amusing complication presently came
about. Mrs. Jane Harrington, whose 1
husband is a cousin of mine and has
charge of a branch of our business in \
the west, came to visit me, bringing
her daughter, a very charming young
woman of twenty. In some mysterious
manner Donaldson got the notion that
Millie Harrington was the beautifuj
psychic whose union with himself was
secretly plotted by the wily " Stephen
Hackett and me. Up bad never beeq
able to fid himself of {lio idea that
something of the sort was In tho wind,
but ho was entirely Ignorant of the
facts In the case of Dorothy Vaughn.
In fact, nobody In Tunbrldge except
Hackett and me knew that Dorothy's
coming to teach our school bad any
connection with our quest of mysteries.
It wflfl far mora llkplv flint rinnnlilsnn
should Suspect Millie, who was there
upon my direct invitation and seem
ingly thrown Into his way with malice
aforethought, than, Dorothy, who lived
on the other side of the town and was
merely the schoolteacher.
Millie was a flirt, I'm afraid, and as
the deacon was the most attractive
young man in her vicinity she proceeded
to practice her innocent arts
upon him. I think he was not naturally
timid In such matters. He had a
very easy and graceful banner in the
company of ladies, and not even so I
simple an old fellow as myself could
fail to see that he had learned his lesson
in the school Of experience. Mil- |
lie found him an admirable cavalier, (
and she kept him busy in her service. I
It may have been five weeks that '
Millie and her mother wero at my
house, and the place was so gay ^hat i
I did not feel ht home. In the even- I
ings there woul* be music and danc- I
j lng, and I would sit in n corner alone i
except when Haekett sprayed into thi4 ;
scene of unaccustomed revelrv or when i
Dorothy could be persuaded to come
over after tho school. She was to
mourning for her aunt, of course, an^Jrl
could not join In tho sport, but she |
held It no harm to sit In sober black '
and wntcfi.tho others. We had some f
great talks in this way, but it seemed I
to me that she was not In so good spjr- I
its otter this brief season of festivity i
I* *?
/ .
- i J1:iv
nothing that la half so bad as hered
ltary sourness of heart. You will for
give me for mentioning this subject.
Really, I was afraid that I might b?
beguiled into some sort of nn experiment.
It may have been a cranky notion,
but this whole conversation lias
been such -a weird mixture of business
and ghosts!"
The big clock in the corner struck 'J
and surprised us all with the lateness
of the hour. It was necessary for Don
aldson to return at once to his office,
and so we could not ask him the questions
which were pressing for utterance.
I may say, however, that when
we had abundant opportunity thereafter
we obtained scant information.
Donaldson either could not or would
pot- tell, how_Jf.8*ttlituined his psychic
messages. riTl irffike suddenly remethberlug
something that you have always
known," was the usual way in which
he dodged the question, and he would
never speak upon the -subject ht all
when he could avoid doing so.
Upon the matter of Donaldson's recognition
of his friend Whiting's presence
we made one discovery beforo
leaving the restaurant. Ilackett sat 1
down in the chair which our young
friend had occupied uud immediately 1
perceived that owing to the position
of a hat tree upon which our coats
were hung the mirror in the wall could,
not explain the phenomenon. I could
see around one side of this obstruction
and Ilackett around the other side,
but it was precisely in the necessary
line of Donaldson's vision.
About two weeks after this remarkable
luncheon Deacon Donaldson was
got wen unaer way. maeea it must
have been a trial for a young and pretty
girl, as I tbougbt uiore tban once. It
never occurred to me tbat tliere could
bo any special trouble. Even when
she advanced tbe opinion one evening
tbat she was not doing very well with
tbe school and perhaps it might be
better for her to go away I totally failed
to comprehend.
That night after the house had become
quiet I was sitting before the
fire in the library alone when Donaldson
dropped in to keep me company.
At my invitation he took a cigar, selecting
one that was black and strong,
and when he had lighted it I perceived
that there was something on his mind.
A iuan who. wishes to conceal his mental
state should not smoke in the presence
of a smoker.
"Mr. Harrington," said he at last,
"you have been very good to me. You
have put me in a illie way of business,
so that my future is assured?if I bohave
U)YSClf. I nm vni'V n-rntofnl l?
- ?J 1U CVery
way. and I'm going to please you if
I can. But, by Jingo," he cried, suddenly
springing up, "I can't!"
"Why not?" I asked as gently as possible.
lie dried the palms of his hands upon
bis handkerchief.
"It's a great honor," he said, trying
to be culm. "I told you so long ago at
Bertram's. Of course I didn't then
know that the young latfy would be
related to you. I couldn't foresee how
beautiful she would be, how admirable
In every way. She doesn't care a
penny for me, to be sure, but I'm not
speaking of'that. I m speaking of my
own sentiments. She's got the most '
wonderful eyes?dark, mysterious, marvelous
eyes. By Jove, I can well believe
that she's the true psychic! And
perhaps that's what's the matter."
"Are you speaking of Miss Harrington?"
I inquired as he paused. And he
replied with a quick nod of atlirmation.
"I'll tell you the truth!" he cried,
wheeling toward me suddenly. "The
psychic matter hasn't anything to do
with it. It's because I'm In love with
somebody else. I've got no business to
be in love, but I am. On the chance
that the woman I love mny love me I
ought to go and drown myself?in licr
Interest?but I won't. I will stay right
and" Yin her if I^cun.i^mBelllsh
enough to do it, vain oilink 1mny
succeed, and It seemed to be my
duty, to twll j'ou about it, Mr. Harrington.
considering the very peculiar circumstances
of the case."
"Who is the young lady?" I Inquired.
For some strange reason a flood of
motion choked him as he tried to
speak her name. He struggled with it
for on instant and then answered me
by throwing out bis right arm so that
lie pointed to the window and across
tlie broad lawn and nearly the whple
town beyond it, half a mile or more in
ill, to the house where Dorothy lived.
I understood hitn perfectly.
"You couldn't please mo better than
that." said I. "With all my heart 1
wish you well."
Some days later Dorothy told me
that she was much more encouraged
about the sehool and that she had quite
Si veil up the idea of going away. She
Was devoted to the work, and yet I
knew that it was not her success theren
which had so lightened her heart.
When Ilaekett learned how matters
stood, he Insisted that my theory about
i natural antipathy between psychics
was overthrown, but 1 preferred to re?i?5?l
They were nuirried tn my house.
iford the ease as merely exceptional.
3bvlousIy the rule carfpot be ironclad,
Tor If such were the fact occult powers f
would disappear from the world.
A f antt r*o f n !?*? ? ? ** **"
4 1V ??UJ IUVV, lUlo nao a UUU IUVC
match If ever there was one. Their
lappinees brought out the noblest qualities
of tbelr hearts. They did \vonderrul
work that winter, both of them,
lustlfying my best hopes and winning
my warmest good will.
It was to be a long engagement
Doroth^ had mentioned two years, I
believe. But In the late spring we
planned to send Donaldson abrdnd,
with the result that Dorothy decided to
;o.too. So they were married In my
liouse, which was rose bedecked for
the occasion.-* There were festivities
tvblch lasted until sundown, and thfen
_ &faAMBKsaNK8 L
WE A.R.]
(TO ?1
OUR resources aro not fabul
'ton earth, nor do we do i
BUT we are here among the
ample means for all rc
enough to take care of a
WE COME, hacked up hy a good rcc
made irreproachable by
WE ARE here to stay and we soli
accommodation consistc
Interest Paid on T
rierchants and Plant
wtuie some of the younger guests were
tying telltale ribbons to the carriage
that waited before 1113' door the two
'overs es'-aped by another way and
ran hand'in band like children across '
the fields through the sweet .June even- 1
lag. It appeared that tbey had secret- 1
ly sent all their baggage to the railroad
statiou earlier In the day.
chapter v.
THE MYSTERY ON THE EXPECTED RODIIEll.
Donald Donaldson, jr..
was born May 2, 1ss1. lie
was the healthiest and altogether
the finest child that
ever came into ti e world, the most deil...
?.?..? I~ ? ?
rum, I IIV -H'.-M IIU-II. .'Villi WIIIIUSK'ill
nature exacted tlio smallest possible
price of pain for him.
Vol permit me to reconsider that
rt itmnent i:i the light of a better philosophy.
There nre those who say that
in adversity one need not shout for the
awakening of the gods nor in the day
of superabundance dread it; tint notb- ,
iug comes which is not earned, it may
be that a young mother reaped no more
than the just reward of consistent right
living from her earlio: gTlhood. However
that tuay he. fact romaius
that ail tilings we incredibly well
behold Dorothy, as pretty as ever and
not a day older, tripping about the
house with a song; behold the hoy,
healthy as a young lion and roaring,
when lie roared, for Ins own good
pleasure and not for any 111.
Hacked prophesied great tilings of
him. believing tlint his exploits would
some day necessitate a revised edition
of our "Psychic Facts," a work that
was. then complete except for the last '
section, which ilackett wished to entitle
"The Real Facts" despito the
inipMtntion upon the accuracy of the '
preceding portions. *
As to his hopes of young Donald my
partner spoke only once In the pres- '
ence of the hoy's parents.
"You'd have thought I had accused ;
Kim Ivninr, /?..?/! >> 1.1
UlUi VI vv lllp VI UOO CJ CU, OUIVI Lit; IU LUC
In describing the incident, and thereafter
we discussed the subject strictly
In private.
Our book eventually went to the
printer, but Uackett never saw it in a
binding. lie'was stricken with an illness
which rushed on to a fatal termination
in such haste that it ^seemed
all over in a day, and I was standing by
the grave of my oldest friend. Afterward
I could hardly bear to look at the
book upon which we had labored together.
I left everything to others. It
had i small success nud was soon forgotten.
though recent events have led
tho publish*.rs to print some thousands
of copies from the old plates. The work
is full of unfounded belief and equally
unfounded doubt. 1 am proud only of
the former, which was mostly Hackett's.
A natural, honest, seemingly
baseless belief is probably founded upon
the knowledge of tho ages and thf
soul's sympathy with infinite wisdom,
but your doubt is likely to be your
own, and you should be the more modest
in the expression of it.
Pardon this digression about "Fsychic
Facts." The psychic fact with
which this present record principally
concerns itself Is Donald Donaldson,
Jr., and from this point onward 1 shall
stick closely to him. I hove given n
view of his parents because that wat
absolutely necessary to an understanding
of his nature and of the events in
which he took part. 1 shall now very
briefiy sketch his youth, which was ;
unmarked by any incident out of the ,
ordinary.
He was a healthy baby and a sturdy,
active schoolboy when the years had ,
brought him onward to that stage of
life. Mentally he was too.quick to re- .
quire diligence. The tasks in the Tunbridge
schools were easy for him, and .
he led his classes without effort. It
tnust bo remembered, however, that, no .
other pupil had equally good home
training. Ills mother was a teacher,
both by nature nnd l>3' instruction. He .
might have advanced more rapidly under
her care alone, but the public school
is a part of our creed in Tunbridge. If
any school in the town had not been a
good place for Donald, we should not
have taken him away. We should
have made the scheol better.
While upon this subject I will quote
a curious remark that I once heard a
little girl make to another in Don's
hearing nnd somewhat in the way of n \
taubt:
"Don Donnldson always knows what ?
the teacher's going to ask him. He t
guefiscs it before recitntiqn aud hunts
it up in his.book." * i
1 questioned the little girl, but could ,
q-q
E3 IN IT
rAY.)
oils, we haven't the largest bank
all the business of the country.
goo<l people of the county with
lasonable demands, with aapital
ill your wants.
ord, that began years ago; a record
fair business methods,
cit your patronage, offering every
mt with good banking. o
ime Deposits.
ers National Bank.
i ?
net lenrn that she had any basis for
her belief except Donald's proficiency
in his studies nnd a vague tradition
that he "could guess things." It was
impossible to discover any specific Instance
worth mentioning. In the
sports of boys he was very successful,
but any boy will be 60 who grows up
ahead of his years. From the time
when lie reached school ago he was always
growing more rapidly In height
and weight than the average. Moreover,
he played with tremendous energy
and concentration. He was fond of
rougli games, but Wither suffered Injury
nor indicted It. Indeed he presently
began to be known as "lucky," and If
I were to select one attribute of hla
which never deserted him and seemed
always to make its impression upon his
associates I would choose his "luck."
For luck 'Is a personal quality. It
menus, ns n rule, no more than an Instinctive
accuracy of Judgment, the
power that makes a bird fly south In
the fnll. though he knows nothing of
the danger which lie is escaping, having
never seen a winter.
If 3'ou tell me that it is rational superiority
which enables a boy to thrust
his head into a football scrimmage In
a place where it will not encounter an
oinor uoy s list or liis skull or his feat
nnil to keep on doing this all through a
season of tlic game, I shall laugh at
you. Yet It Is well known that Injuria*
arc not equally distributed; that nelther
tlic strong nor the prudent eacape
them; that the boy who doaan't
get hurt is the one who has the faculty,
the natural gift, the instinctive guidance,
the luck. And the werid is a
great football game, full of flying flats
and feet.
So when Isay that Donald was lucky I
lecline to be accused of superstition or
of fatalism. That which all of us believe
in, though some of us affect to
doubt it, the thing called luck as a personal
asset, is neither ordinary good
judgment nor the favor of heaven. It
is the faculty of relying upon a deep
seated, guiding power resident In the
Individual and nearly if not quite Infallible.
This power is not limited by the
fineness of the physical senses. It will
help you to dodge au invisible microbe
just as a more obvious instinct will
help you to dodge a snowball. It la
natural to step out of the snowball's
path, but if you hesitate and try to
reason about it you will get hit. And
the same thing is true of that mysterious
force within you which Is absolutely
at one with nature.
In Donald there appeared s singular
combination of spontaneous judgment
ind deliberate action. As s child be
ivould respond to questions slowly snd
with care, even when the expression
of his eyes showed that the correct
inswer had flashed through his mind
u&iauuy. ins greatest una most OD*
itinnte fault was secretlveness. Though
lis nature was very affectionate and
lis sympathy most tender, he lacked
lie natural tendency to oonfldo hie
roubles, bis joys or his hopes to the?
lie loved, even to his mother. He hud
no slyness. He was at no peine to
*eep n secret. He simply ?Id nothing
about it and gave no sign of Its ex*
istence.
We were often grieved to find the!
tie had left us In ignorance of eomo le
?ident of his daily life, some set nek*
:her praiseworthy nor blnmable or oneperhaps
involving n moral question beyond
the appreciation of his yeam
When reproved for Stich an omission,
lis customary?and, 1 believe, stncsrs '
reply would be:
"Why, it never occurred to m# that
you didn't know."
It was frequently necessary to giro
lilin quite an elaborate explanation bofore
he seemed to renllao that wo ha41
tiad no means of knowing.
By all this 1 do not wish to give the
impression that he was a markedly
phenomenal boy, but It is inogioftant, of
course, that 1 should, point out all gos* ''
Llculnrs in which be differed ftw tw
average. 1 have therefore with greet
?are' selected these three pecalUtrttleii
lie thought very quickly end ejpshs
very slowly.
[TO BE CONTTIVOKD.]
Exercise For Both.
"Does your wife go iu for athletteel"
"Um?yes, in a way. She went Mt
yesterday to take exercise; s*id she BUM
going to walk up a long hill."
"And did she?"
> "No; she got into the dry geedfc <B*>
Irlct and ran up a long bill Instead
Von can easily see that 1 am the om ^
who. was excrclacd." ? Tenses .Ofity
journal.
O
\ ."I ? Si .*
tvi i ojbioS aBPWQA