The Imprint of a Thumb
Which Caused the Confession of a Thief and Puzzled a Detective
A Strange Story of the Pennsylvania Oil Region -- An Occurrence Hard to Account For
Since the organization of the society for Psychical Research, in London, England, and similar associations in America, more attention is being paid than in many years to occurrences which were formerly classed as mere coincidences unworthy of more than a passing notice. Thoughtful people are trying to explain upon scientific theories which but a few years ago were dismissed with the remark that they were “very singular,” or that they were “those things which no one can account for.” The phenomena of thought transference which have resulted from numerous carefully conducted experiments have done more, perhaps, to arouse interest in matters of this sort than any other known cause. This thought, says the St. Louis Republican, was suggested by a conversation which occurred Tuesday in the office of Mr. Thomas Furlong. Mr. Furlong related the following incident, which has at least one peculiar feature.
“It was in 1870, I think,” said he, “that an event occurred which was one of the first things that made me think that perhaps I would make a detective, and yet, as you will see, I was entitled to no credit in the transaction, for it was a mere ‘scratch.’ I had just been appointed chief of police of Oil City, Pa. I am not quite certain about the year, but it was somewhere between 1868 and 1870. There was a farm known as the ‘Blood farm,’ situated on the bank of Oil creek, about five miles from Oil City, and it was one of the finest and most productive farms in the oil country between 1864 and 1868. It had a number of fine… Read More