I am currently reading a book of short stories by Wordsworth Press called 'Vintage Mystery Detective stories' [ed David Stuart Davies.
In it I find a story by Earl van Der Biggers.No, not a Charlie Chan.
The story is 'the Dollar Chasers' and likely was originally published in a volume called
Earl Derr Biggers Tells Ten Stories (short stories, 1933)
Earl Der Biggers ,The Dollar Chasers
From this story I quote:-
'Gentlemen,' said Jim Bachelor softly, ' there it is. The first dollar I ever earned. I was a kid of eleven at the time.'
It was my first lesson in how hard money comes. On the first Saturday night I got my pay, this dollar, and I walked home with my father past shop windows that were one long temptation. 'What are you going to spend it for Jim? my father asked. I'm not going to spend it, I told him. I'm going to keep it always. And I have. For thirty-seven years its been my lucky piece and its made good on the job. I've felt it in my pocket at the big moments of my life, and it's given me confidence and courage. A little silver dollar coined in 1884.
And the story? Somebody steals the silver dollar, Jim Bachelor [millionaire] feels unlucky in business, and all sorts of things happen until it is recovered.
Earl Derr Biggers Tells Ten Stories was published in 1933.
As a lifelong Barks fan, seems impossible for me to to believe that this story didn't inspire Barks and added to his Uncle Scrooge characterization.
Cheers!