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AUGUSTA’S FINEST
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ticular buyers of Augusta and vicinity.
IS
A most elaborate stock ot Fall Shoes
now on sale. Visit here when in need
footwear.
Wm. Muliieiun's Sons & Co,,
846 Broad Street, AUGUSTA, GA.
IS
of
m
m
m
m
m
m
S3
suX
mi
ie 'kmm Jewels
Is the title of a
lid
I will do a
ally I
Charles at last in despair,
i solo, or I will keen rilonc
I am unequal to a duet.”
“Sir George,” said Marstoa, “will you
have the goodness to desire Col. Middle-
ton to be silent or to leave the room un
til Charles lias finished hi3 story?”
I was justly annoyed at Marston’s
manner of speaking of me, but as I had
no intention to leave the room and miss
what was going on I merely bowed in
answer to a civil request from Sir George
and took up an attitude of dignified si
lence I felt that I had don9 my part in
vindicating my friend, and after all no
one evidently was accustomed to believe
what Charles said.
“As I was saying,” ho continued, “I
suspected Carr from the first. I did not
like the look of him, an d I purposely
pumped Middleton about him last night
at supper.”
I nearly burst out at the bare idea of
Charles daring to say ho had pumped
me; but, as will bo seen, lie could twist
anything that was said to such an extent
that it was perfectly useless to contra
dict him any longer. I said not a single
| word and ha went on
“All Middleton told mo confirmed me
in my suspicions. Sir John had been
murdered the night before Middleton
sailed for England, a whisper of the
jewels having no doubt gons abroad.
! Carr came on board next day and made
friends with Middleton. Whether lie
had anything to do with the murder or
not God knows! but he found out—nay,
Middleton openly told him that ho had
i jewels of grea^ value in his possession,
■ which ho earned about on bis person.
! Carr was the only person aware of
; that fact. What follows? Carr lias Mid-
; dleton's address in London. Middleton
j goes to the house and finds that his sis-
j ter has moved to the next street. That
i house to which he first went is broken
Thrilling Serial Story
“1 was coming upstairs,” said Charles,
haughtily.
“From the library?” asked Sir George.
Charles bit his lip and remained silent.
I would not have spoken to him for a
good deal at that moment. He looked
positively dangerous.
“From the library, of course,” he said
at last, controlling himself and speaking
with something o. his old careless man
ner, “laden with the spoils of my mid
night depredations. Parental fondness
will supply all minor details, no doubt;
so, as the subject is a delicate one for
me, I will withdraw that it may be dis
cussed more fully in my absence.”
“Stop, Charles!” said Marston; “the
case is too serious for banter of this
kind. My dear boy,” he added, kindly.
“I am glad to see you angry, but never
theless you must condescend to explain.
The longer you allow suspicion to rest on
yourself the longer it will be before it
falls on the right person. Come, what
were you doing in the passage at that
time of night?”
Charles was touched, I could see. A
very little kindness was too much for
him.
“It is no good, Marston,” he said, in
quite a different voice; “I am not be
lieved in this house.”
He turned away and leant against the
mantel piece, looking into the fire.
Ralph cleared his throat once or twice,
and then suddenly went up to him, and
laid Ins hand affectionately on his
shoulder.
“Fire away, old hoy,” he said, in a
constrained tone, and he choked again.
Charles turned round and faced his
brother with the saddest smile I ever
saw.
“Well, Ralph,” said he, “I will tell you i into and the poor woman in it is
everything, and then you can believe me j murdered or dies of fright that same
or not, as you like. I have never told j night. I mention this as coincidence
you a lie, have I?” ■ number one. The following evening
“Not often,” replied Ralph, unwill- i Middleton, having by chance left the
jewels at home, dines and goes to the
ingly.
“You at least are truth itself,” said
Charles, reddening; “aud if you are bi
ased in your opinion of me, perhaps it is
more the fault of that exemplary Chris
tian, Aunt Mary, than your own. Ac
cording to her I have told lies enough to
float a company or carry an election,
and I never like to disappoint her expec
tations of me in that respect; hut you I
have never, to my knowledge, deceived,
and I am not going to begin now.”
“You will be a clergyman yet,” whis
pered the sick parent. “There is a good
living in the family, Charles. I shall
live to see the Rev. Charles Danvers in
a surplice, preaching his first sermon on
the Ninth commandment.”
“At any rate he is practicing the fifth
under difficulties at this moment,” said
Marston, as Charles winced and turned
his back on the parental sick bed.
“Come, my boy, we are losing time.”
“Will somebody have the goodness to
restrain Middleton if he gets excited?”
said Charles. “I am afraid he won’t
like part of what I have got to say.”
“Nonsense, sir!” I replied with warmth.
“I hope I can restrain myself as well as
| theatre by appointment with Carr,
i Unique cab accident occurs, in which
I Middleton is knocked on the head and
1 rendered unconscious. Coincidence num-
! her two. Miss Middleton’s house is
broken into that same night on Middle
ton’s return to it. Coincidence number
three. When I put all this together last
night, remembering that Carr, by Mid
dleton’s own account, was the only per-
| son aware that he had jewels of great
I value in his keeping, I felt absolutely
I certain (as I feel still) that he had ac-
! cepted the invitation and come down
] from London solely for the purpose of
| stealing them. If was pure conjecture on
j my part, and I dared say nothing be-
j yond begging Ralph not to leave the
; jewels in the library—which, however,
' he did. I went straight off to my room
| when the others went to smoke, but 1
| did not go to bed. The more I thought
it over the more certain I felt that Carr
: would not lot slip such an opportunity;
| the more convinced that an attempt
! would be made that very night. I did
j not know that lie was not sleeping in
the house, but I knew Ralph was at the
any man, even under such provocation | lodge, so I could not go and consult with
as I have lately received. You may de
pend on me, ir, that” —
“We lose time,” said Marston, seating
himself by me and cutting short what I
\va3 saying in an exceedingly brusqq#
manner. “Come, Charles, you should
not be interrupted.”
But ho was. 1 interrupted him the
whole time in spito of continual efforts
on the part of Marston to make me keep
silence. I am not the man calmly to let
pass black insinuations against the char
acter of a friend. No;-1 stood up for
him. I am glad to think how I stood up
for him, not only metaphorically, but in
the most literal sense of the term; for I
found myself continually getting up
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him as I should otherwise have done. I
thought of going to Middleton, whose
room was close to mine, but on second
thoughts I gave up the idea. I am glad I
did. At last I determined I would wait
till the house was quiet, and that then I
would go down alone and watch in
the library in the dark. I lay down
on my bed in my clothes to
wait, and then—I had been up
most of the night before with Denis, I
was dead heat with acting and dancing
—by ill luck I fell asleep. When I woke
up I found to my horror that it was close
on 4 o’clock. I instantly slipped off my
shoes and crept out of my room and
down the stairs. I could not get to the
library from the hall, as the stage blocked
the way, and I had to go all the way
round by the drawing room and morning
room. As I went I thought how easy it
would be for Carr to force the lock of
the. drawer, and so it flashed across me
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money refunded it not satis-
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sepl£9am
could I? Oh, Ralph!” said Charles, “I
went down solely to look after your
property for you phut I did think of it.
I hope I should not have done it, but I
suddenly remembered how hard pressed
I was for money, and I did flunk of the
crescent and how you would hardly miss
it and how—but what does it flatter
now? When I got to the library
I found I was too late. Tha lock of the
drawer had been forced and it was emp
ty. There was nothing for it but to go
back to my room. T felt as certain that
Carr had done it as that I am standing
here; hut I dared say’ nothing next j
morning, for fear of drawing an ever
ready parental suspicion on myself—
which, however, Middleton did for me.
All I could do was to keep Carr well in
sight until the theft was found out, to
prevent any possibility of liis escaping,
and then to accuse him. There!” said
Charles, “that is the whole truth. Carr
did not take the jewels. That is abso
lutely proved, and the sooner he Is lei
out the better. Who took them heaven
only kuows! I don't. But I know Who
meant to, and that was Carr.'
“Charles,” said Ralph, with glisten
ing eyes, “if ever I get them back you
shall have the crescent.”
“A very neat little story altogether,”
said Sir George, “and the episode of
temptation very effectively thrown in.
It does you credit, my son, and i3 a great
relief to your old father’s mind.”
“Thank you, Charles,” said Marston,
getting up. “Sir George, it is close on
luncheon time and Carr must be let out
at once. Now that Charles has so com
pletely cleared himself I don’t see that
anything more can be done for, the mo
ment. aud of one thing I am certain,
namely, that you are making yourself
much worse and must keep absolutely
quiet for the rest of the day. If I may
advise, i should suggest that Carr should
be allowed to leave, as he wishes to do,
by the afternoon train, and should not
he pressed to stay. There is nothing
more to b& got out of him, and consider
ing the circumstances I should say the
sooner he is out of the house the better.
As lio lias been wrongly suspected, 1
think the robbery had better not be men
tioned to any one, even the ladies in the
house, until after ho has left.”
“Aurelia knows,” said Ralph. “She
was with me in the library. I left her
crying bitterly about them.”
“Let her cry, if she wilf only hold her
tongue,” said Sir George, making a last
effort to speak, but evidently at the ex
treme point of exhaustion. “And you.
Marston, you are right about Carr. See
that he goes this afternoon. There is
nothing more to he done at present.
Charles, you will remain here, though
I have no doubt you have an engage
ment in London. I cannot spare yon
just yet.”
Charles bowed and lio and Marston
went out. I remained a second behind
with Ralph.
‘ ‘I see it quite clearly,” said Sir George.
“I know Charles. He is sharp enough.
He saw Carr meant mischief, and he was
beforehand with him, and he took what
Carr meant to take. It was not badly
imagined, but he should have made cer
tain Carr was sleeping in the house. It
all turned on that. He never reckoned
on the possibility of Carr being cleared.”
“Middleton is still here,” said Ralph,
significantly, who was pouring out soine-
thiug for his father.
“Is he? I thought he was gone!” said
Sir George, so sharply that I considered
it advisable to retire at once.
Charles and Marston were talking to
gether earnestly in the passage.
“He does not believe a word I say,”
said Charles, as I joined them; “aud
what is more I could see lie had told
Ralph he suspected me before we came
in. Did not you see how Ralph tried to
stop me when he thought I was com
mitting myself by accusing Carr, who
it seems was quite out of the question?
i am glad you cut it short, Marston.
He was making himself worse every
moment.”
“Como on with that key of yours and
let us go and let out Carr,” replied Mars
ton, patting Charles kindly on the back,
“or lie will be kicking all the paint off
the door.”
“Not lie!” said Charles. “An honest
man would have rung up the whole
household and nearly battered the door
down by this time, thinking it had been
locked by mistake, Carr knows better.”
We had reached the smoking room by
this time, just as the gong was beginnin,
to sound for luncheon, and under cover
of the noise Charles fitted the key into
the keyhole and unlocked the door. He
and Marston went slowly in, talking on
some indifferent subject, and I followed.
She v:ns standing up, nervously playing
with her rings.
The room seemed strangely quiet after j
the stormy interview in the sick chain- ;
ber which we liad just left. The pale |
winter sunlight was stealing in aslant i
through the low windows. The fire had
sunk to a deep red glow, and in an arm
chair drawn up in ff out of it, newspaper
in hand, was Carr, evidently fast asleep.
“Oh, my prophetic soul!” whispered
Charles, nudging Marston, and then he
went forward aud shouted, “Luncheon!”
in a voice that would have waked the
dead.
Can - started up and rubbed his eyes.
“Why, I believe yon have been here
ever since I left you here, hours ago,”
said Charles, in a surprised tone, though
really under the circumstances it did not
require a great stretch of the imagina
tion to suppose any such thing.
“Yes,” said Carr, still nabbing his
eyes. “Have you been gone long? I
expect I fell asleep.”
“I rather thought you were inclined
for a nap when I left you,” replied
Charles, airily: “an l now let us go to
luncheon.”
It was a very dismal meal. Lady Mary
did not come down to it, and Aurelia sat
with red eyes, tearful and silent. Ralph
was evidently out of favor, for she hardly
spoke to him, and snubbed him decidedly
when ho humbly tendered a peace offer
ing in the form of a potato. Evelyn, too.
was silent, or made spasmodic attempts
at conversation with Mrs. Marston, the
only unconstrained person of the party.
Evelyn and Aurelia had appeared to
gether, and it was evident from Evelyn’s
expression that Amelia had told her.
What conversation there was turned
upon Sir George's illness.
“We must go by the afternoon train,
my dear,” said Marston down the table
to his wife. “In Sir Georgo’s present
state all visitors are an incubus.”
Can- looked up. “I think I ought to
go too,” ha said. "I wished to arrange
to do so this morning, but Mr. Dan
vers,” glancing at Charles, “would not
hear of it. I am sure when there is ill
ness in a house strangers are always in
the way.
“I have seen my father since then,"
replied Charles, “and I fear his illness i.°
much more serious than I had any idea
of. That being the case, I feel it would
be wrong to press any one, even Middle-
ton, to stay and share the tedium of a
sick house.”
After a few more civil speeches it was
arranged, that Carr should, after all,
leave by the train which he had proposed
in the morning. It was found that there
was still time for him to do so, but that
was all. He was evidently is anxious
to bo off as the Danverses were that he
should go. The dog cart was ordered, a
servant despatched to the lodge in hot
haste to pack liis portmanteau and in
half an hour he was bidding us good-by,
evidently glad to say it. Poor fellow!
He little guessed, as he shook hands
with us. h
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shamefully ho had been
suspected, liow villainously he had been
traduced behind his back.
Somehow or other I had not had a
moment of conversation with him since
the morning, or a single chance of telling
him how I had stood up for him in lxis
absence. Either Charles or Marston
was always at hand, and when he took
leave of me I could only shake his hand
warmly, and tell liim to come and see
me again in town. I watched him spin
ning down the drive in the dog-cart,
iittls thinking how soon I should see
him again, and in what circumstances.
“We shall have more snow,” said
Ralph, coming indoors. “I feel it in
the air.”
General and Mrs, Marston were the
next to leave, starting an hour later and
going in tho opposite direction. I saw
Marston turn aside when his wife was
taking leave of the others and go up to
Charles. The old hand and the young
one met and were locked tight.
“Good-by, my dear boy,” said Mars
ton.
“Don't go,” said Charles, without look
ing up.
“I must,” said Marston. “I am due at
Kcmberley to-night, on business; but,”
in a lower tone, “I shall come back to
morrow, in case I can be of any use.”
They were gone, and I was the only
one remaining. It has occurred to me
since that perhaps they expected me to
go, too. but I never thought of it at the
time. I had been asked for a week, and
to go before the end of it never so much
as entered my head.
There was no chance of going out. The
early winter afternoon was already clos
ing in, and a few flakes of snow were
drifting like feathers in ’a* heavy air,
promising more to come. Every one
seemed to have dispersed—Ralph up
stairs to his father, Charles out of doors
somewhere in spite of the weather. I
remembered that I had not written to
Jane since I left London, and went into
the library to do so.
As I came in I saw Evelyn sitting in a
low chair by the fire, gazing abstracted
ly into it. She started when she saw me,
and on my saying I wished to write some
letters, showed me a writing table near
the fire, with pens, ink and paper.
You will find it very cold at the big
table window,” she said, looliing at it
with its broken drawer, a chink open,
with a visible shudder.
I installed myself near the fire, talk
ing cheerfully the while, for it struck
me she was a little low in her spirits.
She did not make much response, and I
was settling down to my letters when
she suddenly said:
“Col. Middleton!”
“Yes, Miss Derrick.”
“I am afraid I am interrupting your
writing, but”
I looked round. She was standing up.
nervously playing with her rings. “But
—I know I am not supposed to—but I
know what happened last night; Aurelia
told me.”
“It is very sad, isn’t it?” I said. “But
cJaggr up. I dare say we may eat them
back yet.” And I nodded confidentially
| at her. “In the meantime, yon know,
you must not talk of it to any one.”
“Do you suspect any one in particu
lar?” she asked‘very earnestly, coining a
step nearer.
I hardly knew what to say. Carr, I
need hardly mention, I had never sus
pected for a moment; but Charles—Mars
ton had evidently believed what Charles
had said, but I am by nature more cau
tious and less credulous than Marston.
Besides I had not forgiven Charles yet
for fining to incriminate Carr. Not
knowing what. to say I shrugged my
shoulders and smiled.
“You do suspect some one then?”
“My dear young lady,” I replied
: “when jewels are stolen one naturally
suspects some one has taken them.”
“So I should imagine. Whom do yon
naturally suspect?”
I could not tell her that I more than
! suspected Charles.
“I know nothing for certain,” I said.
“But you have a suspicion?”
“I have a suspicion.”
“She went to the door to see if it were
shut, and then came back, and said in
whisper—
“So have I.”
“Perhaps we suspect the same person?
I said.
She did not answer, but fixed her dar
eyes keenly on mine. I had never no-
j ticed before how dark they were.
I saw then that she knew, and that she
suspected Charles, just as Sir George had
done.
I nodded.
“Nothing is proved,” I said.
“I dared not say even as much as this
before,” she continued hurriedly. “It is
only the wildest, vaguest suspicion,
have nothing to take hold of. It is
horrible to suspect any one; but”
She stopped suddenly. Her quick ear
had caught the sound of a distant stej
coming across the hall. In another mo
ment Aurelia came in.
“Are .you there, Evelyn?” she said,
was looking for you, to ask where the
time table is. I want to look out my
journey for tomorrow. Ralph ought to
do it, but lie is upstairs,” with a little
pout.
“You ought not to have quarreled with
him until lie had made it ont for you,”
said Evelyn, smiling. ‘ ‘It is a very cross
journey, isn't it? Let me see. You are
going to your uncle in Dublin, are not
you? You had better go to London and
start from there. It will be the shortest
way in tho end.”
[TO be continued.]
Injunction Dissolved.
Savannah, Oct. 30.—The temporary
injunction in the case of Mrs. Anne
Champion against her son, Charles C,
Champion, was dissolved. Mrs. Cham
pion, the widow of the late Francis J.
Champion, who left quite a large estate,
had charged her sou with mismanage
ment of the property aud asked for the
appointment of a reoeiver.
Heavy Damage Suit Filed.
Louisville, Ga., Oct. 27. — W. H
Kelley of Wrens has filed suit against
the Wrens Milling company for §11,400.
Petitioner alleges that his son received
injuries at the hands of the defendant’s
company which will cripple him for life,
and asks damages for the above named
sum.
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THE CENTAUR COW PAN Y, NEW YORK CITY.
Machinery.
GET OUR PRICES BEFORE BUYING
cotton
GINS.
COTTON
PRESSES*
SEED
0TT0N
ELEVATORS
ENGINES,
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anything in Mill Machinery or Mill upplv Lino.
Wo operate Machine hop? anl Foundry,
Mallary Bros., Machinery Company,
MACON, GKA..
Mention this pape- mavl 9,1900
Hood People of the Town and County
GOOD SEWING
MACHINES $5, $10,
$15, and $20 EACH.
Where have you been buy
ing your Sewing Machines,
all these years—your Or
gans, your Pianos,
Yoar Musical Instruments
* OF ALL KINDS,
Your Baby Carriages, Go
Carts and Bicycles ?
Organs for U-rlor,
Church and Schools.
We presume you bought them from us, for there is not
a house nor a hamlet within a hundred and more miles of
Augusta, the occupant of which has not at some time traded
with us. The people by their patronage have helped us to
increase our business from small beginnings, until to-day
we occupy the largest and best stocked warerooms in the
whole South, and on our part, we have given our utmost en
deavors to please and satisfy everybody with the best value
for their money.
We have been urged of late years, time and time again,
To add furniture and house-furnishings by our thousands
of friends, to the end that they might procure them at
reasonable prices. Of all our triumph Furniture has been
the greatest, until to-day we have the largest floor space
occupied with the most desirable goods at the most reasonable
prices ever offered to the public in the Southland.
Sideboards in
Golden Oak,
Walnut and
Mahogany.
China Closets, Book
Cases, Wardrobes, Com=
bination Cases.Lounges,
Bedroom Suites, Parlor
Suites, Dining Room
Suites, Enameled and
Brass Beds, Tables and
Chairs of all kinds.
Sideboards, Mail
Racks, Cocoa, Cotton
Jute, China and Japa=
nese Mattings, Shades,
Stair and Hall Carpets,
and in Rugs and Art
Squares.
China Cases in
Golden Oak, Walnut
and Mahogany.
We go north and abroad to challenge for variety ot
designs, assortment of makes and lowness of price. When
# # _ . . £
you visit Augusta then we’ll show the convincing prooi.
Church and School Organs always at special cut prices.
THOMAS & BARTON CO.
AUGUSTA, GA.
Agents for Standard Fashion Patterns.
Southern Agents for Hall’s Burglar and Fire
Proof Safes.