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01
Wm. Mulhbrin’s Sons & Co.,
84G Broad Street, AUGUSTA, GA.
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HE
MARKED CARDS Is
Ey CLINTON ROSS.
[Copyright, 1000, by Clinton It 039.]
“A nan’spast will catch him sooner or later.
They had been five days ov
ivas trivia.? him nothing of herself in
eturn. They were seated now, look
ing mil at the frothing white and green
in tin* ship's wake. She was glancing
at him again and again with mild, in
terested eyes. He was forgetting him
self and was telling how his father
er the ! left him only money enough for school
sea, the young man and the girl. He
had forgotten whether this were the
Atlantic or the sea that sweeps the
shore of Elysium. Now, on the fifth
day, they were on deck and talking
somewhat in this way:
“You must walk with me,” she-called
from her chair.
“It's a delightful punishment.”
“Thanks! I believe that's a compli
ment.”
“Truth’s a compliment, eh?” he said,
smiling.
“The best compliments, I suppose,
are those that pretend to be truths, hut
are lies.”
“I am afraid this is getting rather
too fast for me,” he said. “Wait until
I think about it.”
“To carry out what you have begun
you should say to mo, ‘I can’t think j
about it, for 1 have to think about
you.’ ”
“Is it needful to say that?” he said,
looking down at the girl. "How beau
tiful yon are!”
By the rules of conventional conver
sation it was an utterly inane remark,
and the girl's laughter roiled out, full
and delightful, but her voice was low.
“I am glad you think so.”
A deeper red tinged his bronzed
cheeks as he realized his temerity.
“You know I do,” he said.
“Oh, do you? This is the fifth day of
our acquaintance. Today we shall be
at Sandy Ilook.”
He drew a long breath, and his voice
■was earnest. New York and work aud
to see her no more!
Two elderly persons wrapped to then-
ears wore watching the two.
“What a remarkable girl Nell Wol- ,
verton is!” one, gray and rosy aud fat
and imposing, was saying.
“She’s certainly carrying on a re
markable flirtation with that young
man. Who is he?” said the other, with
the severity of position gained by ef
fort.
“Some sort of engineer in the employ
of the Winfield company. Mary Win
field introduced him to Nell.”
“That girl would flirt with anybody.
She seems to find all men infinitely
amusing. Isn’t she handsome? Now
you would suppose she was somebody
or other. But the Wolvertons—oh, you
know!” quoth the other lady.
“Her rnotber was one of the most j
pushing women I ever knew,” assented !
her companion.
“Of the dead, nihil nisi bonum,” said J
the imposing one. “She was an ex- j
traordinarily ambitious woman. With i
pluck and ten millions and a daughter
like that, an ambitious, clever woman
can do anything in New York. The
Wol verton money is said to be indefi
nite millions instead. And now they be
long in Far Westchester. Oh, dear, how
many men have been after that girl!
There were the Marquis di Rodiri aud
the little Duke-of Sussex and Freddy
Van Brule and—she flirts and laughs
at ’em all, just as she does with that
young man.”
Mary Winfield was watching the two
with much the same thoughts. This
poor young mau didn’t understand so
phisticated young women. It was
abominable of Nell Wolverton; she was
sorry she had introduced them; she
might have known that Nell would
play with any man as she would with
a cat or a dog. Oh. dear, this Melville
was so out of it: so busy and capable
and such an efficient servant of the
Winfield company. But Nell was Nell,
and Mary ought to have known better.
If Nell were Nell, she was proving it
with a vengeance. She was making
Melville tell her of himself, and she
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and college, which he had increased
by some tutoring; of how- be had work
ed and won a position in a machine
shop of the Winfield company; of how
he had progressed further and now
“How beautiful you arc'."
was near the head of his department
and had been sent to London on an im
portant mission and—
A young mau came lightly across the
deck and bowed and exchanged some
remarks with Miss Wolverton aud nod
ded at Melville with a “who the devil
are you?” air aud passed on after a
moment. Melville’s confidences sud
denly chilled. This youngster repre
sented what he never had known. Tlie
girl by his side understood.
“Don’t mind Bertie: he’s just Bertie.”
“Oh, you know,” Melville began, “I’m
so out of flirt set.”
“It’s the Far Westchester set you
mean,” she said graciously, as If she
would imply politely that there were
many others which he doubtless fre
quented. “The men are very stupid in
it. It’s all very stupid. It's just sport
and gossip. For my part, give me men
that do things.”
“I think.” said the young man mak
ing his way, “that I prefer other men
to do things and leave ’em to mo al
ready done. Now. my father”—
He paused, wondering whether he
had better tell her, and then it seemed
to him, now that he remembered it,
that this put him on a sort of equality
with Miss Wolverton, as though the in
equality that stood between them was
suddenly swept away by the thought
of this story. But had he a right to
“I never can think of you as a man
like Bertie.” Miss Wolverton said de
cisively, with that calm confidence in
her eyes. The eyes may ha\e been
rather more expressive because this
^ ; was the last day of all aud he would
s ijp ou t of her life so soon. She was
fair to look upon, clever, accomplished,
cnarming. This fence of the sexes
was her delight. She could uo more
avoid it than she could breathing. Our
unsophisticated young man failed to
understand her. Later common sense
was to reach out from the grim, matter
of fact depths of his nature and grasp
his sentimentality until it hurt him.
“Oh. it’s a little story of what might
have been years ago in Red Nugget
gulch, California. My father was out
there after gold, like the rest, and he
fell in with a man with whom be made
a partnership in a general store. Some
times in exchange for goods they took
claims. At first they made a lot of
money, aud then they lost nearly every
penny in trying to develop a claim that
failed. Well, each blamed the other,
and they decided to separate. They
could decide on no other way than to
cut the cards. So they sat down one
day aud cut, and some things fell to
my father aud some to his partner.
And the papers were drawn up and the
division made. A week after that a
claim which had gone to my father’s
partner began to develop. It proved a
find. My father’s partner made the
beginning of a great fortune that
way.”
“Well?” said the girl.
“Now, the shanty that served for the
store had fallen to my father, not the
stock, which went to pay the firm’s
debts. Three weeks after this my fa
ther sat talking with a mining expert,
who spoke of the big find on my fa
ther’s former partner’s lucky claim,
and lie stated boastfully, to show his
value as an expert probably, that he
had told my father’s partner—we will
call him Smith—that the claim was ex
tremely valuable. This set my father
to thinking. Smith believed the claim
to be valuable. But my father could
hut acknowledge that the man had giv
en him a chance, even if he had dishon
estly hidden his notion of the claim.
That day my father happened in the
abandoned store. On the table were
the two packs of dirty cards just as
they had been left the day of the divi
sion. They had cut in the bare inner
room, which hadn’t been disturbed
since. My father picked up these in
struments of his bad luck, aud he saw
that the pack Smith had used had been
marked.”
“How awful!” the listener said. “And
you might have had money if it hadn't
been”—
“If it hadn’t been for Smith’s dis
honesty, yes. Miss Wolverton. But to
return to the - story. My father went to
Smith, whom lie accused, but Smith
looked him in the face and laughed:
You are crazy, man. And you haven’t
any proof. Wbo’d believe you?’”
“Was that the end of it?” the girl
asked gently.
“No; not the end of it. My father
could prove nothing indeed. His affairs
went from had to worse. He left Cali
fornia penniless. Later in 3he east he
accumulated the little money he was
able to leave me. But it was always a
hard struggle for him and my mother,
-who died shortly after I was born.”
“And Smith? That’s not the name.”
Melville hesitated.
“No: that’s not the name. It's a well
known name, but we will let it remain
Smith. Everything Smith touched be
came money. lie was accused of dis
honesty many times in the course of
his career, hut not' >rr ever was prov
en. He succeeded aud is today one of
fhe powerful men of the country.”
They were silent, the girl grave.
“And that’s the reason you think you
are not in the class of Bertie Townley.
Well. I don't want you to be in that
class.”
“If you would care that much,” said
he half lightly, half earnestly.
“Oh. I like you.” she said cheerily, as
she might have said siie liked a fox ter
rier.
“And the man’s dishonesty was real
ly your biessiug. It made you do things.
Oh, I know. I know a lot. of men, and
the men of the Far Westchester set are
so tiresome.”
“Oh, thanks,” said he lamely.
“But you mustn’t be tiresome. Do
you see that line there? That's Sandy
Hook. I know it. I have seen it that
way a dozen times. And—I must be
going below. Oh, I have been so much
interested.”
And she went away brightly smiling,
and he felt suddenly the least like a
fool. The feeling was increased when
lie found in the bustle of landing that
she had only a cool hand and a distant
“So glad to have met you” and no ac-
g—WBSStBBBE
Jf, y Mi. v?-
“What did you say that man's name is?”
he asked.
tell her? No: she wouldn’t, couldn't
know; that was so long ago and for
gotten.
“And your father? Go on; I am in
terested.”
“He might have had the things, the
money, to have put me in your friend
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Every woman in tlie country
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Those who do know about it
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ATLANTA, GA.
kuowioclgment of the fact that he nau
asked to call, which she plainly had
evaded. He felt revengeful and a bit
of an anarchist. And the next morning
when he was reporting to Mr. Y> infield
his success in London and being com
plimented by the company's head his
success seemed cheap. He had a pic
ture before him of a bright, high bred
looking, exquisitely gowned young wo
man surrounded by flippantly gay per
sons whose world was not His and nev
er could be. for when one is making ids
way ploddingly, with 110 particular
capital, he can’t reasonably expect that
way to be made before be may be gray
and all the desire,for pleasure, life's
good things, quite gone.
It may be supposed that Miss Yv’ol-
vertou put the young mau of the At
lantic- out of her mind. Perhaps she
had some thoughts of him or else she
never would have repeated the story he
had told her at a dinner where her fa
ther was most unusually her escort.
At a dinner one owes it as a duty to do
his part. Nell did not care to be lack
ing and wanted her bonnet to be as
natty as another’s and her story as
spirited. For she waged a little strife
to make the world she knew hold her
clever. Now she couldn’t, try as she
would, think of another story than the
one Melville had tclcl her.
“Mary Winfield introduced me to a
very entertaining man on the Lucania.
a man who does things, you knew”—
“What does he do. horses or yachts?”
said Bertie Townley. “Oh, I say, Nell,
yon dou't mean that serious faced chap
you were mooning about with so
much?”
“The very man,” Miss Wolverton
said without turning color.
And she toid Melville’s story.
“How extraordinary!” gasped Mrs.
Pemberton. “You do meet such strauge
people at sea.”
“Business methods are oftentimes
dishonest,” said Judge Torbid pom
pously. “Yet”—
“Your story isn’t funny enough,”
criticised Bertie Townley.
Samuel Wolverton—I should say
“Sam,” the great Sam—held Iris nose
in his port. He’s a thin, sharp featured,
silent man. and looking at him ono al
ways wonders how he succeeded in
possessing such a daughter.
Driving home he said to Nell:
“If 1 were you, 1 don't think I'd try
to tell stories at dinner.”
“Why, papa?”
“It’s undignified.”
“Do you think so?” she said petulant
ly. She usually had him well in hand.
“What did you say that man's name
Is?” he asked after a moment.
“Burke Melville.”
Suddenly she turned.
“rapa. you were in California?”
“Yes. What of it?”
“Did you ever hear a story like
that?”
“I have heard a lot of stories. Cali
fornia is full of ’em. Read Bret Harte.
As for your acquaintance, he was prob
ably yarning.”
“No, no; be wasn’t.”
“What makes you think that?”
“He isn't that kind of a man.”
“Nell. I think that you can take care
of yourself, but I don’t believe yon can
judge men.”
“Oh. trust me for that,” she said airily,
and at the moment she was indeed try
ing to judge uo less a person than her
father. She had thought that she un
derstood him. Had she? He was fond
of her. lie denied her nothing, and she
loved him. But—there were depths she
could not fathom, and she knew uo,
more of his real life, even less, than an
outsider.
But now a sudden fear possessed her.
She rushed up stairs to a little room
which she used for her writing table
and her hooks, and eagerly she looked
for a paper in a certain English maga
zine. “American Millionaires, No. X,
Samuel Wolverton.” Had she been
mistaken? And then she read: “The
beginning of this extraordinary • for
tune was in ’GO in Red gulch, Califor
nia. Melville and Wolverton were
storekeepers who exchanged a sup
posedly bad debt for the now famed
Bullfinch mine. Wolverton bought out
his partner.”
For a minute the room seemed to
swim.
“Oh, if mamma were only here!” the
girl said meaningly.
“It’s true—true. This Is all his and
not mine, every penny of it. And # he
knew when he told me. He knew.”
And she stole down to her father.
Siie went toward him. the magazine
in hand and held it before him. Wol
verton started. He had never seen her
like this, and her pallor frightened
him. And then he saw to what she
pointed.
“Was the story he told me true?”
“What if it were?”
“What if it were?” she said mocking
ly. “You can't understand ‘what if it
were.’ ”
But the father said quietly, with a
mastery of himself.
“If it were true, that Melville
couldn't have succeeded. He hadn’t it
in him. He would have failed at any
thing. I cut loose from him.”
“But you haven’t told me whether,
the story is true.”
“I won't acknowledge or deny it.” h
‘•aid at last. “What of it? You oug’
not to find fault. My money has made
you a,position as tine as any o' ’em.”
“Good night.” said the girl.
At the door he called to her:
“Nell, you haven’t kissed me good
night.”
“I can't—tonight.”
And she was gone.
“A woman can’t uuderstifad busi
ness. She’ll get over it.”’ But he failed
to sleep well that night. She was not
at breakfast. He went to her room.
She was sleeping with a look that
frightened him. Oil his way down
town he stopped at his doctor’s. “I am
troubled with that insomnia.”
“Mr. Wolverton.” said the practi*
tioner, “I have told you again and
again that you must let up on work
and worry.”
“I know, I know,” said the great
man. “By the way. I wish you would
see Nell. I am worried about her.”
He kept himself busied down town
until about 3 and then drove through
the park in the parade, a tired faced
man people pointed out.
As he entered the house he heard
Nell’s voice. He paused in the hall and
listened.
“I am glad to see you, Mr. Melville,”
she was saving. *—•
“I had your note and came here
promptly, I think.”
“Yes: promptly.”
“I have passed you several times,
but I don’t believe yon saw me.” Mel
ville said rather bitterly.
He was thinking how charming she
appeared here in her own house. He
was blaming himself for all that he
had thought of her. when her world, of
which he had that brief glimpse, had
been shut out.
“I sent for you.” Neil went on, “to
ask you why you tohl me that story
when—when 3011 knew that your fa
thers partner then—was—my father.”
The listener started and moved to
ward the door and drew back.
At last he heard:
“Miss Wolverton—yes, it was so, it is
so. and 1 was a coward to tell you.”
“I am glad you toid me,” Nell said
humbly, for this was uo longer the
proud Miss Wolverton. She wondered
at herself, tears were in her eyes, and
self control was far away.
“I don’t know what made me tell
you. and yet I do know. I have lied. I
do know now. You seemed so far out
of my reach, and I wanted you to be in
my reach. Do you understand?”
know that I understand,” the
“I can’t seem to under-
Oh, you are crying. 1 have
I wouldn’t hurt you for the
“I don’t
girl said,
stand.”
“Ami-
hurt you.
world.”
“Don’t.” she said. “Please don’t.”
But !;e was saying:
“I know the reason now. It was—
dou't you see—didn’t you see?”
After a moment the listener heard
Nell’s voice:
“It’s best so. If you do, it rights it
self. And—I see it clearly. I know
now why I didn’t want you to be of
Bertie Townley’s class. You are a
man who does things—and will—a man
for a woman to be proud of, and—yes
“ You hold the marked cards.”
—it’s all clear to me—I thought I was
just flirting with you. But since that
night 1 know it was more.”
Presently the portiere was pushed
aside.
Wolverton was possessed of a certain
grim humor, and instinct for the man
agement of the quick crisis was the
measure of his success iu affairs.
“I am Samuel Wolverton, and you
are Burke Melville,” he said. “I lis
tened to your conversation. I won’t
apologize. I am glad I did it. It seems
to me. Mr. Melville, that your father’s
son has it back at me now. It seems
to me that you hold the marked cards.”
He stopped and looked at the two and
then went on: “Mr. Melville, what’s it
the ministers say? 1 am not much at
going to church. But don’t tliey say
that when a man has wronged another
the best amends he can make is con
fession of his fault?”
But although a moment*after the
young man extended his hand Wolver
ton was conscious that his daughter,
whom lie held his dearest possession,
never would be tbe same to him, that
distrust lay between them, that at the
height of his success Melville’s son had
turned the marked cards against him.
Again 5n Operation.
Bristol, Tenn., Dec. II.—After be-
g idle many months, .the iron furnace
is again iu operation. The fires were
kindled yesterday and it is said the fur
nace will remain permanently iu opera
tion. The furnace is owned by the Vir
ginia Iron, Goal and Coke company. It
is expected that the establishment of
kindred iron working enterprises will
soon follow.
Conductors Leave For Havana.
Miami, Fla., Dec. 10.—The Conduc
tors’ Assurance association, numbering
420, including several ladies, spent yes
terday here. They left for Tampa to
night whence they go to Key West and
Havana where they spend throe days,
returning to Tampa aud thence home
via the Plant system.
Robbed In a Sleeping Car.
Jacksonville, Fla., Dec. 10.—J. T.
Blanford of New Y'ork reports that he
was robbed of 44,000 shares of stock iu
the Rio Honda Copper company of New
Mexico, while on liis way south, he al
leging that the certificates were taken
from his grip in a sleeping car.
to
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321 Broad St., Augusta, Georgin.
Bo’l Phone, 520.
FURNITUS
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We have the larg—
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FLEMING BOWLES,
‘J04 Brtw.i Street. AUGUSTA. GA
Good People of the Town and County
Where have you been buy-
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all these years—your Or-
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the greatest, until to-day jve have the. largest floor space
occupied with the most desirable goods at the most reasonable
prices ever offered to the public in the Southland.
* China Closets, Book
^ases, (iixlrooes, Coni =
bination Cases,Lounges,
Bedroom Suites, Parlor
Suites, Dining Room
Suites, Enameled and
Brass Beds, Tables and
Chairs of ail kinds.
Sideboards, Mali
Racks, Cocoa, Cotton
Jute, China and Japa=
nese Mattings, Shades,
Stair and Hah Carpets,
and in Rugs and Art
Squares.
!ii
Sideboards in
Golden Oak,
Walnut and
Mahogany.
IT
J tf
China Cases in
GoiJen Oak, Walnut
-nil Mahogany.
to
We go north aud abroad
designs, assortment of makes and low
you visit Augusta then we’ll shew
Church and School Organs always at
THOMAS &
for
uric
variety of
. When
.(
he convincing P r0Oi '
pccial cut prices.
bAKi'UIN
AUGUSTA. GA.
CO*
Agents for
Southern
Proof Safes.
fiiiis a
Pattern?.
Burglar and
Fire