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IN LUCK AT LAST.
Bl’ WAITER BESANT.
CHAPTER IV.
THE WOLE AT HOME.
There is a certain music hall, in a certain
street, leading out of a certain road, and
this is quite clear and definite enough. Its
distinctive characteristics, above any of its
fellows, is a vulgarity so profound that the
connoisseur or student in that branch of
mental culture thinks that here at last he
has reached the lowest depths. For this
reason one shrinks from actually naming it,
because it might become fashionable, twid
then, if it fondly tried to change its charac
ter to suit its changed audieifce, it might
entirely lose its present charm and become
simply commonplace.
Joe Gallop stood in the doorway of this
hall a few days after the tempting of Mr.
James. It was about ten o’clock, when the
entertainments were in full blast. He had
a cigarette between his lips, as becomes a
young man of fashion, but it had gone out,
and he was thinking of something. To
judge from the cunning look in his eyes it
was something not immediately connected
with the good of his fellow creatures. Pres
ently the music of the orchestra ceased, and
certain female acrobats, who had been
’"contorting” themselves fearfully and hor
ribly for a quarter of an hour upon the
stage, kissed their hands, which were as
hard as ropes, from the nature of their pro
fession, and smiled a fond farewell. There
was some applause, but not much, because
neither man nor woman cares greatly for
female acrobats, and the performers them
selves are with difficulty persuaded to learn
their art, and generally make haste to “go
in” again as soon as they can, and try
henceforward to forget that they have ever
done things with ropes and bars.
Joe, when they left the stage, ceased his
meditations, whatever may have been their
subject, lit a fresh cigarette, and assumed
an air of great expectation, as if something
really worth seeing and hearing were now
about to appear. And when the chairman
brought down the hammer with the an
nouncement that Miss Carlotta Claradine,
the people’s favorite, would now oblige, it
was Joe who loudly Jed the way for a tumul
tuous burst of applause. Then the band,
which at this establishment, and others like
unto it, only plays two tunes, one for acro
bats and one for singers, struck up the
second air, and the people’s favorite ap
peared. She may have had by nature a
sweet and tuneful voice; perhaps it was in
order to please her friends, the people, that
she converted it into a harsh and rasping
voice, that she delivered her words with
even too much gesture, and that she uttered
a kind of shriek at the beginning of every
verse, which was not in the composer’s orig
inal music, but was thrown in to compel at
tention; She was dressed with great sim
plicity, in plain frock, apron and white cap,
to represent a fair young Quakeress, and
she sang a song about her lover with much
“archness” —a delightful quality in woman.
“Splendid, splendid! Bravo!” shouted
Joseph at the end of the first verse. “That
fetches ’em, don’t it. sir? Positively drags
’em in, sir.”
“Splendid! Bravo!" shouted Joseph. “That
fetches ’em, don’t it, sir?"
He addressed his worus, without turning
his head, to a man who had just come in,
and was gazing at him with unbounded
astonishment.
"‘You here, Joe?” he said.
Joe started.
“Why, Chalker, who’d have thought to
meet you in this music-hall?”
“It’s a good step, isn’t it? And what are
you doing, Joe? I heard you’d left the P. and
O. Company.”
“Had to,” said Joe. “A gentleman has
no choice but to resign. Ought never to
have gone there. There’s no position,
Chalker —no position at all in the service.
That is what I felt. Besides, the uniform,
for a man of my style, is unbecoming. And
the Captain was a Cad.”
“Humph! and what are you doing then?
Living on the old man again?”
“Never you mind, David Chalker,” re
plied Joe with dignity; “I am not likely to
trouble you any more after the last time I
called upon you.”
“Well, Joe,” said the other, without tak
, ing offence, “it is not ray business to lend
money without security, and all you had to
offer was your chance of what your grand
father might leave you—or might not.”
“And a very good security, too, if he does
justice to his relatives. ”
“Yes; but how did I know whether he
was going to do justice? Come, Joe, don’t
be shirty with an old friend.”
There was a cordiality in the solicitor’s
manner which boded well. Joe was pretty
. certain that Mr. Chalker was not a man to
I cultivate friendship unless something was
to be got out of it. It is only the idle and
careless who can waste time over unprofit
able friendships. With most men friend
ship means assisting in each other’s little
games, so that every man must become, on
occasion, bonnet, confederate and pal, for
his friend, and may expect the same kindly
office for himself.
If Chalker wished to keep up his old ac
quaintance with Joe Gallop there must be
some good reason. Now the only reason
which suggested itself to Joe at that mo
ment was that Chalker had lately drawn a
new will for the old man, and that he him
self might be in it. Here he was wrong.
The only reason of Mr. Chalker’s friendly
attitude was curiosity to know what Joe
was doing and how he was living.
“Look here, Chalker,” Joe whispered, “you
used to pretend to be a pal. What’s the
good of being a pal if you won’t help a fel
low? You see my grandfather once a week
l or so; you shut the door and have long talks
k with him. If you know what he’s going to
■do with his money, why not tell a fellow?
F Less make a business matter of it."
THE SAVAfrNAH DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1885.
"How much do you know, Joe, and what
is your busines proposal worth?”
“Nothing at all; tliat’s the honest truth—l
know nothing. The old man’s as tight as
wax. But there’s other business in the world
besides his. Suppose I know of something
a precious sight better than his investments,
and suppose—just suppose—that I wanted a
lawyer to manage it for me.”
“Well, Joe?”
“Encore! Bravo! Encore! Bravo!” Joe
banged his stick on the floor and shouted be
cause the singer ended her first song. He
looked so fierce and big that all the by
standers made haste to follow his example.
“Splendid, isn’t she?” he said.
“Hang the singer! What do you mean by
other busin ?ss?”
“Perhaps it’s nothing. Perhaps there will
be thousands in it. And perhaps 1 can get
along without you, after all."
“Very well, Joe. Get on without me if
you like.”
“Look here, Chalker,” Joe laid a persua
sive hand on the other’s arm, “can’t we two
be friendly? Why don’t you give a fellow a
lift? All I want to know is where the old
man’s put his money, and how he’s left it.”
“Suppose I do know,” Mr. Chalker re
plied, wishing ardently that he did, “do you
think lam going to betray trust—a solicitor
betray trust—and for nothing? But if you
want to talk real business, Joe, come to my
office. You know where that is.”
Joe knew very well; in fact, there had
been more than one difficulty which had
been adjusted through Mr. Chalker’s not
wholly disinterested aid.
Then the singer appeared again attired in
a new and startling dress, and Joe began
once more to applaud again with voice and
stick. Mr. Chalker, surprised at this newly
developed enthusiasm for art, left him and
walked up the hall and sat down beside the
chairman, whom he seemed to know. In
fact the chairman was also the proprietor of
the show, and Mr. Chalker was acting for
him in his professional capacity, much as
he had acted for Mr. Emblem.
“Who is your new singer?” he asked.”
“She calls herself Miss Carlotta Claradine.
She’s a woman, let me tell you, Mr. Chalker,
who will get along. Fine figure, plenty of
cheek, loud voice, flings herself about, and
don’t mind a bit when the words are a leetle
strong. That’s the kind of singer the people
like. That’s her husband, at the far end of
the room—the big, good looking chap with
the light moustache and the cigarette in his
mouth.”
“Whew!” Mr. Chalker whistled the low
note which indicates surprise. “That’s her
husband, is it? The husband of Miss Car
lotta Claradine, is it? Oho! oho! Her hus
band! Are you sure he is her husband?"
“Do you know him then?”
“Yes, I know him. What was the real
name of the girl?”
“Charlotte Smithers. This is her first ap
pearance on any stage—and we made up the
name for her when we first put hei‘ on the
posters. I made it myself—out of Chloro
dyne, you know, which is in the advertise
ments. Sounds well, don’t it?—Carlotta
Claradine.”
“Very well, indeed. By Jove! Her hus
band, is he!”
“And, I suppose,” said the Chairman,
“lives on hi? wife’s salary. Bless you, Mr.
Chalker, there’s a whole gang about every
theatre and music hall trying to get hold of
the promising girls. It’s a regular profes
sion. Them as have nothing but their good
looks may do for the mashers, but these
chaps look out for the girls who’Jl bring in
the money. What’s a pretty face to them
compared with the handling of a big salary
every week? That’s the sort Carlotta’s hus
band belongs to.”
"Well, the life will suit him down to the
ground."
“And Jealous with it, if you please. He
comes here every night to applaud and takes
her home himself. Keeps himself sober on
purpose.”
And then the lady appeared again in a
wonderful costume of blue silk and tights,
personating the Lion Masher. It was her
third and last song.
In the applause which followed Mr.
Chalker could discern plainly the stick as
well as the voice of his old friend. And he
thought how beautiful is the love of hus
band unto wife, and he smiled, thinking that
when Joe came next to see him he might
perhaps hear truths which he had thought
unknown, and, for certain reasons, wished
to remain unknown.
Presently he saw the singer pass down the
hall and join her husband, who now, his la
bors ended, was seeking refreshment at the
bar. She was a good looking girl—still only
a girl, and apparently under twenty—
quietly dressed, yet looking anything but
quiet. But that might have been due to her
fringe, which was, so to speak, a prominent
feature in her face. She was tall and well
made, with large features, an ample cheek,
a full eye and a wide mouth. A good na
tured looking girl, and though her mouth
was wide it suggested smiles. The husband
was exchanging a little graceful badinage
with the barmaid when she joined him, and
perhaps this made her look a little cross.
“She’s jealous, too,” said Mr. Chalker, ob
servant; “all the better.” Yet a face which,
on the whole, was prepossessing and good
natured, and betokened a disposition to
make the best of the world.
“How long has she been married ?” Mr.
Chalker asked the proprietor.
‘Only about a month or so.”
“Ah!”
Mr. Chalker proceeded to talk business,
and gave no further hint of any interest in
the newly married pair.
“Now, Joe,” said the singer, with a freez
, ing glance at the barmaid, “are you going
■ to stand here all night ?”
Joe drank off his glass and followed his
wife into the street. They walked side by
side in silence, until they reached their lodg
ings. Then she threw off her hat and jackef
. and sat down on the horsehair sofa and said
abruptly:
“I can’t do it, Joe; and I won’t. So don't
ask me.”
i “Wait a bit—wait a bit, Lotty, my love.
I Don’t be in a hurry, now. Don’t say rasb
i things, there’s a good girl.” Joe spone quite
■ softly, as if he were not the least angf-y, but
perhaps a little hurt “There’s not a bit of
a hurry. You needn’t decide to-clay, nor
yet to-morrow.”
“I couldn’t do it," she said. “Oid, it’s a
dreadful, wicked thing even to ask me.
And only five weeks to-morrow since we
married!”
“Lotty, my dear, let us be reasonable.”
He still spoke quite softly. “If we are not
to go on like other people; if we are to be
continually bothering our heads about hon
esty, and that rubbish, we shall be always
down in the world. How do other people
make money and get on? By humbug, my
dear, by humbug. As for you, a little play
acting is nothing.”
“But I am not the man’s daughter, and
my own father’s alive and well.”
“Look here, Lotty. You are always grum
bling about the music halls.”
“Well, and good reason to grumble. If
you heard those ballet girls talk, and see
how they go on at the back, you’d grumble.
As for the music——” She laughed, as if
agains' her will. “If anybody had told me
six months ago—me, that used to go to the
cathedral service every afternoon—that I
should be a lion masher at a music hall, and
go on dressed in tights, I should have boxed
his ears for impudence. ”
“Why, you don’t mean to tell me, Lotty,
that you wish you had stuck to the mouldy
old place, and gone on selling music over
the counter?”
“Well, then, perhaps I do.”
“No, no, Lotty; your husband cannot let
you say that.”
“My husband can laugh and talk with
barmaids. That makes him happy.”
“Lotty,” he said, “you are a little fool.
And think .of the glory. Posters with your
name in letters a foot and a half long—
‘The People’s Favorite.’ Why, don’t they
applaud you till their hands drop off?”
She melted a little.
“Applaud! As if that did any good!
And me in tights!”
“As for the tights,” Joe replied with dig
nity, “the only person whom you need con
sult on that subject is your husband, and
since I do not object, I should like to see the
man who does. Show me that man, Lotty,
and I’ll straighten him out for you. You
have my perfect approval, my dear. I
honor you for the tights.”
“My husband’s approval!"
She repeated his words again in a manner
which had been on other occasions most
irritating to him. But to-night he refused
to be offended.
“Os course,” he went on, “as soon as I get
a berth on another ship I shall take you off
the boards. It is the husband’s greatest de
light, especially if he is a jolly sailor, to
brave all dangers for his wife. Think,
Lotty, how pleasant it would be not to do
any more work."
“I should like to sing sometimes, to sing
good music, at the great concerts. That’s
what I thought I was going to do.”
“You shall; you shall sing as little or as
often as you like. ‘A sailor’s wife a sailor’s
star should be.’ You shall be a great lady,
Lotty, and you shall just command your
own line. Wait a bit, and you shall have
your own carriage, and your own beautiful
house, and go to as many balls as you like
among the countesses and the swells.”
“Oh, Joe!” she laughed. “Why, if we
were as rich as anything, I should never get
ladies to call upon me. And as for you, no
one would ever take you to be a gentleman,
you know.”
“Why, what do you call me, now?’
He laughed, but without much enjoyment;
No one likes to be told that he is not a gen
tleman, whatever his own suspicions on the
subject mav be.
[TO BE CONTINUED.]
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>L. T. QLINAN,
Manufacturer of
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Having purchased the business lately con
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CLOTHING. !
m.
MERCHANT TAILOR,
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TO THEPUBLIC?
Having secured the services of MR. T. J. i
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P. H. KIERNAN,
President, oetwsen Whitaker and Barnard
Streets.
GOE.V. HECKER & Di
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selected stock. Also sells so cheap that you
will find it no trouble to buy or get suited,as
he intends to carry out as he advertises.
DRUGS AND MEDICINES.
Shuptrine’s
New Pharmacy,
Bolton and Montgomery streets.
PI RE DRUGS
Dispensed by Careful and Expe
rienced Druggists.
I3AJRK AHOYI’
Not that barque which spreads its sat-.’’
the favoring gale and with every c»L.v-<
drawing taut, sails the sea, a thing of life aiid
beauty, but that bark which comes from a
cold and hastens the traveler to that port
from whence there is no return. For thia
bark use
“COUGH AND LUNG BALSAM.”
It is the best medicine ever presented for
coughs, colds and hoarseness, and for four
seasons has given entire satisfaction. Price
25 cents. Prepared only by
DAVID PORTER, Druggist,
Corner Broughton and Habersham streets.
J. c._u c. c.
Jipjt CiMMg hi
CLEANS CLOTHES,
Removes all Grease, Paints, Oils, Varnish
Tar, Dirt or Soils from any fabric
without injury.
FOR SALE BY
J. R. Haiti wander,
i Cor Broughton and Drayton streets.
I Also sold by L. C. Strong and E. A. Knapp
j To Clean l our Last Winter’s Suit or
Anything Else Use
“Household Cleaning Fluid.”
It removes grease spots, stains, dirt, etc.,
from woolen, cotton, silk and laces, without
injuring the most delicate labric.
Prepared only by
DAVID PORTER, Druggist,
Corner Broughton and Habersham streets.
and sUivery
RBMOYED.
I have removed my entire livery establish
ment from York street to the
Pulaski House Stables
where I may hereafter be found. All orders
for carriages and buggies promptly attended
to Flue Saddle Horses for hire.
E. C. GLEASON,
Proprietor Pulask! House Stables.
Savannah Club, Livery & Board (tahlos
Corner„Drayton, McDonough and Hull sts.
A. W. HARMON, Prop’r.
Headquarters for fine Turn-Outs. Personal
attention given to Boarding Horses. Tele
phone No. 20a.
LUMBER AND TIMBER.
BACON, JOHNSON & CO.
PLANING MILL,
LUMBER
AND
WOO I > YARD.
large;stock of
DRESSED AND ROUGH LUMBER
AT LOW PRICES!
Jj-GooJ Lot of Wood Just Received.
J. J. McDonough. T. B. Thompson.
Ed. Burdett.
McDonough & co.,
Office: 116 J Bryan street.
Yellow Pine Lumber.
i Lumber Yard and Planing Mill: Opposite
S., F. & W. Railway Depot,
Savannah, Ga.
Saw Milla: Surrency. Ga., No. 6, Macon and
Brunswick Railroad.
D. C. Bacon, Wm. B. Stillwell.
H. P. Smaet.
I). c. RACON & CO
PITCH PINE
AND—
Cypress Lumber & Timber
BY THE CARGO.
Savannah and Brunswick, Ga.
P. O. SAVANNAH, GA.
PANSY PLANTS.
50 CENTS PER DOZEN.
VIOLET PLANTS, 25c. per dozen.
CHRYS A.NTHEMUM PLANTS, Si per dozen.
VERBENA PLANTS, 75c. per dozen.
LILY, STAR OF BETHLEHEM, 25c. per doz.
LILY, EASTER PLANTS. 81 per dozen.
CUT AND DESIGNS.
At Wagner's Nursery,
Thunderbolt Road, or
(; A If DNE R ’S,)
30% Bull Street.
This Id da of Going West
to Colorado or New Mexico for pure air to re
lieve Consumption, is all a mistake. Any
reasonable man would use Dr. Rosanko’s
Cough and Lung Syrup for Consumption in
all Its first stages. It never fails to give re
lief in a 11 cases of Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis,
Pains n the Cbest and all affections that are
considered primary to Consumption. Price,
5o cents and 81. Sold by Oceola Butler ana
E. J. Kieffer. (
To be convinced call around and see L
Fried’s before making your purchases else
where, as the price and quality of goods sells
itself.
7