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LN LUCK AT LAST.
BY WALTER BESAhT.
“Never mind. I know a gentleman when
I see one. Go on with your nonsense about
being rich. ”
“I shall make you rich, Lotty, whether
you like it or not,” he said, still with un
wonted sweetness.
She shook her head.
“Not by wickedness,” she said stoutly.
“I’ve got here,” he pulled a bundle of
papers out of his pocket, “all the documents
wanted to complete the case. AU I want
now is for the rightful heiress to step for
ward.”
“I’m not the rightful heiress, and I’m not
the woman to step forward, Joe; so don’t
you think it."
“I’ve been to-day,” Joe continued, “to the
Doctors’ Commons, and I’ve seen the will.
There’s no manner of doubt about it; nnd
the money—oh, Lord, Lotty, if you only
knew how much it is!”
“What does it matter, Joe, how much it
is, if it is neither yours nor mine?”
“It matters this; that it ought aU to be
mine.”
“How can that be, if it was not left to
you?"
Joe was nothing if not a man of resource.
He therefore replied without hesitation or
confusion:
“The money was left to a certain man and
to his heirs. That man is dead. His heiress
should have succeeded, but she was kept out
of her rights. She is dead, and I am her
cousin, and entitled to all her property, be
cause she made no will.”
“Is that gospel truth, Joe? Is she dead?
Are you sure?”
“Quite sure,” he replied. “Dead as a
door-nail.”
“Is that the way you got the papers?"
“That’s the way, Lotty.”
“Then why not go to a lawyer and make
him take up the case for you, and honestly
get your own?”
“You don’t know law, my dear, or you
wouldn’t talk nonsense about lawyers. There
are two ways. One is to go myself to the
present unlawful possessor and claim the
whole. It’s a woman; she would be certain
to refuse, and then we should go to law, and
very likely lose it all, although the right is
on our side. The other way is for some one
—say you—to go to her and say: ‘I am that
man s daughter. Here are my proofs. Here
are all his papers. Give me back my own.’
That you could do in the interest of justice,
though I own it is not the exact truth.”
“And if she refuses then!”
“She can’t refuse, with the man’s daugh
ter actually standing before her. She
might make a fuss for a bit. But she would
have to give in at last.”
“Joe, consider. You have got some papers,
whatever they may contain. Suppose that
it is all true that you have told me ”
“Lotty, my dear, when did I ever tell you
an untruth?"
“When did you ever tell me the truth, my
dear? Don’t talk wild. Suppose it is all
true, how are you going to make out where
your heiress has been all this time, and what
she has been doing?’
“Trust me for that.”
“I trust you for making up something or
other, but—oh, Joe, you little think, you
clever people, how seldom you succeed in
deceiving any one.”
“I’ve got such a story for you, Lctty, as
would deceive anybody. Listen now. It’s
part truth, and part—the other thing. Your
father ”
“My father, poor dear man,” Lotty in
terrupted, “is minding his music shop in
Gloucester, and little thinking what wicked
ness his daughter is being asked to do.”
“Hang it! the girl’s father, then. He died
in America, where he went under another
name, and you were picked up by strangers
and reared under that name, in complete
ignorance of your own family. All .1
which is true and can be proved."
“Who brought her up?”
“People in America. I’m one of 'em."
“Who is to prove that?’
“I am. 1 am come to England on pur
pose. lam her guardian."
“Who is to prove that you are the girl’s
guardian?"
“I shall find somebody to prove that”
His thoughts turned to Mr. C’nalker, a
gentleman whom he judged capable 01
proving anything he was paid for.
f “ And su noose they ask me questions?”
“Don’t answer ’em. You know very
ittle. Tho papers were only found the
other day. You are not expected to know
anything!”
“Where was the real girl?"
“With her grandfather.”
“Where was the grandfather!”
“What does that matter!” he replied; “I
will tell you afterwards."
“When did the real girl die?’
“That, too, I will tell you afterward."
Lotty leaned her cheek upon her hands
and looked at her husband thoughtfully.
“Let us be plain, Joe.”
“You can never be plain, my dear,” he
replied, with the smile of a lover, not a hus
band; never in your husband’s eyes; not
even in tights.”
But she was not to be won by flattery.
“Fine words,” she said, “fine words.
What do they amount to! Oh, Joe, little I
thought when you came along with your
beautiful promises what sort of a man I was
going to marry.”
“A very good sort of a man,” he said.
“You’ve got a jolly sailor—an officer and a
gentleman. Come now, what have you got
to say to this! Can’t you be satisfied with
an officer and a gentleman?’
He drew himself up to his full height.
Well, he was a handsome fellow; there was
no denying it. , •
“Good looks find-fine words,” his wife
went on. “Well, and now I’ve got to keep
you, and if you could make me sing in a
dozm halls every night you would, and
' spend the money on yourself—joyfully you
would.”
“We would spend it together, my dear.
Don’t turn rusty, Lotty.”
He was not a bad-tempered man, and this
kind of talk did not anger him at all. So
long as his wife worked hard and brought in
the coin for him to spend, what mattered
for a few words now and then? Besides, he
wanted her assistance.
“What are you driving at?” he went on.
“I show you a bit of my hand, and you
begin talking round and round. Look here,
Lotty, here’s a splendid chance for us. I
must have a woman’s help. I would rather
have your help than any other woman’s—
yes, than any other woman’s in the world
I would indeed. If you won’t help me, why
then, of course, I must go to some other
woman.”
His wife gasped and choked. She knew
already, after only five weeks’ experience,
how bad a man he was—how unscrupulous,
false and treacherous, how lazy and selfish.
i But, after a fashion, she loved him; after a
■ woman’s fashion, she was madly jealous of
Akim. Another woman! And only the other
THE SAVAMNAH DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1885.
night she had seen him giving brandy and
soda to one of the music hall ballet girls.
Another woman!
“If you do, Joe,” she said, "oil, it you do—
I will kill her and you too!”
He laughed.
“If I do, my dear, you don’t think I shall
be such a fool as to toll you who she is. Do
you suppose that no woman has ever fallen
in love with mo before you? But then, my
pretty, you see, I don’t talk about them;
and do you suppose—oh, Lotty, are you such
a fool as to suppose that you are the first
girl I ever fell in love with!”
“What do you want me to do! Tell me
again."
“I have told you already. I want you to
become, for the time, the daughter of the
man who died in America; you will claim
your inheritance; I will provide you with
all the papers; I will stand by you; I will
back you up with such a story as will dis
arm all suspicion. That is all.”
“Yes. I understand. Haven’t people
been sent to prison for less, Joe?”
“Foolish people have. Not people who are
well advised and under good management.
Mind you, this business is under my direc
tion. lam boss.”
pirn
M te
’lO,l
|ljM ijv-
“Mind you, this business is under my di
rection. lam boss.’’
She made no reply, but took her candle
and went off to bed.
In the dead of night she awakened her
husband.
“Joe,” she said, “is it true that you
know another girl who would do this for
you?”
“More than one, Lotty,” be replied, this
man of resource, although he was only half
awake. “More than one. A great many
more. Half-a-dozen, I know, at least.”
She was silent. Half an hour afterwards
she woke up again.
“Joe,” she said, “I’ve made up my mind.
You sha’n’t say that I refused to do for
you what any other girl in the world would
have done.”
As a tempter, it will be seen that Joe was
unsurpassed.
It was now a week since he had received,
carefully wrapped in wool, and deposited in
a wooden-box dispatched by post, a key,
newly made. It was, also, very nearly a
week since he had used that key. It was
used during Mr. Emblem’s hour for tea,
while James waited and watched outside in
an agony of terror. But Joe did not find
what he wanted. There was in the safe one
or two ledgers, a banker’s book, a check
book, and a small quantity of money. But
there were not any records at all of moneys
invested. There were no railway certifi
cates, waterwork shares, transfers, or notes
of stocks, mortgages, loans, or anything at
all. The only thing that he saw was a roll
of papers tied up with red tape. On the roll
was written: “For Iris. To be given to
her on her twenty-first birthday.”
“What the deuce is this, 1 wonder?" Joe
took this out and looked at it suspiciously.
“Can he be going to give her all his money
before he dies! Is he going to make her in
herit at once?” The thought was so exas
perating that he slipped the roll into his
pocket. “At all events,” he said, “she
shan’t have them until I have read them
first. I dare say they won’t be missed for a
day or two."
He calculated that he could read and
master the contents that night, and put
back the papers in the safe in the morning
while James was opening the shop.
“There’s nothing, James,” he whispered,
as he went out, the safe being locked again.
“There is nothing at all. Look here, my
lad, you must try another way of finding
out where the money is.”
“I wish I was sure that he hasn't carried
off something in his pocket," Janes mur
mured.
Joe spent the whole evening alone, con
trary to his usual practice, which was, as
we have seen, to spend It at a certain music
hall. He read the papers over and over
again.
“I wish,” he said at length, “I wish I had
known this only two months ago. I wish 1
had paid more attention to Iris. What a
dreadful thing it is to have a grandfatlier
who keeps secrets from his grandson!
What a game we might have had over this
job! What a game we might have still
if ’’
And here he stopped, for the first germ or
conception of a magnificent coup dawned
upon him, and fairly dazzled him so that
his eyes saw a bright light and nothing else.
“If Lotty would,” he said. “But lam
afraid she won’t hear of it.” He sprang to
his feet and caught sight of his own face in
the looking-glass over the fireplace. He
smiled. “I will try,” he said, “I think I
know, by this time, how to get round most
of ’em. Once they get to feel there are other
women in the w-orld beside themselves,
they’re pretty easily worked. I will try.”
One has only to add to the revelations al
ready made that Joe paid a second visit to
the shop, this time early in the morning.
The shutters were only just taken down.
James was going about with that remarkable
watering-pot only used in shops, which has
a little stream runni >g out of it, and Mr.
Emblem was up stairs slowly shaving and
dressing in his bedroom. He walked in,
nodded to his friend the assistant, opened
the safe, and put back the roll.
"Now,” he murmured, “if the old man
has really been such a dunder-headed pump
as not to open the packet all these years,
what the devil can he know? The name is
different; he hasn’t got any clue to the will;
he hasn’t got the certificate of his daugh
ter’s marriage, or of the child's baptism —
both in the real name. He hasn’t got any
thing. As for the girl here, Iris, having the
same Christian name, that’s nothing. I sup
pose there is more than dne woman with
such a fool of a name as that about in the
world.”
“Foxy,” he said cheerfully, “have you
found anything yet about the investments?
Odd, isn’t it? Nothing in the safe at all.
You can have your key back.”
He tossed him the key carelessly and went
a wav.
The question of his grandfather’s savings
was growing insignificant beside this great
and splendid prize which lay waiting for
him. What could tho savings be? At best
a few thousands; the slowly saved thrift of
fifty years; nobody knew’ better than Joe
himself how much his own profligacies had
cost his grandfather; a few thousands, and
those settled on his cousin Iris, so that, to
get his share, ha would have to try every
kind of persuasion unless he could get up a
case for law. But the other thing—why, it
was nearly all personal estate, so far as he
could learn by the will, and he had read it
over and over again in the room at the
Somerset House, with the long table in it,
and the watchful man who won’t let any
body copy anything. What a shame, he
thought, not to let wills be copied! Per
sonally sworn under a hundred and twenty
thousand, all in Three Per Cents, and de
vised to a certain young lady, the testator’s
ward, in trust, for the testator’s son, or his
heirs, when he or they should present them
selves. Meantime, the ward was to receive
for her own use and benefit, year by year,
the whole income.
“It is unfortunate,” said Joe, “we can’t
come down upon her for arrears. Still,
there’s an income, a stead}' income, of £3,600
a year when the son’s heirs present them
selves. I should like to call myself a so
licitor, butthat kite w'on’t flv, I’m .afraid.
Lotty must be the sole heiress. Dressed
quie l , without any powder, and her fringe
brushed flat, she’d pass fora lady anywhere’
Perhaps it’s lucky, after all, that I married
her, though if I had had the good sense to
make up to Iris, who’s a deuced sight prettier,
she’d have kept me going almost as well
with her pupils, and set me right with the
old man, and han led me over this magnifi
cent haul for a finish. If only the old man
hasn’t broken the seals and read the papers!”
The old man had not, and Joe’s fears were,
therefore, groundless.
[TO BE CONTINUEDJ
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SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
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m:. t. quinaa,
Manufacturer of
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TO THEPUBLIC.
Having secured the services of MR. T, J.
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f P. H. KIERNAN,
I President, net ween Whitaker and Barnard
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ITS Bay
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; rienced Druggists.
i barkahoy:
N°t that barque which spreads its sap
the favoring gale and with every chia »
drawing taut, sails the sea, a thing of life au<2
3 beauty, but that bark which conies from h
i cold and hastens the traveler to that port
from whence there is no return. For this
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.JI c. c.
Japanese fem
CLEANS CLOTHES,
Removes all Grease, Paints, Oils, Varnish
Tar, Dirt or Soils from any fabric
without injury.
FOR SALE BY
, J. R. HaltiiVang-er,
Cor Broughton and QMfton streets.
Also sold by L. C. E. A. Knapp
To Clean Your Last mnter’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 fabric.
Prepared only by
DAVID PORTER, Druggist,
Corner Broughton and Habersham streets.
and giuery
RiniOA ICI).
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 Fine Saddle Horses for hire,
E. C. GLEASON,
Proprietor Pulaski House Stables.
Savannah Club, Livery S Board Stables
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. 205.
LUMBER AND TIMBER.
BACON, JOHNSON & CO.
PLANING MILL,
LUMBER
AND
WOOD YARD.
LARGEJSTOCK OF
DRESSED AND ROUGH LUMBER
AT LOW PRICES!
Ab-Good Lot of Wood Just Received.*®#
J. J. McDonough. T. B. Thompson.
Ed. Bubdbtt.
McDonough .& co.,
Office : 116 J Bryan street.
Yellow Pine Lumber.
Lumber Yard and Planing Mill: Opposite
S., F. & W. Railway Depot,
Savannah, Ga.
Saw Mills: Surrency, Ga., No. 6, Macon and
Brunswick Railroad.
D. C. Bacon, Wm. B. Stillwell.
H. P. Smabt.
D. C. I J ACO X & CO
PITCH PINE
-AND—
Cypress Lumber & Timber
BY THE CARGO.
Savannah and Brunswick, Ga.
P. O. SAVANNAH, GA.
I’AXSY DDAJXTS.
50 CENTS PER DOZEN.
VIOLET PLANTS, 25c. per dozen.
CHRYSANTHEMUM PLANTS, 81 per dozen.
I VERBENA PLANTS, 75c. per dozen.
LILY, STAR OF BETHLEHEM, 25c. per doz.
LILY, EASTER PLANTS, 81 per dozen.
CUT FLOWERS AND DESIGNS.
At Wagner’s Nursery,
Thundeibolt Road, or
OA. It DEED’S,
Bull Street.
This Idaa 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 all cases of Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis,
Paius n the Chest and all affections that a:e
considered primary to Consumption. Price,
5o cents and 81. Sold by Oceola Butler and
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
1 itself.
7