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IN LUCK AT LAST.
BY WALTER BESAKT.
CHAPTER XII.
IS THIS HIS PHOTOGBAPH?
The best way to get a talk with his cousin
was to dine with her. Arnold therefore
went to Chester Square next day with the
photograph in his pocket. It was half an
hour before dinner when he arrived, and
Clara was alone.
“My dear,” she cried with enthusiasm, “I
am charmed—l am delighted—with Iris.”
“I am glad,” said Arnold mendaciously.
“I am delighted with her—in every way.
She is more and better than I could have
expected—far more. A few Americanisms,
of course ”
“No doubt,” said Arnold. “When I saw
' her 1 thought they rather resembled Angli
cisms. But you have had opportunities of
judging. You have in your own posession,”
he continued, “have you not, all the papers
which establish her identity!”
“Ob, yes; they are all locked up in my
strong-box. 1 shall be very careful of them.
Though, of course, there is no one who has
to be satisfied except mysel /And lam
perfectly 'satisfied. But then M never had
any doubt from the beginning. How could
there be any doubt!”
“How, indeed!”
“Truth, honor, loyalty and candor, as
well as gentle descent, are written on that
girl’s noble brow, Arnold, plain, so that all
may read. It is truly wonderful,” she went
on, “how the old gentle blood shows itself,
and will break out under the most unex
pected conditions. In her face she is not
much like her father; that is true; though
sometimes I catch a momentary resemblance,
which instantly dis ippears again. Her eyes
are not in the least like his, nor has she his
manner, or carriage, or any of his little
tricks and peculiarities—though, perhaps. 1
shall observe traces of some of them in time.
But especially she resembles him in her voice.
The tonjv-tho timbre—reminds me every
moment of poor my Claude.”
“I suppose,” said Arnold, “that one must
inherit something, if it is only a voice, from
one’s father. Have you said anything to
her yet about money matters, and a settle
ment of her claims!”
“No, not yet. I did venture, last night,
to approach the subject, but she would not
hear of it. So I dropped it. I call that
true delicacy, Arnold—native, instinctive,
hereditary delicacy.”
“Have you given any more money to the
American gentleman who brought her
home!”
“Iris made him take a hundred pounds
against his will, to buy books with, for he
is not rich. Poor fellow! It went much
against the jgrain with him to taka the
money. But she made him take it. She
said he wanted books and instruments, and
insisted on his having at h ast a hundred
pounds. It was generous of her. Yes; she
is—l am convinced—a truly generous girl,
and as open-handed as the day. Now,
would a common girl, a girl of no descent,
have shown so much delicacy and gen
erosity!”
“By the way, Clara, here is a photograph.
Does it belong to you! I—l picked it up.”
He showed the photograph which Lala
Roy had given him.
“Oh, yes; it is a likeness of Dr. Washing
ton, Iris’s adopted brother and guardian.
She must have dropped it. I should think
it was taken a few years back, but it is still
a very good likeness. A handsome man, is
he not? He grows upon one rather. His
parting words with Iris yesterday were very
dignified and touching.”
“I will give it to her presently,” he re
plied, without further comment.
There was, then, no doubt. The woman
was an impostor, and the man was the thief,
md the papers were the papers which had
been stolen from the safe, and Iris Deseret
was no other than his own Iris. But he must
not show the least sign of suspicion.
“What are you thinking about, Arnold?”
asked Clara. “Your face is as black as
thunder. Vou are not sorry that Iris has
returned, are you?”
“I was thinking of my engagement,
Clara.”
“Why, you are not tired of it already?
An engaged man, Arnold, ought not to look
so gloomy as that.”
“I am not tired of it yet. But lam un
aappy as regards some circumstances con
nected with it. Your disapproval, Clara,
lor one. My dear cousin, I owe so much to
you that I want to owe you more. Now, I
nave a proposition—a promise—to make to
you. I am now so sure, so very sure and
jertain that you will want me to marry
Miss Aglen—and no one else—when you
xnce know her, that I will engage solemnly
not to marry her unless you entirely ap
prove. Let me owe my wife to you, as well
is everything else.”
“Arnold, you are not in earnest?”
“Quite in earnest.”
“But I shall never approve. Never—
lever—never! I could not bring myself, un
ier any circumstances that I can conceive,
to approve of such a connection.”
“My dear cousin, I am, on the other
land, perfectly certain that you will ap
prove. Wliy, if I were not quite certain do
you think I should have made this promise?
But to return to your newly-found cousin.
Tell me more about her.”
“Well, I have discovered that she is a
•eally very clever and gifted girl. She can
imitate people in the most wonderful way,
•specially actresses, though she has only,
been to a theatre once ox' twice in her life.
At Liverpool she heard some one sing what
xhe calls a topical song, and this she actually
•emembers —she carried it away in her head,
jvery word —and she can sing it just as they
ring it on the stage, with all the vulgarity
md gestures imitated to the very life. Os
:ourse I should not like her to do this before
anybody else, but it is really wonderful.”
“Indeed I” said Arnold. “It must be very
clever and amusing.”
“Os course,” said Clara, with colossal ig
norance, “an American lady can hardly be
xxpected to understand English vulgarities.
So doubt there is an American variety.”
Arnold thought that a vulgar song could
be judged at its true value by any lady,
sither American or English; but he said
ao thing.
And then the young lady herself appeared.
She had been driving about with Clara
sinong various shops, and now bore upon
Her person the charming result of these
journeys, in the shape of a garment which
was rich in texture and splendid in the mak
ing. And she really was a handsome girl,
only with a certain air of being dressed for
the stage. But Arnold, now more than sus
picious, was not dazzled by the gorgeous
raiment, and onlv considered how his cousin
could for a moment imagine this person to
be a lady, and how it would be best to break
the news.
“Clara’s cousin.” she said, “I have for
gotten your name; but how do you do,
again?”
THE SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1885.
And then they went in to dinner.
“You have learned, I suppose,” said
Arnold, “something about the Deseret fam
ily by this time?”
“Oh, yes; I have heard all about the
family-tree. I dare say I shall get to know
it by heart in time. But you don’t expect
me, all at once, to care much for it.”
“Little Republican!” said Clara. “She
actually does not feel a pride in belonging
to a good old family.”
The girl made a little gesture.
“Your family can’t do much for you that
I can see, except to make you proud, and
pretend not to see other women in the shop.
That is what the county ladies do."
“Why, my dear, what on earth do you
know of the county ladies?”
Lotty blushed a little. She had made a
mistake. But she quickly recovered.
“I only know what I’ve road, cousin,
about any kind of English ladies. But
that’s enough, I’m sure. Stuck up thingsl"
And again she observed, from Clara’s
pained expression, that she had made an
other mistake.
If she showed a liking for stout at lunch,
she manifested a positive passion foi' cham
pagne at dinner.
“I do like the English custom,” she said,
“of having two dinners in the day.”
“Ladies in America, I suppose,” said
Clara, “dine in the middle of the day!"
“Always.”
“But I have visited many families in New
York and Boston who dined late,” said
Arnold.
“Dare say,” she replied carelessly. “I’m
going to have some more of that curry stuff,
please. And don’t ask any more questions,
anybody, till I’ve worried through with it.
I’m a wolf at curry.”
“She likes England, Arnold,” said Clara,
covering up this remark, so to speak. “She
likes the country, she says, very much.”
“At all events,” said the girl, “I like this
house, which is first-class—fine—proper.
And the furniture, and pictures, and all
tip-top. But I’m afraid it’s going to be
awful dull, except at meals, and when the
boy is going.” Her own head was just
touched by the “Boy,” and she was a little
off her guard.
“My dear child,” said Clara, “you have
only just come, and you have not yet learned
to know and love your own home and your
father’s friends. You must take a little
time. ”
“Oh, I’ll take time. As long as you like.
But 1 shall soon be tired of sitting at home.
I want to go about and see things—theatres
and music halls, and all kinds of places.”
“Ladies in England do not go to musit
halls,” said Arnold.
“Gentlemen do. Why not ladies, then'
Answer me that. Why can’t ladies go when
gentlemen go? What is proper for gentlemen
is proper for ladies. Very well, then, I want
to go somewhere every night. I want to see
everything there is to see, and to heal' all
that there is to hear.”
“We shall go, presently, a good deal into
society,” said Clara timidly. “Society will
edme back to town very soon now —at least,
some of it.”
“Oh, yes, I dare say. Society! No, thank
you, with company manners. I want tc
laugh and talk, and enjoy myself.”
The champagne, in fact, had made her
forget the instructions of her tutor. At all
events, she looked anything but “ quiet,”
with her face flushed and her eyes bright.
Suddenly she caught Arnold’s expression
of suspicion and watchfulness, and reso
lutely subdued a rising inclination to get up
from the table and have a walk round with
a snatch of a topical song.
‘ 1 Forgive me, Clara,” she murmured in
her sweetest tone; “forgive me, cousin. I
feel as if I must break out a bit, now and
then. Yankee manners, you know. Let
me stay quiet with you for a while. You
know the thought of starched and stiff
London society quite frightens me. lam
not used to anything stiff. Let me stay at
home quiet, with you.”
“Dear girl!” cried Clara, her eyes filling
with tears; “ she has all Claude’s affection
ate softness of heart.”
“I believe,” said Arnold, latex - on in the
evening, “that she must have been a circus
rider, or something of that sort. What on
earth does Clara mean by the gentle blood
breaking out? We nearly had a breaking
out at dinner, but it certainly was not due
to the gentle blood.”
After dinner Arnold found her sitting on
a sofa with Clara, who was telling hex
something about the glories of the Deseret
family. He was half inclined to pity the
girl ox* to laugh—he was not certain which
—for the patience with which she listened,
in order to make amends fox - any bad im
pression she might have produced at dinner.
He asked her presently if she would play.
She might be, and certainly was, vulgar;
but she could play well and she knew good
musfe. People generally think that good
music softens manners, and does not permit
those who play and practice it to be vulgar.
But, concerning this young person, so much
could not be said with any truth.
“You play very well. Where did you
learn? Wxo was your master?" Arnold
asked.
She began to reply, but stopped short.
He had very nearly caught her.
“Don’t ask questions,” she said. “I told
you not to ask questions before. Where
should I learn, but in America? Do you sup
pose no one can play the piano except in
England? Look here,” she glanced at her
cousin. “Do you, Mr. Arbuthnot, always
spend your evenings like this?”
“How like this?”
“Why, going around in a swallow-tail to
irawing-rooms with the women, like a
tame tom-cat! If you do, you must be a
truly good young man. If you don't, what
io you do?”
“Very often I spend my evenings in a
ira wing-room.”
“Oh, Lord! Do most young Englishmen
carry on in the same proper way ?”
“Why not?”
“Don’t they go to music-halls, please, and
lancing cribs, and such!”
“Perhaps. But what does it concern us
to know what some men do?”
“Ob, not much. Only if I were a
man like you I wouldn’t consent to be a
tame tom-cat—that is all; but perhaps you
like it."
She meant to insult and offend him so
that he should not come any more.
But she did not succeed. He only laughed,
feeling that he was getting below the sur
face, and sat down beside the piano.
“You amuse me," he said, -‘and you
astonish me. You are, in fact, the most
astonishing person I ever met. For instance,
you come from America, and you talk pure
London slang with a cockney twang. How
lid it get there?”
In fact, it was not exactly London slang,
but a patois ox - dialect, learned partly from
her husband, partly from her companions,
and partly brought from Gloucester.
“I don’t know—l never asked. It came
wrapped up in brown paper, perhaps, with
a string round it.”
“You have lived in Amex-ica all your life,
and you look more like an Englishwoman
than any other girl I have ever seen.”
“Do I? So much the better for the Eng
lish girls; they can’t do better than take
after me. But perhaps—most likely, in fact
—you think that American girls all squint,
perhaps, or have got hump backs'* Anything
else?’
“You were brought up in a little Ameri
can village, and yet you play in the style of
a girl who has had the best masters.”
She did not explain—it was not necessary
to explain—that her master had been her
father, who was a teacher of music.
“I can’t help it, can 1?” she asked; “I
can’t help it if I turned out different to what
you expected. People sometimes do, you
know. And when you don’t approve of a girl,
it’s English manners, I suppose, to tell her so
—kind of encourages her to persevere, and
pray for better luck next time, doesn’t it?
It’s simple, too, and prevents any foolish
errors—no mistakes afterwards, you see. 1
say, are you going to come here of Um?
Because, if you are, I shall go away back to
the States or somewhere, or stay up stairs in
my own room. You and mo won’t get on
very well together, I’m afraid.”
“I don’t think you will see me very often,”
he replied. “That is improbable; yet 1 dare
say 1 shall come here as often as I usually
do.”
“What do you moan by that?” She looked
sharply and suspiciously at him. Ho re
peated his words, and she perceived that
there was meaning in them, and she folt
uneasy.
“1 don’t understand at all,” she said;
“Clara tells me that this house is mine.
Now—don’t you know—l don’t intend to
invite any but my own friends to visit me
in my own house.”
“That seems reasonable. No one can
expect you to invite people who are not
your friends.”
“Well, then. I ain’t likely to call you my
friend”—Arnold inclined hig head—“and I
am not going to talk riddles any more. Is
there anything else you want to say?”
“Nothing more, I think, at present, thank
you.”
“If there is, you know, don’t mind me—
have it out—l’m nobody, of course. I’m not
expected to have any manners—l’m only a
girl. You can say what you please to me,
and be as rude as you please; Englishmen
always are as rude as they can be to Ameri
can girls—l’ve always heard that.”
Arnold laughed.
“At all events,” he said, “you have
charmed Clara, which is the only really
important thing. Good-night, Miss—Miss
Deseret.
“Good-night, old man,” she said, laugh
ing, because she bore no malice, and had
given him a candid opinion; “I dare say
when you get rid of your fine company
manners, and put off your swallow-tail,
you’re not a bad sort, after all. Perhaps, if
you would confess, you are as fond of a
kick-up on your way home as anybody
Trust you quiet chaps!”
// ’• I % I
' 1/1
fjio
“Good night, old man," she said, laughing.
Clara had not fortunately heard much of
this conversation, which, indeed, was nut
meant fox - her, becauax tlxe girl was play
ing all the time some waltz music, which
enabled her to talk and play without being
heard at the other end of the room.
Well, there was now no doubt. The
American physician and the subject of the
photograph were certainly the sama man.
And this man was also the thief of the safe,
and Iris Aglen was Iris Deseret. Os that,
Arnold had no loxxgex - any reasonable doubt.
There was, however, one thing more. Be
ore leaving Clara’s house he refreshed his
memory as to the Deseret arms. The quar
terings of the shield were, so far, exactly
what Mr. Emblem recollected.
“It is,” said La a Roy, “what I thought.
But, as yet, not a word to Iris.”
He then proceeded to relate the repentance,
the confusion and the atonement proposed
by the remorseful James. But he did not
tell quite all. Fox - the wise man never tells
all. What really happened was this: When
Janies had made a clean breast and confessed
his enormous share in the villainy, Lala Roy
bound him over to secresy under pain of law
—law the rigorous, pointing out that al
though they do not, in England, exhibit the
Kourbash, or bastinado the soles of the feet,
they make the prisoner sleep on a hard
board, starve him on skilly, set him to work
which tears his nails from his fingers, keep
him from conversation, tobacco and drink,
and when he comes out so hedge him around
with prejudice and so clothe him with a robe
of shame that no one will ever employ him
again,‘and he is therefore doomed to go
back again to the English hell. Lala Roy,
though a man of few words, drew so vivid a
lescription of the punishment which awaited
iiis penitent that James, foxy as he was by
nature, felt constraiued to resolve that
. henceforth, happen what might, then and
fox - all future, he would range himself on
the side of virtue, and as a beginning ha
promised to do everything that he could for
the confounding of Joseph and the bring
ing of the guilty to justice.
[TO BE CONTINUED.]
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WEEKLY TIMES," and it is now imitated in
that feature by many of the leading journals
and periodicals of the country. The best
writers from the active participants of the
great struggle on both sides will continue
their contributions to the unwritten history
of the wer in every number, and make the
paper specially entertaining and instructive
to the veterans of both the Blue and the
Gray.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
, “THE WEEKLY TIMES'’ is mailed, post
• paid, for One Dollar a year. Every club of 20
will be entitled to an extra copy.
Ad ’ s, 1 » IM E.
Times Building, Philad
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Sieih ii Feu.'
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I THOALBURN’S very best Marrowfat Peas,
SI 80 cash per bushel.
THORDURN’S best Philadelphia Extra
J Early Peas, at S 325 cash per busbel.
FOR SALE AT
. .1. GARDNER’ S
SEEDSMAN, 30}; BULL STREET.
DRUGS AND MEDICINES
Sliiipiiiiijs
IVeyv Pliarmacy,
Boltnn and Montgomery streets.
PUItE DRU GS
Dispensed by Careful and Expe
rienced Druggists.
IKY R K AIK) V I
Not that barque which spreads its sac
the favoring gale and with every cat;
drawing taut, sails the sea, a thing of life lud
’ beauty, but that bark which comes from w
: 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 efltire satisfaction. Brice
25 cents. Prepared onlv by
DAVID PORTER, Druggist,
Corner Broughton and Habersham streets
J. c. c. c. c.
JipM J’jjjjjjj Jot
CLEANS CLOTHES,
Removes all Grease, Paints, Oils, Varnisil
Tar, Dirt or Soils from any fabric
without injury.
FOR SALE BY
J. R. Haltiwang-er,
Cor Broughton and Drayton streets.
Also sold by L. C. Strong and E. A. Knapp
To Clean Your 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 fabric.
Prepared only by
DAVID PORTER, Druggist,
Corner Broughton and Habersham streets.
and Jftahlts.
Gray Kagle
Livery and Boarding Stable,
Corner Congress and Drayton.
Headquarters for fine turnouts. Personal
attention given to boarding horses.
R. DeMartin & Son,
Proprietors.
ULEIVrOVED.
I have removed my entire livery establish
ment from York street to the
Pnlaski 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 £ Board Stables
Coxrner Drayton, McDonough and Hull Sts.
A. W r . HARMON, Prop’r.
Headquarters for fine Turn-Outs. Personal
attention given to Boarding Horses, Tele
phone No. 205,
LUMBER AND TIMBER.
BACON, IOHNSOnV(E
PLANING MILL,
LUMBER
AND
WOOD VARI).
LARGE.STOCK OF
DRESSED AND ROUGH LUMBER
AT LOW PRICES!
O'Good Lot of Wood Just Received.
J. J. McDonough. T. B. Thompson.
Ed. Bubdett.
McDonough & co.,
Office: 1164 Bryan street.
Yellow Pine Lumber.
Lumber Yard and Planing Mill: Opposite
8., 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. BACON & CO
PITCH PINE
-AND—
Cypress Lumber & Timber
BY THE CARGO.
Savannah and Brunswick, Ga.
P. O. SAVANNAH, GA.
This Id da of Going West
to Colorado or New Mexico forpureairtore-
1 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,
Pains n the Chest and t.ll affections that are
considered primary to consumption. Price,
0 cents and 81. Sold by 0ct0... Builer ata
J. Kieffer.j
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