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Rock Island Argus. (Rock Island, Ill.) 1893-1920, March 02, 1910, Image 8

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THE ROCK ISLAND ARGUS. WEDNESDAY, .MARCH 2, 1910.
3b Z2TJ2E . m
cowAawr; soot.-
stjtopsis op ntRTEunro chap
ters. CTCMTER L Banka, a Trtr gb
Imcwm ctMuttored of a cordon berdl
traotfsr mho ai prospeoclu and atudr
iog hros In ttra vicinity of hr home la
central Aia. and revealed to Mm Um lo
atlon of a mins of rubies hoping- that
the strag:r wouM love ker In return for
her disclosure. They were followed to
the carre by Che girl's relatives, who
blocked op the entrance, aod drew off
the water snppVy. leaving tne couple to
die. Baraka's cousin Saad. her betrothed,
attempted to cllmk down a cliff ovsrtoolc
Ing the mine; bat tbn traveler shot htm.
The stranger, revived from a water award
Saad carried, due; his way out of the
tunnel, and departed, daserttaa; the girl
and carrying a bag; of ruMes. Barak a
gathered all the gams aba eouM carry,
and started in pursuit.
CHAPTER II. Margaret Donne QOmr
varita da Cordova), a (smoot prima doa
ca. became enraged in London to Koa
stantin LogotheU. a weahhy Oreek fitaan
cifir. Her Intimate friend was Countess
JLeveo, known as Lady Maud, whose bus
band had been killed by a bomb In St.
Petersburg", and Lady Maud's moot iuti
ruate friend was Kufus Van Torp. an
American, who had been a cowboy In
early life, but had become one of the
richest men In the worlfi. Van Torp was
In love with Margaret, and rushed to
London as soon as he heard of her be
trothal. He offered Lady Maud 96,000.000
for her pet charity if she would aid him
la winning- the singer from Logothett.
CHAPTER III (Continued.)
The dream-voice was silent as soon
as she opened her eyes, but she had
not been awake lone without realiz
ing that she wished very much to see
LogotheU at once, and was profoundly
thankful that she had torn up her let
ter to Lady Maud. She was not pre
pared to admit, even now, that Kon
stantin was the ideal she should have
chosen for a husband, and whom she
had been describing from imagination
when she had suddenly stopped writ
ing. But. on the other hand, the mere j
thought that he had perhaps been i
amusing himself in the society of an
other woman all yesterday afternoon
made her so angry that she took
refuge In trying to believe that he had
spoken the truth and that she had
really been mistaken about the voice.
It was all very well to talk about
learning Tartar! How could she be
sure that It was not modern Greek, or
Turkish? She could not have known
the difference. Was it so very unlikely
that some charming compatriot of his
should have come from Constantino
ple to spend a few weeks in Paris?
She remembered the mysterious house
In the Boulevard Pereire where he
lived, the beautiful upper hall where
the statue of Aphrodite stood, the
doors that would not open like other
doors, the strangely-disturbing en
caustic painting of Cleopatra in the
drawing room many things which she
distrusted.
Besides, snpposing that the language
was really Tartar were there not
Russians who spoke it? She thought
there must be, because she had a
vague idea that all Russian were
more or less Tartars. There was a
proverb about it. Moreover, to the
English as well as to the French, Rus
sians represent romance and wicked
ness. She would not go to the telephone
herself, but she sent a message to Lo
gotheU, and he came out in the cool
time of the afternoon. She thought
he had never looked so handsome and
so lltUe exotic since she had known
him.
He was received by Mrs. Rushmore
and Margaret together, and he took
noticeable pains to make himself
agreeable to the mistress of the house.
At first Margaret was pleased at this;
but when she saw that he was doing
his best to keep Mrs. Rushmore from
leaving the room, as she probably
would have done, Margaret did not
like it. She was dying to ask him
questions about his lesson in Tartar,
and especially about his teacher, and
she probably meant to cast her in
quiries in such a form as would make
it preferable to examine him alone
rather than before Mrs. Rushmore;
but he talked on and on, only pausing
an instant for the good lady's expres
sions of interest or approval.
He was teling her what a prime
minister had told an ambassador
about the pope, when Margaret rose
rather abruptly.
"I'm awfully sorry," she said to Mrs.
Rushmore. by way of apology, "but I
really must have a little air. I've not
been out of the house all day."
Mrs. Rushmore understood, and was
not hurt, though 6he was sorry not to
hear more. The "dear child" should
go out, by all means. Would Mons.
Logotheti stay to dinner? No? She
was sorry. She had forgotten that
she had a letter to write in time for
the afternoon post. So she went off
and left the two together. ,
Margaret led the way out upon the
lawn, and they sat down on garden
chairs under a big elm tree. She said
nothing while she settled herself very
deliberately, avoiding her . compan
ion's eyes till she was quite ready, and
then she suddenly looked at him with
a sort of blank stare that would
have disconcerted any one less su
perlatively self-possessed than he was.
It was most distinctly Mme. de Cor
dova, the offended prima donna, that
spoke at last, and not Miss Margaret
Donne, the "nice English girl."
"What in the worM has got into
you?" she inquired in a chilly tone.
He opened his almond-shaped eyes
a little wider with an excellent af
fectation of astonishment at her words
and manner.
"Have I done anything you don't
like?" he asked in a tone of anxiety
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"Was I rude to Mrs.
and" concern.
Rushmore?"
Margaret looked at him a moment
longer, and then turned her head
away in silence, as if scorning to an
swer such a silly, question. The look
of surprise disappeared from his face,
and he became very gloomy and
thoughtful but said nothing more.
Possibly he had brought about exactly
what he wished, and was satisfied to
await the inevitable result. It came
before long.
"I don't understand you at all."
Margaret said less icily, hut with the
sad litUe air of a woman who be-
slghed audibly, as if he were very
sorry that he could do nothing to ap
pease her, but this only made her feel
more injured. She made an effort to
speak coldly.
"You seem to forget that so long
as we are supposed to be engaged f
have some little claim to know how
you spend your time!"
"I make bo secret of what I do.
That is why you were angry Just now.
Nothing could have been easier than
for me to say that I was busy with
one of the matters you suggested."
"Oh, of course! Nothing could be
easier than to tell me an untruth!"
This certainly looked like the fern-
lieves herself misunderstood. "It was
very odd yesterday, at the telephone, i inine retort-triumphant, and Margaret
you know very odd indeed. I sup-) delivered it in a cutting tone,
pose you didn't realize it. And now, j "That is precisely what you seem to
this afternoon, you have evidently j imply that I did," Logotheti objected,
been doing your best to keep Mrs. j "But if what I told you was untrue
Rushmore from leaving us together. ! your argument goes to pieces. There
Ton would still be telling her stories j was no Tartar lesson, there was no
about people if I hadn't obliged you Tartar teacher, and it was all a fabri
to come out!" j cation of my own!"
"Yes." Logotheti asserted with ex- ( "Just what I think!" returned Mar
asperating calm and meekness, "we j garet. "It was not Tartar you spoke,
should still be there." j and there was no teacher!"
"You did not want to be alone with "You have me there," answered the
me. I suppose. There's no other ex- j Greek mildly, "unless you would like
planation, and it's not a very flatter- me to produce my young friend and
ing one, Is it?" j talk to him before you in the presence
"I never flatter you. dear lady," said I of witnesses who know his language."
Logotheti gravely.
"But you do! How can you deny
It? You often tell me that I make
you think of the Victory in the
Louvre "
"I wish you would! I would like to
see 'him!' I should like to see the
color of 'his' eyes and hair!"
"Black as ink," said Logotheti.
"And you'll tell me that 'his' com-
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of enthusiasm you say that I sing bet-1 much attention to his skin. He is a
ter than Mme. Bonanni in her best J smallish chap, good-looking, with
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as she ever did, you are a much better occurred to me at once, and I will not
musician, and you began with a better j positively swear that it is not a girl
voice. Therefore you sing better. I after a11- or 6he- 13 really a Tar-
maintain it." ! ter from central Asia, and I know
"You often maintain things you j enough of the language to say what
don't believe." Margaret retorted, j waf necessary."
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"Pray, is 'learning Tartar a matter j
of business?" Her eyes sparkled':
angrily as she asked the question. i
Logotheti smiled; she had reached ;
the point to which he knew she must ;
come before long.
"Oh, yes!" he replied with alacrity.
"Of course it is."
"That accounts for everything. '
since you are admitting that I need I
not even try to believe it was a man ;
whom I heard speaking."
"To tell the truth, I have some bus- j
plcions about that myself," answered !
know the whole thing."
"Excepting what the business was,- 1
Margaret said incredulously.
"The business was an uncut stone,"
answered Logotheti with indifference. I
He had one to sell, and I bought it. j
"He was recommended to me by a man I
In Constantinople. He came to Mar- j
seilles on a French steamer with two
her. Her eyes turned away again, and
she did not answer him. '
"I make mistakes sometimes," he j
said, speaking stHl lower, "I know I :
do. When I am with you I cannot be j
always thinking of what I say. It'a j
too much to ask, when a man is as far i
gone as I am!" I
"I should like to believe that." Mar-
garet said, without looking at him.
"Is It hard to believe?" he asked so I
gently that Bhe only Just heard the !
words. j
"You don't make it easy, you know," J
said she with a little defiance, for she
felt that she was going to yield before !
long. !
"I don't know how to. You're not j
in the least capricious and yet j
"You're mistaken." Margaret an-
swered, turning to him suddenly. "I'm !
the most capricious woman in the
"I have a great many." Margaret ; of whUve tlp.sue paper but Marga
laughed rather harshly. "And you be
have as if you wanted me to have j
Trim X7irt 1 a t V ( c ,aat,ra wnman !
io nt?r own great surprise ana maig
nation, her voice was unsteady and
she felt something burning in her
Greek merchants who were coming to , world! Yesterday I wrote a long let-
Paris, and they brought him to my
door. That is the whole story. And
here is the ruby. I bought it for you.
because you like those things. Will
70u take it?"
He held out what looked like a little
1 ret turned her face from him.
"You treat me like a child!" she
said.
Come, be frank. She is some one
from Constantinople, isn't she? A
Fanariote like yourself, I dare say an
ter to a friend, and then I suddenly
tore It up there were ever so many
pages! I daresay that if I had writ
ten just the same letter thiB morning
I should have sent it. If that is not
caprice, what is it?"
"It may have been wisdom to tear
it up," Logotheti suggested.
"I'm not sure. I never ask myself
questions about what I do. I hate peo
ple who are always measuring their
wretched little souls and then tinker
ing their consciences to make them
J ! OTTOd C oi nlmnst .iihtan .t i T . . ... ...
old friend who is in Paris fora few j " v . Vt t i nt: 1 don 1 belleTe 1 W,B& to anT
days. and would not pass through e thouSht that she might be going tnlDg rea,,T wrong and so j do exactly
. , . to cry, out or sneer morunaauon.
without seeing vou. Sav so. for heav- ...
, r J .. . I Logotheti said nothing for a mo
ens sake, and don t make such a mys- . . ,. .,
tery about it'" ! mnt- He began to unroll the paper
, . .,, i from the precious stone, but changed
"How very ingenious women are! i . , . . .. ' , .
, . , . . . . . i his mind, wrapped it up again, and
observed the Greek. Tf I had thought . , . .. . v i v
of it I might have told you that story
through the telephone yesterday. But
I didn't."
Margaret was rapidly becoming ex
asperated, her eyes flashed, her firm
young cheeks reddened handsomely,
and her generous lips made scornful
curves.
"Are you trying to quarrel with
me?"
The words had a fierce ring; he
glanced at her quickly and saw how
A
fore he spoke.
"I did not mean it as you think," he
said softly.
She turned her eyes without moving
her head, till she could just see that
he was leaning forward, resting hi9
wrists on tils knees, bending his head
and apparently looking down at his
loosely hanging hands. His attitude
expressed dejection and disappoint
ment. She was glad of it. He had no
right to think that he could make her
as angry as she still was, angry even
to tears, and then bribe her to smile
again when he was tired of teasing
I II I 1 I I III I I I III I I I I I I I ! I I ! I
hi I I I I I I I i I I I I I i I J
He Became Very Gloomy and Thought,
fill.
well her look agreed with her tone.
She was very angry.
"If I were not afraid of boring you,"
he said with quiet gravity, "I would
tell you the whole story, but " he
pretended to hesitate.
He beard her harsh little laugh at
once.
"Your worst enemy could not ac
cuse you of being a bore!" she re
torted. "Oh, do! It's something
quite different from boredom that I
feel. I assure you!"
"I wish I thought that you cared
for me enough to be Jealous," Logo
theti said earnestly.
"Jealous!"
No one can describe the tone of in
dignant contempt in which a thorough
ly jealous woman disclaims the least
thought of Jealousy with a single
word; a man must have heard it to
remember what it is like, and most
men have. Logotheti knew it well,
and at the sound he put on an expres
sion of meek innocence which would
have done credit to a cat that had
Just eaten a canary.
"I'm so sorry," he cried in a voice
like a child's. "I didn't mean to make
you angry. I was only wishing aloud.
Please forgive me!"
"If your idea of caring for a wom
an is to make her jealous "
This was such an obvious misinter
pretation of his words that she
stopped short and bit her lip. He
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"If you will only go on doing what
you like," Logotheti answered, "it will
give me the greatest pleasure In the
world to help you. I only ask one
kindness."
"You have no right to ask me any
thing to-day. You've been quite the
most disagreeable person this after
noon that I ever met In my life."
"I know I have." Logotheti answered
.with admirable contrition. "I'll wait
a day or two before I ask anything;
perhaps you will have forgiven me by
that time."
"I'm not sure. What was the thing
you were going to ask?"
He was silent now that she wished !
to know his thought.
"Have you forgotten it already?" j
she inquired with a little laugh that j
was encouraging rather than con- j
temptuous, for her curiosity was
roused. i
They looked at each other at last. I
and all at once she felt the deeply dis- !
turbing sense of his near presence ;
which she had missed for three days, ;
though she was secretly a little afraid ;
and ashamed of it; and to-day it had .
not como while her anger had lasted.
Put now it was stronger than ever be
fore, perhaps because It came so un- (
expectedly, and it drew her to him. !
Their eyes met and they looked ;
Irng at one another in the Bhade of '
he elm tree on the lawn, as the sun i
was going down Only a few minutes j
had passed since Margaret had been
very angry, and had almost believed
that she was going to quarrel finally,
and break her engagement, and be
free; and now she could not even turn
her face away, and when her hard felt
his upon it, she let him draw it slowly
to him; and half unconsciously she
followed her hand, bending towards
him sideways, from her seat, nearer
and nearer, and very near.
And as she put up her Hps to his,
he would that she might .drink hla
soul from him at one deep draught
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wished, in the world's spring time,
long ago.
It had been a strange love-making.
They had been engaged during more
than two months, they were young,
vital, passionate; yet they had never
kissed before that evening hour under
the elm tree at Versailles. Perhaps it
was for this that Konstantin had
played, or at least, for the certainty
it meant to him, if he had doubted
that she was sincere.
(To be Continued.)
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ware, pots, kettles, pans, knives, forks, spoons.
Bath-tubs, sinks, enamel, tile flooring, porcelain,
brass and nickel work, marble, etc., take on new bril
liancy under I-Clean's touch. It is really important
that you convince yourself today.
The can with the sifting top no waste. Water
cannot penetrate it. Leave it on the sink always
ready for use.
10c the Can All Grocers
AMERICAN CLEANSER CO.
"We Repair
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All kinds of Steam and
Hot Water Boilers, Hot
Air Furnaces. Do it right
and promptly.
We can also supply
repairs for all Stoves and
Ranges, no matter where
you bought them.
Allen. Mvers & Company
Telephone West 18. New Phone 5810

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