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By Garrett I\ ftervls*.
Copyright 100. by Qarrett r. Servian.
XII— BETTKR THAN AI/’HBMY.
I come now to a part of my narrative
hl li would have been deemed altogether
Ircredlble tn those closing years of the
:<uh eenlury that witnessed the first steps
toward the solution of the deepeat mys
teries of the ether: allhough men even
then held in their hand*, without know
tug i:. powers which, ufler they had been
mastered and before use had made them
familiar, seemed no less :tin godlike
I'or six months after Hall's departure
for Sun Francisco. I heard nothing from
h m Notwithstanding my intense desire
o know what he was doing, I did not
seek to disturb him In his retirement,
in the meantime things tan on us usual
111 the world, only a tipple being roused
l.v renewed discoveries of entail nuggets
< artemlsium on the Teton, a fact, which
r< allot to my mind the remark of my
With Considerable Surprise I Noticed a Building Surmounted With a Dome.
friend when he dislodged .• flake of the
meiil from a crevice during our ascent
of the pmk. At lust one day 1 re • -toed ,
this Ukfrim at my office In New York: ;
“San Francisco. May 16. 11M0.
“Com** ac once. The mystery Is solved.
“(Signed) Hull.’* i
As soon us 1 could pack n grip 1 was
flying west won! lt*> mile* an hour. On
reaching San Franc loco, which had made
enormous strides since the open in: the
loth century. owing to the ex • i m *f
our oriental poyeselons, mid which *l
- ranked with New York uni Cni
cugo among the financial capitals of the
world. 1 hastened to Hall's laboratory.
He was there expecting me. and after a
heart) meeting, during which his elation
over his success wow manifested, he wkl:
*'! am compelled to you to make n
lie tie journey. 1 found It Impossible to
secure the necessary privacy here, and
before opening my experiments. I se
lected a site for u new laboratory In an
unfrequented spot among the mountains
The row pT~i Frcine Underneath the Flour Instantly Responded.— The Experi
ment Wan* IJepfun. (
this Hid,, ot lake Tahoe. You will be the j
fir*-, man, with the exception of my ,wo
divoted assistants. to ee my apparatus. |
•"'•<l you ehal! share the sensation ot the ;
‘flthal experiment." J
"Then you have not yet comrlftf'l your |
■ umlon of the secret."
"Yea, I hnve; for 1 am a certain of
Hie remit aa If 1 had Been It, but t
thought you were entitled to he In w.th
*“e .it the death."
' tom tiic nearest railway station w*
took tiora. a to the laloratory. which o ■
upied a secluded but moat Kautlful site
t an elevation of about 6.OW' feet a ovc
* hnel. With considerable surprl-e I
Heed a huildlnx *urm.>unt'd wit . •
■ onie. recalling what we had seen from
the tir.jno Teton on the ro>f Dr. cy v a
hdll- llall, obeervlng my look. ensile,* *!*■
• itlrsntly. hut .iM The laborw
• •ry proper occupied .• mailer bull In*
adjoining the domed lUvtu e Hall led
t- w H y j|,| o an abutment having but a
’•lngle door and Illuminated by a ky!i* *t
' This la my sanctum aan. lorum." h"
•aid, "and you are the llrat outrhier 'O
■•nter It. Seat youraelf eomforiably while
l proceed to unveil a lltlia cornet of the
nrtemteium mystery."
Near one end of the room, which erns
about thirty feet in lenffth. wae a table.
““ which a c'sjo tube niKUt me
Inches In diameter and thirty Inches long
In the further end of the tube charnel
a lump of yellow metal which I took to be
gold. Hall and I were seated near an
other table about twenty-hve feet dis
tant from the tube, and on this table wia
an apiairatus furnished with a concave
mirror, whose optical axis was dl'acted
toward Ihe tube. It occurred to m- at
once that this apparatus would be *u‘t
ahle for experimenting with aisetrte
waves. Wires ran from it to the Itoor.
and in the cellar beneath was audlh’a
the beating of an engine. My companion
made an adjustment or two and then re
marked:
"Now. keep your eyes on the lump of
gold In the further end of the tube yon
der. The tube is exhausted of air. and T
am about to concentrate upon tee gold
an Intense electric Influence which will
have the effect of making It a kind of
kathode pole. I only use thla term for
the sake of Illustration. You will re all
tnat as long ago as the days of Crocks
It was known that a kathode In an ex
hausted tube would project particles, or
atoms, of tta substance away In straight
Imi to. Now. watch!"
I fixed my attention upon the gold and
presently saw tt enveloped In a most
beautiful violet light. This grew more in
tense untlt. at times. It was blinding,
while, at the same moment, the Interior
of the tube seemed to have becom •
Charged with a lumlnoua vapor of a deli
cate pinkish hue.
“Watch! Watch!” said Hall. "Look at
the nearer end of the tube!"
"Why. It l becoming coated with go!d!"
I exclaimed.
He smiled, but made no reply. Still the
strange process continued. The pink va
por became so dense that the lump of
gold was no longer visible, although the
eye of violet light glared piercingly
through the colored fog. Every second the
deposit of metnl. shining like a mirror,
Increased, until suddenly there came a
curioua whistling sound. Hall, who had
been adjusting the mirror. Jerked away
hts hand and gave It a flip, as tf hot wa-
l. r had spattered It. and then the light In
the tube quickly died away, and vapor es
cape I. filling the room with a peculiar
sllmulattng odor, and 1 perceived that the
end of the glass 'uhe had been melted
through, and the molten gold was slowly
dripping froen It.
"I enrrled I! * little too ftr," said Hall,
re .fully rubbing the heck of hi* hard.
when the glass gave way under the
atomic bombordment a few atom* of gold
visited mv bones. But there Is no harm
-lone. You observe that the instant the
llr reaches the kathode, as 1 for conven- j
lence call the elecirtfted mass of fold, the
action ceased."
• But your anode to continue your slm
|jc •• j M |d. "Is constantly exposed to the
air."
"True" he replied, "but In the first
place, of course, this la not really an
nn od< just as the other Is not really "
kolhodc. As science advance* we are com
pelled (or a time, to use old term* In a
,ann, until a fresh nomenclature
can be Invented. But we are now deal
-1,,,; with a form of electric net tor. rooro
i subtile in Its effects then any at present
i described In the textbooks and the ***"£
actions of learned socletlea. I have not
ye* evrn attempted to work out 'h ha.> r y
vt it. 1 am only concerned with Its facte.
■iUI wonderful •• tho exhibition you,
THE MORNING NEW S, SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 18,1<K)0.
PURE,
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PLRUIASABLE
4NHIY 1
M 111.
Jos. A. Magnus
Cincinnati, O.
have given la. 1 do not see." T said, "how
ll con, ems Dr Pyx an dhls nr icon.-turn "
"Lister.." replied Hall, settling back In
his chair after disconnecting Ms appara
tus. "You no doubt have been told how
one night the Syx engine was heard work
ing for a few minutes, the first and only
night work It was ever known to have
done, and how. hardly had It started up
when a Are broke out in the mill, and the
engine was Instantly stopped Now there
Is a very remarkable story connected with
that, and It will show you how I got my
first clew to the my stery, although II was
rather a mere suspicion than a clew, for
at first I could make nothing out of It.
The alleged fire occurri-d about a fort
night after our discovery of the double
tunnel My mine! was then full of sus
picions concerning Pyx. because 1 thought
that a man who would fool people with
one hand was not likely to deal fairly
with the other
"It was a glorious night with a full
moon whose fare was so clear In the
limpid air that, having found a snug place
a' the foot of a yellow pin- tree, where
the ground was carpeted with odorlfertous
needles. I lay on my hark and renewed
my early acquaintance milh the romanti
cally named mountains ami "fib” of the
Lunar globe. With my binocular T could
trace those long white streaks which ra
diate from the crater ring ealle 1 "Tycho"
and run hundreds of miles In all directions
over the moon. As I gaged at these sin
gular objects I recalled the various theo
ries which astronomers, puxaled by their
et tgmatlcal aspect, have offered to a more
or less confiding public concerning them
"In Ihe mklsl of my meditation and
moon gnxing I was ntartled by hearing Ihe
engine In the Pyx works suddenly begin to
run. Immediately a queer light, shaped
like Ihe beam of a ship's searchlight, but
reddish In color, rose high In the moon
lit heavens above the mill It did Jtot last
wore than a minute or two. for almost In
stantly the engine was stopp'd and with
Its stoppage the light faded and soon dis
appeared The next .lay Dr. Pvx gave It
out that on starting up his engine In the
night something had caught Are. which
compelled him Immediately to shut down
again. The few who had seen the light,
with the exception of your honorable per
vanl, accepted the doctor's explanation
without quest lon Hut I knew- there had
been no fire, and Pyx's anxiety to spread
the lie led me to bellove that he had nar
rowly escaped giving away a vital secret.
1 said nothing about tny suspicions. but
upon Inquiry I found out that an extra
and pressing order for metal had ar
riv'd from the Austrian government, and
I drew the inference that Pyx. In his
haste to till the order-hls supply having
been drawn low-had started to work,
contrary to his custom, at night, and had
Immediately found reason to repent the
rashness Of course. ! connected the
strange light with this sudden change of
“mind.
"My suspicion having hen thus stim
ulated. and having to n directed In a cer
tain way. I began, from that moment to
notice closely ihe hours during whl.lt the
engine labored. At night It was always
quiet, except on that one brief occasion.
Sometimes It began early In the morning
and stopped about noon. At other times
the work was done entirely in th£ after
noon. beginning sometimes as late as S or
4 o'clock and ceasing Invariably it sun
down. Then again It would start at sun
rise and continue the whole day through.
"For a long time I was unable lo ac
count for these eccentricities, and the
problem was not rendered much clearer,
although a startling auggestlvenes* was
added to It. when, at length. I noticed
that the periods of activity of the engine
had a definite relation to the age of the
moon Then I discovered. With Ihe al<l of
an almanac, that 1 could predict the hours
when the engine would be busy. At the
time of new moon It worked all day; at
Tull moon and last quarter It labored In
the forenoon. Hie length of Its working
hours Increasing as the quarter was ap
proached; between last quarter anil pew
moon the hours of work lengthened until,
as I have said, at new moon they lasted
all day; between new moon and first quar
ter work began later and later In the fore
noon as the quarter was approached, and
between first quarter and full moon the
laboring hours rapidly shortened, being
confined Jo Ihe latter part of the after
noon. until at full moon complete alienee
reigned In Ihe mill."
"Well! well!" I broke In. greatly aston
ished by Hall's singular recltnl. "you
must have thought Dr Syx was a cross
between an alchemist and an astrolo
ger."
"Note this," said Hall, disregarding my
Interruption, “the hours when the engine
worked were Invariably the hours during
which the moon was above the horixon."
"What did you Infer from that?"
"Of course I Inferred that the moon
was directly concerned In the mystery,
but how? That bothered me for a long
time, but a little light broke Into my
mind when I picked up, on the mountain
side, a dead bird, whose scrorhed feath
era were hronxed with art emlslum. and
sometime later another similar victim of
a mysterious form of death Then came
the attack on tho mine and Its tragic, fin
ish. I have already 101 l you what I oh
served on that occasion But Instead of
helping to dear up he mystery li rather
complicat'd It for a time At length, how
ever. I reasoned my way partly out of
the difficulty, Certain things which I had
noticed In the Syx mill convinced me that
there was a part of the building whose
existence no visitor suspected, and put
ting one thing with another I Inferred
that the roof must be <g>en above that
secret par* of the structure, and that If
I could get upon a sufficiently elevated
place I could see something of what was
hidden there. *
At this point In Ihe investigation I
proposed to you the trip to the top of the
Teton, the result of which-you remember
1 bad calculated the angles with great
care, and I felt certain that from the
apex of the mountain 1 should be able to
get a view Into the concealed chamber
and Into Just what side of tt which 1
wished particularly lo inspect. You re
member that I call'd your attention to a
shining Object ua.jemcath th" circular
onenlng In the roof You could not m-i K
. what It was. but I *ovf enough to
convince me-that K was a gigantic para
bolic mirror. I'll show you a smaller one
of the same kind presently.
"Now, Id last. I began lo perceive the
real truth, but It was so wl.dly inured -
hie so infinitely remote from all human
experience, thot I hardly venture.! to
formulate It, even in my own xecret
mind. But I woe bound to ace Ua thing
through to he end. It occurred to me
that 1 "Slid prove the accuracy of my
theory with the aid of a kite You were
kind enough to lend your assistance In
Ilia: experiment, and It gave me irre
fraglble evidence of the existence of a
shaft of flying aoms extending in a di
rect line between Dr. Syx' pretended mine
and the moon!"
"Hell!" 1 exclaimed "You are mad'"
My friend smiled good naturcdly and
went on with hit story.
"The Instant the kite shriveled and
dieapi enrol I understood why she works
> re Idle when the moon was not above
the horixon. why bints living across that
fatal beam fell dead upon the rocks, end
whence she terrible master of that mys
terious mill derived the lower of destruc
tion ihn could wither an army, as (he
Assyrian host In Byron's poem.
Melted like snow In th glance of Ihe
Lord!
"llut bow did Dr. Pyx turn the flying
atoms against his enemies r* i
**lii a very manner. lie tract
a mirror mountel m> tlmt * coulu l*r
turneal in any direction, nml wnuki chut
tho etivam of metallic atoms, heated hy
their friction with the air. towstrd any
tl* *lrfl point When he attack came he
ihi?* machine above the level of (he
roof and swept the mob to a lustrous if
expensive death.**
“And me light at night— **
“W is ihe hlning of tha heated Moms
not luminoiM enough to h> vt*4h|e in
bro.nl day, for whi<*r> reason the engine
never worked at nigh: and the ssream
of \ .utilised nrtemisium as* never *et
flowing at full moixi. when the lunar
glofte in above the 'horizon only during
the hours of darkness.**
“T see,** 1 laid, "alienee came the nug*
uets on the mountain. Home of the
atom*, owing to they* data nee of the air.
fell short and settled In the form of im
palpable dust until the winds and rains
collected ansi ronipi :*d them In the
cracks and crevices of the rocks."
"That was it. of course."
"And now." I added, my amazement at
the success of Hall s experiments and the
accuracy of his deductions, lncroalnjr ev
ery moment, “do you any that you have
also discovered the means employed by
Ip- Hvx to obtain artemislum from the
moon?"
"Not only that,** replied my friend,
hut within the next few minute* I shall
have the pleasure of presenting to you a
button of moon metal, fresh from the
veins of Artemis herself."
XIII—The l.aotlng of the Moon.
I shall spore the reader • recital of the
tireless efforts, continuing through many
ilm*rf sleepless weeks, whereby Andrew
Hall obtained his clew to Ir Syx*s meth
od. It was manifest from the beginning
that the agent concerned must be some
form of etherlc, or so-called electric, en
ergy; but how to set it In <q>oratlon was
the problem Finally he hit upon the ap
paratus for his initial experiment* which
I hove cilready described.
"Recurring to what had been done more
than half a century ago by Herts, when
he ooticetrated electrtc waves upon a focal
IKiint hy means of a concave mirror,"
said Hull, "I saw that the key I wanted
lay In on extension of these experiments
At Inst I found that I could transform the
energy of an engine into undulations of
the eiher, whteh. when they had l>een
concentrated upon n metallic object, like
a chunk of gold. Imparted to It an In
tense charifc of on apparently electric
nature. t*|>on thus charging a metallic
body Inclosed in a vacuum. I observed
that the energy Imparted to It possessed
the remarkable power of disrupting its
atoms and projecting them off In straight
lines, very much as occurs wMh a
kathode in a Crook*’# tube. Hut—and this
was of supreme Importance—l fount! that
the line of projection was directly to
ward the apparatus from which the im
pulse producing the charge had
come. In other words, could pro
duce two poi* between which
a marvelous Interaction occurred Mv
transformer, with Its concentrating mir
ror, acted as one pole, from which energy
was transferred to the other pole, and
that other pole Immediately flung off
atoms of Its own substance 1n the direc
tion of the transformer. Hut these
atoms were stopped by the glass wall of
the vacuum tube, and when 1 trlesl the
experiment with the metnl removed from
the vacuum, and surrounded with air. It
failed utterly.
"This nt first completely discouraged
me. until I suddenly remembered that the
moon Is In a vacuum, the gr* it vacuum
of Interplanetary space, am! ihnt It pos
sesses no perceptible atmosphere of its
own. At this a gnat light broke around
me. and I shouted ‘Kursk*’’ Without he*.
Ration I constructed a transformer of
great power, furnished with a large pars,
belle mirror lo transmit the w *ve* In par
allel line-, erected the machinery ami
h'didlng* here, ami when all was ready for
yie final experiment telegraphed to you."
Prepared by these explanations. I was
all on flrb to see the thing tried, liall
was no less eager, and. calling in his twsi
faithful assistant* to make the final ad
justments. he led the way Into what he
facetiously named "the lunar chamber.**
"If we fall," he remarked with a smile
that had an element of worrtment about
H, "It will become the ‘lunatic cham
ber'—hut no danger of that. You observe
this polished sliver knob, supported by a
metallic rod curved over at the lop like
a crane. Thai constitutes the pole from
which I propose to transmit the energy
to the moon, and upon which I expect the
storm of atoms to be center**! by r*-
flertlon from the mirror at who** focus 1t
Is placed."
“One moment." T said. "Am I to under
stand that you think that the moon Is a
solid mass of artemislum am! that no
matter where your radiant force strikes
It a kithodlc pok* will be formed there
from whuch atoms will be projected to the
earth?"
“No," said Hall IT must carefully
chose the point on the lunar surface
where to operate Rut that will i repent
no difficulty. I made up my mini aa
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soon as I had penetrat#*! Hyx’s eecret (hat
he obtained the metal from those m\atlc
white streak* which radiate from Tycho,
and which have puxsb'd the astronomers
ever since the Invention of teioweopoa I
now believe tho • streaks t* be i'nni|o l
of Itmneim** vcinn >f the nm at iht Hyx
has moot appropriately ium*l arteintsi
um, whltdi you. of court recognize a
being derived from the name cf fhe Greek
Kodtie** of the nison. Artemi*, whom the
Homo ns culled iMana. But now to work!"
It was legs than a day pu t the lime
of new moon and the f.irlh's satellite
was too nekr the aun to he visible In
broad daylight. Accordingly, the tntriot
had to Ik* directed by means of a known
• dg* of the moon'* place In the sky
Drtvtn by accurate clockwork. It con and
be defended upon to retain the proper
direction when once set.
With breathless Interest I watched th**
proceeding* of my friend and his asms*
ants. The strain upon the nervis of all
of us was HiK'ti as could not have been
borne for many hours at a stret* h.
When everything had been adjuated to
his satisfaction Hall stepped I wick, not
w-Mhoiit betraying his excitement n flush
ed cheeks an*! Mashing eyes, and preen, .1
a lever. The powerful engine underneath
the floor instantly responded. The ex
periment WHS liegun.
To Be Continued.
Jim Ball,', llrrolp Hl'tr.
loiter In North China Herat 1
I have re id sever.il graphic accounts of
the siege of Tien Tln hut one prominent
feat during the same has hardly been re
ferred to at all.
It was at the first stage of *!<•*<•; 'he
residents of Tien Tstn. men. woman, an I
children, were pining tn the Gordon Halt
and Its rellurs.
The dally question was. When will the
relief ronv ? the shelling and snipping are
unbearable, and. unless the relief come,
soon, alt holies must tie atianduned.
During hard times men of steel come
forward and sueh was abo here the ea-e
Mr Jim Watts, a young volunteer of
Iwentyjtwo years of age, h<‘ ion of the
well-known Capt James Watts. Taku.
volunteered to r|.V* to Taku with dis
patches
His offer was sei-efited hy the military
authorities; very few expecting to s-> him
again The whole country was swarming
with Itoxers, and It a|i|waie.l quite an Im
possibility to get through. Mr. Jim Watts
posscs.-s th" qualities of a he>o, strong
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tie went through several vlllig'S where
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with rifles wdh Axed bayonets, hts flask
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they swam, and Taku was eventually
reached.
The dispatches were delivered and Mr
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for Tien Tstn.
He has been made a sub-tleutenont of
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I ' ‘tt k nirp t fitt-f! Ik* |.a4la, * •' , ** r ;**
Kait "ciHicmsTgk's cmoußS
11/dfevi. aa4 kali) .♦♦alH' Uta. ~alal
•MSk • f kk-t. Tsk*
4IA MtaV! |>aavrva NkeUttH-i
n- flr UaaTbxt * JWH '"*#•,**•* T* 4 !*• *
/ Juan TastlMMteU
V sad * fr *f** r /L*E
\ nr lam Moll. J O,mo !••••••kf
ill I>ni|("i' IfcUfcpettP uu'i? ** mV
Msh~b ttli par v Ms4lm* r’,*^!^*
§M kf Ll' ***•**• 4 cSm ** * Drqfgfta, OtKBSB,
jTd. WEED * CO
aavaaaaa. aa.
Ltather BcltliA, Steam Packing 4 Hosz
Agaota foe NEW IDiUt MVBUK.H
Bh.LTL.NU AND FAC'JLLNU CUMFA-N L j
Hard Sense.
It take* keen common
added to superior judgment and
experience, to be superintend ent of jjjßCr.
a railroud. Such a uiun atm re* j
commends anything that be has not
himself subjected to #.~v.cial test. jV ||
nt, living at Savannah, On., in li
which city he was born, any 8 he
feela better than he ever did, and s'//
he had the womt case of dyspepsia / \ WvfcAjbJ
on record. He hud no appetite, and 't/) )
the little he ate disagreed with him, fj*!
had pains in the head, breast and X
Stomach, hut after nsing three bot- S
ties of P. P. P. he felt like anew dr
man. *He says that he feels that he ' MM£jn> BMWyVS j
could live fotover if he could always , lllgI RR VkisH
get P. P. P. His name will be given .
on application to Lippman ltrother*, the
Dyspepsia in all its forma la promptly
tat permanently cured by P. P. P. General
Debility and lack of energy gire place to vim and ambition through
the nae of P. P. P. Blood Polao i and all its incidental and hereditary
SUa nre eradicated by P. P. P. Rheumatism is conquered and banished
hy P. P. P., as are aluo Catarrh and Malaria. P. P. P. is a purely vega
table compound, which has steadily grown in favor for years.
• SOLD BV ALL DRUGGISTS.
LIPPMAN BRO T "~'S. '“"BBSS Savannah, fix.
JUST RECEIVED,
Fire-Proof Safes
From the most erlebrated manstaetarers, both Irr-groaf aid
burglar iirnof aafra and vault door,.
We carry aa tmnirnar stork of Fire-proof Safes. Oar aloek em
braces a very rlriasl liar from TOO lo 4,000 pounds. Inclusive,
stnale ssd double doors, asd a visit to our rstabllslim'-nt to la
sprrt these alegaat safes will be a eooree of murh profit asd ln
straelloa to onr friends.
The price will br ns low ns off really Fire-proof Safe can be
ma< t r , and onr motto Is finality and Snfrly of the Ural Import
ance.
ffrnd or call on as for farther parttralars, ratatoaae and prices.
LIPPMAN BROS.,
Wholesale Agents for Manufacturers
of Fire-Proof Safes.
SOUTHERN BANK
uf the State of Georgia.
Capital W* o **"
Piirplus and undivided proflls Mut.*W
DEI*OBITORY OF THE STATE Ok
GEORGIA.
Superior facilities for transacting a
itenerfl Honking Iluslneaa.
t'ollectlnna made on all tvlnta
a. c'-ssjblc through f ck "" I I> *tk• t x
A counts of It.inks. Ilank'-rs, *
sort othera stilt'lied Safe Deposit Boxes
for rent.
Department of Savings, Interest payable
quarterly.
Sells Sterling Exchange on Ixmdon It
and upwards.
JOHN FLANNERY. President
HORACE A, CRANE. Vice president.
JAMES SULLIVAN. Cashier.
DIRECTORS
JNO. FLANNERY. WM W GORDON
K A WWIL W W. OORIION. Jr,
It A. CRANE. JOHN M K'IAN
LEE ROY MYERB.JOSEPH FKRBT
H P. SMART CHARLES Et.l.tß
EDWARD KELLY JOHN J KIRItY.
SdillMi Hen
CAPITAL, *BOO,OOO.
Aecounts of banks, merchants, corpora
tions and Individuals solicited.
Savinas Department. Interest paid quar
terly.
Safety Bosea and Storage Vaults for
rent.
Collections made on alt polnte at rea
sonable rates.
Drafts sold on all the chief cittea of ths
world. u *. ant
Correspondence Invited.
Joseph and. weed. President.
JOHN C. ROWLAND, Vice President
w. F. McCALLEY. Cashier.
T\fe GERMANIA BANK
BAVANNAH, OA.
Capital
Undivided profits
This bank offers Its services to corpo
ration*. men bants and Individuals
Has authority to act a# executor, ad
ministrator. guardian, etc.
Issues dtafta on the principal cities tn
Great Britain and Ireland and on the
Continent.
Interest paid or compounded quarterly
on deposits tn tha Pavings Department.
Safety boxes for rent
HENRY RLt'N. President
GEO W TIKI'EM AN. Vice President.
JOHN M HOGAN. Cashier.
WALTER F HOGAN. Aso't Cashier.
LEOPOLD ADI.ER. JNO. It PILIAIN,
President. Cashier.
C S ELLIS, BARRON CARTER.
Vice President Asst. Cashier.
The Chatham Bank
SAVANNAH.
Will lie pleased lo'reeclve Ihe accounts
of Merrhant*. Firm*, individuals. Hanks,
and Corporations.
Liberal favors extended.
Unsurpassed collection facilities, Insur
ing prompt returns,
SEPARATE SAVINGS DEPARTMENT
INTEREST COMPOUNDED QUARTER.
I.Y ON DEPOSITS.
Bafety Deposit Boxes and Vaults for
rent. Correspondence solicited .
THE GEORGIA STATE
Bl'lLDlNti AND LOAN ASSOCIATION.
U YORK STREET, WEST.
5 PER CENT, per annum allowed on
deposits, w.thdrawable on demand.
Interest credited quarterly.
6- PER CENT per annum allowed on
deposlla of even hundreds, withdraw
able at annual period*.
GEO W TIEDEMAN. Presldant.
U. K. LEVY. Vice President.
E. W. BELL. Secretary.
c. Q. ANDERSON, JR, Treaiuror,
The Citizens Bank
OF SAVAMNAH.
CAPITAL $500,000.
Transacts a tienernl llnnklng
IB t si ness.
Solicits Aernants of Individuals,
Nrrrhssta, Hanks and other Corps*
rations. 9
i 'olleeflons handled nlili safety,
(•roNuiNf anil dispatch.
Interest, rnmpounilril quarterly,
allowed on deposits In oar Bsrlngt
Depart meat.
Safety deposit Hoses and Storage
Vanlts.
llßmiSr A. IIRNHUIK. President.
UII.Mi H. I. A WE, % tee President,
i.l oltl.K C. KRgFHtN, t nattier.
IJORIMIh 1.. UNOOVKH, Asst, ( ashler.
No. 1640. Chartered IMA
-THK-
MiS ill H
OF SAVANNAH.
CAI'ITAU SS.dUO. HI'KFI.ns HOO.OOO
UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY.
J. A. CJ CARBON. IT*.Went
IIEIItNK liOROON. Vie* I'ri-.Ulent.
W M HAVANT. Cauhler
Account, of bank. ami banker*, mer
chant. nml iorporation* received upon
th moat favorable i<rm. ronal.tenl with
•of* an>l con.ervatlvc banking.
' <pf isini
Jffil MU'!
ESSE n3—ns
BROOGHTON Ml:
Bone Meal
For Chicken Feed and Fartlllaer.
NITRATE OF SODA
Invaluable for •'hoeae-mUed" ./ertlliaar.
The cheapeat amt m".t conrtnlraled on
the market Brrul for pertt'-ulara.
HAY. GRAIN, con KKHI, HR AY, DTt,
SEED OATS AND RYE-
T. J. DAVIS,
Thniw Cl. 11l Mar atreat, weal.
BRFiNNAN BROS*
WHOLESALB
Fruit, Produce, Grain, Etc.
bay street, weak
TstepbaatSSO.
IF YOU WANT OOOD MATERIAL
and work, onier your lithographed and
printed stationery and blank hooka tram
Mondog News, Savannah. Oa
17