The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, June 28, 1906, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

" ■ «wr„TKnyimjrrT W p.r ■■■- THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. AMERICAN DENTAL PARLORS 19JPeacMrei Streal, Atlanta, 6a. over JCHaul a may. Dr. C. C, NEEDHAM, Prop. Rubber Plates e#*cn 22-K Gold Crown.... a'/iOU Porcelain Crown.... Bridgework, per Mb PAINLESS EXTRACTING r n r r 1 TEETH CLEANED MlCcl Hour., Sam. till 8 p. m. WE TAKE (MPRE83ION AND PUT IN YOUR TEETH* 8AM E^ DAY." UP \BA TTLESHIP A TLANTA \ IS OUT OF COMMISSION M'LEOD LOTS BRING EXCELLENT PRICES FamousCraft Convert? ed Into Boarding House GEORGIA REPRESENTS THE EMPIRE STATE. The Atlanta, Stripped of former Regalia, Lies at Anchor With the Torpedo Flotilla. THE VICTOR SANITARIUM 321-323 Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga. OPIUM, WHISKY and other drug hablta cured In four weeks. Patlenta do not auffer aa they do at many Institutions. Comfort of patlenta carefully looked af ter. Sanitarium la home-llke and pleasant, and not a prison, ns aomo Imagine. Treatment entirely free from any harmful results. For full particulars call or address The Victor 8an!tarlum, or On B. M. Woolley, Lock Box 387. ATTORNEY FOR WALL RAS ASKED FOR BAIL SiH'ditl to The Reorglnn. Augusta, Qa.. Juna 3T.—Attorney Austin Branch presented a petition to Judge H. C. Hammond yesterday ask ing for a new trial In the J. S. Wall esse, and also asked to be allowed ball. Judge Hammond has set Saturday aa the day for the case to. be argued be fore him. This petition |s the first that has been presented asking for ball for Wall. He has boen In the county Jafl since the night of the tragedy and dur ing the past few weeks there has been but little, If anything, said about his case. HEAR GOV. BOB TAY- LOR BUILD CASTLES IN THE AIR AT MEM. CHURCH THU DAY NIGHT, JUNE 28TH. TICKETS AT EDMOND SON’S DRUG STORE, 14 S. BROAD ST. 50 AND 75c. IpWlll to The Georgian. Portsmouth. Va^ June ft.—Atlanta's only representative ship in the Amer- Iran navy Is now doing somewhat me* dlocre duty at the Portsmouth navy yard, retired, perhaps, from active service for the remainder of Its days. The Atlanta, which was once one of the finest ships In the American navy, is now nothing more than a huge boarding house, quartering the enlist* ed tnen attached to the reserve tor* pedo flotilla at the naval torpedo sta tion at this navy yard. The naval cadets attached to thd United Status naval academy, at An napolis, cruised in the Atlanta Inst summer, but since that time tho cruiser has cast off its Immacuiato white and standard huff of the navy, and has taken on the universal navy green of the torpedo boats. The big warship looks rather awkward and really out of plare, as it lies moored at the naval torpedo station, identl* . ;il In oniiii* With til** scotes of Iml,. torpedo boats, submarines and de stroyers moored alongside, and look ing for all the world like pygmies be side a giant. Dut the Atlanta's days of useful ness are fast waning. It possible, ami even probable, that if tin* in eli sion arose for tin* need of a l»lg fleet of worships to encounter a hostllo fleet, the Atlanta could steam to sea with the other vessels of its class, and put up a good fight, but as long an everything Is serene along tin* coast, the Atlantn seems doomed to remain on Its present Inglorious duty—that ? a station ship. There Is no comparison between the Atlanta of old and tho present-day cruiser. Vessels of this class are be ing built larger and more formidable each year. Ten years ago, the Atlanta ranked with th** host afloat, now the Colorado overbalances tho Atlanta's tonnage of 8,000 by 10,680 tons. The Colorado. Pennsylvania, Maryland and Woat Virginia are speeded at 22 knots, while the beBt the Atlanta could do was 16.60 on its trial trip. But the Cracker State is not going to sink into oblivion from tho naval register. The queenly battle ship Georgia furnished over the trial course off the coast of Massachusetts a few (lays ago In record-breaking time, and Georgia’s name and fame Is to be taken up again with the retirement of the Atlanta from the eyes of tho world. The Georgia is to be Included In the The auction side of n part of the McLeod uuneatend. conducted l>y 8. II. Tununn A 'oiiipfltiy Tuesday afternoon, resulted In he sale of a number of Ids nt fnlf prices, i the total reaching 1AM The sale was attended by n number of rltlnim and ao% crnl lota were transferred at private an!.* after the Idddlng nt higher prison than those said by the fortunate bidder*. The lot* itre located hi Smith Itoulev.ird, Oruieuooil. Mr Lend sod Confederate nve nuea The sale was condsetsd l»y Colonel J. W. Fergusmi. auctioneer, nnd tho fol lowing were the purchaser* and price* paid: llugli UlcunrdHon, **>»; Hugh lllrhnrdran, ivrt; w. S. Archer. $7*X): \V. H. Nell*. $BI5; \V. M. I^.rtla and HoOtfliroller. $*75; J. M. Ponder. $23; W. S. Loftls and lloaten* eel tor. f3*>; IP. 2*. Kelley, &?o: lf7 I*. Kenney. f:tn ; w. P. Kelley, fM0; M. II. burns. $:■»: J. II. Latham. 1W0; M. M. Snider, J5K; T. A ItoNnson, t-CTi W. 1*. Kelley, W. P. Kelley. $*#; J. II. Igithiitn. 17r.fi; \V. A. Pouter. |Dtj Harper. Wen them A (V. 1660; Loftln nnd lloaten- relter. ITC6; J. II. Latlnim. $770; W. B Beall. BOP; K. II. Kllerby. $215; 11. W Green, i860; J. L. Veal. >>20; Mre. J. II. Johnson. 1330; it. N. Pannr. Mi"; W. V. Zimmer. $£|0: Prank 1-Mmondsoh, f.lO; Nhel- I»y Smith. I6C); Prank EdmonaSSn. >575; Prnnk BdOpadtoU, W. V. Zimmer, 1916: A. If. Ulster. $»oo; J. Las Dimes. |*iX). Neat Tuesday 8. It. Tununn a Co. fr"‘ hold nu auction sale on the Holdlers’ Ho car line. INTEGRAL KRYPTOK BIF0 OALS are solid double vision lenses: no ce ment to come loose. Tho only bifocals that are durable. Jno. L. Moore A Hons, sole manufacturers for Georgia. These eyeglass lenses me the greatest •ptlcal Invention of tho last fifty years. 2 N. Broad St., Prudential building. EXCELLENT SERVICE TO WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH, NORTH CAROLINA. During tho months of Juno, July nnd August the Seaboard Air Lino Hallway will oparate on Its train leav ing Atlanta at 0:35 p. m., every SAT URDAY. a through sleeping car to Wilmington, N. C.: returning the through sleeper will leave Wil mington Thursday at 3:00 p. a.. arriving In Atlanta at 6:30 a. m.. Friday. Arrangements have been mndo with the street rail way people nt Wilmington to lmvo cars ready at tho depot to Immediate ly transport passengers to tho liotols nt Wrlghtsvlllo De-ch. Uaggago will be checked to destination. WEEK END rate, good for flvo days, fS.25; SEASON tickets. *18.55. SEABOARD. AUCTION SALE rmTTTrr m ~i n n n iiiiimrr DECATUR! PROPERTY 27 B r.rz7 Next Tuesday, July 3d, 4p. m. This is one of tho only opportunities ever offered to buy n lot at your own price in this clnssic suburb or Atlanta. Efforts are now being made to get waterworks, and it is a question of n short time only when Decatur will have water. Town already lias electric lights. This property is iu half n block of Agnes Scott College and part of tho property fronts car line nnd Georgia railroad. Take Decatur cars at Edgewood avenue nnd Peachtree nnd got off at McDonough street. Terms—One-fourth cash, balance six, twelve and eighteen months, 6 per cent interest. For plats and particulars see ANSLEY BROS. & DR.J. W. MAYSON 10 East Alabama composition of the new Atlantic fleet that is to be organized in tho fall. Sixteen vessels of tho battle ship class will be Included In this squadron, over hich Hear Admiral llobley D. Evans will presfdo as commanding officer. The squadron will rival the famous English channel squadron, and on Its cruises will carry tho fame nnd strength of America Into tho remotest corners of the earth, and Georgia’s will be foremyst among them. IMPROVEMENTS MADE AT MEDICAL COLLEGE Bpeclsl to The Georgian. Augusta, Go., June 27.—The Medi cal College students will hardly recog nise the old collego building this fall when they return for the resuming of their studies. Dean Allen took up the matter **f Improving tho building be- for** th** board "f trustee*, nn*l In a short time the medical building of the University of Georgia will favorably compare with any of the other build ings owned by the state. The outsido of tho building will be palntod a light canary, and there will bo other Im provement* made on the exterior. Good Rosde Convention. 8|n Gill i" I In* (fforgtiui. Pensacola, Fla., June 27.—The good roads convention, which was held In Tallahassee the latter part of Inst week, was attended by A large number of In terested Pensacollans. IMMIGRATION MEETING IS CALLED AT AUGUSTA Hp.clnl lo Tho Qeorklnn. Auxustn. <}n , .hint. .-T -K,i'rpfiry W- j. Moore, of the chamber of i nm- tnerre, but, iulietl r mc-tinn nt the im- mtrreilon end executive committee. I"' Tim I .din nlKhi „„bje< t .if Immlarattoo will bo 4l*cu»»ed Jointly. The In,ml,ration committee lien Tfurt the nmlter up eeveral time, lotely, but they hove never n.knl tlie aupport of tho executive committee before I'linlnnnn Curr, of the Immigration committee, hit. been illpru»Hlng th. nubject with tho merchnnt. nnd bu.l- I10I.H men O* the city, nnd he any. he I. convinced thltt there I, n (Trent rie- mand for more nnd lmtter Intiorern. THE JUNGLE WORLD-FAMOUS STORY OF THE SHADOWS OF PACKINGTOWN CHAPTER VI—(CONTINUED.) Ho they came away, and Ona went down to the yard* and at noon-time *nw Jurats and told him. Jurgl* took It stolidly—he had made up hi* mind to It by this time. It wns part of fate: they would manage It somehow—he made his usual nnttwor. "I will work harder.” It would upact their plant for a time; snd It would perhaps bs neces sary for Ona lo get work after all. It »oa not fair to let Jural, and her sup- had acouted this iden, but now knit brows snd nodded (b head slowly— yea, perhaps tt would be best; they would all have to moke some sacrifices now. 8o Ona set out that day to hunt for work, and at night MnrIJa came home •‘tying that she had met a girl named Jasnltytt who had a friend that worked Jn one of the wrapping rooms In Brown’s, and might get a place for Ona there; only the forelady was the kind thnt takes presents—It was no use for any one to ask her for n place unless at the same time they slipped a ten- dotlnr bill Into her hand. Jurgfa waa not in the least surprised nt this now —he merely asked what tho wages of the place would be. So negotiations »»re opened, and after an Interview fins came home and reported that the f.relsdy seemed to like her, and had •aid that, while she wns not sure, she 'bought she might be able to put her at work sewing rovers nt! hams, a Job fl i which she could earn as much as eight or ten dollars a week. That was » bid, ao Marlin t.•ported, after con- anting her friend; and then there was an anxious conference at home. Th* work was done In one of the cellars, and Jurgls did not want Ona to work In such n place; but then It was easy work, and one could not have every* thing. So In the end Ona, with a ten- dnjlar bill burning a hole In tier palm, h*d another Interview with the fore- lady. Meantime Teta EUbleta had taken Stanlalovas to the priest and gotten a certificate to tho efTect that he waa two years older than he was. and with It the little hoy now sallied forth to make Ills fortune In the world. It chanced that Durham had Juat put In a won derful new lard machine, nnd when the special policeman In front of the time atatlon saw Btanlalovaa and his document he smiled to himself and told him to go—"Cslal Calal” pointing. And so 8tanlslovaa went down a long stone corridor and up a night of stnlrs, which took him Into ft room lighted by elec tricity, with the new machines for filling lard cans at work In IL Tho lard was finished on the floor above, and It came In little Jets, llkt beauti ful, wriggling, snow-white snakes of unpleasant odor. There were several kinds and sites of jets, and after n certain precise quantity had come out. each stopped automatically, and the wonderful machine made a turn and took tho can under another Jet, and so on, until It was filled neatly to tho brim, and pressed tightly and smoothed oft. To attend to all this and fill sev eral hundred cans of lard per hour there were necessary two human crea tures. one of whom knew how to place an empty lard can on a certain spot every few seconds, and the othsr of whom knew how to take a full lard can ofT a certain spot every few sec onds snd set It upon a tray. And so, after little Stanlalovas had stood getting timidly about him for a few minutes, a man approached him, and asked what he wanted, to which Stanlalovas said, “Job.” Then the man said, "How Oldr and Btanlalovaa an swered, "Slxtln.” Once or twice every year a atate Inspector would come wandering through the parking plants asking a child here and there how old he was; snd so the packers were very careful to comply with the law, which cost them as much trouble as was now Involved In. the bow 1 taking the document from the Ifttfe boy. and glancing at It. and then sending It to the office to bo filed away. Then ho SYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS CHAPTERS The story of "The Jungle," Upton 1 Sinclair's novel, which has caused the government Investigation Into the'methods employed by the Beef Trust, has Its origin In an actual Paclnkgtown romance. Tho first chapter shows a broad-shouldered butcher being wedded to a young girl who sees in him a hero. ' The wedding, in all its grotesqueness, is described. Practically penniless, Jurgls tells his bride she shall not return ttf work In tho pocking house—ho will work early and late. He could not work harder, but the thought of seeing her contrlbuto toward their eup- port was abhorrent to him. On arriving in Chicago, J. Bzedvllas, a Lithuanian, who ran a delicatessen store in Packlngtown. guided Jurgls, One, MurIJa and the remainder of tho party through the srock yards, after lie had given thorn lodg ing. In this section of tho story the author reveals some of the things that have startled tho country. The little coterie decided to purchone a bouse. They were to pay $12 a month for It They And they have been swindled—thot the company charges such Interest that they .will be unable to pay, Then*the com pany, In line with Its predatory policy, flgureff on selling the house again, as It had sold tho structure many times before. The seducthre, deadly “easy payment" plan had lured the unfortunate Lithuanians. Jurgls refused to join a labor union that would have promoted the Interests of all. He did not understand that the life was being worked out of him. He was strong. And he thought he would always be so. Antanus Rudkus, broken In health, cannot And work. But ono of the under bosses obtains a Job for him on condition that Antanus pay him one-third of his salary. The first week’s two-thirds went to buy a pair of boots. Yesterday's Installment ended with the story of how Ona and other members of the little party of set tlers went to the real estao agent nnd found that they would havo to pay seven per cent on thelr^home. The author ends the Installment with the family weeping and looking gloomily to the future. (Copyright, 290C, by Upton Sinclair. All righto reserved.) • Beautiful rookwood The displav of Rookwood with its rich familiar brown* greens and yellows has been supplemented bv some exquisite new colorings and shapes un glazed. A soft greenish gray with just a thought of pink is the ground for a conventionalixeddovw in the verv shades of the growing thing. Soft, rich ecru with nasturtiums in natural shades is an^h^- Then dull green with scattered violets. The shades are the best yet in Rtfokwood. We are the Sole Agents in Atlanta. MAIER & BERKELE. set some one else at a different Job, and showed the lad how Co place a bird can every time the empty arm of the remorseless machine came to him, and ■o was decided the place In the uni verse of little 8tanlslovas, and hfs : ' ■!, MU th*’ «*h‘l "f h 1M *1 si > .** Hour after hour, day after day, year after year. It was fated that he should stand upon a certain square foot ^of floor from seven in the morning until noon, nnd again (mm half pa.-t twelve t||| half past five, making never a motion and thinking never a thought, save for the setting of lard cans. In summer the stench of the warm lard would be nauseating, and In win ter the cans would all but freeze to his naked little fingers In the unheated cel lar. Ha If the year It would be dark as bight when he went In to work and dark as night again when he come out, and so he would never know what the sun looked like on week days. And for this, at the end of the week he would carry home S2 to his family, be ing his pay at the rate of 5 cents per hour—just about his proper share of the total earnings of the million an*l three-quarters or children who are now engaged in earning their livings la the United States. And meantime, because they were young, and hope is not to bo stifled before its time, Jurgls and Ona were again calculating; for they had discov ered that the woges of Htanlslova would a little more than pay the !n- Yerest, which left them Just about as they had been before! It would be but fair to them to say that the little boy was delighted with his work, and at the Idea of earning a lot of money; and also that the two were very much In love with each other. chapter’vii. All summer long the family tolled, and In the fail they had money enough for Jurgls and Ona to be married ac cording to home traditions of decency. In the latter part of November they hired a hall and Invited all their new acquaintances, who came and left them over a hundred dollars In debt. a bltt**r and cruel experience. despair. Such a time, of all times, for them to have it, when their hearts were made tender! Such a pitiful begin ning it was for their married life; they loved each other ao, nnd they could not have the brlefeat respite! It was a time when everything cried out to them that they ought to be happy; when wonder burned In their hearts and leaped Into flame at the slightest breath. They were shaken to the depths of them, with the awo of love realized, nnd was It so very weak of them that they cried out for a little peace? They luuS opened their hearts, like flowers to the springtime, and the merciless winter had fallen upon them. They wondered If ever any love that that had blossomed In the world had been so crushed and trampled! Over them, relentless and savage, there cracked the lash of want; the morning after the wedding It Bought them as they slept, and drove them out before daybreak to work. Ona was scarcely able to stand with exhaustion; but if she were to lose her place they would be ruined, snd she would surely lose It If sho were not on time that day. They all had to go, even little Htanfslovan, who was III from over In dulgence In sausage* and sarsaparilla. All that day lie stood at his lard machine, rocking unsteadily, his eyes closing In spite of him; and he had all but lost his place even so, for the foreman booted him twice to waken him. It was fully a week before they were all normal again, and meantime, with whining children and cross adults, the house was not a pleasant place to live Jurgls lost hi* temper very little, however, all things considered. It was because of Ona; the least glance of her was always enough to make him control himself. Bhe waa ao sensitive —she was not fitted for such a life as this; and a hundred times a day, when he thought of her. be would clench his _ - . hands and fling hlmaelf again at the ( havo thwarted. There * amo a day task before him. 8b* was too good for when the rain fell In torrents; and tt him, he told himself, and h* was resolved that sho should never And this out, and so was always on the watch to see that he did not betray any of his ugly self; be would take care even in little matters, such as his manners, and his habit of swenrlng when things went wrong. The tears come ao easily Into Ona's eyes, and sho would look at him so appealingly—It kept Jurgls quite busy making resolutions, In addition to ail the other things ho hod on his mind. It was true that more things were go ing on at this time In the mind of Jur gls than ever had In all hla life before. Ifo bad to protect her, to do battle for her against th* horror he saw about them. Ho waa all that she had to look to, and If he failed she Would be lost; he would wrap hla arms about h*-r. iiml ti v t'. hid- h-r fr-.m Mi* Ho had feared the way or things about him now. Jt was a war of each against all, and the devil take the hind most. You did not give feasts to other people, you waited for them to give feasts to you. You went about with your soul Tull of suspicion and hatred; you understood that you were environ ed by hostile powers that were trying to get your money, and who used all the virtues to bait their traps with. The storekeepers plastered up their windows with all sorts of lies to entice you; the very fences by the wayside, the lampposts snd telegrsph poIch were pasted over with lie** The great cor poration which employed you lied'to you, and lied to the whole country— from top to bottom It was nothing but one gigantic lie. 8o Jurgls said that he understood It; i and yet it w*as really pitiful for the; struggle was so unfair—some had so much the advantage! Here he was, for instance, vow ing upon his kneen • that he would save Ona from harm, and only a week later she waa suffer ing atrociously, and from the blow of| enemy that he could not possibly her on tho street car. Now it chanced that thla car line was owned by gen tlemen who were trying to mako money. And the city having paast-d an ordlnittM *« requiring them t<» kI\«* trans fers could bo hud only when the faro was paid, and lator, growing still ug lier, they had made another—(hat tho passenger must oak for the transfer, the conductor was not allowed to of fer It. Now Ona had boon told that she was to get a transfer, but It wiih not h**r way to speak up, and so wh* merely waited, following the conductor about with her eyes, wondering when would think of her. When at last the time came for her to get out, ehe asked for the transfer and was refused. Not knowing what to make of this, she be gan to argue with tho conductor. In a languago of which he did not under stand a word. After warning her sev eral time* ho pulled the bell nnd the rnr went on«-ot which Onn burst Into tears. At the next corner no more money, she had tn walk the rest of the way to the yards in tho pouring rain. And so nil day long sho sat shiv ering and mine homo at night with her teeth chattering nnd pains In her head and back. For two weeks after wards she suffered cruelly—and yet every day ehe had to drag herself to her work. Tho forewoman was espe cially severe with Ono, because she be lieved that she was obstinate on ac count of having been refused a holiday tho day after her werldfng. ona had on 1*1* it thill h-r "for-lndv" *11*1 not like to have her girls marry—perhaps be cause she was old and ugly and un married herself. There were many such dangers In which the odds were all against them. Their children were not as well as they had been at home, but how could they know that there was no sewer to their house and that -the drainage of fifteen years was In a cesspool under It? How* could they know that tho i»alo-blue milk that they bought around the cor ner was watered and doctored with formaldehyde besides? When the children were not well at homo Teta glzbleta would gather herbs nnd cure them; now she was obliged to go to the drug store and buy extracts—and how waa she to know that they wore all adulterated? How could they find out that their tea and coffee, their sugar and /lour, had been doctored? that their canned peas had been colored i with copper salts, and their fruit Jams with nnlllne dyes? And even If they hn«l known It, what good would It have done them, since there wns no place within miles of them whore any other sort was to bo had? Tho bitter Winter was coming, and they had to save money to get more clothing and bedding; but It would not matter In the least how much they saved, they could not g**t anything to ally an alarm clock, and the boss had shown him two exactly similar, telling Wm that the price of one was n dollar and of the other a dollar and **.*\r*nty-flvek Upon being asked what the difference was the mnn had wound up th<* flret halfway and th** second nil the way, nnd showed tho customer how; the lat ter made twice as much noise: upon which Hi** customer reruntked thnt he wns n sound sleeper, and had better take the more expensive clock. There |s n poet who sings that — "Deeper their heart grows nnd nobler their bearing, Whose youth In the fires of anguish hath died." But It Is not likely that he lmd refer ence to the kind of anguish thnt mince with destitution, thnt Is so endlessly hitter und cruel, ami yet so sordid and petty, so ugly, so humiliating unre deemed by the slightest touch of dig nity or even of pathos. It Is a kind >f anguish that poets havo not com monly deoil wit It; Its very words are not admitted Into the vocabulary of poets—the details of It cannot be told In polite society nt all. How, fur In stance, could any one expect to ex* • !'• swnpathy among lovers literature by telling how ' a f . in'! 1 ti-ii li’UiK* ;illv- w 1th and of all the suffering and Irmn* venlence and humiliation they were put to, nnd the hard-earned money they spent. In efforts to get rid of them? After long hesitation and uncertainty they paid twenty-five cents for a big package of Insect powdei a patent preparation which chanced to In? 35 per cent gypsum, a harmless earth - which had cost about 2 cents to pre- ! pare. Of course. It li’i'l not the least ' effect, except upon u few roaches which : had the misfortune to drink water aft» er eating It, and so got their Inwards* set In a coating of plaster of Part* The family, having no Men of this and no more money to throw away, hn4 nothing to do but give up nnd submit to one more misery for the rest of thelF days. , Then there whs old Antanas. Th# Inter carne, and the place where h# orked was n dark, unhealed cellar where you could >*ee your breath ag day, and where your Anger** sometime# tried to freex#*. Ho the old man's cough ry day worse, until there cam# «, time when It hardly ever stopped and he had become a nuisance sbouh the place Then, too, a still more dreadful thing happened to him; he worked In a place where his f**»*t were soaked In chemi cals, and It was not long before they had eaten through his new boots. The# sore* began to tueuk out on hla feet, and grow worse and worse Whethef It was that his blood was bad. or there had been a cut. he could not say; but asked the men about It, and (earned lothlng that I that It was a regular thing-It waa the ip!* was made | saltpeter. Every one felt it, sooner or hlch Is made later, and then It »»* all up with hlnv *i pieces and nt least for that sort of work. The If they paid sores would never Jteal—In the end hi# i afmkl H Ms. So long he had P»red to posse## her. but now that time haa come he knew* that he not earned the right; that and It plunged them into an agony of'trusted him so was ail her being December, to be wet with it and have to sit all day long In one of the cold cellars of Brown's was no laugh ing matter. Ona was a w«»rklqg girl, and did not own waterpre keep them warm. All th was to be had In -the fit' of cotton nnd shoddy, t by tearing old clothes weaving the fiber again. __ ... „ _ . higher prices they might get frills and < toes would drop off If he did not quit* f.im Im se, <>r be cheated; but genuine Yet old Antanas would not quit; he quality they could not obtain for love saw the suffering o? his family, and nor money. A young friend of Hxed- he remembered what tt had cost him t# vllas', recently come from abroad, had get a Job. Ho he tied up his fast and Jerk In a store on Ashland | went on limping about and coughinj fm-«things, snd so Jurgls ue. and he narrate*! with glee a until that had been played upon an | once •fs and such unsuspecting muntryuian by his bos* her und put' The customer had desired to parchas he fell to a heip, ilk. pieces, all & the On#* •ntlnued In Tom>rrow's Georgia#.),