The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, June 29, 1906, Image 7

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ONE WEEK ONLY. $V 8 CASH Special Sale. This Swing is the BEST BRACED Swine on the Marker SL D „Sli S ri,', firsKl “ ss Swl ” l! «y soes oui . DIXIE SWING $4.98 Cash. Regular Price 57.50. DIXIE SWING $4.98 Cash. Regular Price $7.50. OTHER SWINGS »^ h « Itheh i,v:.v«i Swing 6 ft. long with chain .. ..$4.75 Ice Cream Freezers$1.75 to Hnmmock* 75o to I Mosquito Bars .. .‘$1.00 to I REFRIOERATORS)7.50 to $40.00 Water Coolers $1.75 to $3 Oil Stoves $1.50 to $5.00 OTHER SPECIAL VALUES IN FURNITURE, RUGS, CARPETS, MATTING, ETC. Fancy Baskets, Baby Baskets, Cat and Dog Baskets, Go-Carts. New Home House Furnishing Co., 66 and 68 N. Broad St., Corner Poplar. •HOME OUTFITTERS FROM CELLAR TO GARRET' PHONES: BELL 1681 ATLANTA 2465 Mall Orders Must Be Accompanied With Cash. REV.W.T.HUKNICUn TOEX-GOV.NORTHEN STATES HIS POSITION AS TO THE TORREY MEETING. Money Spent in Advertising Tor- rey Would Have Borne More Fruit in Local Move. SHERIFF WILBURN DIES AT MONTIOELLO, Gif. Special to The Georgian. Montlcello, Go.. June 29.—Sheriff W. H. Wilburn, of Jasper county, after an Illness of a few days, died yesterday afternoon at S o’clock. Mr. Wilburn has been sheriff for ten years, and has filled this office well. He was 59 years old and Is survived by his wife and small son and daugh ter, of Montlcello, and two sons, Her man .Wilburn, cashier of the Bank of Newborn, Newborn, Ga., and W. E. Wilburn, bookkeeper of the First Na tional bank, of Dublin, Ga., and a brother, Sam Wilburn, of Birmingham, Ala. To the Editor of The Georgian: In reply to Governor Northrn, I have this to say: First. I never opened mjr mouth to hinder I the Torrey-Alexnnder meeting. I never have Bald the meeting did not do good. On the contrary. I have said it .did. no doubt, accomplish good, but that meeting! of this kind—not this ono any more tlmu others of the samo kind—do disorganise the local church; do have n tendency to lessen the confidence of the people In the ability of the local pastor to win souls. It seems to me that any one 'With ‘‘yes open can see that It has come to pass that you can't eallst the • cooperation of the people In n movement to save lost men unless vou do a lot of advertising, or hnve »"i - - - itJ.-u '! In other word*, th- hurtful. I have never doubted the sin cerlty of Hr. Torrey or the Basinets Men'* League, bat simply have an opinion ns tc final results of a meeting of this sort. As to the e ‘ bad absolutely meet band dollars, that soul was worth tho money If the meeting did not hurt some where else. The governor's reference to the five thousand dollar advertising is mis leading; ho Speaks of It oue way, * ' another. What did I say and what did I i l meant that if you will advertise any local pastor as l»r. Torrey was advertised, lie in his own church may do more good than an Imported man. Suppose Uorernor S’ortlien would spend ns much time In Working nml advertising a inerting In his own ••Inir.li. NUpported hv n company of _ OM doubt NIAGARA STAMPS. TAYLOR’S Very Special Values -FOR— FRIDAY » SATURDAY 15c quality 40-Inch WHITE LAWN for 10c 15c and 20c MILL ENDS FINE GINGHAMS for .......61.2c $1.00 quality 36-Inch BLACK 8ILKS ,or 89c 75o quality .BAREFOOT 8ANDALS, P»lr 60C ig am; nurch, 8| other Infiuentlol men. does any ono doubt that tho meeting would bo really more suc cessful In that locality? Now put nil the loading men In nil the churches to work talking and advertising tho work In their own community, giving the local pastor the same support they gave to Dr. Torrey] and does nnr ono doubt that much more good would have been ncrnmpllNhed?" “flat." you say, “they won't do it." Well, that Is exactly my point. What is - m w l stay s home—peoido who belong to tbe cliurches- and wait f..r another groat central mooting. Many will say bettor get them that tray than not nt all. Possibly so, but lb there not a bettor way? For Instance, when ono goes to such a groat meeting and goes to work In It. seemingly very greatly enthused, but the meeting over, the work also stops, nnd the outside world says. “Poor religion that, over as soon ns the preacher Is gone." Now, my position Is that anything that encourages this sentiment may bo hurtful, though good may come to some Individuals. Another statement of the governor's Is a single utterance of mine get- $2.00 qualities WHITE 8ILK WAI8T8 for $1.29 $5 and $6 aualltlg* WHITE SILK WAISTS for SR Oft 50c qualities 8ILK ORGANDIES ,or 36c $2.00 qualltlai BLACK SILK WAISTS 1or $1.29 75c qualltlei white LAWN WAISTS ,or 60c 12 1-2o qualities SHEER ORGANDIES for 10c 50c qualltlaa COLORED 8HIRT WAI8TS f<> r 26c 10c qualltlaa SHEER ORGANDIES 1or 7 l-2c TAYLOR’S GREEN STAMPS. $.100 BLACK or GRAY MOHAIRS for 76c 65e BLACK or GRAY MOHAIRS for 50c 39c qualltlaa Boya' Laundtred SHIRTS ,op 26c $100 qualltlaa BLEACHED DAMASK for 76c 7So qualities BLEACHED DAMASK ,or 59c 40c qualltlaa BLEACHED DAMASK 26c ting Into the papers. On last Monday, a week ago. I met a reporter on the stroet and he was tolling me of what happened nt the Ilnpllet mlulHters’ meeting, nnd the conversation naturally continued on the same subject, I really forgetting that I wns tnlklug to a reporter, nud was sur prised when, on the following duy, some ono asked tno about what l said to the paper. Daring the week several people nuked mo why the ltnptlst ministers and 1 were against tho Torrey meetings. 80 on Sunday morning I told my people why I waa not In favor af n meeting of thin kind, not knowing there was n reporter present, nnd not thinking for one moment of my utterances getting Into the paper. I thought any man had ft right to express ..Is opinion ns to whether or not nay move ment might bo hurtful or benoficlnl, evon though lie did not contribute to It. Now, let me say that all I have said Is Ten years ago long time. Examples: Ten years ngo a minister catno to ino and said: “Did you ever hnve n tent meeting In ronr charge?" I replied, “No." “Well, •ala he. “listen to a man of experience nn.t .irtie* nx-at- fmvat nn» for three years and aoift ever bavi | r _ 1 go one wos held In my eimrce, nnd half jf my peoplo are now silting nt home, sighing for another tent meeting, never darkening tbe door of my church." They want to ace things done on a big Tho other day a -friend of mine from a penrby town wns talking of a hlg meeting •f the aort under consideration, which wns b*-ld In niiiitln*r town, nnd mud it looked at the time to bo a groat success, nml ****** It was, but now it altnoMt the universal o have nlwnj .... ~ ..i the communl the eburrhes would Imvo now beonL... _. 1 tor spiritual condition If that meeting had not been held. Not that some good was not accomplished, hot If It helps ono and discourages two, tbe resnlts are not beue- llcjsl. who can tell how fnr-reaehlng for e \ 11 nil lid* wrangling among the ministers of this city will be? Is It not almost at- ,i... It not always be good men differ hon- SON OF RICH BIRMINGHAM MAN CONVICTED OF BIGAMY AND FORCED TO RE-MARRY HIS SECOND WIFE ways this way? Let tho peoplo keep the following facta in mind: First. I did not openly oppose .this par* tlenlnr meeting. Second. 1 dbl mlvlso my people to attend nil they could, as the meeting had been planned for. Fourth. 1 did furnish more than twenty nnmee for tbo choir. Fourth. 1 did not place money obovo souls. Fifth. I did not believe nil Dr. TotrpJ •reached, neither do nny Methodists. I -Id say Dr. Torroy'a methods were the most nnn'e of any meeting of the kind I had ever attended. Heaped fully. W. T. HUNNICUTT. Dy Private Leased Wire. New York, Juno 29.—Martin Ensley, son of a Birmingham, Ala., millionaire, lias been convicted of bigamy and sen tenced to remarry his second wife. He will gladly do so, he says. In November, 1900, an announcement was made that a divorce would be grantod. but beforo the decree was signed Ensley married Miss Mary IS. Abrahams, of Now York. Injured by Planer* Special to Tbe Georgian. Ilefiln, Ala., Juno 29.—John Coley, an employee of thoAlabama-Goorgla Man ufacturing Company, was badly hurt hero yesterday. He w*as working In tho planor and a pteco of lumber got bitched and waa then thrown out with such force that It knocked Coley down. Ills skull Is fractured. SAY THEY SOLD SECRETS TO SPIES OF FRANCE By MALCOLM CLARKE. Hpcelnl Cable—Copyright. ■ Ilerlin, June 29.—A dlnpAtch from Essen Mates thnt two mechanics in the Krupp factory have been arrested, accused of having sold military secrets to French spies. Further details not yet known. UPTON SINCLAIR’S FAMOUS NOVEL THE JUNGLE TELLS TRAGEDY OF PAGKINGTOWN CHAPTER VIII. Tet even by this deadly winter the f»rm of hope waa not to be kept from sprouting In their heartB. It waa Juat it this time that the great adventure befell Marita. The victim was Tamoezlua Kuazelka, who played the violin. Everybody hushed at them, for Tamoszlua wa* petite nnd frail, and MarIJa could have picked him up and carried him off un der one arm. But perhaps that waa why she fascinated hint; tho sheer vol ume of Marija'n energy waa over whelming. That first night at the wedding Tamosxlus had hardly taken to eyes off her, and later on, when he came to find that ahe had really the heart of a baby, her voice and her ttolence ceased to terrify him, .and he got the habit of coming to pay her Welt* on Sunday afternoon*. There »»s no Place to entertain company, Bcept In the kitchen. In the mldat of •he family, and Tamoezlua would alt there with hla hat between hla kntea, •ever saying more than half a dozen words at a time, and turning red In •he face before he managed to aay those; until finally Jurgls woul * him upon the back In Ills heart. crytng, “Come, now, brother, give us a tune.’’ And then Tamoazluz'a face would light up and he would get out hla fid dle, tuck It under hla chin. And forth with the aoul of hlnf would flame up and become eloquent—It wa* Almost an Impropriety, for all the while hla ga*e would be fixed upon MarIJa'* face, un til she would begin to turn red and tower her eyea. There waa no reat*t- ™* the muatc of Tamoazlua, however; even the children would alt awed and wondering, and the tear* would run down Teta Elxbleta'a check*. A wonderful privilege It wa* to be thue admitted Into the eoul of a man of fhlue, to be allowed to ehare the ec- and the agontea of hla inmost Then there were other benefits ac- "tfing to MarIJa from this friendship— wnem, of a more substantial nature. People paid Tamoaxtua big money to and make music on atate occa- Jlons; and nlao they would Invite him Jo Parties and festivals, knowing well •hat he wa* too good-natured to come without hi* fiddle, and that having tonight It, he could be made to play while other* danced. Once ha made bold to ask MarIJa to accompany him , toch a party, and Marita accepted, lo hi, great delight—after. which h* never went anywhere without her, while if t),, celebration were given by friend* of his, he would Invite the of the family also. In any case, “»r|Ja would bring buck a huge pock- •tfui of cakes and eandwlche* for the New Minton China. We cordially invite those interested in Artistic China k> call to see our new im portations of English tpakes. I'ho Minton is especially at tractive with its odd designs nnd unusual coloring. Maier & Berkele. children, and stories of tho good things ■he herself had managed to consume. 'She was compelled, at these parties, to ■pend most of her time at the refresh ment table, for she would not dance with anybody except other women and very old man; Tamoaxtua wa* of an excitable temperament and afflicted with a frantic Jealousy, and any un married man who ventured to put his arm about the ample waist of MarIJa would b* certain to throw the orches tra out of tune. It wo* n great help to a person who had to toll all th* week to be able to look forward to some such relaxation a* tht* on Saturday night*. The fam ily ware too poor and too h&rdworked to make many acquaintances; In Pack- Ingtown, os a rule, people know only their near neighbors nnd shopmates. and *o the place I* like a myriad or little country villages. But now thero woe a member of tho family who wa* permitted to travel and widen her ho- rixon; and so each week there would be new personalities to talk about— how so-and-so was dressed, and where she worked, and what she got, and whom she was In love with; and how this man had Jilted hts girl, and how she had quarrelled with the other gtrl, and what had passed between them; and how another man beat his wife, and spent all her earnings upon drink, and pawned her very clotbea. Some people would hav* scorned this talk as gossip; hut then one has to talk about what one know*. It‘ was one Saturday night, as they were coming horns from a wedding, that Tamoaxtua found courage and sst down his violin case In the street and spoke hi* heart; and then MarIJa clasped him In her arms. She told them all about It the next day, and fairly cried with happiness, for she ■aid that Tamoaxtua was a lovely man. After that he no longsr made love to her with hi* fiddle, but they would sit for hour* In tbe kitchen, blissfully hap py In each other’s arms; It was tho tacit convention of the family to know nothing of what waa going on In that corner. They were planning to be married In the spring, and have the garret of the house fixed up, and live there. Ta rn oeslus made good wage#: and little by little the family were paying back their debt to MarUa, so she ought soon to have enough to start Ilf* upon—only, with her preposterous aoft-heartedness. she would Insist upon spending a good part of her money every week for thlnge which she said they needed. MarIJa was really the capitalist of the party, for she had become an ex tort can-painter by thla time—she was getting fourteen cente for every hun dred and ten cans, and she could paint more than two cans avery minute. MarIJa felt, so to speak, that she had her hand on the throttle, and the neighborhood was vocal with her re- fold turfs Yet her friends would shake their head* and tell her to go slow: one could not count upon such good for tune forever — there were acetdenl* that-always happened. But MarIJa was | o 0000000 00 00 0 0000000 0 8YNOP8I3. Tho etory of "The Jungle,” O Upton Sinclair’s novel, which O has caused the government In vestigation Into the methods employed by the Beef Trust, hoe Its origin In an actdal Packing- town romance. The first chapter shows a broad-shouldered butcher being wedded to a young girl who sees In him a hero. Tbe wedding, In all Its grotesqueness. Is de scribed. Practically penniless, Jurgls tells hie bride she shall not re turn to work In the packing house—he will work early and late. On arriving In Chicago, J. Szedvllas, a Lithuanian, who ran a delicatessen store In Packlngtown, guided Jurgls, Ona, MarIJa and the remainder of the party through the stock yards, after be had given them lodging. The little coterie decided to purchase a house. They were to pay S12 a month for 1L They find they have been swin dled—that the company chargee such Interest that they will b« unable to pay. Jurgls refused to Join a la- O bor union that would have 0 promoted tbe Intereata of all. 0 He did not understand that the life was being worked out of him. Yestardoy’a Installment of the story recite* In pert the homo life of the llttl* family; tells how, after the real estate agent had Informed Jurgls he would have to pay large Interest on the house, Stanlslovas, the little O boy, was sent to work, with a O certificate which lied. In that It gave hla age as sixteen. It Is told how Antanas, working like a slave. Is finally a victim of saltpeter poisoning. Ona, too, has to seek work. She pays tetr O dollars tribute to a forelady 0 who engages her—and she get* but eight or ten dollar* a week for agonizing labor. For weeks pains rack her—yet she most work. And Jurgls tolls on, the manhood being sapped from him by the horrible grind of the merciless lords of Packlngtown. (Copyright, 1906, by Upton Sin clair. All rights reserved.) not to be prevailed upon, and went on _ planning and dreaming of all the treas- OO O0 O OO O 00O0OO0O00O urea eh# wa# going to have for her “ home; and so, when ths crash did ,4 a notice on* Saturday that all hands come, hsr grief was painful to see. j would be paid off that afternoon and For her canning factory shut down! I would not resume work for at least a MarIJa would about as soon hava *x- | nlo nth! And that was all there waa pected to S«e th* sun shut down—the |t_her Job wa* g-<ne! huge establishment had been to her j , t was ths holiday rush that was tae'ne. ’flu" now ft £S*ut! And | over tl." girls -,H to to Mar- th-i had not given her am- eiptena- I IJa* Inquire— **— — tlon. they hail not even give her a always a »l day s warning, they had simply lory Would i fter that there waa | Sometimes the fat- rattl up on half time aft-r hold] a while, but there was no telling—It had been known to stay cloned until way In to. tho summer. The prospects were bad at present, for truckmen who worked In the store-rooms mild that these wero piled up to the ceil ings, so that tho firm could not have found room for another week’s out put of cans. And they had turned off three-quarters of these men, which wns a still worso sign, since It tneant that thoro wero no orders to bo filled It was all a swindle, can-painting, said tho girls—you ware crazy with delight because you were making twelve or fourteen dollars a week, and saving half of It; but you had to spend It all. keeping alive while you Wero out, nnd so your pay was really only half what you thought. MarIJa camo home, and because she was a person whogmuld not rost with out danger of explosion, they first had a great house-cleaning, and then she set out to search Packlngtown for a job to fill up the gap. As nearly all the the canning establishments were shut down, and all the girls hunting work, It will be readily understood that MarI Ja did not lino any. Than ihiiM to trying the stores and saloons, and when this foiled she oven travelled over Into the far-distant regions near the lake front, where lived the rich people In great palaces, and begged there for some sort of work that could be done by a person who did not know English. The men upon the killing-beds felt also the effects of the slump which hod turned MarIJa out; but they felt It In a different way, and a way which made Jurgls understand at lost all their bit terness. The big packers did not turn their hands off and close down, llko the canning factories; but they begun to run for shorter and shorter hours. They had always required the men to be on the killing-beds and ready for work at 7 o’clock, although there was almost never any work to bo done till the buyers out In tho yards had gotton to work, and somo cattlo hod come over tho chutes. That would often be 10 or II o’clock, which was bad enough, In all conscience; but now, In the slack season, th»y would perhaps not have a thing for their men to do till late In the afternoon. And so they would have to loat around in a place where the thermometer might be twenty degrees below sero. At first one would see them running about, or skylarking with each other, trying to keep W’arm, but before tho day was over they would become quite chilled through and exhausted, and when tho cattle finally came, so near frozen that to move was an agony. And then sud denly the place would spring Into ac tivity, and the merciless "speeding-up” would begin! There were weeks at a time when Jurgls went homo after such a day as this with not more than two hours' work to his credit—which meant about thirty-five cents. There wore many days when the total waa less than half an hour, and others when there was none at all. The general average was six hours a day, which meant for Jur gls about $6 a week; and this six hours of work would be done after standing on the killing-bed till I o’clock, or per haps even 2 or 4 o'clock In the af ternoon. Like mm not there would come a rush of rattle at the very end of the day, which the men would have to dis pose of brf-.r#- they went home, often working by ei^ctrtc fight till • or 10, or even 12 «or 1 o'clock, and without a single Intrant for a bite of supper. _ r tne ; him h< Id bo able u -If they by tbe could scare tho shippers into thinking that they mennt to buy nothing that tiny, they could get their own terms. For some reawon the cost of fodder for cattlo In the yards wns much above the market prknnd you were not allowed Jo, bring your own fodder! Then, too, ft nutuhrr of earn wero apt to arrive late In tho day, now thnt tho roads wore blocked with snow, untl the packers would buy their cattlo at night, nnd get them cheaper and then would come Into play their Iron-clad rule, that nil rntllo niunt h** klllrd the samo day they wero bought. Thoro was no use kicking about this —there had been ono delegation after another to see tho packers about it, only to bo told that it was tho rule, and that thero was not tho nllghtest chanco of It ever being altered. And bo on Christmas Eve Jurgls worked till nearly 1 o'clock in the morning, and on Christmas Day ho wut» on the kill- Ing-bcd at 7 o'clock. All this was bad; and yet It was not the worst. For after all the hard work a man did, ho wns paid for only part of it. Jurgls had once been among those who scoffed nt the Idea of these huge concerns cheating, and so now' In- could iippr«’f|ftte tlif Mttfr Irony <>f the fact that It was precisely tholr size which enabled them to do It with Im punity. Ono of the rulea on tho kill ing beds was that a man who waa one minute late was docked an hour; and this was economical, for ho wns made to work the balance of tho hour; ho was not allowed to stand around and wait. And on tho other hand. If he came ahead of time he got no pay for „„ that, though often the bosses would Tl>mmy yinnsgan buttons conspIcuouBly and with pr For fully a week 1 they wero qulto bll nlfled thnt he was willing to do his ehare. Deforo anothor month wan hy, all tbo working members of hla family had union cards and wore their union rid* ■ I bliss fully happy, thinking that belonging to a union meant an end of all their troubles. But only ten days after sho had Joined, MnrlSa'M canning factory closed down, and that blow quite staggered thorn. They could not underatand why the union had not provented It, nnd tho very first Utno she attended n meet ing MarIJa got up and m&da a speech about It. It wan a busIneHH meeting, and was transacted (n ICngllHh, but that made no difference to MarIJa; slut "Mill ulini ttiiH III lnT, nnd nil the pounding of tho chairman'* gavel nnd nil ilit' uj.ronr and < oufu.*don in ili> room could not prevail. Quite apart from her own troubles, she was boil ing over with n general sense of the Injustice of It, and she told what she thought of tho packers, and whnt shn thought of a world whero such things Were allowed to happen; and then, whllo the echoes of the hall rang with the ehork of her terrible voire, ahe sat down ngnln nnd fanned herself, and the meeting gathered Itself to gether and proceeded to dlNcmix the election of a recording secretary. Jurgls, too, had him dodging about the room the whole ovonlng. Ho never mlHsed a meeting, how ever. He had picked up n few words of English by this time, and <rlends would help him to understand. They were often very turbulent meetings, with a half dozen men* declaiming at once. In ns many dialects of English; but tho speakers were all desperately In earnest, and Jurgls was In ♦•arnest. loo, for he understood that a fight was on, nnd that It wuh hlx fight. Hlnce tho time of his disillusionment, Jurgls had sworn to trust no rua/i, except la • own family; but here ho dlseov- id that ho had brothers In affliction J allies. Their one cliana* for Ufa, wan In union, and so tho struggle be- kind of crusade Jurgls had. always been a member of the church, because II was the right thing to be, hut the church hnd never touched him; left ait fhnt for the women. Here, however, wns n new religion— one that did touch him, that took hold of every fiber of him; nnd with mil the zeal nnd fury of a convert, he went out n« a missionary. There were many non-union men nmong the Lith uanians, and with theee he would la bor ?tnd wrestle In prayer, trying to show them the right Sometimes they bntlnnte and refuse to see size up the gang ten or fifteen min utes before tho whistle. And this samo custom they carried over to the end of the flay. They did not pay for any fraction of an hour—for “broken time." A man might work full fifty minutes, but If there was no work to fill out the hour there was no pay for him. Thus the end of every day was a sort of lottery—a struggle, gll but breaking Into open war between the boeeee and the men, the former trying to rush a Job through and the latter trying to stretch It out. JurgU blamed tho bosses for this, though tho truth to be told it waa not always their fault; for the packers kept them frightened for tbelr lives—and when one was Jn danger of tailing behind the standard, what was easier than to catch up by making the gang work a while "for the church?” This was a savage witticism tho men had, which Jurgls' had to have explained to him. Old man Jones was great on missions and euch things, and so whenever they wero doing some particularly disrepu table Job the men would wink at each other and say, "Now we’re working for the church!” of the consequence* of all these things was that Jurgls was no longer adventure first time he attended a union giect Ing, but It was not of his own seek- j would be I tiff .fill I’t had K"II<* with tile <I«’mIi It, and .hir-glN, tilit*.' wan not always to get Into an inconspicuous corner patient. He forgot how he himself nnd see what was done; but this nftl- [nod been blind a short time ago— tude of silent nnd open-eyed attention after the fashion of All crusaders since had marked hlrn out f-.r a victim Ithe original .ti*-*, who set out to n little Jrl«!:- ' a/nmd »!)•• gospel «.f brotluThood by man with big staring eyes and a wild i force of or— aspect, a “holster" by trad#*, and bad- i (Continued In Saturday's Georgian.) ly cracked. Romewhero bark In the j • - 1 far distant past Tommy Finnegan had ' _ _ _ . had a Htrnng" i*xp«*i !• n« and the bur- REDUCED R. R. RATES den of It rested upon him. All the • balance of his life he had don.- noth- FOR FOURTH OF JULY. ing but try to make It understood. 1X ' J * V When he talked he caught, hla victim The W. A A, R. R. end N. C. A 81. h’- the and hla tru,- k#pf Railway will tell cheap round trip '* ; tickets to all points south of the Ohio and Potomac and east of the Mleeie- _ . lexed when he heard men talk of fighting for their rights. He felt like * Tf; and when the Irish delegate of the butcher helpers’ union came to him a second time, he received him In a far different spirit. wonderful Idea it now seemed to Jurgls, this of the men—that by com-, blning they might be able to make a stand and conquer the packer*! Jur-1 phy, while thi gls wondered who had first thought on Jurgls’ forel of It; and when he was told that it [agitation and *< W'ab a common thing for men to do end, one of the In America, he got the first Inkling cams over and i f .t rr.e.in'rig It, T ft *- pr.'.o**- "a fr>>- time l*efo country. 1 coming closer and cl trying because his teeth wrero so bad Jurgls did not mind that, only ho wan frightened. The method of operation of the higher Intelligence was Tom Finnegan's theme, and he desired to find out If Jurgls had ever consider ed that tho representation of things In their present similarity might he altogether unintelligible upon a more elevated plane. There were assuredly wonderful mysteries about tho developing of these things; and then, becoming con-* fldentlal, Mr. Finnegan proceeded to tell of soma discoveries of hfs own "If ye have iver had onythlng to do wld shperrlts," said he, and looked In quiringly at Jurgls, who kept shaking his head. ”Niver mind, nlver mind,” continued the other, "but their In fluences may be operatin’ upon ye; it's shure aa I’m tailin’ ye. It’s them that has the reference to the Immejlt sur- roundln's that has the tnout or ix>wt*r. It was vouchsafed to me In ful days to be acquainted v rite”—and so Tommy Finn expounding a xystem • plratfon so great was 1 •fppl river, including 8t. Louie, Evansville and Cincinnati, at one and one-third fares; tickets to be eeld on July 2d, 3d and 4th, good to return until July 8th, 1006. For further Information end tick* eta apply to any agent of ths W. A A. R. R. CHA8. E. HARMAN, General Pass. Agent. rhaps the buyers wouk It depaaded upor t to Jo their »>« nd i rganjzatlon, and so Jutgi.-. Hg- icanwhil** llttl** Iri EXCELLENT SERVICE TO V. RIGHTSVILLE BEACH, NORTH CAROLINA. During tho months of June, July nnd August the Heaboard Air Line Hallway will operate on Its train leav ing Atlanta nt 9:35 p. m., every SAT URDAY, a through sleeping car to rur- i Wilmington. N. C.; returning th« w,r * through deeper will leave WU- I inlngtoa Thursday at 3:00 p. m, arriving iti Atlanta at 0:30 a rn, Friday. Arrangements have been made with the street ralb — ... way people at Wilmington to have In the | cars ready at the depot to Immediate-' eyeing hi* *,'Jght. ly transport passengers to tbo hotels I him; but it a at Wrlghtsvllle Beach. Baggage will wmn .tbl^ to JYi.d [ he checked »o destination. WEEK END rale, good for five days, |3.25; SEASON tickets. |18.55. SEABOARD. vlth shp« egmn w* r»f philn lest