The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, July 10, 1906, Image 7

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■■ THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. TfKRDAY, .11 I.Y 10, 100* UnionCentral Life Insurance Co, premium rates. I25 $29 17 UlUiL DIVIDENDS 20-Piymeot Lift. 40 \45 31 99 35 50 39 89 45 58 iIRtfIL DIVIDENDS 15-Payseot Life. /25 \30 (35 40 \45 lllUll DIVIDENDS 10-Piynnt Life. 34 67 37 97 41 99 46 95 53 16 45 96 50 28 55 48 61 77 69 44 gilts and particular* furnished at request. THOMAS H. DANIEL, Gen'l Agent. Engllah-Amerlcan Building. NATHAN F. WOLFE. Supt. Agents, BABES ARE CALLED LOTUS BUDS AND HOMAGE IS PAID TO THE SUN Purple Mother is Main Spring at Point Loma. SPECIAL EVENING FOR THE BOVS' CLUB Tuesday evening, In YVesley Memo rial church, another Very delightful en< tertalnment for the beneflt of the Boys’ Club at Atlanta will be given. Master Hugh Leslie Hodgson and his sister, Miss Kate Eleanors Hodgson, of Athens, will be the attractions for the everting. Master Hodgson li violinist of exceptional ability, and, assisted by his sister, a very entertain ing program will be rendered. Interest In the Boys’ Club Is growing constantly, and some of Atlanta's best citizens are giving their attention and aid to the work of building up a splen did organization for newsboys and other lads of the streets. An Invitation has beer, extended to the general assembly to attend the af fair Tuesday evening, and many of them will doubtless be present. PASTOR 8AY8 QUIT READING THE SUNDAY NEWSPAPERS. tpeclnl to The Georgian. Chattanooga, Tenn., July 10.—Rev. Franklin K. Mathlews, paator of the Central Baptist church, advised his rongregatlon to quit reading Sunday newspapers and to quit eating Ice cream and other delicacies, to quit riding on the street cars to the parks on Sunday, and to quit hunting bar gains In the store. He charged that merchants lie In their newspaper ad vertisements, that the girls behind the counters are paid meager salaries and that 90,000 little children are working their lives out In the stores winning bread because of the heedless desires of the people to gratify their passions. Prsss Program Arranged. Bpeelnl to The Georgian. Gtdaden, Ala., July 10.—Secretary Jacob Pepperman, of the State Preaa Aasoclation, met with the local com mittee on entertainment and arranged a program for the annual meeting of that body, which takea place In title city on July 2(-2S. Louie Hart, proprie tor of Bellevue hotel, on Lookout mountain, will tender the Preaa Aaao- clatlon a grand ball and reception on the night,of the loth. By Private Leased Wire. San Diego, Cal.. July 10.—It Is four years since the Point Loma thooso- phlat colony and' Its leader. Katherine Tlngley, "Purple Mother of the Uni versal Brotherhood," has been so con spicuously In the limelight as it la to day. Four years ago Mme. Tlngley got all the notoriety and publicity even she could desire In New York, when the Immigration officials at Ellis Island ordered tbe deportation of eleven Cu ban children Imported for enrollment In the Haja Yoga school at Point Loma The children designated by the "Pur ple Mother” as her "lotus buds" were the subject of a long and bitter right which turned the attention of the country on the Point Loma colony and its mysterious customs. Mme. Ting- ley’s career and her educational the ories ns practiced at the Raja Yoga school were revealed and furnished countless columns of news matter for newspapers'all over the country. Eleven Little Lotus Buds. A board of social Inquiry met at Ellis Island to decide Whether tbe eleven lit tle Cubans should become "lotus buds” at Point Loma or bo shooed back to Cuba Mme. Tlngley attended the hearings of the board and expounded her case with remarkable skill. Her pose waa that of what Bernard Bhaw de scribes as a "super-woman" with Ideas and Ideals cloud high and the regenera tion of the world as her mission In life. But witnesses, mnny of them theoso- phtsts, who refused to accept Mme. Tlngley aa leader and teacher, testi fied before the board that If aba waa all aha claimed aba must have under gone an astonishing metamorphosis. Has Had Varlsd Carter. I The testimony revealed the fact that before she assumed the purple mother hood of the Universal Brotherhood. Mme. Tlngley had had a varied career, curiously Interwoven with rum selling, palmistry, 25-cent horoscopes and hyp notism. Also, before she arrived at a realization of her own divinity she wns much addicted to the habit of matri mony. She, It was shown, received her earliest Impressions of life around n saloon owned by her father In New- buryport, Mass. There was a hotel In connection with the saloon, but the authorities had trouble which ended Anally In the revocation of tho license. Shaw Aida Purple Mother. Ultimately the board at Ellis Island decided tho children must go bock to Cuba. But they reckoned without Mrs. Tlngley. One of her maxims Is: "The knowledge that wo are divine gives the power to overcome all obstacles and to dare to do right.” She over came this obstacle by a personal ap peal to Secretary Shaw, who overruled tho Ellis Island board and allowed the children to go to Point Loma, where they becamo ‘lotus buds," and get up every day to greet tho Bun. Whatever shadows there aro over the "Purple Mother's'' career, her pro- feesed Ideals are lofty. The Universal Brotherhood, which sho rules from Point Loma. Is pledged to the ameliora tion of mankind's lot Hera Ars th* ''Objects.” These ore Its advertised objects: - 1. To help men and women to reallxo the •nobility of their calling and their true position In Ufo. 2. To educate children of all nations VISION OF SLAIN BROTHER DROVE GAGE TO THEOSOPHY By *I*rIrnt« Leased Wire. * Chicago, July 10.—Lyman J. Gage was well known during his residence In Chclago to students of the occult and the "black art/* His Interest In esoteric matters be gan In a dramatic way In Chicago. While still president of the National Bank, Mr. Gage, hard, cold man of money, received a flash of Inner vision which Is said to have changed his life. It was while he was at a banquet at the Auditorium hotel that the vision came. He saw a scene In a far coun try In which his brother, a Western mine owner, was the principal figure. He received a distinct Impression that his brother was holding a gun and that the weapon exploded. He saw his brother lying dead In a lonely country road. The pteture was so vivid that he disturbed by ft, and when a few* hours later he received word that his brother had been killed In tho same manner ns had appeared to him in iltvmn, he was so Impressed that he began to study the theories underlying tin*..So phy. At that time Thomas Hudson was the great psjvhlo in I'hiii.K *. He had written books on the subject and taught the cult In In T!ilrt> ninth street, it was under this man that the banker took up the study. In the opinion of Chicago Btudents he wns n born psychic. He was In the habit of receiving Hashes of some In distinct thing that u*aa going to hap pen to him. The "black art," or the study of astrology was the next step» and. although he communicated lndl- ivrtly with lenders In this art, he also pursued this study In quiet and was Identified with no organization. WITHOUT A GUIDING HAND, TRAIN RACES THROUGH CITY By Private Leased Wire, Memphis, Tenn., July 10.—Without a crew, and after having collided Vvlth a Southern railway passenger train at Orleans street, a Southern railway switch engine with two cars, attached yesterday dashed wildly three-quarters of a mile at the union depot on Cal houn street, where It crashed Into two mall cars. One man was seriously Injured and nine others slightly hurt. When the switch engine collided with the passenger train, Engineer Williams was thrown heavily against the boiler. He and his fireman then Jumped, the engineer sustaining bg- rlous Injuries. The switch engine, with no guiding hand, dashed forward at Increased speed. The locomotive crossed eleven stri-fM before arriving at tb# dMOt, and the presence of inlnd of a yardman prevented the engine from dashing Into the depot proper. The yard man threw a switch and the "wild" engine collided with two mall care on a siding, injuring five mall dwto. On# of (a# mall cars waa thrown through a fence and Into Cal houn street by the force of the colli sion. in addition to Williams, the In jured are: C. D. Wallace, *fireman, of Memphis; J. W. Curry, engineer, Tua- cumblo. Ala.; George Hunter, fireman, Tuscumbla, Ala.; A, 8. Cromwell, mall clerk, Memphis; T. 8. Ethridge, mail clek, Chattanooga; R. W.' Ritch, mall cleric, Chattanooga; S. B. Duncan, mall clerk. Bowling Green, Ky.; I. B. Mc Manus, mall clerk, Clarksville, Tenn. on the broadest lines of Universal Brotherhood, and to prepare destitute and homeless children to become work ers for humanity. 3. To ameliorate the conditions of unfortunato women and asslts them to a higher life. 4. To assist those who are, or have been, In prison to establish themselves In horiorablo positions In life. Oppose Death Sentence. 6. To endeavor to abolish capital punishment. 8. To bring about a better under standing between the so-called savage and civilized races by .promoting n closer and more sympathetic relation ship between them. 7. To relieve human suffering result ing from Hood, famine, war and other calamities. For beauty of location and surround ings the home of the Point Loma col ony, where Lyman J. Gage will lead the simple life, la unsurpassed. Point Lo ma has long been regarded os one of the famed beauty spots of the world.' Even before ft became the International headquarters of the theosophlsta It waa one of the most visited parts-of South ern California. New Church Completed. Special to The Georgian. Huntsville, Ala,, July 10.—J. D. Dll- worth & Son aro completing a new house of worship for the congregation of tho West Huntsville Baptist church. SAILS IN AIRSHIP IN SPITE OF POLICE By Private Leased Wire. New York, July 10.—Police Interfer ence, because he proposed charging ad mission, prevented Roy Knabenshue making a flight In his airship Sun day, but the 5,000 persona who had traveled to the Polo Grounds and were turned away at the admission gates witnessed a balloon ascension, Knab- enshue, accompanied by his wife, sail ing into tbe air at 4 o'clock, an hour after the real airship flight had been scheduled to take place. The balloon landed without inlshnp on Long Island, one mile outside of Flushing, at about 8 o’clock. REMAIN8 OP SIMP80N BURIED AT CHATTANOOGA. A Mutual Benefit Agency is a valuable business asset, and one that grows more valuable even’ year. "We have no “light ning Specials,” and pay no exorbitant corami ssions. For high class business men we have an at tractive business proposition, out of which they can make good money and friends at the same time. * If we are not rep resented in yony town drof) us a line. Angier & Foreman, State Agents, ATLANTA. MUTUAL BINIPIT Lift of NEWARK. H. i. "The Aaaaal Ditldtad Company." 8CHOOL8 AND COLLEGE8. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. Two ImtitutliQt under one numipcaicnt. Tbe Collffe ftirolibri high literature, science and kindred aubjectaj fsrul'r of 25 J wf l-equlpp'd Ubors»ml* offer* beat advantage* la muik, elocution, art; apecisl course and_training eh plaeaa j two pipe organa ; moat beautiful concert ball" ~ rcprejentlne IS “ A. W. VAN BOOSE c had 27 S I JOOfeet. To If. J. PEARCE. Aaaoclatn Prraidenta. Gainesv ra. Ideal local Georgia School of Technology ATLANTA, GEORGIA NIGHT CLERK LEAVES WITH GUESTS’ FUNDS Special to Tb* Georgian. Savannah, Gil, July 10.—Telllnj lodgers of the Salvation Army uyr r _ leave tnelr money with him, as they might be robbed, Charles White, act ing night clerk of tho Salvation Army hotel, collected somo $50 from the guests. Sunday morning early he ap> Jacksonville. message was sent yesterday by the chief of police asking for tho arrest of White, who, It wns reported, was preparing to board a steamer for New York. NEW CONTRACT LET COUNTY SAVING $6,000 Special to Tbe Georgian. Chattanooga, Tonn., July 10.—The re mains of Dave Simpson, who suicided In Birmingham Sunday morning, ar rived In the city Monday and were in terred In the Jewish cemetery here. Mr. Simpson waa a former prominent citizen of this city. Ho leaves two brothers, Moses and Harry Simpson, and two sisters, Mrs. Adolph Mathis and Miss Carrie Simpson, who aro prominent here. Special to Tbe Georgian. Augusta, Go., July 10.—There wa! a meeting of tho building committee of the board of education yesterday and the new Fifth ward school bulldlpg was taken up agnln, and the contract let. There wero bids from four of tho contractors of tho city, and the work woe let to Mr. T. O. Brown, who se cured It lost month, but who had to forfeit it on account <»f tho Injunction that was brought against him. The contract wns lot this tlmo for $80,180, or a saving of $8,000 on tho former bid. A technical Imf Itut# of tbebigliMt rank, whom grradustm, without •xreption, occupy prominent and lucrative Doolttons In onginooring and rommnrrinl Ilf*. 1** *1*0 in th# n pr .Kr«»8lvn city of thafivuth, with th« abounding opportunities offvrfd It* graddaten In theKouth'apraaent remarkable development The forty members of the class of 1906 weraplaced In d»arrable *r <i lucrative poaKton* iifort grottaaUtm. Advanced course* In Mechanical, Electrical. Textile, Mining and Civil Engineering tnd Engineering Chemlatiy. Kxtenaire and new equipment of .Shop. Mill. I.ak*.ratoriea. etc. New Library and new Chemical Laboratory. Coat reasonable. Karh county in Georgia entitled to fifteen free scholarship*. The nett aaaaion begins Sept. 26. l'JOn. For illustrated catalogue, address K. G. MATHESON, A. M.. LL D.. President, Atlanta, Georgia WASHINGTON SEMINARY North Avenue and Peachtree Street. ATLANTA. For Girls and Young Ladies. Boarding Department ztrictly limited to provide refined home life. t;ia«.e« divided Into section, averaging about ten students to secure personal Instruction. Faculty of eighteen college graduate,. Primary, academic, college preparatory, music, art and elocution. Certificate admits to Vasaar, Wellesley, Etc. Catalogue on application to Phone 2047, North. L. D. SCOTT, EMMA B. SCOTT, Principal!. jj AN ILLICIT DISTILLERY AND OPERATOR# CAPTURED Special to Tb* Georgian. Pickens, 8. C„ July 10.—Gab. Chap man, United States deputy marshal. In company with P. P. McDaniel, state constable, captured a sixty-gallon still In full operation near the foot of Mt. Pinnacle. With the still they captured Will Johnson, Elisha Mooro and Ernest Kllvnlx'ig. Tiny wiTf pintf.| In Jail, but gave bond for their appearance at the United States court at its next term, which meets in Greenville. * WANTED A BOOK-KEEPER AND STENOGRAPHER . WHO HAS ATTENDEO THE SOUTHERN SHORTHAND and FAST THROUGH SERVICE MAY BE INAUGURATED To Erect Finishing Mill. Spoelal to Tbe Georgian. Huntsville, Ala., July 10.—J. J. Brad ley, agent for the Merrlmac Manufac Lowell, Mass., Friday. Mr. Bradley's company will erect a now finishing mill here this summer. Special to Tbe Goorglan. Gadsden, Ala., July 10.—It Is re ported from a reliable, but unofficial, source that the Louisville and Nash ville railroad will at an early date In augurate* a fast passenger service bo- tween Knoxville, Atlanta and IMnnlng- lmm by way of this city and Carters- ville, Ga. It !h said that tho equipment for those trains has been ordered and the schedule will go Into effect tail.v In the fall. Tho proposod routo is over the Heaboard Air Line from Carters- villo to Wellington, Ala., tho Junction of the Seaboard and Anniston and Birmingham division of tho LoulsvIUo and Nashville. Railroad Men Promoted. Special to Tbe Georgina. Huntsville, Ala., July 10.—IlxrJlo Seay, for somo tlmo cashier of tho fviij, iui ouiiiv iiiiiu uiouiur ui him Southern and M. and O. railways at Corinth, Miss., has been promoted to ATLANTA,QA Tha Laadlna Business School of the South. 0y>OOK-KkEPINO, Shorthand end eom- Pl*t«i Knellgh Department*. Ovir 10.000Qr*<luat«s; 600■ indent*nanu •ily. Receive* from two to five •ppllcgiton* drily for offtc« gMUtentt, Bn- ‘b»r,r<t by Oovernora, .S«n*t<>r«, Bealrara, profgMloiial and bu*ln*aa men. Ita Dip lomat* a aura naaaporl to a good poaltlon. Bntornow. CaUloguafree. Montlon this paper. AddrvM A. C. BRISCOE, rr*«i, or L. to. ARNOLD, V.Prett., Atlanta, Qa. traveling auditor for tho Memphis vision of the Houthom, with hoadqu tors Jn Huntsville. Young Brskeman Killed. Special to Tbe Georgian. Gadsden, Ala., July 10.—Lae Parker, a brakeman on the Loulavllle and N/ihIi vllb’, L’J yen i h old. was killed Jn a wreck between Wellington, Ala., and Cartoravllle, Oil, some time yesterday. Tho dotalls are not known here. Pnrk- er’s home was In this city. “THE JUNGLE” SHOWS ROMANCE OF YOUNG GIRL TURNED INTO TRAGEDY BY STRUGGLE FOR EXISTENCE DEATH A RELIEF TO PACKINGTOWN’S BRAVE WOMEN PITIFUL PICTURE OF THE FATE OF ONA SHOWS HOW YOUNG LIVES ARE CUT SHORT BY WORK IN STOCKYARDS CHAPTER XVIII (CONTINUED). Jurgl, could see all the truth now— fould »ee hlmzelf, through the whole long couree of event*, the victim of ravenous vulture* that had tom hla *lt»U end devoured him: of flenda that Iwd racked and tortured him, mocked him, meantime jeering In hi* foe*. Ah, Ood. the horror of It, the monztroua, lldeous, demoniacal wlckedneaa of It! He and hie family, helpleza women and Children, etruggllng to live, Ignorant *nd defeneeleze and forlorn ae they sere—and the enemlee that had been urmng for them, crouching upon their trail and thlretlng for their blood! That pret lying circular, that smooth- |he extra pnyments, the Interest am. — the Other charges that they had not the means to pay, and would never have attempted to pay! And then all the trick., of the packers their master*. Ihe tyrant, who ruled them—th* abut- P'>»ns and the scarcity of work, the irregular hour* and the cruel speedlng- nj>. the lowering of wage*, the railing nr prl.es! The mercllezaneza of na ture about them,,of heat and cold, rain and snow: the mercllesaneta of the the country In which they ■bed, Of Its laws and customs that they "id n„t underatand! All of thoz* things . T°' ita together for th* company tnat had marked them for It* prey and If* halting for Its chance. And now. J°“* and ioht**t again. And they could do nothing; they were tied hand S” ,0 “‘—the law wtn against them, ,' v . h °le machinery of society waa •j their oppressors’ command! If Jur- *>• so much a* raised a hand against Summer Jewelry . Of course it’s jewelry that is Rood and wearable in iiuy other season, but it seems Peculiarly adapted to the air y lingerie frocks of sum- Wortime—Handy pins, sash out'kles, collars, bracelets, ^list-sets, and so on. Lots smart new things, Maier & Berkele them, back he would go Into that wlld-beast pen from whlcn he had just escaped! To get up and go away wa* to give up, to acknowledge defeat, to leave th* atrange family In possession: and Jurgla might have aat zhlverlng In the rain for hours before ho could db that, had It not been for tho thought of hi* family. It might be that he had worse things yet to le*rn—and *o he got to hie feet and atarted away, walking on. wearily, half-dazed. To Anlele’s home. In back of the yards, wa* a good two mile*; the dis tance had never seemed longer to Jur- gls, and when he aaw th* familiar din gy-gray ahanty hla heart waa beating fast. He ran up the stepa and began to hammer upon th* d-or. The old woman herself cam* to open It. She had shrunk all up with her rheumatism since Jurgls had seen her last, and her yellow parchment face stared up at him fronts little above th* level of the door knob. 8h* gave a atart when eho aaw him. “la One hereT'"’* he cried" "breathleaaly. — - —r, "ahe e here. "Ye*," wa* th* answer. — - "How—” Jurgl* began, and then stopped short, clutching convulsively at the side of the door. From somewhere within th* houe* had com* a sudden cry, a wild, horrible scream of an guish. And th* voice was Onae. *For a moment Jurgls atood half- paralysed with fright: then he bound- *d past tha old woman and Into th* room. ply. "No, no,’’—ahe rushed on. "Jur- gist You mustn't go up! It's—It’s the child!" She dragged him bock Into tho kitch en, half carrying him, for he 4tad gone all to pieces. It was ns If the pillars of hlfl soul had fallen In—he was blast ed tv 1th horror. In the room hd sank Into a chair trembling, like a leaf, Ma- rija still holding him, and the women staring at him In dumb, helpless fright. "Who's with her?” Jurgls demanded; and then, seeing Marlja hesitating, ho jght," ahe answer ed. "Elsbleta's with her. “But th* doctor!" he panted. "Some on* who knows! He seized Marlja by tbs arm: she trsmbltd, and bar vole* sank beneath a whisper as ahe replied: "We—we have no monay." Then, frightened at the look on hie face, eh* exclaimed: "It's all right, Jurglal You don't un derstand—go away—go awayl Ah, If ...... h,S tr,llult R you only had waltad! "And the children?” cried Jurgla. “The children hare not been home for three days, th* waatbar baa been so bad. Jurgls waa standing by the table, and he caught himself with hla hands; hi* It wa* Anlele’a kitchen, and huddled round th* Store were half a dozen round tne move ; woman, pala and frifbttnad. On# of . _ ._r.s Lav faat a■ Jurrl* in* tnem stariea w n*r tered; she was haggard •mdfrj*lurt“ny thin, with on* arm tied up In bandages —he hardly realised that t was Marija. He looked riret f»r Ona: then, not eee- i n - her ho »tar*d at tha women, ex- peeling'them t<> «pe*k- But Wgjri dumb easing hack at him, panlc- atrirken: and a aecond later cam* an other piercing scream. It waa from tha rear of th# and upstair*. Jurgts boundad to the door of tha room and flung ft open, there was a ljddar leading through a trap door to thegarret.andhewaa at the foot ot It. whan RUdden^ h# hwj a voice behind him, and »aw Marlja hla heel*. 8h* *el*ad him by th* «l«r* Sibber g^^nO' wildly. "No, no, Jurgl*! stop! “What do you mean?" h* **‘P* d - "You mustn’t up. aha erteo. i„ r .ia a>a* half-crazed with bewll— te'r™ he ahouttf. "What la It?" Marija clung to him tightly; — could hear Ona sobbing and moaning Shova and he fought to get away and riffiib 5p. without waiting for her re- HO t uugm iiiiiirru aaatss iiim uuiiua, iiia head sank and hie arm* shook—It looked as If he ware going to col lapse. Then suddenly Anlele got up and came hobbling toward him, fum bling In her skirt pocket. She drew out a dirty rag. In one coriiar of which ■he bad something tied. "Here, Jurgls!" she said, "I have soma money. Palauk! Seel" She unwrapped It and counted It out—thirty-four cent*. ’’You go now," yourself. And maybe will pay you back some day, and It will do him good to have something to think about, even If he doesn't succeed. When he comes back, maybe It .will be And so th* other woman turned out th* contents of their pocket-books most of them had only pennies and nlcksla, but thty gave him all. Mrs. OlssaweM, who lived next door, and had a husband who was a skilled cat tle butcher, but a drinking man, gave Marly half a dollar, enough to rals* th* whole sum to a dollar and a quar ter. Then Jurgl* thrust It Into hla pocket, still holding It tightly in hla rist, and atarted away at a run. CHAPTER XIX. 'Madame Haupt" ran a sign swing ing from a second-story window over a saloon on the avenue: at a side door was another sign, with'a hand polnt- SYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS CHAPTERS A Mmplo^nlndtM cotprfo of Llthantilnns nrrlta In Chiefg . - ma*t, it it* I aro conducted to ParklngtoWD by • triend. JurgU. a fia_. u a- •-“-‘•-j ( tn ,i tfo 0 HrHt chapter tclla of tho wedding In all Ita tribulation, the entire family obtains work to the Jurgla aatd, ohould never work. it light er bourn 1 * la told with almost revolting do* strength, la betrot! tall—the fl« ML makers, la all vlvl tnent plan, only t< to meet the actual which they loam ig of hands, the atrugglo to keep up with the pace* d. Tho Jlttlo family buys a boas* on tho Install* have been Nwlndled, and Ona fa forced to seek work ansca, and tho Interact on tha purchase contract, of .... , ■. Hla nature begins to change. and savage with pals. Starvation atarea the family In the face. Finally Jurgls begins work In the fertiliser plant—tbe deadliest of all-end El* bleu slaves In tho learn to swear, drl constant stupor. «m*g department. l_ — __ oke. Gradually tbe gri*4 throws tho family ..... lJttle-only eat what they can, sleep when they can, WUIS) it arrina tu turui, always. Then Ona rent. •«•«. nn.l-r rompnl.lon, that. In nrder to anv* the .mire fim- lly from Snsnri.l rtrelrm-iion and loss of Jobw iVonor. foreman of b.r Urpnrl- ... * *■-* <1 her to receive nlteutlons from him. Jursl. al- i tries to nnd work. It senna ment In the yards moat kills her. T sinking bis teetn Is than arrested, a Jurats, In Jail, I Later lie Is senten from a messenger I what once wns bin where One and th bn Mindly to tb* yardn nnd nnd Busily helm: dragged oS by a dosen wen. fev.J’S l . n n,«!; l ^ n ’in',r!L , ;* ra , /^ri,.«, irels si- and freezing to d* K dsys In prison for nnsnnltlng Coe nor. y Is starving. Finally he Is rriessed and >tbar family has It /urpts Is nntbl* to death In somo bleak garret. Copyright M4*> by Upton Klnclslr. All rights rreorrtd. .. crime. He learns r.tnrns to m discover told they ore stirring Ing up a dingy flight of atepa. Jurgla wedt up them, three at a time. Madame Haupt waa frying pork and onion* and had her door half open to lot out the emok*. When he tried to knock upon It, It swung open the t of the way, and h* had a glimpse of her, with a black bottle turned up to her lip*. Then he knocked louder, and ■ha started and put It away. Bhe waa a Dutch woman—enormously fat— when ahe walked ehe boiled liked a ■mall boat on tho ocean, and the dishes In the cupboard Jostled each other. Bb* wore a filthy blue wrapper, and her teeth were black. Vot la It?" she aald When ah* aaw Jurgl*. H* had run Ilka mad all th* stray and wa* so out ot breath he could hardly speak. HI* hair was flying and hla eyes wild—he looked'like a man that had risen from the tomb. “My wife!" he panted. "Com* quickly!” Madame Haupt set th* frying pan to one aid# and wiped her hands on her wrapper. "You rant mo to come for a case?" she Inquired. "Ye*." xuDCd Jurgl*. ”1 haf Just come back from a case,” ahe eald. "I haf had no time to eat my dinner. Still—If It I* eo bad "— "Yes—It 1*1” cried he. "Veil, den, perhaps—vot you pay?" "I—I—bow much do you want?" Jur ats stammered. "Twenty-live dollara." Hla face fell. "I can’t pay that," ha The woman was watching him nar rowly. "How much do you pay?" ah* demanded. "Must I pay now—right away?" "Yes; ail my customers do.” "1—I haven't much money," Jurgla began. In an agony of dread. 'Tve been In—In trouble—and my money le J on*. But I'll pay you—every cent— ust as soon as I can; I can work"— "Vot l* your work?" "I have no plac* now, I must gat on*. But I”— "How much haf you got now?" He could hardly bring himself to re ply. When he said "A dollar and a quarter," th* woman laughed In hla "I vould not put on my hat for a dollar und a quarter," ah* said. Ht’s all 1’vo got,” ha pleaded, hla voice breaking. “I roi.lt get some on* —my wife will die. 1 can't help It— next mont’." "1 can't do It—I haven't got It!" Jur- gle protested. "I tell you 1 have only a dollar and a quarter." Th* women turned to her work. "I don't bvlleve you,” sho said. "Dot It all to try to sheet me. Vot le de rea son a big man like you line got only a dollar und a quarter?" "I've Just been In Joll," Jurgl* cried —he wns ready to get down upon his knee* to th* woman—"anil 1 hud no money before, and my family has al most starved." "Var* Is your friends, dot ought to belt! you?" “They ara all poor," h* answered. "They gave me this. I have done everything I can"— “Haven’t you got nottlng you can sell?" 1 have nothing. I tell you—I have d* you borrow It, den? Don't your store people trust you? ” Then, as h* shook hla head, aha want on: "Listen to me—It you git me you vlll be glad of It. I Vtll save your wife und baby for you, und It vlll not scam like mooch to you In d* end. If you loose dem now how you tlnk you feel den? Und her* Is a lady dot knows her bualnese—I could send you to peo ple In die block, und day vould tell you”— Madam* Haupt was pointing her cooking fork at Jurgla perauaslvaly; but her words war* more than he could bear. He flung up hla hand* with Madame Haupt had put back her pork and onions on the etov*. Bhe turned to him and answered, out ot th* ateant qnd noise: tilt me ten dollars cash, und so you can pay mi de rest started away. "It’a no uae," ho ex claimed—hut suddenly he heard th* woman’s vole* behind him again: •'I vlll make It rive dollars for yon.” Bhe followed behind bint, arguing with hint. "You vlll bt foolish, not to taka auch an ofTar," ah* aald. "You vont rind nobody to go out on a rainy day Ilk* jdla for less. Vy, 1 haf never took a rasa In my Ilfs so aheap as dot. I couldn't pay min* room rent"— Jurats Interrupted her with an oath of rag*. ’If 1 haven't got It,” he shouted, "how can 1 pay It? Damn It, I would pay you If I could, but I tell bo you hear me—I haven’t got -He turned and started away again. 11* was halfway down the stairs be fore Madam* lfaupt could about to him: "Vail! I will go mlt youl Com* hack!" He want back Into tha room again. "It I. not goot to tlnk of anybody suffering!” she said. In a melancholy vole*. "I might as veil go mlt you for nottlng sa vot you olfar me. but 1 vlll try to help you. How far Is It?” "Three or four blocks from here." "T'reo or four! Und ao I shell k soaked! Oott In lUmmel. It ought be v<»i :li iieii e! Vim ilell.ir und quarter, und a day like dlsl Hut y understand now—you vlll pay me rest of ttventy-flvo dollars soon?" "As soon as I con." "Somo ,tlmo ills mont’?" "Yea, within a month," said poor Jur gl*. "Anything! Hurry up!" "V. i '■ Is il.- ih, l.ii 11ii. 1 a iiuurter ?" persisted Madame Haupt, relentlessly, Jurgla put the money on thu table and (ha woman counted It and eto»ed It away. Then ehe wiped her grease hands again and proceeded to get ready, complaining nil the time: elm was so fat that It waa painful for her to move, and ahe grunted and gnsped at every step. When they*wars on th* ■treat he kept about four paces ahead of her, turning now nnd then, os If ho could hurry her on by the force of his desire. Hut Madame Hnupt could only go eo far at a step, and u p...k h> .■ attention to get the needed breath for that. They cams at last to the house, and to Ihe group of frightened women In th* kitchen. .Madame llaupt removed her bonnet and laid It on the mantel piece. Then they escorted her to the lad der, and Jurgls heard her give an ex clamation of dismay. "Oott In lllm- mel, vot for baf you brought me to a place like dls? I could not climb up dot ladder. I could not git troo a trap door! I vlll not- try It—vy, I might kill myself already.” At last Anlels succeeded In purify ing her, and she essayed the ascent: then, however, she had to be stepped while the woman cautioned her about the floor of the garret. They had no real floor—they had laid old boards In one part to make a place for tho family to live; It was all right and safe there, hut the other part of tho garret had only the Jolstr. of the il.mr and the lath and plaster ot the ceiling below, and If one stepped un this them would b* a catastrophe. As It Was half dark up abovt, perhaps one of tho others had beat go up first with a fon dle. Then there were more out. ri.-s and threatening, until at lust Jinitu had a vision of a pair of elephantine legs disappearing through the trap door, and felt the house -hake as .Mad am* Haupt started to uulk. Then sud denly Anlele rame to him and tools him by tho arm. Now,” she said, “you K ' fcway. Do as : toll you- 7~~. Lave done all you cap. and you are only In the way. Go away and stny away." (Continued in Tomorrow's Gserg.au,) WWuAsk