Newspaper Page Text
I
TAYLOR’S
We Offer the following Special
Values for
SATURDAY:
Ladies* Vests,
Full Bleached, tape neck apd
arms, In extra large elzea, at
10c.; and In regular elaee at
5 Cents
Umbrellas,
White linen, hematltched edge,
$1.50 quality for 98c., and black
rainproof Taffeta, $1.00 quality,
for
83 Cents
Undermuslins,
We will cell 25c Cor-
eet Covers for 15c; 25c Draw*
ere for 21c; and 75c Underskirts
for
59l Cents.
Pillow Cases,
We will sell 25 dozen full
size bleached Pillow Cases at.
each
10 Cents
A. C.A, Ticking
10 pieces of best Amoskeag Bed
Ticking at, yard
15 Cents
Apron
Ginghams
50 pieces regular 6 1-2c quality
Apron Ginghams at, yard ’
5 Cents
Apron Linens,
10 pieces superior quality Apron
Linens, yard,
121-2 Cents
Mill Ends.
Another case of those Mill Ends
of 12 1-2e Ginghams, at, yard
6 1-2 Cents
240 Marietta Street.
Men*s Suits,
56 All-wool Blue Serge Suits In
latest cuts, regular * $8.50 and
$10.00 values, cut to
$6.90
Ladies* Waists.
Another sale of those
$2.00 quality White Silk
Waists at
$1.29
Ladies* Suits.
42 Ladles’ colored Lawn and
Dimity Wash Suits, nearly alt
large sizes. 38 to 44; they were
$2.00 and $2.60; cut to
$1.00
Boys* Clothes.
Wash Suita at 60c and 75c.
100 dozen Linen color Wash
Pants, all sizes, pair
10 Cents
Lawns.
50 pieces fast color Dress Lawns
on center table, yard
5 Cents
Boys* Shirts.
20 dozen Boys’ Laundered
Woven Madras Shirts, 39c val
ues, all sizes,
25 Cents
Table Linen.
Bleached Table Damasks, sxtra
heavy, full width, yard
25 Cents
Embroideries
7 and 8 Inches wide, and worth
15c for a yard,
10 Cents
240 Marietta Street.
SLOW REGISTRATION
WILL MAKE SMALL VOTE
Tax Collector Stewart Soys All
Persons Must Register in
Each Calendar Year.
*Td like to remind the people that
regiAtratlon is mighty plow,” said Tax
Collector Andy Stewart Friday morn
ing. "Only about 11.000 names have
been registered and there ought to be
several thousand more than that. The
books close on August 11."
It Is expected that there will be
rush for registration at the last and
this will bo Inconvenient to officials
and public a8 well.
"There are numbers <*( persons
think that when they register once that
Is the ond of It,” continued Mr. Stew
art. "The law Is that every man must
register once in each calendar year,
he has not registered since December,
31, 1905, he Is not eligible to vote. This
applies to those beyond the age for
paying poll tax, disabled soldiers and
all"
It is believed that the total registra
tion In Fulton county . will hardly
reach more than 13,onn, though the
full strength of the county should be
17,000 or 18,000.
COL, ESIILL SPEAKS
TO LARGE AUDIENCE
Gubernatorial Candidate is Well
Received By Voters of Dade
Count v.
MAYOR MAKIXti TRIP
IN BOAT DOWN RIVER
Special to # Tbe Georgian.
Balnbridge* Ga., July 13.—The steam
er Ruth II Is now en route to Baln
brldge from Cairo, IlL, via New Orleans
and Apalachicola. The Ruth 1
purchased by J. W. Callahan, president
of the Callahan Grocery Company, sev
eral days ago, and will be operated In
the Interest of his grocery' and turpen
tine business down the Flint. He wll
build one and possibly two other boats
In the near future.
Mayor Willis went to Cairo to make
the down trip on the Ruth. It Is ex
pected that the boat will be out about
fifteen days,
INCREA8E OF TONNAGE
OPPOSED BY FARMERS
Special to Tbo Georgian.
Charlotte, N. C. t July 13.—The state
farmers* convention, which has been
In session In R&lelgh the greater part
of the week, Thursday elected Hon.
Ashley Horne president, to succeed
Mr. & C. Moore, of Charlotte. The
convention adopted a resolution against
a proposition now on foot to increase
the minimum tonnage of carload lots
of fertilizers from 30,000 to 30,00, upon
application of the railroads.
Gone Into Camp.
Special to The Georgian.
Decatur, Ala., July 13.—Captain
Throckmorton. First Lieutenant Roy C.
Horton and Second Lieutenant Raymon
Brown and about forty members of Co.
E, Dick Adams Rllles, Alabama nation
al guard, have gone to Mobile where
they will go into encampment at Frls-
cadie.
GRESHAM ASHFORD
SHOE CO.
93 PEACHTREE ST.
Special to The Georgian.
Treuton, Go., July IS.—Colonel J. H,
till, the South Georgia candidate for
governor, arrived here Tuesday morn
Ing from Roekmarf, Polk county, where
he delivered an address the day before.
He was met at the depot by a num
ber of representative citizens and wo;
driven to the Williams house, where he
met many of the voters and people of
the town. The reception of Colonel
Estlll In Trenton was a most cordial
one. He has many strong friends and
supporters here and throughout the
county.
The distinguished Savannahan wa
introduced to a big crowd at the
court-house at 11 a. m. by Hon. G» W.
M. Tatum, ex-state senator and a well
known man In politics In the state.
Colonel EsttU's speech was on the
usual line, and he was heartily cheered
by his hearers.
Likely, no man ever addressed i
Dade county audience which command
ed better attention, or made a deeper
Impression.
From here Colonel Estlll went to Ris
ing Fawn, where he addressed the peo
ple at 7 p. m.
COMPTROLLER IS
ENJOINED BY ROAD
The Georgia Railroad and Banking
Company filed a petition In the superior
court Thursday afternoon asking an In
junction restrsjfldng Comptroller Gen
eral Wright from assessing the road
for taxes for the years 1905 and 1006
on 15,000 shares of stock of the West-
orn Railway of Alabama. A temporary
restraining order was Issued by Judge
L. 8. Roan and the case set to be heard
before Judge Pendleton In Hoptembsr.
The petition alleges that the West
ern of Alabama Hallway Is a foreign
corporation, that It has been leased,
and the lessees derive the profits and
that It has since been transferred to
the Louisville and Nashville Railroad.
The railroad ond the comptroller gen-
oral have previously figured In tho
courts regarding similar taxation.
REPUBLICANS WRANGLE
AT DECATUR MEETING
8pedal to Tbo Georglno.
Decatur, Ala^ July 18.—The question
of Indorsing the president’s Alabama
referees caused some wrangle here
yesterday at the meeting of the Repub
lican executive committee of the eighth
congressional district. The meeting of
the committee was called to order by
Chairman Frank T. Conway, of Mobile.
The committee called a district con
vention to be held in Decatur on Sep
tember 1 for the purpose of nominating
a candidate for congress.
’i'h" friends of the president's
ees
who
hat Do You
Think of That?
Right here in the very midst of Baseball Season-rand
yet we have cut the price from 2.5 to 50 per cent on
every piece of baseball goods in our house. Don’t take
our word, just cpme and see for yourself. You know
what goods are and can’t be fooled on the price, so all
you have to do is to look at the goods. Just as a, sam
ple of the price, see how this looks:
GLOVES
Regular Price.
Out Price.
GLOVES
$3.00
$2.10
GLOVES
$1.75
GLOVES
D.&M. BALLS.
D. & M. BALLS.
75
25
D. & M. BALLS.
Oh! Well, no use to go over a great list of these things.
You can see how it goes—just stop and take a peep at our
big show window and the very first question that will
appear in your mind will be—“How can they afford to
do it?” Baseball Season just in its glory, too.
, KING HARDWARE COMPANY,
S3 Peachtree Street.
THEY WILL EDUCATE TWO
DAUGHTERS OF CONFEDERATES
Special to Tbo Georgian.
Balnbridge, Go., July 18.—Tho local
chapter. Daughters of tho Confederacy,
at their regular meeting Wednesday
afternoon decided to send two daugh
ters of Confedorato Veterans to college
In the fall. The Georgia Normal ond
Industrial College at Mllledgevllle was
eolectcd as one of tho colleges, but
the other has not'yet boon decided on*
They are arranging for a series of en
tertainments to raleo funds to defray
tho experises of tho young ladles.
Mute Killed by Train,
8pecloI to The Georgian.
Nowberry. 8- C., July 18.—Tho
through freight No. 71, on the Southern,
Ot 6 o'clock yesterday afternoon struck
and almost Instantly killed Tom Willie
Baxter, a negro doaf mute, about 24
years of age.
NEWBERRY RED MEN
ELECT TWO DELEGATES.
Special to The Georgina
Newberry, 8. C„ July 13.—Newberry
will this year furnish the two dele
gates t.> which South Carolina Is enll
tied to tho Great Council of Red Men,
which will bo held In Niagara Falls lr
September.
The delegates to the great round
are Messrs. J. H. Haw and Cob l,
B lease.
Freed or Murdsr Charge,
8peclal to Tbe Georgian.
Spartanburg, 8.-a, July 13.—C.
Teague, a young white man, Indict
for murder, charged with killing G<
Blown, i olm«•«!, In fi .•••, tlm Jut v
heard the caao having returned n
«ll< i of not guiltv a « lout • .I--
defenso was inndo and the lun
not long In bringing In n verdlc
thn
The Jungle’s Victim Is Driven to Tramp Life and Rejoices in the Escape
JURGIS AT LAST BREAKS FROM THE BONDS
Conscience Awakened in Time to Prevent
His Descent Into the Vortex of
Vicious Criminal Life.
CHAPTER XXI (CONTINUED).
In a week Jurgls got over hla sense
or helplessness an d bewilderment In
the rallmlll. Ho learned to find his
w»y about and to take all tho mlraclea
«nd terror, for granted, to work with
out hearing the rumbling and craehlng.
From blind fear he went to the other
extreme; he became reckless and In
different, like all the rest ot the men,
who took but little thought of them
selves In the ardor of their work,
wu wonderful, when one came ..
think of it, that then men should have
tsken an Interest In the work they did;
they hsd no share In It—they were
P«M by the hour, and paid no more for
win, tnterestd. Also they knew that If
they were hurt they would be flung
ulde and forgotten—and still they
would hurry to their task by dangerous
short-cuts, would use methods that
Were quicker and more effective In
•plte of the fact that they were also
jMsky. His fourth day at hi* work
Hurgis saw a man stumble while run
ning In front of a car, and have hi*
foot smashed off; end before ftp had
been there three week* he was wltnee*
°f * yet more dreadful accident. There
*** a row of brick furnaces, shining
white through every crack with the
niolten steel Inside. Some of these
Were bulging dangerously, yet men
Worked before them, wearing blue
*“»«« when, they opened and shut
tne doors. One morning as Jurgls was
Passing, a furnace blew out, spraying
two men with a shower of liquid Are.
5* they lay screaming and rolling upon
me ground In agony, Jurgia rushed to
help them, and aa a result he lost a
tood part of the skin from the Inetde
, one °f his hands. The company
joctor bandaged It up, but he got no
PS?? thank* from any one, and was
“ip up for eight working days without
■ pay-
Elegant S river
Tlic excellence and popu
larity of Maier & Bcrkele
silver is due largely to the
tasteful designs and artistic
patterns we carry in stock.
K you want any of the
lew things, we have them.
” e study the modes in these
ines as attentively as smart
^vssers study the current
asi liions.
Maier & Berkele
Most fortunately, at his juncture,
Elzbleta got the long-waited chance to
go at 6 o’clock in the morning and help
scrub the office floors of one of the
packers. Jurgls came home ond cov
er.',i himself with hlnnkets to keep
worm, ond divided his time between
sleeping end playing with little An-
tanas. Juozapas was away raking In
the dump a good part of the time, and
Elzbleta and MarIJa were hunting for
more work.
Antanas waa now over a year and a
half old, and was a peife.-t miking
machine. He learned so fast that srary
, ek u inm Jtngis eomo horns It seemed
to him as If hs had a new child. He
would sit down and listen and stare nt
him. and give vent to delighted excla
motions—"Palauk! Muma! Tu mono
ezlrdela!” The little fellow was now
really the one delight that Jurgls had
In the world—hi* one hope, hi* one
victory. Thank Qod, Antanas was a
boy! And ha was as tough as a pine-
knot, and with the appstlta of a wolf.
Nothing had hurt him, and nothing
could hurt him: he had come through
alt the suffering and deprivation un
scathed-only shriller-voiced and more
determined In his grip upon life. Ho
was a terrible child to manage, was
Antanas, but his fsther did not mind
that—he would watch him and smile
to himself with satisfaction. The more
of a fighter he was tbs better—he
would need to light before ha got
through.
Jurgls had got the habit of buying
the Sunday paper whenever he had the
money; a most wonderful paper could
be had for only 5 cents, a whole arm
ful, with all the news of the world
set forth In big headlines, that Jurgls
could spell out slowly, with the chil
dren to help him at the long words.
There were battle and murder and
sudden death—It was marvelous how
they ever heard about so many .en
tertaining and thrilling happenings;
the stories must be alt true, for sure
ly no man could have made such things
up; and besides, there were pictures of
them all as real as life. One of these
paper* wa* as good as a circus, aqd
nearly a* good a* a spree—certainly a
most wonderful treat for a working
man who was tired out and stupefied,
and had never had any education, and
whose work was one dull, sordid grind,
day after day. and year after year,
with never a eight of a green field nor
an hour’s entertainment, nor anything
but liquor to stimulate his Imagina
tion. Among other things, these pa
pers had pages full nf comical pic
tures, and these were the main Joy In
life to little Antanas. H* treasured
them up, and would drag them out
and make his father tell him about
them; there were all sort* of animals
among them, and Antanas could tell
the names of all of them, lying upon
the Boor for hours and pointing them
out with hla chubby little fingers.
And then, when he was able to use
hi* bands, Jurgls took his bedding
again and went back to bis task of
shifting rails. II was now April, and
tbe snow had given place to cold rains,
and tho unpaved street In front ol
Anlele’s house was turned Into a ca
nal. Jurgls would have to wade
through It to get home, and If It was
late he might easily get stuck to hi*
waist In the mire. But he did not mind
this much—It was a promise that sum
mer was coming. Merlja had now got
ten a place nB beef trimmer In one of
the smaller packing plants; and he
told himself that he had learned his
lesson now, and would meet with no
more accidents—so that at last there
was prospect of an end to their long
journey. They could save mgney
again, and when another winter came
they uould have a comfortable plore,
and the children would be off the
streets and In school again, and they
m’ght silt to work to nurse beck Into
life their habits of decency and kind
ness. So onte more Jurgls began to
make plans and dream dreams.
And then one Saturday night he
Jumped off the cor and started home,
with the sun shining low under the
edgo of a bank of clouds that had been
pouring floods of water Into the mud-
soaked street. There wne a rainbow
In the sky, nnd another In his breast,
for he had tblrty-slx hours’ rest be
fore him nnd a chance to see his
family. Then suddenly he came In
sight of the house, and noticed a crowd
before the door. He ran up the steps
and pushed his way In, nnd' saw An
Isis’s kitchen crowded with excited wo
men. It reminded him so vividly of
hhe time when he had come home from
Jail and found Ona dying that his heart
almost stood still "What’s the mat
ter?" he cried.
dead silence had fallen In the
room, and he saw that every one was
staring at him. "What’s the matter?”
he exclaimed again.
And then, up In tho garret, he heard
sounds of walling In Marlja’s voice.
He started for the ladder—and Anlele
celled him by the arm. “No, no!”
she exclaimed. “Don’t go up there!"
"Whet Is It?” he shouted.
And the old woman answered him
weakly: "It’s Antanas. He’e dead. He
was drowned out In the street!”
SYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS CHAPTERS
The story of “The Jungle,” Upton Sinclair’s novel, which caused the government Investigation Into the
methods employed by the Ileef Trust, hns Its origin In nil nctual Packlngtown romance.
A simple-minded coterie of Lithuanians arrive In Chicago, reeking employment, nnd are conducted to
Ik hm r. ■■., ii liv ,, f, I. ll.l Jingls, a gliinl III slrellglh, la hoi ml lied to mill, anil the Ills! chapter lolls of III"
wedding In all Its grotesquensss. After much trlbulntlon the entlro family obtains work In the stockyards—
all but Ona, who, Jurgls said, should never work.
The terrible tale of the slaughter houses Is told wllh almost revolting delnll—Iho filth, the overworking
of hands, the struggle to koep up with the pacemakers, Is nil vividly depleted. The little family buys a hoove
on the Instalment plan, only to find they havo been swindled, and Onu la forced to seek work to' meet the
actual living expenses and the Interest on the purchase contract, of which they learn too late.
Just II "II .Hid .Ilirsli. ;,HV Muriju ulsil they uwi- In i, .Imal- toms hla liul.li' and Is laid up fur mouths.
His nature begins to change. He becomes cross nnd savage with pnln. Starvation slnres the fant'ly In the f/*«.
Then Ona confesses, under compulsion, that In order to save the entire family from financial destruction
and loss of Jobe, t'onnor, foreman or her department In the yards, had forced her to receive attentions from
I : » r ! ■ 1 kill" h. i. Then he nielie* Idludly la III" y.iida and tries In kill I’nnnur, sinking Id" Petli
Into him. and.la dragged off by a dozen men. Jurgls Is then arrested, and spends Christmas Eva In prison,
awaiting trial.
Imtsr he Is sentenred to thirty days In prison. Finally he la released and returns to What was ones his
home. Another family has It.
Jurgls traces hla family to a shanty to find his wife dying. He seeks a midwife, who laughs In Ills face
when he tell* her he has only a dollar nnd a Quarter, but she Anally relents unit goes with him. At the door of
III" hIiii III v .M in IJa mid .III i "II i h him p> g., num iinlll Hi" m. .1 id ng. It" milks III" stri-il' nil night, nnd
reaches homo In the morning In time to close his wife’s ayes In death. Then he tnkes to drink In earnest.
Jurgls Is blacklisted in every packing bouse by Connor, but finally obtains s Job wllh the Harvester Trust.
The department In which he works closes down. Hlarvatlon again Is Imminent, but a philanthropic woman cams
to his rescue and gets the Lithuanian a Job In a steel factory. Meanwhile iho hero's son has died, and he Is left
practically alone In the world, with resentment against conditions gradually growing stronger In him.
Copyright, 1905, by Upton Sinclair. All rights reserved.
"Art you sure h* Is dead?" ha de
manded.
'All *1!" she walled. "Tea; we had
the doctor."
■ Then Jurgls stood s few seconds,
wavering. He did not shed a tear. He
ono glance more at the hhinket
i the littln form beneath It, and
then turned suddenly to the ladder and
elltnbed down again. A silence fell
once more In the room as he entered.
He went straight to the door, passed
out and started down the street.
When hla wife had died Jurgls made
for-the nearest saloon, but he did not
do that now, though he had his week’s
wages In bis pocket, lie wnik.-ii ..ml
walked, seeing nothing, splashing
through mud nnd water. Later on hs
sat down upon a step and hid his faro
In hts hands and for half an hour or so
CHAPTER XXII.
Jurgls took the news In a peculiar
way. He turned deathly pate, but he
caught himself, and for half a minute
stood In the middle of the room,
clenching his hands tightly and setting
his teeth. Then he pushed Anlele aside
and strode Into the next room and
climbed the ladder.
In the corner was a blanket with a
form half showing beneath It; and
beside It lay Elzbleta, whether crying
or In a faint, Jurgia could not tell.
MarIJa was peeing the room, scream
ing and wringing her hands. He
clenched hla hands tighter yet, and hla
voice waa hard as he spoke.
“Hgw did It happen?" he naked.
MarIJa scarcely heard him In her
agony. He repealed the question,
louder and yet more harshly. "He
fell off the sidewalk!" she* walled. The
sidewalk In front of the house was a
platform made of half-rotten boards
about five feet above the level of the
- ink. ii ui<" i.
"How did he come to be there?” h*
demanded.
He went—be went out to play,”
-MarIJa sobbed, her voice choking her.
"We couldn’t make him stay In. He
must have got caught in the mud!"
of a tear—he rose up cursing with
rage, and pounded It down.
II* was lighting for hla life; lie
gnashed his teeth together In his des
peration. He had been a fool, a fool!
He had wasted his life, he had wrecked
himself, with Ills accursed weakness,
and now he was done with It—he would
tear It out of him, root and branch!
There should he no more tears and no
more tenderness; he had had enough
of them—they had sold him Into sla
very! Now he was going to be free, lo
tear ol? his shackles, to rise up ond
light. He wa* glad that the end had
come—It hail to come some lime, and
It waa Just os well now. This was no
world for women and children, and
the sooner they got out of It the
better for them. Whatever Antanas
might suffer where be was, he could
he did not move. Now and then ho suffer no more then he would hove
would whisper to himself: "Dead! had he stayed upon earth. And mean-
rlslvsly, and started across th* coun
try.
Only think that ha had been a coun
tryman all his life, and for three long
years ho had never seen a country sight
nor heard a country sound) Excepting
for that one walk when he left Jail,
when he waa loo much worried to
notice anything, and for a few tlmea
that he had rested In the city parks In
the winter lime when he was nut ,.f
work, he had literally never seen u
tree! And now he felt like a hli.l
lifted tip nnd borne away upon n gale;
he stopped and stared nt each new
right of wonder—nt n hard of cows,
and a meadow full of daisies, nt hsdg"
rows set thick wllh Juno roses, at lit
tle bird* singing In the tree-
Then hs ramo to n farm house, and
after getting himself a slick for pro
tection. he approached II. The farmer
was greasing a wagon In front of Urn
barn, nnd Jurgls went lo him. • I
would like to get eome breakfast,
please,” he entd.
"Do you want to work 7” eald the
fanner.
"’No,” said Jurgls, "1 don’t."
"Then you i in’l get anything here,"
snapped the other.
•I meant to pay for It," aald Jurgls
"Oh!” said the farmer; and then
sddsd sarcastically: "We don’t serin
breakfast after 7 n. in."
”1 am vary hungry," said Jural*,
gravely; "I would Ilk* to buy Pinna
"Aek the women,” eald the farmer,
nodding over his shoulder. The “wom-
was mure tractable, noil for s dime
.1 III vis seciin-.l hi,, lli|. k f.I In! wli lies
mill II Jilei .f t«le Mini tw-> iijqiles lie
walked off eating the pie, os the Iseat
convenient thing to carry. In a few
MmM lip suras to a stream, a&fi Is
. II III In" I -t Ivm " "Mil .ilk. I ii i" II III"
hank, along a woodland path, in an.:
by he found a jiomfortahls spot, ami
there he devoured hie meal, slaking his
thirst at tbs stream. Then ho lay for
hours. Just gazing and drinking In
Joy; until at lost ha felt sleepy anl
lay down In Ih* ehade.of a bu*h.
fContlnued In Tomorrow’s Georgian.)
Dead!
Finally h* got up and walked on
ngaln. It was about SMM Pa
went on and on until I*, waa dark,
plot p* waa stopped by a raflgoao
crossing. The gats* were down and
n long train of freight car* wna thun
dering -by. He stood and watched It,
and all at once a wild Impulse seized
him, a thought that hod been lurking
within him, unepMfen. unrecognized,
leaped Into sudden life. He started
down the track, and when he waa past
the gatekeeper's shanty he sprang for-
.ward and swung himself on to one of
the cars.
By a'nd by the train stopped again,
and Jurgls sprang down and ran under
the car and hla himself upon the
truck. Here he sat, and when the
train started again, he fought a battle
with hie soul. He gripped hi* hands
and sat bis testh together—ha had
not wept, and he would not—not a
tsar! It was past and ever, and he
was done with It—he would fling It off
hie shoulders, be free of It. the while
business, that night. It should go like
a block, hateful nightmare, oral In
the morning he would be a new man.
And every time a thought nt tt as
sailed him—a tender memory, a tract
time, hta rather had thought the last I
thought about him that he meant to; :
ho waa going to think of” himself, h"
was going to fight for himself, ngulnst
the world that had baffled him and !
tortured him!
Ho he went on, tearing up all the ,
flowers from the garden of his soul, and ,
setting his heel upon them. The train 1
thundered deafenlngly and a storm of
dust blew In his fore; but though tt
stopped now and then through th*
night, h* clung where he was—be
would cling there until he was driven
off, for every mile that he got from
Packlngtown meant another load from
his mind.
Whenever th* cars stopped a warm
breeze Mew upon him, a breeze laden
with the perfume of fresh fields, of
honeysuckle and clover. He snuffed It,
and It made his heart beat wildly—he
was out In ths country again! H*
was going to Uvc In ths country!
When th* dawn cams he waa peering
nut with hungry eyes, getting glimpses
of meadows and woods and rivers. At
last he could stand It no longer, and
when the train stopped again he
crawled out. Upon the top of the rsr
was a brakeman, who shook hla fist
and swore; Jurgia waved his hand ds-
THREE GOVERNORS
and a host of depositor* with Two Million, Three Hundred and Fifty
Thousand Dollara to their credll strongly endorsed
THE NEAL BANK.
Was first appointed a State Depository by the late Gov. W. Y. Atkin
son. then by Ex-Qovernor Allen D. Candler, reappointed by him, then
appointed by hie successor. Governor I M T>"i"ll also reappointed
by blm. We are so near the ten thousand lino of accounts on onr
books that yre are encouraged to reach out for
TWENTY THOUSAND DEPOSITORS.
If each one of our loyal patrons will send us one or more accounts
wo will soon hare the roll complete, thus enabling us to still farther
Increase oar ability to eld Merchants, Manufacturers and Home
Builders.
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.
One Dollar starts an account with a little Home Dank end hook
or with a book only. We allow Interest, roiapnqnded semi annually,
at tbe rate of
THREE AND ONE-HALF PER CENT. PER ANNUM.
t. h. reossro*. hnin. r. HA,nr. c»Mrt.. h. c. CAiomu. tm a.
J