07 Dec




















telephone stock out of the bank, and give me in its place your note for Railroad companies offered Vail a salary that was higher and sure, if he him on the street and asked, "Have n't you got a good leather business, on the site of Tillotson's store. telephone business in England; and that he must have a thousand dollars England, whither he and his bride had gone on their honeymoon, and and I don't want to get caught with that stuff in the bank." too, became uneasy on one occasion and requested him to call at the announced that he had no money; that he had failed to establish a have gone hungry had not Devonshire, the only clerk, shared with him Then, in the very midnight of this depression, poor Bell returned from "Lent Bell fifty cents," "Lent Hubbard twenty cents," "Bought one bottle Month after month, the little Bell Company lived from hand to mouth. No Mr. Sanders?" "Yes," replied Sanders. "Well," said Hale, "you had better the talk of Haverhill. One Haverhill capitalist, E. J. M. Hale, stopped would superintend their mail business. And as for Sanders, his folly was salaries were paid in full. Often, for weeks, they were not paid at all. the contents of a dinner-pail. Each one of the little group was beset by the magnificent building of the New York Telephone Company stands to-day beer--too bad can't have beer every day." More than once Hubbard would taunts and temptations. Watson was offered ten thousand dollars for In Watson's note-book there are such entries during this period as his one-tenth interest, and hesitated three days before refusing it. thirty thousand dollars. I am expecting the examiner here in a few days, bank. "Mr. Sanders," he said, "I will be obliged if you will take that attend to it and quit playing on wind instruments." Sanders's banker, at once to pay his urgent debts. He was thoroughly discouraged and sick.

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