The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, December 13, 1906, Image 8

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. THtlssnAV. DKOKMPEK IS. Toys and Dolls The Best Stock In Town building Mocks 10c and 25c Pnjier Cup Pfslols..,5c and 10c Tov Waiciics ...... 6c and 10c Toy Cook inn Slows, large . .$1.00 Simplex TypCvVI-lt'ors $1.00 Automatic Automobiles. 25c to $1 We* say the "best” stock, because it's the largest, most varied and ineludea better values than you'll find else where. The earlier you buy, the better you'll fare. Don’t de lay and be caught in next week's rush. Ilolls in great variety . .5c to $1.00 Doll Chinos 26c to $1.00 Dolt Swing with doll 25c Toy Coat Wagons . .B0c Toy Huy Wagons, large . . . .$1.00 j Automatic Train's ... ,25c to $1.00 Special Demonstration of “Exer-Ketch,” the New Game Basement Annex Turkey Roasters of best sheet iron: 15 inches long; very special at 25c Frying Baskets of bright wire for oysters, po tato chips, ete.; special .. . t 10c Fire Set, including poker, shovel and tongs: special, per set $1.00 Feather Dusters— 1()-inch select quality; very special at, only 10c Layer-Cake Pant of best blue and white enam eled ware: 9-inch size; 3 for 25c First Floor Lunch Boxes of indurated fiber: light, durable. and odorless 10c Carpet Slippers iu men’s and women’s sizes; very special at, pair : 26c Pocket Mirrors—A new line of very great val ues at, choice 10c Ladies’ Vests and Pants and Misses' L'nion Suits: fleece-lined 25c Jewelry Novelties—Brooches, l'ins, Cuff l.inks and other things 10c Shaving Mugs of decorated and tinted china, with good brush, 25c Holiday China, Crockery, Etc. "Open Stock” Dinner Wares iu for Child’s Set, consisting of fancy glass Spoon holder, butter dish urn! cream pitcher 15c new and very attractive pat terns. at specially low prices. Crystal Vases, 12 inches tall: worth fullv 25p; tomorrow .15c Bisque Figures and Vases iu new and very attractive de signs 10c Toilet Sets iu handsome paf- terns; 10 and 12 pieces; £1.00 to $10.00 McClure Ten-Cent Co. MAIN STORE—Corner Whitehall and Hunter. ATLANTA AD MEN , ARTISTIC CLOCKS MA UDE BALLING7ON BOOTH LECTURES FRIDAY NIGHT The member* of the Atlaiila Lecture ' Association have In store one of tin* greatest treat* of tho season in the ’ coming of Mr*. Muud Bulllugton Booth to the Grand on Friday evening of thl* wook. Mrs. Booth is not only a celeb rity whose nume I* a household word, blit also an oiator whose natural ©lo- quence has gained for her u prominent place among lyceum star*. Major Fond, the late pilot of celeb- ritie*. said of her: "Mrs. Booth is the oiity woman mo tor of the decade w hom the public w ill turn out und pay to bear. Why? First of all. she Is the ablest woman orator in America. Her cause I* the in »rt worthy. Hhe I* probably the most Im- loved woman Iu the land: certainly sin* Is the most attractive of all women speaker*. 8he has fire and nmgnetlHm —gift* of the ItlghcM oratorlrul or* dor. sustained and animated by deep conviction, high purpose und burning earnestness. These krefit essential* at* of paramount importance to surer** *>n the platform." The subject of Mrs. Booth's lecture 60 MARIETTA ST. Xmas Suggestions R««d Pi.ree's Pleasing Price.: L.di.i’ Fancy Cellar., Sc to $2.00. Ladle*' Xma* Handkerchiefs. Sc to 50c. Glove*. 25c to $3.00. Nieo Hosiery, 10c to 50c. Veil*. 25c to $2.00. Napkins, 5c up. Fancy Faacinator*, 25c to $4.00. Belt*. 20c to $1.00. A job 1st of Ladle*' *w*ll Um brella*. $1.50 to $2.50. Man’* Silk Ti*a; 50c value, 35c. Suspenders in Xma* bekas, 25c to Shirt*. 25c to $1.50. Glove*. 25c to $1.25. 6cck*. 10c to 60c. Underwear, 25c to $3.00. Fancy Scarfo. Pillow Tope, Shams, ate., 25c to $5.00. Ladie*' guarantaod atylish Shota, $1.50 to $3.50. Men'* boat mad* Shoo*. $3.50 to $4.00; al*o $130 to $5.00. Children'. Shoot, 25c to $200. piERCE'C sntv troat ^ MRS. MAUD B. BOOTH. here will be "Light* and Hhadnwx Prison Life." w hich 1* considered to lw» her bent. Thl* I* a heart Htoty brim ful! t*f living, breathing pictures. She give* every cent of her money to fur ther tin- work of prison reform. Thl* N her only !»»u*on f«»i appearing before the public. Mr*. Booth command* the highest price ever paid a woman loc- tuier .in thl* country, und the public lias le»en most willing «•» hear her and •i»*!p li**r cause. Her offices are In New York city, but In r home Is up In the Orange mountain* ;.t Montclair. X. J„ w bet- she live* with her husband. Conn.under Bulling ton Booth, of the Volunteer* of AnieiU i. They h«.Ve two child ini. Charles and Theodora KAISER PROMISES TO KEEP PEACE Pari*, Dec. 13.—The Petit Partoien. In an article prub-lng the decision to give President Roosevelt the Nobel prize, nay* that Mr. Roosevelt the day after Foreign Minister Delcnsse was dismissed. telegraphed to the kaiser counselling moderation. The kaiser, u* cording to Hie paper, replied: • | am grateful f«»r your amicable In- ierventioii. I promts.. >011 that wli-n lb‘‘ time #im»e> I will Und a solution whhh will be acceptable," CHILDREN GUESTS OF EL DORADO TO SEE LITTLE LOTTIE t»n next HaturUay afternoon at 3:30 o’clock the door* of the K1 Dorado thunter, at which the IJaldwIn-MolvIlIc Htock Company i* now playing u sea son of stock production*, w 111 be thrown open to the school children of Atlanta. The management of thl* popular little theater earnestly request* that every mother send her children to the Satur day matinee, anil for thl* purpose they have Issued live thousand tickets, w hich will be distributed In the differ ent. schools throughout the city and which will admit any school child to the matinee on Saturday free of charge. The Immediate cause of this gener ally on the part of the management I* the fact that they have been able to obtain the services of one of the great est child actresses on the American stage, little Miss Lottie Nalsbury. win will hereafter be Identified with the Baldwin-Melville Stock company, and they desire every woman, mother and child In Atlanta to come to the matinee Saturday afternoon and meet and be entertained by this clever little woman. Some of the parts taken by this little w oman have been exceedingly difficult and In order to com# with the Baldwin- Melville Stock Company she was forced to camel an engagement as Puck In "The Midsummer Night’* Dream." Among her other great hits I* the Little Lord in "Little Lord Fauntleroy.'* Hit • played this part for fourteen consecu tive weeks at the Grand In Chicago; for five weeks at the Burwood In Oma ha. and for nine weeks ut the Audi torium In Kansas City. Her press no tices /or three performances are ex tremely flattering and her admirers were so numerous that It was impossi ble to accommodate the crowd* that came to see her daily. BIG COMMISSION HOUSE IS FORCED TO 8U9PBNO. 8t. Paul. Minn., Dec. 1$.—The Cum mings Commission Company, one of the largest and best-known brokerage house* In St. Paul and Minneapolis, suspended business this morning. Full ing off In buxinexx is given as the cau-o of the *u*pen*bm. The company had branches throughout Minnesota, the Dakotas and at Winnipeg. | Two Atlanta advertisements, in the J original drawings, will be exhibited at | the banquet of the Sphinx Club, the national association of advertising men, I to be held In New York hi the next j day or two. These advertisements ore among those used by the Coca Cola I Company in the 1906 magazine cam paign. They were selected by the of ficial* of the Sphinx Club as among the twelve best advertisements In the United States this year. Mr. St. Elmo Massengale, president of the Massengale Advertising Agency, which handles the Coca Cola advertis ing. Is now In New York for the pur pose of attending the Sphinx Club ban quet and also the banquet of the Quoin Club, the American Association of Magazine Advertising Managers, to be held at the Waldorf-Astoria this even ing. Both the Sphinx and the Quoin Club* are very exclusive and the selection of the Coca Cola advertisements for the exhibit held by the former organization Is considered quite u compliment to Houthern advertising. PARISIAN POLICE SECURE NAMES OK OFFICIATING PREISTS Continued from Pago One. papers captured at the papal nuncia ture is being compiled by a large force of clerks, and It l* said these papers will show conclusively that the Vatican Iiuh conspired to accomplish the down fall of tlie French republic. CHURCH PROPERTY TAKEN FOR FRENCH AUTHORITIES. New York, Dec. 13.—Many seeking a cause for the warfare between the French government anil the Roman Catholic church declare that it wus the Increasing activity of the church In national politics. • A less obvious cause, they say, was the remarkable hold of Roclallstic propaganda on the minds of the people who gradually awoke to the fact that the liberty they so lbnged for was certainly not to be found under the double yoke of government and church. Jn the last quarter of a century the nation has become acutely sensitive to the touch of the Vatican in the politics of France, and not only seemed ready for the ratification of the separation law, but also for Its enforcement this week. Church Loses Francs. This act means practically the loss of France to the church. Outside of Spain France has for centuries been the most obedient and loyal daughter of Rome, so that tljls crisis seems an unnatural blow to the established order of things. It also means that title of church property to the value of $200,000,000 I* turned over to the Mtate; that tho Ro man Catholic church In France Is dis established. and that hereafter no en dowed church will be allowed to grow in strength and power beyond certain limits. In fact. It is ns complete a divorce of state and church as the most rabid aeparatlonlst might ask for. Act Passed in 1905. The chamber of deputies passed the act of disestablishment, ns the law Is known, on July 3, 1905. The senate pasted It on December 6 following, and it was ratified on December 11, 1905 It provided that a year’s time be given to the church In which to complete Its side of the question. At the end of (list per I is I h was expected that the church would be ready to hand over Its property to the government and continue Its work under the order of things. Thl« new order, as conceived und enacted by French statesmen, re quired the churches to be conducted by public worship associations or In corporation*. After months of agitation, the Vati can refused to establish such associa tion*. By so doing. It would virtually be admitting defeat and evincing com pliance with one of the most hostile movements It had ever been called upon to face. It so happened, therefore, thut the churches are today like so many ships at sea that know not what port to steer to. Property Hold by State. All the church property In the coun try Is now In th«* hands of the French government. According to the law, there Is slip otic more year In which to transfer it to the public worship associations. But the church has not the slightest Intention of complying. The state may sell, rent or destroy every cathedra! or church edifice in the lam!, with the Vatican powerless to raise a finger. The state ha* also provided that no church shall accumulate endowments exceeding three time* Its revenue. If the revenue Is more than 5,000 francs annually. The public worship associa tions are supposed to bo the financial manager* of the religious establish ments and to be the intermediary be tween them and tho state. As for the charitable Institutions and such organ izations ns are not directly associated with the church, the state will take them. Trouble Over Pensions. The matter of tension* gave a great deal of trouble in the period when dis establishment agitation ran high. It was enacted that the clergymen who had spent many years in the church should receive pensions not greater than I.50O francs and that the younger should derive annuities from the state for periods varying from 4 to 8 years, hi the past It has been the custom of the state to pay these salaries, and the state will save in this alone I9.000.oo0 annually. The revolution not only got rid of re. tlgton for the time being, but also of the church. Napoleon, however, as soon 4* he became first consul, arranged a concordat with Plus VII, under which the consul nominated and the pope ap pointed a certain number of bishops. Napoleon, however, wished to use these bishops for the glory of France and re. qulred them to swear allegiance to the republic. This several of them refused to do, and were driven from France. Thev went to England, formed their La Petite Kgliz. which flourished for a number of years. Pope Was Captured. In l*»>9 Napoleon grew less regard ful of the Vatican and published the decree of Hchoenbrunn. The pope was captured an*! Imprisoned at F«*ntaln- bleu. and It wa* then* that another con-! eordat. commonly culled '•the false con- j oordat." was signed In 1313. Tin* main pros Mon of this was to devolve the 1 Clocks with nude figure iu pose as if rising from the water,' surrounded by cattails and leaves. The clock at the base. Price, - 7.49 Clocks with figure of woman reclining upon a bed of sea plants, with swim ming fish. The clock mounted in the base, 4.98 Clocks with two draped female fig ures at either side, 4.37 Clocks with fisherwonmu with net, as if returning with the catch. The clock mounted in a rock, 6.98 Clocks done in the effect of gray mar ble with seated figure of woman across the base. The figure done iu white and gold. The clock dial of etched copper, , 11.47 Clocks with seated draped figure with woman lioldiug a raven, 6.93 Clocks to represent a stone gateway with two exquisite figures in dark green bronze—a man and woman, 18.39 CloclvS that embody the ar tistic in the mounting of the clock—they came from abroad, «very one of them, where the artistic has been turned toward the craft in producing really worthy things for every day use. Things that develop the ar tistic sense about the home. The clock pictured here will help you to understand the hun dred or more other different de signs here in these things. Like Picture Clock as shown in cut‘with draped figure. An accurate time-piece. These come in sev eral shades of green and pink at 5.98 A clock typical of the sculpture with a panel iii bas relief and a semi-drap- ed figure standing before the clock, 24.97 The dancing girl iu an artistic, light, graceful pose with a clock in the base upon which she is dancing. This ••lock is done in a rich electric green, 9.87 Clocks in Rococo designs, with a Cu pid perched upon the base.- Above the ••look is the head of old Father Time, the wings at each side typical of time’s flight, 10.87 Clocks with two draped figures repre senting .“music.” One with a lute in her hand, the other a tamborine. The clock face iu bronze held between them, 7.47 Clocks iu green stone ware with bronze clock set in the center. On the top a group in dark green bronze effect. Two classic nude figures, 18.67 Clocks suspended in a bronze eagle with outstretched wings poised upon three onvx columns, 3.98 Clocks in white Dresden China with Cupids, 2.89 Jacobs 9 Pharmacy. HURT IN ELEVATORi WOMAN SUES FOR right of institution on the metropoli tan bishop If not exercised by the pope within six months. The clergy, nevertheless, grew strong er and stronger each year in France until they not only had a monopoly in religion, but proved a factor of Im mense weight In the politics of the re public. Many Orders Refused. Wei deck- Rousseau voiced growing public sentiment when, In 1901, he pro posed the associations act, which com pelled every• religious order to inform the government of everything pertain-1 — Inr <«» being: to furnish the names Alleging that she was seriously In. of Its members and the times andijured In an elevator In the Umpire P ‘*\iU,v f ,y i"h’!t! n 5rter. . , [ building, Jllsi Grace McDonald hied orders were secret, suit In the superior court Thursday and they refused to comply with the j morning ugalnst the Umpire Building new law »hich had been enacted be- ) Trust, the owners of the building, for cause of the growing suspicion that (10 out) damages * the associations wore time and again \ii« a MeDnnaid who „„,u guilty of plotting against the State* ft j Injun- a slem*™nhe »ta?*s XV ih. had been provided that disobedience‘boarded an elevn^orln would be at the cost of dissolution and f n * the defendants*VovemherV^iLaL* confiscation, and such orders as dis- obeyed were promptly dissolved and their property duly confiscated by the government. The Jesuits, AssumptiotT- iM*.« Carmelites, Oblates and Benedic tines practically ostracised themselves from France. VIVA The elevator was In charge of R. D. Kelley. Hhe asked to be let off at the third floor. The operator started the elevator off with a Jerk and It went up with more than ordinary speed. Mis* McDonald wraa thrown to the floor and against the gate of the elevator, the walls of the elevator shaft and the floors of the building. Hhe was bruised and mashed and torn dangerously. The Empire Bulldfng Trust t« com posed of \V. B. Htovall. of this county; Samuel «*arr. Boston. Mass.; William V Aspen wall. Newton. Mass., and If. M. Atkis^o, Atlanta. BURNS TO DEATH STANDING BEFORE OPEN FIRE PLACE Special to The Georgian. Wilmington. X. C„ Dec. 1$.—Whli« playing In front of an open flrepla *e the clothing of Una Milligan, the 1ft c* year-old daughter of J. R. Milligan a cotton mill weaver, caught on fire, rr- eulting in the child's death. The little one waa horribly burned on the face, one arm and both legs. She died this morning, after a night of suffering. , Oglethorpe Monument. J. Randolph Anderson, chairman of the Offlettmrpe Monument commlwiou. I‘ a# railed a meeting »«h* Saturday In Savan nah. Stale Ttmiiust Park Is n member an l will attend ih* Medina. Th«* ln«i fra*> latnre ;i|i|m.»jh i;ite.| JI5,b»») for lid* «>•»»•' ineui. and Ha\u mm It |wo|»lc have rs****** about DMOO. Preliminary step* ■bmimh