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Mr*. Mary Lambard, Aged 102 Year*, and Her Daughter, Grand
daughter and Great Granddaughter. .
$1.50
$1.00.
OFFICE OF
ST. NICHOLAS
Messrs. Daniel's Shoe Store, City.
Gentlemen: ...
Time in its rapid 'flight has
brought us to .yule-time again. It
'.has ever been my custom to remember
the loved"'ones • on Christmas with
an appropriate gift. Past experi
ence teaches no gift more useful
or acceptable than Nice Footwear—
a compliment alike to the good- <
sense of the giver' and the good
taste of the recipientT Knowing,
as I do, your reputation for ‘ ‘old-
time honesty'' in duality, and
1 i
’ styles -Just from the cradle of
fashion, I trust you'll pardon.me
for asking your assistance in mak
ing my selections from your valu
able stock.
Thanking you in advance and
awaiting'your kind reply, I am
Yours very truly,
Dic-F. ST. NICHOLAS.
$4.00
OFFICE OF
DANIEL’S SHOE STORE
Dear Santa Claus:
Answering your kind favor of
recent date we beg to advise you
that we are ever ready and willing
to assist you in making your se
lections. Our stock was never larg-
.er, quality better, styles as. beau
tiful as they are varied.
Graceful conceptions in Patent
Leathers, Gun Metal, Kid, arid Felt.
Assuring you of our best ef
forts to please, and hoping to be
favored With ^n early call, we are
yours with a large and courteous
corps of salesmen to please.
t Very cordially,
DANIEL'S SHOE STORE.
Dic-M.
$6.00
$5.00
We Are Ready to Help Santa Claus to Select a gift for Dear
Mother, Tired Father, Faithful Wife, Late Husband, Promis
ing Son, Accomplished Daughter, and All the Little Folks.
EXCLUSIVE ATLANTA SELLERS OF STACY, ADAMS & CO.’S MEN’S FINE SHOES
>^"***^*8!a*— s
If Out of
City, Order
By Mail.
$4.00
WAR TIME CHRISTMASES
AMONG THE CONFEDERATES
AS TOLD BY GEN. C. A. EVANS
General Clement A. Evans, whose
brilliant and devoted service on the
field of battle for the Confederacy dur
ing the four years of the Civil War are
too well known to Georgian readers to
need elaboration here, gives some in
teresting reminiscences of the Christ
mas seasons spent by the soldiers dur
ing that period.
Now. in tlie fullness of his honorable
but vl-orous old age, devoted to his
state's service as one of the prison
commissioners, General Evans speaks
of those stirring days with ever-in
creasing tenderness.* His story of how
the soldier lads spent the Christmas
days camped on the field of battle will
prove of great Interest. He says:
“I enjoyed as a soldier the four
Christmas seasons of the Confederate
war in the Immediate presence of the
enemy without being engaged In bat
tle or even in a skirmish. You ask,
Did the Confederate soldiers observe
and enjoy the Christmas season? Of
course they did. Their enjoyment was
• mainly not boisterous, and there was
not much giving of gifts and not any
revelry anil riotous living. But the
irrepressible spirit of the young Con-
federate soldier sought and found
pleasure under very unfavorable cir
cumstances. And sd It was during all
the snmvs that covered the ground and
while the cutting winds raided the
tl* Ids, these spirited soldier boys kept
up the Christmas holidays.
In fact, there,,was not a battle
•ought Christmas day during the en-
GEN. CLEMENT A. EVANS
the dAy the music of the bands floated
through the air in a fraternal mingling
of melodies. Christmas etfe and Christ
mas morn came alike to the hundred
over 2,500 battles and skir
mishes are named in the list of fights,
out there were only about a doxen
minor skirmishes on Christmas day and
n*»t »nc battle. I am sure that the J thousand soldiers whose thoughts. turn-
brave sectional foes had enough ed to thanks for life spared and to the
feasts and other Christmas times at
home.
"General Lee wrote to hls wife on
this Christmas day expressing the feel
tng of hls army as well as of his owi
great heart. He recalled the goodness
of Divine Providence, referred with
Just pride to the recent battle and
closed with the remark: 'My heart
bleeds at the death of any one of our
gallant men.’
"Thus the two armies * were con
fronted in quarters for the winter, one
having abundance gathered from all
the world, while the other husbanded
Its resources, strengthened its patriot
ism ami increased its trust in Divine
Providence through religious observ
ance, by almost every member of the
army from its youngest private to the
noble Christian soldier who had led and
encouraged them by hls example.
"I may also mention that my person
al enjoyment of the Christmas of 1862
was increased by the visit to our army
at Fredericksburg at that time of my
eldest son* then about two months old,
who was promptly enlisted "for the-
war” In Co. K, Thirty-first Georgia In
fantry, and was under fire in the first
battle of the early spring, behaving
very gallantly considering that he was
not aware of any danger. The adjutant
general of my brigade. '
flghting and were willing to let the
amr'ris sing their song of peace when-
Christinas morning broke upon
earth.
. memory of the -Christmas of
* 88 ~ is specially vivid because It came
*’ y ."'[ n after the great battle of Fred-
-ru ksburg, December 13, and was cele-
ornted „n the ground where the Army
m Northern Virginia had Just won a
grt.u victory. Burnside, who had sue-
.f tl McClellan, attempted at once
another "On to Richmond” by the short
‘‘ml although he had rapidly
8*2*?* V 8 ^Plendld armies upon Staf-
o' r ' ! flights, on the north side of the
> t,a £ nnnock Hver, commanding Fred-
i rick#burg, he found the sagacious Lee
' fronting him on the south side. Un-
h!L rov f r of the 12th, and the
fo K next morning, Burnside’s
'y/wsted the river and the dear
th? nf the disclosed them in bat-
ar .u ay * The l»ue had Joined all
1,10 lines and at the close of the
had Burnside so thor-
nnMh /V* to f °rce a retreat to the
225, This battle was simply
Sjjnificent from my point of view.
‘ Northam •••I* lx a
Colonel Ned
Lawton, an officer of rare merit whom
. I loved as a brother, was mortally
comforted”’ themselvW^tvith w7nte? wounded by my side In the midst of
Sorters«. pSwictaSor* battle and the
^'rthorn soldiers fought with a
I , “ ,‘' s ' worthy of our American man-
in,) the Southern soldiers In both
rn-p and attack won yet greater
brew..'' shlne "«ind their traditional
[mtonej 11 "’** ov * r the two arm ' es
thrVw th 1° .EE****^ the’ camp-fires |-the £ red £^* b ?.JJ t ^ferred * to was I weatherman however,. refuses ti^be an
the if lights against the common!young „ recruit referred. io wusi _ - 'r
"ty In full vtnr by night, and during named In hU honor. accessory In this forecast.
WET CHRISTMAS
ON DOPE SHEET
SAY THE FIGURES
Mathematicians May Look
at the Past Record and
Do Their Figuring.
FOUR GENERATIONS LIVING;
DEATH NEVER TOUCHED
DIRECT LINE OFTHIS FAMILY
It la a little bit early for the weather
man to predict what weather condition*
will prevail Chrlatmas, but It It possible
that some Idea can be gained from the
weather that Santa Claus has brought
In the past, of the kind that will arrive
with the Christmas of 1908.
The data at the lotal weather bureau
goes back Just twenty-eight years, amt
fourteen of those twenty-eight Christ
mases were wet ones. Just an eve'n
break. Rain fell on Christmas day of
the years 1879, 1880, 1881, 1888, 1881,
1884, 1890, 1891, 1894, 1897, 1899, 1901,
1908, 1904. The other* wore fair. This
even break of wet and fair Christmas
days was shown only onco before with
in tile twenty-eight years, and that was
during 1897.
Within the history of the local
weather people and Its data, both of.
llclal and otherwise, Atlanta has never
experienced a Christman day with snow
on the side. Only once, on Christmas
day of 1899, did snow fall, and then It
was only a trace. Snow fell two days
after the Christmas of 1804.
The following llgures show tempera
ture on every Christmas day for the
past 88 years:
Year.
'1878...
1879.. .
1880.. .
1881...
1888.. .
1881...
1884.. .
1885.. .
1888.. .
1887
1888...
1889.. .
1890.. .
1891.. .
1892.. .
1891.. .
1894.. .
1895.. . .
1896.. .
1897.. .
1898.. .
1899.. . ,
1900.. . ,
1901.. .,
1908.. . .
1903.. .
1904.. . .
1905.. . .
1906.. . .
High. Low. Mean.
. 34 19 28
If the same ratio holds goed Christ
mas day for 1(98 will be a wet one. The
This Is the picture of a remarkable
Woman and members of a still more re
markable family. Four generations
there are represented In title picture,
and the head of the family, who la
seated at the extreme right, has the
distinction of being 102 years of age,
and at the same time hale and hearty.
She Is Mrs. Mary Lombard, of Au
gusta, and she was born In the county
Longford, Ireland, In 1804. Next to her Is
her daughter, Mrs. Annie F, Reynolds,
also of Augusta, and bora in Ireland
81 years ago. Next Is Mrs. Reynolds'
daughter, Mrs. Nellie F. Hogan, of At
lanta. and .the little girl is Mrs. Hogan's
18-year-old daughter, Annie May Ho
gan.
Not only la Mrs. Lombard of a re
markable age, but she can also say that
her family Is marked with the time
characteristic. There has never been
a death In this family In a direct tine
up to the preaent time.
Mrs. Lombard, the great-grand
mother of the' little girl, came to this
country fifty years ago from Ireland,
and she Is blessed with exceptionally
fine health.
Mrs. Hogan, the granddaughter of
Mrs. Lombard, Is an Atlantan and re
side* atlnirian Park.
In Mrs. Lombard's Immediate family
there are four sisters and two sons, all
living, while In the family .of Mrs.
Reynolds, her daughter, there were
born and are now living four daugh
ters and three sons. The sons are all
well-known Atlantans, and arc In the
tobacco business, Joe, Dick and Em
mett.
In the four generations of this family
IF EVERYBODY HAD A HOLIDAY;*
BUT IF THEY DID SOME OF US
WOULD HAVE A BUM CHRISTMAS
there have been six children* seven
grandchildren and one great-grand
child.
Fatting Fad*.
From The New York Tribune.
It Is'said by some phyalciana that a
good deal of the Insomnia, extreme
thlnneas and* general debility from
which Americans suffer Is due tfl the
various fasting fads. Here a man goes
without breakfast, there a woman
makes a point of going hungry to bed
Another systematically omits a raenl
at noonday, .and so It goes. Where peo
ple arc constitutionally below pur and
in a position where they can only
hope to maintain a fair degree of ef
ficiency by keeping up their vitality,
such "stunts” are of questionable vir
tue. Sturdy, full-blooded people, with
Iron nerves and digestions that can
negotiate nails, may try starving them
selves with impunity, perhaps. Thin,
anaemic* nervous people, on the other
hand* generally need all the food they
can eat and all the blood they can
make. If such people would eat before
going to bed they would generally see
an - Increase In vigor, for the reason
thu while the wear and tear of the
body were susj>eiided digestion and as
similation would still be going on. In
other words* the body would be making
more tissue than It destroyed; hence
an Increase In blood* weight and In
health. At least that's the way one
physician explained things to a woman
of the pale, thin type who applied to
him "all run down.”
Did yon ever stop to tltluk what Christ
runs would be If everybody had n holiday ?
Did It ever ocenr to you n* you reclined
In an easy chitlr before a eheerfnl lire with
the kids frolicking si tout on it Christians
morning with nil their new tops, that some
thing might he different If everybody
could remain at home like you aud enjoy
the dny? *
Well, It wounl Imj different.
Suppose the rnllroud hands took a holi
day on Christmas. How would your wife's
mother get to see you on thnt day mid
spend the day with yon mid fuss because
the kids were allowed to snlly forth with
their new toys and run chances of getting
cold?
If these people had holidays, the trains
wouldn't be able t«> bring home the ub-
Meut htisfmnd to hls family that was count
ing the minutes until he arrived.
Suppose the troll
conductors decided .
dny like other folks. _ _■
a nice shape, wouldn't fliey? Von might
sny ns you alt III front of thnt tire thnt
you'd take a cab. Well, the nibbles have
Just as much right to rt, holiday at the mo*
turmoil.
So If yon didn't own nn nutomoblls and
DO YOU FEEL CHARITABLE.? .
THERE ARE LOIS OF FOLKS
’ yOU CAN MAKE HAPPy
Associated Charities
Can Aid You in
Judgment.
Do you reel like scattering happiness
In an Atlanta home, where Christmas
will not be looked forward to with any
partleular degree of Joy?
In the language of the time, do you
feet like flowing yourself and helping
the poor to feel as good as you will
feel?
Now, of course, a man feels better If
he drops a quarter In. the hat of a
panhandler whining on the sidewalk..
He thinks he has done a charitable act
and feel* better for It. Rut he hasn't.
Pnnhandler* are not the kind of peo
ple to help. There are others who are
really needy—people who wouldn't for
the world go out and shout their pov
erty from the housetops. They have
too much pride.
But there is one place where such
needy people are known. And It Is
here that several Atlanta people who
are charitably Inclined have sought
Information during the past few day*.
They have found what they were look,
tng for, and so. nn Christmas morning,
several Atlanta'families will know how
it feels to be happy.
This place Is the office of the Asso
ciated Charities. Secretary Logan, of
that organisation, probably knows the
records of more Atlanta people In need
of help than any other man in the
city.
He knows the fakir* and the grafters
and he know* those who are actually
In need. But In nine cases out of ten
these really needy people wouldn’t (tell
anybody else. They know Secretary
Logan Is not going to advertise their
poverty to the world.
The Associated Charities.
Tho Associated Charities has made
no plans for making the poor happy ,,n
Christmas by giving away food, cloth
ing and' things* for the little ones, but j
at the same time they remember that I
needy people exist in Atlanta, and Sec- I
retury Logan Rets In touch with peo
ple who, he knows, would Ilk* to give
these needy people a lift.
Many of these people have already
called upon him for Information along I
this line, and have secured names >f
people whom they would like to make
happy. And they have made thelf
plans for scattering happiness. Some
churches, too, have asked for Infor- ,
■nation along this line, and It has glad
ly been furnished. It Is better to held
the. really deserving than to spend |
money on faktrs and grafters wl
would smile and comment afterwards
on how many suckers there are in the
world. • -
But the list/of needy Is not all fur
nished yet. There are others down on
that list who need and would appre
ciate help on Christmas day. Some
there are to whom clothes and shoes
would be acceptable and who* woald
be made happy t>y saeh gifts.
Others there are who would think a
chanee to get a job would be an ex
cellent Christmas present, and eldl
others who would like to harp a meal.
If you have been prosperous during
the year and feel like making others
happy. Secretary Li gsn would be gl id
to furnish names of families where
your presents would make a cf
home filled with happiness.
And it would take such a litti.