The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, December 19, 1906, Image 12

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER It, 190*. ..Christmas Gifts “If we home one pleasure greater than to sell you it Is to please you." • •• MEN’S HATS. BOYS’ HATS. BOYS’ GLOVES. BOYS’ UNDERWEAR. COTTON HDKFS. WAITERS’ JACKETS. BOYS’ CAPS. BOYS’ STOCKINGS. SCARF PINS. SMOKING JACKETS. BATH ROBES. LOUNGING ROBES. FANCY VESTS. WHITE VESTS. If a gift expresses mere sentiment it serves but half its purpose. Let that gift de fine good taste and enduring qualities and you have truly given that which fulfills not only the mission of senti ment, but is appreciated, and a remembrance from the giv er for years to come. Soon it will be Christmas and with it comes the beautiful custom of gift-giving. It is the pur pose of this announcement to invite your attention to this immense store, at this time of year so replete with dependable merchandise of- the kinds that not only will make handsome and accept able presents, but combine the useful with the beautiful. We would ask you to read this list. We are sure that you will find among the arti cles mentioned, something that will pledse you. OVERCOATS. RAINCOATS. MEN’S SUITS. YOUTH’S SUITS. BOYS’ SUITS. BOYS’ OVERCOATS. BOYS’ RAINCOATS. SILK NECKWEAR. SILK HDKFS. SILK MUFFLERS. KID GLOVES. BOYS’ NECKWEAR. MEN’ UNDERWEAR. NIGHT ROBES. BAR VESTS. MEN’S CAPS EAR MUFFS. CUFF BUTTONS. MOCHA GLOVES. SILK SUSPENDERS. RUBBER SUSPENDERS. WHITE SHIRTS. COLORED SHIRTS. SILK UMBRELLAS. MEN’S TROUSERS. FANCY SOX. BLACK SOX. TAN SOX. LINEN HDKFS. BOYS’ NIGHT ROBES. COLLARS AND CUFFS. RUBBER COATS. PULSE WARMERS. WATCH FOBS. AND MANY OTHER USEFUL GIFTS. There It not an artlola that gots from this itora that you buy but that la thoroughly rollabla and you art prlvllagtd to glva with tha diatlnot understand* Ing that if R la not aatiafaotory In avary way wa art raady to maka it right. The Globe Clothing Comp’y* 74-76 S. Broad Street. - - 89-91 Whitehall Street. And aa to prloaa, they’ve alwaya bean right Wa re main open avary night thla weak, and alto next Monday night TEN TERRIBLE FEMALES MAKE ENGLAND TREMBLE AND FEAR FOR THE FUTURE By GEORGE BERNARD 8HAW. T HIS U a torrlbl* moment .in our nn tlonaI Ilf**. Wo arw not often thor •Highly fright rued. When England trembles, the world know* that freut^ peril overshadow* our Jala ml fit •at clinch their tooth and hold their breath, t We wotchod the Armada creeping alowly i«p tho .channel. We wiped our brow when (chance revealed the treaaou of Guy Hawke*. Wo aro listening even now for the bugle of the Merman Invader nud ■canning the waves we rule for the peri* , scope of the French submarine, lint until now wo have faced our fato like taen. with ottr parliament unshaken In our mhlat; grandly r - ** K t like ■ , r , riant charged bloodstained Into their Charlea Itradlaugh, the moat to do hia worst. It wui day tha l gallery < into ala men ‘ hnrl him from our legislature. * “ iciatra . deigned to a*k securl ,;eo.i n#n ~' “ ■■ - ■corned prot puny an an- . Fawkes, Ilrad in ugh. and the stranger in the gallery, hold and dan gerous as they wore, were uo females. The peril today wear* a darker, deadlier aspect. Ten women—ten pettlcoated, long stocking ed, corseted females—have hurled them- selves ou the British houses of parliament. Ddoperate measures are neressarj. 1 have a right to speak In this matter, because It was In my piny, "Man and Superman." that my sex was first warned of woman's terrible strength and man's miserable weakness. It Is a striking confirmation of the cor rectness of my view* that the measure* which hnve always been deemed Sufficient to protect the house of common* against men are not to he truated against women. Take, for example, the daughters of Itlcb- ard Cobden. long known to everybody worth knowing In London it a among tic- most charming and Interesting women m poll*tan police they did carried »»»*• ladjr out ev lady out eteu aa they carried They held ... ... ..— . they had her safe under bolt and liar, until they bud stripped her to see that ahe had no weapon* concealed, until a temperate diet of bread and cocoa should have abated her perilous forces. She—and tbs rest of the terrible ten. For the moment we have time to breathe. But baa the government considered the foot that owing to the Imperfsctloua of our law these ladles will be at large again before muuy weeks have passed? I ask. In the name of the public, whether proper precautions have been taken? It Is not enough for Herbert Gladstone, Mr. Hal dane. Mr. Asquith and 8tr Henry Camp* bell-Uaiiucrtnnu to alt there pale and de termined. with drnwn lips and folded anus, helplessly awaiting a renewal of the assault—uu assault the couacqtieucv of which no man can foresee. It Is their duty, without n moment's delay, to quadru ple the police staff Inside the bouses of parliament, Westuiluster and Vauxhall bridges should be strongly hold by the guards. If necessary, special constables lions arc tnkeu, tore to let Mrs. Cnbden-IHHBHBHI f« lends out. As a tax-payer, 1 object L„ having to pay for her bread and coal when her bushnud Is not only ready but appar ently even anxious to provide a more gen erous diet at home. After all, if Mrs. Cobden Sanderson both as one of our moat distinguished artist craftsmen and as a i most munificent contributor In crises where I nubile Interests hnve been at stake, if | iMrs. t’obden Sanderson must remain a pris oner while the home secretary Is too par alysed with terror to make that stroke of the pen for which every sensible person In the three kingdoms Is looking to him. 1 why on earth can not she be Imprisoned . lu her own house? We should still look I Irldiculous, but, at least, the lady would • not be a martyr. I suppose nobody In the THREE NE W HOMES FAR OUT PEACHTREE re Another of the magnificent new residences being built ou* Peach* troo street. This it the now homo of Dr. Floyd McRae, at sl' % 9 comer of Fifteenth street. This residence hat a basement entrance for carriages and automobiles. i*rld really wli omen In Kng •nrncut indlgiu: i to see one of the nicest j f having lost our trainers and made ■ r<*«> of ourselves, snd of being Incapable of nciiug geucrmtsly now tligt r- * * ‘inn* It * — * an be » t«» what we ought to do. Will not the b*»me secretary rescue os rom (i ridiculous, uu Intolerable and Inci dentally a revolting!;' spiteful and umnsnt; situation! of ourselves, and of _ _ hnv. had time to miiii" to our senses. Surely, there two opinions among sane people ym **vnii % isisKvf tSi t 1176 Fsacntree otre n. KEEP UP WITH TIIE TIMES. By IRENE GARDNER. By IRENE GARDNER. It lx very well to Imprca* on children the Scriptural Injunction that they obey their parent., but It It fully at necetaary to Impreaa on parents the advice from the aame source: "Fathers, provoke not your children to wrath." Undoubtedly the word "father" It used In a general tense, meaning both parents, for the phrate could read with equal appropriateness: "Mothers, provoke not your children to wrath." There are tome things parents owe to their children as well os many things children owe to their parents. In this day of progresetvenesa, when each generation makes decided pro gress In advancement of the preceding one, parents owe It to their children to keep as much na possible abreast of the times, so that when the children grow up and go out In the world with those parents they need not have cause for wrath. However, we need not. look far to And parents who have failed to do thla very thing. They have neglected to make any progress since they were young, and for this reason their sense of perception has become dulled to an appreciation of the limes In which they live, and to, all unconscious of their own shortcomings, they subject their children to keen embarrassment. You say that this should not be so, .because children should 1 always over- i look the faults of their parents out of I pure love and gratitude, but that Is just alt talk. t'hlldren like fo be proud of their parents, just as much as parents like I to be proud of their children. Mothers are particularly prone to provoke the wrath of their daughters. Many a sweet girl has been made reti cent and bitter because of such a moth er. who will tell the meat casual ac quaintances all the personal side of her daughter's life and that of other members of the family. She loves her daughter devotedly, and would work from morning until night to make her comfortable. But. alas! she does not know that what a daughter wants In her mother Is not a slave to her dally need, but a companion who under stands her. The mother who has kept herself aloot from the world during her daugh ter's childhood, and then. When ahe has become a young lady le utterly tncana- Beautiful and spacious residence almost completed for E. P. McBur- nay, on Peachtree street, out toward Brookwoad. It is surrounded by a large lawn and will ba one of the finest in the eity. ble of Identifying herself In any way with her real life, bemoans the fact that her girl has grown away from her. 'Tvs slaved all my life for Mary,” ahe complains, bitterly, in air agony of mind that Is pitiful, "and this Is my reward." Yes. It Is her reward. So far she Is right. But she Is wrong In laying the fault at Mary's feet. For very aetdn-n do you see.a daughter who docs not make a confidant of hsr mother If the mother has assumed the right attitude toward her.' If you will look about among your friends you will And that those homes are the happiest where the parents have kept abreast of their children In their Interest In the world. Such a home may not be richly furnished, so far as the canned fruits, the jellies, the Pickles and hams arc concerned, and the mending basket mav often be sadly In need of attention. But for all that the home Is happier than many a one where oil these things are attended to os though life depended on their ac complishment. There Is no more beautiful sight In the world than that of parents and children who are congenial and nappy. The mother who ■ ran keep the deep love of her grown-up child It more of a true woman than when she knelt In nn ecstasy of devotion over the child's cradle. And It Is the same with the father. Those parents w'ho feel they arc estranged from the Inner life of their DIALOGUES OP’THK DAY. By WEX JONES. Tin* ambassador's wife looked up from hi*r innII. v "Bnlggles, our old Janitor, asks me to get hla sou a Job ns porter In the embassy," she Mild to her husband. "Better hum his letter, my dear," replied the uiultasaudor. *ui old friend of the family." Objected the a ni| hi sea dor's wife. "Yea. ye*, my dear, hut how do we know whether lu* wrote that letter na a Janitor or aa a private eltlxen?" J .VII the inhabitants of Mura had crowded to °cn‘ Jj thw P^net on *M R threatened ...V . !V B u °“ r ’ a * ketl Martian, Senior. *J5gt !*•!*.* ,M ! nrh has settled down there with their lunches?" you *ahl Martian, Junior. •They re watching the slx-mllilou-yenr race between the Eurtli and the Moon. Moon'a «*** «rt>lt ahead, and they're betting Id to 1 that harth won't pick It up unless a comet scuds Mood out or the aaucer." There was some uneasiness among the passengers lu the subway cars. A Are, a blockade, a derailed car ami a rear end-eok- Usion bad shaken their nerves. "Don't get excited," cried the alert guard. "Manager Medley, told me to tell yon that ,h / "trie* !• had. and that we've beeu lucky to escape accidents; but he says fin*!* 1 '?? ^le-tho snbway cars can never wj] the tracks like the *L’ trains." \\ hcreat the panic ended. children would do well to look tin themselves to see |f that la not wl the fault Ilea.