Newspaper Page Text
22 (698)
I
I IRA LAND&ITH. D. D., LL. D , Prsaldant S
I MISS HOOD and MI88 HERON, Principal!. I
I Located In West End, Nashville, famous as "tha J
I Athens of the South." Magnificently equipped I
1 buildings. Charming 20 acre hilltop Park. Twenty I
per cent, are Northern students. Unprecedented I
J health record. Filtered distilled water. Practical |
teaching Imparting refinement and culture, tn- j
I stilling worthy standards and womanly Ideals. .
I Right of certification to other colleges. Schools '
S of Art, Expression. Modern Languago, Physical
Education, Domestic Science. Diplomas awarded I
by Schools. Send for Music catalogue. Gymna- |
J slum, bowling alley, tennis, hockey, golf, basket
I hall, rawing, swimming, walking, horseback rid- J
| Ing. Limited number new students. Early regis- I
| tration necessary. Address
^ Belmont College, Box 54 ^
STOP WORKING^
Learn a profession in 180 hours which
will make you independent for life. Address
WKLTMUll INSTITUTE Nevada,
Mo.
Via Bristol
An d The
Norfolk & Western
Railway
The Short Line Between
NEW ORLEANS, BIRMINGHAM, MEMPHIS,
CHATTANOOGA, KNOXVILLE,
?AND?
WASHLNGTON, PHILADELPHIA NEW
YORK.
Solid Train Service Dining Car.
All Information cheerfully furnished.
WARREN L. ROHR,
Chattanooga, Tenn.
! . Wee tern Passenger Agent.
W. B. BEJVILL,
VJOAlOi X ttOOCUJDI A6VUI,
Roanoke. Va.
National Bank of
Virginia
9th A Main Streets, Richmond, Ya.
Capital $1,100,900.00
Surplus and Undivided
Profits, .. 700,000.00
Assets 9,000,000.00
OFFICERS
W. M. HABL.ESTON, President;
JOHN SKQLffON WIULflAMfl,
WILLIAM T. RE20D,
Vice Presidents.
W. M. ADDISON, Cashier;
O. 8. MORTON,
W. H. SLAUGHTER,
JOHN TYDH5R,
J. M. BALL, JR.,
Assistant Cashiers.
ACCOUNTS SOLICITED.
3 per cent, allowed on Saving* Accounts.
Direct Q&Cj
R#tt,e Route
TO
NBW YORK.
WAflHINOTON.
CINCINNATI?DETROIT,
WJFF1ALO?OLiETVTSLLANI),
PITTSBURG?INDIANAPOLIS,
B ERMINOHAM?CHATTANOOGA,
BLflQTRIC LIOHTEJD SLEEPERS.
DININO CARS.
Ticket Office: 711 St. Charlaa St.
DOpot: Terminal Station, Canal Bt.
Phane M 4483
V ' '* ! ' /*
THE FRESBTTEBU
CO-OPERATION FOR SOUTHEASTER.N
DEVELOPMENT.
I'resident FUnaey, ml the Southern
Railway Company, who was one of the
principal speakers at a b&iiquet given
by the Columbus Board of Trade, spoke
on "iCo-operation lor Southeastern De
tciuyiueui.
He told of the great natural advantages
enjoyed by the Southeastern
States, quoted statistics showing the
great progress that has been made in
recent years, and emphasized the importance
of co-operative work for promoting
the agricultural and industrial
development of the section and for
making its resources and opportunities
better kno.wn. He Baid in part:
"We have room in the Southeast for
all of the industrious, enterprising, and
otherwise desirable people who can be
induced to come among us. We have
a hearty welcome for them and opportunities
in abundance for then* to better
their condition. On? of the most desirable
ways in which our population
Can be increased is hv kee^inc nnr
young men at home. We are constantly
losing a certain proportion of our
population to the West and to the
North, iln. every community there are
men who are always looking for the
pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
They think that the great opportunities
of life are to be found in some
other locality than that in which tey
are living.
"In the United States, owing to. the
factB that the first settlements were
along the Atlantic seaboard and that,
until recently, there were great tracts
of public lands open to settlement in
the West, the idea has been traditional
that the West is the land of opportunity.
Horace Greeley did much to popu
larlze this idea by bis advice to young
men to go west and grow up with the
couatry. Conditions have radically
changed since Mr. Greeley gave his advice,
and I believe that if the great
editor were alive today he would say,
*Gu South, young man, and crow up
with the country,' Our opportunities
are at least as favorable as those in
any other part of the United States,
and one of the most important thlngB
we can do is to Impress this fact upon
our own people. This will be doubly
effective, for if we can bring everybody
in the Southeast to a full realisation
of our advantages and to their enthusiastic
exploitation, we shall have them
spreading the knowledge throughout
PI PF HROA N
FOR SALE
For sale cheap, a seventeen stop
(Esbln) Pipe Organ, now doing
good service In an Bplscop&l
church. Address, ORjOAN, Box 871,
Richmond* Va.
a
dent boc
physicia
families,
exceptio
requiren
modern
* Dlacrl
BSS: Influence!
viewed fn
for cataloi
training.
rzZZO^m mishe
0- -
t n of the south
the entire country and in foreign lauds,
to accomplish this most effectively we
should strive to make our development
at home so marked and so progressive
as to command attention and convince
the restless spirits among us thai it
is to their best interest to stay here,
and we should see to it that the facts
as co o?r progressy and opportunities
are made known. Local organizations
and local newspapers can be most helpful
in this. In many cases effective
personal work may be possible. If a
Southeastern fanner has an Idea that
he can improve his condition by moving
to the eo-called 'corn belt* to grow
corn, he should have the knowledge
.mpresseed upon hlai taai the record
corn crop* of the wo-ld have not been
grown in the 'corn "belt,' bat in the
Southeast, and on land costing lees
per acre, end that corn grown in the
Southeast has taken the prize for quality
in competition with the most successful
farmers of the 'corn belt' and
otner parts 01 toe country, ir ne nas
an idea that be should go to Texas to
raise cattle or to Kansas to raise hogs,
he should know that there is no part
of the United States in which beef and
pork can be produced more cheaply
than in the Southeast and that the experts
of the United States Agricultural
Department who have studied the matter
and conducted elaborate feeding experiments
are of the opinion that an
increasing proportion of the meat supply
of the United States must come
from our section."
In the line of industrial development,
Mr. Finley urged the still further
utilization of Southeastern raw materials
in Southeastern factories and
spoke of the opportunities for a wider
diversification of manufacturing. After
summarizing the co-operative development
work being done by the Southern
rum way v^wupauy in tne territory traversed
by its lines, Mr. Finley said:
"Our lines outside of the South have
recently been greatly extended by the
establishment of agencies of our
Freight and Passenger Traffic Departments
In the extreme West and Northwest
and in Canada. Our purpose in
STUAR
Formerly Virginia Female Inst. Found
of Va. Academic course. Two years
and Art. For catalog address: Maria
AGNES SCOTT,
COLLEGE
Decatur, (6 mile* from Atlanta) Gfl.
Southwestern Pres
Bachelor of Arte or Science, four yeari
of Arts and Divinity, five years. Loca
free to candidates. Opens September
WILLIAM DINWIDDIE, A. M., L
E FOR
COLUMBIA.S.C
DENTS of the College for Women, <
i. C., are selected with care, from the i
pplicants, with a view to maintaining ii
ly, the high ideals of intellectual, moral,
1 culture for which this school has beconu
a the refined young women of the best
amid the most beautiful surroundings, ar
>nal facilities for training to fill the mosl
lents of the best society, including every
culture.
mlnatlng patrons, desirous ot securing Ideal surrou
i In an educational homo for young womon?ldi
>m Mental. Moral. Social or Physical standpoints?
I giving references, or call and Inspect the beautl:
>le buildings and extensive ..modern equipment
roa KRKK UATALOfl AXD KVLL I.VVORBATIOR, A0DRKSH
VPHEHIA McCLINTOCK, A.II., Pres., Co
1
[June 26, 1912
PKESBYTKR1A* OF THE SOUTH
PLLNO CLUB.
The superior quality and durability
of the piano which iB now being offered
to the members of the Presbyterian of
0?..ib Di ? m..t- a? ?1 *
uuc ovukU nuuu i/iuu id d1uwu dy the
following letter from one of the earliest
purchasers of the Luddea ? Bates
Piano, away back In 1883. Mr. H. V.
Coarsey, of Bradentown, Fla., writing
under date of February 7, 1918, says:
"1 am the owner of Ludden & Bates
piano No. Ill,, In rosewood case, and
I take pleasure In mentioning that it
has a good clear tone and a smooth
even touch, notwithstanding It was
bought of you twenty-six or twentyseven
years ago, during which time It
has had constant service, considered by
some an extraordinary amount of hard
usage. This instrument has served two
generations in our immediate family in
a most satisfactory way and we have
no idea of palling with it for any
other piano."
If you would like to join the Club
write for club catalogue and full partlnvi
1 a rB A/1/? rooo T n/1/1on 9- O**"
uvciiu* u. nuui uuu uuuutu UC 0OICD,
Presbyterian of the South Piano Club
Dept., Atlanta, Ga.
F or Boys
Napoleon Bonaparte
Written for Boys by a
Noted Author
Containing 236 pages of highly interesting
and reliable description of this
wonderful man, his life> battles and
accomplishments. Told in a way that
captivates the boy. Well bound m
cloth and good print and paper. Original
price $1.00; our special prlee only
60 Cents, Postpaid
Presbyterian Committee
of Publication
Richmond, Ya. Texarkana, Ark.-Tex.
T HALL
ed 1843. A school for girls in Mountains
college work. Special advantages Music
Pendleton Duval, Box "I," Staunton, Va.
Letters, Science Philosophy,
* Home Economics
w
Resident students limited to 300
^ For catalog, address
F. H. GAINES, D. D.t LL. D., Pres
byterian University
i. Matter of Arts, five years. Bachelor
tion healthful. Cost moderate. Tuition
18.
.L. D., Chancellor, ClarksvHle, Tennr??<e
Columbia,
number of L_ ?inj|
n the stu- iM
social and *
) noted.
Southern jjOnHBAGi
e afforded
^ ovaafin/y ^
U OA?l>WU{5 H
phase of H
inclines and
sal whether
should write
fUl grounds,
for the best
ilumbla, S. 0. ITInni P?w*rS W I
Ula, Policy* fr W??