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See Atlanta First! All the Thrills and Perils of Mountain Climbing in Our Own Public School Yards
SUPERINTENDENT SLATON MAKES ATTACK ON UNSIGHTLY CONDITIONS
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EODGATHERFOR
mp
Dormitories Are' Filled and Ali
Students Have Not Arrived.
Work Begins Monday.
1
Preparatory to the opening As Geor
gia I’eeh Monday morning, the dovmi
t"ri'-■ ~f fj lp college today are tilled
"ith students, awaiting their turn at
the registration office.
More than 600 prospective students
Hi' 1 ’ occupying the rooms of the col
'• ge. filling tile dormitories to the limit.
I'liose who are to enter are register
ing with the secretary today, being f
classified and receiving such instruc
tions concerning their college work as
is required.
formal opening exercises will be hold
ft the chapel at 9:30 o’clock Monday.
Several well known Atlanta men will
there to deliver addresses, as will
"ftieials of the college. President lx. G.
Matheson today announced that the
'beakers have not been selected, as
answers to invitations have not been
received.
1 he students will find an almost new
college at Tech this year. During the
summer many of the* buildings wen
Kone over and some of them remod
,|,|l An addition or two was made.
a ml the facilities are much better than
last year.
Medical College
Opens; 350 Enrolled
’i'he fact that the Atlanta College of
: sieians and Surgeons has placed its
atrance requirements on a par with
Carnegie fourteen-unit system
'i"pted by many of the literary eol
"r ' has caused a decrease in the en
' ants of this year's freshman class.
' "liege opens today with exercises In
building in Butler street, opposit*
Grady hospital, and then the grind
' .'ear's work begins.
Robert Stuart MacArthur pastor
" Baptist Tabernacle, has been
"I'd to make the opening address.
11 t. p Westmoreland, president of
trustees, will preside and weleotm
' students.
'"it addreggea also will be mad' by
mbem of the faculty, among them
/ \ 5
t X
Leaping one of the chasms in.},
the Horrest avenue school yard—
a sport just as hazardous as it
looks in this remarkable snap-1
shot. It is a quick way to avoid
a tedious journey over hills and
1 tittles--a quick, but not entirely
i safe way.
SHORTER COLLEGE IS
OPENED WITH A NEW
ATTENDANCE RECORD
Rtt.ME. GA., Sept. IS.-‘-Shorter col
lege for girls will open this morning
with the largest attendance in its his
tory.
Every bit of space in the residence
halls had been reserved and numbers
of girls have been placed on the wait
ing list.
• Many improvements have been made
on the grounds and buildings during
the bast summer. There are many new
additions to the faculty, and President
VanHoose is of the opinion that he has
one of the best corps of teachers in the
entire South.
RICH MAN IS SWINDLED
IN’‘GOLDEN CHEESE’GAME
SEATTLE. WASH.. Sept. 18.—A $lO.-
()Ott gold brick swindle three years ago
on W R Marion, a wealthy resident of
South Bend, Wash., who has since Hied,
was disclosed when a cheese-shaped
“brick” weighing 100 pounds was de
clared at the United States assay office
here to be made of an excellent grade
of copper coated with a th'iek layer of
pme gold.
Marion evidently discovered that he
had been swindled, hut did not com
plain, and the success of the confidence
man was brought to light only when
his widow began an investigation of an
apparent SIO,OOO shortage in her hus
band's estate.
Search of his effects revealed the
“golden cheese" reposing In the bottom
of a trunk, and brought to light a draft
for SIO,OOO drawn by Marion in favor
of himself and cashed by him at a
Seattle bank in October. 1909.
Dr. Willis Westmoreland, president of
the co||eg< , and Dr. W. S Elkin, dean
of the faculty.
More than 350 students are expected
this year, and while the raise In en
trance requirements has cut down the
size of tin ff simian class, most of the
student of |,i t year have announced
their intention of returning, so that
Un ittemlime win be about as large
us formerly.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEAVS.WEDN:ESDAV. SEPTEMBER 18. 1912.
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A conference in one of the Tenth street school yard chasms.
The picture strikingly illustrates the outrageous condition of
the yard, this one hollow being deeper than a child and 'forming
a fine trap for active youngsters inclined to care-free running
about.
NEGRO STEWARDESS
AT UNION STATION
25 YEARS IS DEAD
Lulu Lewis, one of the best known
old negro women in Atlanta, for 25
years stewardess in the Union station,
is dead. Many a feminine traveler
whom Lulu has helped get rid of the
grime of the railroad train and cheered
with her smile will mourn her death.
She died at 348 Park avenue. South
Atlanta, yesterday. She is survived by
three sons and one daughter.
WOMAN IS NOW ACCUSED
AS LEADER OF SMUGGLERS
LOS ANGELES, CAL., Sept. 18.—
The Federal grand jury took up today
the alleged smuggling filot headed by
Mrs. Ethel Hall, now in the county
jail, in which were involved several of
the moat prominent Chinese merchants
in San Francisco, some of whom are
now under bonds.
According to Captain Charles T Con
nell. of the immigration service, the
smugglers have grown rich by bringing
in Chinese from Ensenada. Lower Cal
ifornia. under a contract that virtually
meant life servitude for the contra
bands
A eharg of 3300 was impom-d upon
each Chinese to be worked out at the
rate of 81.50 n daj \ dollar a day was
allowed th.' Chinese for living ex
pedites. and the debt was paid off at the
fate of 50 cents a day.
MODERNIST QUITS
SCHOOL; DOESN’T
ACCEPT MIRACLES
SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 18.—After
eight years of battling for beliefs not
acceptable to the Presbyterian synod of
California, Dr. Thomas F. Day, profes
sor of Old Testament History and He
brew at the San Francisco Theological
seminary, has resigned.
His resignation has been accepted, and
Dr. Day is now en route for Europe for
a year's vacation. Dr. Day has not re
ceded from his position, and his resigna
tion was offered to forestall removal, an
noyance to his friends and embarrass
ment to the seminary
Among the specific charges brought
against Dr. Day were that he taught,
among other things:
That God never interrupted the orderly
workings of nature
That accounts of miracles in the Bible
are to be so explained that the occur
rence may be regarded as having taken
place according to known laws of na
ture. and that, if this can not be done,
the accounts are to be regarded as false
trunk"held for bill
DELAYS WEDDING A DAY
ST. IJH'IS. Sept. 18 To satisfy a bill
of 88 for conveying a would-be wedding
party to various points in St. Louis and |
East St. laiuls. Janies Hurley, a practi- I
cal-minded chauffeur, appropriated .<
trunk containing the winter wardrobe ot
Frank W. Scoville ami caused Seovlil.
marriage to Miss Tessin Kleffner to be
delayed a day.
Finally married hut still minus the
trunk, Scoville tailed a policeman to hl:
boarding house and made a complaint
against the chauffeur.
Bad Lands of the West
Never Had Anything
i on. Plots Supposed!
To Be Pl aygrounds,
But Often Used as
D u in p i n g Ground.
School Head Shows j
Up the Need of Im
mediate Action.
Unless the Atlanta city council can
find funds sufficient to regrade a num
ber of the public school yards, moun
tain climbing, chasm jumping and kin
dred sports bid fair to displace the old
fashioned pastimes with Atlanta
youngsters.
According to school authorities, the
yards of Forrest Avenue. Tenth Street,
Highland Avenue and Luckie Street
schools bear a distinct resemblance to
the "Bad Lands" of the far West. Ero
sion, caused by the heavy summer
rains, has sculptured the surface of
the yards into miniature mountain
ranges and deep canyons.
in the yard on the west and north
sides of the Forrest Avenue school chll
dien can hide from one another in the
ai roj as the rain has cut. One gully
is so deep that Superintendent Slaton
says he has ridden a horse into it, but
with considerable danger to himself
and the horse.
Forced to Play in Street.
The same condition exists at the
tenth Street school. Here the yard
is not as mountainous as at Forrest
Avenue, but the children since the
opening of school have been forced to
take to the street during recess.
3 he yard of the Luckie Street school,
if it can be called a yard, will have to
be filled in before it will be presentable.
It is really a hollow about twenty feet
I deep. At the Highland Avenue school
two sides of the yard are in such bad
condition the authorities have been
forced to prohibit the children from
using it.
Davis Street school yard is a dump
ing ground. During till hours of the
day wagons drive up and unload old
brick, tin cans and all bianner of trash
directly in front of the school building.
Corpses in the Caverns.
Last week one of the nyire adven
turesome pupils told the teachers that
he had found a dead chicken across
the street and the teacher, upon in
vestigation. found a dead cat also.
Superintendent Slaton is authority
for the statement that the council
should act at once, if a. number of
school yards are not destroyed abso
■ lutely. While the superintendent has
; not made an estimate of the cost that
I would be entailed in putting the school
I yards in shape, he has made a brief
I si h'-dule of the work to be done.
The yards at Forrest Avenue. Tenth
Street and Highland Avenue will have
to la r graded and a retaining wall
bull amund th< property to prevent
fU'thil erosion.
The lollow In th'- yard at th. Luckie
Street school will have to be filled and
“Climbing the /Alps*’ in the Forrest avenue school yard.
The mountaineers in the picture being young and optimistic,
they're not greatly appalled by the perils of this pastime; but
the flangers would daunt many an older person and effectually
discourage any “tag’’ games.
PROGRESSIVES A' PARTY
OF MEN AND WOMEN NOT
AFRAID, SAYS PERKINS
Second of a Series of Articles Written for The Georgian,
By GEORGE W. PERKINS.
Governor Johnson, of California, Pro
gressive vice presidential candidate. In
his address before the Progressive con
vention at Syra-
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V' ■ ■?
fl ’
Ok*
*
cuse, said:
“This is a party
of men and women
unafraid.”
What prompted
Governor Johnson
to use that expres
sion? What is the
real significance
underlying it? Just
this: We, as a peo
ple, here in the
United States, are
no longer a race
of men and wom
en who are afraid.
Fear Is based on
ignorance and su
perstition. and we
have spent 135
years and billions of dollars since our
Declaration of Independence in a titanic
struggle to dislodge, uproot and dissi
pate both, with the result that we have
thrown off one superstitious yoke after
another and have become unafraid.
We have been coming out into the
open as individuals and thinking for
ourselves —making up our minds for
ourselves.
This is not the sixteenth century; it
is the beginning of the twentieth cen
tury.
The fears, the superstitions, the
timidity, the ignorance of the sixteenth
century have no place with us in the
opening days of the twentieth century.
We, as a people, have spent many bi I.
lions of dollars on primary education
alone in this country, and many more
billions on high schools, private schools,
colleges, etc.
All this has beert done to build up our
educational system.
At the. same time we have spent many
billions In building our railroads.
We expect our railroad systems to
a retaining wall built At Walker
Street school the lawn, as does the
lawns around many school buildings,
ne» d- sodding. >
"ft is absurd.' .-aid Superintendent
Slaton, "to build new ami expensive
school buildings and install perfect
equipment and tlieu give no attention
to the school yprds. Many of the yards
hav. never been taken cure of. and 1
..m assure rhe people of Atlanta that
they look it now."
earn and pay dividends. Why should
we not expect at least as much of Ous'
educational eystern?
As a matter of fact, our educational!
systems do earn and pay dividends, and!
the dividends are getting bigger and
bigger all the while. We have now'
reached a point where we are gathering
in the results —results not only from,
the education that comes through book:
learning, but t.lie education that comes
through travel, through contact with,
people, through intercommunication.
You hear many people saying justi
now, "What is all this hubbub about ?!
Why this sudden demand for a target*
and more direct participation 1n munic«
fpal, state and national political af
fairs?"
The answer is that you have first
to sow the seed and then reap the har
vest, and it sometimes seems a good
while from seeding time to harvest
time, but progress is being made just
the same.
The crops grow gradually, but with
good soil, good seed, proper cultiva
tion and average rain and sunshine,
the day Is bound to come when you
must garner in your crop or allow
all the work, all the care, all the ex
pense, all the blessings of rain and
sunshine to go to waste. There are
many cloudy days; there may be either
too much rain or too much sunshine;
but finally the crops come on with a
rush and the day of the harvest ar
rives. The time of actual garnering
comes almost to a day. and the wise
farmer knows almost the exact hour
when he must put in the sickle or lose
his crops.
rhe same process applies to many
affairs of life, and the Progressive par
ty is indeed made up of men and wom
en unafraid—unafraid because, through
the educational seed that has been sown
in good soil, they know that the time
has come to harvest the crop, and the
Progressive party is the machine that
proposes to garner it at the hour when
it is ripe for the harvest.
In place of very many good people
in this country being alarmed at what
the harvest is going to be. they should
rejoice, because we are moving for
ward, not backward. It is distinctly
and In all respects a progressive move
ment. and progress that is real is noth
ing to be afraid of. It is something to
be proud of something to welcome and
not repel.
I regret that absence from the city
fm several days and a very great pres
sure on my time made it Impossible fol
me to furnish articles last week foi
space so generously offered by Mr
Hearst; but unless som. unusual ant
unforseeu thing occurs to prevent
shall i ontrlbute article three times t
week from now until November.
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