Newspaper Page Text
i
Dr. J. S.
Lyons,
newly
elected
moderator
of the
Presbyterian
Church,
South.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEATS. MONDAY, MAY 10,
101
HEADS THE SOUTHERN
BRANCH OF CHURCH
Boys’ and Girls’ Letters Show Their
Pluck and Determination to Win
the Handsome Prizes Offered.
"Please send another book by return mail." is setting to be almost
an hourly request in The 'Georgian and American office, where the let
ters from boys and girls in the pony outfit contest are coming in by the
bale. The ••book" referred to, of course, is the one used in recording
subscriptions and votes.
An out-of-the-State contestant writes, “I see I am ahead; believe
me, I am going to stay right out in front,” and to make good his prom
ise, he forwards a big batch of votes.
"You bet your life my town wins a pony,” write another rather
slangy young contestant. He, too, is making a great race, and his fel
low townsmen are helping him, through friendship and local pride, which
makes a strong combination in his favor.
Another little girl from out in Georgia sends ia 7,500 votes with
single word, ‘‘Hurrah!” followed by a big explosive-looking star.
So it goes. Enthusiasm is increasing daily, the votes are piling
at a great rate. Names and standing of contestants are below:
the
up
district Number One.
George Rosser 22530
Josephine Simril 15300
Jacob Patterson 12880
Miss Margaret Lewis 7030
Willie Ivey Wiggins 621',
Vera Nelle Brantley 6005
Edgar Watkins, Jr. 59<»0
Hugh B. Luttrell 4900
Jas. O. Godard 4695
Miss Frankie J. Smith 4500
Janet Oxenham 3915
Hillmann McCalla 3005
Dorothy Stiff 2030
Nellie Martin 2190
.Miss Estelle Sullivan 1630
Miss Mildred Stewart 1570
Phillip S. Reid 1405
Miss Louise Thompson 1315
Mollie Lee Kendall 1309
Andrew May 1295
James Grubbs 1140
Wm. Elsie .* 1145
Lottie Mae Dedman 1130
Glenn Moon 1115
Thos. M. Price 1100
Eugene Morgan 1100
Wyman Conard 100O
Yoland Gwin 1000
Harold Holsombach 1000
T. L. Hoshall, Jr 1000
M oy Mauldi: 1000
Albert Smith 10)0
Norman Caldwell 1000
Mis; Louise McCrary 1000
Miss Sudie King 1000
Miss Gaynell Phillips 1000
Miss Mary E. Peacock 1000
Robert A. Harden 1000
E. M. Harrison 1000
Caldwell Holliday 1009
John R. Wood 1000
Aiiss Edith <llower l 11 10
Miss Ruth Grogan 1000
H. E. Watkins, Jr 1000
Miss Annie Phillips 1000
Miss Christa Powers 1009
Oliff Moody 1000
William Ernest 1000
Arthur Pepin 1000
District Number Two.
Miss Robert Harbour 11595
Eugene Willingham 10 415
Miss Marjorie McLeod 9715
Miss Lottie McNair 763 >
Elsie Gosnell 5880
Miss Elizabeth Willard 49"'
Miss Idelle Shaw 424 .'
Miss Edith Gray 3820
Ray Warwick 3520
J. Edgar Sheridan 2935
Miss LaRue Church 243-.
Miss Eliza’ th Smith 2425
Edmund Hurt 2375
Willett Matth vvs 217"
Paul M. Clark • 211*
Wm. Wellborn 1850
George M. Barnes 1850
Miss Elizabeth Garwood 1770
Clinton Hutchinson 17-t"
Miss Virginia Walton 1650
Miss Nelle Reynolds 15S5
Chas. M. Kellog, Jr 1380
Max Clein 121",
Robert Wood 1180
Martin Comerford 10 )0
Buel Crawlev 1090
Willie Harden 1000
Raley Ray 1000
Miss Lucy Withers 7"00
Miss Elizabeth Downing 1000
Robert R. Andrews 1000
ML’S Catherine Fusseli 1000
J. W. Collins, Jr. 1009
District Number Three.
Chas. M. Stevens 17140
Wiilette Matthews 6235
J. P. Goets, Jr 5865
Miss Mary Wells 2735
Miss Mable Brace well 1800
Miew Evelyn Oxford 1800
Ernest E. Hambrick 12..'
Anne S. Slatton 10to
Willie Reynolds 1000
Harry Brown 1000
Miss Alma Coleman 1000
District Number Four.
Florence Greenoe 23150
Fannie Mae Cook 21820
Nathaniel Kay 147t5
Oscar Eugene Cook 11410
Ida G. Fox 5965
W. H. Hamilton, Jr 5740
Mill Wilhelmina Tucker 5275
Howell Conway
Miss Ida Bloomberg . .
H. L. W. Brown
Miss Maude L. Berry
J. Walling Davis
Loum Joel
Royal Barbour
James Edens
Vivian Broon [
Miss L. E. Abbott
Miss Lovie C. Dean
Miss Alice Feldman
Frank Henley
Miss Annie Mae Hilsman ..!!
Milton Holcombe
Lynn A. Hubbard .,
Harry Stone
Miss Sarah Whitaker
Miss Margaret White
Charles Stone
R. H. Brown
Dick Denton
Miss Rosemund Humphries ..
Ralph Ross
Agnes Shatren
Hugh Terrell
Miss Carlotta Rums
Lowell Battle
Miss Lillian I, Brown
Miss Marion Overstreet
District Number Five.
Frank Ison, Jr
Harndon Thomas
Richard Rainey * ’
Miss Lorise Chewning
Emery Ward
Miss Mary Holloway ........
Mis9 Margaret La Feure ....!!
John Raker Long
Roy Coleman ...
Wm. Hood . ’ ’
Miss Lucile Berry
Miss Texia Mae Butler ....!
Miss Anna Graham
Albert Leake ’ ’
Merriot Brown Reid
Miss Frances Summers
District Number Six.
V illiam Turney
Miss Beverly Swan ton
Edw. DeLoach
J. T. Sewell
George Nelson Baker
John Lovett
Edgar Wilson
Miss Susanne Springer
Gay Reynolds
Miss Ora F. Dozier
E. F. Marquett 1270
Miss Margaret Thornton 1165
Charlie Hood 1075
Miss Grace Davis 100,9
Gregory J. Eaton 1000
Angie C. Newton 1009
Benjamin F. Safiets 1000
Miss Virginia Jackson 10i'0
Grady Harris 1000
District Number Seven.
A. Morrison 11715
Phillip Gilstein 4260
Tames Allen 2389
George H. Melton 1500
Joe DuPre mj
Lawrence McGinnis 1000
Clyde Mitchell 1000
City Carriers and Newsboys.
Ross Greer 23530
Harold Hamby 13825
O. B. Bigger 13300
Mosc Brodkin 12125
Tno. Trimble 10340
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1009
. 1009
. 10Q0
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
. 1000
.23360
. 6165
. 6115
. 3955
. 3225
. 2065
. 1685
. 126)
. 1245
. 1150
1070
, 1000
100O
1009
1000
1000
.... 3650
.... 3260
.... 2150
.... 2040
.... 1800
.... 1695
.... 1600
Chas. Ernest Vernoy 1650
Guy Quillian 1615
Mi9S Marie Toy 1550
Raymond Smith 1460
John Thrasher 1425
Roy Young 1420
Paul Theodown 1400
Miss Annie Graham 1400
Estelle Honer 1380
David F. Nowell 1295
William Henderson 1290
Louise Simpson 1290
Miss Beatrice Brunson 1175
Mose Gold 1250
Miss Susie Black 1230
Miss Meta Mitchell 1140
Lillian Maurenberg 1045
ONE OF THE MOST
IMPORTANT DIS
COURSES TO BE DE
LIVERED HERE SUN
DAY WILL BE THAT:
OF A NOTED LECTUR I
ER, 0. L. SULLIVAN,
I NEW YORK, AT CA
BLE HALL AT 3 P. M.
/ HE WILL SPEAK ON >
< ‘THE RESURRECT
tion, or life be
YOND THE GRAVE."
Roy Cook
J. E. Moore
Raymond Wilkinson
Harold Turner
Irvan Willingham ..
Powell Pendley ....
Sidney Ney
Sterling Jorda:. ...
Norman Gooch ....
Everett J. Cain ...
Bonnell Blcodworth
Charles Barron ... *.
L. M. Harrison
Frank Garwood
St Leonard Veitch
Olin Neal Bass 1250
R. S. McConnell 1220
Grady Cook usq
Johnnie Evans 1000
Robt. Correll 1000
Out-of-Town Agents and Carriers.
John Martin 13895
9500
8475
8455
5850
4865
4700
4325
3980
2930
2370
2360
2150
1560
1545
147'
Ambrose Scarboro
Jake Palmer
Leon Spence
H. K. Evere't ...
.Aubrey Hopkins
Morgan E. Dasch .
James S. Plunkett
Robt. ‘Newby
Hyman Esseman ..
John Toler
Leon B. Spears ...
Charles R. Walker
Alfred Chappelle
Sidney Newsome
James Wilkins . ..
L. Bennett
Joseph Milam
John Gardner ....
Herman Corliss
3565
3030
2650
2460
1690
1465
1480
1360
1345
1340
1285
1175
1100
1080
1015
1000
1000
1000
1000
Smith Fallaw 1000
R. E. Hudson 1000
Hugh Parrish 1000
Paul Swint 1000
X. N David 1 1000
Rupert Mobley 1000
Thos. W. Rvlee 1000
Georgia School Boys and Girls.
Andrew B. Tribble 9925
Lois Casey 5345
Miss Ennis Spinks 46.85
Miss Virginia McCowen 3310
Miss Esther Boorstin 2995
Maurice Means 2880
Clifford Henry 2760
2720
2720
24 70
2250
2250
1995
1935
1985
1950
1855
1840
1800
1800
1750
1690
1515
1370
135
B. B. Tillman
Miss Margaret Danner
Miss Belle Stowe
Elmer Towns
Terry Strozier, Jr
Miss Belle Ragsdale
Maxwell Aubrey
Miss Gladys Daniel
Johnnie Logan
Eugene Lee, Jr
Beaufort C. Elder
Reginald Houser
Charles E. Keely
W. L. Mattox
Patrick Jones
Emory Steele
Blake Nichols
Miss Berta Davis
Alfred Wilkes 1335
Berry Clein 1325
Warren Taliafero 1240
William Reid 1350
Miss Mary Caldwell 1130
Clay Butruss 1195
Miss Jessie Collier 1105
Ernest Turner
Paul Jossey
Carl Bragg
Robert Davis
Miss Miriam Stansell
Anna Johnson
J. C. Smith
Miss Sallie Evans
Horould C. Ogllvle . ..
Miss Erva Blackrtock .
Winifred A. Hollis
H. Eugene Whit
Johnnie L. Brewer . . .
Eugene Scarborough ..
O. S. Morton
Brannon Sharp
G. W. Davis
Cecil Magahee
Jimmy Logan
Miss Sarah Carter ....
Gertrude Marshall
R. W. Mattox, Jr
Dan Patrick
Harry H. Redwine ...
Felix Reid
1085
10> l
1080
1050
1055
1055
1035
1035
1030
1030
1030
1030
1080
1025
1015
1000
1000
looe
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
Elmer Towns 19i.1
Ralph Little 1000
Warner Webb 1000
Edward A. Heckle 1000
Etheridge Bradley 1000
Ernest Baker 10^“
Miss Lily Wilkes 1000
J. P. Craven 1000
John H. Hewlett 1000
Charles E. Crawford 1000
Miss Helen Mitchell 1000
Charles Harlan 1000
Rudolph Campbell 1000
Walter Harrell, Jr 1000
Robt. Mobley. Jr. 1000
C. V.. Turner, Jr 10.00
Geo. Wm. Posey. Jr 1000
School Boys and Girls Outside of
State of Georgia.
Robt. Hyatt Brown 4370
Rodney Stephens 4255
Miss Dorothy Davis 1145
Ralph Turner 1125
Miss y.nnie McCarell 1030
Novel Wheeler 1013
Pauline Trull 10.00
J. T Webb, Jr. ... 10 -0
Lindsay W. Graves 1000
George Andrews 1000
Fain E. Webb, Jr 1000
Miss Lydia Bemley 10)0
JRives Cary
The Sunday American goes every
where all over the South. If you have
anything to sell The Sunday Amer
ican is "The Market Place of the
South.” The Sunday American is the
White City Park Now Open
1100-best advertising medium.
SULLIVAN, OF NEW
YORK, IS ONE OF THE
MOST INTERESTING
OF THE SPEAKERS
TO BE HERE SUNDAY.
HEAR HIM. CABLE
HALL, SUNDAY, 3
P. M
Bishop Doane Dies
Of Heart Disease
NEW YORK, May V .—Following:
an attack of illness of little more tnan
24 hours duration, Bishop William
Croswell Doane, of the Episcopal Dio
cese of Albany, N. Y., and one of
the great leaders of the high Episco
pal Church In this country, died early
today in his apartments at the Hotel
Manhattan of heart disease. He was
81 years of age. Members of the
family .who had been summoned to
the bedside last night said the body
would be taken to Albany this after
noon for burial.
Bishop Doane came here Wednes
day to attend a meeting of the Board
of Missions of the Episcopal Church.
On the following day he was taken ill
and rapidly grew worse.
Bishop Doane died at 12:30 o'clock.
At the bedside were his four grand
daughters, Misses Margaret and
Elizabeth Gardner, Mrs. Mtvry Frazier
and Mrs. Roy Pier.
Bishop Doane was born in Boston
and was consecrated Bishop o' Al
bany in 1869.
Steel Corporation, for Example,
Is Doing a Lot of Work
for Its Men.
By B. c. FORBES.
A Steel man handed me a cigar,
and on glancing at the band I no
ticed it read: "Boost for Safety” in
the center and "Illinois Steel Co.”
lengthwise. I began to ask ques
tions and was told that these cigars,
as well as articles of more value,
were distributed as rewards among
workmen for, amohg other things,
preventing accidents, suggesting safe
ty devices and otherwise contributing
to the saving of life.
* * *
The annual carnage on American
railroads, in American industry and
in American coal and metal mines is
a most deplorable blot on our national
escutcheon—100 fatalities every time
the sun rises and 6.000 accidents is
the record for the country.
• • *
My curiosity aroused by the afore
mentioned cigar, I went to the United
States Steel Corporation’s offices to
learn what this, the largest industrial
organization in the land, was doing
to reduce its share of the nation’s
awful accident-roll and to improve the
lot of its workers.
* * *
Here arc Home of the thingh I
learned things that mag astonish
you as much as they astonished me,
for I had read so much about the
cruel. heartless, stare-driving methods
of the corporation that I had come
to believe they must be true:
1. The Steel. Corporation has
abolished the seven-day week among
all its workmen.
2. Only blast furnaces are oper
ated on Sunday, and they employ not
more than two of every hundred em
ployees. The men who work on Sun
days are given a day off during the
week.
3. Not more than one man in four
works twelve hours a day.
4. The old plan of working cer
tain men a double-shift in changing
shifts each week has been eliminated
so that no man works twenty-four
hours on end.
5. The average wage has been in
creased $200 a year since 1902: the
average then was $716, to-day it is
$912, adding upward of $40,000,000
to the payroll.
6. "SAFETY FIRST” is the cor
poration’s inflexible motto, preached
incessantly, practiced assiduously
! and encouraged in every way con
ceivable. Next in orders are: Qual-
, ity, Cost, Tonnage.
7. The sum of $4,000,000 has been
spent in six years to increase safety.
8. The results have included a
reduction of 43 per cent in serious
and fatal accidents since 1906. On
to-day’s force this means that there
now escape some 2,500 employees I
who would have fallen victims under
the 1906 conditions.
9. Elazoned over every gate en
tered by workmen is a "Safety
First” motto: "Safety First” calendars
are freely distributed; moving pic
ture entertainments designed to in
culcate carefulness, as well as to
amuse, are given to workers, their
wives and children: "Safety,” but
tons (some of gold) are awarded
men who perform meritorious serv
ices in the cause of safety—these
buttons, it is found, have a most
salutary influence upon the wearers;
and even pay envelopes each week
have a safety-squib printed on them.
Here is a sample:
Indifference to the safety of others
may, in the course of events, some
time place your own life or that of a
member of your family in danger.
10. A voluntary workmen’s com
pensation plan was adopted on May
1, 1910, before any State in the
Union had passed a Workmen's
Compensation law, and the scale of
relief printed in sixteen languages,
so that every employee could know
exactly what he would get for each
kind of injury.
11. Fully 80 per cent of all
casualty expenditures go direct to
the men injured and their families—
the percentage usually received by
injured persons is less than half of
this in most States, legal fees ab
sorbing the lion's share as a rule.
12. The Corporation has 1,843 pen
sioners, who received $358,780 last
year, the average pension now being
slightly over $20 per month.
13. No fewer than 32,248 employees
are now stockholders, owning 125,848
shares. The annua! cost of this to
the Corporation is $850,000.
14. Last year* $1,100,000 was spent
on sanitation and welfare. Inci
dentally, come fifty children’s play
grounds have been provided, with ex
perts to entertain the children.
15. At one plant alone, encouraged
by offers of prizes, 5,150 vegetable
and flower gardens were cultivated
—72 per cent of all that could possi
bly have been cultivated—and the
produce was estimated as worth from
$225,000 to $245,000. or say $45 for
each amateur gardener.
O VK
ASodTTawii
SUMMER FARES.
Lake, Mountain and Sea
shore Resorts.
Daily on and after May 15 the Cen
tral of Georgia Railway will have in
sale at its principal ticket offices
round trip tickets at reduced ‘ fares
to summer resorts in the North,
South. East and West, and to New
York, Boston, Baltimore and Philadel
phia via Savannah and steamships.
For total fares, conditions, train serv
ice. etc., •
ASK NEAREST TICKET AGENT
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY,
or write to W. H. Fogg. District Pas
senger Agent, Atlanta, Ga. Adv.
Threatened to Get
Another Witness.
"While in Now York this week on
a business trip." said a well-known
Atlanta man, "I ran across an inci
dent that was rather amusing.
"A man who was apparently i
lawyer was talking earnestly with a
man at his side in an elevator In a
downtown building in which there
are many law offices. 1 heard the
lawyer say:
" ‘Remember, court opens at 10:30
o’clock. I want you to he in my nffl< e
at 9 o’clock, and if you are not there
I’ll get another witness.’”
The Requisites
Of a Song Hit.
“Fortunes in song writing.” says
an advertisement now appearing in
magazines throughout the country,
and many are Jured by it. But tjiose
who have tried know the disappoint
ments of the song writer striving o
induce a publisher to look at his
work. For those who would try here
is a tip from one who has made goo'd:
"If your song is to make a hit, the
air must be hard to remember, though
catchy and pleasing. If it can be
whistled by anyone who hears it
once or twice, it will not sell, and the
publisher will reject it.”
His Excuse Wes
An Excellent One.
"I was visiting a friend in New
York not long ago,” said a promi
nent real estate man. "and he took
me around a good deal. He is a
lawyer and frequently we visited the
courts together.
"One day a man who had been
summoned for jury duty in the Su
preme Court went up to the clerk-
before the names of the talesmen
were called and told why he thought
he ought to be excused. When the
judge mounted the bench the clerk
said:
‘‘‘Your Honor. Mr. doesn’t
think he ought to do jury duty on
account of his business.’
“‘What’s his business?’ asked the
court, gruffly.
“ ‘He’s a faro bank dealer,’ said
ih<v clerk.
‘ ‘Excused,’ said the court.”
Atlanta Fights for
Another Convention
Though more than ten of the largest
cities in the country are vjdding for
the honor. Atlanta has a fine chance of
capturing the next meeting of the Na
tional Conference of City 1 .jnning
Among the cities that have extended
invitations are Atlanta, New Yoffe, St.
Louis. Toronto, Detroit, Philadelphia,
Louisville and Memphis
Atlanta's official invitation was pre
sented by Charles J. Haden. who bore
credentials from Governor Brown. May
or Woodward, the Atlanta Chamber of
Commerce and the Atlanta Convention
Bureau. Mr. Haden is confident that
Atlanta will be awarded the confer
ence.
necial Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, May 1 .— Following their
orgy of bomb planting yesterday when
fifteen infernal machines, some dead
ly and some harmless, were scattered
throughout England by militant suf
fragettes, the arson squad took up the
torch again to-day.
A new residence at Cambridge
which had just been built and was
as yet untenanted, was burned by J
women, the loss being estimated-*at
$10,000.
Suffrage literature was scattered!
around the ruins. An envelope ad- 1
dressed to ‘‘the Dishonorable Premier
Asquith and the People of England",
said:
"It is the duty of the militant suf
fragettes to warn tlie people that out
rages more serious than those gone!
before are in store for the public of-1
ficials unless the justice of our de- j
rnand for the ballot is recognized.” I
King George is reported to have
called Premier Asquith, Home Secre
tary McKenna and First Lord of the
Admiralty Winston Churchill into
conference, and ‘‘commanded" that
steps be taken, no matter how dras
tic, to end the reign of terror which
pervades England.
The King has strong feelings on
the suffrage question and he deplores
the wave of violence which ha,s swept !
the country at Intervals for the past'
two years.
The Foreign Office is said to have I
sent a formal detailed demand to the ;
French Foreign Office in Paris for the {
extradition of Cristobal Pankhurst.:
Her Paris home has been the rendez- ;
vous of suffragette fugitives from j
justice and at intervals officials of
the Women's Social and Political i
Union visited her there.
To Sell Water by Meter.
WAYCROSS.—At a meeting of:
Council to be held next Tuesday the j
first step of the plan to place water !
service in Waycross on a meter basis
will be taken. An order for 100 me
ters will be placed for immediate de- j
livery.
Church men and labor men will
turn out In force tonight to hear a
discussion of social service and labor
questions at the Auditorium. This is
the annual meeting on social service,
usually conducted during the sessions
of the Northern Presbyterian General
Assembly, and this year it will be
held under the auspices of the com
bined assemblies.
The Rev. Charles Stelzel, of New
York. Superintendent of the Bureau
of Social Service of the Northern As
sembly, will preside and speak on
“The Church and Social Unrest." Dr.
James A. Macdonald, editor of the
Toronto Globe, will discuss “The Re
lation of the Christian Church to the
Social and Industrial World," and
Marion M. Jackson will tell how At
lanta cleaned up its red light district.
Negro melodies will be sung by 300
girls from Spellrqan Seminary .
This promises to be one of the most
unique occasions of the Assembly
meetings. Last year, when the
Northern Assembly met in Louisville,
the social service meeting was at
tended by 12,000 persons, and during
a previous assembly in Kansas City
15,000 people were present. This was
tlie largest meeting ever held in the
history of the Presbyterian Church.
Organized Labor in Atlanta has been
heartily co-operating in working up
the meeting to be held to-night, and
many of the locals have appointed
vice-presidents to sit upon the plat
form.
Bryan Is Scored by
British Newspaper
LONDON, May 1'.—The Standard,
in commenting on the forthcoming
cruise of the American fleet to the
Mediterranean, says:
"It is a very forcible hint to Eu
rope that American diplomacy cm
assert itself If it pleases with the
only kind of backing our modern
diplomatists really recognize.
It is also a curious commentary of
that effusive patronage and universal
peace idea Secretary of State Bryan
has been exhibiting."
White City Park Now Open
ONE OF THE MOST
[IMPORTANT DIS
COURSES TO BE DE
LIVERED HERE SUN
DAY WILL BE THAT
OF A NOTED LECTUR
ER, 0. L. SULLIVAN,
NEW YORK, AT CA-i
BLE HALL AT 3 P. M. >
I HE WILL SPEAK ON
"‘THE RESURREC
■TION, OR LIFE BE
YOND THE GRAVE."
H Fitted in your
own home.
3 SPIRELLA
CORSET SHOP
-ORSEiS p h one W. 428. !
( MOT SOLD !N STORfS >
Telephone or send postal for corsetiere to calk
TO OUR
VISITORS
About every two years
your lenses need changing.
Wouldn’t it in' a good idea
to take advantage of your
visit to Atlanta and have a
careful examination of your
eyes made and a new pair
of glasses made up? At least,
how about having a duplicate
pair of lenses fitted in a large,
comfortable shell library
frame for solid comfort.
Mayl>e you would like a pair
in slight amber tint to pro
tect your eyes when travel
ing. We’ve been fitting glass
es for .TO years and have
some pretty good ideas. Any
way, come in, we’ll in* glad
to make your acquaintance.
A. K. HAWKES CO.
OPTICIANS
14 Whitehall
Utmost Security for Paint Buyers
We use our knowledge for the benefit
of our customers.
STERLING PAINT
Is Absolutely Dependable
The best materials put together by
special machinery, under supervision
of Paint Experts, combine to produce
a Paint of Highest Possible Quality.
pKfinpc" 8ELL M 1115
rilOIICb. ATLANTA 329
“WE HAVE A PAINT FOR EVERY USE”
DOZIER & GAY PAINT CO.
INVESTIGATED SEVERAL COL
LEGES AND THEN ENTERED
SOUTHERN BUSINES COLLEGES
Mr. Buford Summers Is
Secured a Good Posi
tion With a Railroad
Company by the South
ern Shorthand and
Business University.
The literarv schools and colleges
are closing for the summer months,
and their pupils and teachers are
now enrolling at the famous south
ern Shorthand and Business Uni
versity to add to their store of
knou ledge a practical Business Ed
ucation. . ,
Remember that the quickest way
to obtain a position after leaving
the literary schools is to take the
Southern’s Course in Shorthand or
Bookkeeping. No trouble then to
secure a good job.
Mr. J. Buford Summers, who has
just launched upon a business ca
reer. can testify to the above stated
fact. While attending the South
ern and preparing for a position,
he observed the students almost
daily going out into nice positions,
and then his time came around. He
had been a faithful student, an ener
getic worker, and a mighty good
fellow, so nothing could keep him
from securing a good job. In a
letter just received by the South
ern from Mr. Summers, he says:
"After investigating several oth
er Business Colleges, I finally de
cided upon a course in the South
ern Shorthand and Business Uni
versity, and I shall never regret
my choice of a school.
"The college has an excellent
corps of instructors and its man
agers, Messrs. Briscoe and Arnold,
obtained me a splendid position aft
er completing my j course.
"I shall always look with pleas
ure upon the time I spent at the
a S. & B. U”
If you want a position you’ll have
to take a business course, sooner or
later; then, why not now?
Don’t postpone longer such an
important matter.
"If you have a diploma from the
Southern Business University I will
give you a position,” said a prom
inent business man to a young fel
low applying for a job.
The Southern is an old school—
been running 47 years; has a large
faculty, teaches the best known sys
tems of shorthand, bookkeeping,
otc.
J. BUFORD SUMMERS.
Who now holds a good position
after taking a course in the
Southern Shorthand and Business
University.
Plenty of typewriters on which to
practice—seventy-five; think of it!
Its graduates send other students,
and that tells the story of merit.
They keep the school humping,
what better recommendation could
be desired?
It looks businesslike at the South
ern.
Now Is the time to enter the
Southern. Call, phone or write at
once for catalog.
Address A. C. Briscoe, Pres., or
L. W. Arnold, Vice Pres., 10 West
Mitchell Street, Atlanta, Ga.
Prof. Thos. L. Bryan, lecturer and
representative.