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■LESS
H ENRY HELL, manager of
the Elkin Urns' Com
pany, who won second prize in
the Rexall advertising contest.
President. Thousand Miles Away,
Will Flash Signal to National
Conservation Exposition,
I*
MONDAY IS DEDICATION DAY:
Managers Fulfill Promises to Have
Exhibits Ready as Scheduled.
Opens Free of Debt.
KNOXVILLE, Aug. 30.—Promptly
at 10 o’clock Monday morning in
Washington President Wilson will
flash a wireless telegraph message to
Knoxville. The message will be picked
up by the wireless station In the
grounds of the National Conservation
Exposition in this city.
The receipt of the message from the
President of the United States to T.
A. Wright, president of the exposi
tion company, will be the signal for
the formal opening of this exposi
tion, the first in the history of the
world devoted to the cause of con
servation and designed to teach by
concrete example the necessity of
conserving all material resources if
the country is to grow and prosper.
Manner of Opening Unique.
rrven as the National Conservation
Exposition is unique in history, so id
the manner of opening It unique. No
exposition ever before has been
opened by a wireless message sent
by the President. Ben W. Hooper.
Governor of Tennessee, and his staff
will be present on the opening day. |
The exercises will be impressive.
There will be speeches by Governor
Hooper, Mayor Helskell of Knoxville
and President Wright of the exposi
tion.
The new buildings on the grounds
will be dedicated; there will be an
automobile parade, the formal open
ing of “Joy Street,” as the midway
will be known; fire vorks, band con
certs and a general good time. The
official program starts the fun going
at 8 o’clock In the morning, and it
will continue without a break until
late at night. Two promises made by
the directors months ago will be kept.
These Were:
The exposition would open on time
and be complete down to the last de
tail.
The exposition would open free of
debt.
Buildings All Are Ready.
Opening day will see the exposition
grounds looking more beautiful and
more attractive than ever before.
Eleven great exposition builGings. all
snowy white, are filled with exhibits
of all kinds, Government. State, mu
nicipal and private. Flower beds dot
the landscape. Flags are flying. The
lakes are alive with motor boats. The
grounds present a gala appearance.
ii ia in carrying out the idea
*pf kmt ^position itself—the Idea upon
wnloh it was founded—and in teach
ing the lessons of conservation that
this exposition, projected by the South
and brought into being by men of
the South, stands out as different
from any other exposition From
start to finish, from one building to
another, the main idea of teaching
conservation lessons never has been
lost sight of for a moment.
The big mines and minerals build
ing is an example. Here the displays
have been so arraanged as to em
phasize the fact that in the South
nearly every mineral is found, and
also to emphasize the fact that all of
these ores have a commercial value.
A model coal mine dug into a hill
forms a feature of this exhibit.
The exposition will run until No
vember 1.
Drug Company prior to August 1.
The advertising contest was a fea
ture of the convention of the Rexall
Clubs, whieh was held in Boston last
week. The Judges decided that he
was entitled to second prize because
of the suitability of the ads to the
character of trade appealed to, sell
ing quality of the ads and their origi
nality. Mr. Bell entered the contest
without any intention of making a
fight to win a prize.
“I Just wanted to show them what
we could do in Georgia in the ad
vertising line,” says Mr. Bell, “and
give them a real demonstration of the
Atlanta spirit.’ I watch the papers
earefully for advertising of drug
stores in the North, and I believe our
advertising will compare very favor
ably with that put out by the very
largest stores.”
Mr. Bell has been living in Atlanta
so long that he counts himself a
genuine Atlantan, and is constantly
boosting the town and its people. For
more than five years he worked in the
drug business in the East, and. al
though comparatively a young man,
generally is regarded as one of the
most experienced in the business in
the country.
He has entire charge of the pub
licity department of the Elkin Drug
Company in addition to his duties
as manager of the concern, being
W. S. Elkin, Jr.’s, right-hand man in
the conduct of the two stores in At
lanta.
THIEVES RANSACK HOME
WHEN WOMAN GOES AWAY
W. K. Coleman. No. 240 Bellwood
avenue, reported to the police Satur
day night that $15 in cash was stolen
from his home while Mrs. Coleman
was shopping downtown in the after
noon.
TALLULAH FALLS
$1.50 Round Trip $1.50
Thursday, Sept. 4, 1913.
Leave Terminal Station
8 a. m.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
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D IM>, <• -i|
EDUCATIONAL.
EDUCATIONAL.
EDUCATIONAL.
EDUCATIONAL.
EDUCATIONAL.
EDUCATIONAL.
Atlanta’s Leading Violin School
A PRIVATE school of proven .ability for the individual training of vio
lin students from the beginning to the concert stage.
419 WESLEY MEMORIAL BUILDING. Prospectus mailed on application.
ERWIN MUELLER, German Violinist
FOUNDED IN 1904.
Record Session at
Mercer Predicted
ATLANTAN WINS
DRUG AD PRIZE
Henry Bell, Elkin Drug Co. Man
ager, Second in Rexall Contest.
Thousands Entered.
Atlanta Conservatory of Music
MORTIMER WILSON, General Director
Location: In the Heart of Atlanta. 1918-14 Session
Peachtree and Qroad Streets Opens September 2d
Complete Music Courses From the Kindergarten Games to the
Concert Stage
Piano, Organ, Voice. Violin, Cello, Harp. Orchestral Instruments, Analysis.
Ear-Training. History, Harmony, Composition, Conducting. School Orches
tra and Chorus in concerted works . Ensemble Classes in all departments
with recitals. Diplomas and Certificates of dependability.
Prospectus mailed on application.
Atlanta Conservatory, Atlanta, Ga.
The Atlanta Institute of Music and Oratory
A MODERN CONSERVATORY.
Only Successful Teachers of Proven Ability.
PIANO _ VOICR VIOLIN.
George Fr. Linder, Director
Miss Sylvia Sprit z and others.
ORGAN.
Miss Edna Bartholomew.
VOICE.
Wilford Watters, Director.
Miss Sylvia Sprltz and others.
ORATORY
Miss Sarah Adelle East black.
Director, and competent as
sistants.
Walter P. Stanley, Director.
Miss Kate Blatterman.
Mrs. Lottie Gray Browne and
competent assistants.
Brass and Reed Instruments. Music in all its branches.
Incorporated and empowered by the State of Georgia to confer degrees.
Phone Ivy 6986. 20 EAST BAKER ST.. ATLANTA, GA.
Send for catalogue.
ATLANTA COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
Twenty-two years of remarkably successful work. Greater demand for our
graduates than we can supply. Best attendance south of Philadelphia.
Begins October 6th. Address
GEORGE F, PAYNE. PH. G., President. 255 Courtland St., Atlanta, Georgia,
To Henry Bell, manager of the
Elkin Drug Company, belongs the dis
tinction of having won second prize
in the advertising contest recently
inaugurated by the International As
sociation of Rexall Clubs.
Seven thousand druggists through
out the world were entitled to enter
the contest, and thousands did. There
were 48 prizes, and Mr. Bell came
within one of getting first. His en
try was 25 advertisements printed in
the Atlanta papers for the Elkin
SOUTHERN COLLEGE OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY
SESSION 1913-14.
The Southern College of Medicine and Surgery will begin its 1913-14 ses
sion Monday. September 8, 1913. with a full staff of paid Professors. We have
added a Phartnacy, Post-graduate and Literary School to the Medical Depart
ment thus making the college template in #very sense for the matriculate
in Medicine Vast Improvements have been made In the college building,
Including the enlargement of the amphitheater. Chemical, Anatomical, Path
ological, Bacteriological and Histological laboratories; with the addition of
our new Hospital, the student will receive bedside training and have an op
portunity of studying different cases In their several phases.
POST-GRADUATE SCHOOL COURSE
Our Post-Graduate School Course (six weeks) is for the busy practi
tioner. who wishes to perfect himself In certain lines of work.
PHARMACY SCHOOL.
The Pharmacy School consists of two sessions, of six months each, and
will continue throughout the year the same as the Post-Graduate School.
For catalogue arm information app y to WM. BERNARD LINGO, M D.,
Dean 52-54 McDaniel street, Atlanta. Ga.
THE STATE NORMAL SCHOOL, ATHENS, GA.
Named by a United States Commissioner of Education as being among
the best fitted State Norma! Schools in the United States. Fifty-six officers
and teachers, ten buildings, eighteen departments of instruction, full certifi
cate courses in Psychology, Pedagogy, English. Expression. Oratory. Mathe
matics, Science, History, Latin, German, Greek, French, Spanish, Correspond-
ence. _ _ _
The Home Life courses are among the strongest in the South. Domes
tic Arts and Sciences. Manual Arts, Agriculture, Gardening, Home Nursing,
Physical Culture, Vocal and Instrumental Music, Sight Singing Diploma a
license to teach. Two Practice Schools. Education for fitness and happi-
Total expense* tor a year less than $150.00 Mr rite for
JERE M. POUND. President.
SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY OF MUSIC
GERARD THIERS, KURT MUELLER, Jklractora
353 PEACHTREE STREET Nt ATLANTA, OEORQIA
TELEPHONES— Office: Ivy 6490: Dormitory: Ivy 4416.
Among the Faculty—Kurt Mueller, Gerard-Thlem, Michael Banner.
Theo Saul, Allen G. Loehr. W. P Woolf, Clara Mueller, Eda Bar
tholomew, Anna Hunt, Julie Banner, Dorothy Scott, Margherita Carter,
Patricia Threadgille.
ness In the home.
Catalogue.
w
99 Is the
Synonym
For What
Is Best in
Education
Bead tor BoOetfau ot tie Doivenity of Georgia describing courses la La*, Agriculture,
Forestry, Education, Pharmacy, Eu£iaeeriu£, Commerce sod Banking, Literary and Sci
entific atndizc sod Graduate Work. Tuition fro*. Room and Board .*t!hSO per
month. Address THE CHANCELLOR, Athena, Ga.
WASHINGTON
1*74 PEACHTREE ROAD
SEMINARY
ATLANTA
for
THE SOUTH'S MOST BEAUTIFUL SCHOOL
DISTINCTIVE FEATURES.
1. Boarding Department limited $100,000.90 In Ground* and Building*
2. New School Building, modem in equipment, with provision "
class rooms.
3. Courses in Domestic Sctenoe and Physical Tmlnlng a part ef
rlculum.
4. Departments: Kindergarten. Primary. Academic. Callage
\fuslc. Art, Expression.
Thirty-sixth Session begins SEPTEMBER 11th, 1913.
tv,-;;., fur Illustrated catalogue. 3 L. 1>. and EMMAS, SCOTT. Principals.
By IT
PPROVED
WAR DEPARTMENT
President Holmes, In Atlanta on
Business, Optimistic Over Com
ing Term of School.
Professor E. T. Holmes, formerly of
Mercer and now president of the Gor
don Institute at Barnesville, was in
Atlanta yesterday on business in con
nection with the opening of his school
next week.
The sixty-second session begins on
September 3, and the indications are
that the coming year will be the most
successful in tUe history of the insti
tution.
The ground* and buildings have
been put in excellent shape and five
new tennis courts have been built.
Irwin VanTassell. formerly of the
University of Michigan, reports this
year as coach and as a result of this
more attention than ever will be paid
to athletics.
School of Opera
Plans Productions
Pupils of Southern University of
Music Will Give Entertain
ments During Year.
.1^ Southern University of Music,
which openjfTuesday. announced Sat
urday that the school of opera, to be
conducted in connection with the uni
versity, immediately will begin re-
n ear sals preparatory to the presenta
tion of operas. All parts are to be
sung by pupils of the university.
Everything is in kcAdiness for the
opening of the new musical institu
tion. A number of out-of-town pupils
have already arrived at the dormi
tory and others are coming in every
day. The members of the faculty ail
are ready to take up their work.
MRS. WHITEHEAD RETURNS
FROM ABROAD ON SEPT. 16
RICHMOND. Aug. 30.—Richmond
friends of Mrs. Joseph B. Whitehead,
of Atlanta, learned to-day that she will
return to this country from abroad on
September 16.
Follow ng her arrival in New York
Mrs Wh tehead will proceed to Hot
Springs. Va. t for a month's stay There
"i 1 . 1 hav 'f as her guest her cousin,
Muss Mary Wheat, of Wakefield, Va.„
formerly of Atlanta.
THE RECORD
By special order of the Secretary of War an offi
cer of the United States Army is to lie detailed for
service at Riverside Military Academy.
The approval for this detail follows speedily
the recommendation of Major B. F. Hardaway, Sev
enteenth Infantry, stationed at Fort McPherson,
who made the inspection by special order of the AN ar
Department early in July.
This detail carries with it the complete equip
ment of modern rifles, dress and service accouter
ments, haversacks, canteens and mess equipment as
used by the United States Army.
Also artillery and cavalry equipment for dis
mounted service.
The uniforms of the Riverside cadets are identi
cal with those of the NVest Point cadets, and are fit
ted to the figure of each cadet by military tailors at
Riverside Military Academy. In this respect. River
side stands alone among the Southern preparatory
schools.
THE RECOMMENDATION
In July of this year a request was made upon the War De
partment for an army officer to be detailed for sendee with the
Riverside cadets.
Copies of the current catalogue and a complete description
of the campus, location, surroundings, physical equipment and
faculty were furnished.
This so impressed the War Department that notwithstanding
the annual inspection of academies and schools applying for such
recognition is made only in April, a SPECIAL INSPECTION was
ordered immediately, and Major Hardaway was detailed for this
service.
He was so impressed with the location of Riverside, two miles
out of Gainesville—connected by trolley—in the foothills of the
Blue Ridge Mountains, on the banks of the Chattahoochee River,
with Lake Warner on its 2,000-a'cre campus, that he wrote in
strong praise of its magnificent natural advantages and wonder
ful possibilities. \
He was greatly impressed with the opportunities afforded for
indoor gallery practice, long range sharpshooting adjacent to the
school, the maneuvering grounds, bridge building, pontoon work,
swimming, boating and other arts of modern warfare, all on or at
the campus.
The •physical equipment, wit h its well lighted, perfectly ven
tilated and modernly equipped barracks, mess ball, class rooms
and gymnasium, so enthused him that his comments on these fea
tures iu his report caused the War Department to take immediate
action ‘and announce the approval and detail.
THE REASON
Riverside possesses all the requisites of an ideal
military school. In addition to the superior advan
tages named, Riverside has: .....
1. An Accomplished Faculty—An instructor of
successful experience for every twelve boys. No
cadet’s room more than three doors from teacher.
2. Wholesome Atmosphere—Two miles out in
the hills, with ideal quietude for study, j'et enjoy
ing the cultured influences of the refined and in
tellectual city of Gainesville.
3. Superior Athletics—Only best coaches and
trainers employed. Every boy given opportunity
to participate. Three and four teams in each sport,
coached bv members of faculty.
4. Individual Instruction—All the courses of
fered by any preparatory school and taught thor
oughly.
5. Inspection Invited—The most complete
boys’school in the South. Parents and prospective
patrons urged to visit academy.
FOR RESERVATIONS AND RATES ADDRESS
Riverside Military Academy
SANDY BEAVER, President
GAINESVILLE : : : : :
i
GEORGIA