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HEARST’S STTJDAY AMERICAN,
ATLANTA, OA., SUNDAY, AUGUST 31. 1013.
I
ON SECOND LNP
OF FLIC TRIP
Lord High Chancellor of Great
Britain Gets Taste of Ameri
can Strenuosity.
NEW YORK, Auv SO.—The Rljtfit
Honorable Visoount Haldane of (’loan.
Lx»rd High Chanosllor of Great Brit
ain. Keeper of the Great Beal and
Keeper of the Klngr'a Conscience, to
day ia experiencing American atren-
uosity In Its most dynamic form.
He in now on his second day of a
flve-dav flvtng tour of the Hast, dur
ing which time he will meet nearly
every man of importance in the United
States and Canada, be the guest at
a banquet every spare moment of
his time, have a few honorary de
grees conferred on him, make some
dozen speeches, listen to several doz
en, and get back to New York In time
to board the Lusitania as she starts
from New York at midnight Tuesday.
Undoubtedly, the Lord High Chan
cellor has no loafing Job when he Is
at home. His position corresponds to
that of the Chief Justice of the Su
preme Court of the United States, and
It entails a vast amount of labor. In
addition, his office makes him Keeper
of the Great Beal, which shouldn’t
be very hard work, and also Keeper of
the King's Conscience, the amount of
labor carried by this position, of
course, depending on who happens to
be king
Accompanied by Sister.
I.#ord Haldane landed In New York
Friday. With him are his sister, Miss
Elizabeth Haldane, and Sir Kenneth
Muir-MacKenzie, B. K. C.
At the pier the distinguished Brit
ish Jurist waa met by the reception
committee including Francis Rawle,
of Philadelphia, Josejh H Choate.
Attorney General J. C. McReynolds,
Alton B. Parker, former Secretary of
War J. M. Dickinson, Francis Hyde
Btetson, Charles Henry Butler and C.
A. Severance.
The party was whirled In autos to
the Plaza Hotel, where Lord Haldane
received the newspaper men. He was
then taken on a ride covering Broad
way and Fifth avenue to the Battery.
The afternoon was spent in more
sightseeing and in the evening he
was the guest of Mr. Severance at a
formal dinner at the Metropolitan
Club.
To-day st 10 o'clock the party,
joined by President Nicholas Murray
Butler, of Uolumbia University, and
Mrs Butler, hoarded J. P Morgan’s
yacht, the Corsair, and steamed to
West Point. There he was received
by Colonel Townsley, the comman
dant. and Charles J. Doherty, Minister
of Justice and Attorney General of
Canada. The program included an
inspection of the military academy
and a review’ of the corps of cadets.
Will Address Noted Lawyers.
After the review the party boarded
the private car of President Loree.
of the Delaware and Hudson, and left
for Albany, where three hours were
spent, and then proceeded to Mon
treal After a day of sightseeing in
the Canadian city, Lord Haldane will
be the guest of President Kellogg, of
the American Bar Association, at the
Ritz-Carlton in that city.
Monday morning Prime Minister
Robert L. Borden, of Canada, will
open the session of the American Bar
Association, and in the afternoon
Lord Haldane will deliver the annual
address to the association. His sub
ject will be "Higher Nationality.” a
study in law and ethics. The Lord
Chancellor will he introduced by
Chief Justice White, of the United
States Supreme Court. Former Pres
ident Taft is also on the program of
that day.
After his address. Lord Haldane
will proceed to McGill University,
where honorary degrees will be con
ferred on him, Chief Justice White.
Prime Minister Borden, Maitre F. La
bor!. the famous defender of Dreyfus;
former President Taft, Minister of
Justice Doherty, Joseph H. Choate.
Senator Elthu Root and President
Kellogg.
Leaves Montreal Tuesday.
The party leaves Montreal at 10
o'clock Tuepdav, and will reach New'
York Just in time to catch the out
going liner
Lord Haldane is regarded as one of
the most Intellectual men there in in
England to-day. At the bar he had a
great chancery practice and also be
fore the Privy Council. When Sec
retary of State for War, he did a mar
velous amount of work. He is fond
of such relaxations as reading the
works of German philosophers. He
was raised to the peerage in 1911.
The Lord Chancellor is appointed
by the Crown by the delivery to him
of the great seal of the United King
dom and verbally addressing him by
the title. He is custodian of the great
seal, except when It Is Intrusted to a
lord keeper or is in commission.
What His Duties Are.
He is the head of the Judicial ad
ministration of England, and is re
sponsible for the appointment of
judges of the high court, except the
Chief Justice, who is appointed by
the Prime Minister. He appoints coun
ty court judges—except where the
whole of the county court district lies
within the Duchy of Lancaster.
He advises the Crown as to nomi
nating Justices of the peace He is
President of the High Court' of Jus
tice and of the Chancery Division of
the High Court, and is ex-officio
member of the Court of Appeals and
presiding officer thereof.
There is no qualification for the of
flee except that none but a Protestant
can be appointed.
G iant Motor Trucks
Will Carry Freight
Vehicles May Compete With Rail,
roads When Great Highway
Is Completed.
!>A< RAMENTO. Aug SO—That th*
construction of California s Ju.uoo wo
fciatr highway oil the principle of two
turret trunk lines north and south, one
to serve the coast cities and one the
interior, will be of Immense economic
value to the tarmer and business man
in transportation, is the assertion of
.V E. Darlington, of Dos Angeles, a
member of the California Highway Com-
mission.
The development of the automobile
as a m*ans of quick. Inexpensive and
satisfactory interchange of farm prod
ucts and merchandise between country
and city assures keen competition for
the future if the roads are laid out lu
ike moat direct practicable route.
! DEATH REVEALS PORTER
WAS MILLIONAIRE’S SON
Thomas W. Shelton Demands
Fixed Interstate Judicial Rela
tions Before Judges Confer.
MONTREAL, Aug 30 —Thomas W.
Shelton, of Virginia, wan the princi
pal speaker to-night before the Con
ference of Judges, composed of the 4ft
chief judges of the State*, the (Thief
Justice of the (’ourt of Appeal* of
the District of Columbia, the nine
presiding judges of the nine Federal
Circuit Courts of Appeal, a Federal
Judge from Hawaii and the Chief Jus
tice of Porto Rico.
It was the first conference of Judges
ever held In the history of the United
Staten, and it was held on foreign
soil. The object Is to bring about
uniformity in Judicial procedure
among the States through fixed in
terstate Judicial relations, and pro
mote closer relations between the
courts.
"There is,” said Mr Shelton, “no
more excuse for differing court pro
cedure among the State* than for the
use of different languages. The prac
tical men of commerce are demand
ing the injection of practical com
mon sense in the machinery of the
courts, and Congress and the legis
latures are being called upon to give
the courts the necessary power.
It has been long since apparent that
unless judicial procedure was re
formed by the bench and bar, it would
be attempted by persons more selfish
than patriots.”
The speaker declared that the
courts and lawyers were helpless;
that, “under the policy of Congress
and that of nearly all the States," the
Judge Is bound hand and foot by
rigid statutes. As a result, the courts
have been accused of Incompetency
and the lawyers of Indifference con
cerning a condition they did not cre
ate and are helpless to remedy.
Wisconsin Offers to
Feed Starving Stock
Seven Chambers of Commerce Wire
Offers to Kansas and Nebraska
Drought Districts.
MILWAUKEE, WTS., Aug. 26 —
Steps have been taken to relieve the
situation in Kansas and Nebraska,
where cattle are starving to death
and dying of thirst. Telegraph of
fers \ver« made to the stock men in
the afflicted region to provide free
pasturage in Wisconsin for the suf
fering animals.
The Wisconsin invitation Is sent
through the Chamber of Commerce
of seven upstate cities, which are
now negotiating with the railroads
for relief by emergency freight
rates.
AURORA, ILL., Aug. 30.—A Ge
neva, III., saloon porter, Wilfred F.
Kallfiten, for 25 years waa a butt of
village Jokers because he once said
his father, “back in Sweden,” was an
immensely wealthy manufac turer.
When he died at the Kane County
almshouse papers were found on his
person showing he was a son of Carl
Abraham Kallsten, one of the noted
family of cutlery manufacturers who
have made Eskllstuna famous while
building up vast fortunes.
BOYS WITH AIR GUNS RID
CITY OF ENGLISH SPARROWS
APPLETON, AVIS., Aug. 30.—Whllp
"swatting the fly" is now the pre
dominantly popular summer sport
with the young, the boy with the
airgun is still chasing the sparrow,
and the chase has become so warm
that the sparrow has quit the battle.
A few years ago the streets were
literally full of sparrows, but to-dav
one is rarely seen. Farmers state the
same condition applies about their
farms.
LICENSE FEE HINGES ON
WHETHER SHARK IS FISH
PHILADELPHIA, Aug 30.—Dr. Rob
ert E. Lee, president of the Darby
Health Board, has applied to the State
Fish Commission to aid him in ascer
taining whether a shark is a fish or an
animal. The health officer charges
that he was victimized by non-payment
of 4. prize for the biggest catch of the
season, offered by the fishing club of
which he Is a member.
Dr Lee landed a 90-pound shark,
which had to be killed with an ax. He
claimed the prize, but the others refused
to pay on the ground that a shark is a
"mammal.”
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
Anna Rocheleau Burt
VOICE CULTURE AND SIGHT READING
412 Wegley Memorial Bldg. 1 Residence
| Cor. Cancade Ave and Beecher St
BUSH & GERTS PIANOS USED
STUDIOS j (
Phone
West 1239
MISS HANNA’S SCHOOL
368 Peachtree
Phone Ivy 2163-L
Open* MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, for tt» twmty-trtxth session. A
ended school with Primary. Grammar And Collegiate Departments,
Art and Muelc. Office hours, 8:38 to 11:30 a. m.; 1:30 to 4 p. m.
Send for Booklet
SOUTHERN COLLEGE OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY
r*SS!ON 1919-14.
The Owdtwn Onflegs of Medicine and Surgery will begin ft* 1911-14 ses-
*1n* Monday. Boptomber I, 1916 with a full staff of paid Professors We have
added a Pharmacy. Post-graduate and Literary School to the Medical Depart
ment. thus maklna the college complete in every sense for the matriculate
In Medtoina Vast improvements hAve been made In the college building.
Including the enlargemgct of the amphitheater. Chemical, Anatomical, Path-
•Ugloal. 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-ORA DU ATE SCHOOL COURSE
Oar Post-Graduate School Course (six weeks) Is for the busy praotl-
who wishes to perfect himself In certain lino* of work.
PHARMACY SCHOOL.
The Pharmacy School consists of two sessions, of six month# each, and
oontlnue throughout the year the same an the Post-Graduate School.
For catalogue an* Information apply to WM BERNARD LINGO, M D.,
IS2 54 McDanlei street, Atlanta. Ga.
EDUCATIONAL
EDUCATIONAL.
EDUCATIONAL.
EDUCATIONAL.
Atlanta Conservatory of Music
MORTIMER WILSON, General Director
Location: In the Heart of Atlanta. 1911-14 Session
Peachtree and Broad Streets Opens September 2d
Complete Mu*ic Courses From the Kindergarten Games to the
Concert Stage
Organ. Voice. Violin, Cello, Harp Orchestral Instrument*. Analysis
-Training. History. Harmony, Composition, Conducting, School Orches-
Plarto
Ear-
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
PIANO.
Walter P. Stanley, Director.
Mias Kate Blatterman.
Mrs. Lottie Gray Browne and
competent assistant*.
Brass and Reed Instruments.
A MODERN CONSERVATORY.
Only Successful Teachers of Proven Ability.
VOICE.
Wilford Watters. Director.
Miss Sylvia Spritz and others.
ORATORY.
Miss Sarah Adelle Eastblack,
Director, and competent as
sistants.
Music In all Its branches.
VIOLIN.
George Fr. Linder, Director.
Miss Sylvia Sprit* and others.
ORGAN.
Miss Edna Bartholomew.
Incorporated and empowered by the State of Georgia to confer degrees.
Phone Ivy 6986. 20 EAST BAKER ST., ATLANTA. GA.
Send for catalogue.
I
ATLANTA COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
Twenty-two years of remarkably sue cesarful work. Creator demand for our
graduate* than we can supply. Beat attendance south of Philadelphia.
S n
eglns October 6th. Address
GEORGE F. PAYNE, PH. G„ President.
256 CourUand St., Atlanta, Georgia,
THE STATE NORMAL SCHOOL, ATHENS, GA.
Named by a United States Commissioner of Education as being among
(he beet fitted State Normal Schools In the United States Fifty six officers
and teachers, ten buildings, eighteen departments of instruction, full certifi
cate oourses in Psychology, F’edagogy, English, Expression, Oratory, Mathe
matic*, Science, History, Latin, German, Greek, French, Spanish, Correspond
ence.
The Home-IJfe courses are among the strongest In the South. Domes
tic Arts and Sciences, Manual Arts, Agriculture, Gardening, Home Nursing,
Physical Culture, Vocal and Instrumental Muelc, Sight Singing. Diploma a
license to teach. Two Practice Schools. Education for fitness and happi
ness in the heme. Total expanses for a year less than $160 00. Write for
Catalogue. JERE M. POUND. President.
SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY OF IViUSIC
GERARD-THIERS, KURT MUELLER, Directors
953 PEACHTREE STREET HI ATLANTA. GEORGIA
TELEPHONES— Office: Ivy 6490; Dormitory: Ivy 4416.
Among the Faculty.—Kurt Mueller, Oerard-Thlera. Michael Banner,
Theo Saul, Allen G. Loehr, W. P. Woolf, Clara Mueller, Eda Bar
tholomew. Anna Hunt, Julie Banner, Dorothy Scott, Margherita Carter,
Patricia Threadgllle.
"GEORGIA
Send for BsOetioa of fte Uahrerslty of Georgia describing courses Is Law, Agricsltnre,
Forestry, Edscstfoa, Pharmacy, Engineering, Commerce sad Basking, Literary and Sci-
•ntiEc stadias sad Gradaat* Work. Tuition free. Room and Board f r 2.50 per
month. Address THE CHANCELLOR. Athens. Gs.
99 I* tie
Syienym
For What
Is Best in
Ediicatien
WASHINGTON SEMINARY
i|74 PEACHTREE KOAP - ATLANTA
open-air
THE SOUTH’S MOST BEAUTIFUL SCHOOL
DISTINCTIVE Ka rUKbib.
L Boarding Department limited. $100,000.90 in Grounds and Buildings.
i. New School Bulidl-ng, modern In equipment, with provision for
class rooms.
2 Courses In Domestic Science and Physical Training a part of regular cur
riculum
4. Departments: Kindergarten, Primary, Aoademlo, College Preparatory,
Music, Art, Expression.
Thirty-sixth Session begins SEPTEMBER 11th, 1013
Write for illustrated catalogue.—B L. D, and EMMA B. SCOTT. Principals,
APPROVED
By U. S. WAR DEPARTMENT
THE RECORD
By special order of the Secretary of War an offi
cer of the United States Army is to be 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 War
Department early in July.
This detail carries with it the complete equip
ment of modem 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 West 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 service 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 sueh
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-aere 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, with its well lighted, perfectly ven
tilated and modemly equipped barracks, mess hall, class rooms
and gymnasium, so enthused him that his comments on these fea
tures in 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 advaiK
tages named, Riverside lias:
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, yet enjoy
ing the cultured influences of the refined and in
tellectual city of Gainesville.
3. Superior Athletics—Only best coaches and
trainers employed. Every hoy given opportunity
to participate. Three and four teams in each sport,
coached by 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.
ADDRESS
Academy
n t
GEORGIA
FOR RESERVATIONS AND RATES
Riverside Military
SANDY BEAVER, Preside
GAINESVILLE : : : : :