Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 30, 1913, Image 11

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

TTEATtST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, OA., SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 30. 1013, s c I 100 BOYS ^ esctje< ^ Girls Now Want Vote EXPECTED !1 ^•^ ooseve ^^ ecomes ^ e ^ r ^ ero M tj rrin Miss Shore Says She ‘Hates Brazil’ I" I I | Joan Shore, young woman who was rescued from den in Rio I fl I y I Janeiro by former President Roosevelt and Mrs. Roosevelt. Special Dress Parade With Drill by Seventeenth U. S, Infantry Planned—Visitors to Have Many Pleasures; Prizes for Some. Appeals Made for More Residents to Open Homes to Young Farm ers, Only 600 of Whom Have Been Provided With Quarters. Georgia’s com club boys vcill be here this week 1.000 strong. They will begin to come into Atlanta Tuesday, the first day of the Third Annual Corn Show, and by Wednesday morn ing the majority of them will have arrived. At least 600 of these boys will be entertained in Atlanta homes, that number having been provided for in response to the call of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce. The corn show committee hopes that by the time they come a sufficient number of homes will have been provided to Take (’.are of all, but If not, some pro vision will be made for them, as the committee has determined not to turn any of the visiting hoys away. Special appeal has been made to 300 or more committeemen of the At lanta Chamber of Commerce to do just one thing more for the Chamber this year in addition to the splendid work they have already done, and that is. if possible, to take two of these visiting corn club boys into their homes. Those who are in a position to do so are expected to re spond to this earnest request of the Chamber. Monday morning, by consent of the Board of Education, 5,000 cards will Vie distributed among the pupils of the sixth, seventh and eighth grades of all the grammar schools of the citv,*with the request that pupils se cure all the places for the boys they can and return the cards early Tues day morning. It is earnestly request ed that the accurate namfc and ad dress shall be given, so that none of these boys will be wrongly directed. The first feature of the entertain ment provided for the visiting corn club boys will be a special dress pa rade and exhibition drill by the Sev enteenth United States Infantry at .Fort McPheraon, arranged through the kindness of Colonel J. T. Van Orsdale. Special street cars will be provided to take the boys and girls to the fort free of charge. These cars will leave the State Capitol at 3 o'clock sharp Wednesday afternoon, and the boys will he brought directly back to the city at the conclusion of the progra.m. Wednesday night there will be ex hibited, for the benefit of the Visit ing boys and girls, at the Grand Opera House, one of the most inter esting moving pictures of the age, en titled “The Dawn of Plenty.” This picture, which was se” .red for the occasion by the State Department of Agriculture, and the presentation of which, with a lectnre, requires about an hour and a half, deals with the history of agriculture and harvesting from the earliest known period down to the present date. It will begin at 8 o’clock and complimentary tickets for the picture will be mailed to each host or hostess of the corn club boys, who are cordially invited to attend. The annaal corn show parade, which will take place Thursday after noon, December 4, will be' the big event of the show, and will be the most extensive parade of its kind yet given. The parade will be in charge of Adjutant General J. Van Holt Nash as grand marshal, and will form promptly at 2:30 o’clock at the Audi torium-Armory. It will start at 3 o’clock sharp and will follow the route including the Washington street viaduct to Mitchell street, to White hall, up Peachtree to Houston, to Ivy, to Gilmer, to Washington and back to the State Capitol, where it will disband. The first division of the parade will "cblislst of the military in charge of General R. K. Evans, commanding the Southeasternn Division of the Unit ed States army. This will include the Fifth Infantry Regiment. Georgia National Guard; the Marist College cadets, the cadets of the Georgia Military Academy and any other mili tary organizations which may en ter. OLD - TIKE DISTILLERY Actress Wants a Warship if She Ever Visits South America Again. NEW YORK, Nov. 29—“I never thought much about suffrage before, but now I want to vote so that I may help elect Colonel Roosevelt to some thing." said Miss Gladys Waddell. She and her chum. Miss Joan Shore, are the two American girls who were aided by Colonel and Mrs. Roosevelt at Rio De Janeiro when a Brazilian vaudeville agent wished to compel them to honor a contract that they found to be one that they could not with safety fulfill. “When I remember those ugly little policemen with their fierce mustaches wicked swords and volley of language that we could not understand, I am prompted to believe that I was in an opera comique. The necessary’ thrill ing rescue came at the psychological moment, and we escaped through the offices of a real hero. Richard Hard ing Davis could have imagined noth ing better. George Barr McCutcheon was never more romantic. I’m sure I do not know what we would have done had It not been for Mr. and Mrs. Roosevelt.” Miss Shore, who is but 19—one year older than her companion—nod ded in approval. Miss Waddell is liv ing at No. 64 West One Hundred and Fourth street, and Miss Shore was her guest. "We were in Rio but two hours,’’ said Miss Shore, “and never again will we go to South America unless on a battleship. We wish also to give thanks to Captain Cadogan, of the steamer Vestris, on which we went to Rio, for his share in our rescue.” One Retie of the Past ts Still Busy Producing Corn Liquor in Alabama Alabama hae on* thing no other State ha* that ia th« only corn whisky dis tillery of the old type so prevalent a few deoades ago. In this case the ser-mln* lack of progress ie real prog ress, for by the old method the distiller got onlv two and a half gallons of liquor from a bushel of com, and it wsus considered to be a generally healthful and palatable beverage By the newer modern method the dis tilleries add what ia known as a cooker to their equipment and boil out the last drop of fuloe from the com, get ting as much as five gallons to the bushel But the quality to said not to be so good 'Phis old-time distillery is busy everv 4av turning out oora liquor for people who prefer the oM-time article. “Tea,” eald Mr Moore, proprietor this old plant at Olrord. Ala . “we are satisfied to do k the old-fashioned way, because we turn out so much better article No, we charge no more than the others “Oh, yes. we win mafl orders and pay the express, too Of course unless a m«n really appreciates an old-time su perior corn liquor, we don t care for hi . trade, for we *efi about all we can m.'Ae. However, anybody that wants to trj yoire of our Good Stuff Com Liquor oar • *7 01 v four honest quarts Ad - Tilfctllsaiak Otocd The Very Thing! A KODAK The Christmas Gift that will ap peal to every metnber of the fam ily—will add to the joy of the Christmas Day in the pleasure of picture-taking and will perpetuate that day by preserving its memories. KODAKS, $5.00 and Up BROWNIES ( VeVo, ) $1.00 to $12.00 TO SING mist I TIE DEITY Large Number in East New York Public School Deny the Ex istence of God. NEW YORK, Nov. 29. -Because they say that they believe there is not c God, a large number of boys in the four upper classes of Public School No. 72, in East New York, recently developed the habit of maintaining silence during the singing of hymns containing reference to faith in a Deity. Some of the girls in the two upper classes also began to remain silent during the singing. The de crease in Volume became so notice able that the teacher in charge of the singing took action to induce the chil dren to sing, and failing in this she referred the matter to the school principal. The principal, Thomas D. Murphy, referred the question to the district superintendent. (’ W. Lyon, who went to the school for the purpose of talking with the silence strikers. Mr. Lyon questioned the graduating class of boys, and the same class of girls, and told them that if joining in the songs was against their beliefs that it was not necessary fur them to do so. Since that time a large part of the school singing has been dropped. “We have been taught a lot of things in science about the growth and origin of things, which don’t agree with the tilings in the Bible, and we take the science,” was the way one boy expressed It. “The Bi ble says that God put the rainbow in the sky as a sign that there should be no more floods. We have been taught that the rainbow is caused by reflection of the sun’s rays in rain drops falling to the earth. In the case of the girls the ground taken is different. Many of the girls j are Jews and they say that to sing j some of the songs would be against their religion. One song in particu lar to which they objected is the “Battle Hymn of the Republic,” writ ten by Julia Ward Howe during the war between the States. This hymn is contained in the “Song Book of the Nations,” which is used for school singing. How toSay Name Of the Angel City "Our Lady, Queen of the Angela.” (Nueitra Senora Iteinn de Los Angelos, 1781.) Our Lady would remind you. please! Her name ia not Lost Angie Lees, Nor Angie anything whatever. She trusts her friends will be so clever To ehar® her Fit historic pride. The "G” shall not be jellified! "O'’ long, "G” hard, and rhyme with "Yes.” And all about LOCE ANG-EL- ESS. DANTE ILL BE .5. "Immortals” Expect This Country to Produce Poet of Rank of Homer and Shakespeare, You Have Heard It Argued; Here It Is Verse Is Written by Lummis to Teach School Children Pronun ciation of Los Angeles. “LOCE ANG-BL-ESS," Nov 29 — Above is a verse, written by Charles F. Lummis, that will be given to the school children that they may not mispronounce the name of their city. The Southwest Museum furnishes the following authoritative key to the pronounciatlon of I>os Angeles: “The ‘O’ in ‘Los’ is long. The word should be pronounced to rhyme with ‘Dose.’ “The ‘A’ of ‘Angeles’ is a !itfl“ broader than the English Ann, but not so broad as "Ahn.’ “The ‘G’ is hard. There fs no ‘jelly’ sound in Spanish. “The Anal ‘es’ should practically rhyme with ‘Yes. “The vital thing is that the ‘O’ shall be long, and the ‘G’ hard, and the final ‘E’ short, and not ‘EE.’ ” CHICAGO, Nor. 29—Grand opera will be written In English. The over emphasis of the sex motif In novels will fade with the uplift of the public taste. America will produce a poet to rank with Homer, Aeschylus, Dante. Shakespeare and Milton. These are some of the predictions made by members of the American Academy and the National Institute of Arts and Letters. The “Immor tals" and their predictions were based upon certain Inevitable cycles of prestige in the creative arts which America is about to achieve. Buster Brown Camera $2.00 A perfect machine—satisfaction guaran teed. Size picture 2 1 '4x4 1 b. Leather cov ered ; ail metal parts highly polished. Loads in dayligh t, 6 or 12 pictures on a film. Mail ed on receipt of price. Send for catalog G. E. H. CONE, Inc., 2 Stores, Atlanta. Wilson To Be Asked To Visit in Augusta AUGUSTA. Nov. 29.—President Wilson will be invited to come *o Augusta during the Christmas holi days to remain as long as he likes. The President has announced his in tention of coming South to rest and play golf, and it is believed that he can be induced to come here. No where is there a better climate or more excellent golf links than in Au gusta. Friends in Childhood; Meet After 50 Years HERMOSA BEACH, Nov. 29.—When Mrs. M. L. Brown, of Ocean Park, vis ited Hermosa Beach she accidentally en countered 1*. M. Miller, a business man of this place, on the street. Instantly she recognized him as being her child hood chum in the little red schoolhouse in Venango County. Pennsylvania, 50 years ago. Reminiscences revealed that they had resided In the same inland town of Cal ifornia for the last 20 years without ever having met. We Have an Accumulation of $125,1)110 Worth of Diamonds- Unredeemed Pledges to be sold at PUBLIC AUCTION BUY DIAMONDS. WATCHES AT YOUR OWN PRICE Must be turned into Cash at any Price. Sales Daily at 10:30-12 A.M. 2:30-6 P. M., 7:30-10 P. M. MARTIN MAY 19 Peachtree |p®W’-AWAy ^Bove. " til eveuyT-BiNW’ Biggest Gun in the World GLENN PHOTO STOCK CO. EASTMAN KODAK CO. 117 PEACHTREE ST. The five foot armor-piercing Shell 'T^HIS 16 inch gun, the most powerful in the A world, will be installed at Panama. It has a range of 22 miles. No warship could stand the impact of the giant shell. Just as this big Panama Gun ranks first in the ordinance line, so Lewis 66 Rye ranks in the liquor line. j£eu i4 66 “Away Above Everything” Note the package and the label—they serve as YOUR protection against inferior whiskies. Always demand Lewis 66 Rye— “The Standard Whiskey of the South” Case of Four Full Quarts $5.00. Express Prepaid. FOR SALE BY All leading mail order houses and cafes. Never sold in bulk. Sold only in glass direct from distillery. THE STRAUSS, PRITZ CQ. Distillers Cincinnati More than $250,000 now subscribed- Hundreds ot others ready to join us— That is the story in briel, to date, ot Silver Lake Estates NcVCr has a busincss proposal put before the people of Atlanta,Georgia, and the South met with more prompt or gratifying response than our invitation to join us in the purchase, develop ment and sale of the Silver Lake property. We knew we had a splendid business proposition. It needed only that others should find it out. THEY HAVE FOUND IT OUT. They came by the hundred to our SILVER LAKE ESTATES display shown last week at 57 Peachtree street. Many of them subscribed and signed up; many others are ready and will complete their subscrip tions this week. Gathered from our exhibit we have the names of 1,000 persons, every one of whom expressed warm interest in our plans— ENOUGH TO ESTABLISH SILVER LAKE ESTATES TWICE OR THREE TIMES OVER! Some of the best business men of Atlanta and the South are with us. One man came in from New York to join us; an other came from Philadelphia, while still another wrote from Pittsburg and is preparing to subscribe. One man came to us from North Carolina, and South Carolina is represented several times. A Florida business man sent a personal repre sentative to look into SILVER LAKE ESTATES; that representative has advised him that it is good. Middle Georgia sends in a $10,000 subscription, and South Georgia has come forward with its du plicate. We might go on detailing incidents one after another almost indefinitely, but the meat in the co- coanut is that— MORE THAN ONE-HALF OF THE $500,000 CAPITAL NEEDED FOR SILVER LAKE ES TATES HAS BEEN TAKEN. If you are interested and care to know the names of the prominent business and professional men who have joined us, the list is open to your inspec tion at our offices. The object of this advertisement is to let our friends and subscribers know that— SILVER LAKE ESTATES iS MORE THAN ASSURED. It is not a case of “Will be;” IT IS! If you are interested with us, we congratulate you. L. P. B0TTENFIELD Real Estate -Residence Subdivisions 1115-1128 Empire BMo. Atlanta, Ga.