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H KARST'S SUNDAY AMKKIUA.N, ATLANTA
IS THE BEST
EVER GIVEN
Walter G. Cooper, the Secretary
of the Chamber of Commerce,
Gives Praise to Newspapers
for Campaign of Publicity.
Major Part of Success of Affair
Due to His Untiring Efforts,
but He Shares Credit With
Hastings and All Who Aided.
who
arranged the dress parade and
exhibition drill for the benefit of the
D °ys at Fort McPherson, and to Gov-
rnor Slaton for the use of the Capi
tol.
- • r I
C. ADAMS, of Newton County, who was a prominent vis-
^ • itor at tlie Corn Show. He founded the first Boys’ Corn
Club in Dixie.
Nothing but praise has been heard
for the annual corn show of the boys’
corn clubs which has Just closed, and
it Is the consensus of opinion that
1913 marked a distinct improvement
in every particular over past shows.
In the opinion of Walter G. Cooper,
secretary of the Atlanta Chamber of
Commerce, these shows would have
been impossible without the hearty
and generous support given by local
and State papers generally.
"1 want to express my appreciation
for this patriotic and liberal donation
of space for the dissemination of in
formation concerning the corn show,”
said Mr. Cooper. “The Atlanta papers
have responded to every call, and
managing and city editors have been
unusually kind and helpful. State
papers, too, have printed a great deal
of valuable and helpful Information.”
Credit Due to Cooper.
To Mr. Cooper himself must go a
major part of credit for the success of
the corn show. In his capacity as sec
retary of the Chamber of Commerce
and ex-officio general manager of the
corn show, he assumed the general
executive burdens of the undertaking,
with all of th^ infinite details incident
thereto. He has worked day and
night to make the event a success.
In addition, all the executive work
—an immense amount of It, too—has
been done by the office force of the
Chamber of Commerce. This office
also attended to the securing of 800
homes for the boy visitors.
As chairman of the corn show com
mittee of the Chamber of Commerce,
H. G. Hastings has been tireless and
itlgable :n his work to maKe
each show better than the last. Mr.
Hastings has also been one of tne
most liberal contributors, giving $500
each year.
Hastings a Great Factor.
Mr. Hastings personally assumed
charge of the installation of the 1913
corn show, by common consent the
best yet held, both in number of ex
hibits and attractiveness of arrange*
merits.
The ministers of the city were an
important factor in the work of se
curing homes for the boys. Much
credit is also due the Board of Edu
cation. Superintendent W. M. Slaton,
of the city schools; Professors Dykes
and Culver, of the Boys’ High School;
Miss Jessie Muse and principals of
the grammar schools for co-oneration
In making the parade on Thursday
the best of the kind ever seen in the
city.
Too much can not be said about the
ladies of Atlanta who hospitably
opened their homes to the corn club
boys.
For the past three years the corn
show committee of the Chamber of
Commerce has been composed of the
following gentlemen, who have
worked with zeal and energy: H. G.
Hastings, chairman: W. H. Leahv,
H C, Fisher. H. E. Stockbrldge, J. E.
Bodenhamer.
Helped rialse Money.
The following were active in rais
ing money for the corn show:
Wilmer L. Moore, W. L. Peel. Rob
ert F. Maddox, John E. Murphy. H.
Fisher, T. N. Stewart, J. R. Por-
Jcr, Mell R. Wilkinson, Lynn Fort. H.
B Wey, J. T. Rose, H. E. Choate. Ben
M illingham, W. J. Lowenstein, Ivan
L. Allen, W, H. White. Jr.. Jacob W.
Patterson. T. R. Sawtell, C. B. How-
ard, W. J. Dabney, M. F. Holohan,
H. Stentz, Julius Fledelman, R.
Peeples. W. A. Parker. W. E.
Aewill } S. C. Dinkins. Charles P.
Glover. Charles R. Haskins. J. R. A.
Hobson and the Atlanta Hotel Men‘9
Association.
I he corn show committee of the
Atlanta Chamber of Commerce is ox-
especial appreciation and
thanks for the assistance so freely
piyen in connection with the show
tnis year to the following:
Thanks for Assistance.
General VanHolt Nash, who acted
as grand marshal; General R. K.
, vans and his staff, who participated
n the parade; the Fifth Georgia Reg
iment, Colonel Orville H. Hall, com
manding officer; the College Park oa-
aets ’ Colonel J. C. Woodward, com
mandant: the Marist College cadets,
tnrough the courtesv of Father Rapier
and Major Schmidt; the Boy Scouts,
nrough Philip Weltner and Com
mander Everett., and the other Scout
captains; the Mayor and members of
°uncil who participated in the pa- |
rade; Colonel "ohn T. VanOrsdale.
tlflc knowledge obtained by these
boys, and in some cases imparted to
their fathers, the yield in Georgia has
been raised many bushels to the acre.
It has taken the boys to demonstrate
that Georgia ran produce as much
corn to the acre as any other Suite
In the Union and to show the farm
ers that they need not place their sole
reliance on cotton.”
Mr. Adams was County School
Commissioner at the time he took up
the Corn Club work. He later became
president of the Fifth District Agri
cultural and Mechanical School, and
now Is farming In Newton V'uunty.
Proud of Exhibit.
With the remainder of the delega
tion, he was extremely proud of Jhe
exhibit made by Newton County. A
topographical plat of the county was
laid out on a large platform, and on
It was arranged the boys’ exhibits,
under the direction of J. J. Corley,
Miss Clyde Willis, supervisor of do
mestic science in the Newton County
schools, and J. O. Martin, County
School Superintendent.
The plat showed the principal
roads, and miniature houses repre
sented the homes of prominent farm
ers in the country districts. Toy
wagons, loaded with real ears of com
and attached to toy horses, were
placed on the various roads. These
were the boys’ exhibits, and each one
was placed relatively at the home of
the boy who brought it to the show.
A doll sat atop each load of corn, to
complete the novel representation. A
card, bearing the name of the young
exhibitor and his picture, was placed
at the side of every wagon.
Cordele Will Have
A $33,000 Church
CORDELE, Dec. 6—The contract
for the construction of a new Baptist
Church of this city, the total cost of
which will be approximately. $33,000,
■was awarded to the contracting- firm
of Little & Phillips, of this city, at a
meeting of the church building com
mittee. The bid for the church build
ing proper is $24,500. The contract
for heatipg and plumbing was also let
to Little' & Phillips for $1,650.
Contracts for seats, art glass wir
ing and lighting will be awarded in
about two weeks.
Man Resigns $3,600
Job to Hear Sea Roar
SACRAMENTO. Dec 6.—“The sound
of the surf at night is worth $100 a
month to me,” said Charles L. Snyder,
chief examiner and secretary of the
State Civil Service Commission, in an
nouncing his resignation of a $3,600 job.
Snyder will return to Alameda and
resume work as secretary of the Pacific
Division of the Federal Civil Service at
$2,400 a year. He has been on leave
from this position, which is a permanent
one.
40 German Families
To Locate in Crisp
CORDELE. Dec. 6.—The Cordele
Chamber of Commerce, through Sec
retary Louis Spencer Daniel, is ar
ranging with a colony of truck farm
ers from Indiana and one from
Michigan, including between 30 and
40 German families, to locate in Crisp
County within five oand six miles of
Cordele. Deals with these colonists
have practically been closed.
J. A. Ryals, a member of the Cham
ber of Commerce, has gone North to
make final arrangements with these
immigrants and interest others in
coming to Crisp County.
Prince Sees Gaby;
Queen Scolds Him
Special Cable to The American.
PARIS, Dec. 6.—The campaign in
London against Gaby Deslys was or
ganized by Queen Mary, it was stated
to-day.
The Prince of Wales went to the
Palace Theater to see Gaby glide. His
mother scolded the hen* to the Brit
ish throne and called in the Bishops
of London and Kensington and urged
them to start a crusade against im
morality in the music halls.
The bishops obeyed the royal be
hest.
He Fought Ddown Opposi
tion to Boy Farmers.
Mr. Adams is
shown judging
one of the prize Father of C | ub | dea Te || s How
ears of corn
with which his
county won so
much admira
tion at the
great com
show held last
week in At
lanta.
Now that the Corn Club Show is
ended, the persistently patriotic peo
pie of Newton County have some
thing more to boast about.
When the last stragglers of their
big delegation to the show left At
lanta Saturday, they were saying that
Newton County had made another
record, by having the most novel and
striking display at the whole show.
And they were right. There was
nothing else that approached it.
They always are doing something
down there that gives them a chance
to lord it over the rest of the popula
tion of Georgia.
To begin with, they rigged up the
first rural telephone system in the
world. At least, this is their claim,
and, so far as known, no one has
arisen to dispute it.
Get First Rural Delivery.
Then, the first rural free delivery
in America was tried out right down
there in Newton County. Congress
man Livingston generally is given the
credit for obtaining this innovation.
When the idea of traveling iibrar-
ies for rural schools began spreading
about the country, Newton County
was one of the first to try it out.
About this time, someone said that
it would be a mighty good plan to en
courage attendance in the rural
schools, by providing the youngsters
some way to get there besides walk
ing the roads in all kinds of weather.
Straightway Newton County adopted
the scheme of sending a wagon
around to the various homes and
bringing the kldlets to school therein.
But this was to be a story about
the growth of the com club spirit in
Newton County, so there is no time
for mention of the Spring school
fairs, the county oratorical*? and the
standardized rural schools, in all of
which movements this county pro
fesses to be a pioneer.
Big Newton Delegation.
When young Georgians of all sizes
and descriptions began pouring into
Atlanta the first of last week, the del
egation from Newton County was one
of the largest and most enthusiastic.
With the lads came G. C. Adams,
father of the corn club idea in Dixie,
as well as of a fine family of indus
trious boys.
Three of Mr. Adams’ sons accom
panied him to Atlanta—Cleveland,
Charles and John. Cleveland, the eld
est. this year is president of the corn
club that his father organized nine
years ago.
It was back in 1904 that Mr Adams
conceived the idea of corn clubs in
Georgia and thereby started some
thing. The movement now has spread
through the South from th^ small be
ginning it had a few miles south of
Atlanta.
The project met with considerable
opposition at first. StrangMv enough.
It was the farmer*? them^elvos who
opposed the formation of the clubs.
Adams Tells Story.
Here is Mr. Adams’ own story of
his work, as he told it to The Amer
ican Saturday:
“Yes, sir. I certainly did have some
trouble before I got the club going
smoothly. I encountered objections
from the least expected sources—■
from the farmers themselves. The
idea was so new that they could not
understand at the time how one could
mix ‘book learning’ and actual farm
ing. Neither did they like the idea of
working the corn separately from the
other crops. They did not take kindly
to the modern svstem of fertilizing,
and were inclined to ridicule the
whole plan.
“These few that held out against
what they called the ‘newfangled’
methods? were able to offer quite a
little discouragement for a while, but
as soon as we were organized and be
gan to get results the opposition
faded. Now the whole county is en
thusiastic over corn raising on a scl
ent ifife basis.
Yields Are Increased.
“The great benefits that the move
ment has brought are most manifest
in the magically Increased yields all
over the State. Just from the scien-
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Hall Appeal Fails;
Execution Date Set
TIPTON, Dec. 6.—Judge W. E.
u!* 0 ' nas has sentenced I. B. Hall to
hanged Januarv 10, 1914, for the
"'order of Dennis W. Hall, whom he
on May 10, following a dispute
. the house in which they were
°th living at the time and which I.
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Hall was convicted at the July
„ rm °f Tift Superior Court and sen-
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u “ re *he judgment of the lower
c rl . " as Affirmed. The Supreme
’ >r- also refused an application for
a re-hearing.
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