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GORDON TO DEDICATE FINEST CAMP BUILDING IN SOUTH
\
Handsome Structure at Camp Re
sult of Efforts of Y. W, C. A.
War Council,
onssifiesins 3
By GRADY HARRIS.
CAMP GORDON, Nov. 28.—“ A new
acre of sunshine will be opened to
the men of Camp Gordon tomorrow."
And this appropriate expression of
Top Sergeant Montgomery’s - briefly
tells that the hostess house of the
333“" Women’s Christian Associa
» brobably the most magnificent
army camp building in the South, wil]
formally be dedicated on Thanks
-Biving morning,
Billy Sunday will say the prayer
of dedication as the building is given
over to the commanding general and
his many thousands of appreciative
men, A.nd there will be a flag rais
ing while the band plays the Na
tional Anthem, and Homer Rode
heaver, Billy Sunday’s celebrated
choir man, and Warren Kimsey, the
army song leader, will hoist a tune
for the o.casion,
Covers an Acre of Ground.
The great building covers an acre
of ground. It is the largest structure
on the reservatlon, and by far the
prettiest and most appropriately ap
bointed. It is to be given to the men
&s the one place on the camp grounds
Wwhere the hand of womanwill bring
the much cherished home-like sur
roundings to chase the gloom away,
In the left wing of the building
ls,a spacious lounge room where the
men of the camp may .meet their
wives, mothesr an dwomen friends. It
is beautifully furnished and appro
priately arranged and may be con
verted into a ballroom to accomo
d{fle hundreds of couples. There is a
Plano and a hig open fireplace where
& cheery blaze brightens its corner.
In the right wing is the cafeteria,
a tempting place that rivals Atlanta’s
most fashionable dining rooms. The
cafeteria can accommodate 350 pat
rons at the time, and will be open at
ceratin hours of the day when the
men are idle,
Dedication in Morning.
.The dedication Thursday morning
will begin at 9:15 o’clock. After the
program at the hostess house Billy
Sunday will appear at the main au
ditorium of the Y. M. C. A. where he
will make a Thanksgiving address to
the soldiers. The hostess house will
be open for an informal reception
from 1 to 5 p. m., during which time
the Colonial Dames will welcome the
men., Cake and coffee will be served.
Mrs. Charles Drinberger will 'be
general secretary at the building and
the cafeteria will be in charge of
Miss Constance Rainer. Other as
soclates of Mrs, Dirnberger will be
Mrs. John Wicker, Mrs. Milton Wil
liams, Mrs. George Vedder and Mrs.
W. Wootten.
The building is in need of a piano
and a victorla, which the committees
would appreciate from friends. Palms
and ferns also are needed.
The hostess house was given to the
camp by the,war work council of the
Y. W. C. A. Miss ay Kellogg, of New
York, was the architect, and the deco
rations were done by the Brown Dec
orating Company, of Atlanta.
More than 10,000 young Southern
ers, who, when called for the draft
last summer, were granted extention
of time in order that they might work
in the harvest, will begin reporting
at Camp Gordon soon after Decem
ber 1.
The men will be assigned to Colonel
Price's casual detachment, where they
will be given preliminary training
before being transferred to the Na
tional Guard camps of their home
States. g
M.embers of the Belgian relief com
mission were at Camp Gordon today
making appeals for the cast-off cloth
ing of thé new soldiers who are dis
carding civilian attire for the khaki,
Thousands of pounds of clothing have
been gathered throughou the camps
by the commission and sent’ to the
suffering Belgians.
A club of the artists of Camp Gor
don will be organized Wednesday
night at the main auditorium of the
Y. M. C. A. The members will in
clude the various.vaudeville and other
entertainers, of which there are scores
yat the camp. They will volunteer a
‘winter program of entertainment for
the division.
Britt Craig, popular Atlanta news
paper man, has gone to join the coun
try's air fleet. Craig, who has been
a sergeant with Colonel Luhn’'s am
munition train and who was one of
the volunteers for Ambulance Com
pany No. 29, will report at Trenton,
N. J., where he will go into training
for a commission as an air fighter.
Atlanta’s Syrian colony will give a°
There are as many -¥re
wards for early Christmas
shopping as there are pen
alties for its postpone
ment,
Only 21 More
Shopping Days
Until Christmas
B ittt
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN .8 A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes #0 oo WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1917.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—The ° fol
lowing promotions and appointments of
officers of the National Guard are an
nounced:
Infantry—To be colonel, Lieutenant
Colonel Willlam J. Vaiden, artillery,
Alabama; to he major, Captain Caleb
'R. Layton, infantry, Florida; to be cap-l
tains, First Lieutenants William W.
Hampton, Jr., infantry, Florida; John |
W. White, infantry, Florida; to be first |
lieutenants, Benjamin F. Stone, Robert
L. Marsh, John C. Byrne, Joseph W.
Shand, Edwin H, Hale, Walter 8.
-Blackmer, Thomas B. Sparkman, Os
'sian W. Drane, Victor T. Covington,
Archie P. Buie, Bradford \Y‘ White,
Calvin B. McCaughen, Edwin N, Stan
‘ley. John B. Leffingwell, James E. Cas
sels, Harry P. Cooper, all of the Flori
da infantry; Thomas W. Lipscomb
Bradley Curry, Paul C. Calhoun, Fred
D. Bryant, Edgar E. Bean, Thomas W.
Deupree, James E- Deupree, Sidney S.
Simmons, all of the infantry reserve
corps,
To be second lieutenants—First Ser
geant Bryon E. Bushnell, infantry; Ser
geant James N. Daniel, infantry; First
Sergeant Frank E. Washburn, infantry;.
First Sergeant Alvin J. Register, infan
try; Assistant Band Leader Frank L
Holland, infantry; Sergeant Archibald
M. McEachin, engineers; Sergeant Chel.
ton M. Mehang, infantry; First Sen
geant Winfred B. Stephens, engineers;
First Class Sergeant Hood C. Hampton,
quartermaster corps; First Class Ser
geant Edward G. Burkhead, quarter
master cprps; Sergeant Gelmff, infan
try; Sergeant Leonard V. “Nance, in
fantry; Sergeant Edwin M. Giles, in
fantry; Corporal Albert R. Pierce, in
%«Tntry; Second Lieutenants David O.
evins, infantry reserve corps; War
ren H. Byington, infantry reserve
Icorps. Earl P, Carter, infantry reserve
corps; Harry A. Osteen, infantry re
serve corps; Emmett P. Green, Jr., in
fantry reserve corps; Second Lieuten
ant John C. Murchison, Jr., infantry re.
serve corps; Howard J. Wienges, infan
try reserve corps; Sergeant John Prince,
infantry.
These officers, assigned to the 124th
Infantry, will report to the Thirty-first
Division at Camp Wheeler.
The following officers of the medical
reserve corps are relieved at the places
specified and will report to Camp
Wheeler: First Lieutenants George N.
Acker, Fort Terry; Maurice W. K.
Byrne, Fort Benjamin Harrison; Ed
mund A. Rogers, Fort Oglethorpe.
Reported That Men Will Be Sent
to Charlotte Camp From
~ ' '
Hattiesburg.
CHARLOTTE, N. C,, Nov. 28.—1 t 1s
reported that troops from Hatties
' burg, Miss.,, will be transferred m
large numbers to Camp Greehe. This
was not given out at camp headquar
‘ters, but it was said in the city that
the skeleton units of National Guards
men from Maine, Vermont, Massa
l.:‘:”husetts and Connecticut may be
completed with men from Hatties
burg.
- Many new men must be sent to Camp
Greene to put the units now here on
a war footing, and no formal an
nouncement has been made as to how
the War Department will meet tmsy
need. Not a regiment at the camp
has a complement of more than 60 per
cenprof war strength, and some regi
. ments of regulars are below this per
centage.
. * .
Captain Parker, member of the
!First Maine Heavy Artillery Regiment
at Camp Greene and an old newspaper
' man, tells a story of the red tape that
'was wound about the purchase of a
few pounds of nails the guardsmen
'had to have up in New England be
‘fore they migrated to the Tarheel
State.
’ " “We were engaged in construction
'work and purchased the nails in Bos
!tnn." said Captain Parker. “A month
later a bill was sent in, properly O.
' K.’d by the supply officers, and went
on up the line through half a dozen
other hands to the top. When the bill
got there, it appeared that the com
pany which had bought the nails had
‘moved to another camp, and so the
bill started back down through the
departments, and when it finally goti
to the cash box there was attached to
that little bill just seven sheets of
official documentary paper, tellifig |
when, why, for whom and where those‘
nails were purchased, with such other
information as was wanted. And the |
bill was only $7.50. But it is all in the
day’s work and we don’t mind,” said
the captain.
] . .
A carload of Charlotte and Meck
lenburg boys returned Tuesday from
Oglethorpe, where they have been in
training since August 25. Many of
the local men returned with commis
sions as captains and lleutenants, The
returning officers will be at home un
til December 15, when further orders
will be issued for their movement.
Many friends of the newly commis
sioned officers met them at.the depot
and accorded them a warm welcome
back home.
Thanksgiving dinner to their coun
tryvmen who. are in the service here.
The dinner will be served at 2 o'clock
Thursday afternoon in the Syrian
Church building at No. 4 1-2 North
Butler street. Two hundred Syrian
soldiers from Camp Gordon will be
guests.
United efforts for the entertain
ment and comfort of the men here
are planned by the Camp Gordon
Welfare Workers’ Conference, which
has been organized among represen
tatives of all civilian war work or
ganizations on the ground. Partic
ularly will be conference seek to
make the Christmas holidays bright
for their soldier fricnds.
F. W. Evans, general secretary of
the Y. M. C. A. work here, hah been
chosen president of the conference
and other offices are filled by repre
sentatives of the Y. M. C. A., the
Knights of Columbus, the Red Cross,
the Jewish Alliance, the library de
partment and the army chaplaiaa.
Three thousand books for-the anl
diers’ librarv here have been received
by Albert R. N:ichols, librarian, and
6.000 additional volumes hav: been
forwarded ‘rom New York. The
handsome new library buildirg. on
Hardee avenue is practically com
nlatad. ]
Infantry Brigades to Take Turns
in Small Arms and Grenade
Instruction.
MACON, Nov. 28.— Courses of in
struction in automatic rifles and gre
nades will begin next Monday at
Camp Wheeler. This instruction is
designed to give every officer in the
'rifle companies of the division an
~opportunity to acquire a general
' knowledge of the handling and use of
3 these weapons.
. Each class will consist of 24 offi
cers from the Sixty-first Infantry
' Brigade (one from each rifle com
pany) and a like number from the
Sixty-second Infantry Brigade. The
course @f instruction for each class
will last two weeks. During the first
week the section of the class from
the Sixty-first Brigade will receive
grenade Instruction, while the section
from the Sixty-second Brigade will
receive instruction in the automatic
rifle. During the second week of the
course the sections will change
courses.
The work will be in charge of the
directors of the divisional automatic
rifle school and divisional grenade
school, supervised by Captain Bellot
and Lieutenant Renard, of the French
army. The instruction will be given
from 7:45°t0 11:45 a. m. and from
1:30 to 4:30 p. m.,, Wednesday after
noons and Saturday mornings ex
cepted, ~
» - .
Crap games have beerr banned at
Camp Wheeler. The following order
from Brigadier General J. L. Hayden,
commander of the Thirty-first Divi
sion, sounds the death knell of the
pastime:
“Complaint has been made to these
headquarters that participation in
crap games i 8 a common sight at
Camp Wheeler. Regimental and sep
arate unit commanders will take steps
to see that crap games and all other
forms of gambling are not permitted
in Camp Wheeler.”
-- ® ~
The first official information that
Major General Francis H. French, na
tional army, had been assigned to the
command of the .Thirty-first Divi
sion to succeed Major General F. J.
Kernan was received today. It is
from an advance copy of a War De
partment general orders and is as fol
lows:
“By direetion of the President, Ma
jor General Francis H. French, na
tional army, is relieved from the com
mand of the Eighty-first Division,
Camp Jackson, Columbia, S. C., and
is assigned to the command- of the
Thirty-first Division, Camp Wheeler,
Macon, and upon the completion of
the duty assigned to him in orders
from the War Department, this date,
will proceed to join the latter divi
sion.”
Commanding officers, officers and
noncommissioned officers who will
have to act as instructors have been
' told that it will be necessary to thor
oughly famillarize themselves with
‘ the methods of gas defense work and
its great importance. They must
come in contact with real gases, both
with and without masks. The non
commissioned officers attending the
divisional school are expected to be
permanent gas noncommissioned of
ficers, and upon their efficiency and
reliability will depend much of the
safety of troops under gas attacks.
All persons now supplylng milk to
Camp Wheeler have been informed
lthat beginning December 1 only such
milk as is pateurized will be permit
ted. All milk dealers must have per
mits,
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Sergeant Battley Says Folk at
Home Need Not Worry About
Men in Camps,
The heart-breaking thing about
}thls business of soldiering isp’'t the
thought of danger or hardship, and
llp lsn't the monotonous routine and
‘dxschnne of the thing. It is the
'thought that folks at home are going
to be worried and tormented by false
krem»rts that you are cold and un
unclothed and poorly fed and badly
cared for when you fall ill and that
your blankets are thin and your
equipment insufficient, and all that,
: “It is a mystery where all the false
| reports come from that trickle back
ihome to the families of soldiers and
keep them tortured,” said Sergeant J.
. Battley, of the 115th Ambulance
Company, at Camp McClellan, Annis
ton, Ala., who was in Atlanta Wed
‘}nesday on a furlough. “You can just
ldiscount by 90 per cent the truth of
;ull sugh reports, whether they are
spoken or written.
~ “At my home in Norfolk, Va., last
week I was kept busy answering the
questions of worried mothers and
wives who had heard that their boys
at Camp McClellan were cold and
‘hungry and insufficiently - clothed.
'None of the reports was true. 7
. “The health at Camp McClellan is
superb. Nobody is going to get on
the sick list there, or anywhere else,
~who takes care of himself and who
goes through the raily exercises thor
oughily and conscientiously—who
takes the exercises with the idea that
they were designed for his benefit,
‘and not that they constitute an un
'pleasant duty to perform.
“That spirit of antagonism toward
orders isn’'t the sort of thing, as a
soldier soon finds out, that wins wars
or promotes the highest sort of pa
triotism. An order isn't issued mere
rly as another restriction or anothet
imposition upon a soldier. It is issued
for his benefit, to help him, to make
‘his duty ecasier and simpler, and to
'get him where he should be and to
‘set him to what ke has to do as easily
‘and cuickly as possible.
| “We are proud of our company
over at Camp McClellan. Every man
bought a Liberty bond. Every man
is a volunteer in spite of the fact that
not one of them was near the top of
‘the draft list. And no man in the
outfit has served an hour in the
guardhouse. The policy of regarding
orders in a spirit of friendly co
operation has been firmly established
among them. There has been no
fighting and no serious arguments
among them. And we are sure these
men wijj give a «ood account o?
themselves in France.”
~ Camp McClellan is occupied by
national guardsmen from Virginia,
New Jersey, Maryland, the District
of Columbia and Delaware. It is the
famous "“Blue and Gray” division,
composed as it is of soldiers on the
border line of Confederate and Union
territory in 1861.
Sergeant Battley, after going home
on his furlough, stopped in Atlanta to
hear Billy Sunday, having been at
tracted to the evangelist by reports
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§ . . ¢
‘EFmest Greeting Cards |
of taste and distine
§ tion. Volland and §
¢ Murray's selective §
lines here ex
clusively.
Pictures,
'WALKER % |
@2 91 N. Pryor )
. |
Four Shows at Lyric
. .
Thanksgiving Day
To accommodate the Thanksgiving
Day crowds, B. F. Keith’'s Lyric
Theater has arranged to give four
shows Thursday. In addition to the
usual matinee at 2:30 and evening
performances at 7:30 and 9:15, there
will be an extra matinee at 4:15,
of the sermons in The Atlanta Geor
gian.
“l wish every soldier could hear
Billy,” he said. “It would be a great
thing for him {o tour the camps. We
‘haven't had much recreation or en
tertainment at Anniston.”
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West Wants S
of Big War Ordersl
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—Presi
dent Wilson was asked Tuesday to
use his efforts to divert the placing of
some of the large ...r orders from the
East to the West by a committee of
‘business men from Davenport, lowa.
~ The Davenport men allege that
practically all of the large war con
tracts are placed with Eastern man
ufacturers, and a marked flow of
skilled lahor from the West has re
sulted, )
City Sues to Compel
.
Paving by Trolley Co.
-
Suit was filed Tuesday by attor
neys for the city of Atlanta against
the Georgia Railway and Power Com
pany to compel the company to re
pave parts of Edgewood avenue he
tween Piedmont avenue and Bell
street and between Fort street and
Yonge street. A city ordinance (2724)
authorizes the city to proceed with
the work after five days’' notice to the
power company. Refusal of the pow
er company to pay for the work will
result in fi. fas. being issued by the
city clerk.
. ‘ . 3 .‘
Chicago Man ‘Finds"
. AAE ¥
- Stick of Dynamit
CHICAGO, Nov. 28.—Patrolman B
H. Gessler travels a beat from the
East Chicago avenue station. He was
approacted by a well-dressed young
man last night, who handed him &
package with the remark: g
"Here, T found this. I don't know'
what to do with it. You'd bettes!
take it.”
Then the young man walked away'
as quickly as possible. The polices
man learned why when he removed
the wrappings and found in his pol %'
session a perfectly good, husky eight !
inch stick of dynamite. i -
5