Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 30, 1912, EXTRA, Page 2, Image 2

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2 WON FIGHTS TO MOVE CAPITAL Declares That Atlanta Is No Longer a Georgia City in Best Sense of Word. Continued F'om Page One. •nces of the past between himr ' and Pendieton are eon-emed H* desire? to ’ak* a stand beside the Bibb county man and fight for th’ removal of the capitol to the Central Citv He and Pendleton are to. stand shoulder tn shoulder in that fight, f P*ndlFton is •• llllnsr If is not willing to accept Watson s services In the caufce of Ma ron: win fight for Maron’, any way. • H & f i’’s th* country people of Geor gia demand that Macon be made the capital city nf Georgia Tn The Georgian this morning, Mr Watson said: ■ I am in the fight tn pemnve the • tpi ta! o* this state from Atlanta to Ma con Says Atlanta Is Net a Georgian City I am in favor of that, beraut* Ma con is the logical plan* for .B. and b*-_ cause Atlanta has ceased to be. a Geor gia -. it'-, in the b*tt*r of th*- word ■Maron -a genuin* Georgia < it? Its people are refined and intelligent— and »v»n a rod-head and humble coun tryman. so red-headed and SP humble a« Watson, indeed, can get a respect-, ful hearing tn Macon, when he comes there to plead for his sort of folks, and to give- voice to their righteous de mands. Yesterday m as th» third time I have come to Atlanta, onlv to be rough housed. jeered hissed red ridiculed bv a vicious mob <<t hoodlums., picked in to halls against me. Mob Mistreats The Countryman. "The delegates didn't rough-house me and hiss me Neither did the thou sands of good people in Atlanta who might have been ’ln mV vicinity to help me, and to see that t got a re spectful if not a winning bearing It was that same old rowdy , uncontrol-, able, vicious mob that seems bent upon howling and hissing down every coun tryman who comes here, earnest and honest in his desire? to speak for a poorer and braver class that works In the- fields, and earn its living in the sweat of its brow. "Wo country people come to Atlan ta to these convention' at much ex-I pc nFP and at a sac’ifli e of Comfort and time. We belteye that Atlanta, being the capital. Is our city, in part, nt least Atlanta hould he that but It isn't. ' I have long thought that Macon should b* the capital of this state, and I am going to fight to make It the capital. Atlanta has no us* for a country man it does not care to hear the coun tryman speak h'ls desires It con temptuously thrusts him aside and in sults him. "From now on. I am enlisted in the cause of Macon- The capital must go there." ’Twas a Famous Victoree T. E. Won Grim-visaged war hath smoothed its wrinkled front Th* captains and the kings have de parted. including the "red-headed one” and although Thomas E. Wgtson ca - ries home -few of the spoils of battle, his, like Marlborough s at Blenheim, was a famous victoree." nevertheless maybe. In calmer retrospect, it is evident enough that Mr Matson was given only such things in the state Demo cratic convention yesterday as the "city politicians" dared not den), and that he achieved little if. anything of genuine triumph. There was nothing of sensational or nerve-racking interest attaching to the convention save the interest that Mat son's presence gave It Its proceedings, minus Watson, would have been dull. v delegation of “prominent citizens" would have been framed-up to go to Baltimore, instructed for Underwood for president. In a set of resolutions reeking with the glorv of the Star Spangled Banner and the blessings of the Unterrifled Democracy, and so forth an d «o on—and that would have been at!. . Everybody would have been happy, and the work would have been thor oughly ladylike and pleasant from Ex hibit A to Exhibit Z. Watson the Flv' in the Ointment. Watson, the sage o' Thomson,, w ; the disturbing element in the T'nder wood program as the leaders would like to have seen it carried out Watson demanded things in a loud ton* -f voice. He threatened to ki-k the 'id 'iff a lot of politt al business, unless th” "city politicians" came a< ro -.-' That was embarrassing, for the "citv politiCißns" dared not th'ow Watson down, and they dared not agree to his more extr-m- demands So them compromised with them selves ran a handsomely de- orated and beflowered steam-roller over Watson, and sent him home a victor without a scalp dangling from bi- belt. Hr- goes to Baltimore i deiegate-ai large Bv> h' g'-r - bound hand and foot, obliged to b* t goo-1 littb boy Operation the Roller. It was evident, from the beginning that the plan was to ’*t Wats“'i talk his head off" if he wished, an'! then to proceed tn so th* things that bad be n egreed upon, regardless Mr. Watson did most nf the talking. ! CENTRAL BAPTISTS TO GREET NEW PASTOR ON ARRIVAL FRIDAY | D- Caleb A Rid!*' who accepted the I call of the rongrr?at!on of rhe Centra! Baptist church, will arrive in th* city, ♦ accompanied bv his uif* and children a T ■ !0 45 o'clock tomorrow morninc Dr Ridley and hi? family will be met ( at th* train h' a ho?’ of friend? and members of th* church. He will be for . mall’ installed a? pastor of the church • on next Sunda? Special music bv the Central chorus will mark the servb *s HOPES TO PLAY A PIANO 60 HOURS WITH ONE HAND NEW YORK Mat 3h—Harry W Richard, who has omj one hand, will endeavor tn break a "long distan- e" pla-no playing record. Beginning at midnight he will trx to play continu ously for fid hours or more, while his wife and relatives serve him with food and drink REFUSED A GLASS OF MILK. MAN TAKES COW YONKERS. N Y . May 30 —John Leonard refused a thirsty pedestrian a fr*e glass nf milk The thirsty stranger returned later and got away with a row . He believes that the thief, with th* aid of confederates took the cow- to the woods and. after milking her, turned h*r loose. Marie Belirtg. The funeral of Marte Boling daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs B. F. Boling, 'who died at the residence, 13S Gaskill street, yesterday, was he'd this morning a’ 10 o'clock. Interment was in Hollywood J iK Bfe ». fl I y®. I K '.. y* I UK' Egißjgslag' * L \\ *■. —i— e err •c. ■ t / e l tMtt>• •• Mr -tn Two views of General Leonard Wood in full dress uniform, and a snapshot of his wife. Friends of Doughty Army Chief Who Saw Him Play Football Once, and Will Not Believe He Is To Be Deposed. The national house and senate think they are going to remove General Leonard Wood from his job as boss of the army, as was indicated by yester day’s Washington digpafch to The Georgian, but Atlanta people who know the doughty general well are Inclined to want to see the skids put In place and a stiff shove given the general in the small of his back before they will believe It. For Atlanta folk know that sandy-, haired Leonard wasn't born yesterday and has sixtjeen ounces of wriggling gray matter under his straw thatch He's .lust about the shiftiest big man on his feet you ever saw, and it will take a wise lot of ttolons to separate him from his job. M hen he was nothing hut a post sur. geon at Fort McPherson here twenty years ago. Atanta people vame to like and admire Leopard Wood, He stuck around fbr several years and made friends by the hundreds. Whether he was much of a sawbones, memory saith nothing, but he was every inch a man and there were some inches to his anatomy. So it was no surprise when his star rose with the outbreak of the Spanish- American skirmish, and Leonard was seen hanging right on the luminary That tar yanked him from one promo tion to another till it landed him high and dry as the real commahder-ln chlef of the United States army Which job Is about to be segregated from him. they think at Washington But let's wait ami see. Wood came from New Hampshire and the “city politicians'' did the rest The delegates were extremely polite to the Thomson man The crowds in the galleries and on the - floor of the convention —where they had no right to be whatever, and from which Chairman Hutchens made every effort to clear them —treated him out rageously Mr. Matson. after the convention, expressed gratitude to Mr Hutchens and Mr Anderson for their efforts i > get him fair play, but he was exceed ingly bitter toward the crowds that howled and hissed him down He said he was sure they had been packed into the hall for a malicious ‘ purpose, and by one of his enemies and ) scheduled contestants on the floor Watson's Resolutions. Early in the proceedings. Mr Wat son read a batch of resolutions, cover ing numerous reforms he thinks ad visable in state and national affairs. They went politely enough, as usual -to the committee on resolutions. And the committee has them yet, presum ably At least, nobody ever heard any thing else of them, after Watson fln i.-hed reading them When Watson undertook to say what he thought of a delegation composed of Watson. Pendleton. Felder and Brantley, he was bellowed and bullied into silence not by the delegates, how ever. Far be it from them to bellow or bully Mr Matson They were to< polite for tha’ Besides, they knew that gentleman’v little steam-roller would overtake Tom before h» got any where in particular It is generally agreed that the “city politicians' of the Vnderwnod persua sion got awav with 'he sltua’fon iw pretty eair shade al! things ccnaider ed. ' - t.-, -a t ! me .lehr M Slaton, ctmn THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWSiTHT’RSDAY. MAY 30. 1912. ATLANTANS REMEMBER GEN, WOOD, "SCRAPPER” Il *'<'wk originally and was graduated in medi cine from Harvard in 1 884. He took the army medical examination two years later and by 1899 had risen to the rank of captain and assistant sur geon. About that time he was sent to Fort McPherson and was attached to the local post for some three tears When Roosevelt organized the Rough Riders in 1898 he had M ood made colo nel of the regiment For services at Las Guasitnas and San Juan he was promoted to be brigadier general of volunteers and later attained the rank of major general of volunteers. He w ent to l 'uba as governor 'luring the first American occupation, showed he was an executive front the word go. and remained there till the government was turned over to the Cubans in 1902. Roosevelt then made him major general of the regular army and he later rose to chief of staff, having jumped over the heads of some 300 officers of the line. Gee. but nearly all of them were sore 1 ; M'hen Wood was located at Fort Mc- Pherson he was a lot younger than he Is now -he was about 30 then. His main fault with life here was that he didn't find opportunity for as much ex ercise as he liked, so when in the fail of 1893 they were organizing Tech's first football team, the surgeon saw a chance for a lot of fun He matricu lated at the school, taking just enough studies to entitle him to membership as a student, and got out on the athletic field. It took him one afternoon to demonstrate that he was just about the huskiest man available for the eleven. date for governor and friend of both Felder and Matson, found himself skating around on pretty thin ice His friends viewed with alarm in about every direction they viewed at all. for some 24 hours or more. Even “Little Joe” Brown was appealed to to save the day. And up one side and down the other, the day finally was saved after a fash ion. and things unquestionably are not as uncomfortably shot up in the Slaton camp today as thev might be. Neither Mr Felder nor Mr. M ItSOII expressed bitterness or excessive re gret after the convention h id adjourn ed finally, and they had thought things over. For a time both were a trifle bewil dered. and apparently wondered what all the how had been about, anyway. Rut as day faded Into night each said he would stand by the result, and go to Baltimore, there to be as happy as both might in the circumstances of tic going Watson Compliments Pendleton. . The talk in the hotel lobbies ran more to the humorous phases of the tight than otherwise laet night and this morning delegates and visitois hom-wiul bound agreed that it wa- a pretty p >i-y and amusing sort of convention, but the results of the steam-rolle opti.i tions were approved, in the main. A rather dramatic and interesting in-ident took place in tilt meeting of the delegates, after the convention had adjourned The delegates were called togethi'. for the purpose of organization. and the gle.ytipn of a .national eommittre man 2 Th* mreting took' place in the old dining room of the Aragon. and was and another afternoon to take charge of the team as sort of ex-officio cap tain. coach and mainspring. Wood Beats His Only Retrea*. Even in those days the University of Georgia was Tech's dearest foe. and as usual th* university was confident of defeating the Tech team hands down. But when the Yellow and White eleven took the field at Athens, there was a gasp .of surprise from the uni versity men. There were three or four men on the team who had been voting longer than most of the university men had been wearing “long pants.” Dr. Wood was one of then. Two or three soldiers from the fort were the others These ringers from the fort played like demons and plowed up and down the Georgia field till they had scored three or four touchdowns and cracked the Georgia team. Mood was a whole team in himself. Though he played guard, he dropped back and took the hall nearly every time for gains of from 10 to 40 yards. Ry lhe time rhe first half was over the Georgia rooters had started hoot ing and jeering Wood. By the time the game was over they had started throwing rocks at him. and by that time V\ ood and the rest of the Tech team had started running. They ran all th* way to the depot, where they found refuge in a car. That's the only time on record that Leonard Wood ever beat a retreat, and you can't make Georgia people believe that a little thing like an act of con gress can make him retreat now. attended by every delegate In the city. It was presided over by Clark How - ell. at th.e request of the delegates. After temporal' y organization had been effected, the delegates proceeded to the election of a chairman. Mr. Matson had said early in the garni that he should, and would, have this place "or know the reason w hy." His name was placed in nomination bv a friend. Then the names of Colonel C. R. Pen dleton. M . G. Brantley and G R. Hutch ens also were advanced. Mr, Matson arose, amid intense si lence. and begegd that his name be withdrawn, and that his friends vote for Colonel Pendleton. Pendleton Named Chairman. "He is the nestor of Georgia journal ism. and an older and better known man ihat I. 1 hope my friends will join me in electing Colonel Pendleton." And then M'atson was vehemently cheered. Men rushed to him and hug ged him. and congratulated him upon his fin,- attitude in this matter. Seeing the trend of things, all names we, iui’kly withdrawn except that of Pendleton, and lie was elected chair man of the Georgia delegation to Bal timore with a vv hoop Tin: ancient and bitter enmity be tween Matson ami Pendleton has long be. n in a. • opted fact in Georgia. After Colonel Pendleton's election had been accomplished Clark Howell was placed In nomination as his own suc cessor in th* national Democratic t >m mitte* He was elected unanimously. His term of service holds, for four years. M Oh th* *!<" ’ion of Howell to the executive <nmmitt*i. the nost-ionv*n tion gathering of delegates adjourned, tnd th.e great show was all over. !• had been ? funny show in larger part -most!: pure fau.-e comedy. Such t i.r.ed-. a- attached to it probably will r."t oe far-re o ong in its effects on g’.a r natl-mal politi.? WRIGHT, KING DF i FLIERS, IS OEM Siege of Typhoid Ends Fatally for Famous Aviator at His Home in Dayton. Ohio. Continued From Page One. was summoned. All were in the room when the aviator passed away. The aviator* condition sank lower , and lower as the morning hours sped | Iby Shortly after 1 o'clock it was I J thought he was dying. His heart ac- ! | tion bet aine very, low . The stimulants 1 were again used and his heart respond ed slight’y. The final sinking spell be- . gan about 3 o'clock. He died peace- j fully. Orville Wright, the brother*who has | shared in Wright's work and his I achievements, was overcome. Their ’ sinter, Katherine, w ho helped the broth ers when the-' were struggling with , their invention and w-ho shared their j triumphal European trip and their ' home-coming after the success of their ' machines haA been demonstrated, though overcome herself, strove to comfort O’ville. Wright's mother is dead and his sis ter Katherine has taken the mother’s place in the home since that time. No arrangements have been made for , the funeral. A complication of kidney trouble is i supposed tn have been the cause for the ! first, sinking spell after it was believed 1 th* fever had been broken. First Mar In World to Fly. H'ilbur Wright shared with his brother. . Orville, the distinction of being the first to fly. Students of world progress have , placed these name? in the Hall of Fame In immediate proximity tn thot* other plo ' neers of advancement- Gutenburg. Watt. . Fulton. Stevenson. Edison. Bel! and Mar i coni Wilbur Wright and hi? brother, natives of Ohio, began their experiment? in flying when they were mere boys Their step father gave them a helicopter as a toy. The curious little instrument, when wound {up. flew abou’ the room over th* head? of the delighted youngster? T’nlike most ; boys, instead nf quarreling for possession ‘of the toy they played with it together and set their precocious young brains to i the task of first imitating and then im | proving upon the toy. As they grew up I their interest in aviation was manifested in the buiWing of kites, and finally in 1896 they took up in earnest the study of ac tual High’ They were in the bicycle business in Dayton, Ohio. It was with th* profits of this business that they defrayed their [ expenses of experiment. In 1901 they operated their first gliding motorless bi plan* Exhaustive study of air pres sure during the following winter was followed by more experiments in 1902. increased in 1903, and they then at tached to the glider a gasoline motor of the type used in automobiles. These later experiments uerc conducted ai Kitty Hauk. North Carolina, and in lieu of a passenger the - attached an anvil tn the biplane for the first flights. On the 17th day nf October, the machine flew, with its inventor, owing tn their secrecy, the world doubted their success until four days later, when they publicly demonstrated their ability to fly. and proved beyond contradiction that two years before any other man had flown for one minute they had flown repeatedly for more than twenty miles. Hailed With Honor Throughout Europe. With the perfection of the \< right bi plane. Wilbur Wright went abroad, where he was hailed in every land as the in genious Yankee who really could fly. In Taris, the navtive aeronauts served only ■ as a background for his fame. Royalty .' and nobility honored him everywhere, i but he remained the dry. secretive, cen tered, good-natured American, who was 1 making a business of flying. After ac- ( cepting contracts with several European governments for supplying airships for military purposes. Wilbur Wright re turned to the I’nited States to find that “the prophet without honor in his own country’’ was a wirld idol to b* honored i at last at home At the white house honors were show; ered on him and the army adopted him as’ savior of the nation's prestige in aerial na\igation a? applied to military man euvers Dayton closed up shop and held a three-day fete in honor of th* two men who had been known to them years agone as ‘‘those crazy Wright boys.” But the Wright brothers were too busy to play the hero They had machines to make for the world They were making them in Germany, in Scotland and in Dayton and still they could net make enough of them Their business grew and they quit fly - ing They taught others to fly and soon 1 the countryside of every state was billed j with flaming announcements of aviators j in thrilling exhibitions in the Wright ma- i chines \A ilbur Wright always counseled cau tion m flying It was a science with; him . not a circus performance. The hea\- ier-than-air machine he had perfected . had a valuable purpose in b orld advance ment and his hopes for it were most san guine. but. at the some time conservative. The main purpose of the biplane, he said, would he to make short trips speedily : that it would ever carry more than two or three passengers or engage in freight traffic, he did not believe Chicago Meet Opens, Flags Half Mast i HK'AGI '. May 30. —Pennants of the I Aero Club of Illinois fluttered at half! mast today in honor of Wilbur Wright j when the four days meet opened at] clt’ro fi’lri 3 meeting of ine di.—c-I tors to pay more fitting tribute to the I pioneer aeroplane inventor has been ' i ailed. "Wrigm > death Ls a severe blow to the progress of aviation." said James i S Stephens vice president of th“ club. Eight licensed aviators will take part j in the meet A novel feature will be, the demonstration of the new McCor- I miik Romme L'mbrellaplane. An exhi-j bition of mode! aircraft of al! styles; tnd makes wi<| b» held in conjunc’ion I w ith the meet Miss Katherine Stinson, j the first woman wh » has given public! demonstrations of flying in Chicago is . among those who will compete. GinNULGTEDON SCHOOLS, HE SNS ■ Educational Head Declares At- ; lanta Got Worst of It in Six Buildings. Walter R. Daley, president of the hoard of education, declared today that j the city had been hopelessly robbed in : its new schools He terms the work ' manship and materials in many of the j schools terrible. "It is my candid opinion that every ; new school, has cost the city from slfi,- . OQO to Jli.non more than it should have ! cost," he said. “In addition to this, | the interiors of many are falling to j pieces and the roofs are perforated i w ith leaks." I The members of the board of educa j tion are stirred almost to desperation today by conditions that have gradual, ly grown worse for many months. Con , tinuous efforts have been made to have j these schools repaired. The schools ' have already been accepted on the rec ommendations of the architects. The only recourse is the doubtful ability of the city to recover damages from the contractors. Blames the Architects. The architects are to blame," said tV. O. Stamps, member o£ the board . from the First ward. “They were paid ito supervise this work. The bricks.in ; the Walker Street school are crum : bling, the cement is giving way, the I plastering has fallen several times on the heads of th* children. That such things should happen shows clearly that th* architects did not do their work properly." The schools most affected are Lee Street Walker Street. Hill Street. Eng lish Avenue. Ashby Street and Georgia Avenue. Reports on all these have been made to Superintendent W M. Slaton by the principals. The schools engineer then made an inspection and the reports that t he members of the board of education now have are most discouraging to them. Robbed in Lot Purchases. Aiderman James E. Warren, chair man of t he schools committee of coun cil, said today that trie condition? were most discouraging. H* agreed with President Daley that the city has been robbed and added that, it had been stung in school lots as well as build ings. •“The fault—ls with the cubersome system of supervision." he said. “I fa. vored a change in our system of gov ernment not because 1 was opposed to any official, but because I realized, and every on* who considers the matter without prejudice realizes, that the city gets robbed in almost everything." President Daley said the board of ed ucation is required by council to build all of its schools by contract, let and supervised jointly by the board of edu cation and the bond commission. F. A. Quillian, chairman of the bond commission, is paid a salary to look after the work and most of lhe author ity is lodged with him. Daley Says He's Helpless. "I haven't the authority to call a joint meeting of the board of education and the bond commission to thoroughly in vestigate this matter," Haley said. "But' Mr. Quillian has, and 1 suppose he will call such a meeting." But Mr. Quillian did not think the situation so serious. He said today that he would not cal! a special meet ing of the joint boards, but that he would continue to urge the contractors to repair these buildings. | "If they refuse to make these repairs. ■ I will then call a joint meeting of the i board of education and the bond eom : mission and we. will report to council ! to sue the contractors for their bonds," i he said. FOR PHYSICAL EXHAUSTION Take Horsford's Acid Phosphate Especially r»con mended for physical ' and mental exhaustion, nervousness and I I weak digestion. ••• I CC c PURIFIES □•0.0. BAD BLOOD Bad blood is responsible for most of our ailments, and when from any cause it becomes infected with impurities, humors or poisons, trouble in some form is sure to follow. Muddy, sallow complexions, eruptions, pimples, etc., show that the blood is infected with unhealthy humors which have changed it from a’ pure, fresh stream to a sour, acrid fluid, which forces out its impurities through the pores and glands of the skin. A very common evi dence of bad blood is sores and ulcers, which break out on the flesh, often from a very insignificant bruise, or even scratch or abrasion. If the blood was healthy the place would heal at once; but being infected with impurities which are discharged into the wound, irritation and inflammation are set . up. the fibres and tissues are broken, and the sore continues until the blood is purified of the cause. S. S. S. is Nature’s blood-purifier and tonic, made entirely from roots, herbs and barks. It goes down into the circiiTa* tion and removes every particle of impurity, humor or poison, restores lost vitality, and steadily tones up the entire system. S. S. S. neutralizes any excess of acid in the blood, making it pure, fresh and healthy, and perma nently cures Eczema, Acne, Tetter, Salt Rheum. Boils, and all other skin eruption or disease. Book on the blood and any medical advice free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA ' 1.-t J l "* l»tr I .u'” 3 F* ’< we" rTB»~Nr--T-r*'-T* " 1 " The name of Griffin ahd teeth have been associated I together for 25 years. Griffin is a name which means guaranteed sei of teeth ’ At the lowest Jh PRICES. All jßflk work guar- XL - t -e fi. Backed by cen • J t j ry reputa tion. Pain- iMr iess dentis- IT i try. too. Est DR. E.G, GRIFFIN’S De MX, HALL ST—-OVER BROWN AND ALLEN’S. U.S.FLEETOFB x. SHIPS OFF CUBA Marines Ready to Intervene if President Gomez Fails to Crush Negro Revolt. KEY WEST. FLA.. May 30.—The United States is now preparf. V in- ■-( tervene in Cuba at any moment. Eight warships arrived during the night and early today and anchored in the harbor. They carry marines that will form the advance guard of the intervention forces unless President Gomez suc ceeds in crushing the negroe revolt. OHIO WILL VOTE AS TO ENDING DEATH PENALTY COLUMBUS. OHIO. May 30—Life imprisonment as a substitute for the death penalty will be the proposition to confront the voters of Ohio when they go to the polls next November. ’ The Ohio constitutional convention passed a resolution abolishing the death penalty and prescribing life imprison ment. Your Blood Needs purifying and your whole sys tem renovating in the spring, as pim ples. boils, eruptions., dull headaches, dyspeptic troubles, loss of appetite and that tired feeling annually prove. The most effective and successful medicine for the complete purification of the blood and the complete renova tion of the whole system Is Hood’s Sarsaparilla It will make you fee! better, look bet ter. eat and sleep better. Get it today in usual liquid form or chocolated tablets tailed Sa’satabs. Get That KODAK Today The whole outdoors await* your Kodak P-irks. Outings, Picnics.. Vacations —they are incomplete without a Kodak. Th* new vest pocket Kodak and the Folding Brownies ar* small and practical. The larger Kodaks are made in sizes and special equipments to suit your exact require ments. Send for catalog of Kodaks, or come in and look them over. M’e do expert developing, finishing and enlarging and carry full line of fresh amateur supplies. A. K. Hawkes Co. KODAK DEP’T 14 Whitehall St. “On the Viaduct” •