Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 31, 1913, Image 10
12 A
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, CIA., SUNDAY, AUGUST 31, 1913.
\
V1TH A TLANTA 1\
AANVFACTi
URERS AND JOBBERS
Fabrics to Retail as High as $10
to $12 Per Yard Will Not
be Uncommon.
Tons and Tons of Sweets
Laid Away for Holidays
Atranta Candy Factories Put Christmas Confec
tions in Cold Storage Homs.
Great Growth Made
By Paint Industry
Value of Products Rises Sixfold In
Forty Years, Increasing 79.6 Per
Cent in Decade.
The Atlanta woman who wants to
be at "the top of the mode” this fall,
*o far a« her silk garment* are con
cerned, will have to pay heavily for
the privilege. Not for years have the
fashionable silks been held so high.
In grandmother’s time it was con
sidered nothing unusual to pay $10 to
$12 a yard for the queen of fabrics,
but in the present generation, with
Us skilled labor, its cheaper raw ma
terial, and its Intricate power looms,
this figure seems remarkably high
to the layman. Nevertheless, the real
ly fashionable woman will have to
pay $10 a yard and more this sea-
e°n.
According to creators of authorita
tive styles, the fall mode can he met
acceptably only with the highest-
priced foreign and domestic weaves.
Along Whitehall street it will not
be unusual this fall to see silken fab
rics wholesaling as high as $0 and $8
a yard Most of these high-priced
goods are of foreign make, but the
best-made domestic silks do not fall
far behind. Jobbers are showing a
40-lnch velvet brocade effect on chif
fon, from European looms, at $6 a
yard. None but the highest types of
shops and stores will handle these
goods, and the retail price for them
will range from $12 to $15.
Another gorgeous imported fabric,
a tinseled warp-print effect on chif
fon, is offered at $8. This, It Is said,
will sell at retail from $15 to $16, ac
cording to the shop or store in which
It is bought. Shimmering gold and
silver effects on satin grounds have
also been brought across the Atlantic,
and are being wholesaled at a figure
close to $10.
And there are also fabrics shown
that go wholesale at fully $10 a yard.
The most noteworthy of these has a
raised velvet floral design hand-paint
ed on a satin ground. Brocaded ef
fects, with tinsel and design In block
print, are offered at this figure as
well. Chiffon cloth, with dainty small
floral designs, is expected to meet
general approval, and is not so ex
pensive as one of the others
In the high-priced domestic fab
rics offered this season are heavy
crepes de chine, which will retail at
$4.50 to $5 a yard. In the old days,
if the manufacturers,could have made
these particular patterns, they would
doubtless have sold at retail around
$9 in considerably narrower widths.
Poplins, both plain and brocaded, are
included, too, but they come under
the cheaper and middle class heads
at $2 to $5 a yard. Good qualities of
eharmeuse, which will again he worn
this season, may be bought for from
$2 to $2.50. Messaline.s, the back
bone of the cheaper qualities of silk,
will be obtainable at $1 to $2 a yard.
Among the real novelties of the
season, on which the prices are seem
ingly limited only by the means of
the purchaser, are vestings for wom
en. These are amde up in heavily em
broidered and tinseled effects on satin
grounds, after the manner of the Co
lonial days, and many of them are
truly exquisite.
Chinese Knit Goods
Shipped To America
Customers All Orientals—Products
of American Machinery and
Yarns Are/Preferred. -•
The export of Chinese-made knit
garments (made in Hongkong of
American cotton yarn) to the United
States, is the latest development of
Hongkong-American trade, according
to Consul General G. E. Anderson. Th»*
export of these garments is made al
most entirely for the use of Chinese
in the United States, but it has grown
*4o considerable volume and Hong
kong factories are paying considerable
attention to the trade. One factor>
reports that almost half of its entire
output is now being exported to the 1
United States.
The growth of the knitting factory
Industry in Hongkong is or decided
significance in the clothing and cotton
trade of this part of the world. The
factories have been developed almost
entirely within the last three years
The chief factory in some respects Is
a foreign concern known as the Wei
San Knitting and Spinning Company,
which has been In existence seven
years and has a dally capacity of 10u
to 120 dozen sweaters or pieces of un
derwear. • This factory employs about
125 people, mostly girls and young
men. whose wages run from 48 cent,
to $4.40 gold a week, the greater num
ber earning about $1 gold a week.
All of them use American knitting
cottons almost exclusively, claiming
that the American yarn runs better
In the machines and otherwise suits
their needs.
FLORIDA CONCERN STARTS
ELABORATE ROPE FACTORY
ST. JAMES CITY. FLA . Auk. 30.—
The Sisal Hemp and Development
Company has completed its 80-spin
dle mill, driven by steam and electri •
power, with a ten-hour capacity of
•ix tons of rope and twine. It has
also completed a machine shop and
tar plant for tarring the lath yarn
manufactured. Both manila and sisal
hemp are beinp' used, most of the sisal
being Imported from Nassau and the
manila coming from ^he Philippine
Islands.
Th*» company Is proceeding rapidlv
wlits hemp planting, and propose
to grow it in sufficient quantities 10
its factory consumption. About
100 men and women are now err»-
T yed in the sisal fields and the mill.
CALIFORNIA OIL OUTPUT.
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 30.—Total
K'r -■ output of oil In California for
t. - first six months of the year was
approximately 47,000,000 barrels.
, Bti-ed on this showing, the aggre-
[for the year should be about 94,-
f00 barrels. The output of the
six months has been increasing
in the history of the indus
try.
Preparations for the wl .ter holi
days are already being made by the
candy factories of Atlanta and con
fections in large quantities are be
ginning to fill spare in the storage
houses. The demand for confection
ery is so great in the holiday season
that the factories must be forehanded.
So, in summer, when the market is
dull, a supply Is manufactured and
stored.
Candy eaten by the American peo
ple is counted by the ton, and agents
aver that It vastly exceeds the
amount eaten by other peoples,
though France consumes an enor
mous amount.
The temperature In the candy
storage rooms is kept at about 60 de
grees. with fresh air Mowing through
all the time. Molasses candy is
stored in large quantities. Nothing
else can be packed in the rooms
which contain the candy, as the scent
of other articles is transferred and
affects the taste of the candy. Mo
lasses candy is easily acted upon and
demands a more even temperature
than other kinds.
Some materials which enter into
the making of candy and decorative
supplies are also piled in the store
house. Spain, Turkey, the East
Indies and France have sent nuts of
all varieties, France sends the most
walnut meats. The nuts are in large
boxes, each kind by itself, in one cor
ner almonds, in another pecans, and
in a third walnuts.
Barrels of holiday greens are also
in the cold storage rooms—holly
picked late in the fall, hemlock, pine
boughs, spruce, together with smilax
and shrubs with bright red berries,
evergreen for wreaths and laurel.
Ferns are picked in the summer and
fall months, tied in bunches and
stored for a year at a time, keeping
as fresh and unfaded as when brought
from their native woods.
Jute Grain Sacks Made Abroad
Should Come in Free, Wash
ington Man Believes.
Changes Which Reduced Tariff
Necessitates Can Be Made Only
as Conditions Arise.
NEW YORK, Aug. 30.—In the opin
ion of competent Judges, readjust
ment which tariff reduction is cer
tain to bring eventually In cotton
manufacturing has not as yet run
anything like its full course. There
have been many substitutions of la
bor-saving machinery. Standards of
efficiency in manufacturing methods
have been overhauled and cost of
production has been attacked from
standpoint of competition with for
eign goods.
There remain, however, many
things w'hich can only be met as oc
casion arises under actual competi
tion with reduced duties.
As between the North and the
South, the former with its 18,727,000
spindles and its production of higher
grade goods, will probably feel more
of the competitive burden than the
South. The problem of the South
covers a much wider geographical
area. In the thirteen States there are
765 mills with a splndleage of 13,-
008,083 and 650,156 looms, distributed
as below:
Mills. Capital. Spindle*. Loom*.
.Ala 64 $17,016,000 1.065.04 6 20.556
Ark 2 215.000 14.662 164
139 36.605,000 2.160.702 43.471
Ky 8 1.655,000 98.6*4 1.429
La. ..... . 4 1,800.000 Rfl.908 2.316
Min 19 2.835.400 186,172 4.781
Mo. .3 1.130,000 42,080 966
N. C 316 58.970.582 3,718,460 63.784
Ok la 1 227.500 5.712
C 157 75.324.082 4,650.156 21*560
Trnn 21 4,823.185 297.413 3.657
Tex 18 2.738.000 126,000 3.198
Va 13 10.104,500 516.206 13,904
765 $514,741,047 13.008,083650.156
The investment involved is $214,-
41,047. Since January 1 there has
been a slight decrease, duo to dis
mantling of a few Small mills and
the merging of others. Tariff changes
in prospect have not, however, pre
vented expansion. Southern mills in
creased their spindles by 730,975 in
the past twelve months. The feature
has been the tendency to increase ex
isting plants rathr than build new
ones.
Linen May Go Even
Higher, Says Expert
Foreign Manufacturers Shipping Only
About Twenty Per Cent of Usual
Supply to America.
NEW YORK, Aug. 30— According
to a linen importer, who has Just
returned from abroad, prices there
are high and firm, and a further ad
vance is not improbable.
Such expenses as new taxes, high
er wages, the increased cost of man
ufacturing supplies and the Increase
in raw materials have contributed
this scale of high prices, and there '*
no prospect of a drop at present.
Foreign manufacturers are now
shipping only about 20 per cent of the
usual amount of goods to America,
but the demand from other countries
is so great that their aggregate sales
are Increasing. The manufacturers
abroad are making goods only to or
der, and this is likely to cause difii-
culty when the tariff question is set
tled. and the usual demand from this
country begins.
It is thought that buyers can derive
no benefit by holding off until the
tariff is settled before placing their
orders, as the advances abroad will
offset any decrease in the duty. The
local demand with importers has in
creased to some extent during the last
two weeks, and dealers are more
hopeful regarding the trade outlook.
Medium auc. heavier weight white
dress linens promise especially well
for the coming spring, but it is
thought that waist materials will not
show any particular activity.
INDIAN COTTON SLUMPS
IN GRADE SECOND YEAR
The Times of India has some in
teresting comments on the recent
deputation from the International
Cotton Federation to Lord Crewe. It
Is true that in several parts of the
country there has been distinct suc
cess in producing cotton of an im
proved staple. Aind the Bombay mill
owners have snown themselves ready
to take as much of this as they could
get.
The trouble is that in the second
year of cultivation there is a marked
tendency to fall back to the low r
grade; this is not confined to a par
ticular case or even to one part of
the country.
The question is whether such de
terioration is inevitable, and “the cot
ton trade” says that it is not. attrib
uting It to "an alleged erroneous wav
of selecting seed from one year’s crop
for sowing the next crop.”
Real Woven Effects Wanted, but
Scarce Owing to Labor Trou
bles at Mills.
Plaids are Joining the black moires
ah .strangers in the ribbon market.
Real woven plaids are what is
wanted, and though on the looms of
a number of domestic mills, they have
not yet been turned out in any quan
tity because of labor troubles. A lim
ited amount of Imported plaids are
coming in now, but large houses have
been anticipating the demand, and by
another week it is believed more
goods will be procurable.
In broad silks, the plaids have beefi
popular, and are now’ difficult to se
cure. The ribbon demand is for trim
mings, such aB sashes and girdles.
Some of the ribbon houses have be
gun to note more inquiry for narrow
goods Early in the spring they were
the leaders, but dropped out very
completely this summer. Whether the
new interest in narrow effects is due
to the fact that they are plentiful in
the present scarcity of wide goods, or
whether they fill a style demand the
trade is not yet certain.
It is certain, however, that certain
narrow ribbons, such as grosgrains,
are w’anted for hat bands, and the
newest sandal effects in ladies’ foot
wear also are taking quantities of
narrow’ ribbons.
With the labor situation in Pater
son improved, it is said Paterson
manufacturers can go ahead more
confidently in their plans for next
spring. So far most of them have not
seen their way clear to offer goods
for that season, being uncertain as
to Drices and deliveries.
Arkansas Diamond
Fields Developed
Total of 1,375 Stones, Weighing 550
Carats, Found Since
August 1, 1906.
Diamonds were first discovered in
Arkansas Avgust 1, 1906, near the
mouth of Prairie Creek, in the vicinity
of Murfreesboro, Pike County, and
since that time approximately 1,375
stones, aggregating 550 carats, are re
ported to have been found in this lo
cality.
The diamonds in Arkansas occur
in a rock known as peridotite, and for
this reason, search for further areas
of the rock has been made. This
search has resulted in the finding
of three new areas, the know’n ex
tent of which Is much smaller than
that near Murfreesboro. They lie
within an area of one square mile,
about three miles from Murfreesboro.
The Kimberlite Diamond Mining
and Washing Company is erecting at
Kimberley a plant to wash the dia
mond-bearing earth to be hauled on
a tramway from its peridotite area
and from another tract near the mouth
of Prairie (’reek. Four diamonds of
good quality are said to have been
picked up on the surface, the largest
weighing 5 carats. Further develop
ment work to ascertain the extent of
the peridotite is now’ under way.
On another tract, where a little
washing for diamonds has been done
in a crude way without machinery, 20
diamonds have been recovered.
FALL SUITS SHOWN EARLY
TO STIMULATE TRADE
NEW YORK. Auk. 16.—Earlier
openings than usual of fall lines >f
women’s ready-to-wear garments will
be the rule this year in several of the
big stores. A number of instances
were reported in the cutting-up trade
where buyers had asked for quick de
liveries of their fall purchases. The
opinion prevailed that some of the
stores would be showing their mer
chandise within the next week or two.
Buyers for stores in the small East
ern cities are also asking early de
liveries to some extent. The idea
generally accepted in the trade is that
early openings of these Tines will be
made to stimulate business in one of
the dullest months of the year.
NEW YORK, Aug. 30.—The action
of the Senate in withdrawing the par
agraph of the tariff bill which relates
to burlap bags for further considera
tion, upset the trade in no small de
gree. The demand that burlap grain
bags be placed on the free list was
made by Senator Jones, of Washing
ton, on the ground that the farmers
who use thepe bags should get them
as cheaply as possible.
The amendment offered by the
Washington Senator read: “Provided,
That Jute grain bags, known com
mercially as standard Calcutta 22-
inch by 22-inch grain bags” (22-inch
by 26-inch was meant probably),
“shall be admitted free of duty.”
Senator Jones contended that, as
these bags were not made in this
country and are absolutely required
by the farmers for the export of
grains, they should be admitted duty
free. Whatever duty was levied on
bags of this description, the Senator
claimed, was simply that much of a
tax upon the farmer for exporting his
wheat.
During the debate It was pointed
out that the drawback clause enabled
buyers of bags of this sort to get back
most of the duty.
Interesting data on burlap and bags
is contained in a report of the pro
ceedings of the Bengal Chamber of
Commerce during the month of Jun- J
An excerpt from the records is as
follows:
“According to the latest available
figures, the total number of operatives
employed in the Calcutta jute mills is
202.948, of whom about 20,000. or, say,
10 per cent, are children under 14. It
follows that children form a most
important and indeed indispensable
element in the production of jute
goods. Naturally, therefore, any pro
posal to prohibit the importation into
a consuming market of goods manu
factured in factories employing chil
dren must be regarded with consider
able misgiving by Calcutta mill own
ers. And when the particular con
suming market is by far the largest
Individual market for cloth and one of
the largest markets for bags the
gravity of the proposal is obvious
During the year 1912-1913 the United'
States imported from Calcutta 663,-
293,316 yards of gunny cloth and
43,092.596 gunny bags. In addition,
Cuba imported 10.421,600 bags.”’
WASHINGTON, Aug. 30.—Statis
tics of the paint and varnish indus
try In the United States for 1909 are
presented in detail in a bulletin soon
to be issued by the Bureau of the
Census.
The value of products increased
$55,327,187, or 79.5 per cent, during
the decade 1899-1909, being almost six
times as great in 1909 as in 1869.
New York ranked first at the cen
suses of 1909 and 1904 in average
number of wage earners, value of
firoducts, and value added by manu
facture. In average number of wage
earners, Pennsylvania held second
place at both censuses, but in value
of products and value added by man
ufacture Illinois was second.
The cost of all materials used in
the combined industry was $79,016,000
in 1909, $59,827,000 in 1904, and $44,-
739.000 in 1899, the increase for the
decade 1899-1909 being 76.6 per cent.
The quantity of pig lead used in
the manufacture of paint and varnish
in all establishments increased 51.6
per cent during the decade 1899-1909;
that of wood alcohol 327.6 per cent
and that of grain alcohol, 354.9 per
cent Grain alcohol formed approxi
mately one-fifth of the total quantity
of alcohol used in the manufacture of
paint and varnish in 1909 and 1899,
but a considerably smaller proportion
in 1904.
Cotton Men To Meet
For Exhibit Decision
Probabilities Favor Their Taking
One of Four Floors In “Made-
in-Atlanta” Show.
Representatives of all branches of
the cotton trade, from planter to mill
man and seed crusher are expected to
meet within a week or so and make
final decision to take an entire floor
in the new Chamber of Commerce
building for a permanent exhibit of
the products of the South’s great
staple.
Few Southerners, to say nothing of
those from other sections of the coun
try, know the real scope of the uses
of cotton and cotton seed The ex
hibit will be an education to the gen
eral public, and it will serve to em
phasize Atlanta's supremacy in man
ufacturing lines.
The remaining three floors of the
proposed "Made-in-Atlanta” exhibit
practically are sold. The committee
from the Chamber of Commerce is
working steadily, and about 50 manu
facturers now have agreed to taka
space, an increase of a half dozen in
the week.
Credit Man Answers
Discount Grabbers
Has Excellent Letter for Those Who
Try to Get Deductions After
Date Specified.
A credit man who has established
something of a reputation for his po
lite but effective handling of trouble
some debtors has evolved a form let
ter which is attracting no little at
tention.
The letter is for use in connection
with those customers who seek to take
advantage of discounts after the ex
piration of the discount period, par
ticularly upon the plea that the ship
ment of goods was in transit beyond
the discount period. The. credit man
puts his argument as follows:
“If the purchasing house is the re
cipient of the confidence of the selling
house, there is no good reason why re
ciprocal confidence should not be
granted by the buyer, in the belief
that any error in the execution of the
order will be promptly corrected after
being adjusted.
“We firmly believe that there Is no
justification in varying discount terms
on the ground that the time required
for shipment exceeded the discount
period, or for any other reason. If
the purchaser believes that he should
he entitled to delay remittances for
invoices until the goods are received,
this should have been made clear at
the time of entering into the contract
and either agreed to or declined by the
selling house.
“We take the liberty, therefore, of
returning your check, believing that
you will concur in our ideas upon this
subject and mail us a check for the
full amount of the invoice.”
Russian Mills Buying
Cotton in Liverpool
Short Crop in Turkestan and Trans-
Caucasia Will Increase Imports,
Bulls Declare.
NEW YORK, Aug. 30.—The report
from Liverpool that Russia and the
continent were buying in that market
attracted considerable attention. It
is now claimed by bulls that spinners
have so cut down their reserve stocks
that they will be forced into the mar
ket. and that a buying movement once
started will soon gain headway.
One explanation for buying by Rus
sian mill interests is expectation of a
9hort crop in Turkestan and Trans-
Caucasia. Moreover, consumption is
on the increase in Russia, that coun
try not having felt the financial and
political disturbances to as great an
extent as other European countries.
Russia had a larger aggregate of
spindles March 1, 1913, than on any
preceding year, while stock of Ameri
can cotton was the smallest for four
years, and almost half that on corre
sponding date in 1912.
Bears contend that the Russian
crop promises well, that a season is
rarely unfavorable, since planters de
pend largely on irrigation, and tem
peratures are not subject to undue
changes.
SELLS YEAR'S
Prices for 1913 Pack Opened
Monday—Jobbers Clean Up
Business by Week-End.
“Salmon week” ended Saturday. At
lanta jobbers bought from Wednesday
through Saturday practically all of
the 60,000 cases of the succulent
canned fish which the city and its
jobbing territory uses annually.
The modern salmon trade, from the
time when the fish are caught in the
cold rivers of the Northwest to the
time when the goods are delivered,
presents one of the romances of the
business world. W. M. Burke, of H.
H. Whitcomb & Burke Co., Atlanta’s
foremost grocery brokers, gives an in
teresting account of the trade—a line
in which a year’s business is done
in two or three days.
“We represent Libby, McNeill &
Libby,” says Mr. Burke. “Other firms
represent other packing houses. The
competition for this business is keen
er than in almost any other line. By
concerted plan, prices for the year s
pack of salmon are announced on a
certain day, usually during the third
week of August. This year we re
ceived telegrams August 25 quoting
prices.
Orders in Advance.
“We had orders for thousands of
cases, subject to these quotation?,
from dealers who wanted Libby quali
ty and prestige. But most of the Job
bers wait to learn the figures quoted
by the competing packers. When the
price is announced, there is a scram
ble. The whole year’s business is
done in a couple of days. The job
bers know just about what they will
need for the year, and usually buy,
though some wait to see if there is to
be a decline. Others do not buy
enough, and have to supplement their
orders later on. But of the 60,000
cases of 48 one-pound or half-pound
tins each I would estimate that 50,000
are sold during the few rush days of
August.”
All the Libby salmon is canned in
Alaska. The fish, caught in almost
every kind of net known and with
fish wheels, are brought to buying
stations along the rivers. Thence they
go by fast power boats to the can
neries. Machinery cleans and skins
the fish, slices it, puts it in cans, seals
the cans and cooks the fish by steam
heat.
The cans, the labels, the boxes and
even the nails for the boxes are taken
to Alaska when the season begins,
and when it is over the steamers re
turn with the goods reajiy for im
mediate shipment.
Only Salt Added.
Nothing is added to the fish except
a quarter ounce of salt for each pound
of fish. There is ho more sanitary
food prodi>ct than canned salmon.
As to food value it ranks higu.
United States Government statistics
give canned salmon a food value of
.218 as compared to sirloin steak .16.",
ham .142. macaroni 134. eggs .131,
chicken .120 and white bread .090.
The Whitcomb-Burke Company has
received notice that the Atlantic-Pa
cific Steamship Company will run
three steamships from the Paciflo
Coast to Savann h and Charleston,
principally for the accommodation of
the salmon trade. One boat leaves
San Francisco early in October, one
in November and one ne. the end of
December. Rates for salmon will be
60 cents per 100 pounds in carload
lots and 95-cents per 100 pounds on
smaller quantities.
INVEST $250,000 IN FOXES.
For breeding black foxes and other
fur-bearing animals in captivity, the
British Columbia Black Foxes (Lim
ited), capital $250,000, has been form
ed ir« Vancouver. It has a 175-acre
tract, having an elevation of about
800 feet above sea level, seven miles
from Nanaimo. Six pairs of silver
black foxes will be used to start the
farm.
DIXIE PICKLE AND PRESERVING CO.
Manufacturers of
Pure Apple and Distilled Vinegar, Catsup, Pickles, Mustard, Pepper
Sauce, Sauer Kraut, Jelly, Etc.
CANNED GOODS
364 to 378 Marietta Street, Atlanta, Ga.
TIRED AFTER CONVENTION
MOORE TAKES VACATION
Harry T. Moore, secretary t»f the
Merchants and Manufacturers Asso
ciation. is taking a well-earned rest
at Wrightsville Beach. Mr. Moore,
on whom fell much of the load of
preparing for the Southern Merchants
Convention, was heartily glad to get
away.
The success of the Atlanta conven
tion has led Birmingham and New
Orleans to attempt the same thing
this rear New Orleans’ is just over;
Birmingham’s is under way.
A
FREE
TRIP
To Atlanta is avail
able to the mer
chant who buys an
adequate bill from
the members of the
Merchants’ Asso
ciation.
Write to
H. T. Moore
SECRETARY.
Rhodes Building,
Atlanta.
Write for our latest Catalogue. The leading merchant* are adding
the 5c and 10c departments. Why not one for your town?
McCLURE 10c CO., 47-49 S.Broad St.
Give Your “DIMES” a Chance
V0LLMER MANUFACTURING COMPANY
Moore Building
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
MAKERS OF FINE JEWELRY
Special Designs in Platinum
Engravers Diamond Setters Watchmakers
Specialists in Jewelry Repairing
ALABAMA
PENNANT
SEAL
For 15 Cents and the Pennant
Coupon That Appears Below
Regulation Size—12x30 Inches
Is suggested by us to be used as the centerpiece for table
cover made from the other fifteen pennants listed below,
15c each; 18c each by mail and coupon.
By using the Alabama Pennant Seal for a centerpiece you
have colors that blend well with all colors of the other fif
teen pennants.
For sale by the following Newsdealers:
IN ATLANTA
JACKSON-WESSEL DRUG CO., Marietta and Broad Streets.
CRUICKSHANK CIGAR CO., Peachtree and Pryor Streets.
GEORGIAN TERRACE CIGAR CO., Georgian Terrace.
WEINBERG BROS. CIGAR STORE, Alabama and Pryor Streets.
BROWN & ALLEN, Alabama and Whitehall Streets
HAMES DRUG CO., 380 Whitehall Street.
MEDLOCK PHARMACY, Lee and Gordon Streets.
WEST END PHARMACY, Lee and Gordon Streets.
JOHNSON SODA CO., 441 Whitehall Street.
ta
WHITEHALL ICE CREAM CO., 284 Whitehall Street. 'T
STEWART SODA CO., Cooper and Whitehall Streets.
TAYLOR BROS. DRUG CO., Peachtree and Tenth Streets.
TAYLOR BROS. DRUG CO., West Peachtree and Howard Streets.
JACOBS’ PHARMACY, Alabama and Whitehall Streets.
Out-of- Town Dealers
Out-of-Town Price, 18c and the Pennant Coupon.
BENNETT BROS., 1409 Newcastle Street, Brunswick, Ga.
JOE N. BURNETT, 413-A King Street, Charleston, S. C.
REX VTNING, Dalton, Ga. ——
ORA LYONS, Griffin. Ga.
SUNDAY AMERICAN BRANCH OFFICE, 165 East Clayton Street,
Athens, Ga. P. D. Cherry.
ROME BOOK STORE CO., Rome, Ga. ... ;/; , ~
CHEROKEE NEWS STAND, Rome, Ga. -
H. K. EVERETT, Calhoun, Ga.
J. D. BRADFORD, Sumter, S. C.
EARL A. STEWART, 451 Cherry Street, Macon, Ga.
ROBT. NEWBY, Vienna, Ga. tt—■ j
GEO. W. HORAN & SON, Dalton, Ga.
If your newsdealer can not supply you,
write us. We send all pennants any
where for 1 8 c£nts each and the Pen
nant Coupon.
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or all Pennants at the Special Reduced
Price of 15 Cents for each pennant when
presented to any Atlanta newsdealer or at the
offices of
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CAN
7 Edgewood Ave.
LIST OF PENNANTS
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College
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Ga. University
Alabama
Pennsylvania
Cornell
University
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Elk
Eagle
Odd Fellows
Columbia
University
Three cents extra if sent by mail or redeemed by out-
of-town newsdealers or agents
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