Newspaper Page Text
2A
0.3, AR FORCE OF 7001
QUCHLY TOBENADEFI
WASHINGTON, July 21.-~After a
few short weeks of practice the vol
unteers in Uncle Sam’'s military avia
tion training schools have indicated
that America will surpass the nations
of the world In flying. The hundreds
of “volunteers gathered at the four
training flelds now in operation have
shown a greater aptitude in aerial
navigation than did the British or
French novices.
In some ingtances men have learned
the ticklish art of equilibrium within
three hours after they began to fly.
8o uniformly successful have the
new aviators been under the instruc
tion f American officers that their
teachers are now laying greater stress
upon their duties as machine-gun
operators, photographers, map
sketchers, etc,
“They learn to fly easy enough’” is
the universal decision of the War De
partment experts,
The four flelds now in use are lo
cated at Rantoul, I1l.; Dayton, Ohio;
Mount Clemens, Mich, (near Detroit),
and Belleville, 111, (near St. Louls).
The Wilbur Wright field at Dayton,
largest of the group, will accommo
date 300 students at a time, and now
has 1.700 volunteers on its list, These
include the machinists, canvas repalr
ers and others who are not actually
studying aviation, Three hundred
students may be taught in one class
on this immense field.
The other fields accommodate from
800 to 1,000 men, and have facilities
for the instruction of 150 men at a
time. This constitutes one aeroplane
pquadron,
Under American Experts.
Contrary to the impression, which
has been spread abroad, the Ameri
cans are not learning flying under the
instruction of French and British ex
perts, These latter are frequently
on the field, but they serve simply in
an advisory capacity. The actual work
of teaching the oung alrmen is in
the hands of United States commis
sioned and noncommissioned officers
who, in the signal crops, have been
studying the subject for years. ‘
The progréss made by the young
aimen has caused army officers to
revise hastily certain schedules which
they had prepared, ‘
When the first camps were opened,
the belief was generally expressed
that the men could not be trained in
Jess than eight months. A fatal ab
sense of that mysterious “sense of
equilibrium” was feared in many of
them. Within a week this time was
cut to six months, and before the sec
ond week was out the officers ex
pressed their Mlef that the rank and
file could be made ready for France
in four months. Now they are talk-
Fighting in Air Is Main
Part of America in War
WASHINGTON, July 21.—Discuss
ing the $640,000,000 appropriation for
air fleets, Brigadier General George O.
Squler, chiet signal officer, made the
fcllowing statement:
To develop all the possibilities of
fighting in and from the air in this
present war will be America's great
part. Europe is§ war weary and ex
hausted. The personnel of our allies
for the most effective military avia
t'on has been used up, killed in the in
fantry, cavalry and artillery. 1 mean
the young men between 19 and 25
years of age—the period of life when
men are at their best for aerial work.
In Germany this class of personnel
has certainly been exhausted. So it
remains for us.saminu in with a fresh
viewpoint, to e this thing the first
possible minute,
Nothing else counts. Saving a week
of this war would be cheap at any
price. And the United States alone
can make this contribution to her al
lies and the world. We can outman
all other countries involved, friends
and foes, and we can surely outbulld
them. So we should make this a great
national plan to win, to make our
contribution to the cause something
that will be distinctly American In
eonception and in magnitude,
Promptness Needed.
And there must be promptness lt‘
any cost, for the sake of our own peo
ple as well as for the people of Eu
rope. To win quickly by the sheer
weight of the number of our machines
means the sending of the minimum
number of men of the United States
to the trenches.
We can train our men for actual
war service in the air in seven
months, comprising eight weeks of
ground work and four months of fly
ing at the training schools In this
country, and then a month of inten
sive battle plane training work in
France. | don't know how many will
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Ing of “graduating some of the
classes In two months,
Among the group of newly acquired
aviators, there are collége men, auto
moblle salesmen, mechanics, chauf.
feurs, yatchtsmen, hborsemen, poio
players and policemen, Such names
as J. P. Warburg, of New York, son
of Paul M. Warburg, of the Federal
Reserve Board; Henry P. Davison,
Jr.,, and F. T. Davison, sons of the
banker who is & partner ™ the com
pany of J. Pierpont Morgan & Com
pany; W. A. Rockefeller, E. R. L.
Gould, G, C, Depew and J. M. Vorys,
of New York, and R, A. Lovett, of
Boston, are found on the lists,
The Alrcraft Production Board of
the Council of National Defense, of
which Howard Coffin is chairman,
has co-aperated with the Federal
Government in a plan of instruction
which will probably remain effeclive
as long as the war lasts,
It has been necessary for the board
to amplify its ériginal plans coslder
ably since it began operations. It
may be necessary to amplify (hem
again. But it Is safe to predict that
on whatever scale they are tonducted
the methods of instruetion now used
will be continued,
Rebel Against Strictness.
The gravest fault with the Ameri
ecan civillan, so army officers have
found, is his rebelliousness against the
strict regime of military life. Intel
ligent, accustomed to do his own
thinking and to guide his own actions,
he finds it hard to grasp the idea that
he is a minute cog In a yast military
machine—that he must not think for
himself or act for himself.
Officers declare that it is more dif
ficult to reconcile their civilian pupils
to the idea of military discipline than
it is to tcach them to fly. \
But by infinite patience and ap
peals to the unselfishness of the stu
dentg they have succeeeded in drilling
these lessons into the first aeronauti
cal Instruction class.
A certain number of newly-fledged
puplls will be retained at the fields
for the instruction of those who come
after them, Thus the army and navy
will establish a egort of “endless
chain” system of practical teaching
whereby the raduatlnx class wiil
undertake the improvement of the
“freshmen.”
Within a year this country will
have turned out 20,000 pilots, at the
lowest estimate, With mechanics, ob
servors, machine gun operators and
photographers this represents an
aerial force of some 70,000 or 50,000
men.
The estimated cost of a training
aeroplane of standard type is $6,000.
A battleplane, it has been estimated,
will cost from SB,OOO to SIO,OOO,
be needed. That, agaln, depends upon
Von Hindenburg.
But we want enough to operate in
regiments and brigades if necessary,
to make all Germany unsafe, to force
her to demobilize her alr forces at the
front and send the men and machines
back to protect the cities. This will
blind her artillery and render it help
less by depriving it of the range find
ers.
Can Destroy Transportation. |
. F‘urthermfire.. our regiments nn(:
rigades will be able all of
Germany's interior nm%:!nupor-‘
tation for the movement of troops and
supplies. They will be able to rob the
enemy fleet of the security it now en-
Joys at Kiel. |
An airplane can now carry and drop
1,000 pounds of explosives. llf that is
not enough to sink a dreadnaught it
certainly can disable it for three or
four months, and then it can be dis
\nbled agaln in the mu&:ay after re.
pairs. We can make t Kiel Qanal
itself useless.
These are safne of the things that
American can do if she has a safficient
preponderance of machines. In addi
tion to all that we can carry on the
more conventional aircraft warfare
along the front, working on the three
levels, ranging all the way from the
altitude of 19,000 feet of the solo ma
chines down through the one-mile
level of the range finders to the bomb
dropping machines flylng as low as
circumstances call for or admit.
Waste No Time.
We will waste no tlme in experi
menting with battleplane devices of
our own before we begin the vork of
construction., On the contrary, we
will call on our allies to furnish us
with their best plans and specifica
tions, with which we can rush our
building program,
It will require necromancy, how
ever, to enable the United States to
carry out an effective aviation pro
gram within a year. Though war was
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN A_gg_w_sgamr for Peom Who Think — SUNDAY, JULY 22, 1917.
AMERICA UNDER ARMS--A GERMAN VIEW
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Against This Array of Talent Germany Can Oppose Only Soldiers.
—From Lustig Blaetter, of Berlin.
declared more than three months ago,
the great aviation plan is still on pa
per and was not even concelved six
weeks ago.
No one understands the colossal
difficulties confronting the United
States in its aviation program better
than Captain de la Grange, of the
French army, who is here to give the
Administration the benefit of his ex
perience in developing the flying
forges of France.
Aviators Quickly Made.
The formation of a large aviation
section by the United States, he said,
‘u only a question of money. It takes
three¢ to four months to train a pilot.
We already have seen how quickly
sturdy young men can be turned into
excellent aviators.
In less than a year it would be pos
sible to have more than 5,000 pilots.
These pilots would be trained for the
first few muThn in the United States
.fii! for the last months In the Ameri
can schools that is now being created
in France at Issoudan,
The important question is that of
material. If the Government wishes
to, before April 1, 1918, it can have a
tremendous sero fleet. Suppose it de
cided to have only 5,000 planes and
10,000 motors. In order to keep that
number of aeroplanes always at the
front it will be necessary to build 2,000
planes and 4,000 motors per month,
viz.: 18,000 planes and 36,000 motors
during the next nine months. There
fore, between January 1, 1918, and De
cember 31, 1918, the United States
‘must build 22,000 planes and 44,000
motors.
Factories Must Do Big Work., |
This means a great effort on tho‘
part of the American factories. They |
can make this effort, as they have al
ready the buildings, the workmen and ‘
part of the machinery needed. They
have also a large number of the best
scientists and technicians. The slze of
the ordars given them will insure ob
taining the money necessary to organ
ize the plants for their construction.
Two difficulties will be met at once.
The first that of skilled labor. In
constructing airplanes, machinists nre‘
not sufficient; very good engineers are
needed and a great number of them.‘
The necessary steps should be taken
to recruit these men as soon as possi
ble, and, in view of this, the board of
production is sending a commission
composed of skilled workmen to
France, so that they should study the
methods used in the factories there.
When finished they will return to the
United States, will apply all they have
learned, and will be able to train
workmen as well,
20 Motors Each Month at Plants,
The stcond difficulty is that of man
ufacturing quickly enough the ma
chines and tools necessary for build
ing such a large supply of planes and
motors. Although the best American
engineers are giving all their atten
tion to this, it will be impossible, I am
afraid, to build these machines fast
enough so that an January 1, 1918,
sach factory will be able to produce,
not ten motors a month, but twenty
and thirty.
In my opinion, there is only one
way in which this difficulty can be
surmounted. It is to realize that the
work must go on night and day, and,
in consequence, to organize night
#hifts so that the machines will never
be idle,
1 am convinced that the quickest
way In which the United States can
help the Allies is by aviation. In nine
‘months from now, on April 1, 1918, |
am sure it will be possible to have a
corps of 5,000 aviators trained, equip
ped and armed.
OF SCHEDULE.
Effective Sunday, July 22, L. & N.
train No. 831 will arrive Atlanta 11:45
a. m. Train No. 33 will arrive Atlanta
10:26 p. m.~ Advertisement,
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SENATE DEFEATS PLAN
OF POWER FOR HOOVER
opened the ball by announcing that
he was against the whole bill.
‘ “Labor uniong have sent me in
structions on how to vote, but I don’t
pay any more attention to them than
I would to Samuel Gompers,” he an
nounced,
Two-dollar wheat wase the topic
which was uppermost. Declarations
by Mr. Hoover that $1.756 would be
enough of a guarantee were freely
guoted. Senator Shaffroth said he
thought $2 was going too fas-when
the interest of the consumer was con
sidered.
The chief change came when Sen
ator Hitchcock was successful in al
tering the Chamberlain amendment of
“not less than $2 per bushel at the
prinecipal interior primary market” to
read “markets.”
Chamberlain immediately an
nounced that he would vote for an
amencdment by Norris which allowed
the President to fix the price.
“The Hitchéock amendment makes
the price $2, plus trangportation,
ncew,” he sald. “We might as well
strike out all definite price fixing as
the Norris amendment does.”
This angered Reed, who said it was
“unfair to take away the guaran
Named by President
——-+—-
WASHINGTON, July 21.--The list
of men appointed by .Proaldent Wil
son to compose the different boards
over the country to which exemption
pleas must be made was announced
by Adjutant General Crowder tonight.
Boards in Southern States other than
Georgia follow:
NORTH CAROLINA, Eastern Dis
trict.—G. . Bradham, John D, Langs
ton, Dr. Charles O'H. Lauginghouse,
E. R. Peace and A. W. Pate. Western
District—W. B, Gibson, O. R. Jarrett,
Dr. John Wesley Long, R. B. Wedwine
and W. N. Reynolds.
ALABAMA, Northern District, Di
vision No, I.—E. W, Gray, Dr. R, P.
Huger, Hugh McElderry, Emmet
O’'Neal, Priestly Toulman. Division
No. 2.—0 Otto Agricola, Dr. W, J. Cal
loway, Sheriff Lacy, John Peebles, R.
I, Spragins. Southern District.—Joe
Oglesby, William Newton, Dr. 8. 8.
Pugh, J. J. Russell, H. 1. Shelley,
Middle District—M. E. Barganier,
Algernon Blair, John Gamble, A. H,
Rankin, Dr, Merrick D. Thomas.
SOUTH CAROLINA, Eastern Dis
trict.—William Godfrey, R. Q. Jefferds,
Robert B. Scarborough, W. Stuckey,
Dr. Robert Wilson, Jr. Western Dis
trict.—Marion J. Davis, 1. W. Gaston,
Dr. E. A. Rines, J. E. McDonald, A. F,
McKissiek.
Boy, 10, Had Never ]
Heard of the Bible
e |
LONDON, July 21.—A boy of ten,
called as a witness at Marylebone on be
half of the education department of the
London County Council and described as
very intelligent for his age. told the
magistrate he had never heard of the
Bible and did not mflv what it was,
He also said he had né@ver been to church
or Sunday school.
“You can not do anything with this
‘boy."” said the magistrate, “He does
;nmh seem to knaw the nature of an
oath "
f:lee." as it would “discourage produc
on,”
LaFollette Enters Discussion.
In the middle of the wheat discus
sion LaFollette rose
“Agencies have set to work since
this bill came here,” he said. “The
speclal interests have shown their
great power, the manufacturing in
terests of New England, the alumi
num interests of Utah, and so on.
“They took the subjects off into a
corner, struck from it control of the
‘necessaries’ and produce a bill with
not even the name of the maker upon
it,” he shouted. “It is so framed now
as to undo the work of the Senate
and the Agricultural Committee.
“It frees the great interests of any
control and fixes on agricultural in
terests the burden of furnishing to
the country the products of the soil,
regulated by a board, which really
amounts to one man.
“There has been an exhibition for
some weeks here of the effect of these
powerful intersts so strong in control
of legislation for the last quarter cen
tury. .
“At the penalty of going to jail, you
are making the agricultural interests
fix the price of wheat at a price not
fixed by the world markets.”
Conferees were appointed after the
bill had passed. They will sit with
the conferees from the House and en
deavor to adjust the changes made.
.
U. 8. Soldier Is Held
(By International News Service.)
NEW YORK, July 21.—Karl Basel,
&
P expert photographer and a private
n the recruiting squad of the First
New .;‘?rsey Infantry, was today taken
from Newark to the internment camp
at Ellis Island. He is suspected of
being a German spy. He was for
merly a noncommissioned officer in
the German army, Beyond admit
ting he was a war prisoner, Federal
officials refused to tell what evidence
they had obtalmfi‘asainst him. He
will be closely gwhrded until disposi
tion is made of his case.
Basel is suspected of being the tool
of a recognized agent of the German
Government. For weeks he has been
under heavy guard in the Essex
County jail at Newark. His arrest fol
lowed reports by agents of the De
partment of Justice, who have been
trailing him on his frequent leaves
of absence from the First Regiment
armory,
Taken After Flight
H. B. Bolt, of No. 200 Lee street,
was held by police last night following
an alleged attempt earlier in the day
to cash at the Third National Bank a
spurious check for $317 on the An
derson Mercantile Agency, by which
he wag employed until a few days ago.
According to police, the check was re
fused by the teller, who recognized
the signature as a forgery, and Bolt
ran from the bank. Late in the aft
ernoon he was arrested by Detectives
Powers and Hollingsworth.
Bolt came to Atlanta from Chatta
‘nooga some time ago.
’ 7,000 LOST PIPES RETURNED.
LONDON, July 21.—More than 7.000
lost pipes, which were picked ur on
treins on the Metro;‘\‘olltln Railway lines,
have been lhorougely cleaned and re
stemmed and are being sent to the sol
diers in France.
Boards Given Instruction as to
Correcting Errors, Summoning
Drafted Men for Examination.
Continued From Page 1.
. |
ready for distribution not later than
Tuesday |
“The next step will be the certifica
tion of the results of the drawing to
4,607 lceal boards and the application
by each board of its chart to its se
rially numbered list. *This need con
sume but little time, and when done
the order of priority of the nearly
10,000,000 registrants to report for
examination will be revealed. Such
additional drafts as may be ordered
by the President will be filled by call
ing men in the order ofr this estab
lished priority, and no further draw
ing will ever be necessary. Each lo
cal board, upon receipt of its chart
and upon notification by the Governor
of the quota to be raised by it, may
proceed at once under regulations al
ready promulgated to summon men
for examination.
| Praise for Newspapers.
“We have now passed the stage of
the execution of the selective service
‘act, and when we must have concert
of action by States. In raising State
contingents the race is to be the
)swiflcst.
“I can not let this opportunity pass
without adverting to the great value
of the assistance which has been so
earnestly and efficiently renderea wy
the press.
“Without the systematic campaign
of public information that prepared
the country for the registration the
enrollment of 10,000,000 men on the
sth day of June would have been
impossible. The generous support of
the newspapers through the period
since registration day is appreciated,
and only the most thorough effi
ciency could haye placed upon the
streets within a few hours after the
first number was dhawn lists for
each registration district, showing the
persons who would be summoned for
examination on the first call of the
local boards.”
General Crowder has been without
gleep for more than 36 hours. He did
not leave the room in which the draft
was held until after 4 o’clock this
‘morning. He went home, but could
not sleep. So he spent the rest of
the night reading a history of the
Punic wars. Bright and early this
‘morning he was at his desk.
The first thing he did was to clear
‘away the difficulty which had arisen
over the drawing o%a blank number
as the 10,004 th capsule.
That Missing Number.
The general ordered that the slips
bearing the numbers be assembled
into groups of thousands and counted,
o as to determine what the missing
number was. It was discovered to be
4,662. He then ordered it placed on
the tally lists in the 10,004 th place,
where the blank had been drawn.
No hardship was worked on an
man by the error, as if the slip ha
borne the number 4,662 it would have
been recorded as that when drawn in
the 10,004 th place. e
General Crowder this morning re
ceived a letter from Secretary Baker,
in which the latter said:
| “When this letter reaches you, the
actual drawing of the numbers select -
ing the men for the first national
army of 500,000 men will have been}
completed, and the third stage in your
great task brought to a successtul{
conclusion.
“There remain, of course, the aiff
culties of applying the exemptions
provided by the statute, and to this
task I know you will give the same
splendid services, but 1 can not allow
this epoch-making achievement to\
pass even this stage of its accom
plishment without rendering you my‘
personal and official thanks and ex
pressing my judgment that the coun
try owes to vou the success which
has attended the steps so far taken.”
Chances Three to One.
General Crowder’'s office will send
the tabulated sheets by mail to the
various locxl‘ exemption boards on
Monday night. They will reach the
most distant board within five days.
The men, under the law, are sup
posed to acquaint themselves with
their positions on the list of their
local board in order that they may
know their liability for service, but
‘the boards will advise by mail when
to report. Officials of the War De
\partmpnt_ today estimated that only
one man out of five will be held for
gervice,
Xo matter what his position on the
list, they estimated the chances of
the healthy unmarried young man to
be only 3 to 1 against being ordered
out.
Indications today were that there
would be far fewer claims for exemp
tion than officials had anticipated.
From all parts of the country came
messages showing how anxious the
manhood of the nation ils to serve.
FEven aliens are anxious. The follow
ing message from a Spaniard was re
ceived today by Secretary Baker:
“you drew my number first, and,
although I am not an American citi
zen, but a Spaniard, and have never
applied for naturalization papers, 1
congider it such an honor to be the
first one drawn that 1 beg to offer
you my services to fight the war for
freedom and democracy thrust on this
great nation.
“SAMUEL SANJINES."”
Sanjines’ home {s in New Orleans.
General Crowder today ruled that
men drafted yesterday may still en
list in the army, navy, National Guard
or Marine Corps until officially noti
fied to appear before the local boards
for examination,
Rules for Correcting
Errors in Draft Cards
(By International News Service,)
WASHINGTON, July 21.—Provost
Marshal General Crowder tonight
made public the rules and regulations
prescribed by the President for de
t¢ rmining the order in which persons
represented by the numbers drawn
yi. terday will be called for service by
the respective local boards. The reg
ulations describe at length the order
e s
FALL VEGETABLE PLANTS.
Get freshly drawn plants for fall garden skips and
vacant rows. Celery, special fall strain tomatoes,
jce-rasistant collards, early and late fall cabbage,
egg plants, kohl-rabi, Shelley Ivey, 119 Peachtree
St. Ivy 1525,
directing the scheduling of the num
bers exactly as they were drawn from
the bowl,
Any registeation card received after
July 10, or found to have been im
properly, erroneously or illegally se
rially numbered or that has not in
some cther respect been serially num.
bered in striet accordapce with the
regulations will not be given a se
rial number, but will be sent to the
adjutant general of the State, who,
under the direction of the Governor,
will. assign a serial number to the
card as follows:
When any registration card is found
to bear more than one serial number
there shall be assigned to such card
the lowest in number of the numbers
which it bears, provided such num
ber is not borne by any other regis
tration card in possession of that
board. The remaining number shall
be disregarded.
Will Choose by Lot. i
When two or more registration
cards are found bearing the same se
rial number with fractions added to
the number for the purpose of distin
guishing the card, or letters for the
same purpose, or any other distin
guishing marks, one of the cards is
to be chosen by lot and assigned the
“common serial number” which both
bear and the other to be regarded as
having no serial number,
When the serial number on a card
is found to be illegible and a cohsec
utive number is found to correspond,
such card also “is declared to have
no serial number,
Serial numbers for all cards bear
ing no serial numbers are to be de
termined by lot by the adjutant gen
eral of the State under conditions to
be prescribed by the Governor. These
will consist of shuffling the cards
beaiing no seriai number and then
assigning serial number in the origi
nal list from one up, but if there are
no vacant serial numbers these cards
are to be given the next highest serial
number to that for which registrants
already have been assigned. For in
stance if the highest card in a district
is 2334, the number of the card with
out serlal number would be made
2336, and the holder of the card would
be in the place of 2335 as drawn from
the bowl.
“The method of determining the
order to be followed by each local
board in calling for military service
the persons whose registration on
cards are in its possession and which
have been given a ‘serfal number’ in
accordance with the rules and regu
lation prescribed, is: =
How Call Will Be Made. |
“A list of the names of the persons
whose registration cards are in its
possession and have been so serially
numbered shall be made by each local
board as required by section 14 of
the rules and regulations prescribed
by the President under date of June
30, 1917.
“The first name to be entered on
the list prepared by each local board
shall be the name of the person the
‘serial number’ of whose registration
card was first placed in such sched
ule containing the numbers from 1 to
10,500, both inclusive, reading down
from the top of the first page of the
schedule disregarding the numbers in
the schedule which do not appear on
any registration card so serially num
berad and in the pogsession of the lo
cal board.
“Before the name of the first per
son on this list shall be written the
‘serial number’ of his registration
card.
“The order number, that is, the
'numbefi" designating the order in
which he will be called for military
service to be written on the list made
by each local board after the name of
such first person on each list is num
ber 1. The next name to be entered
on the list prepared by each local
board shall be the name of the person
whose ‘serial number is next placed
in such schedule containing the num
bers from 1 to 10,600, both inclusive,
reading down from the top thereof
and disregarding the numbers in the
schedule which do not appear on any
registration board so serially num
bered and in the possession of the
local board.
Must Number Whole List,
“The order to be “written on the
list made by each local board after
the name of such person on each list
is No. 2. The order in which the
names of all such persons shall be
entered on txe list prepared by each
local board shall be determined in the
exact manner above described for de
termining the names of the first and
second persons on each such list and
this method shall be pursued by each
local board until the name of every
person whose registration card is in
its possession and which has been
given a ‘seriad number’ in accordance
with the rules and regulations, and
shall have been entered vpon the list
I Wish We Had a More
Distinctive. ‘L
istinctive. Letter
h d, *
—said a business man the other day to one of
our salesmen.
Do YOU realize the importance of your let
terhead as an,a,dvertlsement?
A good letterhead creates a favorable im
pression on the mind of your customer. It
serves as an introduction. It is the equiva
lent to saying: “Permit me to introduece my
self—l am,” ete.
The letterhelé of a machine shop should be widely different
from the l¢fterhead of a bank. It should reflect the char
acter of the business. Tais it ean do by proper arrange
ment and proper use %f type.
It must stand out, like a ptrong individual in a crowd, among
the scores of ‘‘good, béd and indifferent’’ letterheads that
reach the same desk at ‘the same time.
The business man we quoted in our headline above
« certainly had the right idea. And we were glad to
work with him in dreating a letterhead for him
which was strong, yet simple and dignified.
Perhaps we can help YOU aith your printing problems
Webb & Vary, e
’
Printers and Engravers
Atlanta, Georgia \
/ -
required to be made by each local
board by said section 14,
“In furnishing the quotas required
to be called and furnished by each
local board in accordance with the
directions received from the Gover«
nors of the respective States or Ter«
ritories, or from the Commissioners
of the District of Columbla, as the
case may/ be, acting for and by the
direction of the President, each local
board shall call the persons whose
pames are on the list prepared by It
as above required in the exact order
fixed and stated on such list”
| Cards Received Late.
~ “All registration cards received by
any local board after July 10, 1917,
‘shall be copied and a list of the names
of all persons whose registration cards
are so received made by the local
board. The original registration card |
shall be retained by the loeal board,
and no ‘serial numbers’ will be placed
before the name of any person on
the list to be so made. A copy of all
such cards and a list of the names
of all persong whose registration cards
have been so received shall be duly
forwarded to the Adjutant General of
the State, Territory or the District
of Columbia, as the case may be, or
to the officlal who under the regula
tions is charged with the duties of the
Adjutant Genera of the State, Terri
tory or Distriet,
‘ “Whenever the examination of a
registration card in the possession of
‘any local board discloses that it has
not been serially numbered or that it
‘haa been improperly, erroneously or
{llegibly serially numbered, or has not
in some other respect been serially
numbered as required by section 9
of the rules and regulations, it shall
be the duty of the local board having
jurisdiction thereof to forward such
registration card to the Adjutant Gen
eral of the State, Territory or the Dis
trict of Columbia, as tfi;nse may be,
without assigning any sérial number
thereto.
BABY BORN WITH TWO TEETH.
LEWISTOWN, IDAHO, July 21—
When a daughter was born recently to
Dr. and Mrs. Walter Braddock, of Lew
istown, Idaho, they found she had two
teeth with which to start life. This is
sald to be the first instance on record
in which a child had teeth at birth. The
father is a dentist, which may have
gomething to do with it.
2 0
L {1
e e
’,‘%’ieo : L ,'
i R =
M 1111
A Browni
For the youngsters will
keep them out of mischief,
out of doors.
The No. 0 BROWNIE
Costs but $1.25.
Other Brownies up to $12.00.
Our Stock Is Complete.
Bring Us Your Films for
Correct
- Development
Our Salespeople Will Help You
Obtain , the
BEST RESULTS.
Eastman Kodak Company,
117 Peachtree.