Newspaper Page Text
4A
Gives Opinion Against Conten
« tion That Beverage Is Not
Intoxicating.
WASHINGTON, May 24 An opinion
4% the effect that the brewing of beer
ppniaining 2.7 per cent nleohol is 1l
ikl has been given by Attorney Gen
el Palmer to Internal Revenue Com
jssioner Roper., bu ificials explained
It would not obel to gtop the man
Mlacture {f this oeer pending a decision
Ly the Federa [rist { urt New
York in se pending
he ert revenise bureau asked
YOE an opinion as to Lhe e« evenue
slamps for wer containing e halt ol
ane per ent of aleohol and mors mak
ing of which the internal revenue bu
Jeau has held to be prohibite
Situation Complicated.
she beer manufacturing situation
wémplicated by the fact that the revenue
vollecting aspect is distinet from that
where the manufacture s illegal under
the food control measure and execus
%_ive regulations Internal Revenue
bmmissioner Roper has the \ttorney
Preneral s opinion unde: gideration,
but declines to state o «Jly what
action he might take under it
«sfhe controversy over whether beer
eontaining 2.756 per cent of alcohol or
{hereabouts was Intoxicating was pre
bipitated In March when Elihu Root
w Willam [, Guthrie advised the
ewers thev could begin to brew a
beverage of that strength, and that it
wils non-intoxicating
William K. Olcott, coansel for the
Bverhardt Brewery, invited the Govern
ment to enter into litigation which
would clear the question The bureau
of internal revenue refused at first to
;issue revenue stamps for thig producs
Commigsionetr Roper ruling that such
a beverage was intoxicating
Decided to Fight.
gh« breweries decided to fight this
ftrary ruling by a subordinate of
1 tevenue burean and in the middle
i March the Jacob Hoffman Brewing
( pany enterad a bill of equity to
% vent interferenee with ite brewing
mz}fi per cent beer. |
"his company and the Gambrinus
Company began brewing heer of this
alcohoe content the middle of April, |
and while revenue stamps were at first
refused the sale was authorized a day
or S 0 later
Injunction proceedings then were
started by the Hoffman Company teo
prevent interference with the brewing
#«nd sale of this beverage. All brew- |
ing was supposed to be stopped on May
i and Department of Justice agents
were ordered to watch and report oa
‘hrewers who continued to make beer,
no matter what its quality and alcoho
ic econtent. |
A stand similar to that of the New
York brewers has been taken by the
Iwewers in New Jersey, Masgsachusetts,
Hlinois and other States
Robert Lee Avary to
Speak at Yatesville
Robert lLee Avary, Atlanta lawyer
lind president of the Emory College
' yhamni Assoctation, will dfiver the
sspmencement address at the Joseph
,fimsmn institute, at Yatesville, Mon
oy, it was announced last night
A Mr. Avary is one of the most widely
_fi{wwn speakers in Georgia and has de
sMvered xeveral notable Memorfal Day |
| iddresses in various cities
CORRECT DEVELOPMENT
MEANS BETTER PICTURES
And Costs No More at
YHE LARGE KODAK STORE
Glenn Photo Stock Co.
EASTMAN KEODAK CO. 117 PEACHTREE.
Atlanta’s Painless Dentist
Gold Crowns .........$3, $4, $6
:’m ) Bridge Work . ......$4, $5, $6
Qs 331, West Mitchell, Cor. Forsyth
s RIERCANS ' One Block From Depet.
s . . Fine Set of Teeth, $5 te $lO
|
.U. S. ARMY PUBL[C AUCTIoN U.S. ARMY
: United States Government Properly
WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC OUTCRY ON
: MONDAY AND TUESDAY, JUNE 2 & 3, AT 9:30 A M.
- AT THE BASE SALVAGE PLANT, 465 PONCE DELEON AVE., FORD BUILDING
: ATLANTA, GEORGIA
: IN LOTS TO SUIT PURCHASERS
6.8 Pyramidal Tents
3412 Wall Tents
1.924 Flies and Covers
297 Tarpaulins
612 Pairs Rubber Arstics
847 Pairs Rubbér Boots
1.047 Horse Blankets
2900 Pairs Cotton Blankets
1,014 Waist Belts
11,000 Shaving Brushes
450 Steel Cots
912 Regular Army Cots
2151 Cotton Coats (obsolete
4.097 Wool Coats (obsolete)
3.712 Cotton Comforts
29285 Pairs Cotton and Wool Gloves
521 Pounds Rubber Hose
1.012 Pounds Fire Cotton Fabrie Hose
222 Bridles—Halters—Collars
4718 Denim Hats
% And Thousands of Other Articles of Great Value Too Numerous to List.
: TERMS: Cash or Certified Checks—Positively No Deviation From This Rule.
Purchases must be moved within 48 hours after sale is made, or if remain longer,
iit will be at purchaser’s risk. By Order of War Department.
: J. U. H. BARKER, Captain, Q. M. Corps, Acting Base Salvage Officer.
| D. WHITMAN, Auctioneer.
% Inspection of All Items In This Sale Is Invited
| . ‘e
) .
- Rich Food Gives
.
- Hun Delegation
§ J . . e 9 )
, ob’s Affliction |
(By International News Service.)
| ARIS, May 4—The entire )
f [': German peace delegation at §
|
! Versailles is =uffering from §
| bolls and are complaining over ;I
‘ their bodily discomforts, French §
officers in charge of the Teutonie ¢
. envoys suggest that they brought
! on their own ailments by eating
{ food that is too rich ’l
v
Foes of League Plan |
n
To Hold Up Peace
i By WINFIELD JONES,
Washington Correspondent of The
l Sunday American. !
WASHINGTON May - 24—~Re
l publican Senators opposed to the
| league of nations are planning ways
i’ and means of keeping the treaty of
peace in the Senate committee on
' forcign affairs for many months so
the Senate will not act on it until
just before the opening of the 1920
presidential campalgn
The treaty probably will not be
reported from the foreign relations
committee until the snow is on the
ground,” said one of the leading
opponents of the league
“The committee should call be
fore it the members of the peace
commission, especially the so-called
experts and the employees who have
resigned. Many prominent Ameri.
cans who are returning from Paris
and london have called on Sena
tors and told them of the situation.
They should all be given an oppor
tunity to tell anout the peace nego
tiutions at open hearings before the
committee.”
Senator Lodge, who will be the
new chalrman of the foreign rela
tions committee, has been urged by
opponents of the league to conduct
open hearings on the treaty and to
inquire into all of the details of the
peace negotiations, besides receiy
ing the opinions of international ex
perts. By delaying action on the
treaty the league's opponents, most
of whom are Republicans, hope to |
intensify the existing situation for |
the 1920 campaign. They are so |
convinced by reports from Senators |
returning to Washington that the |,
tide is changing throughout the |}
ceuntry against he league that they |
want the Republican party so wage |
the next presidential campaign on
ihe |issue of whether the United |,
Sta ghall be a member of any |
leunt: of nations, |
eee — '
.
Harrison to Lecture :
2 i & :
- In Georgia Towns
Speaking dates of Robert Bryan Har- |
rison, health and thrift lecturer of the
extension division of the Georgia Nor- |
mal gnd Industrial College, were an
nounced Saturday as follows:
‘ Monday, May 26, Greenville; Tuesday, |
May 27, Chipley; Wednesday, May 28,
Woodbury; Thursday, May 29, Manches
ter; KFriday, May 30, Talbotton; Maon- ||
day, June 3, Zebulon; Tuesday, June 3,
Thomaston; Wednesday, Juneé 4, Rock- }¢
mart: Thursday, June b, Cedartown, [
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMbt:C AN — A New.Ea,Er for‘PeoE]e Who Think — SUNDAY, MAY 25, 1919
e T o i — e e o e e .— A e 0 e . e
| l
[Bl AI RI MEN TU |
)
' Memorial serviees of the Grand |
'Alm) of the Republic will be held in |
| the National Cemetery at .\l.u‘ll'ltztf
1,\1n,u1..\ morning at 10 o'clock, I'M-|
;vmlml by church services at the
'l'nnro- Deleon Methodist Kpiscopal
I('hur'h South, Sunday morning
} Major Trammell Scott, fnrmq;lv'
with the 164th Brigade, Eighty-sec
;mnl Division, will deliver the momn-{
\llal address, and tell of the soldiers
in the late war, who fought for fl'f"l'~‘
dom and “Old Glory” in the trnnt'hrul
of France, as the dead for whom !hni
exercises are held fought more than
half a eeéntury ago
All Confederate veterans and re
turned soldier from® the Ilate war
are invited to taxe part in the '-x«-r-l
clses, The Woman's Motor 4'ur[w[
will have charge of procuring flowers |
ind in transporting the feeble and the |
ladies participating in the c‘.\'unmvn.!
Special cars will leave the Atlanta
Northern Railwey Company's termi- |
nal, opposite the Walton Bullding, at
9 and 2:30 o'clock Monday morning,
and the company will provide &
thirty-minute schedule throughout
the day
The following program will be pre
sented in the cemetery at Marietta:
Assembly, bugler; music, “Nearer
My God to Thee” Marietta choirs
and audience; prayer, Comrade W. H,
Kimball, Post 4, Tallapoosa, past de
partment commander; “Duty of the
Day,” Comrade Charles H. Cox, com
mander O. M. Mitchell Post No. |,
Atlanta; music, “Star-Spangled Ban
ner,” by all; reading of department
and national orders, Comrade W, M,
Scott, adjutant Post No. 1; mugie,
“America,” choir and audience; Lin
coln's Cettysburg address, Professor
J. Colton lLynes, ex-adjutant general
CGieorgla Division, Confederaté Vet
erans; ‘““Rribute to Our Dead,” Com
rade 1. A, Jones, Post 4, Tallapoosa,
rast department commander; ad
dress, Major Trammell Scott; mausie,
“Columbia,” eholr and audience; ad
dress, Bdgar Turner, historian United
Spanish War Véterans; salute to the
dead; decoration of graves, taps,
benediction.
.
Negro “Fagins” and Boy
. .
Pupils Held by Police
Frank ('lark and James Washington,
114-vear-old negroes, who are said to be
graduates of a school for crooks con
ducted by Sherman Henderson and
Charles Harris, were arrested Saturday
by the police, The latter two were ar
rested soon after and a string of rob
bery charges that occupied about two
feet on the police blotter was entered
againgt their names
Henderson and Harris were arrested
on testimony of the boys that they
stole for the ‘lmgro men, who taug
them the insif®¢ work of the game. The
proficiency of the tutors is attested by
the detectives, who say the negro boys
stole everything they could get their
hands on, from women's clothing to
lamps.
The first stolen article to he found
was in the possession of Henderson, it
wae said. It was a Georgette crepe
waist taken from tne store of J. P. Allen
& Co. Next came a dress stolen from
Miss Etta Smith, of No. 38 Walker
street, which is said to have been sold
to the wife of a negro named John
Hart, of No. 119 Mangum street, Hart
is being held for receiving stolen goods,
Another dress is said to have been
stolen from Mary lee, a negro woman,
of No, 270-A West Mitchell street. A
gecond-hand store at Pratt and Decatur
streets {8 alleged to have been visited
and a lamp stolen, The negroes are
helieved to have stolen large amounts
f goods from other local stores.
| : $
Lutheran Church Aids
.
Eliza Manget Home
Among the week's subscriptions to the
fund of $25,000 for the purchase of the
Fliza Manget Memorial Home, the new
]ly acquired building of the four
Churches Homes for Girls in Atlanta,
was one contribution of S3OO from the
Lutheran Church,
This church is one of a number of
| houses of worship located near the site
%m‘ the new home, No. 171 Rast Fair
y street, and the congregation has taken
an active interest in the twenty or nmm‘
'glrln who are now established in their
enlarged and attractive quarters.
The Eliza Manget Memorial Home
succeeds the first of the churches homes,
founded more than three years ago by
*(ho late Rev. Gaston P. Buford, at No.
44 Crew street, as the “mother home"
of the four local institutions operated (
under the anspices of the Atlanta Fvan
gelical Ministers' Association for the
| benefit of voung business women,
| Popular subscriptions have already
| made possible a substantial payment on
the purchase price of the new home,
and permanent ownership of the build
ing, as well as extensive improvements,
are the objects of the present campaign
for funds. Mrs, Emma T. Martin is
chairman of the workers supporting the
movement, Headquarters are at No,
1627 Candler Building, Ivy 960, and ad
ditional contributions are solicited?
2799 Pairs Leggins
2,400 Cotton Mattresses
1.912 Pillows
37 Ranges
4,224 Pounds Manilla Rope
4,407 Ponchos and Slickers
1,084 Shelter Halves
150 O. D. Sweaters
6.084 Cotton Shirts
120 Wool Shirts
24 Flag Stafl's
5,009 Pairs Civilian Shoes
16.000 Pairs Russet Shaoes
152 Pairs Field Shoes
226 Pairs Marching Shoes
75,5095 Pieces Various Enamelware
Buckets, Pails, Plates, Pans
Boilers, Ete.
7.000 Gas Masks .
60,000 Dead Batteries
Winston Churchill
Warns the Allies
To Fight Leninism
Of all tyrannies in history the
Bolshevik tyrany is the worst, the
most destructive, and the most de
grading. It is sheer humbug to pre
tend that it is not far worse than
German militarism. The miseries
of the Russian people under the
Bolsheviskl far surpass anything
they suffered even under the Czar.
The atrocities by Lenin and Trotz
ky are incomparably more hideous
on a larger scale, and more numer
ous than any for which the Kaiser
himsell is responsible,
There is this also to be remem
bered —whatever crimes the Ger
mans have committed, and we have
not spared them 1n framing our in
dictment, at any rate they stuck to
their Allies, They misled them,
they exploited them, but they did
not desert or betray them. It may
have been honor among thieves,
but that is better than dishonor
among murderers,
Lenin and Trotzky had no sooner
seized on power than they dragged
the noble Russian nation out of the
path of honor and let loose on us
and our Allies a whole deluge of
Cerman reinforcements, . whieh
burst on us in March and April of
last year., Every British and French
soldier killed last year was really
done to death by Lenin and Trotz
ky, not in fair war, but by the
treacherous desertion of an ally
without parallel in the history of
the world.
T'here are still Russian armies in
the fleld, undée Admiral Koltchalk
and General Deiken, who have
never wavered: in their faith and
loyalty to the Allied cause, and who
are fighting valiantly and by no
means unsuccessfully against that
foul eombination of eriminality and
animalism . which constitutes the
Bolshevik regime, We are helping
these men, within the limits which
are assigned to us, to the very best
of our ability.
Impossible to Send Army.
We are helping them with arms
and munitions, with instructors and
technical experts, who volunteered
for service. It would not be right
for us to send our armies raised on
a compulsory basis to Russia.
If Russia is to be saved it must
be by Russian manhood. But all
our hearts are with these men who
are true to the Allied cause in
their splendid struggle to restore
the honor of united Russia, and to
rebuild on a modern and democratie
basis the freedom, prosperity and
happiness of its trustful and good
hearted people,
There is a class of misguided or
degenerate people in this country
and some others, who profess to
take so lofty a view that they can
not see any difference between
what they call rival Russian fac
tions. They would have you be
‘lieve that it is “six of one and half
a-dozen of the other.” Their idea
of league of nations is something
which would be impartial as be
tween Bolshevism on the one hand
and civilization on the other.. We
are still forced to distinguish be
tween right and wrong, loyalty and
treachery, health and disease, prog
ress and anarchy,
British Troops Attacked.
There is one part of the world in
which these distinctions which we
are bound te draw can translate
itself into action. In the north of
Russia the Bolsheviski are contin
uously attacking the British troops
we sent there during the course of
the war against Germany in order
to draw off the pressure from the
west, and who are now cut off by
the ice from the resources of their
fellow countrymen. Here we are
in actual warfare with the repre
sentatives of a Bolshevisk govern
ment and with its army, and, what
ever views may be held by any sec
tion in the country on Russian af
fairs, we all agree that our men
who were sent there by the govern
ment have to be properly supported
and relieved from their dangerous
situation. We have no intention
whatever of deserting our lads and
of leaving them on this icy shore to
the mercy of a cruel foe.
The Prime Minister has given me
the fullest authority to take what
ever measures the grand general
staff of the army think necessary to
see that our men are relieved and
brought safely through the perils
with which they are confronted,
and so far as is physically possible
we shall take whatever measures
are required.
I am in favor of making peace
with Germany. After the war is
over, after the enemy is beaten,
after he has sued for mercy, I am
in favor of making peace with him.
Just as in August, 1914, our duty
was to make war on (Germany, so
now our duty is to make peace with
Germany.
Making peace with GGermany does
not mean making friends with Ger
many.
Peace, But Not Friendship.
Peace means—l do not say for
giveness, for after all that has hap
pened this generation can never for
give—but peace, put at {its very
lowest, means a state of affairs
where certain. common interests are
recogniezd, where the beaten side,
having taken their beating and hav
ing paid their forfeit—that is a
matter which must be attended to,
and will be attended to, may have
still a chance of life, and have a
chance for the future and some
means of atonement,
1 do not think we can afford to
carry on this quarrel, with all its
apparatus of hatred, indefinitely.
1 do not think the structure of the
civilized world is strong enough to
stand the strain.
With Russia on our hands in a
state of utter ruin, with a greater
part of I urope on the brink of
famine, with bankruptcy, anarchy
and revolution threatening the vic
torious as well as the vanquished,
we can not afford to drive over to
the Bolshevik camp the orderly and
stable forces which now exist in
the German democracy.
All the information [ receive from
military sources indicates that Ger
many is very near collapse. All my
military advisers, without excep
tion, have warned me that the most
vital step we ought to take imme
diately to secure victory is to feed
Germany, to supply Germany with
food and the raw material necessary
for them to resume their economic
life
But the situation in Germany is
grave. The Secialist governmeont
of Bcheidemann and Ebert and
Noske is tottering, and if it falls no
one knows what will take ity place,
Anarchy Peril to Others,
If Germany sinks into Boishevik
anarchy she will no doubt bhe
skinned dé)VP. and not only will
there be n® indemnity, but we shall
ourselves be impoverished and our
trade revival will be paralyzed by
the increasing disorder and ruin of
the world.
The policy which the Primme Min
ister has consistently pursued in
Paris amid all the difficulties and
turmoil of that tower of Babel has
been clear and simple—to disarm
Germany, to feed Germany and to
make peace with Germany.
A way of atonement is open to
Germany.
By combating Bolshevism, by be
ing the bulwark against it, Ger
many may take the first step toward
ultimate reunion with the civilized
world.
Very great perils still menace us
in the world. Two mighty bramehes
of the human race—the Slavs and
the Teutons—are both plunged at
the present time in the deepest
misery. This great power which
was our foe, and the great power
which was our friend, are both in
the pit of ruin and despair. It is
extremely undesirable that they
should come together,
(rermany is struggling against
breaking down into Bolshevism. But
if that were to happen it would pro
duce reaction which it is no exag
geration to say would reach as far
as China.
March to Food and Plunder.
The Russian Bolshevik revolu
tion is changing in its character. It
has completed the anarchist de
struction of the social order in Rus
sla itself. The political, economie,
social and moral life of the people
of Russia has for the time been
utterly smashed. Famine and ter
ror are the order of the day. Only
the military structure is growing
out of the ruin. “That is still weak,
but it is growing steadily stronger,
and, it is assuming an aggressive
and predatory for:n, which French
Jacobinism assumed after the fall
of Robespierre, and before the rise
of Napoleon.
Balshevik armies are marching
on toward food and plunder, and in
their path stand only the little,
weak states, exhausted and shat
tered by the war.
If Germany succumbs, either from
internal weakness or from actual
invasion to the Bolsheviki, Ger
many no doubt will be torn to
pieces, but where shall we be®
Where will be that league of na
tions on which so many hopes are
founded.
1f that should eome to pass there
will be two leagues, not one. There
will be the league of defeated na
tions and the league of victorious
nations, and the league of defeated
nations may easily be rearming
while the league of victorious na
tions is laying aside the sword and
shield.
Once again there will have been
oreated that terrible balance of an
tagonism which was the prelude to
the explosion of the great war five
vears ago.
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= \ for T Mexican white
-, sapphires are 12-facet cut,
R~ g they are the most wonder
ful discovery of this cen
tury, they nave no false backing and show a blue
white sparkling fire like a genuine diamond, thes
are hard and will last a lifetime. Our special offer
with this advertisement, 75c¢ postpaid; without ad
vertisement $2. Send for our big bargain catalog
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Wire&
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59 MARTIN ST
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Be Sure to Get a Bottle Before
Leaving and Keep It Handy.
The strenuous exercises and un
usual taxing of muscles that accom
pany the vacation period, especially
the first few days, make it imperative
that you keep Sloan’s Liniment handy
for instant use. It quickly penetrates
without rubbing, bringing a tingle of
comforting relief to the afflicted part
and putting you in ship shape for the
next day's doings.
The stings and bites of insects are
allayed, as are the many pains, aches,
strains, sprains and bruises,
All druggists. 30c., 60c., $1.20,
Sloans
. s Lanaiment
&ot sR v s W
CHeep - handvs
Memorial for Men
Who Fought in War
(By International News Service.)
NEW YORK, Mdy 24 A proposal
for the erection of memorials and
wltars to commemorate the glory of
the American soldiers was made by
Secretury of War Newton D. Baker
in an address at the Phi Gamma
Delta dirmér at the Pennsylvania
Hotel,
“The thing our boys have done is a
sacred thing,"” sald Mr. Baker. "We
must build an altar to it, not merely
an altar of memory, but an altar of
inspiration. They have assured the
present; we must make their mrur" an
ingpiration to the future, and know
of no better way to show our grief
for the fallen and our pride for the
living than the bullding of some no
ble memorial where the names of the
dead may be reverently written as an
inspiration to the present and future
generations,
“America will be greater because of
the glorious deeds of the American
soldiers,
“The American soldier learned
quickly and fought gloriously betvausd
the traditions of the free institutions
of America were with each of them."
While Mr. Baker was speaking bul
letins of his speech were being sent
to the different chapters of the Phi
Delta in Cleveland, Toledo, Detroit
Chicago and San Francisco Nearly
seven thousand members of the frater
nity have served in the army, navy
or marine corps during the war.
No. 2, 2\4x31,4 picture, $2.93.
No. 2A, 21 4x4'y picture, $3.73.
Prompt a'lnllhlng,
--By Mail, 15¢ Extra—
DOCKSTADER OPTICAL CO,,
56 N. Broad S%, Atlanta, Ga.
Your Money Brings You
Too Small Returns!
If your investments are yielding too small a return, you would
find it worth while to look into an investment which gives every
promise of bringing handsome profits, with a view to converting
your present holdings into,more remunerative securities.
; We do not suggest that you invest your capital in an untried or
visionary §cheme, but we do invite your attention to a legitimate
industrial enterprise which has already passed the test; an enter
prise in which sane, sensible, successful business men have in
vested their money and their reputation. The early hazard has
been eliminated. The business will continue to grow and earn
profits whether or not the public invests in it. But larger capital
will enable it to increase production and meet the rapidly growing
demand for its product, with consequently quicker and greater
profits.
A Machine Which Saves
The Lanham Cotton Cultivator Company is now engaged in
marketing the Lanham cotton chopper-cultivator. a machine
which saves a large proportion of labor cost in cultivating cotton.
The factory which is building these on contract for us can not keep
pace with the demand for the machines. We have more orders
from dealers than we can supply.
By building our own factory we can keep pace with this grow
ing demand, buy materials in large quantities at advantageous
prices, and obtain the liberal credits accorded large investments.
All of these mean more rapid returns and larger ones to the own
ers of the business. We expect to sell 25,000 machines next year
and 75,000 the year following. The South needs 400,000 in its
cotton fields now.
Experimental Stage Has
Been Salely Passed
The public was not invited to share in this enterprise until the
experimental stage was passed and the early hazard removed. We
have spent two years and more than SIOO,OOO in bringing the
business to its present stage of development.
We now offer the common stock of the company for sale.
There is no preferred stock. There are no bonds, no “inside
things'' for anybody. All investors will share alike.
We promise no huge profits at the beginning. We do not in
vite speculation for quick profits, but we do offer an excellent in
vestment.
We know that we have a practical machine, that we have a
monopoly on its manufacture and sale, that there is a tremendous
demand for it, and that we can make and sellit at a profit. We
confidently believe that a thousand dollars invested now will be
worth many thousands in a few years.
If your present investments are bringing you a small return, or
if you have idle money which should be set to work for you, we
invite a letter, a telephone message or a personal call.
The Lanham Cotton Cultivalor Company
Empire Bldg.
CALVIN TICHENOR
President
i H. W. BROWN
Vice President H. G. Hastings Co.
ERWIN C. CATTS
Lieutenant of Engineers, Increase
Production Division, U. §. Army
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THY SOUTH'S LARGEST KODAK SUPPLY HOUSE.
Says Mr. Snapshot, “See where the arrow points—right across
from the Flatiron Building at the junction of North Broad and Peacn
tree streets—to Kodak headquarters in Atlanta, at 72 N. Broaa.
Close to the leading hotels, theaters, office buildings and principal
street car lines, Kodak hedaquarters is easy to find and well worth
going to for service Supreme Fifty styles in Kodaks for you to
choose from, at $2 tc $232.
Kodak Finishing and Everything
Pertaining to Photography—
8-Hour Developing Service
SOUTHERN PHOTO MATERIAL CO.
Kodak Headquarters 72 North Broad St.
Phone vy 5511
OFFICERS:
H. W PPN
Vice President "
DIRECTORS:
ST. ELMO MASSENGALE
Pres. Massengale Advertising
Agency
JOHN W, STEWART
Atlanta, Ga.
CALVIN TICHENOR
President
Atlanta, Ga.
wW. J. WARD
Secretary and Treasurer