The Augusta herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1914-current, June 22, 1919, Home Edition, Image 9

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Organizations, Large and Small, That Make Augusta’s Business Wheels Go ’Round Johnson, Reynolds & Ferguson Machine Shop, Automobile Repairing and Accessories 944 Ellis Street , Augusta, Ga. '"/' v: H"ft? | OHNSON, REYNOLDS & FERGUSON,, in Augusta, are agents in ten J Georgia and South Carolina counties for the Columbia truck and trailer and they are right now in position to offer attractive sub-dealer propositions to agents over those ten counties. One of the best equipped machine shops and automobile repair departments that one will find in any city in the South is owned and operated by this firm. Twenty men, experts in every line featured by the firm, are employed, and modern machinery for repairing anything that the best machine shops and auto mobile repair houses attempt will be seen in operation here. MARVEL CYLINDER REBORING MACHINE This is the only machine of its kind for reboring automobile cylinders, and it gives the firm of Johnson, Reynolds & Ferguson a big advantage over other machine shops and repair houses not equipped with the Marvel machine. “Business people who handle your repair work in a business way,” is the kind of service which this firm offers its big clientele. PLANTERS’ COTTON OIL COMPANY Manufacturers and Exporters of Cotton Seed Products Fielding Wallace, Pres, and Treas. AugUSta, Georgia E. L. Stelling, Sec. and Mgr. f , f i rm ' —? . g - V » - Ji£ / « . T » , 1 X 'A'.# ":•*> W' ■ r--> '•<**& *■ : ’ * ■’if *j- ‘ • v ■■*’ • ' I '» L - FLAMERS’ COTTON OIL COMPANY, of Augusta, whose magnificent plant is shown in the above illustration, is the largest independent oil n * in the South Atlantic State*, and is one of Augusta’s and the South’s outstanding successes in the cotton oil business. THE AUGUSTA HERALD. The Home of Successes in Cotton Products H. C. Tennent’s Busy Block Supplies, Machinery and Vulcanizing On Broad Street Augusta, Ga. t?s ' f jrran«|-r- runll I, i ••••••• ?■ % wH»*aslSi3isEttSß w# "’ll® m «*■> t 1 .■UKMIQaiMISUMUHPIi in IP ms C|g WmiiM vi HlßHli'i' wmW&wm 1 pla« ilpilß&iSa r iP 1 1E H. C. TENNENT SUPPLY COMPANY and Tennent’s Vulcanizing Dc pot, the two owned and operated by H. C. Tennent and .1. G. Wingfield, is one of the largest business houses in Augusta, specializing in particular lines. The firm began business in 1914, with 14,000 square feet of floor space— today it has J 3,000 square feet of floor space and has the largest frontage on Broad street, Augusta’s main thoroughfare. Railroad track connections con veniently located make shipping a matter of but a few minutes. The H. C. Tennent Supply Company carries a full stock of mill supplies and machinery, blacksmith supplies and tools, carriage and wagon material, and all the standard automobile accessories. Tennent’s Vulcanizing Depot, located at 621 Broad street, adjoining the other business, is one of the best equipped vulcaniz ing plants in the country, and does work for its customers within a wide radius of territory. The business is a partnership, and is not incorporated. The members of the firm are progressive Augusta business men, who believe in their city, and who are in position to do business on a South-wide scale. The plant covers five acres of ground, is operated night and day, and one hundred and fifty people are employed. An eight-stand cotton ginnery is operated in connection with the company’s oil mill, and it is one of the most modernly-equipped ginneries in the entire South. SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 22, 1019.