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                <text>Jenkins writes to Bell in response to a previous letter. They frequently exchange humorous stories through correspondence and Jenkins states that he will tell another when they meet in person again. Jenkins also expresses longing to get together with the entire defense counsel and their families and looks forward to doing so.</text>
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                <text>Jenkins writes to Bell about Drew Pearson's book, U.S.A.--Second-Class Power?, of which, he mentions, has an entire chapter on Colonel Nickerson.</text>
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UAH Archives and Special Collections

�T1e

Bradle1=1ean
1927

Volume Five

1927

1926

Published bl:l the

Students of Joe Bradlel] School
Huntsville, Alabama

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�eontents
I.

Administration
II.

Classes
Ill.

Athletics
IV.

Organizations and
Features
V.

Community Activities

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�1

CJoreWord

T IS with a feeling of pride
mingled with regret that we,
the staff of the Bradleyean,
offer to the readers this book.
We feel that it is fairly well repre­
sentative of the great school and
community of which we are glad
to be a part; therefore our pride.
We can see already, however, so1ne
of our shortcomings and realize
that we might have produced an
even better book; therefore our
regret. Nevertheless, we offe1· it
for your approval, asking only a
compensation for our long hours
of earnest endeavor, that this
product of our effort nwy serve in
the clays to come to recall to your
mind the time here happily s71ent.

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�c-rJedicated to 0ur
mcothers
C7:: HE best friend in the world,
-l9 the one who is most anxious
to see us happy, who prays for our
success, who would believe in us
though the world were against us.
To You
"OUR MOTHERS"

We Dedicate the 1927 Bradleyean

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�c:A.dministratiorw

I

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�Agen-CS Home.,

St;re,(t S ce,ne,
Page Six

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�MAIN BUILDING

Page Seven

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�"
if eyes were rn.ad e for se&lt;'ing
Then beauty is its only excuse for being".

MERRIMACK HALL

ERRIMACK HALL sen·es the School and the community. On the
,..,C7\lf
(!_/ 0 l, first floor are the following places of business: One mercantile
store, barber shop, drug store, cafe, and meal market. The second story
contains a gymnasium, reading room, pool room, lodge room, band room,
and a scout reading room.
Page Eight

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�IN MEMORY
OF
JOSEPH

J.

BRADLEY, SR.

Page Nine

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�t

WARD THORON

Treasurer
MERRIMACK MANUFACTURING COMPANY

19

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BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF MILir-lNSETS SHOW MR. J. J. BRADLEY, AGENT, AND MR. V. W. LOVILL, SUPERINTENDENT.

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Superintendent of Education

Page Tweltie

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�T-HE FACULTY-

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

�J,1 Rrc"fJ11ition
OP
E. F. DUBOSE

c-J. OR his untiring ancl ceaselC'ss actiYity in be­

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half of our school and community, and for
his service during his six years as teacher, prin­
cipal, and friend in which capacity he has won
the respect of all to whom has been given the
pleasure of knowing him.

Page

UAH Archives and Special Collections

r'n11l'fcc11

�..
L. H. KNIGHT
Assistant Principal
Science
MRS. J. B. CLOPTON
Mathenwtic!-1; Ai·t
MISS BESSIE CURETON
Home EconomicR

H. S. PUGH
Vocational Work

MISS FLORENCE PETTUS
History

MRS. J. J. SPARKMAN
English

Page Fifteen
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2

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�l\lISS MARY ESSLINGER
Music

C. G. MEDLEY
Fifth Grade

MISS RUBY WOODALL
Music

MISS MILDRED WELLS
Fifth Grade

MRS. A. T. BUCKNER
Sixth G1·ade

MISS RUTH BEAUCHAMP
Fourth Grade

Page Sixteen
2
19
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�MRS. CURTIS HILL
Third Grade

MISS MABLE HUGHES
First Grade

MISS NORINE RICE
Second Grade

MISS MATTIE ESSLINGER
First Grade

MRS. E. M. MITCHEM
Expression, Second Grade

MISS LYDIA ALLISON
Beginners

Page Seventeen

UAH Archives and Special Collections
-

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�RESERVOIR OF MERRIMACK MILLS

PLAYGROUND SCENE

Page Eighteen

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

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Page Twenty

UAH Archives and Special Collections

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Page Twenty-One

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�GERALD McCUTCHEON
Basketball '24-'27; Baseball '27; Foot­
ball '23, '24; Scouts '24-'27; President
Thoron Literary Society '2; President
Freshman Class; President Senior Class;
Cheer Leader '26-'27.
Gerald, 011r Business Manager, great
and wise,
Will attend to your tra1rnactions no mat­
ter the size.

LINA B. VENABLE
President Mary Bradley Literary So­
ciety '26; Secretary Student Council '23;
Critic of Domestic Art and Science '23;
Secretary-Treasurer Tennis Club '25;
Agricultural Club '22-'25; Secretary
Sophomore Class; Basketball '24-'27;
Scouts '22-'23; Art Club '25; Chemcraft
Club; Assistant Supervisor '24-'27.
Lina B. is ow· class beauty
A little lazy bitt will do her duty.

GLADYS KNIGHT
Secretary Sophomore Class; President
Art and Science Classs '24; Tennis Club;
Assistant Patrol Leader Scouts '24, '25;
Treasurer Chemcraft Club; Agricultural
Club '25; Critic Tenth Grade; Assistant
Supervisor '25, '27; President Student
Council '25; Secretary Senior Class; As­
Fi stant Editor of '27 Bradleyean; Presi­
dent. Mary Bradley Literary Society
'25, '27.
Tall she is, that's quite true
But she is pure gold through and through

WILLIAM OSBURN
Basketball '26, '27; President Mary
Bradley Literary Society '26; Treasurer
Senior Class.
Billy, boy with curly hair,
Always 1·eady to do his share.
Page Twenty-Two

9==================�•5::=======================32tJ
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UAH Archives and Special Collections

�EARL BUFORD
Basketball '22, '27; Baseball '22, '27;
Football '24, '25; Scouts '21-'27; Presi­
dent Thoron Literary Society '25, '27.

Our athlete for the past four years
Will give over his place to the Junior
peers.

GEORGE McNATT
President Class '25; President History
Class '25; Boy Scouts '21-'26; Agricul­
tural Club '22, '25; Member Thoron Lit­
erary Society; Art Club '22-'25; Chem­
craft Club '23; Tennis Club '22-'25; Mid­
get Basketball '22-'24; Midget Baseball
'22-'24.

George gets tired of staying at home
So once in a while he decides to roam.

LUCILE TODD
Agricultural Club '23, '25; Chemcraft
'23, '24; Critic of Mary Bradley Literary
Society '27; Tennis Club '24, '25; Basket­
ball '24, '27; Music Club '24, '25; Assist­
ant Supervisor '25, '26.

Lucile likes to live on an easy street
But she is quiet, pretty and sweet.

LEO WRIGHT
Chief Chemist of Chemcraft Club;
Associate Editor Bradleyean '23; Class
Basketball '21-'27; News Reporter '23;
Scouts '22-'27; Editor-:n-Chief of '27
Bradleyean; Treasurer Thoran Literary
Society '27; Reporter for Basketball
team '27.

Leo as staff editor has worked hard
But aside from that he is a dandy "pard"

Page Twenty-Three

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�Class Historq
-·•/4r&gt;··ANY years ago, when the Seniors of '27 first entered school, it
was to a small building on B St. in Merrimack. Here we
spent some very happy years studying and playing together.
Our enrollment kept increasing until everyone saw the need of a new
building. In 1914, when vacation was over, we had a new G!"ammar
school, on Triana Pike. Here we studied and climbed, trying to get ahead
until Mr. Bradley, Sr., saw our efforts and built a new addition to our
school in 1919 which was called the Joseph J. Bradley School. In 1923 we
entered the Freshman class with Prof. E. F. DuBose as Principal of the
school; Mrs. J. B. Clopton as session room teacher and Gerald Mccutcheon
as our class president. From time to time some of our classmates dropped
out but we added new ones. We were and have been ever since the high­
est grade jn school, because in 1926 our school became accredited and our
class has since been the one to lead and to pave the road for the future
Seniors.
Through all the years since we entered High School we have endeav­
ored to do our best and to be shining examples to the class behind us. We
have had our share of good times and hope that each class following us
will continue to do so.
Since the class of 1927 started to school the school has grown from a
small building with three teachers to be one of the most beautiful, also
one of th£ leading schools in Madison county, with a faculty of nineteen.
whose whole heart and soul is in their work.
As we look back now with fond memories we find our past has been
very happy and we only hope that the future Seniors' path will be as rosy
as ours.
I

Page Twenty-Four

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�Our Last UJill and Testament
WE, THE SENIOR CLASS OF BRADLEY SCHOOL, of the County of Madison
and the State of Alabama, being indisputably of sound ::md dispcsing mind and mem­
ory and about to pass out of existence, do make, publish and declare this to be our last
will and testament, hereby revoking any and all former wills by us:
First: We bequeath to our esteemed Principal, E. F. DuBose, all the fear, admira­
tion, reverence, awe, respect, in which we hold him; when we are gone, distribute said
fear, admiration, reverence, awe, and respect among the incoming Freshmen, in order
that said incoming Freshmen may comfort themselves with becoming conduct in his
presence, as we have always endeavored to do.
Secondly: We give back and return to our beloved teachers all the advice, infor­
mation, reproofs and demerits which shall at the time of our departure from the afore­
mentioned High School be in, upon or about our minds and memories, feeling that any­
thing so fully and abundantly given away as said advice and information, reproof and
demerits of said teachers must be of trifling value and not worth retaining in our
minds and memories when we depart.
Thirdly: We give and bequeath to the Juniors of Bradley High School, our Senior
decorum, privileges, polished manners, together with the unquestioning servitude of
the faculty and student-body alike, that they may occupy our seats in our session room,
with our beloved teacher, Mrs. J. B. Clopton, with the gravity nad impressiveness be­
fitting our successors.
Fourthly: To the Sophomores we give the advice to stay on the school grounds.
Fifthly: To Lucile McGee we bequeath Leo Wr:ght's curly locks that she may
not be bothered with the nightly rolls.
To William Childress we will George McNatt's seriousness and earnestness.
Sixthly: To every girl graduate the Senior girls devise the handsomest man in
seven states. To every boy we, the Senior boys, devise our great skill in basketball.
Seventhly: All the rest, residue and remainder of our estate, real, personal and
mixed, we give and bequeath to Mr. Cummings, absolutely and forever, in grateful
recognition and past favors, to-wit: The removal of telltales of chewing gum, una­
voidably deposited in places that caused some slight inconvenience to fellow students;
frequent application of "Old Dutch" to the door knobs that sticky Freshn1an fingers
contaminated.
We make, constitute and appoint our beloved teacher and coach, Mrs. J. B. Clop­
ton ar,d Mr. L. H. Knight, to be executrix and executor of this our last will and testa­
ment.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, we have hereunto subscribed our names and affixed
our seals this the ....... . day of May, 1927.
SENIORS OF BRADLEY HIGH SCHOOL.

Page Twenty-Pive

UAH Archives and Special Collections

��EillOR �MBlTlONS
HE Senior ambitions as you will see,
Are better than you'd ever think them to be,
And though we're called lazy by tradition,
evertheless, we have ambition.
Gladys Knight, whom all girls adore,
Wants to rise just six feet from the floor.
\Vhile Lucile Todd, that sweet little lassie,
Doesn't care what happens, just so she can pass.
And William Osborne, quite modest and sedate,
\Vants to get up courage to ask for a date.
George McN att says he's on the right route,
By inventing a chewing gum that won't wear out.
Gerald Mccutcheon, that Virgil "kid",
Aims to break some woman's heart, as Aeneas did.
Earl Buford is a bright laddie, too,
But still he is planning to join the zoo.
But all give attention to Lina B.,
She's going to vamp a sailor and live on the sea.
And Leo Wright whose dreams always soar,
Wants to do all this, and then some more.
I wish that the hands of the clock didn't move,
'Cause, there's one thing I wanted to prove;
It's th:s: Don't believe all you hear;
We're the most ambitious class in rnany a year!

Page Twenty-Six
27
10

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�GE.O HAS AN E.A (;2.
fOR MU.51C

GLAOY.S
GE.RALO AS A
COMEDIAN

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BILL - AS A BUSINES!» /"'\AN

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Page Twenty-Seven

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

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Page Twenty-Nine

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�WILLIAM CHILDRESS
President

J. D. JONES
Vice-President

LILLIAN COOPE
Secretary

GENEVA BATES
Treasurer

LEOTRA ESSLINGER

JOHNNIE MAE HAMMER

Page Thirty

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�PAULINE MANNING

OLEN MARKS

LUCILE McGEE

THOMAS SHARP

HAZEL VAUGHN

EVANS WILLIAMS

Page Thirty-One
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�Page Thirty-Two

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�� � e Cal'\. \Vh.o
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Page Thirty-Three

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�NELLIE LAMBERT

PAULINE LOWERY

EDWARD OSBORNE

IRENE PHILIPS

MAYME VAUGHN

VIRGIL LOVILL

WILLIAM VENABLE

Page Thirty-Four

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�MILDRED BLEDSOE
FRANK BROWN

ANA BRYAN
MALVERN CLOPTON

BEATRIC:E COOKE
MILDRED GRAHAM

LESLIE HUDGINS
HOLLIS KIRK

Paye 1'hirty-/&lt;'ive

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�NINTH GRADE

LENA RUTH MANNING

MARY LOU OLDFIELD

FLORENCE PATTON

PAULINE POTTS

HOWARD RUSSELL

VERA SERTIN

ANNIE MAE SPURLOCK

BERNICE SMITH

Page Thirty-Six

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�NINTH GRADE

JAMES BRANDON

ILA BAKER

WILLIAM ESSLINGER

WILLIE HALL

EDWARD HORNBUCKEL

ELSIE MAE MARKS

ANNIE LOVILL

SAMUEL JOHNSON

Page Thi?'ty-Seven
9

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

�cAthletics

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�L. H. KNIGHT
Coach

Although this is Mr. Knight's first
year as Athletic Director we give him
credit for putting out an excellent team.
Ile knows basketball, how to teach it,
and, best of all, how to be a good loser.
His silent ways and abstinence from
that which is unsportsmanlike have kept
up the record of clean athletics for
which our school is noted. Bradley val­
ues him as a friend and an uplifter of
her athletic prestige.
EARL BUFORD
Captain-Forward

"Bud" needs no introduction to the
fans of Madison county. In the four
years of playing with us his shots from
any and all angles of the court, his ease
in handling the ball, and his swiftness
and clean playing has made him a rec•
orcl player any team should be proud of.
We regret that this is "Bud's" last year.

BASKETBALL RESULTS (BOYS)
Brndley .......... ......................................................... ...
Bradley
.................... ······- ·············•
..
Bradley ····················-··················································
Bradley ································· ············..........................
Bradley ·•··················-···-•·-···-·············· ····--··· ..
Bradley ··············-···..······•··.. ··-·····-- ·-·········-···········
Bradley ...........................................................................
Bradley
-----·---·········-··········
Bradley ..... ·-················ . -·· ········•·............................
Bradley .................................................................. ..

29
44
26
36
21
28
28
19
49
29

Monrovia ··-- .... ······--·-- ..... ............................. ...
Madison .... ......................................................................
Cullman .....
.. -·--······-.. -··-·-·····-·····
Huntsville High .....................................................
J. C. H. S.....
····-··-············•-··-······-··········-•····
J. C. H. S. . ·-······· ..·-·····-···················-····-·····
Gurley .........
..... ..................................................
Huntsville High ··--··-··---················-····
New II ope
........................................................
New Market ·····················---

13
18
25
21
11
17
20
23
13
15

BASKETBALL RESULTS (GIRLS)
Bradley
Bradley
Bradley
Bradley
Bradley
Bradley
Bradley
Bradley

··························-·-··············....................._... 10
-··--'• -···············-··········································· 7
8
·
..
................................................................ ....,.•. 6
7
·······-· -· ···· ..····---·

-··..... ............. . ··-··· .............................. ...

4

············································-·-·· ....... ... _.. ... 15
7

Rison
.... ··········-··..·············-···..·····
West Huntsville
Lincoln
---····-·······--·····
Huntsville College
West Huntsville ....
Huntsville College
New Market
··•········...........
Madison

14

20

6
10
10
13
7
18

Page Fifty

19

oe,

====�==============�@t�======================================::::32 ra
UAH Archives and Special Collections

�GERALD McCUTCHEON
Alternate Captain-Center
"Red" is a dandy center and usually
gets the tipoff and plays the court well.
He is improving on his shots and makes
counters in each game. Continue to
watch this boy go.
WILLIAM OSBURN
Forward
"Billy" sure believes in "staying with
the ship" and he fights until the whistle
blows. He is not defeated until the
game is over and then he shows good
sportsmanship. His motto is "Fight,
but be fair."

J. D. JONES
Guard
"Bones" might be termed "the gent to
do and dare" for he breaks the other
teams and dares his teammates to do
likewise. He is a new man on our team
but he is showing himself to be one of
the best guards the team has ever had.
WILLIE VENABLE
Guard
"Pap" is a hard fighting guard and
iStays with his man. He is one of the
fastest players on the team and an
adept in spoiling the other team's sig­
nals. His effective guarding has caused
the record of many forwards to be de­
creased. Little but loud can truly be
said of "Pap".
WILLIAM CHILDRESS
Forward
"Chill" is the smallest player on the
team but he gets in the game and fights
as hard as the larger boys. He is a
smooth working little forward and his
fast passes and a keen eye for the goal
makes him a popular player.

Pctge Fift11-0ne

le:9, =================================��=======�•�===================================�============��LI
UAH Archives and Special Collections

�C

EDWARD OSBURN
Guard

"Ed" as a running guard combines all
the requisites of a good basketball
player. At heart he has the manner of
a man and a star. A player with greater
tenacity, cool headedness and willing­
ness to perform without compl:lint, has
not been on the court.

LEO WRIGHT
G11ard

"Leocie" is the quietest man on the
team but silence holds room for thought.
Being right there with the gocds, he dis­
played his ability as a good fighter and
as a depe1!dable guard.

WILLIAM GIBBS
Center
"Cowboy" is a dandy center and we
predict that if he decides to play next
year he will make an enviable 1ecord.
This is his first year on the team. Al­
though he often enjoys a "beauty sleep"
he is ever awake on the basketball court.

EVANS WILLIAMS
Fonuard

"Huntsville" always played a real
good game on the second team, and if
needed he rallied to the call of the first
team. Next year he will prove himself
one of our most valuable players.

BUFORD BAUCUM
Guard

"Boots" is a guard whith we are very
proud of. His fight and aggressive play­
ing were noticed throughout the season
and we hope he will be back next year.

Page Fifty-Two

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�Page Fifty-Three

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�Scouts
Scouts
Scouts
Scouts
Scouts
Scouts
Scouts

51
20
26
29

SCOUT BASKETBALL TEAM
RESULTS
Hazel Green ..... .. 16 Scouts ········ ··· ...... 18 Huntsville Col. ..
ew Hope . ··- 28
32 St. Bernard .........
Scouts
Huntsville
28 Scouts ................. ....... 15 Scottsboro
- 14 Scouts
22 Huntsville Col.
Huntsville
.. ..... .. 23 Scouts
Dallas .....
22 Scottsboro ........ .. ...
39 Dallas ..
Huntsville Col.
28 S-out..;
26 Merrimack A C.
25 Scouts
Dallas

15
12
14
14

SCOUT RESERVE BASKETBALL TEAM
RESULTS
.. 13 Scouts . .. --···-········ 8
Dallas
West Huntsville 28 Scouts .. ....... ··••··-·- 27
Monrovia .. ........ . . . 161 Scouts _ .......... .. 31
Dallas ...... .. ·-·············· 21 Scouts ...... .................. 20

45

... ·- ....... ..... .. 58
..
······· ········ 42
-••••••-n•••••• •

.......... .......... ..
.. ................... ..
........................
. ... .............

Scouts --- ·--······Scouts ... ·- •··••-····· ..
Scouts ...........................
Scouts ....................... ...

•-••••••••..•u••• ••

00, ----•••U

17
18
5
16
18

�o

25

.. 2
New Market
Hickor• Grove. .. i
West ·Huntsville J 7
West Huntsville 17
Page Fifty-Four

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�Page Fil ty-Ffre

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�Page Fifty-Six

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�0rganizations and
CJeatures

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�q

rainin�
Paye Fifty-EigM

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�\

Page Fifty-Nine

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�U?PER PlCTURE SHOWS EXHIBIT AT COUNTY FAIR AND lNDIVfDUAL PRIZE
COMMUNITY FAIR EXHIBIT.

...

-

---------�-..:

UAH Archives and Special Collections
WINNERS.

LOWER

PICTURE:-VJEW

OF

�'

B�ADLEYEAN STAFF

Lfo Wright

. .. ...................... . . .. . .. .. .

. . .. . .. . ....... ............................

Editor-in-Chief

Gladys Knight . .. ..... ......... .. .... .... .. .... .................. .................... .. .... Assistant Editor
Gerald Mccutcheon .... ....................
Virgil Lovill. .. ............ .. .... .... ....

. .Business Manager
Assistant Business Manager

Lucille McGee . ....... .....................................

Department Editor

Evans Williams .......................................... ......... Athletic Editor
Hazel Vaughn ........... ..... . ............ .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .
Hollis Kirk . .... .. .... ....... .... ............ .................................

Athletic Editor
Organization E'ditor

Mildred Graham ...... ... . . ....... ............................................ . Community Activities
Ana Bryan ............................................ ................... ................. .. ............ .. .... ............... .. .. .. . . ..
f
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Page Si.rty-One

UAH Archives and Special Collections

Jokes

�•

MRS.

J. B.

CLOPTON,

Instructor

MISS ESSLINGER, Piano; MISS CURETON, Violin; VIRGIL LOVILL, Drums;
LUCILLE McGEE, HAZEL VAUGHN, LINA B. VENABLE, Ukes.

Page Sixty-Two
2
9
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�========�================================='====3
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UAH Archives and Special Collections

�'

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�Scouts at Camp

Page Sixty-Four

UAH Archives and Special Collections

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SCENE FROM THE MUSICAL COMEDY "MISS CHERRY BLOSSOM" PRESENTED BY THE STUDENTS

�eammunity
c54.cti1Jities

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�UAH Archives and Special Collections
BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF THE MERRIMACK MILLS AND COMMUNITY

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Office Forc(J
tk_ MERRlMACK.. M.A.NUF AC TUK..ING- CO,

Ove,1• s �e,,rs
_,.._..._.._ � .t1BRR.I MACl&lt;.J MANUFACTURING- CO 1
Page Sixty-Nine

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�Page Sei&gt;enty

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�Nerrimdcl(Pentd! Clinic

OJ]f!rdtinfRoom at )ter11imack '/lo.rp1't-t1l
Paue Seventy-One

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�•

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2
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UAH Archives and Special Collections

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E-vc.,ning, Class

I'age Seventy-Three

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UAH Archives and Special Collections
--- --=�-----

�Commllntty Ilasl\tt full �m

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�c52td1Jertisements

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Opposite Jail

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COSTUMES

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iHOOKER-HOWE·
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COSTUME CO.,
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46-52 Main Street
Haverhill, Mass.

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WORLD'S LARGEST
COSTUME MAIL ORDER
HOUSE

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McANELLY HARDWARE CO.,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL

Huntsville, Alabama

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HARDWARE

PAINTS

MILL SUPPLIES

SPORTING GOODS

McANELLY HARDWARE CO.,
EUGENE R. GILL, President

Capital, $100,000.00

"We offer you our services backed by more than fifty years
of successful effort"

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�CUMMINGS
FURNITURE AND
HARDWARE
COMPANY
Three Departments

Radiolas
Telephone No. 27

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MR. B.

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CHURCH, a resident

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of Merrimack, is our "Traveling

Credit

Salesman" in your village.

is Good

only difference is, "He Stays

The

There."

A. J. DICKERSON &amp; co.,
Yarbrough Bldg.

HUNTSVILLE

Washington St.

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Telephone 68-J

Huntsville,

Compliments

Alabama

Phone No. 43

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PREPARE YOUR CHILDREN

FOR FUTURE BUSINESS
'I SUCCESS

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Buy them a Royal typewriter and let them learn
the first principles of business management. We are
agents for the Royal machines in either new or rebuilt.

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"Service to Your Office"
Phone 71

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JO8EfB SYKES BROS.

Lindley, Huddersfield, Engbnd

CARD CLOTHING
MANUFACTURERS
Reclothing Card Flats and
Rewinding
Lickerins a Specialty

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Sedalia, Mo.

U. S. A.

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Huntsville,

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Alabama

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FLO RIST AND

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FOR PRICE AND

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Trade at

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DOLLAR STORE I

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NORLANDER MACHINE COMPANY
463 South First Street
New Bedford, Massachusetts
We offer Cotton Mills a Flyer Service unexcelled
in its satisfactory scope.
Our burnished Flyer Pressers are noted for their
being of correct proportion which enables them to
function so satisfactorily.
Customers are assured of co-operation throu�h
a corps of practical and efficient Flyer Men highly
trained in their special .line.
We can furnish Flyers, Pressers and Spindles for
any make frame and respectfully solicit inquiries and
trial orders.

FLYER SPECIALISTS

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�mRADITfON ·inspires· every

�SWE CO ·Crd{tsmal).•to
5ive · t? ·every• det'!,i 1- of· t_he
enAravm�• art· a· pa1nstakiM
paiient·attention-that · lends
precious ·quality• to· his
workmanship �

SOUTHWESTERN

ENGRAVING COMPANY

FORT WORTH

WICHITA FALLS

·

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HOUSTON

TULSA

· 0/\LL/\S
• ATLANTA

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�UAH Archives and Special Collections

�-. --.--.--.co.,
·l1·= ·-. -.METROPOLITAN
-·---·INSURANCE
---·-•l.
.-·-·-·-..-·-. --.-·-..-·LIFE

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SUREST SA VIN GS
BIGGEST INVESTMENT

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HUNTSVJl,LE, ALA.

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H. F. LANDMAN

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COTTON

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Huntsville, Ala.
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Represen ting

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and
Start a Savings
Account

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tion guaranteed.

GOODYEAR
SHOE REPAIR co.

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ATTENTION
LADIES

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We Paid 8 % on Savings I
in 1926 and Should Earn I
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Compliments of

SOUTHERN BELTING co.,
ATLANTA, GA.
C. R. MERRITI, Representative

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ANDREWS LOOM, REED AND
HARNESS WORKS

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JAMES
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CHATI' ANOOGA, TEN .

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MILL
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PLUMBING
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AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORIES AND REPLACEMENT PARTS
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"North Alabama'

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ROSS-REED

DRY CLEA I G A D DYEI G
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Hunt ville, Alabama

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Compliments
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JUDGE

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w. JONES

Huntsville, Alabama

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DR. W. L. McCOLOUGH

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Compliments

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GEORGE DARWIN

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Tax Assessor,
Huntsville, Alabama

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JOE'S JUMBO

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CHERO-COLA I I
BOTTLING co., I

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Comin' to You"

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RUBBER SHOP II
Goodrich
Silvertown Cords

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Genuine Ford Parts

Vulcanizing

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,209 Washington Street,
Huntsville,

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HUNTSVILLE ICE &amp; COAL co.,
(Incorporated)

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PURE SPRING WATER ICE

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ALL GRADES OF COAL

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MAN FACT RERS OF

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS I

OFFICE AND ICE PLANT, 122-124 SOUTH GALLATIN ST.
Phones: Ice Plant, 6J; Coal Yard, 6W

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KIRSCHBAUM
CLOTHES,
NUNN BUSH SHOES,

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STETSON HATS,

"Lower the Cost of
Dressing Well"

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EDUCATIONAL I
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MONEY

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YOU have money to burn, keep it in the
house, hidden in the closet, in the cellar, or
under the carpet, where it may he lost or
stolen; hut if you want to keep it safe, where it will
always he ready for you when you need it, and will
earn you FOUR PER CENT INTEREST, deposit it
in our hank.

HUNTSVILLE BANK &amp; TRUST co.,
Capital, $150,000.00

J. B. WOODALL, President

R. H. GILLAM, CashieO

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Importers of

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HUNTSVILLE

I IC E CREAM AND

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Plumbing, Heating

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Phone 148-J

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Huntsville, Ala.

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SKYLIGHTS, FURNACES

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Telephone 840

Residence Phone 719-W
121 West Clinton Street
Huntsville, Ala.

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Corner of Clinton and Jefferson

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Huntsville, Ala.

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Phone 42

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E. KARTHAUS'
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PHONOGRAPHS

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Alabama

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The Foster-Alexander Corporation
POWER SPECIALTIES

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FALCO, RATTAN AND RAT-OAK WATERPROOF
LEATHER BELTING
Distributors

Rubber Belting, Hose and Mechanical Rubber
Goods. Falco Ring, Coil and Spiral Piston Packings, Sheet Packings, Boiler Gaskets and
Pump Valves, Fairbanks Valves and Dart
Unions. Dixon's Textile Crayons
· Birmingham, Ala.

Phone Main-383

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DODGE BROTHERS MOTOR CARS
Kelly-Springfield Tires and Tubes
Phone 381

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WASH
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LAUNDRY

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T. M. JONES

J. T. JONES

R. T. BAUGH

JONES-BAUGH COTTON CO.,

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Huntsville,

Alabama

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Incorporated

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HUNTSVILLE, ALA.
Where Savings Are Greatest Every Day in the Year

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We are well equipped to handle
your HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
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Goods.

Our big BRICK WAREHOUSE
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Call Phone 567

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FARMERS'
COTTON OIL &amp; FERTILIZER
COMPANY
Huntsville, Ala.

"Home of the Polecat"
R. E. SPRAGINS, President
W. P. MONROE ., Manager

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Compliments of

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Kodak Finishing

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GENERAL MERCHANDISE
Merrimack

"Come and See the Ladies"

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BEN LEE YOUNG

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Agents for Nunnally's Caudy

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G. R. MAPLES

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SHEET METAL WORK

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CORNICES, SKYLIGHTS, VENTILATING,
ROOFING, GUTTERS

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Jobbing Promptly Attended to

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Agents for Cahill Furnace

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Phone No. 4 7 4

East Holmes Street

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Patronize Home Industries

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TWICKENHAM BLEND COFFEE
"Huntsville Made"

Sold by Leading Grocers Everywhere

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FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE

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"Be Sure You Are Insured"

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Office, Franklin Street

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C. M. GRACE &amp; CO.,

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Foundry and Machine Works

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C-A-S-T-1-N-G-S

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GRAY IRON, BRASS, AND ALUMINUM

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All Kinds of

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PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
Pittsburgh, Pa.

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A. M. BOOTH

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THE HOME BUILDER I

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Houses Built on

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Also Dealer in
All Kinds of

BUILDING MATERIALS

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W. R. RISON
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"The Gibraltar of
North Alabama"

Congratulates the students
of Joe Bradley School on
the excellent advantages
they enjoy so generously,
provided by the Merri! mack Manufacturing Co.
We urge you to make full
use of them.
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from the foundation

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CEMENT

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PLASTER

Complete Stock of

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C. W. ROBINSON LUMBER CO., Inc.,
"Everything in the Building Line"

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Huntsville, Alabama

COMPOSITION AND METAL ROOFING
BRICK

PINE SHINGLES
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MURRAY'S

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ALABAMA
GROCERY CO.,

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We Know the

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Since 1860

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WHOLESALE

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JEWELRY
BUSINESS
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and Prices Are Right

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GROCERS

We Sell Merchants Only

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BELLE-CAMP CHOCOLATES

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Registered Prescriptionist

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Lowest Prices, Quality Considered

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STYLE, QUALITY AND PRICE

PIZITZ DRY GOODS co.,

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115 JEFFERSON STREET

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J. D. HUMPHREY &amp; SONS

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TWICKENHAM PHARMACY

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THE REXALL STORES

EASTMAN KODAKS, FILMS, AND SUPPLIES
Let Us Do Your Printing

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and Developing

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Compliments

ATLANTA BRUSH COMPANY,
ATLANTA, GA.

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pARAMOUNT

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-the greatest name

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in amusement circles.

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"If It's a Paramount Picture- -

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It's the Best Show in the Town"

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THE LYRIC

Shows Paramount Pictures

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CLOTHING

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Great Is the Power

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Southside Square

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GILL LEATHER COMPANY
MANUFACTURED BY

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SALEM, MASS.

"\\.\.LEATHER Co_

Result of Thirty-five Years

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Practical Experience
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MASSACHUSETTS
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You Must Use the Best Leather

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Distributors of the
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Check:r�!�dABrand

HORSE FEED
CHICKE FEED

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COCA-COLA
BOTTLING WORKS

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In Bottles

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J. F. CHAMBERS

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Manager

UAH Archives and Special Collections

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GROCERIES

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CIGARS AND TOBACCO

An Autumn Verse With
Twilight Thoughts

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See

MOORE

For Engagement Rings
and Other Things

BAGGING AND IRON TIES

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See Moore and See Better

Huntsville, Ala.
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We Specialize in

BALL BEARINGS
and

BALL-BEARING APPLICATIONS
for the

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GREENWOOD, s. c.

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TEXTILE INDUSTRY

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The garden gate has ceased of I
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late
Its load of love to bear;
But double weight is now the 1
fate
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Of many a parlor chair.

GRAIN, COTTONSEED MEAL
AND HULLS

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GIFTS THAT LAST

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Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry make a pleasing gift for
both young and old.
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We have a most wonderful line to select your gifts from. Our
Optical Department is very complete; we can give you quick service on your broken lenses or frames. Come to see us.

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A. L. HIPP, Jeweler and Optometrist

117 N. Jefferson St.

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Huntsville, Ala.

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TENNESSEE VALLEY BANK

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"The Big Bank at the
Big Building''

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WHITE STAR BAKERY

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KREAM KRUST AND PULLMAN BREAD

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H. F. ANDERSON, Proprietor
Made With Milk

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WHOLE WHEAT BREAD
Telephone 281

100 Per Cent Pure

Huntsville, Ala.

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

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C OMP LIMEN T S OF

wASHABLE

SMOOTH
LUSTROUS
Readily Tinted

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WHITE
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PERCHA p AINT

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Manufactured by

u. s. GUTT A

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co.,

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PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND

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T. W. PRATT, President

W. A STANLEY, Manager

HUNTSVILLE WAREHOUSE

co.,

West Huntsville
Bonded under License of U. S. Government

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COTION GINNING-STORAGE
-Manufacturers ofHIGH GRADE FERTILIZERS, MIXTURES OF HORSE,
MULE AND DAIRY FEEDS
TRY OUR A-Al BRANDS OF MOLASSES FEEDS
80 Per Cent Grain (Corn and Oats)
62 Per Cent Grain (Corn and Oats)
35 Per Cent Grain (Corn and Oats)
20 Per Cent Protein Cow Feed, Cow's Delight
Alfalfa Meal, Cotton Seed Meal and Molasses Mixtures

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

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The One Right Lubricant in Textile Mills

•· -,,-,,-c1-1,_,,_,,_,,_, ,_c,_c,_1,_,,_1,-•1_,_,,_,_,,_,_,,_,,_,,_,_,_,_,_,_,,_(♦:♦

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NON·
TRADE MARI(

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UNITED STATES

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RECISTERED IN

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PATENT Of'FICE

Modern Textile Lubricant

Lubricates Perfectly and Stays in the Bearings

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Exceptionally adhesive (our exelusive process) NON-FLUID OIL
is entirely pure lubricant giving
full lubrication for a longer period
than liquid oil-lasting several

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times as long per application-and
costing much less per month.
IN the bearing is OFF the goods
-so the use of NON-FLUID OIL
avoids Joss from oil stains-an
important saving.

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TRY the ONE RIGHT LUBRICANT-Write today for free sample and bulletin, "Lubrication of
Textile Machinery'', a veritable mine of information
regarding the lubrication of all types of textile ma-

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Main Office: 292 Madison Ave., N. Y.
Works, Newark, N. .J.
LEWIS W. THOMASON, Charlotte, N. C.
Southern Agent.

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NEW ;�;� &amp; NEW JERSEY LUBRI��

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co.,

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Providence, R. I. Pittsburgh, Pa.
Warehouses:
Chicago, III.
St. Louis, Mo.
Kansas City, Mo.
Philadelphia, Pa. New Orleans, La. Atlanta, Ga.

,:

Charlotte, N. C.
Greenville, S. C.

♦:♦J-C)-(l-() -11-ll-ll-ll-ll-ll-11-ll-11-ll-ll-1) -II-Cl-!l-ll_l_l)-l-11-1)-11-ll-11-l l....

STEEL HEDDLE MFG. co.,

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PHILADELPHIA, PA.

GREENVILLE, S. C.

Manufacturers of

Flat Steel Heddles and Harness Frames,
Drop Heddles, Leno and Jacquard Heddles
for Weaving All Grades of Textiles

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SOUTHERN PLANT

Greenville, S. C.

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Loom Reeds Soldered and Pitch Band
Leno Reeds, Lease Reeds, Beamer Hecks
and Combs

621-635 E. McBee Ave.

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

�-·1 -·-·-. -..---·-·--·-.-..-·-"-•-·-·--·-·-·-·-.-·-. ---•:1

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SEIBERLING ALL-TREADS

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Phone 878

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

�Specialists
1n

Huntsville, Alabama

UAH Archives and Special Collections

�MILL SUPPLIES
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS
WAGONS AND BUGGIES

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BUILDING MATERIALS
PAINTS AND OILS
PLUMBING
HEATING
ROOFING
WffiING

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THE HUTCHENS COMPANY
Wholesale-Retail

UAH Archives and Special Collections

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�·1•1.-·----·----·-·--·-··1
THE
YOUNG &amp; VANN
SUPPLY CO.,
Birmingham,

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TRI L
PPLIE
HE
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H RDW RE

We re peciali t in
Machinery, Equipment and upplie for Mills, Min , Furnace
ontractor, Textile and Indu trial Plant of all kind .
LET

HELP YO
OL E
YO R PROBLEM

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DRY GOODS
READY-TO-WEAR

ha
a•way
repre enled that
great ha ic quality which di j cerning women de cribe as

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Down, through the changing
tyle of over 20 years our
tock of

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GOOD VALUE

MAY &amp; COONEY
"Greater Hunt ville'
Greater tore"

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!••�---•-o-c.__._,,_.,._,.._._.,. •••

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THE ACORN STORES, Inc.,

ALwA y

DEPE DABLE MER CHA DISE

Our
w York Buyer ar on th watch for the Acorn
Stor , throughout the county, and with our great
Store Buying Power that enahl u to ell good that
are dep ndahl at the very low t price po ihle we
can ave you money on any purcha e you will make.
Come in to see us.

Compare our prices and

convince yourself

Hunt vill , Ala.

Phone

o. 25

UAH Archives and Special Collections

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�ONE PLANT,

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ONE MANAGEMENT!

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Since the inception of this concern in 1831, nearly one hundred years ago, the shop, as it is known to
those who are in any way connected with it, and the
management have been as one.

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Since the day the first Whitin picker was built,
there has been a sense of loyalty between employer
and employee, the one to the other, which has been
and is reflected in the quality and workmanship of

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all that has been produced by this plant.

Today, on the basis of the severe modern competition, these two attributes stand all in good stead.

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Due to being a self-contained unit under one roof
more careful supervision over design and more uni­
formity and consistency in manufacture is had than
is possible in a plant of several separate units. And
for the samB reason, by the co-operation engendered
thereby, the words "WHITIN" and "QUALITY" are
synonymous.
Visitors are cordially. invit�d at all times.

WHITIN MACHINE WORKS
Whitinsville, Mass.

Charlotte, N. C.

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Atlanta, Ga.

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

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This space is given by The Henderson National Bank

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in the interest of Education

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1 �be J&amp;,enbergon jlational ,Sank
i;untsutlle, Alabawa

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FOR STRENGTH AND SERVICE

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PEE GEE pAINTS AND VARNISHES
Were U ed on Thi School Building

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We Are Distributors for

PEE GEE PAINTS

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Successors to

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YARBROUGH BROS. HARDWARE CO.

Get Acquainted With the NOOJIN Service

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LAWRENCE
AND COMPANY

24 Thomas Street, New York, N. Y.
89 Franklin Street,

Boston, Mass.

Export Department:

24 Thomas Street, New York, N. Y.

Selling Agents

MERRIMACK
MANUFACTURING CO.
Huntsville, Ala.
Lowell, Mass.

F-3

UAH Archives and Special Collections

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Phone 178

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DILWORTH LUMBER COMP ANY
N. Church Street and Southern Railway

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Money spent for a house is money saved
and, at the same time, money invested.

Put this question to your family tonight:

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"Shall we build a house and let our rent

money pay for it?" and take a vote.

will he carried unanitnously.

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We Solicit a Share of Your "LUMBER" Business
and, Remember, When You Think of
Lumber, Think of DILWORTH

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

�THE
MERRIMACK
MANUFACTURING
COMPANY

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♦
•♦

UAH Archives and Special Collections

♦: ♦

�♦14-0-••-•-••-••-••-n-••-••-••-•-••-••-••-••-••-•-••-•-••-•-•-•-••-•-••-•-o-••:

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AUGUSTA CREAM SIZING
COMPANY

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Manufactrers and Jobbers

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Disinfectant, "Autox" Roach Powders,
Sizing, Cherokee Cleaner, Etc.

Telephone 2446

P. 0. Box 376

1002 Walker Street

AUGUSTA, GEORGIA

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SERVICE

There is a Texaco Lubricant
----

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for Every Purpose

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THE TEXAS COMPANY
HUNTSVILLE, ALABAMA

UAH Archives and Special Collections

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SACO
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LOWELLI

Largest Manufacturers of Textile Machinery in America

Mills Equipped Throughout
with
Saco-Lowell's Latest Machinery

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Are in a Position to Meet
the Most Strenuous
Competition

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WALTER W. GAYLE
Southern Agent................................................Charlotte, N. C.
Branch Offices:

Greenville, S. C., and Atlanta, Ga.
Executive Offices:

Newton Upper Falls,

Massachusetts

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

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�•..a,&lt;•........ ��,,....,.,.....,.).-.(t.._.o_........._........,..,.....,_�••.-..4� 1_.......�• ..-.,,.._.. ......����•�..-.-1�.._.,.!•

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A Victor Traveler for
Every Need

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We make and carry in stock over 7,000 different sizes and styles of Ring Travelers and
Twisters to fill every need in your mill.

In

just one particular are they alike,-that is,
they are of the highest quality humanly possible to produce.
When you need travelers in a rush, telegraph or telephone our nearest office.

Bet-

ter yet, never allow your Victor stock to
run low.

Victor Ring Traveler Company
20 Mathewson St., Providence, R. I.
Southern Agent-A. B. CARTER,
Room 615, Third Nat. Bank Bldg., Gastonia, N. C.

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UAH Archives and Special Collections

�You can
save on
your
rolls,
you can
make
stronger
yarn
and
better
cloth,
by using

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UUN 191914

2l6L92 l30

FEB21912

KNOXALL
Roller
Ooth

Edward
H. Best
&amp; Co.
Incorporated

Boston

These Rolls were taken off in 1924.

Rolls of later date can be furnished if required. We supply Date Starnpti
with K OXALL Roller Cloth

UAH Archives and Special Collections

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,.,...••.....c,..., ,.....
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ECONOMIC TRENDS IN THE ELECTRICAL INDUSTRY

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Name a home wilhoul clcclric
lights-you probably have to
think a minute in order to do so.
Yel your Elcclric , crvicc
Company will tell you that there
are in the nation today approximalcly 5, 000, 000 homes within
the ,each ol c kd ,i, sec vire
d
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:t :\�h�•:��::;":\;,'.��,i!; :�:
jet-still cling to �lie smoking
coal oil lamp.
In spite of the low .:osl of clectric current-in spile of the

47%

areWii-eJ

cfforls of cl cclric service companies to reach every available
home, Lherc are today only
12, 750, 000 or the nation's 27,000, 00 0 homt'S that are wired
for current. Only a fraction of
these wired homes have all �ae
mo,e common cl cct,ical nppl i-

"";:•�oint ol yeo,s , t he Amed can home is among the oldest or
electrical markets; in point of
customers available, it still r�nks
with the newest.

WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC &amp; MANUFACTURING
EAST PITTSBURGH, PA.

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Westi ughouse mnnufactures Lhe only complete
line of home electrical appliances guarnnteed
by a common trademurk, nn&lt;l built up to a
common stnn&lt;lur&lt;l.
Westinghouse appliances
in&lt;'lu&lt;le fnns, irons, heaters, toasters, ranges,
curlins.t irons, percolnlors, lamps, rectigoos.

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��--------------------�-�---

-"'-

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-�---- -

------------------------ - - - -

Co,nplinient

of

POST OFFICE CAFE

UAH Archives and Special Collections

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4.00 MILL........................FAMOUS N
500 MILL ........................C. P. SPECIAL

BLUE RIVER CRYSTAL
These STARCHES are manufactured by carefully
controlled and standardized methods.
PURITY and UNIFORMITY are secured by accurate
laboratory tests.

ECONOMY and EFFICIENCY are proved by the constantly increasing number of exacting cotton manufacturers who are getting satisfactory results by using
our STARCHES especially selected for their conditions.
Recommendations are based upon intelligent investigation of each individual problem.

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COR�

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Selling Representatives

CORN PRODUCTS SALES co.,

4 7 Farnsworth St..............................................Boston, Mass.
Woodside Building.................................... Greenville, S. C.

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Compliments
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ATLANTA HARNESS &amp; REED

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MANUFACTURING CO.,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA

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You Should Have a Westinghouse
Electric Range

BECAUSE accurate heat control gives you absolutely uniform results. You can always duplicate your best culinary
efforts.
Cooking with electricity is easier; there is not the necessity
for constant attention and regulation.
An electric range is clean; there is no dirt or smoke. It isi
healtJhy; there are no obnoxious fumes. It is safe; there is no
need for loose matches in the kitchen.
Your kitchen is cooler with an electric range because th.e heat
does not penetrate the oven walls.
There is less shrinkage of meats and other food in an electric;
range; you will save in the amount of food used for your family.
The meals you prepare on an electric range will be more appetizing and more nutritive because all the savory juices are retained by the heat storage principle.

ALABAMA POWER COMPANY

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60 Stores in Alabama

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THE HAPPY FAMILY
is the well dressed family­
they have no worries. They
have solved the good clothes
problem, they BUY and PAY
THE EASY WAY. Dividing
the payments in small sums a
little at a time makes it easy
to dress stylishly.
For MEN and YOUNG MEN
Classy Suits, Overcoatl-l, Swell
Hats and Caps, Trousers, Gab­
ardine Rain Coats, Boys' Two
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For WOMEN and MISSES
Stylish Coats, Dresses, Sweat­
ers. New Millinery, Girls' Coats
and Dresses.

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GERON LUMBER COMPANY
Meridian

treet, Hunt ville, Alabama

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COMPLETE STOCK BUILDING
MATERIALS
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MONROE
PRINTING COMPANY
COMMERCIAL PRINTERS
SPECIALISTS
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IN OP'ICE FORMS, ANO COLOR PRINTING
FOR LOCAL AND PORElGN ADVERTISERS
MEMBER.

MON --ROZE --MARK

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Compliments

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HUNTSVILLE
KNITTING CO.,
Huntsville, Ala.

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This little 6 t-page, non-technical booklet, illustrated by a famous cartoon-

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ist, holds much of interest to the textile man.

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Send for your copy

Parks-CramerCompaey
En,qinaers &amp; Contractors

Indus-I-rial Prj,in.!JandAir G&gt;ndift"oni'l!J
Charlotte
Boston.
Fitchburg

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                    <text>I

John F.
Space Center
N A T I O N A L A E R O N A U T I C S A N D SPACE A D M I N I S T R A T I O N

KM HISTORY DOCUP
ity of Aiabama Researcl
QF Science 6 Technolc _

-LI-..-----D=N~.--------

-

AMERICA'S
SPACEPORT

�"The story of man's achievement thrmgh30ut history has
been the story of his victory over the forces of nature. In
that continuing story, our generation has been given the opportunity to write the grandest chapter of them all. It i s on
our schedule, in oar plm, and in our determination to put
men 092 the moon before 2370."
President Lyndon

B. Johnson

sept.n, 1966

�W E L-COME...
,

.
'

.&amp;

.

Welcome to the John F.
Kennedy Space Center, NASA.
This i s the major launch
base from which manned and unmanned spacecraft explore the
environment beyond the Earth's
atmosphere, reaching out to the
Moon, the Sun and the planets.
Thousands of dedicated engineers, scientists, technicians
and support personnel, members
of an integrated GovernmentIndustry
team,
have created
these facilities.
The Center's
superb launch team has achieved
many "firsts" i n man's conquest
of space.
These accomplishments represent an important
phase of the Nation's effort to
achieve and maintain preeminence i n space research and
exploration.
I trust you w i l l share our
pride i n the unique environment
of the launch center and the historic work being carried on here.

John

F.

Kurt H. Debus, Director
Kennedy Space Center,
NASA

�MISSION
John F. Kennedy Space Center i s the major
NASA launch organization for manned and un:
manned space missions.
As the lead center within NASA for the development of launch philosophy, procedures, technology and facilities, Kennedy Space Center launches
Apollo space vehicles; unmanned lunar, planetary and interplanetary spacecraft; and scientific, meteorological and communications satellites.
The mission encompasses planning and directing:
Preflight Preparations
Vehicle Integration
Test and Checkout of Launch Vehicles,
Spacecraft and Foci liti es
Coordination of Range Requirements
Countdown and Launch Operations
Supporting t h i s primary mission are a host of
technical and administrative activities. These include design engineering; testing, assembly and
checkout of launch vehicles and spacecraft; launch
operations; and purchasing and contracting.
The national Spaceport i s the site from which
American astronauts w i l l be launched on lunar exploration missions before the end o f the decade.
The A i r Force Eastern Test Range, part o f the
Air Force Systems Command, operates and maintains the largest missile proving ground i n the free
The Test
world, one that spans 10,000 miles.
Range's mission i s to provide launch f a c i l i t i e s
and support services for launching missiles and
spacecraft, and gather useful data from the flights.
The Range supports NASA-sponsored launches for
the peaceful exploration of space.

�The

National

Aeronautics

and

Space Administration was established
October 1, 1958. T h i s was 12 months
after the launch o f Sputnik 1, the f i r s t
man-made Earth satellite, and n i n e
months after the launch o f Explorer 1,
the f i r s t United States satellite.
The maior focus o f NASA's launch
operations has centered on Cape Kennedy, formerly Cape Canaveral, Florida.
The antecedents of these a c t i v i t i e s
date back to t h e years f o l l o w i n g World
War II when the War Department selected the s i t e as a t e s t i n g area for longrange guided missiles. T h i s s p i t o f
land i u t t i n g into the A t l a n t i c Ocean
wos selected because o f the chain o f
islands stretching southeastward t o
Ascension Island which could accommodate tracking stations to measure
the f l i g h t of research and development
vehicles.
The s i t e was formally approved J u l y 8, 1947.
Soon afterward, Congress author i z e d the acquisition and construction
o f the A t l a n t i c M i s s i l e Range, now the
Eastern T e s t Range. A s a Department
o f Defense facility, the range was assigned to the A i r Force for management.
Subsequently, the range was
extended t o the Indian Ocean, a distance o f more than 10,000 miles. The
Army and Navy have a l s o u t i l i z e d the
range f a c i l i t i e s i n the development o f

rocket-powered weapons systems.
As the NASA program got underway, the Cape became the headquarters
of the Launch Operations Center, later
renamed the John F. Kennedy Space
Center, NASA.
In late 1964, the Kennedy Space
Center was relocated on adiacent Merr i t t Island. The s i t e occupies some
Here, foci l i t i e s have
88,000 acres.
been installed t o accommodate enormously powerful space vehicles t o
carry man to the Moon and back, and
to undertake even more challenging
missions i n the vast reaches o f the
universe.
By noteworthy coincidence, the
Spaceport has an unusual heritage.
Numerous Indian burial mounds and
middens (refuse piles) have been discovered on NASA property. Researchers have removed artifacts dating back
to the time of Christ. Elsewhere, part i c u l a r l y along the beaches, traces
have been found of early Spanish
activity.
Dr. Charles Fairbanks of the University of Florida has pointed out:
'This was one of the areas where
Western c i v i l i z a t i o n came to the New
World, and now it i s the area from
which our c i v i l i z a t i o n w i l l go forth to
other worlds."

�LAUNCH
VEHICLES

T h e United States space program
depends on the $ability o f scientists
and engineers t o provide the means
for propelling useful pay loads i n t o
Earth orbit and into the farther reaches
of space. For t h i s task, launch vehic l e s of varying sizes and capabilities
are necessary.
The f l i g h t path chosen for a payload determines what performance i s
required of the particular launch vehicle. Obviously, it would be impractical
to use our most powerful launch vehicle, the Saturn V, t o orbit a small,
lightweight group o f s c i e n t i f i c satellites, or to r i s k failure of a mission by
placing too much weight on a launch
vehicle of any size.
For these reasons, NASA has developed a family o f r e l i a b l e launch

�vehicles of different sizes, shapes and
capabilities. The objective has been
to develop the smallest number of vehicles consistent with the f u l l scope of
the space program.
Launch vehicles employed for
space missions i n the recent past
evolved principally from basic military
systems developed and tested during
the previous decade.
Technological
exchange between military and scient i f i c projects continues to benefit the
national space program.
The f i r s t United States satellite
was orbited by an Army-developed
Jupiter-C missile.
Delta, the workhorse of NASA's unmanned spacecraft
program, employs components developed by the A i r Force and Navy. Modi-

SATURN I

fied Army/Air Force developed Redstone and Atlas boosters were utilized
for the Mercury program, this country's
i n i t i a l manned space flight effort. The
Gemini launch vehicle was a modified

Air

Force Titan II booster. Centaur,
the world's f i r s t space launch vehicle
to be powered by liquid hydrogen fuel,
and the highly successful Ranger and
Mariner space probes were boosted into
space by modified Air Force Atlas
vehicles.
The Saturn family of heavy launch
vehicles, which was developed by
NASA expressly for the peaceful exploration of space, evolved from technology acquired during the Army's
early Redstone, Jupiter and Juno miss i l e development programs.

A P O L L O / U P R A T E D SATURN

�MANNED
SPACE FLIGHT
For thousands of years man has
dreamed of the day when he would explore the vast universe that surrounds
his tiny planet. This aspiration has
stemmed from his fundamental thirst
for knowledge and his readiness to
accept the challenge of the unknown.
When Orville Wright made the first
powered flight in 1903 at a speed of
31 miles per hour, the significance of
his achievement was barely recognized.
Yet, in l i t t l e more than half a century
following that historic event at Kitty
Hawk, man' has succeeded i n orbiting
the Earth at speeds measured in thousands of miles per hour. Now, he i s
literally reaching for the Moon as the
first stop on the way to exploration of
the solar system and the infinite
reaches of interstellar space beyond.
The achievements in space since
the first satellites were launched have

paled to insignificance when compared
with future proiects. Only i n the light
of what he has already accomplished
can man look ahead with the almost
certain knowledge that he eventually
w i l l realize his age-old dream of exploring the universe.
Viewed in terms of time and distance, the challenge of space exploration seems insurmountable.
Yet, a
review of the technological accomplishments of the 20th century indicates
that what appears as impossible i s
merely difficult.
The exploration of space i s following the pattern by which flight
within the atmosphere was mastered.
Each new development provides a
platform from which to take the next
step, and each step i s an increment of
scientific knowledge and technological
skill.

��MERCCJRY
Project Mercury, the first of the
manned space flight programs, was
organized October 5, 1958, and successfully executed i n less than five
years.
The primary objectives of Proiect
Mercury were:
To place a manned spacecraft
i n orbital flight around the
Earth.
To investigate man's performance capabilities and his abili t y to function in the environment of space.
To recover, safely, both man
and spacecraft.
Project Mercury demonstrated that
the high-gravity forces of launch and
reentry, and weightlessness in orbit for
as much as 34 hours, did not impair
man's ability to control a spacecraft.
I t proved that man not only augments
the automated spacecraft controls, but
also can conduct scientific observations and experiments.

-

Moreover, Project Mercury proved

that man can respond to and record the
unexpected, a faculty beyond the capability of a machine which can be programmed only to deal with what i s
known or expected. In addition, the
Mercury flights confirmed that man can
consume food and beverages and perform other normal functions while i n a
weightless
environment.
Finally,
Mercury laid a sound foundation for
the technology of manned space flight.
The Mercury spacecraft, a one-man,
bell-shaped vehicle, 9.5 feet high and
6 feet across at its reentry heat shield
base, weighed approximately 4,000
pounds at liftoff and 2,400 pounds at
recovery.
The launch vehicle for the Mercury
suborbital missions was a modified
Redstone rocket generating 78,000
pounds of thrust at liftoff. A modified
Atlas rocket whose three engines produced 367,000 pounds thrust was employed for Mercury orbital flights.
Complexes 56 and 14 at Cape Kennedy
were utilized for the Mercury missions.

�GEMINI

&amp;mini was %he Lntermdiate step
tawutd ~ h i c n r i n gB manpad lwsw land#
ing, bridgina the afIigjhtexp4ilcnce
k w e m tke S ~ W T - ~ Q ~
missions andhe lang durdflm mirsions
of Apollo.
Major obitctives achieved during
the p r ~ r a m
included d*mons+ration that
man can perform effectively during extended periods i n spoce, both within
and outside the p~oiectivaenviron.men+
of a spacecraft, development crf r m dezwus and doeking techniques, and
parfelttan of controlled rsenTry and
landing procedures.
The Gemin i progrm provided fhe
first American demonstratim of arbi tal
rendezvous
a skill which must be
devdeped to land Amsriean exploxers
on the Meon and is camduct the adwnced ventures of the future.
The welaan Gemini spaeemafr
was also a bll-shaped vehicle; however, it was almost twice as heavy, SQ
perceht larger and contained 50 per-

wmq

-

cccn? more valume than the Mercury
saw&amp;crafit.
The tatsneh vehicle empleyed i n
the C m i n i prepram was the modified
Air Force Titan tl rocket which devdoped a thrust of 430,000 pounds at
liftoff.
The o v ~ ~ length
l t
af the
Gmttni-Titan ll spa&amp;@vehicle was 109
h t , Gemini flights wwe launched
from Complex 19 at Cope Kennedyelr,
The t a r p t vahicls fos thq Gemini
r.(tndezvuur ond docking misrims was
B d i f i e d Agena-D vehicle with (J fwwad moun~edtarget docking adapter,
which provldedtb connecting point far
mwting wjth the &amp;mini srraaecrdt.
The Agena-a, with a multiple restwt capability, had a rated thrust o f
appmxim&amp;aly 16,W pcrunds. it was'
launched an an Atlas Standard Launch
Vehicle which generates about 390,000
pounds of thrust. Gemini Aflas/Agena
t a r p t vehiefrs had an avarall length
of 104 fret. They were lounched from
Complex 14 at Cape Kennedy.

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Apollo i s the largest and most
complex of the manned spoce flight
programs. Its goal i s to land American
astronauts on the Moon and return them
safely to Earth.
The astronauts w i l l travel to the
Moon in the three-man Apollo spacecraft. Weighing 45 tons, the spacecraft
consists of three sections - a command
module, a service module and a lunar
module.
The command module may-be likened to the crew compartmentof a commercial jet airliner. It i s designed so
that thrse men can eat, sleep and work
in it without wearing pressure suits.
Of the three modules, only the command
module w i l l return to Earth. Thus, it i s
constructed to withstand the tremendous
deceleration forces and intense heating
caused by reentry into the Earth's
atmosphere,
The service module contains supplies, fuel and a rocket engine so
the astronauts can maneuver their
craft into and out of lunar orbit and
alter their course and speed in space.

&gt;

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1

The lunar module i s designed to
carry two men from lunar orbit to the
Moon's surface for exploration and
and then back into lunar orbit for rendezvous with the command and service
modules.
After the crew transfers
back to the command module, the lunar
module i s jettisoned and left in lunar
orbit.
Providingthe muscle for theApollo
program i s the Saturn family of heavy
launch vehicles. The first of these to
be flight tested by the Kennedy Space
Center was the Saturn I. Developing
1.5million pounds of thrust at liftoff,
theSaturn I demonstrated the feasibility

,

.- . .
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of clustered rocket boosters and qualified vehicle guidance and control systems. It also tested the structure and
design of the Apollo command and
service modules, physical compatibility
of the launch vehicle and spacecraft
and iettisoning of the Apollo launch
escape system. Additionally, Saturn I
vehicles orbited large Pegasus micrometeoroid detection satellites to monitor the frequency of micrometeoroids
and to determine if they would be a
hazard to manned space flights.
Currently, uprated Saturn flight
programs are underway at Kennedy
Space Center. W i t h the greater power
of the uprated Saturn, a l l three modules of the Apollo spacecraft are
launched into Earth orbit.
Initially,
the flights are unmanned. Soon, uprated Saturn vehicles w i l l launch three
astronauts on Earth orbital missions
up to 14 days in duration.
Lunar missions w i l l use the enormous power of the Saturn V launch
vehicle. Together with the three modules of the Apollo spacecraft, the
Saturn V stands 364 feet, weighs about
6 million pounds at launch and develops 7.5 million pounds of thrust at
liftoff.
Development of the Saturn vehicles
i s the responsibility of the Marshall
Space
Flight Center,
Huntsville,
Alabama.
The Manned Spacecraft
Center, Houston, Texas, has responsi bility for Apollo spacecraft development, training of the flight crews and
conducting the flight missions. Assembly, checkout and launch of the ApolloSaturn space vehicles are conducted
at Cape Kennedy and at the Nation's
Spaceport by Kennedy Space Center.

�1

;,I
'

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-

SATELLITES
AND
SPACE -.
PROBES .-...

�Unmanned spacecraft are making
important contributions to man's knowledge ahout the world in which he lives
and the universe around him. Much of
this knowledge i s derived from the
growing family of scientific satellites
and space probes launched by Kennedy
Space Center.
Explorer satellites have mapped
the Earth's magnetic field and have
pioneered i n gaining new knowledge of
the Earth's shape and mass distribution. Explorer I, this country's first
satellitewhich was launched from Cape
Kennedy on January 31,1958, discovered that the Earth was partially surrounded by a belt of deadly radiation, subsequent1y named the Van Allen Radiation Region.
Other satellites have furnished
information on micrometeoroids,temperatures in space, radiation and magnetic
fields, upper atmospheric conditions,
solar activity and other phenomena.
Meteorological
satellites have
achieved the most significant advances
in weather forecasting since the invention of the barometer over three
centuries ago. T I ROS satellites, the
first of a series of orbiting "weathermen," were launched from Cape Kennedy Complex 17 by Delta vehicles
beginning i n April 1960. These satellites returned well over a million cloud:over photographs of the Earth's surrace.
Starting
in 1966, operational
ueather satellites were launched for
the Environmental Science Services
Admini stration by Kennedy Space
Center personnel. Placed into polar
3rbit from the Western Test Range in
Ealiforn ia, these satellites photograph
cloud cover and transmit pictures to
weather stations akound the world.
This type of fast, accurate weather
reporting coupled with long-range weather prediction can be worth untold
millions of dollars to agriculture,
business and industry.
Communications satellites such
as Echo, Telstar, Relay, Syncom and
Early Bird, launched on Delta vehicles
trom Cape Kennedy's Complex 17, are
shrinking the distances between continents, and are leading to better under-

standing among the world's people.
Exploration of the Moon's surface
and environment by unmanned space
probes i s essential to obtain data for
manned lunar landings. This type of
information i s also important i n yielding clues to the origin of the Moon, the
solar system and perhaps even the
universe.
Rangers 7, 8 and 9 returned thousands of close-up pictures of the Moaj
before smashing into the lunar surfac+:
On June 2, 1966, the Surveyor I space&amp;
craft, the first of a series of instryk
mented soft-landers, settled gently
onto the lunar surface and transmitted
thousands of detailed photographs ba*
to Earth. Other Surveyor soft-landers
are making detailed examinations of
the Moon's physical phenomena and
surface composition. These spacecraft
are launched by Atladcentaur vehicles
from Cape Kennedy Complex 36.
Lunar Orbiter spacecraft, circling
the Moon in low orbit, have photographed with amazing clarity wide
areas of the lunar landscape. Launched
from Complex 13 at Cape Kennedy, the
Lunar Orbiter missions have provided
significant data on potential landing
sites for Apollo astronauts.
Investigations of other planets of
the solar system are conducted by
unmanned Mariner spacecraft. On December 14, 1962, Mariner 2 became the
first spacecraft to scan another planet
at close range as i t passed within
21,600 miles of Venus.
Mariner 4,
after an eight-month iourney, passed
.
within 6,000 miles of Mars on July 14,
1965.
Instrument observation of the
plahet yielded invaluable clues to
scientists seeking clues to the possibility of life on Mars. Mariner spacecraft are launched by Atlas/Agena vehicles from Cape Kennedy Complexes
12 and 13.
Goddard Space Flight Center manages NASA's unmanned scientific,,
meteorological and communications
satellite programs. Unmanned lunar, planetary and interplanetary programs
are managed by Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Launch operations for these
programs are conducted by the Kennedy
Space Center.

�LAUNCH COMPLEX 39
Launch Complex 39, the nation's
f i ~ s toperational spaceport, ranks as
one of history's great engineering
achievements. Developed and operated
by the Kennedy Space Center, the immense facility is designed to accommodate the massive Apollo/Saturn V
space vehicle which w i l l carry American astronauts to the Moon.
Complex39 reflects a new approach
to launch operations. In contrast to the
launch facilities presently utilized at
Cape Kennedy, Complex 39 permits a
high launch rate, economy of operation

.

..

and superior flexibility. This new approach, known as the 'mobile concept,"
provides for assembly and checkout of
the Apollo/Saturn V vehicle in the controlled environment of a building, i t s
subsequent transfer to a distant launch
siteand launch with a minimum of time
on the launch ad.
The maior components of Complex
39 include:
the Vehicle Assembly
Building, where the space vehicle i s
assembled and tested; the Launch
Control Center, which houses display,
monitoring and control equipment for

�checkout and launch operations; the
Mobile Launcher, upon which the space
vehicle i s erected for checkout, transfer and launch and which provides internal access to the vehicle and spacecraft during testing; the Transporter,
which transfers the space vehicle and
Mobile Launcher to the launch site;
the Crawlerway, a specially prepared
roadway over which the Transporter
travels to deliver the Apollo/Saturn V
to the launch site; the Mobile Service
Structure, which provides external access to the vehicle and spacecraft at
the launch site; and the launch site,
from which the space vehicle i s launched on Earth orbital and lunar missions.
The Vehicle Assembly Building
provides a startling contrast to the low
Merritt Island landscape. Covering 8
acres of ground, the Vehicle Assembly
Building conslsts of two major working
areas: a 525-foot-high high bay area
and a 210-foot-high low bay area.
The- high bay contains four vehicle
assembly and checkout bays, each capable of accomrnodoting a fully ossembled, heavy-class space vehicle. The
low bay contains eight preparation
and p heck out cells for the upper stages
of the SacturnV vehicle.
Vehicle stages are shipped by barge
from fabricatian centers to a turning basin near the Vehicle Assembly Bui lding,
off-loaded onto special carriers and
transported to the building. The first
stage i s towed to the high bay area and
erected on the Mobile Launcher. Four
holddown-support arms on the Mobile
Launcher platform secure the booster
in place. Work
are positioned
around the booster for inspection and
testing. Concurrently, upper stages of
the Saturn V are delivered to the low
bay cells, inspected, and tested.
When testing of the individwal
stages i s completed, the upper stages
are prepared for mating and moved to the
high bay area. A l l components of the
space vehicle, including the Apollo
spacecraft, ore assembled vertically
in the high bay area. The fully assembled space vehicle then undergoes

final integrated checkout and simulated
flight tests.
Located adjacent to the Vehicle
Assembly Building and connected to
the high bay area by an enclosed
bridge i s the Launch Control Center.
All phases of launch operations at
Complex 39 are controlled from this
four-story concrete structure.
The first floor of the Launch Control Center contains offices, a dispensary and a cafeteria. The second floor
is allocated to telemetry, measuring and
checkout systems for use during stage
and vehicle assembly in the Vehicle
Assembly Building, and for launch operations at the launch site.
Four firing rooms occupy the third
floor
one for each high bay in the
Vehicle Assembly Building.
These
rooms contain control, monitoring and
display equipmentreqwired fw automatic
vehicle checkout and launch. Each firing room i s supported by a computer
room, which is a key element in the
automatic checkout and launch sequence.
The Mobile Launcher, the key to
launch operations at Cemplex 39, actuallyperforms a dual function. It serves
as an assembly
within the
Vehicle Assembly Building and as a
launch ~ l a t f o r mand umbilical tower at
the launch site located several miles
away.
The Mobile Launcher i s a 446-foothigh structure with a base platform
measuring 25 feet high, 160 feet long
and 135 feet wide. I t weighs 10.6 million pounds. Whether in the Vehicle
Assembly Building, at the launch site,

-

�or in its parking area, theM~bileLauncher ir positioned on six 22-foot-high
steel pedestals.
Nine swing arms extend from the
Mobile Launcher's tower. The three astronauts wi ll enter the Apol lo spacecraftvia the top swing arm. These arms
are dei~igrrrrdto swing rapidly away
from the vehicle during launch, Besides
carrying vital umbilical lines prapellant, pneumatic, electrical, data link
to the space vehicle, the swing apms
also permit a catwalk access to the
vehicle during tfaa final ~ h a s eof countdown.
The ApolloAaturn V i s p s i t i m e d
on the Mobile Launcher and secured by
f a r suppart and holddown arms. At
the pad these arms hold the vehicla
during thrust buildup of ths engines. A
45-square-foot spcning in the k s e plotform permits passage of engine exhausts
at ignition. Three Mebile Launchers
have been corrsttuctrd at Complex 39.
A tracked vehicle hnewn as the
Trclnsporfer moves thc 36-stsry Apol lo/
Saturn V space vehicle and Mobile
Launcher horn the Vehicle Assembly
Building to the launch site. Two Trans-

-

-

are stutioned a t Camplex 39.
"Ihe Transporter i s similar to ma-

porters

chines used in strip mining operations.
Weighing app~aximately6 mi Illan ponds,
it i s 131 feet long and 114 M w?&amp;.
Its height is adjustabls froa aQ to 26
feet. The vehicle moves on. h r J~ltlLletracked crawlers, e s h 10 %a&amp; high and
40 feet long. Each shwe &amp;
~ m l c r
track weighs atrout a tat. ffrwa W Q $?
shws on each h a c k B F F ~l
~ ~ t 1 1of 8
tracks on the c n t h A t a l s .
Two main Civet d i m 1 engines provide 5,500 hnrsepwe-r. T* aher diesels gsnerah 2,t 30 h w ~ p ~ w e
farr
Ievk-ling, iackhg, rtew~tlsg, Il@ng,
verrtiloting and sfsctrsnia syat%ns.
Aurilimty plmimature pmvide power to
the Mabila L W W RwG h~ carried by
the Trurrhparter.
Fn optaatian, the Jranspwter s l ips
under the Mabile Lwncher while inside
the Vehicle Assembly Building, Its 16
hydraulic i a ~ k s
rulsctheMobila Launcher, with the spaee vehicle aboard, from
support pdestals, The leaded Tranoporter then backs out of the Vehicle
Assembly Building and transfers the
11.5-million-pound-load 3.5 mil&amp; te the

�launch site.
The Transporter has a speed of 1
mile per hour when fwlly loaded and
twice that when unloaded. It can negotiate curves of 500 feet mean radius.
A leveling system provides the capability to maintain the entire load i n
level position during *he transfer operation.
The combined weight of the Transporter, the Mobile Launcher m d the
Apollo/Saturn V exceeds 17 million
~ o u n d sa t the time of transfer from the
Vehicle Assembly Building to the
launch site. To accommodate fhis load,
a specially constructed Crawlerway was
prepared.
The Crawlerway extends from the
Vehicle Assembly Building to the
launch site, and consists of twa 40foot-wide lanes separated by a SOfoot-wide median strip.
The overall
width of the roadway i s 130 feet or
about equal to an eight-lane parkway.
Unsuitable material was removed
from the roadbed before beginning construction of the Crawlerway. The area
than was compacted with hydraulic fill
and selected material s, topped with
crushed graded lirnerock, paved w ith asphalt, sealed and covered with gravel,
forming a roadbed approximately 7 feet
thick. From eight to twelve thousand
pounds-pet-square-foot in surface prossures are exerted on the Crawlerway;
this i s equivalent to a stress of 40 iet-

liners landing at the same time on a
runway.
The Mobile Service Structure i s a
402-foot-high tower which weighs 12
million pounds. The structure contains
five service platforms that provide circular access to the space vehicle for
final servicing at the launch site. The
two lower platforms can be adiusted up
and down the vehicle, while the three
upper platforms have a fixed elevation.
Like the Mobile Launcher, the Mobile Service Structure i s transported to
the launch site by the Transporter. I t
is removed from the pad a few hours
prior to launch and returned to its parking area.
Two launch sites are located at
Complex 39, three and one-half miles
from the Vehicle Assembly Building.
Each site i s an eight-sided polygon
measuring 3,000 feet across.
The maior elements of the launch
iites include the launch pads; storage
tanks for liquid oxygen, liquid hydrogen
and RP-1 propellants; gas compressor
facilities; and associated umbilical
connection lines necessary for launching the space vehicle.
The launch pad itself i s a reinforced concrete hardsite measuring 390
feet by 325 feet. Top elevation of the
pad is 48 feet above sea level, sufficient distance for the rocket's engine
nozzles to rest above a 700,000-pound
flame deflector.

�INDUSTRIAL AREA
The lndustrial Area of the Kennedy
Space Center i s located 5 miles south
of Launch Complex 39. The area was
planned so that a l l functions not required at the launch complexes could be
grouped for ease of administration and
efficient operations. Here, the administrators, scientists, engineers and
technicians plan and accomplish many
of the detailed operations associated
with prelaunch testing and preparing
space vehicles for a mission.
The Headquarters building i s the
admin istrative center for spaceport
operations. Dr. Kurt H. Debus, Director
of the Kennedy Space Center, and his
immediate staff maintain offices on the
top floors. Procurement, program management, legal and other support functions occupy lower floors.
The largest structure i n the Industrial Area i s the Manned Spacecraft Operations building. This facility i s used
for modification, assembly and nonhazardous checkout of Apollo spacecraft. It also provides astronaut quarters and medical facilities, spacecraft
automatic testing stations and complete

supporting laboratories.
Following systems testing and
Apollo service module static firing,
Apol lo spacecraft are delivered t o this
building for integrated systems testing.
Here, individual spacecraft modules
undergo acceptance testing and integrated systems and altitude chamber
testing. Two 50-foot altitude chambers
environmentally test Apol lo spacecraft
in conditions simulating altitudes up to
250,000 feet. Space-suited astronauts
participate i n these simulated flight
tests.
The Information Systems facility
i s the hub of thespaceport's instrumentation and data processing operations.
It provides instrumentation to receive,
monitor, process, display and record
information received from the space
vehicle during test, launch and flight.
The lndustrial Area contains special laboratories and testing facilities
for the hazardous checkout operations
associated with spacecraft pyrotechnic
devices and toxic fluids.
Among the other maior f a c i l i t i e s
located i n the lndustrial Area are:

�-

Flight Crew Training Building
this foci li t y provides an environment where astronauts and flight
controllers
under the direction
of Manned Spacecraft Center
personnel
can practice for
manned Apollo space missions.
actual Apollo spacecratt and
creates nearly complete realism
for simulated missions.
For
about three weeks prior to a mission, astronauts go through makebelieve flights and cope with
purposely contrived emergency
situations.

-

-

-

L i f e Support Test
this facility
i s used for high-pressure testing
and liquid oxygen supply testing
of environmental control systems.
FluidTestSupport this facility
i s a single-story structure housing laboratories, shops and service areas to support the entire
test area.
Critical component
lesting of spacecraft fluid test
[systems are conducted i n the
laboratories which maintain special clean-room conditions.
Hypergolic Test
this facility
i s used to test and check out
stabilization and attitude control
systems, orbital maneuvering systems and reentry control systems
for spacecraft. Hypergotic fluids
utilized i n these systems are
especially hazardous since they
ignite upon contact with each
other.
Cryogenic Test
this facility
i s used for checking the cryogenic systems of spacecraft.
Cryogenic fluids are supercooled.
An example would be liquid hydrogen which must be maintained
a t a temperature of 423 degrees
below zero.
Pyrotechnic Installation
this
ten-story-high facility i s used
to install spacecraft pyrotechnic

-

-

-

-

devices and to statically weigh
and balance the spacecraft i n i t s
mission configuration to determine its center of gravity. The
facility i s also used for optical
alignments of critical components
of the guidance and navigation
systems, as well as acceleration
tests on dynamic fixtures.
Ordnance Storage
this facility
provides remote, safe storage for
solid fuel motors, pyrotechnic
devices and aligned launch escape towers.
RF Systems ~ e s t this facility
i s used to adiust, test and check
out spacecraft rendezvous apparatus and procedures in a simulated free space condition. Transmitting antenna height, elevation,
squint and azimuth angles and
transmitter frequency are remotely
controlled from an operator's console.

-

-

Additional support structures in the
Industrial Area include cafeteria, warehouses, fire station, security offices,
utilities and occupational health fac i l i ties.

�CAPE
KENNEDY FACILITIES
Stretching northward along the Atlantic Ocean are the famous launch complexes of
Cape Kennedy. The Cape i s managed by the U. S. Air Force for theDepartment of D e fense and designated as Station 1 of the Eastern Test Range which reaches 10,000 miles
to the Indian Ocean. The U. S. Army, Navy and Air Force have used the Cape's f a c i l ities for missile development programs. Since the advent of the national space program in 1958, however, the area has also been u t i l i z e d by NASA as a launch s'ite for
space vehicles. In the foreground are the two pads of Launch Complex 36 from which
Surveyor spacecraft are launched toward the Moon.

�Ten manned space missions were launched
from Complex 19 during the highly successfu!
Gemini program. Here, the Gemini 12 vehicle,
the final flight i n the program, i s readied for
launch.
At the right i s the erector which i s
employed i n servicing the space vehicle. Prior
to launch, the erector i s lowered t o the ground.
The umbilical tower on the left carries electri
call communications and propellant lines to the
rocket. lt remains attached t o the vehicle until
liftoff.

-

A t Launch Complex 34, one of two Saturn
launch sites on Cape Kennedy, the 300-foottall service structure encloses an uprated Saturn
launch vehicle.
Unlike the erector used at
Complex 19, this structure moves back from the
launch ready vehicle on rails. At nearby Complex 37, another Saturn launch site, a similar
structure serves two launch pads that are connected by rails.
From these sites, astronauts
w i l l be launched on Earth orbital missions i n
- . the three man Apollo spacecraft.

-

1

,

,.This view of Launch Complex 37 shows the
service structure in an open position with an
rated Saturn launch, vehicle on the pad. To
afford launch crews access to the rocket, the
service structure closer around the Saturn. The
platforms, which can be seen i n the photograph,
provide work levels at various stages of the configuration. This unmanned Saturn, AS- 203, was
successfully launched July 5, 1W6. The mission was an orbital flight t o examine the effects
of weightlessness on the liquid hydrogen fuel of
the second stage.
For this reason, i t was
equipped with a nose cone instead of an Apollo
spacecraft.
Blockhouse personnel of the Kennedy Space
Center's Government- industry launch team follows liftoff of uprated Saturn AS-20-3 on television monitors inside Complex 37 launch control center.
Seated at a console and pointing
(front center) i s Dr. Kurt H. Debus, Director of
the Kennedy Space Center. Manning the peri
scope directly behind Dr. Debus i s the Marshall
Space Flight Center Director, Dr. Wernher von
Braun.
The launch control center i s located
approximately 1,200 feet from the launch pad.
Constructed of heavy reinforced concrete, the
two story, dome shaped structure can withstand
blast pressures of 2, 188 pounds per square inch.

-

-

-

�THE HUMAN ELEMENT

�The John F. Kennedy Space
Center i s many things. It i s the tremendous power of space vehicles
carrying precious cargoes o f men and
equipment; i t i s s c i e n t i f i c progress i n
it i s material and hardwareaction;
some minute and delicate, some huge
and powerful-in
various stages o f
being born and growing up; i t i s a l l
these
and more. The John F.
Kennedy Space Center i s also people.
From N e w York City; Nashville,
Tennessee; Dallas, Texas; San Jose,
California-virtual ly from a l l over the
United States-these people, representing a l l racial and ethnic backgrounds
and professions and skills, have been
molded into one o f the greatest teams
ever assembled for a peacetime endeavor.
More than 24,000 strong and representing the b e s t launch talent i n
government and industry, t h i s team
devotes i t s s k i l l s and talents to the
United States' goal o f space preeminence. Additionally, thousands of
Air Force Eastern T e s t Range personnel and A i r Force-associated con-

...

tractor personnel are providing v i t a l
range and mission support to NASA
activities.
Because the continuing progress

of the space program i s dependent
upon the total, coordinated efforts of
many people, no task i s inconsequential, no job t r i v i a l and no individual
unimportant. Each success hinges on
the premise that the people involved
w i l l do the best iob they know how to
do a t a l l times.
The entire space program i s varied
and complex, as are the s k i l l s required
to successfully accomplish the iob.
Welders, radio technicians, doctors o f
medicine, engineers, scientists, mechanics,
tinsmiths, writers,
photographers, truck drivers, policemena l l these and more are employed. T h i s
i s but a fragment of the whole.
As each day expands the scope
and technology o f space activities, the
need for people who can cope w i t h and
contribute to the growth of the space
program also expands. People are the
most important asset o f the program.

�PRIVATE INDUSTRY

�BUDGET
Research and Development of Ground-Support
Equipment and Instrumentation
Construction of Facil-

$ 37,876,000

ities

FACTS
&amp; FIGURES
MANPOWER
Federal Service Personnel
Support Contractor Personnel
Stage Contractor Personnel
Corps of Engineers Personnel
(C of E)
Construction Workers
NASA and NASA Related
Manpower-July 1, 1967

$339,800,000

Administrative Operations
Total Budget Estimate
(Fiscal Year 1967)

$ 93,620,000

$47 1,296,000

-

GOVERNMENT INDUSTRY TEAM
AT KENNEDY SPACE CENTER

CONTRACTORS

CONTRACTORS

�8

PUBLIC BUS TOURS
Daily bus tours of the Kennedy Space Center
and Cape Kennedy are available to the public.
Tours originate near the Center's Gate 3 , adjacent
to U. S. Hwy. 1.
The tour route includes the industrial and
launch a r e a s of the Kennedy Space Center and
Cape Kennedy Air Force Station, with s t o p s for
photography and a v i s i t to the Vehicle Assembly
Building.
Nominal f e e s are charged for the tour.
Tour information and reservations may be
obtained by writing NASA Tours, P o s t Office
Box 21222, Kennedy Space Center, Florida 32899.

�</text>
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                  <text>Saturn V Collection</text>
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                  <text>&lt;a href="http://libarchstor.uah.edu:8081/repositories/2/resources/60" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the Saturn V Collection finding aid in ArchivesSpace&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                  <text>&lt;p&gt;The Saturn V was a three-stage launch vehicle and the rocket that put man on the moon. (Detailed information about the Saturn V's three stages may be found&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;a href="https://www.nasa.gov/centers/johnson/rocketpark/saturn_v_first_stage.html"&gt;here,&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;a href="https://www.nasa.gov/centers/johnson/rocketpark/saturn_v_second_stage.html"&gt;here,&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;/a&gt;and&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;a href="https://www.nasa.gov/centers/johnson/rocketpark/saturn_v_third_stage.html"&gt;here.&lt;/a&gt;) Wernher von Braun led the Saturn V team, serving as chief architect for the rocket.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Perhaps the Saturn V’s greatest claim to fame is the Apollo Program, specifically Apollo 11. Several manned and unmanned missions that tested the rocket preceded the Apollo 11 launch. Apollo 11 was the United States’ ultimate victory in the space race with the Soviet Union; the spacecraft successfully landed on the moon, and its crew members were the first men in history to set foot on Earth’s rocky satellite.&lt;/p&gt;
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