Greensboro (Guilford County, N.C.) city directory, 1930, Part 2

Author:
Publication date: 1930
Publisher: Richmond, Hill Directory Co.
Number of Pages: 750


USA > North Carolina > Guilford County > Greensboro > Greensboro (Guilford County, N.C.) city directory, 1930 > Part 2


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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Greensboro's public school system is a point of genuine pride, it having been recently rated 96.4 out of a pos- sible hundred by the North Carolina Department of Education. The 10,000 school children have 22 modern school


18


GREENSBORO


tv


Y. M. C. A.


Y. W. C. A.


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GREENSBORO


buildings, including two junior high schools and a new senior high school. The municipal school plant has a to- tal valuation of about $5,000,000. There are 329 instructors, and the annual budget is three-quarters of a million dollars. The excellent colle- giate educational structure will be commented on later.


An up-to-date fire department con- sists of 47 men, efficiently governed and equipped with modern apparatus. Greensboro has one of the most com- plete fire alarm systems in use today. Every part of the city and many important buildings are covered with modern alarm boxes. Greensboro's record in reduction of fire losses is outstanding. In 1927 the inter-city award was won for the lowest fire loss of any city in its class in the United States, and in 1928 and 1929 honor- able mention was received in the same contest. There are five station


A Healthful Place to Live


Greensboro is blessed with a mild, life-prolonging, delightful climate. Its average monthly temperature com- pares favorable with that of famous European resorts along the Mediter- ranean shores of western Italy and southern France. Greensboro has neither bitter winters nor oppressive summers, but rather only a moderate fluctuation from the coldest to the warmest days.


Greensboro's altitude (843 feet) and drainage practically eliminate "low country" ailments such as malaria fevers. The air is clear and bracing, with no violent atmospheric distur- bances. The Government Weather Bureau figures show that Greensboro has more clear days (136 per year) than Jacksonville (129), Miami (99), Tampa (126), Atlantic City (123), or Asheville (124). Greensboro has com-


70


60


50


Monthly Temperature Comparison


40


JAN.


FEB.


MAR.


APR.


MAY


JUNE


JULY


AUG.


SEPT


OCT


NOV.


DEC.


houses strategically located in the city, and the equipment has a value of $350,000.


Greensboro's police department comprises 58 officers and men. It is provided with modern physical facili- ties, radio intelligence equipment, a complete and efficient identification bureau, and a comprehensive system of city-wide telephone signals with centralized control. Greensboro has long been kept free from lawlessness such as prevails in many other cities.


Two essential steps have been taken in planning for the future- the adoption of a comprehensive city plan administered by a competent planning commission, and the en- forcement of a modern building code. Zoning laws have been passed to maintain desirable neighborhood classifications. Municipal activity has been governed insofar as possible with an eye to the future growth of Greensboro.


paratively little snowfall (total aver- age, 6.8 inches per year) as compared with such centers as Atlantic City (16.9), Denver (40.4), Asheville (11), Omaha (19.9), Wilmington, Del., (44.3), and Chicago (33.7).


United States Weather Bureau re- ports for Greensboro:


Normal average temperature (an- nual), 58.8 degrees.


Average humidity, 53.185.


Annual precipitation, 46.76 inches.


Greensboro is only three hours' drive from those famous winter re- sorts-Pinehurst and Southern Pines, and only four to six hours' drive from mountain summer resorts such as


Asheville, Blowing Rock, Linville, Roaring Gap and Chimney Rock. Its climate is the "happy medium" be- tween that of these resort centers, being on the plateau between the mountains and the coastal plain. Taking advantage of this climatic ideal, a beautiful all-year resort cen- ter has been established at Sedge- field, near Greensboro, which has be-


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GREENSBORO


E


The Curry Building at North Carolina College for Women, Home of the School of Education and of the Training School


come widely known as a golfer's and sportsman's paradise. High daytime temperatures give relief from the se- verity of northern winters; and low. night temperatures permit comfort- able sleep, in contrast to the enerva- ting heat prevailing further south.


Recreational Facilities


Greensboro is the sports-lover's paradise. Golf, tennis, horseback rid- ing, hunting of all sorts, fishing and a host of other sports are available either in Greensboro or in the im- mediate vicinity. A prominent part of this phase of the city's life is played by the new World War Me- morial Stadium, within a few blocks of the heart of the city, which at- tracts many of the major college ath- letic events of the section, and the leading interscholastic events. The stadium seats 9,200 persons, and is equipped with modern fields for foot-


ball, baseball, track, tennis and other sports. The stadium was erected in 1927 at a cost of $150,000, donated by citizens of the city and county.


Greensboro has one public and two private golf courses. The famous Val- ley Brook course at Sedgefield Inn is a championship layout, where compe- titions of national import are staged. The Southern Amateur Tournament was held there in 1930. The Greens- boro Country Club course is one of the oldest Class "A" courses in the South. The municipal course has only been recently opened and has already proved tremendously popular. Ham- ilton Lakes course, an 18-hole layout of rare beauty, will be put in play in the fall of 1930, and a municipal course is under construction. The equable year - round climate here makes Greensboro ideal for golfers.


Greensboro's theatres are modern, both as to their houses and the char-


World War Memorial Stadium


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GREENSBORO


acter of their entertainment. The moving picture houses have a seating capacity of 6,000. Due in part to the local colleges, Greensboro has, for nine months of the year, the satisfy- ing advantage of fine music, famous singers, outstanding lectures and the like. Such organizations as the Civic Music Association, the Open Forum and the Little Theatre make a real contribution to the esthetic life of the community.


About 1,500 acres of land have been set aside for parks and playgrounds in Greensboro, and the city has the reputation of having more play area per student about its public schools than any city in the country. Three Y. M. C. A.'s, Y. W. C. A., professional league baseball, public and private swimming pools, trap-shooting course and similar facilities offer a wide va- riety of recreational opportunities.


Its enrollment is now about 300. On the other side of Greensboro is Oak Ridge Institute, a preparatory mili- tary school for boys. It was founded in 1852, and in 1926 became a Junior R. O. T. C. unit. It now has 246 students and an adequate plant val- ued at $250,000. It is a preparatory school for college and offers a com- mercial course.


Other institutions in Greensboro in- clude the Greensboro Bible and Lit- erary School, King's Business College and the Greensboro Commercial School.


Greensboro is a center of educa- tion for the Negro race as well. Here is the North Carolina Agricultural and Technical College, with a yearly enrollment of 800 and a million dol- lar plant. Bennett College for Women and Immanuel Lutheran College for ministers and teachers are also here.


The World's Largest Denim Mill, Located at Greensboro


Educational Facilities


An outstanding advantage of Greensboro is its extraordinary edu- cational structure. Six thousand out- of-town students and faculty mem- bers attend its schools and colleges.


Greensboro College, organized in 1838 by leaders of the Methodist Epis- copal Church, South, has an enroll- ment of 357 women students and as- sets amounting to $1,056,000. North Carolina College for Women, created by legislative enactment in 1891, has a yearly enrollment of about 2,500, and a faculty of 178, and includes a college of liberal arts, a school of ed- ucation, a school of music, a school of dramatic art, a school of commerce, a department of health, and a school of home economics. Five degrees are given, including A. B., M. A. and B. S.


Five miles west of Greensboro is Guilford College, organized by the So- ciety of Friends (Quakers) in 1837.


Practically every religious denomi- nation is represented among Greens- boro's fifty-seven fine churches.


Commerce and Industry


Present Industrial Structure:


In Greensboro, textiles predomi- nate, but do not dominate. Industry is well diversified. There are great cotton spinning and weaving plants; broad silk and silk hosiery mills; structural steel, foundry and machin- ery establishments; terra cotta and chemical works. Altogether, Greens- boro's industries, totalling 141 plants, manufacture $47,000,000 worth of goods per year. 8,700 workers are em- ployed, who receive over a quarter of a million dollars weekly in wages.


The largest single industry is that of the Cone interests, the White Oak Cotton Mill being the largest denim mill in the world. The Blue Bell Over- all Company is one of the largest overall mills in the country. Three


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GREENSBORO


hosiery mills are here, Mock-Judson- Voehringer, Inc., Greensboro Full- fashioned Hosiery Mill and the Juven- ile Hosiery Co. Greensboro is the larg- est full-fashioned silk hosiery center in the South.


Greensboro is the "home town" of Vick's Vaporub Salve, El Moro and


machines, woodworking machines and foundry products.


Numerous advantageous industrial sites are available, with adjoining railroad trackage or highways. There is a plentiful supply of native white labor, easily trained and industrious. There has never been a general in- dustrial strike in Greensboro.


Home of the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company of Greensboro


El ReesO Cigars, Pomona Terra Cot- ta, Glascock Stoves, and a host of other products, including canton flan- nels and many other textile products, fabricated steel and iron, clay pro- ducts, medicines, automobile bodies, elastic webbing, lumber products, fer- tilizers, dairy products, ice, laundry


A constant supply of power is avall- able from almost unlimited resources, and at reasonable rates. Great re- sources of raw materials are close at hand.


These factors have tended to diver- sify Greensboro's industrial structure, as well as develop it. The city is not


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GREENSBORO


dependent on any one line of manu- facture, and consequently is immune from those periods of violent depres- sion which paralize communities in which a majority of the workers are employed in one line of work.


It is impossible to present ade- quately here either Greensboro's present or potential industrial ad- vantages. Those interested may ob- tain from the Chamber of Commerce more detailed information. A research staff is maintained to compile intelli- gently specific industrial and distribu- tion data for responsible inquirers. Retail Trade:


Greensboro is a recognized retail center attracting partial purchases from an area of from 57 to 75 miles in several directions. In the 12 coun-


of the most powerful in the state. The Record is a fast-growing and popu- lar afternoon daily, with a circulation of 15,000.


Greensboro has ten hotels, most of which are of the modern fireproof variety, offering about 1,000 first-class rooms. The O. Henry, King Cotton and Sedgefield Inn are the most prominent.


Wholesale Trade:


Due to its strategic position in transportation and communication, and the centralization here of the business interchange of the Piedmont area, Greensboro's wholesale houses and agency representatives reach out far beyond the bounds of its retail trade. More than 1,500 traveling men have found Greensboro the most log-


O. Henry Hotel


ties surrounding Greensboro live ap- proximately 600,000 people, according to the 1930 preliminary Census fig- ures. This area has a greater rural and urban purchasing power than any similar area in the Southeastern States, and more paved roads and more automobiles to enable purchas- ers to reach the market center.


Due to its tremendous market, the retail trade in Greensboro is of a very high type. The shops are modern, and the merchandise handled of a variety and quality above the average. Prom- inent in the retail life of Greensboro are the two daily newspapers and the numerous weeklies published here. The Greensboro Daily News, with a morning circulation of 40,000, is one


ical place for their homes and head- quarters, a great many of them trav- eling from district offices located here. The city has an abundant sup- ply of modern offices and bonded warehouse space at reasonable rents, and this fact, coupled with an ad- vantageous position, is causing the lo- cation here of branch warehouses, district offices and agencies.


Within Greensboro's wholesale trade area of approximately 75 miles live nearly a million people, with ten towns of 10,000 or more population. In this jobbing area are 1,844 miles of paved and 665 miles of sand-clay roads, which, together with rail facili- ties, greatly simplify distribution and close customer contact.


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GREENSBORO


Public Library


Greensboro holds the dominant place in the state, and reaches into the surrounding states, in hardware distribution. In drugs it is almost as favored, and it is particularly strong in the distribution of food products, produce, tobacco, bread, dry goods and clothing. The Chamber of Com- merce has compiled exhaustive data on the consuming power and distri- bution advantages of Greensboro. Commercial Greensboro:


Seven insurance firms have their home offices in Greensboro, and a number of state headquarters for out- of-state companies are located here, causing the city to be called "the Hartford of the South." Almost every type of insurance coverage is provided locally, giving Greensboro companies an annual premium income of ap- proximately $19,000,000; $469,337,453 worth of life insurance alone is in force by Greensboro companies. These companies have made substantial in- vestment in physical properties in Greensboro and the surrounding sec- tion. Their business is steady, their payrolls constant. They provide a stable and diversified commerce en- joyed by few contemporary cities.


Greensboro has adequate facilities for doing business, such as banking, transportation, communication, pro- fessional services, etc. It is a natural banking center. The North Carolina Bank & Trust Company, with its com- mercial branches in other North Car- olina cities, administers in Greens- boro the financial resources of a wide


area. The North Carolina Corporation operates industrial and investment banking establishments throughout the state, while other institutions af- ford Greensboro a well-rounded fi- nancial structure. There two commercial banks with five city branches, and three industrial banks. Total savings are $2,403,753.79; total resources are $7,303,483.07.


The services of nationally-recog- nized accountants, accredited ap- praisers, outstanding lawyers, and technical advisers are available as a necessary business aid. The munici- pal government is organized and equipped to provide the physical fa- cilities and services needed to pro- mote and safeguard the commercial and industrial safety and progress of Greensboro.


Greensboro possesses unusually well-balanced economic advantages. All her "eggs" are not in one "basket." The sources of income, the facilities for commerce and the potentialities for progress are widely diversified, providing insurance against excessive fluctuations, booms or depressions. Greensboro is a safe, sound, secure and stable place in which to live and work.


Increase in Population in Greensboro


1890


3,317


1900


10,035


1910


13,895


1920 19,361


1930


53,422


CLASSIFIED BUYERS' GUIDE OF THE CITY OF


GREENSBORO


(NORTH CAROLINA)


1930


MIME SUOCS


THOUGH THE


CLASSIFIED BUSINESS LISTS DIRECTORY


ANY THEO ME LION


ON FAQTH


The Buyers'Guide contains the advertisements and business cards of the more progressive business men and firms in the city, classified according to lines of business.


HILL DIRECTORY CO., Inc., Publishers


8 N. Sixth Street (4th Floor)


Richmond, Va.


3


26


ACCOUNTANTS-CERTIFIED PUBLIC


D. HUGH EVERETT, C.P.A.


EDWARD R. ZANE, C.P.A.


JOHN C. MUSE, C.P.A.


EVERETT, ZANE AND MUSE CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS


AUDITS -- SYSTEMS -- TAX SERVICE


MEMBERS : North Carolina Association of Certified Public Accountants American Society of Certified Public Accountants


A North Carolina organization for constructive service to the business and municipal interests of the state in Audits, Systems, Federal and State Taxes, Production Costs, and Municipal Budgetary Accounting Systems.


Offices, 603-606 Greensboro Bank & Trust Bldg. Telephone 5410 Greensboro, N. C. and Masonic Bldg., Sanford, N. C.


GREENSBORO, N. C.


ROCKY MOUNT, N. C.


TARBORO, N. C.


Hollowell, Gorham & Company


AUDITORS, ACCOUNTANTS INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERS


A North Carolina organization for constructive service to the business and municipal interests of the state in Audits, Systems, Federal and State Taxes, Production Costs, Municipal Budget- ary Accounting Systems, and Special Investigations for Con- solidations, Reorganizations, etc.


DAVID R. HOLLOWELL


Certified Public Accountant (N. C. and Va.)


FRANK C. GORHAM


Registered Public Accountant (N. C.)


Offices : 807-808 Jefferson Building GREENSBORO, N. C. PHONE 4783


(1930) HILL DIRECTORY CO.'S


27


ACCOUNTANTS -- CERTIFIED PUBLIC


T. L. MATLOCK COMPANY


CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS 206 PIEDMONT BUILDING


Auditing-Accounting-Investigations-Reorganizations-Financial Reports Tax Service-Accounting Systems


SPECIALISTS IN Machine Bookkeeping Systems, and County, Municipal and Public Institution Examinations


PHONE CONNECTIONS GREENSBORO, N. C.


Winston-Salem, N. C.


High Point, N. C.


Goldsboro, N. C.


Greenville, N. C.


A. M. Pullen & Company


CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS


AUDITS -- SYSTEMS -- TAX SERVICE


North Carolina Bank Building


GREENSBORO, N. C.


J. D. HIGHTOWER, C. P. A. Resident Mgr.


GEO. E. PERRIN, C. P. A. Asst. Resident Mgr.


GREENSBORO CITY DIRECTORY (1930)' .


28


ADDING MACHINES


Telephone Connection Burroughs Adding Machine Company


220-221-222-223-224 PIEDMONT BLDG. GREENSBORO, N. C. D. P. SMITH, Manager Greensboro Agency ADDING, BOOKKEEPING, BILLING AND CALCULATING MACHINES


ADDRESSING AND MAILING


Addressing and Mailing


With large and fully equipped addressing and mailing depart- ments in the larger cities, we can handle up to the largest campaigns quickly and at attractive prices.


Hill Directory Co., Inc. 8 N. 6th St., 4th Floor, Richmond, Va.


Directory Publishers, Mailing List Compilers, Addressing and Mailing Service With Affiliated Offices in


New York, N. Y.


Chicago, Il1.


Pittsburgh, Pa.


Philadelphia, Pa. Los Angeles, Cal. San Francisco, Cal.


Milwaukee, Wis. Indianapolis, Ind. Seattle, Wash. Cleveland, Ohio


Automobile Batteries & Shock Absorbers


Pickett Storage Battery Co.


Bosch Radio - Prest-O-Lite Storage Batteries Sales and Service Starter and Generator Service "HOUDAILLE" HYDRAULIC DOUBLE-ACTING SHOCK ABSORBERS Anderson Spring Covers-Hyman's Seat Covers


Phone Connection


125 Church St.


(1930) HILL DIRECTORY CO.'S


29


AUTOMOBILE ELECTRICIANS


GREENSBORO AUTO ELECTRIC CO.


EXPERTS ON "EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL" Automobiles Our Specialty


EUJEMANN


-


OFFICIAL SERVICE STATION


LEECEE-NEVILLE


UTHORIZED EISEMANN 14


OWEN-DYNETO


MAGNETOS


American- Bosch, Apollo Wico


WICO


Generators:


Owen- Dyneto, Leecee- Neville North East Auto Lite Delco Remy


HARLEY-DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES SALES AND SERVICE


Phone 2581 GREENSBORO, N. C. 210 West Gaston Street


GREENSBORO CITY DIRECTORY (1930)


30


AUTOMOBILE LIVERY


RENT A NEW CAR U-DRIVE-IT


116 E. Market St.


Phone Connection


AUTOMOBILE PAINTERS


J. C. FREEMAN, Prop.


Five Points Motor Co.


Automobile Body and Fender Repairing Brake Lining Service Duco and Varnish Painting


DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE


204 W. Lee St.


Phone Connection


AUTOMOBILE PARTS


MOTOR BEARINGS & PARTS COMPANY


JOBBERS OF STANDARD BRANDS OF REPLACEMENT PARTS


309-311 Bellemeade


Tel. Connection


(1930) HILL DIRECTORY CO.'S


31


AUTOMOBILE SERVICE


Sineath Motor Co.


GENERAL REPAIRS and STORAGE


WASHING and GREASING


We Use Nothing But Experienced Automobile Mechanics


SINCLAIR OILS AND GAS


Special Attention Given to All Repair Work


Our Garage Open All Night-Call Us At Any Time


301 BATTLE GROUND AVE. PHONE CONNECTION


W. A. BALES L. O. TRUITT


BALES & TRUITT, Inc.


GENERAL AUTOMOBILE SERVICE ELECTRIC BRAKE TESTING


113 NORTH FORBIS STREET PHONE 2875


Cooper Tires, Storage, Gasoline and Oil, Battery Service, Repairing, Greasing, Washing and Polishing, Vulcanizing, Body and Fender Repairing, Painting All Night Service


WEST MARKET SERVICE STATION


Gasoline - Oils - Washing - Polishing Greasing - Tire Repairing - Accessories FISK TIRES


441 West Market St. Phone Connection


GREENSBORO CITY DIRECTORY (1930)


32


AUTOMOBILE TIRES


CITY TIRE AND VULCANIZING CO.


Wholesale and Retail Dealers


MILLER TIRES


USL Batteries -- Accessories Rims -- Rim Parts


FREE ROAD SERVICE


GUARANTEE


We guarantee chir tire outwear any other


to tire of equal price when run under the same con- ditions.


314 S. Davie Phone 4050


AN HONEST TIRE


CORD


BALLOON


MOHAWK


The NEW MOHAWK BALLOONS


not only look like the finest tire buy today but actually per- form the part. Honesty in con- struction and performance is a Mohawk characteristic. Come in and see them.


OFFICIAL A.A.A.


24 Hour Complete One-Stop Service


VULCANIZING RETREADING


Top, Body and Auto Repairs


Phone Connection


COMPARE Mohawk PRICES and Quality with any Standard Make Greene Street Tire Co. 401 SOUTH GREENE ST.


(1930) HILL DIRECTORY CO.'S


33


AUTOMOBILE TIRES


VULCANIZING - ROAD SERVICE


ALL WORK GUARANTEED


Auto Tire Accessory Co.


300-308 N. Elm (Opp O Henry Hotel)


Greensboro, N. C.


Phone Connection


FISK TIRES and TUBES - GABRIEL SNUBBERS GABRIEL TRIPLE HYDRAULIC SHOCK ABSORBERS RIMS-RIM PARTS


W. H. MILLOWAY


V. L. CHANDLER


W. C. JOHNSON


P. L. GROOME


Carolina Vulcanizing Co. GOODRICH SILVERTOWN TIRES-TUBES TIRE SERVICE-VULCANIZING WASHING-GREASING Your Choice of Good Oils


313-315 W. MARKET ST. PHONE CONNECTION


S. A. SIGLER & CO.


Distributors The General Tire GENERAL TIRE & RUBBER CO.


S. A. SIGLER, STATE MGR.


125 Church


Phone Connection


SMITH TIRE COMPANY


GOOD YEAR Tires


"More People Ride on Goodyear Than Any Other Kind"


N. Elm, n. w. Cor. Paisley


Phone Connection


GREENSBORO CITY DIRECTORY (1930)


314


AUTOMOBILES


CHRYSLER MOTOR CARS


GATE CITY MOTOR CO.


215-217 EAST MARKET STREET


UNITED STATES.ROYAL


BALLOON


United States Pneumatic and Solid Tire Service


Parts, Accessories & First Class Automobile Repairing


Phone Connections


CYLINDER and CRANK SHAFT GRINDING


RADIATORS Rebuilt and Repaired


(1930) HILL DIRECTORY CO.'S


35


AUTOMOBILES


GREENSBORO MOTOR CAR CO., INC.


Buick Automobiles AND G. M. C. Trucks


FRIGIDAIRE


ACCESSORIES and SUPPLIES


Wholesale and Retail


307-21 N. Elm St.


Phone Connection


HEDRICK AUTO CO.


Sales and Service


FORD


202-208 N. FORBIS


PHONE CONNECTION


GREENSBORO CITY DIRECTORY (1930)


36


AUTOMOBILES


JEFFERSON MOTORS


INCORPORATED


HUDSON ESSEX


SALES and SERVICE


317 West Market Street


Phone Connection


T. & H. MOTOR CO.


SALES AND SERVICE


DeSoto and Plymouth Durant-6's


DIAMOND TIRES


210-220 Price Street, Right Off of North Greene Street


(1930) HILL DIRECTORY CO.'S


AUTOMOBILES


37


PHONE 1918 FOR THAT GOOD SERVICE


STORAGE CYLINDER REBORING


WASHING


PISTON


GREASING


GRINDING


LACQUER


STARTER, IGNI-


REFINISHING


TION and


AAA


GENERATOR REPAIRING FENDER AND BODY WORK BATTERY RECHARGING


TIRE and TUBE REPAIRING


QUICK ROAD SERVICE


(Two Trucks)


Armfield Motor Company


Open Until Midnight


316 ARMFIELD PLACE


H. G. ARMFIELD, Prop.


CAROLINA NASH CO., Inc.


NASH


Nash Motor Cars


Charlotte - Greensboro


106 N. DAVIE STREET


Sales Service


"NASH LEADS THE WORLD IN MOTOR CAR VALUE"


for Economical Transportation


SALES


CHEVROLET


SERVICE


"SERVICE WITH A GUARANTEE" CRESCENT CHEVROLET COMPANY, Inc. PHONE CONNECTION


315 NORTH ELM STREET


Service Entrance-Bellemeade Street


GRAHAM-PAIGE CO. OF N. C.


GRAHAM MOTOR CARS


GRAHAM


300 BelleMeade Phone Connection


GREENSBORO CITY DIRECTORY (1930)


38


AUTOMOBILES


O. HENRY MOTOR CO.


CHESTER SMITH, Mgr.


AUTHORIZED


DEALERS


Sales and Service


445-449 W. Market St.


Phone Connection


AWNINGS AND TENTS


COCKFIELD TENT & AWNING CO.


"We Put You in THE SHADE"


724-726 S. Elm


Phone 3986


Your Advertisement Here


Would be constantly before the public-the buyers-twenty-four hours a day-three hun- dred and sixty-five days a year-every year,


-Think it over


(1930) HILL DIRECTORY CO.'S


39


BANKS


Home Industrial Bank


INDUSTRIAL LOANS


Southern Life and Trust Building 112 E. MARKET STREET JUST BACK OF POST OFFICE


Authorized Capital Stock $250,000.00


OFFICERS


CLAUDE KISER, President C. C. WIMBISH, Second Vice-Pres.


GEORGE L. STANSBURY, First Vice-Pres. JOE M. BARNHILL, Cashier


VICTOR W. STOUT, Assistant Cashier


DIRECTORS


C. W. EDWARDS CLAUDE KISER


BASCOM T. BAYNES


E. R. FORD B. B. KENDRICK


JOHN K. VOEHRINGER, JR. GEORGE L. STANSBURY


CHARLES G. HARRISON


C. C. WIMBISH F. C. BOYLES


JOE M. BARNHILL


5% Interest Compounded Quarterly


PHONE CONNECTION


GREENSBORO CITY DIRECTORY (1930)


40


BANKS


THE MORRIS PLAN


"THE MORRIS PLAN FOR EVERY MAN"


This Institution Loans Money with a Convenient Repayment Plan to People of All Classes and Engaged in All Kinds of Occupations.




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