Front: Clement C. Clay Bridge over Tennessee River near Huntsville, Ala. Back: CLEMENT C. CLAY BRIDGE, This magnificent structure over the Tennessee River is a few miles out of Huntsville on the newly paved "Airline Highway" to Birmingham, Ala., and all points south.
Back: CLEMENT CLAY BRIDGE located twelve miles south of Huntsville, Alabama. Across the Tennessee River. It is the scene of old Ditto landing where material was unloaded for many ante-bellum homes.
Back: BILL CLEMONS AUTO PARTS CO., 611 Meridian St. Ph. 534-2491, Huntsville, Alabama Air Conditioned - Free Parking. We can furnish all of your Automotive Needs, Parts, Accessories, Equipment, Battery Chargers - Hydraulic Jacks Rebuilt. Complete Machine Shop Service - Two Way Radio Equipped Trucks.
Front: Colonial Homes, Huntsville, Ala. Back: Few parts of the South equal Huntsville in wealth of handsome ante-bellum Homes. Posterity may view with profitable concern No. 1, the residence first Secretary of the States of the Confederacy, who issued order to fire on Fort Sumter in 1861, first shot ot the Civil War. This edifice was built in 1815. No. 2, the home of the first Governor of Alabama, built in 1837. No. 3, the palatial home ot a wealthy planter of the Old South, built in 1835.
Back: CORPORAL GUIDED MISSILE REDSTONE ARSENAL, HUNTSVILLE, ALABAMA A member of the Army missile family used in support of ground combat operations, the Corporal, equipped with either an atomic or conventional type warhead, is a surface-to-surface guided missile capable of engaging tactical targets far beyond the range of conventional artillery. A powerful rocket motor propels the missile through space, at several times the speed of sound.