The Kodak Salesman . If you must blow yourown horn^ join a band. TO-DAY Sure this world is full of trouble— I aint said it ! Ive had enough, an double. Reason for and storm have come to fret me. Skies were often gray;Thorns an brambles have beset me On the road—but, say. Aint it fine to-dav? •Whats the use of always weepin. Makin trouble lastr*Whats the use of always keepin Thinkin of the past?Each must have his tribulation. Water with his \, it aint no celebration. Trouble? Ive had mine— But to-dav is fine. •Its to-dav that 1 am livin. Not a month ago,Havin, l


The Kodak Salesman . If you must blow yourown horn^ join a band. TO-DAY Sure this world is full of trouble— I aint said it ! Ive had enough, an double. Reason for and storm have come to fret me. Skies were often gray;Thorns an brambles have beset me On the road—but, say. Aint it fine to-dav? •Whats the use of always weepin. Makin trouble lastr*Whats the use of always keepin Thinkin of the past?Each must have his tribulation. Water with his \, it aint no celebration. Trouble? Ive had mine— But to-dav is fine. •Its to-dav that 1 am livin. Not a month ago,Havin, losin, takin, givin. As time wills it a cloud of sorrow Fell across the way:It may rain again to-mor7ow. It may rain—but, sa^. Aint it fine to-day! —Douglas I\l^/ s\ V, ^s^ / / ? J^?veP>.(b Before the Days of the Kodak Self-Timer The Colonel Takes His Own Picture yA e KODAKSALESMAN an aia to tne man oenina tne counteT- Vol. 6 SEPTEMBEK, 1920 No. K Your Cue Tlie on]}- man wlm cant l)e interested in |)h()t()i^rai)h}is the man who isnt interested in an\tliin^- else. A man l)uys i^olf sticks 1)ecause he has l)een l)itten hy thegolt l^iii^. or l)ecause someone has told him that he has atorpid liver. A man Iniys a glin or fishinjo- tackle hecaiisehe loves to i4et away from the crowd and hack to man or woman Iniys a l)ai)}- carriage because it has becomea necessar}- ])art of the family e(|ui]:)ment—and then theytalk and think bah}- just because they cant help it. Peoplebuy railway and steamer tickets because the} love to travel—to joet out of the beaten i)ath. They buy automobiles andtalk their heads oft about automolnles because, for them,the automobile is the all-absorbino- interest. On all these thin^^s and a score o


Size: 1313px × 1903px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidkodaksalesma, bookyear1917