{ title: 'The Greenwich journal and Fort Edward advertiser. (Greenwich, N.Y.) 1924-1969, September 03, 1924, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031458/1924-09-03/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031458/1924-09-03/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031458/1924-09-03/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031458/1924-09-03/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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X -V-. h * E r P> ii *•-. • f e e . ? Kbi~ ■' r, I , — ;| ;. ^ ;f / /- ^ ■■' • *■ ■ . ‘ fc\- r < . •? r\ ! • U •. i • N-v- < . . i * >! ■ ; 4 ^ 1 •«- . Il f~v _-'■ * ^Jv ■42.',' , t e M V ■:- .ij ’■'- -n> f Li-.. '-r> * f e ' »' a \•C'v. $•' ■'^.T gV^-VV', ‘ &&$<*- w; s-«>, i - V •*A .ftjJUU* ' ^iitijjj^ijp \- ? vr?^ ' * ! V a n N e s s i Russell ^ftttoi,ney& and Counselors at Law Raal Estate and Inauranco GREENWICH, N. Y. and Its Neighbors Fire Insurance T h a t I n s u r e s % . G R E E N W I C H , N. V. F . 1— T O W N S E N D , Agt. Offlcn and Residence Ss lem Street C .J. W E A VER, C. E. PROFESSIONAL ENGINEER LAND SURVEYOR Licensed under State Laura Membership in American Soc. of C. E. WATERFORD, N. Y. PARTICULAR MEN A m moat particular about their Ofur* and Tobacco. Comer Main and John Street* U i i M Cigar Stores Ajfency Omr Specialty ia luiting the taste g l tvery amoker. We probably have m bcud of cigars, tobacco or cig- Mew* and Notes of Timely Interest About the County and Vicinity. N e s t year’s automobile license plates will be red with black figures. A smaJl letter will be affixed desig nating the county to which the plates are ass-igned. The INew York State Association of Police Chiefs at their meeting in Gloversville last week Wednesday voted to hold their 1925 convention in Glens Fallsr Prom thirty to fifty chiefs of police attend the conventions. Mae D. Berger of St. Albans, Vt., has had her automobile license re voked for three years as a penalty for driving' while intoxicated. She is the second woman on record at Montpelier who has received a penalty for this offense. Washington county fair and Tuesday, an office building on the grounds at* Hudson Falls containing electrical fix tures taken from booths and most of the other buildings had been entered and most of the fixtures stolen. It was also found that the judges’ stand in which there was a avaluable piano, had been opened and the piano nearly ruined. b “ I I*. By MILDRED GOODRIDGE 1.924, Vvesiern Nawspapcr Union.) CAN'T go through with it 1” groaned a haggard, desperate- faced man on one. side—of a garden wall. ‘‘Oh, you beautiful world!” lisped a child in an Invalid chair ou the oth er side of tlie wall. The man was Robert Dale, a city merchant. He sat in the shade of a tree near the ruins of some burned- down residence. -‘‘There are only two ways,” he mut tered, darkly. “There is bankruptcy, but that reads disgrace, and I could not bear i t . The other is—this 1” He drew from his pocket a loaded revolver and gazed at it fixedly. The little child was Flora Easton, a sweet-faced girl of ten. The chair was Douglas A. Calkins of Rensselaer and Ralph Pierson of Hudson Falls are among twenty-eight law students ratfcM th*t will suit you bettn than • have passed the bar examination -------------------- | and well be admitted at the session , pany has agreed to remove a bank of - n especia m g When Clarence Darns of Middle Granville went to examine why a blast of dynamite which he was using in a quarry there did not go off last Thursday afternoon, there •was an ex plosion that threw him into the river. He was rushed' to the Mary McClellan I drawn up close to a rustic table . r. v *j v .. „ s Upon this were writing materials. As hospital at Sanibridge .where it was ( took up & pencll/ one coold see found that his left Jeg haa been ^ j>rom ^jje slow, weak and erratic move- broken and that his face was badly j meats of her hand that she had only burned. He may also lose his sight. an imperfect control over Its muscles. He is a widower and has six children, j “Pine 1” was little Flora’s accus- ____ | tomed cheery reply wheij asked how As the Delaware and Hudson com- was getting along. wlut yon u e now buying. E . F . C A R E Y [ of the appellate division of the su- earth at the Best crossing east of j preme court September 9. J Whitehall, which is the only restrie- I ---- , tion to the view of the tracks, t he Francis McDonough, son of Mr. and \public service commission Thursday LET PETRI SAVE YOU MONEY! little heart thrilled, as for the first time she found that she could use her hand to’write a word. Hitherto even the effort to produce a single letter had been a har'd task. ‘Oh, papa, mamma! sljie cried in a Mrs. John J. McDonough of Granville, dismissed the complaint of the board recently won a scholarship at Ford-, 0f supervisors of Washington county 1 wild fervor of excited delight, as al- ham university in competition with 1 asking protection of-the crossing by most breathless with joy and surprise I about EOOO high school graduates in a a warning device. The complaint may district which includes all the schools be reopened after sixty days if the If you can through quality Dry from Albany to Plattsburgh. (railroad company has hot removed Oaaniner tret another season’s wear , , L. oatof that suit or dress or any other ' ~ --- . the bank by that time. article of wearing apparel, you will Mrs. Br>,dgglt_Powers died Thursday ( ---- v faare saved a very Sizeable amount ’ morning in Granville from the effects , fo Charles Hartman of Schenec- Let PETRI help ypn. of injuries received about two_ hours {tady goes the “distinction\ of bt-inp: E. F. CURE! of* 42 Main Street, Greenwich, I turner Dr. H. E. Cliese D E N T A L O F F I Oaiffa Block Over American Exk-r GREENWICH. N. W P. BRADLEY Try Our M o n a r c h B r a n d Mtnce Meat Salad Dressing Teas and Coffee earlier when she fell down a flight the first person in New York state of staits at the home of her son, John jjaVe his operator’s license ami li- rPowers, in that village. Mrs. Powers, cense plates revoked under the new ho was an elderly lady, made a mis- S(ate ny>tor vehicle law. Hartman Bjp and fell down the entire flight. was arrestedln Schenectady Thurvl ay ----- following an automobile accident in Blethodist church building at which he figured, and he was charged ^aratimc Lake, which has been pur- wjth driving while intoxicated. He ;hased by the Odd Fellows’ lodge of swore that he had never before be< 6 % she completed a whole sentence on the sheet of paper before her. Her parents came rushing anxious ly from the house at the unusual cry. “What is It—are you ill. Flora?” quavered her mother. \Oh no!” dissented the agitated lit tle one. ‘‘Just think of it--I am get ting well, sure, papal Foe see—I have written a Whole sentence 1 ” And then UttletFlora uttered a cry of direful dlsmajpy A great breath of wind had come along. It caught up the loose sheets of paper. It scattered them over the garden wall. “And it was the first real sentence I have written since—since I was sick!” mourned Flora. “Why, think of it! plain as day and without .tiring my hand at all, I printed out ‘Never Say Die’!” . building purposes has been sold and i Clarence Steves, thirty-three years “Well, my dear, said her father, a business block will be erected upon | o)d of Fort Ann is now afcie to walk , “'’eriy 800n ^,oa J 1}! bc. f bl® ^ M , ! ’ . ’ . x. whole pages,\ and then his heart ovei^ , rt- for the flrst time «X three years as . fl£>wed with hope ot thla lndlefltion ! , i the result of an operation recently {jje uttle sufferer was on the road [ Trorasfer by Charles S. Wood of tne J performed on him in the Glens Falls . recovery. . electric lighting and power plant sup- hospital by Dr. Davis Baker. Steves ; jn a week the episode of the miBS- j plying Lake George and vicinity with suffered a dislocated vertebrae about . ing sheet of paper was forgotten. Lit- i electrical service, to the Adirondack . t]lree years ago and complications de- ' tie Flora, indeed. Improved. Day by 1 - ---- --- - ------- . . ^ay gj,e grerw stronger. Many a bur dened heart revived at a sight of the patient loving jittle creature, who sftw only love and \helpfulness as her | rare mission of life. I nick—the man who sat on the other * side of that fatefnl garden wall had j been too absorbed In Ms misery to WJ ° S u U 1 C l l l u t llw IJ U U H V A u1, x 41 \°™Ithat pLace, will be used as a home for arrested but the police say they found A plot which this was not true. I f. 01 j.U°that b<ody hereafter. ‘ ■ had be«n held by the organization for i Power and Light corporation was an- | veloped which necessitated removal of the diseased bbno. The operation was performed and a piece of bone was thorize-d iast week by the public serv ice commission. The value of the - | transfer, not to exceed $15,000, will be later determined. i J ■'ires Brown, eighty-eight years of , age, di'cd at his home in Rutland, Vt., Saturday afternoon. Mr. B^own died in the honae where he had ’vv»d for eighty-two years. He was a surveyor and assisted in the survey and con- structi«oi of the Rutland railroad be tween Bennington, Vt., and Chatham, New York. Farm Mortages W. J GOWV & . BRO., Norfolk, Neb. IT* h*ve been negocUting farm *ortg»ge» in Nebraska since 1880— 41 jru n —and offer to you our serv- in placing your moiey in safe ■ m lttea. Your principal and interest will be yald promptly when due. Write na for a list of loans on taiid- M E 3 U IW 1 > > U &' JOH 3 JSO H V T1XE E ’Y 0 0 S ffe c t ira S n n , ^ono 2 2 . 1924, a t 12.01 a m. ■ , , AH T rains D a ily Except Sunday | Wakelj, president of the Saratoga A Republican campaign school is to be ■conducted at the Casino, Sara toga Springs, September 30 and Oc tober B, according to an announcement recentEy made by Mrs. Phillip S. Eastern Standard Time Passenger I r i l a S c irica Subject to change w itho u t Notice £ a Wo. Botm d F.V A.M. Z*£0 3TA.5B n.oo m i « ns.oo ttJS n j e A8.55 r. u L.7.401 PT.48 FT.50 F7 64 F7.58 F8.02 FS.06 A8.1S main - inra Leave A r r ive Johnsonville Lee» South C air,hridg-p W est Catnbridffe V ly S u m m it Arcfad&le Easton Greenwich A. M. Arrivp * Spring’s Republican Women’s Coo- . lidge c-lab. It is expected that wom- 1 8 '■n’s e cltils throughout the country will A8M Bp'u t be represented at the school session. 1A7.1S 1F7.07 F7.05 F7.01 F6.57 FB.58 F8.49 L6.40 A4.SO : F 4.20 A tnation-wide appeal has been made So Boy Scouts to? aid during the » A. 1C. L 8 .EC *■8.67 79.0 6 W.14 At.ZO A. 1C. F4.08. coming election in arousing interest L8-.bs | and in getting out every voter to cast Leave 'J l . M. P. M. Qr |,er hallnt. The^ScoUts will salew branch work on 'B strictly non-partisan basis, Dailg_ Sjcopt Bnndzy ^ j ^ objective being t0 reduce the Arrive A. K.i number! of “vote slackers” which has ^F 10.02 1 been increasing greatly for the past F 9 53 ' qquarter of a century, to the lowest F 9.46 I ” L 9 40 possible minimum. A.M. Lesve Grepn-wirh Center Falls B a ttenrillp East G r w o w ifh Greenwich Junction A r r ive Lfcave I#- L**ye. A— Arrive. P— Stop on Sipnal to receive or discharge psseeiigorB. 0 . 1 . BTJBR, Yice-Proa,, Q-reeii'wieh, N. 3f, K I0 U L L 7 . S u p t_ Gre«rwlch* N . Y. TIME TABLE. Hudson Valley Railway Co. Leave Greenwich for Thomson, Schuylerville, Stillwater, Mechanic- \ville WaterfoTd and Troy—6:20, 7:25, S$5, 9:25, 10:25, 11:25 a.m. 12:25, 1^5, 2:25, 3:25, 4:25, 6-^5, 6:25, 7:25, 8:26, 9:25, 10:25 and tlhe 11:25 p.m. to Stillwater only- Leave Greenwich for FofSt Edward, Hudson Falls and Glens F'alls—6:20, ^ One evening last week an automo bile was stolen from in frorit of one of the large Lake Placid summer ho tels. After a search of the Vountry- side, the machine was discovered in a garage in the village. Investigation disclosed the fact that the machine had been taken by a young lady who explained that she borrowed the vehi cle so _that its owner, a friend of hers, couldn’t leave the resort so soon. Artacles of incorporation of the Babcock Lake Building ‘corporation were filed with the Rensselaer county clerk Thursday. The capital of the corporation is stated to be $ 20 , 000 , and i4s principal office is in Hoosick The directors named in the 8:26, 10:25 a.m., 12:25, 2:25, 3:25, 4:26, 6:25, 8:25, 10:25. Arrjve at Greenwich from Still-1 Falls ^ rf?rdT®-22' ! papers on file are Earl A. White of From Troy, Waterford, Mechanicville, l £ p , Stillwater, Schuylerville and Thom -1 Brooklyn, George G. Austin of Eagle ■oo—9t:22, 10:22, 11:22 ajn., 12:22, Bridge and Delmer Runkle, I. Burke X33., 2:22, 3:22, 4:22, 5:22, 6:22, 7:22, Surd am and Ezra Tiffany of Hoosick 3:22, 9:32, 10:22, 11:22 p.m. Falls Arrive at Greenwich rrom Glens Palls, Hudson Falls and Fort Edward, —7:22, 9:22, 11:22 a.m., 1:22, 3:22, H was discovered last week that *32. 6:22, 7:22, 9:22, ll:22 and 1 2 ^ sometime between th,e closing of the taken from his shin and inserted in the spine to replace the bone which was removed. Loss of '“between $5,000 and $6,000 was caused Thursday night by fare which destroyed every building, ex cept the house, on the farm of Isadote Roycewicz near the Delaware 'and Hudson crossing on the Fort Edward road, in Moreau, formerly known- as the Cornelius Reardon farm. The blaze was seen fora number of miles and spectators going to the scene in automobiles caused such a traffic jam that the South Glens Falls firemen who had been summoned could not get through with their chemical truck. Besides the buildings, all the hay, oats and oat stra-w, and the farm ma chinery was destroyed. Th<re was no insurance. V e g e t a b l e C o n t a i n s M o t e F o o d T h a n P o t a t o e s . ‘ ■ » it took the Prcneli Faculty of Medi cine, the controller general of ■finance, n France'and Jlre pope to convltie^ ihe people of Europe In 1771 that tlie potato was good to ent and would sus tain life instead Of utterly, destroying it, as so iilany feared. Now, as nearly everybody knows, the potato Is n»t reared at all. This bit of history Is added tt> tt statement of the Depart ment of Agriculture to encourage those engaged in promoting th«» (iaSheen industry. The dasheen Is a vegetable with food qualities similar to those of the po tato, but becituse It ls drier It con tains about 50 per cent more actual food than an equal weight of potato. *h has a nutty flavor and Is so mealy that even the worst of cooks can serve it without sogginess. According to the department, there are many gTowers of the -dasheen In Florida and because the vegetable was introduced here by explorers of the department, the growers of the plant are getting all possible aid from fhe government. ^ The dasheen first appeared here about fifteen years ago, but instead of being haileci as n -wonderful pew crop plant it was Jeered nt, ridiculed, con demned and damned with faint praise. Bqt neither the government nor the farmer engaged In raising it have be come dlscoarnged and the dasheen, It j is confidently predicted, will tjefore long come to t»e considered as an In dispensable article nnd as a most temptfng part of a meal no matter whether It appears baked, fried, ln a salad, as ciilps a la Saratoga, or tn any of many other forms. The statement nf the department says of the daslieen: “Experimental iwrk lias proved th<** Ylilue of the clashi'on and the pos sibility of producing it on a commer cial scale. Farmers who recognized Its high potenflal value since Its intro duction have kept on growihg It, eat ing it and marketing It when tliey HavS Become Glassiti Some time ago there appeared ip thfe British comic journal Punch, a partlou- .larly effective tongue twister, which t-an something to this effect: ^ K lady \vus wulklng. down a country lane when she met n tinker. “Ah,” she snltl. \1 see you are coinier-bottomlng .voiEr pots.\ “Oh, no,” he replied. \I’m aluiuinyiining ’em, mum.’’ As a U \1 twister this, i^ pretty hard to g^t, thlmgh perhaps the American form of the words is just a trifle more difficult- to wrap one’s tonsue iyouml: “I'm uliuninuifiing ’em, mum.” There are, of ‘ eourxe, many thou* stin ds of these traps for the unwary floating jibout. Here are a few. Tha test Is. aiot merely to say them, but to nuiBageno repeat them quietly, say a half a dozen times without gel tin one’s tongue tied up In-a knot. ^ . The sea ceuseth and it .sufiiceth us. A growing ^leani growing green. The bleak breeze blighted the bright bloom blossoms. She took a switch at Smith’s fish sauce shop. Flesh of fresh-frying Bsh. High roller, low roller, lower roller. A l box of*mixed biscuits, a mixed biscuit box. [ihe stood at'the gate we^eomingJiim. In. She sells sea shells on the sea shore. Which switch is the switch, miss, for Ipswich?—Kansas City Star. Music of the Orient Harsh and Strident The idea as to what real music really Is va-ies according to race and en vironment. Music of the (>«lent ls apt to Jar. upon sensitive occidental ears. Take the question of drums as an in stance. The playing of drums in Euro pean orchestras has reached a high standard of art, though it is rare that rnore than three or four are used. In a Ituijniese orchestra, however, the two principal instruments are one made of a series of drums called the selng- vetng and a similar series of gongs called the kyee or gongs graduated In size, the drums being played with the , , , _ . . , , ., I Ungers and hands and the gongs with could, and the Oriental populations) kDohRtlolcs. BeatJ(>s the?eBthere are cymbals, tom-toms and castanets, th( last-named being much larger than tht of our large cities kept op eating It when they could gel It. Thus the high production and consumption of dash- eens gradually Increased until the equivalent of ten carloads found Its way to northern markets each season. “However, some of these forward- looking farmers, finding thnt they conld grow dash eras more success fully than most other crops, decided the vegetable ought to be Introduced to our pooplo more generally. They consequently formed In Nassau-county, Fla., a Fa&heen Growers’ association, .two of tho principal objects of which were to market « more uniformly high- grade product and to European instruments and made of j bamboo. Of wind Instruments thert ( Bre oily a number nf clarinets and flute played hy the leader or coa«l tor. String Instruments are not and there are also no brass Instru ments. A l l BORN IN IRELAND . An Irishman was being < rnss-ex irained in a nise of assault. “I'ld the prisoner strike you wltt aallee?” \He did not have wan, sor, so be struck me wid his fust.\ After the court had r w ftv .i, coun sel proceeded: \Where were you aorn?” “('ireland.’’ “Yes. hut what part?\ “Whnt part, hfgorrat The howl a’ me, av o-urs^\ I A Good Thing - DON’T MISS IT Send your nuns and address plainly written, together with 6 cents (and this slip) to Chamberlain Medicine Co., De< Moines, Iowa, and receive^in return trial r LA IN ’ colds, croup, bronchial, “flu” and whoop ing coughs, and tickling throat; CHvtM.- B E R L l lN ’S TABLETS * 7 stomach troubles, indigestion, gassy pains that crowd the heart, biliousness and consti pation: CHAM BERLAIN ’S- SALVE, needed in every family for bums, scaMe, wounds, piles and skin affections these ▼allied family medicine# for only 5 ceati. Don’t tnisa it. heed the sounds about him. “He got ready the deadly jweapon. Then It dropped suddenly -from his nerveless fingers. There hod come floating down like a dove of peace, like a heavenly messenger, a sheet of paper. It fell directly In his lap. With awed staring eyes Robert Dale read the rude, scrawling words: “Never say die!” A quick revulsion of feeling passed ] over him. Whence had the message come. No one was In sight He burst j into tears, he dropped to his knees I and a new strength and Impulse came 1 Into 'his life. ' Two years later little Flora and her j parents fittended a meeting at tbe i town hall of the village. It had been announced some time previous that Robert Dale, a wealthy city merchant, had * purchased the grounds beyond the garden wall. A meeting had been I called where he was to publicly I donate the land and $30,000 to build an ! orphan asylum. J Mr. Dale arose and made the formal j tender of his beneficence to the town. Then his face grew grave and solemn, as he stated that lie wished to tell why he had been Impelled to his phil anthropic action. He recited his ex perience the day when that strange message had come to him. He told bow, banishing his cowardly fears, he had gone hack to the citr nerved to combat his busin.ess difficulties. Then he took from a treasured cor ner in his pocketbook a folded piece of paper and passed it around among the audience, the previous sheet of pa per bearing the words: “Never say die I” The liftle scrap of paper passed among two rows of seats. As it came to Mr. Easton little Flora littered a quick cry: “Oh, papa, It's my writing. Don’t you remember that day la the gar-, den?” •* Hoi only for Dale, but for others who had felt the gentle, hopeful Influ ence of little Flora, tiie rare perfume of her lovlne soul spertied to diffuse hope and happiness everywhere. As Robert Pale left the Easton •'home the following day the lofty flight lif a bird appeared to sypibolize the purified aspirations of his better na ture. The lark was flying straight into the face of the glowing sun, Its wild, glorious note echoing like a call to life, to duty, ^l'hen it wns lost to view, hut in the fervor of liis gratefui nature, to Robert Dn’fl? It p -enfed a? though the lark was singing at Heav en's gatel market steadily -wherever a demand was found. “With the co-operation of a system of local chain stones and other friend ly Interests In tlie near-by city oi Jacksonville, this farmers' organiza tion Is meeting with considerable sue* cess ln ma&lig the dasheen a familial' food product In that city. Housewives are learning how best to prepare It for their families ond are forming the habit of providing It occasionally.” Pleasant for A untie LJttle Margaret wits spending a holi day with her aunt in Cornwall. Now, auntie was a spinster, and not In the flrst bloom of jouth. In fact, an up keep this on the! felitd person had once been heard fleedltsa Expense A traveling man for an Atlrfnta house tells of an incident he observed in one of the towns of Georgia. He was seated in the waiting room when a typical negro of the backwoods type appeared at the ticket window nnd asked the agent for a ticket to Macon. “Straight or retarn?” asked th<j agent \Straight or return?” repeated the negro. “Yes,” continued the agent, €,a straight ticket will take you to Macon only, and a return ticket will bring you back here-” The negro understood at . once. “Say,\ he shnatpd. “whaf do yo’ thlnl! I wants a retarn ticket foh when I*« already hesh?” Perfect Resemblance ■ Wife (waxing philosophical)—Just to think, John 1 First, utter drabness, then the working of the sap and final ly the gorgeous tree—splendid ln its multitude of gold and crimson gown* I How like ours I Fed-Dp Husband—How w&l/lndeed, my dear! You iti* gorgeous tree nnd me the sap 1 — \’nn<’ou.yer f*?»vlnce. ieardti< i believfo .- Aim- ref«r to her as “old,” and we the other word used was “cat.\ how, she was not joung. Auntie was determined to give her little niece. a good time, and She ar ranged several pleasure trips ln order to glve-Margaret a chance of appreci ating the beauties of the Cornish ecttnery. v “When I take you to St. Ives I will show you the school that I went tof wlten I was a little girl,\ promised^ Mad auntie one day stfhen they w«r* cut for a walk. “Oh, auntie, ls it still here?” asked the child, innocently. “I expect it's ln ^ iuLn 8 no*1, Isn’t it?\—London Answers, j f Insect-Eating Plant An lnsect-eatlng plant is the sun dew, so called because of a shining sticky substnnee secreted by glands In the sunlight like a rnre gem, says the Detroit News. By means Of the sticky mess, the sundew attracts and\ entangles its prey. Then the edges «f the leaf curve Inward, forming a ’ sort of stomach Into which an add secretion Is poured to digest the meal. The portions which cannot be digested are later thrown out and the trap Is set for the next victim. The sundew seems to know when food is near, for if mpat la placed close to It the plant slowly reaches out for it. If a portion is placed within a few inches of the plant tha leitf will hend toward It until the tiny huirs, enfold the delicacy and tha sticky substance completes the grip. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE JOURNAL-ADVERTISER LETTER HEADS BILL HEADS AUCTION BILLS PAMPHLETS ENVELOPES HAND BILLS CIRCULARS In s h o it everything th a t ’s P r in t in g P r o m p t a n d satisfactory service } THE ffiraiiaaauaii^ ^