Cheraw chronicle. (Cheraw, S.C.) 1896-2005, April 13, 1922, Image 3
Where Exj
^ #&<
A view of the trading settlement at
Inhabited of all settlements there. It wa
'Shoe' Mil
of J
*Specimen
Found in Limestone of
the Triassic Period Amazes
Scientists.
THEY CALL IT "NATURE FAKE"
Stitching Is Perfect, but Man Didn't
Exist When It Was Made, Professors
Assert?Found in Nevada
by Prospector.
New York.?Wliat appears iv ue
the petrified sole of a carefully made
shoe has beeu submitted by John T.
Iteid, a mining engineer of Lovelock,
Nev., to Dr. Jaines F. Ketup, professor
of geology at Colun^'a university,
and to Dr. William D. Matthe\y, paleontologist
of the American Mtlseum
of Natural History.
If It is what it looks like, it is proof
that human beings were walking
about In shoes of finer workmanship
than are made today on this continent
> between 10 million and 300 million
years ago. The seeming fossil was
found in blue limestone of the Trias8ic
period on a summit in the southern
extremity of the Humboldt mountain
range In Nevada.
Both Dr. Matthew and Dr. Kemp
said that the object was the most surprising
imitation by nature of the
workmanship of man which had ever
come to their attention, but that it
was absolutely Impossible that it could
be a genuine fossil because the evidence
was overwhelming that the
career of humun beings on earth wus j
not over half a million years, whereas 1
the Triassic rock of which the neatly ;
sculptured sole is made is so ancient, i
Shows Lines of Stitches.
It would fit nicely a boy of ten or
twelve years. The edges are as
smooth as If freshly cut. But the surprising
part of it is what seems to |
be a double line of stitches, one near '
the outside edge of the sole and the |
other about a third of an Inch inside I
the first. The "leather" is thicker inside
the inner welting and appears to
% be slightly beveled, so that at the
margin, ha!f an inch wide, which runs
outside, the sole is something like an
eighth of an Inch thick.
The symmetry is maintained perfectly
throughout. The perfect lines
pursued by the welting and the apUnique
The unnual burro show for the chili
^ list of entries competing for the silver tri
i fir flniil Injunction
WHEAT SUPPLY
*
Enough of the Grain to Supply
r All Nations of World.
* Surplus of 11.800.000 Tons In Exporting
Countries From Year's Crop?
Increased Production in Wheat
13 Shown.
i Home.?After setting aside the quantities
of wheat required for home consumption
until the next harvest, the
wheat exporting countries will have]
I an exportable surplus of 11,800,000 J
metric tons, says a statement concern- j
ing the world's wheat supply just is?
sued by the International Institute of
Agriculture.
k it is impossible to form an accurate
estimate of the quantities the importing
countries will require before the
t iid or July, when their next wheat
crop will he gathered, adds the statement.
but It is ascertained that the
aggregute wheat crops in the import-1
Dlorer Shackleton W;
j v^A\y^iyw.-.WA^^/AVA%)yv.w;.;;/.ssN^iw
.,., w. - ' v
South Georglu. wh Ich Is the farthest so
o o? Contii fionpiria Hint <<lr I<"!rnf?t Shnrk
[lions
ears Old
pearance of hundreds of minute holes
through which the sole was sewed to
the shoe ure the things which make
the object such an extraordinary freak
in the eyes of the scientists who examined
it.
Under a strong glass. Mr. Reid
found that the tiny holes uppeared
with such exact regularity that it set
at naught the laws of probability to 1
believe that the thing was anything I
except the handicraft of man. The
edges are rounded off smoothly us if it I
were freshly cut leather from the !
hands of an expert cobbler. The '
heel and part of the sole appear, the ,
toe end being missing.
"It is not extraordinary," said Pro
fessor Kemp, "to tlnii natural imitations
of bones or man's handicraft*
The}' turn up frequently. But this is
by far the most perfect thing of the
kind that I have ever seen.
"On the other hand, I have no hesl- |
tation in saying that it is not a fossil !
but an accident. If it were a fossil, It
would probably be 10,000,000 years
old or older, because it appears to j
come from a Triassic formation. Man ]
did not exist that long ago.
Found by Prospector.
Mr. Reld said that the object was
found by Albert Knapp, a prospector,
whose attention was immediately ar- I
rested by the striking resemblance to ,
a cobbler's work. The uppearance is
aided by the fact that the color is i
thut of leather, which is due, accord- j
ing to Dr. Matthew, to Iron sulphide '
present In the alleged fossil, but not In
the rock on which it is mounted.
"The two scientists that I have 1 j
talked to simply take their stand that i
the Darwinian theory is so completely j
proved that man could not have pos- j
sibly existed during the Triassic peri- j
od, that only lower forms of life then ;
existed," said Mr. Iteid, "and they'
say that no amount of evidence that
this was a genuine fossil shoe would
convince them that it was such, although
they admit that the resemblance
to the sole of a shoe is exact
and extends to so many particulars. I
"Under a glass. It is perfectly plain i
that the leather was first perforated 1
by a line perforating machine before [ i
it was sewed. They call it an accl- j <
dental concretion. But they admitted
that they would not consider uny evidence
of the genuineness of the fossil
because they were so weddet] to a [ i
theory which would make It iuipos- i
slble" |]
Burro Show Held in
.; :-v<S:
dren of Sun Antonio, Tex., wus this yea
phy annually awarded by tlie mayor. 1
IS NOW AMPLE
ing countries which are furnishing
data to the institute will he consider- !
ably larger than last year, being 27,700.fx?o
metric tons, as compared with
21.SOO.OOO metric tons Inst year.
Imports of all the Importing coun- |
tries together between August and i
December. 1021. were larger than the (
previous year, and. supposing the shipments
between January and July of ,
1022 reach the same figure (despite the i
Increased yields and additional quan- j
titles imported during the last live j
months, the totals, according to the !;
institute, will still he within the limits .
>f the exportable surplus. It is even
probable that an exportable surplus
will still exist in August, 1022.
The aggregate showing of wheat
during this winter extended to 107,- ,
(n 10.000 acres, or l..'i per cent more L
than Inst year. It ye sowings reached i;
I'O.O'Ki.tKKi acres, or more than 12 per j,
cent greater than Inst season.
A reduction in the areas under I
wheat occurred iu Europe, utid there <
. _ - M
I
as Buried
If ' : \
SfiK ~
:t,, -,-?
y?
, ' : \*:
t? & * '
#.X: ::*X;X;:*
*: ,JJ/ \ .u.-.,. ^ M S3
uth In the Arctic circle und the m'st
leton, the British explorer, was bur'ed.
"It Is the most perfect piece of
natural mimicry that I have ever
9een," said Dr. Matthew. "But that Is
all. It Is not the work of man. Mau
lias not been In existence much more
than 500,000 years or so on earth, and
It Is not believed that man has existed
on this continent for more than 30,300
years. That Is, of course, only an
approximate guess. The Trlnsslc
formation in which this appears to
have been found might have been
300,000,000 years old. Sudi finds are
made every now and then, though I
have never seen anything so extraardlnary
as this before. A man recently*
found, for Instance, what he
thought to be a fossilized human eye J
of great antiquity. It bore a very
strong resemblance to an eye, but of j
course was no such thing."
earthquake recorder
' M
The earthquake recorder at Georgetown
university Is regarded as one of
the most accurate Instruments of the
kind <n the world. It will record the
slightest quake in any part of the
world.
Raleigh Pipe a Relic.
The pipe which Sir Walter Raleigh j
smoked on the scaffold, In H518, is now !
In the private museuiy belonging to a
London firm of tobacconists.
Texas
r u most successful affair with a Inrpe
I'he entrants are here shown lined up
was also a sllpht reduction In the
wheat aren In the United Stntes, but
this Is neutralized by an Increase In
Inrlln Ttvp smvlnps Increased both In
Europe and the United States.
Largest Olive Tree.
Yuba City, Col.?What Is held to
t?e the largest olive tree in the United
States so far as known has been
jlscovered by Deputy City Marshal Lee
McCuno on the Hoy Hull ranch, nine
miles below this city.
The tree, which was planted about !
forty years ago, stands 30 feet In '
height, has a spread of 20 feet and '
- feet from the ground the trunk has
a circumference of 0 feet 0 Inches.
Dog Saves Little One.
Livingston, M:?nt.?Three children of
K. J. Lyons, rancher, and the family
ilng were buried under eight feet of
snow during the storm here. Using
a skill gained in digging up hones,
the dog dug his way through the drift
with a little girl, Xonie, aged eight,
hanging to his neck. The two, sufe
uu the outside, brought help.
11??iimnrw
COLUMBIA TO HEAR!
REV. BUT SHAY'
NOTED EVANGELIST OFFICIALLY
ACCEPTS INVITATION FOR (
REVIVAL. ,
MEETING 10 LAST SIX WEEKS j
Evangelistic Committee to Make lm- 1
mediate Arrangement! of
Preparation. ,
Columbia.?Definite acceptance of ,
Columbia's invitation to conduct a re- ]
vival here was received from the Rev. j
William A. Sunday, the noted evange- |
list. The dates will be the same as ]
those named in the temporary ar- (
rangement, the meeting to start ap- j
proximately March 15, 1923, to run six ,
weeks. Columbians who have been (
deeply interested in the proposed re- (
vival were Jubilant that Mr. Sunday ;
had officially accepted. <
A city evangelistic committee is al- (
ready formed and this body of men j
will meet in a few days to make im- j
mediate arrangements of preparation. ]
W. D. Melton, well known Columbia \
lawyer, heads the commltte as chair,
man; the Rev. T. C. Skinner, D. D., |
pastor of the First Baptist church, is i
vice-chairman, and J. B. Horton, general
secretary of the Young Men'? j
Christian association, is secretary <
Other members are: Dr. W. R. Barron.
prominent physician; H. T. Pat 1
terson, treasurer of the State hospital; ;
J. Nelson Frierson, dean of the law (
school. University of South Carolina; |
T. B. Lanham, state secretary of th?
Young Men's Christian association;
Mrs. O. J. Kreps, president of the Co
i. lumbia Woman's Interdenominational
Missionary union; Rev. R. S. Trues ,
dale. D. D., pastor of the Main Street
Methodist church; Rev. E. M. Light
foot, pastor of the Second Baptist
church; Rev. Wade Bogge, pastor o:
the Arsenal Hill Presbyterian church;
Julien C. Rogers, cashier of the Liberty
National bank, and E. I-I. Schir- ;
mer, secretary and manager of the
manufacturing department of the R. L.
Bryan company.
It was announced by Secretary Horton
that Mr. Sunday's manager would
be here in a few days for a conference.
TV.,* raattor nf a tahfimarle suffi
cienlly large to handle the enormous
crowds will be one of the principal
matters to be disposed of by the committee.
While there has been no definite
selection and several places are
under advisement, it is understood
that the block on lower Main afreet
owned by the University of South
Carolina, between Green and College
streets, is being favorably considered.
When Mr.* Sunday was in Spartanburg
he was visited by a Columbia
committee and invited to come here.
At that time there was much encouragement
from Mr. Sunday, in fact the
matter was practically settled then,
but no contract was signed. The official
word from Mr. Sunday means that
the matter is closed and that Columbia
and all of South Carolina may look
forward to the revival in March, 1923.
1 <
Men Attack Obliging Friend.
Orangeburg. ? Stewart t. Coy. of
Pittsburgh, Pa., ?nd John A. Robinson,
of Blackstone, N. D., are in the Orangeburg
jail, having been arrested on
a charge of attempted highway robbery.
These two - young white men
came to the home of E. L. Pull, a prominent
farmer of the Parler section of (
Orangeburg county, and told Mr. Bull
that they were tourists, that their car
had broken down and requested him
to drive them to Parler that they
might catch the night train. Mr. Bull ,
consented and while driving his car toward
Parler and when Vance mill dam
was reached, the road being quite secluded
at that spot, the young men as- (
saulted Mr. Bull with their fists. Mr. ,
Bull was being choked by one of the ,
men. but he managed to get his Knire
out and he cut that man's throat from (
ear to ear, cut the other man on the (
hand and about the mouth and shot
one of the men in the leg. Although ,
Mr. Bull was bruised considerably, he (
was not badly hurt. The robbers were ]
painfully injured and could not even ,
attempt to escape. (
Woman Gets Medal.
Anderson.?Mrs. James Hunter, of
Pendleton, hns received from the British
government a handsome silver |
medal for distinguished services riur- ,
ing the war. This medal was presented
to Mrs. Hunter on a recent visit to
her former home. Mrs. Hunter was se- ,
verely injured by the blowing up of a ,
TNT plant during the war. Before
she married Mr. Hunter, an American ,
soldier, she was Miss Hilda Fern. She |
says there is pending in England a ,
bill similar to the bonus bill of the ,
United States. ,
School Highly Kraisea.
Batesburg?The Bateaburgfl^esville
high school, which has been receiving (
federal aid for vocational training, <
was visited by the federal agent for ]
agricultural education who has charge f
of the work in 14 southern states. Ac- (
cording to information received- .
through the office of the state super- ,
intendent of education, this agent re- ,
ports that the local school has as (
good equipment for teaching voca- (
fional work as any school in the South. ^
He complimented Superintendent (
Scott and the local trustees. (
Laurens Farmer Kiled.
Laurens. ? Riley Hammond, a merchant
of Laurens Cotton Mills vil- ,
lage, wns shot and killed by Thomas t
P. Duncan, a farmer residing near f
Madden station, about six miles south- ,
west of Laurens, the homicide occur- (
ring in the home of Duncan. A single- (
barreled shotgun was used and it was
said three shots were fired by Duncan. (
two of which took effect. Hammond ,
lived about 4o minutes after being j
shot. but. so far as known, he madp ,
no statement. Coroner R. R. Owlngr j
held the inquest. ; f
STATE AID GOMES IN TIME
Calhoun County Receives $2,200 From
Department of Education For the
Rural Graded Schools.
St. Matthews.?George W. Wannanaker,
county superintendent of education,
is in receipt of $2,200 from
;he state department of education,
which is the apportionment for this
county for rural graded schools. Mr.
tV'annamaker says the money arrived
'in the nick of time,' since the delinluency
of taxes has drawn some of
:he schools very near the twilight end
>f the session. He also expressed himself
as being highly pleased with the
showing made by this county. Out of
20 districts In the county, three of
which are Joint with Orangeburg and
Lexington counties, lb 01 tnese support
16 schools. Of these 16, nine are
rural graded schools, receiving state
lid. All of these, in compliance with
the requirements of the state aid laws,
tave two or more teachers, and two
>f them are high schools. There are
five one-teacher schools which are unible
to meet the requirements, not because
they have not the spirit to do
io, but because one of the essenital
requirements is unavoidably missing.
Taking into consideration the various
standards and requirements to be met
ind the difficulty usually encountered
In meeting them by average school.
Mr. Wannamaker feels that this county
makes a remarkable showing.
The following schools are now rural
schools sharing in state help: Pine
drove, $300; Woodland, $200; Fort
Motte, $200; Bellville, $200; Midway,
$400; Creston. $200; Spring Hill, $200;
Center Hill, $200; Sunny Plain, $200.
Midway, with 112 pupils and four
teachers, is the largest rural school
In the county. The Creston school was
awarded a prize of $15 by the state
scb|ool improvement association, for
which, it is said, credit is principally
due to Mrs. W. A. Keller.
Center Hill is the only one which
has suspended on account of shortage
of funds, but all will run the six
months.
New Board Begins Duties.
Laurens.?According to a special act
passed at the last session of the' general
assembly, abolishing the county
highway commission and transferring
the duties to the Laurens county
board of commissioners, the former
board was formally dissolved at a
final meeting Leid here and turned
the work over to the legally authorized
successors.
The Laurens highway commission,
authorized and named a few years
ago to have charge of the construction
of the highway system of Laurens
county, was composed of John
D. W. Watts, the county supervisor;
George M. Wright, who acted as secretary;
O. C. Cox, Henry Sims and
Willis Putnam. Under the supervision
of this board over $500,000 has
been expended on the public roads of
the county. Standard top soil roads
have been constructed from the county
line at Kinards via Clinton, Laurens
and Gray Court to the Greenville
county line at Fountain Inn, from Laurens
to Princeton, from Laurens to
Cross Hill via Cold Point, from Laurens
to Enoree with the exception of
about five miles between Watts Mills
and Ora.
More Detroyers Go.
Charleston. ? Destroyers of squadron
No. 3 steamed from Charleston
harbor for League island, where they
will be put out of commission along
with scores of others of these warships.
There are 16 destroyers in this
squadron, making the largest single
movement or vessels yet to go under
the schedule in force which is taking
the trim vessels from their winter base
at a rapid rate. By the end of this
month there will be only 39 left of the
106 here early in March. As the swift
warships trailed from the harbor they
made an impressive spectacle.
School Funds Short.
Laurens.~-A meeting of the school
trustees of 60-odd districts of the county
was held In the court house in response
to a call Issued by Ralph T.
Wilson, county superintendent of education.
The purpose of the conference,
as announced by Mr. Wilson,
was to discuss the situation In regard
to the matter of continuing the schools
to the end of the full term as originally
planned. For the lack of funds
many of the schools will have to close
sooner this, year than formerly.
Will Try Potatoes.
Greenwood.?A potato curing house
with a capacity' of 10,000 bushels will
he opened in the second story of the
Greenwood Fruit company, President
T. W. Bradford has announced. Thi.?
potato hous^ will be only one of a
number of houses to be opened
througout the county.
Farmers are turning to the sweet
potato industry as a means to meeting
boll weevil conditions. In a large
number of communities co-operative
potato houses have been built and farTiers
are planning to ship potatoes.
Live Stock Men Form Association.
Sumter.?At a meeting in Sumter
jf farmers and live stock breeders of
Sumter, Lee. Beaufort, Charleston,
Darlington and other counties, the organization
of the South Carolina Cooperative
Live Stock association was
completed with an initial capital
Uock of $50,000, 20 per cent of which
ras paid in. The following board of
iirectors was elected with lnstruc;ions
to begin operations at once: L.
D. Jennings, C. J. Jackson, Archie
Shlna, Sumter; Robert M. Cooper, Lee
:ounty.
Bamberg Farmer Takes Own Life.
Bamberg?John Steedlv. 35-year-old
vhite farmer, who resided seven or
dght miles from Bamberg, took his
>wn life while riding along the high
vay in his automobile with members
the family in the car with him. No
tause for the rash act is known.
Besides Mrs. Stcedly, a brother and
he brother's wife were also in the
nachine at the time. Without any
provocation or warning Mr. Steedly
Irow a pistol from his pocket and
Ired a bullet into his chest. Death
ollowed almost Instantly.
^SEALED AIR.I ICjHI
#81
Penn s spells
J Peon's is packed
M air-tight in the pat|f
ented new conIll
tainer. It is always
11 Chew fresh toB
bacco. Try Penn's
next time. Clean?
/) Guarantee
USKER BEFORE COMMITTEE
HOUSE AND SENATE COMMITTEE
um n mimt ucidimr r>m
MEASURES.
Says That Shipping Board is Standing
Fast by the Administration's
Program.
Washington.?Enactment of the ad
ministration's ship subsidy bills with
out radical change is the hope o:
President Harding and shipping boart
officials, Chairman Lasker told mem
bers of the senate commerce ant
house merchant marine committees a
the opening session of joint hearing.'
on the measure.
Declaring that the shipping boart
"stands fast" for the general princi
pldh embodied in the program en
dorsed by the President, Mr. Laskei
expressed the opinion that "any radi
cal change in the proposals might re
suit in the destruction of the whole.'
After he had read a lengthy state
ment in which he-contended that gov
ernment operation not only hat
proved a "costly failure," but wai
driving private owners off the 6eas
the shipping board head became th<
target for a rapid fire of questions
most of them from democratic mem
bers of the house committee. Fre
? - * *- ? * ? T o o
quent veroal ciasnes oeiweeu mi.
ker and Represnetative Hardy, Texas
ranking democrat of the house com
mittee, marked the cross-examination
Quizzed by Representative Briggs
democrat, Texas, as to the board's
experience with ship operators, Mr
Lasker said he had a "suspicion tha
a few operators have purposely abus
ed their operation privileges" to prov<
government operation a failure. Th<
chairman added that he would noi
make any specific charges on this
point.
-v
Guard Shot Down by Bootlegers.
Baltimore.?A band of bootleggers
motored up to the Gwynnbrook Dis
tillery, 15 miles northwest of Balti
more, summoned a guard to the door
calling him by name, and shot him
down. He died within an hour. Po
lice of Baltimore and Baltimore coun
ty were rushed to the distillery. I)
is believed no liquor was obta'red ir
the raid.
Pays Bill After 51 Years.
Utica, N. Y.?Because he left Col
gate university in 1871 unable to pay
a board bill of $7, Frank S. Lyon, of
Wolverine, Mich., has sent to the
treasurer $27.42, which is equal to $7
and simple interest for the 51 years
intervening.
The amount was owing to Byron
Richardson, who conducted a boarding
house and Lyon requested
that the money be turned over to
. -1 A
him. if living, or nis neirs. ALIC1 iuc
letter from Lyon was read to 'the student
body, Harold B. Anderson, of
Hammond, Ind., now a freshman, at
the university, informed the treasurer
that he is a grandson of Byron Richardson.
Maryland Passes Bonus Bill.
Annapolis.?With only four dissenting
votes, the house of delegates passed
the state soldiers bonus bili. The
measure having passed tb& senate,
now goes to the governor
The bill provides for a $?tOCO.(?>0
bond issue, which 's to be submitted
to the people. If the bond issue is approved
at the polls the money will
be distributed to ex-service men in
Maryland as follows: Ten dollars a
month for every month of service for
all Marylanders in the army, navy,
marine corps or nurses corps.
Failures of Month.
New York.?Business failures in the
United States during March increased
in number over those of March, 1921,
but decreased in the total amount
of capital involved .said a report issued
by Bradstreets.
There were 2.307 failures, for a total
of $57,513,590 last month as against
1.500 for a total of $6S,698,350 in
March, 1921.
For the first quarter year, there
were 7.111 failures for $230,219,350 in
March, 1921.
9H
3Be
ffiSr^ Bfi
jfi
*1
\ J
** %/ ^??
te<st^L- wfc^^g.
General
Semenoff Arretted.
1 New York.?General Gregorie Ataman
Semenoff, anti-Bolshevik mill- i
tary leader In Siberia, was arrested
at the Pennsylvania station' upon his
' t i u ?mam. u?? qv?a '
arrival ueru lium tvasuiagiuu u/ t?ucriff
Nagle. In the custody of six deputy
sheriffs, he was taken to the 1
^Waldorf-Astoria hotel where arrangements
were under way- to have him ;]
released on $25,000 bail.
The arrest was made in a civil ac?N J
tion involving nearly half a million
dollors on an order issued by Supreme
Court Justice Delehanty.
General Seminoff was charged with
. the theft of woolen stuffs and furs
t valued at about $475,000, property of
j the now bankrupt firm, Yourevata
. Home and Foreign Trade company,
1 Inc. The theft was alleged to ha4re
t been made in or near Chita.
3 1~
Moore Serves Term.
j Indianapolis. ? Isaiah Moore, selfconfessed
spouse of 13 wives, was sentenced
to serve from two to 14 years
' in the state reformatory on a charge
of embezzlement and was fined $1,100
and costs and disfranchised for five
? years.
Moore was sentenced to serve from
v two to five years in the state prison
j on a charge of bigamy. He pleaded
5 guilty to the bigamy charge.
Moore is said to have embezzled
$512 from Miss Harriet Evans of MepI
Tn<1
Itu, 1UU.
Kindness Costs Him $24,077.71.
New York.?The kindness of heart
of Rev. Dr. Charles H. Parkhurst, the
[ noted Presbyterian divine, cost him
* $24,077.71. '' A
Supreme Court Justice Geigerich
' awarded a verdict in that sum against
3 him in a suit on a $20,000 promissory
' note brought by Albert K. Kintner.
Dr. Parkhurst. who is ill with pneumonia,
said in an affidavi that he en*
dorsed the note in September, 1919,
? purely as an act of accommodation to
the American Education Alliance and
3 the German Publication Society,
which were named as co-defendants. 1
Bandits Hold Up Passengers.
' St. Louis.?Compelling 30 passen- *
" gers to hold up their hands, three
" younthful bandits in a daylight street
> car robbery robbed Harold Kaemmer1
er, 17, bank messenger, of $5,600 in
" cash and $1,600 in negotiable paper.
* The bandits escaped in an automobile
* driven by a confederate.
i
Twenty-two Aliens Caught.
Tampa. Fla. ? Twenty-two aliens^
patrons of the gigantic smuggling sys.
tern operating along the Atlantic
seaboard, were captured by federal of;
fleers off Tarpon Springs, near here,
i The men?Spanish, Greek and Ger..
A.. 4Uin
man?were attempting to emer una
i country through the "underground"
soute, authorities declared.
[Telephonejl
i ;
I when you want
that next job of
Printing |
You will get first-class
work, and you will get
it when promised, for g
having work done I
when promised is one
of the rules of this office.
If you prefer, send the
order by mail or bring 9
i it to the office in person. t
I Let t/i Show You
What Wo Can Do