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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1939 Meet Mr, Lochinvar YESTERDAY: Locke (Mr. Lochinvar) tells Cecily he will be in and out of her life. She de- cides to give a series of suppers and charge for them, | | with meat and mushroom sauce, | She had to reheat it over the elec- trie stove. She mixed a fresh salad and cut generous chunks of cheese. “Why hang around? Why didn’t you come in?” “Well,” he said, taking the vin- egar away from her, “I thought you’d have too many people here. Which one of them was Callen?” “He wasn’t here,” she said. “What are you doing with the vin- egetce, “Showing you how to mix real dressing,” he answered impu- dently. _ If you don’t like our ser- vite...” “I know, don’t tell me. I can go some place else.” “I wasn’t going to say that,” she said, making an attempt to eat heartily. She had already had her supper but she wanted him to feel at ease. He did. He helped himself to a generous second portion of spa- ghetti. “I’m not easily discour- aged,” he said. i They ate silently for a few min- utes. When the platter was clean and the last lettuce leaf used to absorb the last.ounce of dressing, he sat back and drew a pipe from his coat pocket. Cecily thought: He couldn’t al- ways have been so poor; that’s an excellent coat. It was of the same kind that Doug used to order from England. His linen was fine, too, she noted. And his hair had been brushed to lie smooth. It didn’t. “Gal, did you cook this fine food?” he asked, lazily drawing on his pipe. “T did. Will it do?” “You’d make a wonderful wife for a poor man,” he said content- edly.'Cecily felt like an idiot be- cause his careless compliment pleased her exorbitantly. “Think so?. Well, tet’s see what kind of a poor husband you’d make. You can wash the dishes.” | “Td make a very poor husband indeed,” he responded promptly. “In fact, ’d make a bad one, but T’'m a good companion.” Story Of Her Life ‘HE few dishes were washed and pu in the cupboard and Cecily | and her guest sat on a lounge. Cecily prayed that no one would be attracted by the light in her shop. Aloud she said, “What makes you think you’d be a good com- anion? What are your attri- yutes?”” “I’m a good listener.” “You'll need more than that, because I’m not a talker.” “G. on,” he urged. “Tell me the story of your life.” “Tt’s not interesting. I was born, then I grew. First I grew out and then I grew up and here 1 am.” | “Nice work of growing,” he said approvingly. “And since then?” “Nothing,” she finished. “Then shall I tell you?” She nodded. “Weli, then, Miss Cecily, you went to good schools, made a | debut, got bored with the social | life and opened a shop as a lark.” “Oh, no I didn’t!” she protested earnestly, anxious that he wouldn’t think her like her cousin, Gloria, “Then tell me about it.” “Oh, it’s not .interesting,” she said, conscious of how dull she sounded. “I went to a good school. My father and mother died ina railroad accident. I have a twin brother, Doug, who is aie ee be a doctor. He’s tutoring in France this summer. You’d like Doug.” Chapter 14 Another Visit “WE COULD charge thirty-five cents and...” Laura_put down her pencil. “Cecily Stuart, have you lost your mind? Thirty-five cents for that kind of a meal? In the first place, we'd go broke. In the second place, these colonists have lots of money and would be glad to pay a reason- able price for such grand food.” Cecily wasn’t thinking of the colonists. She was thinking of a young man whose throat looked thin. A young man who lived in a ramshackle shack at the end of a lonely road. A shabby transient who had the manner of a cavalier. A man who might be able to pay thirty-five cents for a nutritious meal. “That's the banker influence,” she said, pretending to scold. “Well, it’s your business,” Laura said resignedly and went to work to help Cecily get the word around. Olivia protested the plan. “Cecily, if you want to run a book-shop as a whim, that’s all right but I'd rather you didn’t go in for restauranting. What will people think?” ip said he thought it was rest fun and he was proud of ecily. He said, he’d be there at six with other guests from Darelea. Promptly, Cecily said she’d rath- er he didn’t. It wasn’t a party, she said, and she would get along more efficiently without them if they wouldn't mind. ; She was annoyed with Philip. He had refused flatly to autograph copies of Ride the Rainbow. “It's not cricket,” he said. “If 1 vere a Shaw, I might, but I think it’s a bit of showing off for me to Go it.” She thought crisply that that was the first time Philip had objected to showing off. But she didn’t press the point. If he would only stay away the night of the supper. . ie did, granting her that point. Cecily and Philip seemed always to be exchanging move for move. She didn’t like it but she had some- thing else to think about. She had tomatoes and pimientos, spaghetti and salad on her mind. had to think of card tables and linens and service. Oh, she found a great many things to think of so that she wouldn't think about whether or not Locke knew she was having a supper that she wanted him to come to. She had said specifically on the little note she zrote to the sum- mer cottagers that her suppers were from six to eight. It- was quite plain that this was not to be a se- ries of parties such as her first one. Party or not, her first supper Wes a great success, She served twenty- suppers at fifty cents a piece—Laura.baving won her point —and,.made a few cents over six dollars. And by eight-thirty, the last of the supper guests had departed for the movies, and Cecily paid small Archibald his quarter for helping with the dishes. Laura had been invited to play bridge with the MacGregors and| “Would Doug like me?” he asked y had insisted that she go|with one eyebrow raised crooked- with them. She really need- | ly. elp. It had been amazing!y | ' “Yes, he would.” She said it and | vay the food in the|realized that she meant it. Doug | ; h was a recent addi- | might not approve of her taking a ion, and to burn the paper plates | transient under her wing but she | end cups. felt that he would like Locke none thought: Laura was right. I| the less. puld have charged a dollar and “Ah, a little approbation goes they would have paid it willinglv.|to my head. Go on saying these nice things.” But I thought surely he would “You're laughing at me,” she ac- come and he couldn’t afford so} mutch. If I had known— “Party over?” Only The Man Who— HE dropped the plate she held “7 jn her hand, as his voice star- tled her, and bent over to pick it up, taking a longstime 4 do it so that he would not see how sud- denly erimson her face had turned when she heard his voice. When she got the pieces to- gether, she couldn’t hold them in her hands. Her hands were fool- ishly tremblingy Oh, she thought, this confusion # ridiculous. He is only a young man who— She couldn’t get any further. He was only the young man that she had wanted to see more than any- one else. He was only the young. man who had been haunting her. He was only the person who turned her thoughts inside out, who made the world seem entirely new. He was only the person who reduced her now to a state where she could only say foolishly, “Oh, I’m glad you came. I didn’t think you were going to.” “T’'ve been hanging around starv- ing for the last hour,” he said. “And now, it’s over.” “Oh, no, it isn’t,” she said quick- ly. “I haven’t had mine. We}... . we'll have it together.” She heaped his plate with the steaming, succulent spaghetti rich BROADWAY STORE SATISFIES PATRONS One grocery store that has con- SS RS tion in this city. sistently done en excel lent job o! | Bach Friday the Broadway merchandising in a quiet way—)j just plugging along day by day | Market specials many prices on Turn to the adver-! and serving an increasing num-/|page four. ber of patrons, is the Broadway |tisement now and make up your Market, Duval at Angela streets. shopping list for your weekend Continued advertising in good'meals. Patrons do say that the space in The Citizen has helped |service and price are hard to to build up business, as the mana-|beat in town, cused. j “I’m laughing with you,” he cor | rected. “I amuse you, Cecily, and not many people do.” She had no answer to that. “There are no lines of laughter in your face,” he said after a little when she was silent. “Child, I don’t think you’ve had much fun. I don’t think you've laughed very much.” Cecily said quickly,“Of course T have! I’m not a very spontaneous person, if that’s what you mean.” “That_ isn’t what I mean, And what I do mean is séniething that you wouldn’t understand because you are neither subjective in your point of view, nor introspective.” | “Smile when you say that,” she | attempted light, | “I mean nothing but compli- | ments, my gentle dove.” “Perhaps we'd better return to your companionable attributes. Now, that you've proved you're a pred listener by listening to my, life story, let’s get on to the next: “Oh, we’re by no means through with your life story but we'll take | it up in easy stages. To get back to me, I’m also a fine story-teller,” he said, making a mockery of hismod- | est expression. “T've noted that,” she replied patly. “I remember the posse, the Kentucky Derby and...” ger, A. Rivero, will tell anyone —but it has been simply a case; of “keen merchandising” all! jalong the line that has brought; ithe store to a top-ranking posi-! ‘Today \Be very circumspect in this di-|many friends. : THE KEY WEST CITIZEN CINCY ALMOST IN “ixisy" Wiest IN’ (CLEANERS ALMOST AS LEAD INCREASES'DAYS GONE BY T HOSPITAL I TAKE DOUBLEHEADER FROM: GIANTS; CUBS WIN Two: YANKS LOSE AGAIN TAKING TWO GAMES; (Special to The Citizen) the bureau of enginers of public i : NEW YORK, Sept. 15.—Cin- | toads of the U, S. Department Ge Maatemnecgr icy PE can cqla| cinnati Reds gained a half-game { Agticulture, who arrived by auto- | i eee ae theta 7 ‘ ve 1; mobile yesterday, bringing with | # ie mighty arine lospit for their lead in the National them plans and specifications for |club’s colors trailed in the dust League with a doubleheader win’ the proposed long bridges of the |tast night in their first two bowl- over the fading New York Giants. '\Oversea Highway, left at '6 o’clock |; FA ‘, A {ing games in the Terrace Tourna- Scores were 8 to 5 and 9 to 3,/ this morning for the water spans’ ay <i this strike Reds turned on a powert‘ul hit-|to be bridged, their purpose be- ment. nly a last-minute strike ting attack, collecting ‘thirteen in ing tacheck up on the details|by Dr. Avery staved off defeat. eacn game. St. Louis Cards |and obtain final information to | With one frame to go, the third stayed in the race, though sh ae B full Tet ey the game Jooked very bad for the ping four games behind the ‘ead-|head department office in Wash- * ers, by beating the Boston Bees, ington, which will be done early sind iat toon bi ae raat 6 to 3, behind Curt Davis’, twen-|in October, it is understood. The ad what it takes, and the final ty-first win of the season. \ visiting enginers are from the of. score for the match was Hospital Chicago Cubs overwhelmed |fice of the Montgomery Division | 1156, Cleaners 1147. the Phillies in a double} ieader, headquarters. The survey on! ‘Another upset of the evening 13 to 1 and 5 to 2, Charley Root! which they have come to check was thé defeat of Hotel La Con- and Larry French being the win-| Was made several months ago! ha by DeMl fae <6 ak ning pitchers. The remaining two | by government civil engineers/CD@ Py Vel sa . teams in the senior circuit also|Who came quietly and had their) The night’s scores: played a doubleheader, resulting | Work»completed before it was| Marine Hospital in a split between Brooklyn and generally known that the work | ward 12 135 153— 400 Pittsburgh. Bucs took | game, Was im progress. Arriving with} ‘Avery (sub) 141 104 120— 365 number one, 4 to 3, and the Dodg-|the government engineers last Me 123 113 155— 391 ers took, number two, 8 to 4. |night’were Chairman Duncan of Moore -- 2 In the American League, the|the Florida highway depart-| New York Yankees suffered their ment; George Derrick, also a third straight licking, this one at member of the state organization, the hands of a rampant lot of and H. J. Morrison, federal engi- Detroit Tigers, score being 6 to Meer of the Gainesville office. 1. The Yanks collected only six They were met and accorded a hits, A tenth-inning home run by | Cordial welcome to Key West by | rookie Dee Mills brought in one @.large delegation of city and) ahead of him and’ enabled his county officials, who went to the 1744 o4,. team, the Philadelphia A’s to de-| Lower Matecumbe slip, accom- pected feat Chicago’ White Sox, 4 to 2.{Panied them on the return trip GOW" = Boston Red Sox and Cleveland |of the ferry and escorted them |” Indians fought out a close game,;t0 the city. The visitors were the latter winning 8 to 7 with a entertained last night with a fish} barrage of eighteen hits. Dutch |Supper at a local cafe as guests Leonard proved highly effective of city and county officials, local in allowing St Louis Browns only |engineers and Chamber of Com- 6 hits, providing ample reason for |™erce members. The visiting Washington to win easily, 5 to 1,/group left this morning on the Results of the games follow: County yacht Mayflower, accom-| NATIONAL LEAGUE panied by county commissioners First Game ‘and the county engineer and ex-} At Cincinnati R. H. E. pect to return to the city this} New York 5 12 0{evening.. | Cincinnati - 6:43: 1| = Hubbell, Lynn, Gorman, Brown | . ie pe trae mae hat / and Hayworth; Derringer and sa a a pe oi dit is | POWERFUL YANKS: If the Lombardi. eat patel ae Yankees win the American sash Pe |sugar, left yesterday monning Fs thi ad ‘for England. The work of load- ague pennant this year, a1 ing th leted last there certainly isn’t much doubt ~ a 5 night. ised Nace cdma ae it, they will become the oes a \ first team in the 39-year history ipaenet a a eee Hy Enrolling an aggregate of of the junior major circuit to Salvo, Brown, rman and | spout 3,000 pupils the four public | ; ‘ win four consecutive cham- Danning; Niggeling, Shoffner| -choois of Key West opened this pionships. Detroit Tigers of and Hershberger. morning for the 1929-30 term! 1907, ’08 and ’09, the Yankees of under the conditions and pros-|1921, 22 and ’23 and of 1926, R. H-B Pects that are most encouraging, \’27 and '28, the Athletics of 1926, - * ** according to . Superintendent |j30 and '3l—each won three but |Meivin E. Russell, who says that |failed in their fourth attempt. ‘the enrollment ~‘as larger than |The famous Athletics of Connie was anticipated and will exceed Mack won in 1910 and ‘11, lost to ithe record of last year. \the Boston Red Sox in 1912 and | SS ‘came back and won in 1913 and | Charles S, Lowe has received | 14 Mack had. the outstanding * his appointment as vice consul of infield of’ McInnis, Collins, Barry |Norway. in the district compris-|and Baker. . ing Miami and Key West with League, McGraw won in 1921, ’22, offices in Key West. |pointment was received from the senior circuit has failed to pro- minister of foreign affairs at|duce even a three-time winner Oslo, Norway. | because of keen competition. MAJOR BASEBALL LEAGUES’ STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE Club— Ww. L. Cincinnati - St. Louis Chicago Brooklyn Total —... . 1156 White Star Cleaners (Medina .. -112 141 140— 393 Zaldivar 09 120 136— 365 \C. Mike -161 107 121— 389 Total 2 , Dem (sub)122 . 95 118 128— 341 -127 121 146— 394 -110 131 132— 373 90 119 107— 316 -104 104 128— 336 1025 | Mendoza Shehane Edwards Total FOLLOWING THROUGH By PEDRO AGUILAR Second Game At Cincinnati New York First Game At Chicago Philadelphia Chicago Beck an Hartnett, Garbark. ¢ 7 ae Second Game At Chicago Philadelphia —.. Chicago Bruner and and Mancuso. Warre! First Game At Pittsburgh Brooklyn - Pittsburgh Tamulis and Hartje; and Berres. Editorial Comment: Miami “crows” because the custom col- | lector’s report for once shows |that Miami exceeded Key West | | in the total value of imports. This | st eee ees RHE |same report shows that exports | Broskign $13 0|from Key West for the same Pittsburgh | £13 2| month totalled $2,330,280 to. Mi- Pressnell, Crouch and Hartje;|@™'S bates i aie oe ‘at Sivigert, Bowman and Meuller. jeesiee staat line 5 itdotalael bo ELI {not crow, for that is nothing un- vusual. Cardinals and Sluggers «were/ the winning teams at the Phelan} jgrounds yesterday afternoon. | |The first game scheduled be- tween the Sluggers and the Pi- Club— rates was forfeited to the Slug- New. York . R. HE 8ers by a score of 9 to 0. The | Boston 23 (9 | Second: contest between Key | Chicago a 4:0 0] Ven ee eee, ee Clevennd, jslugfest, with the Cards coming |netroit __ out winners by a score of 14 | Washington ‘ | jto % x | Philadelphia St. Loui R. H. E|__ Belio Sanchez, manager of the bps € 10 1 Pirates, has issued a challenge| 1 6 2/to‘the Young Sluggers fot a se- TODA IN M Pet. 621 3 2S sesesset,-g ssaees At St. Louif Boston St. Louis - f Sullivan, Frankhouse, Earley and Lopez; C. Davis, Warneke and Owen. AMERICAN LEAGUE At Philadelphia Chicago Philadelphia (10 Innings) Smith, Brown and Tresh, Sch- luetter; Potter and Hayes. ES28sa Philadelphia AMERICAN LEA‘ 2B asses Sesn At New York Detroit —-- New York —- . Newsom and Tebbetts; Donald, Hildebrand and Rosar. |ries Oftfive games of baseball, | |the winner to take three of the \five. ~Prize will be 50 cases of} |soda .water. The games will be) 1 |Played Sunday afternoon if the \challenge is accepted. R LEAGUES At Boston Cleveland Boston Allen, Dobson, Pytlak; Auker, Dickman, Bagby and Desautels. Hi jgames—Lohrman | (11-11) Schumacher (10-9) vs. Moore | (12-10) and Vander Meer (5-8). Boston at St. Louis—Turner | (4-9) vs. Bowman (13-4). | Philadelphia -at Chicago—Two games—Higbe (9-12) and. Kerk- |sieek (0-1) vs. Dean (6-3) and Page (6-7). at Pittsburgh—Hol- lingsworth (2-11) vs. Butcher At Washington . i. St. Louis - Washington Trotter and Harshany; Leonard and Ferrell. E (Ry Associated Press) 1) Wyo., Sept. 15.— ®| Joe Shockley, contractor, tells it this way: | “I was 22.2 miles from Muddy _—_— | glance speed- SOCOCOSOSSOSSCCEDSOOOOOSS nda ih see the ’ S |. “I was traveling 22 miles an Cegee bs joil registered a pressure of 22 and The feelings will sometimes be!it was 22 minutes before 11 inclined to run away in those | o’cleck. born today, and parents will do! “Along came a car bearing well to inculcate moral prin- | United States department of agri-| Chitago at Philadelphia—! ciples in youth, for otherwise /culture license number 222”. |trich (7-6) vs. Nelson (8-11). there is danger of entangling) St. Louis at Washington—Ken alliances with the opposite sex.|rection. The native will make|nedy (8-20) or Wade (1-4). vs. [Srakauskas (1-15). Detroit at New York—Rowe | (8-10) vs. Sundra (9-0). 4 133 102— 357 In the National | The ap-|’23 and ’24, but since then the | PAGE THREF lore out of Sweden out of her 222,- |000,000 marks of foreign iron ore (purchases. There is a strong | suspicion that a long war will LUXURY RIDE IS PLYMOUTE'S STOR jhave Germany scraping the bét- Navarro, Inc., calls attention | FLORIDA LOBSTERS | RECEIVING PRESSURE | (Cantinued from Page One) | $10,000. to $15,000 ‘each season. | |Now unprotected by duty. from, jottshore imports selling at four to te “Luxury Ride” today in| © jor five cents, they work on per- 2 ¢ront } > Sy H page space and maintains \CLASSIFIED COLUMN us ig ge ere that pleasure is just what | eececeseesevcccecccccccses awaits those who apply for a} PERSO! |for all costs they have made a ATs ; — tie. 9 nade @ 'ttial demonstration ride in the |fair living. . To “come out” they|/new 1940 Plymouths, just re- QLD AT 40! GET PEP. jhold they must sell at eight cents | ceived for display this week. AY New Ostrex Tonic Tab- [spout eee Interested citizens are invited) Jets contain raw oyster invigo- Even with a market the} : ‘ ~, | ators and other stimulants. See a ¥ Bs hehe their demonstration rides! ne dose starts new pep. Value busin: 3 ster ing. is. not jthis weekend. Just stop in at! $1.00. Special price 89c. Call, tosy. Pirating is not unusual, as the agency, Southard and Duval, write Gardner's Pharmacy. |“free lances” raid the traps of|and make the date. ' those who make a legitimate business of catching and selling lobsters. Firearms are found aboard many of the boats-and, as ‘the western plainsmen thought of \horse thieves, so de the lobster- jmen view pirates. Florida’s lob- |ster industry has ven profit- able only from Ft. Pierce through the Keys. The matter was brought to a point through issuance of a cease ‘and desist warning to the East | | Coast Fisheries, Inc., of Miami, in ‘which the trade commission has \Taled the concern’s activities “fall within the proper definition of | the term ‘unfair methods of com- | pétition, in commerce’, the use of which the commission is required | |to prevent”. Accordingly the \¢commission’s ruling is that the 'Miami ‘company must cease dis- (tribution of Florida lobster prod- ucts under the designation of “Jobster”. The trouble appears to be that | FOR RENT BACKGROUND |PAGE’S SODA FOUNTAIN FOR OF THE WAR} RENT. Owner must retire be- Dis ae cause of ill health. Apply at (Continued from Page One) Tountain, is ta discharged. Then the Columbus jwent to Vera Cruz, Mexico, where under international law, |—~—— lunless Mexico declares war on | WANTED TO _ BUY—Second- Germany, he will probably re- | hand house in fair condition. main throughout the present) Box X, The Citizen. septl2-wk war. | i WANTED TO BUY { 1 aii FOR SALE | AMERICA FAVORS— Ira aeRO EE Ey PSUR SS Notes on the War: A’German|FOR SALE—8-tube Atwater- press correspondent and an Eng-! Kent Radio, $10; Water Cooler. lish correspondent were sitting; $2.50; Bottle Cooler, $10. Duke’s side by side in a Washington, Bar-B-Q. septll-lwk press room. The German ran tout of paper and turned to the| Englishman for some. “Certain-| jly”, the Englishman said. Inci- > jdentally the German has two} rear 1217 Petronia street. jcousins fighting in the French aprl4-s jarmy. . .Washington is dotted | (OAL FOR SALE—Just. th ic “ | with maps with pins showing the , E—S cpleaanens “Leck, Eat have eul- Progress of the war in Burose...| ight kind for barbecueing. In- ae - bp Se Engl 7 | bately the guards around the, eXtinguishable. Burnt from TS an ae then Ma and | White House have taken to| buttonwood. Erskine Roberts, pe imargy se pos nc in rr |wearing their pistol holsiers in| 903 Thomas street. sept2-lwkx . +. |plain sight. . .The capitol is preju- ce reply to the seirrel comple: diced in favor of England and | FOURTEEN-FT. V-BOTTOM parang Popa Ae cran und-cormat{emabee- You sauld’tesl dt in tte] CYPRESS “BOAT; Sour Hare: cae aint ie iy n oak air even if you didn’t hear army | Johnson Outboard Motor; Four per sa . be ohctek aa land navy men and even diplo-| Life Preservers, One Fire Ex- Preiemin sirens see orth Amer. | 2ts sounding off. Privately, of| Snfuisher; Pair of Oars, and | see nacan truth and fact, (Course. - -At lunch time people thnks “ we es "$25.00, ‘Agus im ber of - Ai erican \draw sketches on napkins to iat? P aie St pxtey ye Pe moyy tisha At Gaal ans show where Poland is weakest ‘etronia Street. jun27-s | ster with the product found in.°T Where Britain could land | | Southren . waters”. | troops. . .Code clerks are work- | | The Florida lobstermen might 7€ overtime with code | |have added that the theory of the Coming in from Europe. passing”, 15¢ each. THE. ART- | trade commission is like ruling | GERMANY LACKS ORE | MAN PRESS. nov25-tf i that only New Englanders be! “ _ Germany will be very hard-/ PERSONAL CARDS, $1.25 per known as Americans and that) 5 | | natives of Georgia and Florida |Pressed to make machinery .to' 190. THE ARTMAN PRESS. fun25-tt | be forced to exercise their citizen-|serve her armies. She won't) ship as “Crackers”. We have even attempt to ship to her ally, | taachinw’ cer: Sock | peal the Florida. spiny #3 oe | Russia, experts say, as her iron | lobsters and crawfish and they |SMertage would be terrific. Al-) | tasted just as good under either | 0st half of her normal ore sup- | Jabel, After all, taste is the final (plies are cut off. She still hoa | test of any dish regardless of how |access to Sweden, her principle | it is billed in the market or on/supplier. In 1937 she bought! the menu. {122,000,000 marks worth of iron! FOR SALE—2 lots, each 50x100. Run from Washington to Von Phister street. $1,000. Apply SIGNS—“For Rent”, “Rooms For Rent”, “Apartment For Rent”, “Private Property, No Tres- HOTELS + BRING YOUR VISITING friends in reed of a good night’s rest to THE OVERSEAS HOTEL. Clean rooms, enjoy the homey atmosphere. Satisfactory rates. 917 Fleming St. may17-tf is the time to get all of your PRINTING NEEDS for the busy Winter Season soon coming up---while MER RATE entailing savings up °" 259% and more, are pos- sible! INVESTIGATE YOUR NEEDS IN LETTERHEADS, ENVELOPES, BILLHEADS AND OTHER FORMS— Phone 51 For A Representative The Artman Press