February 1, 1921 



THE INDIA RUBBER WORLD 



347 



HOLIDAY GREETINGS, CALENDARS, SOUVENIRS 



A CAIN the holiday season lias brought to T)iE India Kubbek 

 *' World the greetings and kind wishes of the rubber and allied 

 industries. We take this opportunity to acknowledge these 

 courtesies and to assure our friends of our cordial and continued 

 interest in thcni and their varied activities. 



CARDS 



W. H. Salisbury & Co., inc., Chicago, Illinois, manufacturer 

 and dealer in rubber products, sends to the trade, on a card bear- 

 ing its well-known red and green trade mark, the season's greet- 

 ings and best wishes for 1921. 



The Spreckels "Savage" Tire Co., San Diego, California, has 

 sent out a holiday card bearing the picture of a very young Indian 

 chief and greetings from "Little Heap" and his people. 



The Chicago Rubber Clothing Co., Chicago, Illinois, sends a 

 holly-decked card wishing a merry Christmas and a happy New 

 Year to all its friends. 



The Oak Rubber Co., Ravenna, Ohio, has sent to the valued 

 members of its large circle of business friends a card bearing 

 wishes for success in the New Year. 



The Dunlop Tire & Rubber Co., Limited, Toronto, Canada, 

 has sent a cheerful card bearing the representation in gold of 

 one of its tires with a sprig of holly in the center, and the 

 pleasant and appropriate greeting, "May You Travel on the 

 Circle of Prosperity During 1921." 



The Mason Tire & Rubber Co., Kent, Ohio, has distributed 

 an art hanger on which a very attractive girl, the product of 

 Haskell Coffin's gifted brush, invites the beholder to ride with 

 her on Mason tires. 



Charles E. Wood, 287 Broadway, New York City, crude rub- 

 ber broker, is a business man who realizes that his biggest asset 

 is the good will of his customers and business acquaintances, and 

 who is not afraid to tell them so. A handsome engraved card 

 announces this pleasant fact, together with other friendly state- 

 ments. 



A strikingly colored poster representation of "Christmas on 

 the Portage Path," showing a solitary woodsman and two Indians 

 at a twilight camp in the forest, decorates the folder which car- 

 ries the holiday wishes of the Portage Tire & Rubber Co., Akron, 

 Ohio. 



Lee Tire & Rubber Co., Conshchocken, Pennsylvania, sends a 

 tastefully engraved greeting card surmounted by a traditional 

 Christmas scene of the Wise Men following the Star. 



A holly-decked, gold-bordered folder with the cover showing 

 a representation of a • snow-covered, brightly lighted factory 

 under a .star-filled sky, bears best holiday wishes to the trade 

 from The Black & Decker Manufacturing Co., Towson Heights, 

 Baltimore, Maryland, maker of special machinery. 



Compliments of the season are fittingly conveyed by an en- 

 graved card from The J. H. Day Co., Cincinnati, Ohio, manu- 

 facturer of rubber machinery, wishing to all its friends a merry 

 Christmas and a Happy New Year, 1920-1921. 



CALENDARS 



A set of useful calendar blotters, one for each month, bearing 

 an appropriate verse from some famous poem and decorated 

 with a colored reproduction of a painting illustrating the poeti- 

 cal selection, is a holiday remembrance of E. H. Clapp Rubber 

 Co., Boston, Massachusetts, rubber reclaimer. 



A painting by Zula Kenyon, "The Land of Laughing Water," 

 showing an idyllic scene in the days when Indians were the only 

 inhabitants of the West, adorns the panel calendar issued by The 

 Oak Rubber Co., Ravenna, Ohio, manufacturer of toy balloons. 



A very colorful painting by Emilio Vasarri, "In the Days of 

 the Caesars," is reproduced on the wall calendar presented by 

 Elmer E. Bast, Chicago, llh'nois. manager of The Acme Belting 

 Co. and of the United & Globe Rubber Co. It shows a group 



of Roman ladies amusing themselves at games in the peristyle 

 of a nobleman's palace. 



A panel calendar with the picture of an extremely pretty girl 

 is the gift of L. J. Mutty Co., 175 Congress street, Boston, Massa- 

 chusetts, maker of automobile top fabrics. It does not need the. 

 caption to tell that this young person is "Sweet Sixteen." 



The Rubber Regenerating Co., Trafford Park, Manchester,. 

 England, sends its greetings all the way across the Atlantic in. 

 the form of a wall calendar, on which the months of the year 

 surround a pad of large clearly numbered leaves with the date 

 of cacli consecutive day, intended to be detached daily. The 

 calendar is decorated with a charmingly soft-colored reproduction; 

 of a painting by F. Gresley of historic "Haddon Hall" and its- 

 picturcscjue surroundings. 



A handy desk memorandum calendar refill is the thoughtful 

 remembrance of the New Jersey Rubber Co., Lambertville, New 

 Jersey, reclaimer of rubber. 



Lavellc Rubber Co., 413-421 N. Franklin street, Chicago, Illi- 

 nois, manufacturer of mechanical rubber goods, has issued a very 

 practical wall calendar with large figures, each leaf displaying the 

 current month centered, with the past and next following months 

 at top and bottom, respectively. 



A painting of the Indian maiden Minnehaha, seated by a moon- 

 lit forest stream, is shown on the large-size calendar issued by 

 the Pioneer Asphalt Co., Laurenceville, Illinois, maker of mineral 

 rubber. The background of the calendar represents an Indian 

 blanket with gay-colore<l, characteristic designs breaking the 

 soft gray of the fabric. 



A clear-type, large size wall calendar with leaves for every 

 month and all holidays printed in red, is sent by The Schilling 

 Press, 137-139 East 25th street. New York City, "printers of 

 quality." 



The General Electric Co., Schenectady, New York, has brought 

 out a striking large three-color calendar, each leaf showing a 

 photograph of some different phase of the application of electri- 

 cal energy to modern industry. The surrounding decorations are 

 in poster effect and show sources of electricity, electrical ma- 

 chinery in process of manufacture, electrical apparatus in the 

 home, in the office and on land and sea. 



F. R. Henderson & Co., New York City, crude rubber importer, 

 has thoughtfully sent a refill for the convenient leather desk 

 calendar with which that firm presented the trade last year. 



From Lockwood, Greene & Co., 60 Federal street, Bostow 

 Massachusetts, comes a large calendar printed in sepia ink oi* 

 ivory paper, illustrated by photographs of twelve model factories- 

 constructed by this engineering firm for various companies, 

 throughout the United States, including several rubber goods, 

 manufacturers. 



The 1921 addition to the series of calendars which the Mona- 

 tiquot Rubber Works Co., South Braintree, Massachusetts, has 

 issued for the last several years, bears the portrait of Chief 

 Wanipatuck. The calendar is large size, printed in brown ink 

 on sepia paper, and the stern profile of the Indian chief in war 

 bonnet strikes a distinctly decorative note. 



A combination of calendar and catalog is the souvenir of F. E. 

 Myers & Brother, Ashland. Ohio, manufacturer of pumps and 

 special machinery. A large wall panel, topped witii a colored 

 picture, bears a calendar pad surrounded by pictures of various 

 pumps, each numbered in red with its style number for ready 

 reference. 



A handsome pf)lishc<l brass easel desk calendar has been dis- 

 tributed by the Allen Tire &• Rubber Co., Allentown, Pennsylvania, 

 with a return post card entitling the signer to a 1922 refill at the 

 end of the year. The pad is small, but clearly numbered, witli 

 holidays in shaded type, and shows the moon's phases. 



The J. H. Stedman Co., scrap rubber merchants. South Brain- 

 tree, Massachusetts, has sent out a calendar bearing the fifteenth 



