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Dkcbhbeb 19, 1918. 



The Florists' Review 



9 



niore Na-tional Cash Registers 

 to meet the present-day 

 ttdrtage of help. 



s 



Mr. Wanamaker says: 



"A large number of people have been taken out of the 

 big stores. The men have enlisted. The women have 

 gone into Red Cross work and nursing. 



"We are able to fill some of their places with improved 

 cash registers. This frees many persons for war work.*' 



Mr. Wanamaker's statement that 

 cash registers save labor, is based 

 upon critical investigation and upon 

 experience with N. C. R. Equip- 

 ment extending over many years. 



His recognition of the labor-saving 

 qualities of modem National Cash 

 Registers is plainly shown by a 

 contract he has just placed for 

 nearly $100,000.00 worth of ma- 

 chines. This order calls for 1 00 of 



our latest model clerk-wrap reg- 

 isters. It is the largest single order 

 ever placed with us for one store. 



The high character of Mr. Wan- 

 amaker's stores, the careful tests 

 made by his executives, and the 

 size of his orders, combine to make 

 his personal endorsement extremely 

 important to other merchants strug- 

 gling with the present-day shortage 

 of help. 



The National Cash Register Company, Dayton, Ohio 

 Offices in all the principal cities of the world 



