Canadian printer & publisher . tah 40 P R T N T P: R AND PUBLISHER /GENTLEMEN, we have with us to-day, Fred Elliott, of^^the Allisfon Herald. Said fish are real, honest-to-goodnessMuskoka fish, that look at one with the genuine cold eye of a dead fish. Fred Elliott has ideasof his own. One is thathis oflice should closetwo weeks each summerin order that there maybe some real is that a weeklypaper should have a costsystem, and still anotherthat weekly men shouldget in the , ofwhich he is chairman ofthe job printing com-mittee. Hes fond of fairlylong words, too, and they


Canadian printer & publisher . tah 40 P R T N T P: R AND PUBLISHER /GENTLEMEN, we have with us to-day, Fred Elliott, of^^the Allisfon Herald. Said fish are real, honest-to-goodnessMuskoka fish, that look at one with the genuine cold eye of a dead fish. Fred Elliott has ideasof his own. One is thathis oflice should closetwo weeks each summerin order that there maybe some real is that a weeklypaper should have a costsystem, and still anotherthat weekly men shouldget in the , ofwhich he is chairman ofthe job printing com-mittee. Hes fond of fairlylong words, too, and theydo tell that folks aroundAlliston, when they getstuck on a new word ofponderous length, putthe thing in a cart andwheel it over to Elliottsoffice. Not a bad chap asweekly publishers most of his debts,is on speaking termswith his subscribers, andat gatherings of publish-ers gathers up the looseends and writes resolu-tions with a hop-stepand jump in them. Thatsabout all we know of hop along and cleanthe fish F. MB, FRED ELLIOTT St. Catharines S/awdord:—Archibald Fleming, aged 71, afterspending five years in the Hospital for Incurables m Toronto,died there. Born in Thornhill, Ont., he was educated m Toron-to, and in 1875 entered the Globe newspaper as spending several years with them, he left for Toledo, wherehe continued in the newspaper business, afterwards working onnewspapers for a number of years in various parts of the seven years prior to his illness which rendered him unfit forhis chosen profession Mr. Fleming was a valued and conscien-tious member of the Standards editorial staff. He was anewspaperman of the old school and practically all his acquain-tances were numbered with his admirers. Since his confine-ment in the hospital Archies trenchant pen refused to rest,and he occasionally contributed local items to the Standard. Toronto press women bade farewell to Miss Daisy Cryer, ofthe Telegram editorial staff, who has left f


Size: 1049px × 2383px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectprinting, bookyear192