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  2. Mail Delivery (sculptures) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mail_Delivery_(sculptures)

    Mail Delivery East Mail Delivery West Mail Delivery North Mail Delivery South. Mail Delivery is a set of four relief sculptures by Edmond Amateis completed in 1941 for the Section of Painting and Sculpture and displayed at the U.S. Court House and Post Office Building in Philadelphia, now called the Robert N. C. Nix, Sr., Federal Building, at 9th and Market Streets.

  3. Mail order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mail_order

    Cover of a mail-order catalogue for scientific equipment. Mail order is the buying of goods or services by mail delivery. The buyer places an order for the desired products with the merchant through some remote methods such as: Sending an order form in the mail; Placing a telephone call

  4. Blick Art Materials - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blick_Art_Materials

    Blick Art Materials is a family-owned retailer and catalog art supply business. Established as a mail order business by Dick Blick in 1911 and purchased by Robert Metzenberg in 1947, it is one of the oldest and largest art materials suppliers in the United States, as well as a primary supplier of mail order art supplies.

  5. Johnson Smith Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnson_Smith_Company

    Early 20th century Ventriloquism Guide and novelties catalogue. Johnson Smith Company (Johnson Smith & Co.) was a mail-order business established in 1914 by Alfred Johnson Smith that sold novelty items and gag gifts such as miniature cameras, invisible ink, x-ray goggles, whoopee cushions, fake vomit, and joy buzzers.

  6. List of mythological objects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mythological_objects

    It was called "tears of Isis" in ancient Egypt, and later called "Hera's tears". In ancient Greece it was dedicated to Eos Erigineia. In the early Christian era, folk legend stated that V. officinalis was used to staunch Jesus' wounds after his removal from the cross. It was consequently called "holy herb" or (e.g. in Wales) "Devil's bane".

  7. Flax Art Supply Stores - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flax_Art_Supply_Stores

    From the early 1960s–1980, the Flax entities shared in the production and distribution of a commercial catalog that utilized Danziger's 'F'. The art supply catalog averaged 150 pages and featured thousands of items. [32] [37] More than 70 years later, the different Flax locations still use the original logo, though with some variations.

  8. Utrecht Art Supplies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utrecht_Art_Supplies

    Utrecht Art Supplies is an art materials manufacturing and chain store company, based in Brooklyn. [1] Utrecht, founded in 1949 in New York City by artist Norman Gulamerian and his brother Harold Gulamerian, sells a large range of art material brands including its own line of products.

  9. American Catalog Mailers Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Catalog_Mailers...

    Membership is open to any party with significant interests in the catalog mailing industry. These include: 1) Multi-channel retailers for whom catalogs represents a significant sales channel, whether the demand is fulfilled via traditional mail order techniques, over the internet, or by generating traffic into brick and mortar retail stores.