Mr. Jenner. Do you make mats?
Mr. Graef. Yes; it's a rather complete service. We can take an advertisement from the very beginning and actually carry it all the way through to the end, to the point where we mail the mats to the newspapers for insertion, but we don't do any printing as such, of any kind.
Mr. Jenner. Are you a native of Dallas?
Mr. Graef. No.
Mr. Jenner. Just tell me in a few words something about yourself?
Mr. Graef. Oh, golly—I was born in Chicago, Ill.
Mr. Jenner. So was I.
Mr. Graef. I went to Lane Tech.
Mr. Jenner. I went to Lindblom High School, and that's where I practiced law and have done for 30 years.
Mr. Graef. Well, I haven't been back there for quite some time. I left there about 1940, after graduating from high school, took commercial art at Lane Tech, and I went down to Tennessee and worked at the Kingsport Press designing book covers and also the Holston ordnance works, and during the very beginning of the war, this was the last—the Second World War—then I was drafted into the service and served as an airborne engineer for 3 years.