Newspaper Page Text
M«E «fX
TO BAWWCT-mgtAI4). ATHENS. OTOKCIA
»UNDAY.JULV1,.„
^(Continued rromv
On#)
faflV Walker Tlkos IJn J denunciation of our press; Jet t’aemjmen, through a misplaced and
* p - p«| na ! remind lho world/that sush dls- |tiaud!ln sympathy for the convict
taffCllUUCIll news onler j s not incident to Georgia ;°f unprovoked and
alone—therewrero «ueh in the days
of the Savior—Chicago, St. Louis,
New York, Springfield. Illinois, the
home of Abraham Lincoln, ^ave
hoard file litnvl of the mob and will
hear it agalt£ until th«? passions of
men are curbed and the Peace o*
the Master tampers their souls.
yc*r 1922 alone over a thousand
bi# ir.duttrial plaq;.; seeking more
favorable conditions in the south
located ia a staler ttatc. Many
hopeful sign?, however, are al
ready evident. Patriotic business
men are generously indicating
tlitfr willingness to co-operate in rl0T ALONE
the framing of stabilized tax laws |N cquTH
which will distribute the expense
Uf government more fair’.y* .Big
bmuess enterprises of the cities
* f volunteering, tp furnish funds
advertising and otherwise lead
i'thc agricultural sn<t industrial j" 11 *', 1 '
development of the state. Towns '
mi cities are responding through ' ”
liyq-wire Chambers of Commerce,
ready nnd anxious to join in the
flfrlvard march of progress. A a
with one common impulse, th'-re
cmucs hac!: lrcm flunking citizen!*
of the farm, the village and the
a note o* cordial co-operation,
of determination that there shall be
no iurthcr tarrying in the slough | f \
of f'spond. that our people shall no ! j,
longer fritter away in petty poUt*
lihf partisanship, friend fighting
lotflul, brother breaking with
brother, over isiu* a not really
vital. w Idle neighboring States are
laying the foundation for progress
which would put Georgia to shame
/l ihe future. They express a do-
tOrlhination that tho voice of the
{femagogue preaching the doctrine
of Bate, of class against class, nnd
Of section against section, must be
f$f$ver stilled; that In its stead
tfceyo shall tie developed a real
community Democracy, a spirit of
flTmpaihy and co-operation be
tween the town nnd the country,
tfeecity and tho village, the farm-
er tnd tho business nmn. betw
them parallel tha reports of
m e In the South with tho
unspeakable ertrm
unmitigated
[crime, continuously clamor at tfic
[doors of the Governor for pardon,
witnout knowledge of the facts,
with no real study of the record
jf the case, with an utter indiffer
ences to the effort upon society
to the Increase of crime in the fu
ture, nullifying the verdicts of con
sclentiouH, sworn Jurors and defy
ing the solemn Judgments of tho
court, in short, so long ns our peo
ple fall te set an example before
the youth of the land and willing
obedience and cheerful respect for
(instituted authorities.
oked the violence; Jet hope for that high citizenship which
II up'ii the peculiar con
ditions in tlm -loath, the Isolation
i*f th<- Southern faTm. leaving the
women defenceless from the vag-
•ant vagabond bvhlle their husbands
roil for a HvCng in the distant
fields; instead of seeking dirty
foliars In bufWIing ttp a circulation
by arousing stt -tlona! hate and pas
sion. let them; come ‘here In a con-
re, fraternal spirit; let them
he patriotic statesmen fof
ith in seeking the underly-
ing cause of cirime which provokes
mol) violence kind in providing a
remedy. Let them come to the
South to find tthe GOOI> and not
the HAD; let them place the em
phasis upon the marvelous CON-
ST-ti’CTIVE forces at work and
not Ihe DESTRUCTIVE; If the
poverty of the South'following tjie
destruction wrought by tho Civil
War forced living conditions for
the negro not always sanitary or
otherwise condJe'W* to h1s best In
frost let them sympathize with us
in polvliig our economic problems
so that better conditions may be
provide t; if there bo isolated In
stances of cruelty to the negro.
ill hold Georgia In its rightful
position among the States of our
t’nion. The halls of the Legisla
ture are open annually for the re
peal of any unjust measure. If
flponse of this administration, of
this legislature? Having provided
an income ample to r*iace our, in
stitutions in line with ‘he progres
sive states by bringing to the tax-
books property hitherto untaxed,
having thus crossed the bridge of
tax reform, we will find ourselves
at the dawn of a brighter day for
Geotgia, on a highway, broad and
straight, leading toward the east. | M Sem
On that highway will d htless be
encountered rocks of difi culty and Send
grades of discouragement. But J Men
with the spirit of the fathers who
opened the path rmid the trials of
colonial days and braved the way I worm n i
through the gloom of re-constru* - Lponded to tbh
tion. we will find ourselves at our * i a i, or8 are ended and th.
destination at the end of the day— ! thfl and the s u
a centralized consolidated high- | forgotten t.nd you rest ro
grade 9-months school in everyj actlorM ot l>uh jie
pubmlslso
North Georgia and South Georgia; I j ( . t u 10m remind the world Dat
^^termination that there shall bo
xporo economy In government af
fairs. State, County nnd Municipal
4100 cents of value received for
mrery Collar of tax-money enacted,
(hit there ahull be less of gro»d
and more of God In Georgia.
If by Providence In unison
with these Impulses, Chambers of
E erco aco taking tip tho
[ iCIvie organisations, tie
ans, the Klwanlans, tin
Lions, tho rivltanr. all are crystal
(ZlQk this sentiment into practical
action, into service, into real build
lag, Into f ;s!nc«s brotherhood.
4VVAV WI?H *
PESSIMISM
?'is today we come together til
lym! to this salutary spirit of pro!
gross, tha encouragement of legis
lative and executive departments
X government, wo will do well tr[
taka note of two or three impor*
elements In the development
hi civic life of Georgia: And
|, the time has Come when we[
should cease to dwell upo?i the
wreckage of the cataclysm ofi
world war and turn to tho futuro|
with cleat vision nnd fearlesn
t*end, .
- T do not for a moment minimize
the struggles and the sacrifices of
jJuT^oople thrmighrvft this tryingi
P Jjcrlod. Tho system--or rather tho
■ Jack of system—of many of our
F 1 Jhroiors In the operation of their
I /prms ma • bo criticized Justly, but
i it is only fair to say that in all tho
I ‘economic history cf the world no
' Samor fight was e7er waged than
I ahat of tho average farmer for
W'Katf last three years ns through
f frugality and sn-riflce he has
\' m jatrlvcd to preserve his credit and
p maintain his honcr by meeting his
* Obligations when, they fell duo.
flklAny of thorn—more than tho
U 1 Iwrrld will ever know—have lived
( Tor months on peas and buttermilk,
i cornbroad and «yrup. I recognlzo
* Shelr heroic suffering and reallxo
{ their manly radfice; with my own
[ Jheoplo, I too, have felt tho sting of
I Sepeclatlon nnd loss undreamed of;
! ijut I come to encourngo you by ro-
J . minding you that our fathers of the
J Sixties suffered as we 'havo suf-
* rfered, and endured as wo endurol
1 fend they conquered as we muBt
i tonquor; indeed, they lived
/days on ixVched co*|» alone, wo
J tiavo suffered no such prlvatlonJ
AS’o havo our boll-weevil condlJ
J iions, our laborers are leaving our
I Savings largely exhausted; our
] gathers had no seed, their stock
wan worn out, their slaves freed.
1 their labor disorganised, their
. money was worthless. * Morcbver,
' they fused and conquered a foo
, more trying than hunger, more
1 dreadful than death—the dark
I uiadow of negro domination, the
, danger to white supremacy amid
I iffo galling rule of tho scalawag
Bvfcnd the carpet bagger! Grimly
I fisse fathers of ours endured.
I Jravely they fought and gloriously
I they conquered. I speak to sons of
1 jioble sires; bone of their bone and
}l. h of their flesh; in tt^olr name 1
, call to you In perfect confidence
I Jfiat under tho inspiration of their
1 gallant lives, you will fight in this
| Sonomlc battle as bravely ac they
j fc nght and win ns gloriously •»
I They won! I beg you to "let the
\ i'ad past bury the dead;” to look
Eut as a new day dawns;
j * V beg you to load on to a bigger.
^tMgbter and a better Georgia!
these *same southern people, men
nnd women, received from
wilds of Africa, through the people
of tho North, the forefathers of
those negroes, savages and uncivil
Ized, nnd In these same southern
homes nnd on these southern
farms, for a hundred years, car.
rind on tho grandest missionary
work since tho crucifixion of the
Saviour, teaching nnd training,
Christianizing nnd cf /ilizing, lay
Ing the foundation for the progrecs
nnd development of lho negro of
tho present day; If these be qc-
easlonal Instances of unfairness to
tho negro, lot them- be fair to the
South and tell the story of count
less instances r.hen your mother
and mine at the tiead hour of mid
night, at tho call of some negro
In destress, cheerfully and promptly
loft their beds nr comfort to go
out Into tho night to minister to
tho need. Let them pnlnt the pic
ture of tho OPTIMISTIC Georgia
of the CONSTRUCTIVE Georgia of
today; of modern brick school
houses springing up In consollda
ted country school districts
throughout tho State. Let them toll
of Sumter County with such mod
ern schools in Its oven; ^intrlct;
of tho little village of Urowton in
Laurens County, with its $00 pupils
nnd Its fourteen oUtomobUe busser*
bringing tlio children in frolti the
farm; of Improved highways, o<
better churrhes, of collogos crowd
ed with students,*of p now Georgin
rising with unparrallelled courage
Phoenix-like, from tho ruins of
tho Civil Wpr nnd the wreckage of
panics culminating In the recr.it
financial depression, the worst the
world evor saw.
Tho need of tho hour is less dls
piny of our deficiencies and more
study of the basic ■ cause; less
flaunting of our civic imperfections
nnd more ngithtlon of the remedies
i pledge this administration and its
utmost endeavor to the betterment
of living conditions, physical ami
moral; to the rordinl co-op<ration
with any commission or other or
ganization In tho serious study o!
these problems ami in finding th*
proper solution thero for. 1 further
pledge t.ljls administration to n
square deal to every citizen, of
every color, cast or condition, but
I am utterly sick and tired of the
slundoroutt hnlf-lies about our
Stato—tho blackest lies In the
catngory—thoso “white lies” - that
fell only the half of tho truth
tho sensational bnjf of tho story
—and let .vos unsaid tho creditable
half.. I trust my tongue may never
tiro in speaking in lwhal! of the
down-trodden nnd the oppressed
but may that tongue bo palsied tho
Instant It fails to utter n protost
against tho further slander Qf tho
good peoplo of this tSato. THertf
nevor was a tlm9 when there were
.not In Georgia ns many men,
brave, chlvairic nnd true, and as
many women, gentlo nnd cultured;
as In any other State and In the
name of her chlvairic men and
her gracious women. I summon you
to lend a movement which will put
a stop to this miserable advertise
_VN WITH THE PROPEfr-
Inal scandal-monger
• fi; A second element which has rel
larded our progress If the undue
And unfavorable notoriety given
£ur State. For m^ny year* the Met
ropolitan press * has publicly
LKraded before the dutside world
^«very sensational Incident dla-
«r. .litable to Georgia. In this re-
jpect, w# have not had a square
deal. Many correspondents jot these
y. tlow Journals .arc t*Id by the
nolumn and they have learned to
make their stories unduly sensa
tional in order to secure publica
tion. It Is true that there have
txen outbreaks of violence and
dthcr discreditable disordera with-
fci the limits of the State. If out-|
Georgia, h t th-vn tell the worldl
Gmt these outbreaks have always
received the r'onflenifiarton*of'our
best citizens a6d the unmeasured
provisions of any glvon law it it
found to he unwise, if after a fail
trial of its operations it Is found
to he ».|»r*rrsslve # it can and will
he repealed In the orderly course oj
legislation: .hut so long as a ma
jority of the people favor Its re
tention on the statute hooks, a de
fiance of the law Is an attack upor
the very spirit of democracy, ar
undermining of the very foundation
ff our government. As the 1
of the Executive Department, I
shall attempt no undue Influent
upon legislation but I pledge every
power of the office of Governor to
the orderly enforcement of tho law
as written by the legislative branch
of the government.
feat In the service of the best In
terests of the State. Ah for me J
am prepared to join you; to effac;
self and forego further politico
future if such shall be dertfendfd
of me for doing my bit In redeem
ing Georgia. From the hlisl, acrot
the plains, and th the sea there
sounds and echoes and revelberatt
a call for men!
"Send me men to match my moun
‘tains,
me men to mulch my plains,
with empires In their
And new eras in their bral
When you patriotic m
worn* n » f the tv
In accepting j\ i
bleiit of the #oV-
ple oi thls^£0«i“
voicing in the ns
since thanks to
the manifold h.
vouchsafed our ^
own name, conf
frailty, gratitude
call to the servi*
ni^n and for ever
which
■ enty **f the ik
mwealth. I do
ne of the poop
our. have nobly r<
I call, when ryot
this spirit t! humility
isiona | trust, pledging the a
my fellow cifzem. " I
and respect the chun li
out this adf.ilnistra
emphasis will l»c phv
moral and spiritu il
■IfIce t
n the »
Tho Inst and most Important, be
cause most pressing for solution, Is
the reformation of tho tax system
of Georgia. The people of the State
confidently look to this General
Assembly for such legislation. 1
shall tako occasion at.an early hour
to communicate to tho Legislature
a special message on this rubjerf.
At this time I shall make only a
few’ goneral observations.
The ad valorem system as now
administered has broken down in
Georgia ns It has broken down In
every other State. The general
proporty tax Is recognized as •.
fulluro by practically every tax ex
pert for a number of reasons upon
which there is g.neral unanimity
of opinion. I need here refer to
only* one—Its failure to reach a
rapidly Increasing class of prop
erty, the intangible personal prop
erty to real and other property was
negligible. Taxable property con
sisted largely of farm, lands, live
k nnd form Implements. There
a few stores in tho villages
and an occasional one at the'cross,
roads. Th*» store houses and the
stock of goods was tangible and
visible nnd their value could be
fairly approximated. There were
practically no banks and no safety
deposit boxes. It Is true that In
the moro prosperous stores could
be found on iron safe In which was
placed tho store-keeper’s moner.
notes and acconta.-These were not
visible butShe proportion of these
properties was so small that no
serious question arose as Ao their
tax*hio value. As tho years went
bv this proportion rapidly Increase
od until It Is now belle.od that
country school district _ ...
state, giving to the boy and the • J*!
girl on the farm the same advar»- L.
tages enjoyed by their friends ; al r .
the towns; 12-months highways on
which these children can be carried
to such-schools economically and
comfortably, and on which th»
farmer can transport his produce I
to market; normal schools and col- |"*‘ a
leges equipped to furnish trained
teachers for these schools, ardi CI,a
safe and sane leaders of thought ! The
and sentiment; technical institu
tions equipping our own boys tr j
utilize the myriad natural re-'
sources of Georgia; agriculture], The
colleges fostering the call of na
ture and summoning the youth of
the state back to the potential
wealth of the soil.
In a program like this lies the
hope of Georgia, the solution of all
our problems, civic, political and
industrial. Among a people im
pelled by such a vision, the voice I
of the radical, the views of the i
bolshevist will find no lodgment, i
Our state has suffered from an*
over-supply of professional knock
ed, men wit personal grievance
who would seek revenge at the ex
pense of their state and play upon
the passions of the discontented.
The answer to hnril times i«
har;l work. Our people have bared
thejr backs to the summer sun and
returned to the fields. They need
our help. Let us hack them to the
Mmit. Improve their condition..
Give them a market for their pro
duce. Give them financial hope.
Crowd out the crumbier with the
producer. Crowd out the civic
slacker and the civic soldier. Down
with the carplnc critic . and un
with tho constructive builder
Down with the selfish sore-hea.l
and up With the liberal light-
bearer. Down with the over-nighi
cimngel.ng and un with the *tead-
fa< t statesman who is willing to
8ta J?, .^e rjghtful minority
until that minority - becomes the
majority.
PANACEA FOR
STATE ILLS
And let no man say tha this ut
terance is sophomoric, * that these
views are idealistic. The man
without an ideal never climbed to
heights sublime. The people, the
state without a vision never devel-«
oped latent powers. I recognize i
the necessity for practical thought
and action. I realize that con«U I
tiona shaping through the years |
cannot be revolutionized in a day;
that the program hero announced
will meet with bufferings and hin
drances before it comes to full
fruition, yet I remind you that this
is a day of achievement, u day of
vice
accounts, mortgage!, etc., common
ly called IntangllUe. or Invisible
uroperty, now largely exceeds Ir
value the other classes of property.
In the moantime this Intangible
property 'has not borne Its share
of the expense ol government be
cause Its owners refuse to return
It for taxation voluntarily and by
Us very nature It is very difficult.
If not impoaslhlo, to placo It on the
tax books by force.* This, of course,
results In groat Injustice to the
citizen whoze investments are In
real estate or other tangible prop
erty was forced to bear practically
a a a . t mI , a w. linn * Will 11a
fully abide In the refleotioi
iiir own self-respect as /TOP
y the glory of 1h e gre.atei
J-orRin, In deed and in truth
The Empire State of the South,*'
nd /
nnd Home,
golden Hills,
Of Georgia,
ns the morning's bugle call
not#H of the message rise and
faft.
In Georgia.
able!
eak with plenty laid
to bless th-
rd Is the word 1
land where- the roc
these credits, taxable bonds, notes, The patriot of reconstruction days
tnent of Georgia—bad, nnd pledge
for the future the advertisement of
Georgin—good. From this hobr let
us go forth to labor for the pro-
gres of the 8tate in the spirit of
love and optimism toward the des
tined glory of Gecrgia.
RESPECT'FOR
THE LAW
A third gteat civic nerd In leot-
gla I* the moulding oi public sen
timent toward a genuine respect
for government ns expressed by
constituted authority end n willing-
tp pay the price ot properly
sustaining the government. Along
with an agricultural and* Induslrla*
all the burdens of taxation/while
tho owner of intangiblo properties
havo b«*rno practically no part of
tho burden*, although he ehared
tho bcnofltn and protection to pot-
son and prt'porty equally with tho
tax payer. Ai the proportion of *n-
tanglblp property Increased, dls-
satlsfatl w with the old systom
grew until now falr-tnluicd ir.cn
agree thaf It Is no longer iolera-
blo. Indeod this was generally rec.
ognlzed as far back as ten yemrt
ago when an Act of the taglala-
turo. commonly known as tho Ta*
Equalisation Law. was passed, in
an effort to relievo the situation
by distributing tho burdens of tax
ation more equv.ably. While In
practical operation this Tax Equal
isation Law hss succeeded some
what 1n a fairer distribution of
taxes on real estate, although its
uofriendly critics charge that tt
has unduly Increased the tax values
of farm lends, even |ts friends
admit that It has failed to roach for
tax purposes a fair share of the In
tangible property of the t8ate. AI
though s moat vigoroui ,nn ,u,-
ttolnctf fight hu boon mad* Is re-
dpuI the l iw at pructtcgllr every
ftesilon of the Ie*t,tature. lu
friends hare failed to am amend It
£ to reach the Intangibles. CMber
defects wert pointed out and In
three 8tat*' elections the people
have clearlv declared for Ita re
peal and the enactment of some
other measure to reach the Intangi
ble. Indeod this mandate wsa writ-
ten Jn the, pUtform ol principles
sdoptsd by tnh people In Conven
tion.
WUn on ngricuuurui aift ......Whs^*VfT >0*7 jft
awakening, wp ner«l an a wakening tor, it cannc*t be OUistloniW tnsr
Urge majori'y of
•t.(t m <>ppo«d to the Tm
llutiep liw and it .houJd be
led for the re*ton. .toted. It
of public opinion along lines of re.
spect for tho law. So long ns State‘ —
lsgintatures nullify tho ConstItutlor »Eqnalt**tWl
and defy the fundamental law ot *°» i
,hv land: «o km* *» hlsh cfftehHr|»U«W toft promptly
or prominent rl.tnn., make dS2nit«tol
’.' n M "iT'Vn fiSt tot* there wiU be no
nnd ridtrnlo thr ronm-t-ntloun nffl- ““‘uni.. j-i turmony.
cm. In their effovt. to rnfor<-« thr.r !" vl « f. r . th o^nl“
■tatuten; no long n, nny IndlvIltoeT," unit ^ “ P “ P ‘ '
of high estate or of loWfy pisce.* o*«j* GREATER
any association of men. undertake t (J|rORGIA
to appraise the law to suit their
nwn taste or passion, in defiance-
of the orderly processes of the
Courts, we cannot hope for a stab
TBidd * government. So imtg as
fanatical
never, dreamed of the realities' of
«*ty years a K o a man
had leridbsly predicted the nerfee-
tion of a flying machine, the wire-
ess teiegraphy aid the radio with
in this period, he would have be
classed as a fit subject for the i
aaylum. If this legislature
W i Hi *y th / ^°undation for the com-
nlerion of the program which I
have only outlined to you, the de
sire for which I sincerely believe
'A**. tho , rt °* every member,
fifty years from today your chil-
« nd your childeni’8 children
will rise up to call you blessed just
s today wo acclaim the recon-
struction herpes of fifty years
w£j£u klyt that n. ,f , We Ml those
who follow us will rise up to call
us nccursod.
So I com* onco more to usk what
snail be our rcsimnse? We hive
been called to the kingdom at the
hour of our beloved State’s .su
premo need, civic nnd industrial
Tho ptate’s Treasury is empty Ut
future Income baa been mortgaged
to pay obligations for rhleh out
unbusinesslike financial syst. in
and not any one Individual is to
blame; our higher educational in
stitutions are struggling for life
from a lack of plotter support,
while year by year accomplished
professors and brilliant graduate!
are going away from homo to de
velop other institutions, because o
Inadequate salaries; our boundles;
raw materials arc lying umlcvel
oped, or being shipped away in
bulk to enrich other states because
our boys are not trained to mahu
facture them st home.
In short Georgia Is lagging be
hind other States in constructive
The needs of the 8tnte»
sound a challenge worthy the con
aecration of the best and the brav
est of her sons. Th?.first, the atl-
Important duty before us. is the en
actment of a fair and stabilised tax
system. I warn you now that how
ever unselfish, however patriotic,
your approach, however Just your
legislation, you will be criticized b*
those whom you tax; good friend:
may \»« estranged If forced to pay
a fair share of the expense of thr
State: your service will probably tv
discredited but this Is a time foi
sacrifice; your State today sound-
call, ns clear and as vital as th«
call to -service on the battle-field'
What, honor can there be In holdlni?
office If we bequeath to our child
ren a State decadent qnd I'ving?
A popular slogan of today Is this
•It Is great to be a Georgi- i." Yes
It Is great to be a Georgian, but 1‘
this hour of oar need, no man Is i
true Georgian who does rot dedicab
- rotor fliHmpito. of thi« »Ut*- Wmreir nnd hi. every vn-rey to t£,
wjdp movtmtnt for harmony and proarwn of bln Slat, nnd the up"
‘ ' In 1U import, jreg- 1 ' *
at shall be the re-
jfi. ^'•'fewwishirtl
lift of his people. This Is a time
for men, for rest men, for r. m ,
ready and willing to do down to u«- I
* -
— things grow.
In Georgia."
load
riRhtful destiny. I 1-
that when (IiIm Great S«al of Slat*
1h returned to me *«» be «b livored t< ■
my successor. It will bo found free ff
WANTED
Three saleswomen with n
ence in und6rwe.Tr and c~r
Apply Monday, morning bo*-'
8:30 and 9:00.
Michael Bros.
r
y/E Arc Glad to Announce to Our Friends
and Customers that wc have installed
sonic new equipment in our shop that en
ables us to do neater and nicer work at lea.-,
.expense than in the past, which we are go-
ing to give you the benefit of the saving.
Our price on Half Soles are cut to .. $1.00
Half Soles and Rubber Heels .. $1.50
We use the best materials money will buy
Try us and be convinced.
BLUE RIBBON SHOE SHOP
E. C. OLDHAM, Prop.
‘1 156 College Avc
Phone 1541
LOOK—Four full
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When you have finished your day'.'labors—when
the shadows of evening begin to fill and, as the
poet might eay, “you wenjl your wesry way home-
ward "—what are your anticipation!? You go home
to cat—yes—but after that—have you an eaey chair
or divan to reet your weary bonea In? Have you a
cool, comfortable porch awing to stratch out in and
be al,:ne with ybur thoughta? If not you are losing
the greatest of life’s Joys. Coma-fn and we'll prove
it to ^01
DORSEY’S DIVIDED PAYMENTS FURNISH YOUR HOME
For a $5.00
Cash Payment
Tbfa handsome Grosser In
cither walnut of nrnhngnny
finish. Pay $5.00 at tho time
of purchase and the balance
$1.00 weekly.
Desirable Rqckcrs
For a $12.00
Cash Payment
Thrqp Kond/looking pieces In genuine walnut veneer. Con-
cfats of a semi-vanity toilet table, a bow end bed and a
chit Curette. Pay $12.50 at the time of purjhuao and $2.50
Weekly.
Dorsey’s Special
SWING
For a $5.00
Ca.h Payment
A true Colonial Pofittf Bed
in mahogany finish;-. Pay
only $5.00 at the time of
purcliu.se nnd the balance
$1.50 weekly.
Extra Value ’
'Made plain but in very pleas-
?ag styles. There is a range
of three styles to make a
choice from. Strongly con
structed. high grade steel
spring net work makes for a
cushion with utmost comfort.
Rockers finished in ma
hogany. Cushions'In figured
tapestry.
BELBER
WARDROBE
TRUNKS
A Substantial,
Comfortable Swing
$3.50
This Is a very plain swing and yet its ruspodness lends a
charm not found In any other typo of swing. Well construct
ed jn quartered oak end finished in flat brown and black
varnish. Tills is a swing that you can leave out doors all
summer. Special while they-last, J.150
Dorsey Furniture Co.
Quality Furniture Since 1884
Three pieces in mahogany
finish. Full vanity dresser,
chifcrctte and bow^end bed.
Every piece handsome In ap
pearance and generous in
size. A $15.00 cash payment
and $2.00 weekly on tho
balance.
HOOSIER
KITCHEN
CABINETS