Newspaper Page Text
10
$5-0 °
for
aaM $2.98
H
We have a limited number of pieces
of fine, rich Cut Glass left from our
June Sale. We are going to sell every
niece of our
CUT GLASS
AT COST
Regular This
Price, Sale.
Set of six Tumblers $4.00 $2.45
Vinegar Cruet $2.50 $1.50
Sugar and Cream $5.00 $2.98
Small Compote $2.00 $1.35
Pickle Dish $2.50 $1.50
8-ineh Berry Bowl $3.50 $2.25
94nch Berry Bowl $6.00 $3.75
Two-handled Nappy $2.50 $1.50
Mayonnaise Bowl $5.00 $3.00
10-inch Vase $7.50 $4.95
Water Set. including Mirrors22.so $15.00
Wine Set. including Mirrorslo.oo $7.45
Spoon Holder $3.00 $1.95
Celery Dish $5.00 $2.95
Water Bottle $7.50 $4.95
Mail Orders Receive Prompt and
Careful Attention
King Hardware Co.
53 Peachtree Street
Telephone
Change
Notice
H. M. Patterson fe? Son |
Funeral Directors
telephone numbers
have been changed
to Ivy 217 and 218
Our place of business
is never closed
1| Mil II IM—MMM.MMIIL J
READ FOR PROFIT-
USE FOR RESULTS-
GEORGIAN WANT ADS
THE ATLANTA LtEUHDLAN AND NEWS. IL ESDA Y, JULY 30, l»ia.
HOW’S YOUR
CIRCULATION?
Strychnine would hardly be called a
healthy medicine, and yet every good doc
tor gives strychnine as a stimulant for a
weak heart. It helps the circulation.
Just so in a season like this, a few floor
goods bought right might stimulate some
stagnant stock you have, and help your
whole proposition.
For several years we have been visited
twice a year by bargain houses of Phila
delphia and Baltimore who would clean
up our odds and ends.
We are led to believe that lots of these
are sold right back to Southern merchants
who visit those markets: of course at a
profit, to cover the expense of the buyers
they send out, never to speak of the
freight both ways.
We have decided t/> give our home mer
chants who come io Atlanta the benefit of
these sales.
! i • A ; ’ ’• 4 4
At our clearance sale of August 6, we
will close out
1,000 CASES OF SHOES.
There will be enough buyers in Atlanta
to make a market price on anything, so we
are going to sell these for what they will
bring.
There will be some splendid offerings
of Low Cuts for the trade who sell these
all the year round.
Usual terms to firms of established
credit, or discount to cash buyers.
J. K. ORR SHOE CO.,
ATLANTA, GA.
*’•i • r '
If, when you go home, you’ll advertise
th? bargains you picked up at this sale, it
will start your Fall trade off with a rush.
FACE TO FACE
How many of the firms that you deal
with do you know personally?
Don’t you feel a little keener pleasure
in doing business with folks you know?
Isn’t it that way at home? You have
some old tried and true friend who has
been trading with the store ever since you
were a boy; how glad you are to occasion
ally see his face, and press his warm hand.
>
It’s that way all along the line. Our
membership in the aggregate has many t
thousands of customers.
One of the benefits of these semi-annual
meetings in Atlanta is to renew old friend
ships and make new ones.
The Convention and the Exposition
would either be well worth the trip.
Many, however, will come to lay in their
Fall supplies; there is promise of a fair
crop, and cotton will bring a good price.
The Atlanta Merchants and Manufac
turers expect to put forth unusual efforts
to show the many advantages Atlanta
offers as a market. k
Many will have exceptional offerings to
meet the demand of those looking for
bargains.
»
But whether you have any trading to do
or not. Atlanta wants to know you—wants
you to see and know the articles she
makes, and the splendid stocks she car
ries. t
We want you to make this your market,
and we want to meet von FACE TO
FACE.
*
Merchants and Manufac-
turers’ Assn.,
Atlanta, August sth to 9th.
4
I
ChamberliipJohnsoipDußose Company
| ATLANTA NEW YORK PARIS*
I
Children’s Dresses and Coats So
Priced to Make the Day Busy
Juvenile Department—Third Floor
Notice the prices below—what the dresses and
coats were marked, what they are marked for to
morrow’s selling. They make bargains of the
first water.
Mothers who have an eye to the savings that
are possible in dressing the children should be here
early in the morning, for the dresses and coats
have about them not only the attractiveness of
low prices but that plus an amount of charming
style that you seek much more often than you find.
Girls $ 1 25 Colored Dresses 79 c
In sizes six to fourteen years. The materials
are gingham and percale, very prettily checked,
striped, dotted and figured in blues, greys, tans
and black and white. They have the attractive
long waists, the short plaited skirts, with low neck
and short sleeves They are trimmed with self
bands and with pipings.
Girls ’I 50 to $ 2 50 White Dresses s l J ’
In sizes six to fourteen years. A splendid
assortment of these to choose from—white lawns
and nainsooks, variously trimmed with embroidery
bands and headings and edges. They have the
low neck and short sleeves.
Girls '3* M" and ’5 J " White Dresses T
«
In sizes six to fourteen years. Remarkable
values, lacy, fluffy, filmy—dresses for the little
ones to dress up in—with low necks and short
sleeves. Not one is worth less than 53.00. At
this clearance price they should not stay here long.
Children’s and Misses’ Coats In a
Final Clearance
They were $6.00 to $12.50 now $3.00. $3.15 and $5.00
Wonderful opportunities among these
Coats Tomorrow!
All that remain of the light weight coats in
sizes two to sixteen years are now marked
$3.00, $3.75 or $5.00. This includes pongees,
serges, shepherd checks and the rough mixtures
fashioned after the smartest models of the sea
son.
Such a sale should recommend itself to those
who want coats for the mountains and the sea
shore where cool mornings and evenings are
the rule, not the exception, and for those who
will look a few weeks ahead and buy for the
cool days of early fall.
Chamberlin=Johnson=Diißose Co.