Newspaper Page Text
News has arrived from the Kast that
the Turks have begun the systematic
destruction of the Greeks in Asia Minor
in the same manner that they destroyed
the Armenians, and for the same pur
pose, viz., 8o that as the peace confer
ence at the end of the war there will be
0 Greek question so far as the Turkish
iumpire is concerned. The inquiring
American will naturally ask, “How
many Greeks are there in Asia Minor?
Why are they there? Why should they
be destroyed?”
Before the appearance of the Turk in
\sia Minor it was inhablted almost
vholly by a Greek-speaking population
vho formed the backbone of the Byzan
tine empire, furnishing it with its finest
soldiers from among the peagantry and
its best administrators from among the
aristocracy. The Turkish hordes settled
n the interlor destroying the splendid
cities and farm life there, preferring
themselves the life of pasture which
better suited their nomadic tastes,
The Turk, however, never became a
sailor or a trader, hence the seaports
b .1l along the coast of Asia Minor re
mained Greek though many Turks set
tled in them. Moreover, the Turk has
been at war ever since he entered Fu
rope at the beginning of the fifteenth
century, and that fact combined with
- life on a low moral plane explain his
steady decrease in numbers, The
Gresk, on the contrary, especially in the
nineteenth century has been steadily
increasing. Today there are not less
tkan 2,000,000 Greeks in Asia Minor,
especially strong on the western coast,
but found also spread along the north
exn and southern ceast,
Greeks Are More Progressive.
The Greeks are the most alert, effi
cient and progressive race of the mixed
o
“Get’ things done” in the quickest,
most efficient way. That's the demand
of today. Because Poslam is so well
able to combat skin troubles, goes at
themm energetically right at the start,
ind finishes what it begins, it should
be first aid to any sufferer from ecze
wa. Itching stops; angry skin is
soothed and comforted, Pimples, rashes,
scalp-scale and minor troubles usually
need few applications. Here is quality
concentrated.
Sold everywhere, For free sample
vrite to Emergency Laboratories, 243
West Forty-seventh street, New York
City.
And Poslam Soap, being medicated
with Poslam, will benefit your skin
while used daily for toilet and bath.—
Advertisement.
A Real Hair, § J
eal naitr, vaver
and Beautifier
e—— |
Found at Last—Bhows Results at‘
Once or Nothing to Pay. ‘
If your hair is thinning out, prema
turely gray, brittle, lifeless, full of
dandruff and your head itches like
mad, quick action must be taken lu‘
save your hair. \
Don't wait until the hair root is
dead, for then nothing can prevent
baldness, ‘
Get from any good druggist today a |
package of Parisian Sage—it doesn't
cost much and there's nothing else
you could use that's so simple, safe
and effective.
You will surely be delighted with
the first application. Your hair will
seem much more abundant and radi
ant with life and beauty—all itching
ceases and your scalp feels cool and
comfortable. Parisian Bage is in
great demand by discriminating wom
en because it is delicately perfumed,
does not color or streak the hair, and
keeps it lustrous, soft and fluffy.
Be sure you get the genuine Pari
sian Sage (Giroux’s), for this is guar
anteed to give perfeet satisfaction or
nothing to pay.—Advertisement.
It matters not whether you have
had agonizing pains from rheumatism
for 20 years or distressing twitchings
for 20 weeks, Rheuma is strong
encugh and mighty and powerful
enough to drive rheumatic poisons
from your body and abolish all mis
ery, or money back,
Jucobs' drug stores and all drug
wists sell Rheuma on a no-cure-no
pay basis. A large bottle is inex
pensive, and after you take the small
dose as directed once a Jday for two
duys yvou should know that at last you
have obtained a remedy that will con
dquer rheumatism,
'or over seven years throughout
America Rheumd has been prescribed
, and has released thousands from
igony, pain and despair.--Adv.
ee —— S ————
CAN BE CURED
dore than 5,000 persons have mknnl‘
the Dr. W. J. McCrary Pellagra Rem ‘
edy, every one of whom hag been per-|
fectly satistied with results of trnut-‘
ment, If it doesn't cure to your satis
faction, it costs nothing. Pellagra
treated in all stages, Treatment taken |
in privacy ot home: contains no hab
it-forming drugs; total cost small;
terms easy; results guaranteed. De
wy is dangerous; investigate now!
v
Big 50-Page Book Free!
This book explains ali; ‘sent free in
plain, sealed wrapper to all who write
for cop)y Send for your copy today
it may save youl life.
Have You These Symptoms?
Tired and Drowsy feelings, accom
panied by headaches depression or
state of indolence; roughness of skin,
breaking out or eruptions; hancs "'d!
like sunburr sore mouth; tongue,
lips and throat uming red; much
indigestion and
mMucus anu CRORINS ’
ntadsen Marrhe \ onstipation
' nind Moeted nd mans others
Write for nHOw
Dr. W. J, McCrary, Inc, Dept. 707,
Carbon Hill, Ala
.
Village Pauper |
»
Unperturbed |
By Fortune
CLINTON, ILL., Sept. 28.—Rob- §
ert Willilam Entwistle, aged 35,;
of this city, was a pauper a month ?
ago. BErtwistle ranks among the !
idie rich. Entwistle formerly wres- !
tled trunks for a living. He found }
it hard to make both ends meet.
An aged and infirm mother didn't
help matters any. So when the
business of smashing baggage got |
dull he picked up odd jobs about g
the eity. )
One day, while cleaning out a }
cellar for a more fortunate fellow 2
citizen, a mailman handed him a
letter. It was postmarked Cincin
nati, Ohio, Carelessly placing it in
his pocket he spat upon his hands
and went on shoveling. Arriving
home that evening, he recalled the ?
letter. With his mother peering:»
over his shoulder, he opend it. §
“Your uncle William ¥ntwistle,” >
the letter read, “has died and be- ¢
queathed his entire fortune of
SIIB,OOO to you.”
But riches did not alter his view
of life. Entwistle declares he will
continue smashing baggage. S
:v.o:gles of Asia Minor. Nearly all the
trade and commerce and whatever man
ufacture there is are in their hands,
their only competition being the Armen
.ans. In Smyrna, the chief city of Asia
Minor, they number 125,000 of the total
pogulauon of 3£0,000, and control the
industrial and economic life of the city.
But it is not only in old cities like
Smyrna that they show their ability
un’gheffl(;liency.
e chief s rt town of northwest
Asia Minor lsafl\?.u, newly built in the
third decade of the Nineteenth Century
on the site of an old Greek town. It is
a fine example of a large, almost pure
ly Greek and practically self-governing
community, with more than 25000 in
habitants, a yearly export business of
12,000,000 francs and a shipping of 3,000
vessex; It has thoroughly modern busi
ness institutions as well as a Chamber
of Commerce and agriculture, and agri
cultural bank. A striking evidence of
the alert and progressive spirit of the
Greeks is given in the way in which
they have followed the railroads into the
interior. The cities that have heen con
nected by the railroads going out from
Constantinogle and Smyrna and the
towns that have sprung up beside thery
have become centers of Greek influsnce,
The Greeks have settled in them in
large numbers and control not only the
economic life of the towns themselves,
but of the surrounding country.
Greeks Till Soil,
It is a great mistake, however, to as
sume, as many superficial observers
have done, that the Greeks of Asia Mi
nor are only sailors and traders, but are
not bound to the soil, that they form a
purely city element, and that the coun
try folk consist only of Turks. The
large Greek islands of the Asiatic coast,
Mitylene, Rhodes, Samps and Chios have
dense populations living in great mes
ure from grape and fruit-raising and
from silk cuiture.
Farming plays no large part simply
because of lack of arable land. Hence
many peasants have emigrated to the
mainland where the{flseltled in the Iruit
ful valleyt of the Maeander, the Her
mos and the Sangarios,
In this way new and thickly populat
ed uttlement? have come into exist
ence in the midst of the more scattered
Turkish populations and the higher
fecundity of the Greek settlers, com
bined w;th their industry, their frugal
ity, thefr intellectual keenness, and their
community-feeling, helped always by
the retrogression of the Turkish popu
lation itself, have contributed to extend
the Hellinizing ({)roceu more and more
to the untry distriets.
In coorg)uutiwly recent times there
have come to light in the interior of
Asia Minor large settlements of Greeks
who speak Turkish and conceal the
fact that they are Christians, and for
political reasons pass as adherents of
Islam, but who are really devoted to
Christianity and have kept up their
Greek national feeling.
Ten Per cent in Schools.
Po speak only of the increase in num
bers, wealth and material progress of
the Greeks of Asia Minor would give
a very erroneous impression, for it is
their intellectual and spiritual progress
in the past centur;s' that has been most
remarkable, In 1914 there were 1,450
boys’ schools with 3,400 teachers and
136330 pupils and 360 girls’ schools with
5 teachers and 47,000 pupliis.
In other words 10 per cent of the
Greek inhabitants of Asia Minor are in
school. These schools are all sugxport
ed by the Greeks themselves, the Turk
ish Government not only contributing
nothing to their maintenance but
frowning &%on their existenceé, There
are also 2, churches with 2,600 priests
attached to them. These schools and
churches are the centers of the na
tional life, but in all the large cities
the Greeks have their newspapers, ca
f‘lnos and other agencies of a cultural
fe.
It is no monder that the higher pro
fessional plhces in the towns of Asia
Minor are filled almost exclusively by
Greeks. Teachers, doctors and engin
eers are for the most part Greeks and
among the higher administrative and
englneerlng officials of the Anatolian
and Bagdad railways are found many
(reeks. Thou{h conquered by the
Turk the Greek, in his turn, won the
upper hand by his intellectual supe
rioritly. i
When one realizes that under a
Government that existed only to rob
the worker by all forms of taxation,
thegse people have succeeded, despite
numberless persecutions, in making so
formidable an effort to secure these
gpiritual needs, it is eas¥ to imagine
what progress in civilization and
wenlth awaits them when an era of
llbe;tg’ and seourity for them shall be
introduced.
Turk Government Is Ruthless.
But this s just what the Youn
Turk Government is determined shafi
not happen. They have declared that
all the populations of the en’}plre must
be Turkified or disappear. hey have
practically exterminated the Irmcn
jans and are in process of causing the
Greeks to disappear,
After the Balkan wars the method
was one of forcible expulsion. The
Greek inhabitants were simply driven
out by the thousands and their homes,
lands and m::‘fwny given to Turks who
had emigrated to Asia Minor from the
lands con?uered b{ the Balkan States,
for one of the chief characteristics of
the Turk s his unwillingness to live
under alien rule. Since the com
mencement of the great war, however,
the method is one gimply of destrue
tion, and the Greek islands are crowd
ed with thousands of refugees who
have fled from the Turkish terror.
‘When the peace conference does oc
cur, is Kurope to agree to this state
of affairs as an accomplished fact or
are these people to be restored to their
homes and guaranteed security in life
and property and liberty of action?
HEADWAITER STILL A POWER,
LONDON, Hept. 28 —Casunl customers
al restaurants are becoming shy of sur
rendering meat coupons. The portion they
receive is generally inadequate and is often
under suspicion of being one of the now
numerous kinds of unrationed meat. Reg-
Rn!ronu who are on affable terms with the
ead walter may be seen consuming lib
eral quantities of beer and mutton, and
the conjecture that these are provided at
the expense of the chance client is prob
ably well founded,
MEETS HORRIBLE DEATH.
RHINELANDER, WIS, Sept. 35.-
When his clothing was caught in the
shafting at the mill of the Rhinelander
Box and Lumber Company, Bernard Mos
knee wus whirled about the shaft at
terrific speed and practically crushed to
death, Wyvery bone in his body was brok
wn‘hvforu the machinery could be stop
ped
HEARST'S, SUNUVAY AMERICAN
Judge Praises Wife
Who Silenced Man
With Ax and Iron
KANSAS CITY, Sept, 21.—~Mrs,
H. O. Drumm was tired, dead
tired, and the heat was oppres
sive. But there was a good com=
edy billed at the picture show,
and she thought it would be a
good place to go, for it was an
open-air theater.
So at noon she requested her
husband, a paperhanger, to be
home for an early supper, after
which they would forget the ther
mometer via the movie route. And
Drumm promised.
Supper time came, and with it
the radiating heat from the
ground. But Drumam did not ap
pear. He had forgotten the pic
ture show engagement in his sin
cere efforts to forget the heat,
" and was finding solace with
friends downtown. Anyway, ar
gued Drumm, that was the best
way to beat the heat.
Mrs. Drumm waited, with. a
married sister, Mrs, Esther Bar-
Ker,
The hours went by and the
thoughts of a comedy changed
with fleeting time to grim
thoughts of tragedy. The heat
was mounting.
When Mr. Drumm arrived at
midnight the thermomeier was
still high. Drumm felt badly and
didn’t like what his wife said to
him., Mrs. Drumm chose flatirons
and the sister, in lieu of a rolling
pin, picked a nice handy ax. ’
The husband was taken to the
General Hospital and the women
to the station,
Judge Casimir J. Welch decided
that Drumm had been punished
enough and lauded the wife and
sister for brave work.
“Just a few more women like
vou two and booze would be on
the run,” he sald
Drumm was returned to the
hospital to recover. The couple
live at No. 1316 Indiana.
DON'T ENDURE RHEUMATIC PAIN!
HERE'S QUICK RELIEF FOR YOU
Stop the pain! Give me relief!
That' what you want when you're
hurt. That's what you get with
Sloan's Liniment. It not only “kills
pain,” but does it quickly, without
delay.
If you're tormented by Rheuma
tigm, Neuralgia, Sprains, Bruises,
Backache, and body or nerve pain—
just see how quickly a little Sloan’s
Liniment gives relief. The very first
application rests and comforts. Seems
DITT el
% "Ihc V\’/'orld‘s, ‘
AA R R
I X
‘EL-REES-SO CI .
- - Here is the story in fig
. . ures of the EL-REES-
Gain In Public Favor === | SO'S yearly growth:
—————--_ .- . 722~ | Total Cigar Production
BLmin T wiae el TS er T | IS ... 94000
Neeo oil 2000 1914 ..... 600,000
T ’,’-": e| I 1915 ..... 1,435,000
Tiv / A-- ::?:_::': :_ "._' '--_'_’.' L S 5,305,000
Yoo Bivé S ST - s art”\ ]| | 1917 .....15,000,000
ry .: : :"JLP_ ,’. .. : 9 - ':" '. ':: 1918 E.tc- .25,w0,(m
EL-REES-SO ke mGRANT‘-‘- ALI WY ,
- (APKAYYC-- e BB N
. -\ 7 (AAR- P = Sl
And You Will o - QMUTY Froae b =-
‘-,’ - ,—‘,"" 3 \;\ ,’ >
Try Another i : ':T: < \§\‘§\\*
PSS
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We appreciate N\ NN J -
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the magnificent N A R : v”y
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manner in which ‘\\‘t\. (fi NN s /,/
; L \ A AONN v '., s >
the public has received i I\‘\:\\“\\),, o / Wr‘-"‘;’ lize fully th
M\ NN o S e realize fully that
the EL-REES-SO. ?""".h SSAETEY #57 merit is responsible for
) NS e
W\ N ,::,.* .77 our almost marvelous
\-;‘3\\“\ :, "; :;,,/ growth. ‘We are going to
\‘\\:;3 /i keep up this merit.
e HIRSCH
. -
1 T
3 144 MARIETTA ST., ATLANTA, GA., DISTRIBUTOR "
o ' W ' e
A Newspaper for People Who Think
Bread for 40 Weeks
Pledged to England
. B, Banner Harvest
LONDON, Sept. 28~G. N,
Barnes, of the Food Ministry,
speaking the other day at an ex
hibition of co-operative societies’
ailotment holders' produce at Rl
mers Green, said Great Brifain
~ was garnering the best harvest it
‘ ever had known,
| There was enough grain, he
said, if used for this purpose of
~ bread alone, to supply all the
~ needs of our population for 40
weeks.
Of course some of the grain
would be used for beer. Some
people who appeared to have
been brought up on beer said they
could not do without it., It was
an anxious consideration for the
Cabinet last year as to whether
[ they would not be forced into
~ using more barley in order to
~ brew more beer, but he was glad
~ to say they had not had the same
pressure applied this year,
The number of allotment hold
ers had grown since the war be
~ gan from 570,000 to 1,400,000. Put
. . .
Skin Without Wrinkles
: Not Easy to Have
There's no exquse for any woman hav
ing wrinkles now. It has been found
that a simple mixture of saxolite and
witch hazel has a remarkable action
us)‘on the deepest wrinkles, no matter
what their nature, whether caused by
worry, habitual frowning, a debilitated
condition or the ravages ofFather Time,
This harmless remedy, which anyone
can easily make and usé at home, acts
both as an astringent and a tonic. The
combined effect of tightening the skin
and heightening its vitality is te im
mediately affect every line and wrinkle,
keeping the cuticle smooth and firm as
in youth.
The proportions are one ounce saxo
lite (powdered) to ne-half pint wicth
hazel, ingredients which are found in
every drug store. The solution should
be used as a wash lotion. It is equally
effective in disposing of flabbiness of
cheek and neck, as well as sagging be
low the eyes.—Advertisement.
to reach flq‘nvt down to the seat of
the trouble, ‘warming and easing the
nerves and tissues. You can almost
feel the inflammation, swelling or
stiffness subside, as the pain grows
less and less.
You don’t even have to wait to rub
in Sloan's Liniment. It penetrates,
and its clear, eclean liquid can be
poured right on the skin without
staining. Get a generous size bottle
from your druggist today.
in another way-—whereas there |
was one in every twelve house
holders having an allotment
there was now one in every five
householders who was giving his
spare time to the production of
food.
They had 200,000 acres of land
devoted to allotment production,
and every one of those acres pro
duced in round figures seven
tons of food.
' BONUSES FOR HOUSES,
GLASGOW, Sept. 28.-—The scarcity of
houses in Scotland is emphasized hy the
advertisements in & Glasgow newspaper:
‘L2 Reward-—-Wanted, 1-2 rooms, kitchen;
would buy fittings.”” “[s Reward-—-{ne
room and kitchen, Springburn.”” *“£10 Re
ward—Wanted, unfurnished houseor flat,
lz, 3, or 4 rooms and kitchen™
RHEUMATISM
I will_gladly send any Rheumatism sufferer a
Simple’ Herb Recipe Absolutely Free that Com
pletely Cured me of a terrible attack of muscular
and inflammatory Rheumatism of long standing
l{ler everything else I tried had failed me. 1 have
| glven it to many sufferers who believed thelr cases
| hopeless, yet they found rellef from their suffer
| ing by taking these simple herbs. It also relieves
hlzntlo: promiptly, as well as Neuralgia, and s a
{ wonderful blood purifier You are most welcome
to this Herb Recipe if you wiil send for it at once.
I belleve you will consider it a godsend after you
have put it to the test. There is nothing injurious
contained in it, and you can see for yourself exactly
what you are taing. I will gladly send this Recipe
—absolutely free—to anw sufferer who wiil send
pame and address. M. B. SUTTON, 2650 Mag-
Imlh Ave., Los Angeles, California. * ¢
11 ‘
i £
f ] i | 1
i A‘e\ \ 1
s\ - ’
| '\ u |
9I) \ E"" \\Q\ (fi“': o] ‘
/ ‘\- ';z ,u; "é,:“ >
A 0 R ®& TN R
E \ y b c?// .[\
’// \J ‘ ! g S/
W= e | |
/A: g |
4. e Ore; ¢
/e ! o
s o ¢ N .‘ = |
/| e
$ 5%, > ‘;A;’v.'ll ’_,‘;:'; ;.“ — -'ua: - '
7 A .3 )= |
AR b 1
. - ALo \
Davis o |
G MAGHINES i
A Davis Portable Electric Sewing Machine takes |
the drudgery out of sewing. * It's a pleasure to make |
baby's dresses and your own clothes with it.
It operates the same as an ordinary sewing machine, except that
the little motor does all the hard work. Simply fasten the cord in |
any electric light socket, press l‘i!zhtl on the foot controller and |
guide the work as it glides under tilw needle — you can make a 1
stitch at a time slowly or speed it up to 800 stitches a minute.
When it is not in use it is enclosed in the compact, dust-proof
case and put away on a shelf,
It can be operated for a fraction of a cent an hour. |
Come in and let us tell you all about it.
y -=f3--
Carter Electric Co. ;5.
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 191»s.
GERMANS AS STRIKEBREAKERS, I
LONDON, Sept. 28,--Bath Trades Coun
¢il has decided to protest to the Prime
Minister against the alleged use of Ger
man prisoners as strikebreakers at Cran
more and Mendip Quarries, Somerset, where |
men are striking for union recognition It
stated that the Germans are driven to work
in brakes, "as though on a picnic.”
BLOW AT BRITISH TEA HOUR,
LONDON, Sept 28. Office tea clubs,
parish meetings, lectures and the like will
in future not get special allowances of tea,
Existing permission i 8 to be withdrawn,
The Food Controller will shortly announce
the new meat prices, which, it is under
stood, will be about 4 cents a pound
higher, S PRI T
Chouss NEW
- STYLES
e e
A A tromendous and beau
-77 tifulcollectionof sizzling
‘ WYI hot, up +to-the-minute
, \ R\ O-Q(meura Fash.
A VAT onlfoni 'all and Winter.
o B IR loot from
1”“3 i ASO Frabrios
i{‘l 1 : rllrlnhudolalnnt{l(&!hn
U sos A n every popular shade—
[} “m} 1 M:Ymmno'wuven.
Al W WHOLESALE
HiEL il} PRICE T? YOou
HEELE g on onr great Adveriis
,<".,'\\‘ | “v Ying Ofterif you arethe
RN firat to write from your
hL} P town. Your chance to save
| [/ %10 to %}f\. ‘!a charge for
] |fi! extras. Noobligations what-
UN AR L HEE over. All express charges pro
paid. tllulruho. Wesimply
want your friends to see the real class of & nobby
P-nqon suit. But write quick for our *'Grestest
Ever'’ Style and Sample Book. It's a wonder. Para
on Afinnt&egruw- week, Ask about our New and
BIFF RENT Mmln. Bend your name NOW,
PARAGON TAILORING PANY, Dept, g9y , CHICAGO
? Furniture of All Kinds is
il : Priced Lower Here
x "y ’ .
o | Use Your Credit |
Wu?ttngv “Grafonola Headquarters”
. ic in Yo H
//13\)“ 094[0 P‘tlhte Mh‘,‘sflucll round, me‘llo't;loun o!'onn:
£ 1. from the Columbia Grafonola will convince
5 (@ you at once that this wonderful instrument
(gl,)‘: is just what you need in your own home.
)
\V, f& 5T R PA e
R ¥ gl
. S i RS
This Grafono!a Cabinet 1 S
Holds 55 Records 4‘:\' W s
ecords. ¢W' 4 ']
-O-M-P-L-E-T-E V
:\/.E\r;g).selecuom, (five 10-inch %/
Delivered to R \
Your Home s4'9o ‘&( a(‘fi( »’(l‘, i l
FOI’ SN ‘ ~éf\"\\‘ ." 'l|
AR eRy T '
only $49.25, L
NS 5
~Come in Saturday— /
One Dollar a Week Pays {§ For It
Come Hear the New Records
Bring Your Friends With You ol
v S 'y
‘N"& ufifl&‘.fi 2 .l| € \ A
\‘;. = ’:er'g,. l": ) '} .\ ~{ |
(M B.‘ 'm','%fl‘: .‘i,l\“fll‘_'fl” . J‘,;l’ hii y
SR oL
i e i !"X:i‘f.'? y’)i »A ."'7 o)l
il I Lo sl
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iy - :;fi fi ‘ fl'“" Vel ¥ : "
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SPEC]AL This beautiful (Style E. 2) ma
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RECORDS OF YOUR OWN CHOOSING, delivered
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A total cost to you of only $98.50.
EASY WEEKLY OR MONTHLY PAYMENTS
THE BEST VALUE IN ATLANTA -
o= OLD IVORY OR MAHOGANY ceomiitee
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sy [[ads ] ) peet o gyt
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== - i
FOUR PERFECTLY MATCHED PIECES SALE
This beautiful suite was made special for us. @~ PRICE
The sanitary wood bed has steel rails; worth
$175.00. BSpecial this week. .......coauradven $l2B
—EASY TERMS—
COMPLETE MATTRESS, BED AND SPRINGS
Monday : ‘ Free Pillows
Only b RS
AT \'l
AU WL Y R R
HRETIN m\/——\l
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This Is a big special value, complete with fully warranted stes!
sprlng-alndvulzluréflrzne eglg:chaosn combination mattress. A reg- ’
:ON?A.\:SG:’E:IAL ks $26.95
paasammanmeny___ We Are Exclusive Atlanta Agents
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| rosroroned { §49,00 f 0 $65.00
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SHORTAGE WORRY YOU ¢ l [
Come in and Let Us Show "c Ml‘ i
You This Wonderful 3-Burner b el
OIL STOVE with the famous {)’ o A
“BO”" Oven (s w.u;.—;'_ .
Get one of the splendid - i“-‘J 8
3.Burner Oil Stoves with 1 4 iR b
the ‘‘Boss'’ Oven, known "H)1.,.:} ‘| »
for its fine baking quali i as S
ties. Cheaper than coal, Lié 11 1] L
no odor, no ashes, no dan "_\
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and safe. This size {o’
$25 50 J sla Week{
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