Newspaper Page Text
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Charles Edward Russell Declares World Labor
Will Win Its Fight—Must and Will Have
‘ What It Desires.
; Co.nhn‘:;;;mm Page 1.
S ————————
“arror here. Such figures would put use
' down among the old, slow, backward-
I‘}onking nations like Spain and Bul-|
garia, Siam and Mexico. It would
ake us absolutely out of that fair|
rst rank where we belleve ousseives
belong if not to lead.
For against our 20 per cent of il
teracy see Denmark with 0.2 Switz-|
Weriand with 03; New Zealand, 0.3
gland and Wales, 1.8, Scotland,
8; New South Wales as the other
nd of the earth 2, South Australia,
8; Algeria, 13, The whole German
mpire had in 1918 only 0,02, Cuba
ked almost as high es the United
tates.
® It demands that all labor of chil
under 14 years of age shall be
ibited, that children between the
s of 16 fin(i 15 shall not labor
ore than 20 hours a week and
I have at least as many hours at
001, and that the full power of the
jon shall be exerted to protect thy
h and welfare of every, child 31
immature years.
» WHAT LABOR 1S DEMANDING.
&Jf every child in the United States
to recelve school training to fits|
‘eighteenth year, if all labor by (-hll»’
dreny under the age of 16 years Is
zub. abolished, agd if colleges and
versities are to be thrown open
generally to the children of the work
s, you will.see in another genera
on more extraordipary evolutions
than are promised from the
ace conference
- And this is what labor everywhere
!demundhm. What it demands it
ill have to have. Is not this a fore
oast of tremendous changes?
8o far as labor in the United States
' is concerned, it has yet another de
mand that is likely to have a more
tmmediate effect upon visible cogdi
tions in thig country of ours. It d»-'
mands that all immigration to the
United States shall be for a time
prohibited by law,
It is convinced the end of the war
will start a vast flood of KEuropean
immigration, and it believes that
labor in this eoulit!" 18 in no condi
tion to stand that Kkind of inundation,
In this it is alleged by its enemies
to be merely selfish, and all good
people are invited to look with horror
upon its course.
EVERY MAN FOR HIMSELF..
¥ven if the chargés were true, |
don't know that it would cut much
m The essence of the existing sys
-18 every man for himself. ILabor
trying to shut out Immigration that
wWages may be kept up is no more
selfish than the employers that want
immigration that wages may be beat
en down
It is easy Yor gentlemen of pleasing
and assured ipocomes to condemn the
horrible selfishness that causes labor
10 want to keep its ;fobl and its wages
but the case Is different when the
vent goes up 76 per cent at a clip,
utter is 80 cents a pound, and there
@thin‘ between you and want for
whole househsld but the single
k of a wage that gets no larger.
{ However, in this case, the charge of |
selfishness isn't altogether true, any-,
way vou may look at it, There is
something else here besides merely
wage levels
The American workgr has for him
melf and hig family a r“"lnln standard
of living. It would be fatal to the
American nation and the Ameérican
mission 10 have that standard low
ered.
We bhave just been lvoking at some
startling figures of illiteracy. llln-l
eracy is a product of bad industrial
conditjons. Let those conditions
m worse, as they musts under a
of immigration, end your [llit
eracy W‘m that - are so bad now
they shock the natien, would short
1y become appalling.
There is also another point I
" The war showed the patriotism of
erganized labor in America to be in-|
tense, intelligent and high proof. From
first to last it never slackened in its!
loyalty; its unswerving devgtion to
duty made victory possible. |
We had very few strikes in this
country while the conflict was on
s Sometimes, a 8 in-the case of the min
ers, the provocation to strike was
strong and the conditions of injusgice’
were almost intolerable, the wor'lter-‘
#stuck them out to the end. |
But. the war also revealed to us
k{.fio presence M America of a large
}hnent of hostiles or unfrieudlyl
“ aliens.
i 4 The favorite old theory of ours that!
¥iwe assimilate and Americanize for
# eigners that come to us in great nums
"*bers was overwhelmed ecarly in the
k fray. We learngd that too often we
w don’t even begin to assimilate them,
pathat they remain as nwruuxhfi for
preign as if they had never lef¥ their
» ative land. :
We learned of whole colonies of
such people that after twenty or thir
- years of pesidence here knew not
word of the American language,
knew and cared nothing about the
American institytions and leus,
= They had their own newspapers snd
their own schools in thelr own tongue
ey maintained their allen manners,
oms and thinkings. In a time of
me peril to the nation they sym
pathized with the nation's enemies,
MANY OF FOREIGN®"BIRTH.
* ' Unbelievable as this seemed, there
“were some peasons to think that the
. case wnn"vn-n worse than had been
| Pepresentell—that the illiteracy in the
. United States was even greater than
”& cent, |
: examination of 1562206 sol
diers In twenty-elght camps revealed
. 386,198 illiterates or 249 per cent,
On this basis the army of the Unit
. ed States on November 11, 1918, 4.
. 000,000 men, contained more than
. 300,000 that could not read or write
. § At one of the camps the percent
: E was 41, at another 37, at another
| *at another 31. The lowest per
‘tentage was at Camp Lewis, Pacific
~ Northwest, 13, Camp Custer, which
I represented the Middle West, was 1%,
“Camp Devens, in prideful and
¢ ¢ Massachusetts, was 22
i I 8 quite true that many of the il.
litepates (' the army were of foreign
birth, and many others were negroes
mm- South, but what took the
i of every thoughtful person was
the rate of illiteracy indicated among
It® Americans, ’
ing every allowance also for
rs that for one reason and ln-I
feigned iliteracy and allowing
for possible errorgs by the recording
officers, the fact from which no one
could escape was that ignorance had
gained appailingly upon education,
The census for 1910 showed only 7.7
per cent,
No one had expected such develop
ment: no one had thought it possible,
Previous reports had not disclosed ft;
the leaders in education had said!
nothing about it, Yet there was the
fact that the United States of Amer
fea after more than a hundred years
of the public school at least one per
san In five was illiterate.
About the same time the educauon-I
al bureau of the Department of Com
merce came in with a docwment that
not only confirmed the 256 per cent
estimate, but showed plgmly what it
i to which we owe the most of this|
condition.
INCREASE IN LIVING COST. |
If found that one child in four “of
those at work” could not sign its own
name, and that of 19,646 children to
whom it fssued work certificates un
der the child labor act, 5,294 could not
read plain writing, \
Children at work—there “is one
great root of the trouble.
The struggle for life, always grow
ing fNercer and flercer under the
steadily increasing price lists, had
reached a point where the children of
many workers must go to work them.
selves Instead of going to school,
The cost of living had increased
faster than wages, and all the truancy
laws, compulsory. education laws and
child labor laws were more or less
fragile before such a necessity.
What we have begun, then; to build
xl two classes, the well-to-do to be
ighly educated and the workers not
to be educated at all, and there is no
ingenuity strong enough to devise a
way by which democracy can survive
such conditions,
STARTLING lIeW!NG. ;
We have already started In the
frankest way to recogmnize the crea
tion of some such division. Every
year the educated are becoming more
and more of a separate caste,
In the war jJust over we had some
startling showings of the advance of
this great change. We even had a
deliberate attempt to lmit all com
missiong in the army to graduates of
nlvcr-'uo-. soo that advancement in
ul’fl? should be denied to all except
the rahmins of our new social
structure,
Demoeracy means democraoy in ed
ueation as much as in anything else.
If there is no democracy in educa
tion, there is no other democracy that
ean last,
The greatest danger of an Indus
trial civilizaMon such as we have been
developing in the last century Is that
workers shall become mere automa
tons, cogs In a vast machine, without
joy, energy or ambition; and the sur
est way to bring them into that state
is to deprive them of edueation, in
which work we seem to have ad
vanced ag far as 20 per cent.
The deadly peril of this kind of
thing, even to the fortunate and edu
ecated, ought to he apparent from the
record of Russia.
PERILS OF IGNORANCE.
™ Petrograd and Moscow today
the most educated persons still left
alive are engaged in cleaning latrines
and emptying cenn&:fllfl under the
rifles of the Red ards. 1 should
think one glance at their story would
'be enough for anybody that hesitates
to believe that the perils of a general
ignorance are deadly. .
The same tendency to drive children
into work and keep them from the
schools has been plainly seen in other
countries as much as In the United
States. It is the sure result of rising
;irloen and spreading industrialism.
n one of the countries affected the
steady protesting of labor has been
already heeded.
Gireat Britain ‘\has been compelled
by British organized labor. to adopt
such sweeping educational reforms qu
have not been known anywhere else
in the world. "In a few years these
reforms will have made such radical
lehanxu in the Intellectnal condition
of the masses of its people that the
country will enter upon a new and
unprecedented era of development.
Other countries, under the same
prodding, will have to follow the same
course, for labor, master of the social
field, will not be satisfied with any
thing else,
PROGRAM OF LABOR,
On this subject the reconstruction
program of the American Federation
of Labor contains these suggestive
sentences:
“Kducation must not be for a few,
but for all our people.
' Wly s essential that our system of
publie education should offer the wage
earners’ children the opportunity for
the fullest possible development. To
attain this end State colleges and
universities should beideveloped,
“The industrinl education which is
being fostered and developed should
have ofr its purpose not o much
training for efficiency in industry as
training for life in an Industrial so
elet_g,
“Phe dunger that certain commer
eial and industrial interests may dom
inate the character of education must
be averted by insisting that the
workers shall have equal representa
tion on all boards of education or
committees having control over vo
cational studies and training.” |
NATION'S LIFE THREATENED,
Of course, this was not true of all
such peoples, nor of the hulk of them,
but It was true enough to make a
threat against the nation's life no
nation could afford to overlook
Moreover, we came upon the astons
fshing fact that sometimes the second
generation, though native to this soil,
grew up as allen as the first. Wa
lenrned of thousands of caszes of mén,
of the draft age that, born in this
eountry. could not speak a word of
its Ima:nn and had no knowledge
of its vernment,
We saw also extraordinary manifes.
tations of m spirit among men of allen
birth to hamstring the country that
had given them protection and elti
renship.
We saw elections in which colonles
of unassimilated aliens voted solidly
for eandidatex that In the war had
sought the country's defeat,
We suw communities in which men
even of the third generation clung
together as a clan to vote on the
HEARSL'S SUNDAY AMEKICAN — A INewspaper lor reople who anink — SUNDAY, dbive 19, LUID,
- .
Heiress to Bige
Fortune Makes
,
Doll’'s Cloths
(By International News Service.)
OSTON, MASS., June 14~
B Just because a girl happens
to be an heiress to millions,
and a soclety girl, should she be
debarred from embarking upon a
“purely private enterprise” it she
#0 desires?
This is the question that Boston
society folk ‘have been asking since
they have received the little cir
cular advertising Miss Edna Reg
gio as “The Doll Fairy.”
This is the way that Miss Reg
glo advertises her new vocation,
and this is the little verse that has
et soclety’s tongues Lo wagging:
“Dollies 1 dress for you, large and
small-—
Or send me your dolly, I don't care
at all—
Send the matertals you like for her,
Or I'll choose them for her, if you
prefer.
Send me her old elothes to make
ke new.
I'll wash them and mend them and
add to them, too.
My specialty: Bables! Small, me
dium or big.
Shirts, didies and nighties; the fair
or dark wig,
Petticoats, dresses and caps so
jolly.
Just write me your wants and the
wants of your dolly!
“THE DOLL FAIRY.”
She is the daughter of A, C.
Regglo. Her grandfather was a
former Itallan consul in Boston,
with wonderful estates and a reti
nue of servants in ITtaly.
When Heinie Beat
Wife Our Doughboys
Get Into the Game
(By International News Service.)
LLOS ANGELES, June 14-—A
handful of doughboys of the Eight
eenth Meld Artillery are undecide
whether it 's very gallant to chas
tise a haughty Heinie for beating
his hausfrau. Still, when Heinle
came home and in deep bass voice
brought down wrath upon one poor,
defenseless but stout German wom
an, and began to let his fists fly, the
doughboys, writes Mechanic Albert
1. Clark, decided something must be
done.
Still, it was a delicate matter,
even in Germany, for a man to be
aisturbed in his domestic happiness,
but it was decided the “ferocious
- mustache.” described as a “bird”
and taught to stand up around his
eyes “after sixteen years training,”
must come off the irate husband.
The doughboys went to the
house, caught the “overbearing
stiff.” whom “nobody liked,” sheared
his facia]l adornment with dull scis
gors “in sixteen seconds” bat what
Ald Mrs. Heinle do while the fright
ened and trembling husband slunk
away?
"You should have seen that wom
an rave,” said Clark., “What did she
care because her Heinie had been
affectionately knocking her down
and kicking her? Somebody had
insulted her Heinie and somebody
sure had to pay. Man, she rolled
up her sleeves and entered the fray
for & woman's rights. Jack Demp
soy could have got pointers on
goeed that would have given Jess
Willard she'l shock. Say, that wom
an's virbal barrage was worse than
her artillery, We fled to the Amer
jcan trench. 1 don't know where the
husband is, but I want to say that
women still holds her trench,”
‘Woman, 85, Comes From
.
} India to Attend Meeling
(By International News Service)
BOSTON, June 14 Although 8§ years
of age, Mra. Lols Lee Parker, widow of
Inm late Bishop Edward W. Parker, of
Indin, came all the way from that country
lalnnv to attend the jubilee of the Wom-
Inn'n Foreign Missionary Soclety of the
Methodist Episcopal Chureh, of which she
| was one of tig founders. Mrs. Parker has
11-N-u in missienary work in India 61 years
| and is the sole survivor of that small
| group of women who started the mission
| ary movement half a century ago.
basis of an alien ancestry and not as
citizens of the republic.
We saw in the West a man of alien
birth that denounced the war win
with alien votes a seat in Congress,
1t is not only to keep wages from
being battered down that organized
labor is asking Congress to shut the
gates, and it is not only on that
ground that intelligent Americans
»ught to listen carefully to its plea.
A bill to shut out immigration for
the next four years will be intro
duced in Congress. Organized labor
s #olidly behind the measure, Organ
ized labor i not now in a position to
be ignored when it stands, solidly be
hind anything.
MEMBERSHIP GROWS,
In the last three years the member
ship of the American Federation of
Labor has increased nearly 6 per
cent. In 1916 it was 2,045,793, Today
it i& about 3,600,000, By January 1
next It is I”mly 10 be close to 4,000, -
000. Here Ais the record for the last
eleven years:
Year. Membership,
1009 .iasoncssrssannsss . 1,483,872
000 . coisurisssirsnnras s hiBERIIE
IPl] Lieiennnesinsacnnees 1781080
3018 i cciivsisnnnsisiemnecNTlßE
1018 Loiiscnnirsnnnssacs i 800,004
I 8 ..o iicciisiinar s D RTE
lOAE L i sinenencrsinanstt il IR INT
1018 . .iiccnnsennnninene ' 018,703
lOIY civicnnnrnnnsinnnsnn B 871404
1018 Loiiviinninnnangees 3726478
BUAD o iicniiiinainnans i REOROND
Twelve years ago President Gom
pers, of the federation, was repeatedly
denied a hearing by scommittees of
Congress, even on subjects most vital
10 labor's welfare.
In the session of 1907 he succeded
by dogged persistance in wresting
three minutes from the hostile com
mittee on lubor, He was at that time
under sentence of imprisonment for
upholding what he deemed \:obo an
inalienable right of free labor and
free. men, i
Today he is president of the inter«
sationa! lubor commission created
by the peace conference, and when In
speaks for the organised labor
America, Congress and the country
"&fi'i“fi?'m of the coming
old
echange.
The Revelations of a Wite ‘
A New Story of Married Life.
By Adele Garrison.
(Continued from Yesterday's
Georgian,)
‘¢ FLL, old girl, what sort
Nx’ of day did you have?
Dicky's echeery volce
came like a fresh breeze through
the stale air of a closed room. 1
had been brooding all the afternoon.
The discourtesy and ingratitude of
the woman across the hall, and my
experience with Harry Underwood
on the omnibus had depressed me.
I had sat pretending to read, but
in reality idly thinking ever since
I had confe back from my unpleas
ant bus ride. 1 had eaten no lunch
eon, for we had breakfasted so late,
and this was the first tume 1 had
seen Dieky since morning.
“A perfectly horrid day, Dicky.
Oh! but I'm glad to see you!”
I clung to him as he kissed me.
He evidently read my need of his
sympathy, for he picked me up and
carried me to our armchair, and sat
down, gathering me cldse to him,
and smoothing my hair,
“Now tell me all about it,”* he
said, “Get it out of your system
and you'll feel better.®
I had to decide swiftly how much
T should tell him of Harry Under
wood's annoying persistence in
seeking my society. I knew Dicky's
unreasonable childish jealousy, I
did not wish to arouse it if I could
possibly handle the gituation my
gelf. I made up my mind to hold
my tongue concerming hig friend’s
ridiculous actions for a. while, at
least.
“Yon were right and 1 was wrong
his morning about those people
across the hall’ 1 began,
“Why! what did they do? Were
they rudeé to you?” Dicky bristled at
the mere idea of rudeness to me.
“T'll tell you all ut it, and you
can judge for you P
So for the secpnd e I retailed
the petty little story of the rude
ness of my neighbor across the hall,
“By Jove!” Dicky ejaculated when
I had finishek "I never heard any
thing to equal that., We saved
her !sahy's life among us, and she
considers it a bore to meet you.
Well! T guess the next nursemaid
who rushes in hére with a dying
infant will be told to beat it to the
nearest hospital.”
I could not help but smile at
Dicky's indignation and his way of
expressing it.
“Tell me all about it, this min
ute!”
“There ocouldn't anything like that
happen again, Mt is tomm an
occurrance to come than
once,"”
“1 should hope so.” Dicky's tone
was still wrathful,
“l.et us forget all abont it. I'm
sure [ never want to think about it
again”
“All right, What did you do when
yvou walked away like a tragedy
queen
“Nearly walked into an automo
bile and had my life saved by a
{:mceman." 1 smiled at the recol
ction, g
“What! You're joking, Madge'!*”
“Indeed, T'm not, but there wasn't
any danger, | think, gven if the po
liceman did scold me”
He listened quietly un#l I had
finished, then took me by the shoul
ders and shook me playfully, vet
the grip of his hands hurt me. But
I did not mind, for both the clasp
of his hands and his scolding words
warmed my heart with the message
of love and concern for me they be
traved.
“Don't ever, ever do such a thing
again,” he said. "“What do . you
think would become of me if any
thing should happen to you? I
don’'t want to think or talk of it.”
He shook his shoulders as if
throwing off the memory of the
occurrange.
- hoy you had a pleasant ride.
It surely should have been a dandy
to make up for the rest of the
morning.”
I smiled grimly to myself at the
hateful memory of the ride. But I
must not let Dicky suspect the
truth.
“The ride was well enough™ 1
sald indifferently. “Mr. Underwood
boarded the bus a few blocks after
I did and rode a number of blocks
with me. He ig rather tiresome,
don't you think so?"
Doll Up
Your Ford
We Make It Look Like a
Million Dollars
At Small Cost
NICKEL PLATING
“THAT STICKS”
Radiator Shells, Hoods,
Lamp Rims, Etc., Etc.
REPLATING=—=
”B R e “
Plating by Cg:ms.pamn Process LASTS.
PLATING WORKS
125 S. Pryor St Main 1147
, Dicky looked at me keenly,
“Not many women say that about
him,” he replied,
“Well, I think him decidedly tire
some,” I returned. “When I ride
on the top of a 'bus, I either want
to be alone or have a really con
genial companion with me.”
“Like me?”" Dianky teased, smiling
at me,
: “Like you,” I answered, returning
his smile,
| “Dinner ready,” Katie's voice
I broke in.
“And here I have not even my
overcoat off. That's what comes
of comforting downhearted wives.”
Dicky hurried into hig room.
The little talk with Dicky had
restored my cheerfulness. We were
both hungry, and *we made a most
| excellent meal, neither of us talk
ing much until the coffee came in.
“T have a dandy scheme for to
morrow.”
Dicky lighted his cigar as he
| spoke and stretched himself luxu
riously.
I “What is 17
“Well, if tomorrow is like today,
I I've just got to get a whiff of coun
- try air, Today was like spring, and
I the minute anytNng ke spring
comes, I'm like a fish out of water
' until I get to the country, There's
| the bulliest piece of country out
~ on Long Island about 25 miles, real
~ brooks and woods and meadows and
thingg like that. And there's an
~ old Inn that dates back a hundred
Years or more, where you can get
~ the bulliest meals you ever ate.”
~ “We'll go to bed early tonight,
and get up tomorrow in time to
~ take the 8:10 train from the Penn
~ #ylvania station, That will get us
out there at 9, and we’ll have a long,
glorious day.”
“Oh! Dicky, won't that be splen
did? 1 don’t know of anything in
the world 1 would rather do. 1 have
* always wanted to live in the coun
try ever since I left it when 1 was
a little girl”
“Well! 1 don’t know about living
in it the year around,” Dieky said
dubiously. *“I imagine it would be
an awful bore in the winter time.
But in the summer time it is the
only thing to do. That's one thing
1 want to go out there for tomor
- row. Perhaps we can pick up some
~ place we would like for the sum
| mer.”
I “Oh! Dicky!” 1 repeated inanely.
I To live a whole long luxuriously
- summer in the real country! It was
too good to be true. [ had had short
tripe to summer resorts, weeks of
vacation spent at farmhouses de
voted to the entertainment of sum
mer guests, but housekeeping in a
real country home-——it seemed like a
glimpse of paradise.
“T know you will en%yy it tomor
row,” Dicky said. “By the way,
amuse yourself with this for a few
moments. I'm out of cigars, I find.
T'll run out and get some.”
“This’ was a box of sugared
almonds, my favorite bonbon. I
settled myself luxuriously in my
chair to wait for Dicky's return
when a sudden disquieting thought
. struck me.
I Tuesday was the day 1 had ar
- ranged the meeting with Mrs.
Emith to discuss my leadership of
I the history section of her club.
I could not go with Dicky after
I all! !
| :
- (Continued in Tomorrow’s Atlanta
; Georgian.)
I . .
Shortage in Pennies Is
.
Caused by Thrifty Boy
(By Internationsl News Service.)
BELLEVUR, lOWA, June 14.—For somae
time the banks at Preston, near here, fac
ed a shortage of pennies, and they had to
secure a supply from other money centers,
No one seemed to know where they all
went.
Finally, the mystery was solved. Henry
Hohlenhoff, the young son of Hans Hoh
lenhoff, of Presgton, brought 5000 to the
bank and deposited them. He had saved
them since January, through the operation
of his father's milk wagons. They weigh
ed an even 353 pounda
——————————————————
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ELECTRIC FIXTURE CO,
136 Peachtree Arcade
Phone M. 4811
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Monday, dozens of pe
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MOTHER HUBBARD'S
NEW CUPBOARD
Makes Kitchen Work a Pleasure
A number of new features are included in this
model shown in illustration. (We have a large
number of other models at different prices. Ask
to see them.) Has tilting removable flour bin, 50-
pound capacity; swinging glass sugar jar, interior
of upper section is white enamel, table top on
roller bearings. A small amount down puts one
into your home. Worth $47.50,
-
Sale Price $39.75
—Cash Mail Orders Filled-—
10-Piece Fimasams Queen Anne Period
PEEEN =—"PN
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EXTRA PI" o | W =
SPECIAL |F 1] I
- UL .
TR \l‘ I TERMS ARRANGED ) ©
This beautiful Dining Roo.: Suite is made in Mahogany and American_ Walnut., We fortunately placed
our order for a big shipment of these suits before the big advance in price. You benefit by our fore
s‘l‘:hl; llarb,t f;o»imh lh}fi'ut. lw:)nutiful' -I;S-lnA (‘lxifi. II“:I-'III'J»"IU'I“' Serving Table, 544 n, 8-ft. Extension
SR L T O eN s I
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ÜB|» | 1 K 4
“Extra Special” 3-Piece Cane Panel Living Room Suites
$376.00 Mahogany 3-Piece Suite, upholsterad in
blue velour, loose cushion, spring seats, four sun
burst pillows, one bolster,
BALE PRIDE ccosvvccivnrivrans $285000
$276.00 Mahogany 3-Piece Suite, upholstered in
mulberry velour; has two sunburst $2lO 00
pillows, one bolster, SALE PRICE .
—We Arrange Terms When Desired—
S B &i) i SO, o Jil, D) 2 3 e e
2oup™ STERCHI FURNITURE & CARPET'CO, faray
7-9-11 EAST MITCHELL ST. ATLANTA, GA.
75c Feather Dusters et
eSt A 2 e e ‘I“;?l::-'sé,\ves.vwr*éfé*‘“\*'
b i@%g?flfg{fi X
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19¢ Monday Special 19¢c e ees hs
No Mall Orders Filled N
. Child’s Nursery '
' Commode Chair
Made of heavy wicker seat, 12 inches wlde,
back 9 inches high. Worth $3.00,
I A BIG SPECIAL, $1.98
—Cash Mai! Orders Filled—
Porch Swing Special
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eseamera=a
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“‘_,M'F, I :';fs
Hammered Brass
Jardinieres
®.inches wide, 7 inches
high.
SALE PRICE
MONDAY .. SIO9B
No Mail Orders Filled
Semi-Collapsible Steel Sulky
Semi-Collapsible in one motion. Rear
wheels fold imto space 11x18x271% inches,
Black enameled.
Special ™ r
E 2 %
S B P .
L A . -
$2.98 .I
—Cash Mail Orders Filled— ’
. . ‘12.98 Gt ’
Semi-collapst- QEME "o 5 Zeaaiy
| Dle. adjustable N A S
back, fabri- CAA g
koid top, rub- s ;e!"’:
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i X A ..-:w.i.._“: a« ‘}%'i
b , 10- & ¥ as o L
flat reed body, b"m’ o~
oak finish. A ST T TR
BIG SPECIAL ' Ny oMg
THIS WEEK. W
$8.98
--Cash Mail Orders Filled—
$275.00 Mahogany 3-Piece Suite, upholstered in old
Square pillows. SALE PRICE.... 9210.00
$135.00 Mahogany, 3-Piece Suite, upholstered in
ERE e el e $105.00
’
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~ Solid Brass
Cuspidors
Full 7-inch size, bot
tom heavily weighted.
SALE PRICE
MONDAY ..... 98¢
No Mail Orders Filled
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WORTH $6.98
Made of solid oak, fumed
finish, 54 inches long:
complete with hooks
(hung on your porchk
Better get yours early.
THIS
WEEK. coinaeq $4.98
Cash Mail Orders Filled.