Evening Star Newspaper, November 3, 1930, Page 16

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[ A—16 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1930. { Good furniture costs less today . | than during any period in modern times Mayer & Co. Off;rs Discéunts Now on even 1930’s adjusted prices NE year ago, the market for furniture broke as badly as the market for stocks. Furniture manufacturers took an awful licking as the prices of furniture dropped. The retail furniture store with money in the bank was able to buy like they had never bought before. Mayer & Co. took advantage of conditions as they were and bought liberally of the known, dependable qualities. Mayer & Co.’s dollars went farther than they ever went before and values came teeming in. Prices throughout our store were cut to correspond to the new low price level. Now . . . with hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of Lifetime Furniture priced so advantageousty . . . you can furnish, in good taste, for far less than you could a couple of years ago. IFETIME] |ruQNITI RE Buy Now Before Prices Advance Such low prices can’t last long. Already some of our furniture prices are below even today’s cost of production—not 1929's or 1928's, but today’s! The time to buy good furniture is now...before prices advance. ~This is straight talk on furniture and furniture prices and we repeat that now is the time to buy! , TO MO R R 0 W THESE LOW PRICES Don’t Confuse Low Prices 70 YOU It’s easy for stores and manufacturers to talk low price and skimp on the quality. It's easy to “go shoddy.” We won’t! Since its inception, Mayer & Co. has had a standard of quality and we still do. Furniture prices now are far too low . . . but Co me Ea r l y Pl ease Mayer & Co. continues to maintain its standards of Lifetime Quality—andurgesyouto purchase now, before prices startupward. SO O MAYER & CO. Seventh Street Between D'& E X 4

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