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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JULY 12, 1931—PART TWO. of the.uyfl y ducklings? CIRCULATION OF THE STAR COVERING PAST 10 YEARS 6 Months P. O. Statements. ORCULATION] 1921 1923 19251927 19291931 -IIIIIEE MORE VALUE IN CIRCULATION During the past 10 years the circula- OUlknow:gifls, Maxine has always referred to certain pieces of her householdtfurmshmgs, those; things she particularly disliked for one teasonnor,anotherw’a,s‘her ugly ducklings’ . . . . and here I walk in and find"them allvmissingiand beautiful, stylish new things in their place— explanationstare certainly 1 order”” . .. “My dears, I simply couldn’t standathose old fashioned, worn out, mismatched things any longer. Llvelbeen threateningsto*‘transform’ them for:a long time. Lately I've heard. so:muchitalk-aboutilow. prices on' this, that and the other that I began reading every furniture ad in the paper . . . . ... .. What I leained opened my eyes—why I bought an entire living room suite for less than the price I paid for that old fashioned parlor chair that has for years been my ugliest ‘ugly duckhng’f‘ Have YOU, perhapsyan ugly duckling’ or two in YOUR home == pay a visit to the furniture stores— read the furniture advertising in" this newspaper—learn just how economically you can transform those ugly.ducklings, into furniture in which you can take a pardonable pride. he Star Gopyrighted 1931, by The 100,000 Group of Americen Giies