Evening Star Newspaper, July 12, 1931, Page 23

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

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

Other pages from this issue: