Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 30, 1914, Sports Extra, Page 7, Image 7

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EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 191.
PEACE PARLEY BEGUN;
CARRANZA READY TO
FIGHT IF NECESSARY
First Chief Sends Word He,
Will Retire if -Convention
in Capital Accepts Resig
nation, But Not Otherwise.
MEXICO CITT, Sept. 30.-Tho first
session of tho pence parley between rep
resentatives of First Chief Vcnustlano
Carrahza and General Francisco Villa
Is under way In Zacatccas, according to
a telegram from that city. General Car
rnnza's representatives aro General Obre
gon, General Cosa, General Trovlno, Ed
tiardo Hay nnd Santos Coy, while the
delegates representing tho leader of tho
Division of the North arc Eimenlo
Benavides, Ysabel nobles and Colonel
Ccnlceros.
It Is the object of tho first chief's dele
gates to maintain tho status quo until
the rent peace convention Is held In this
city next month.
Wllili FIGHT IF HE MUST.
Carranza, according to hl friends, still
'maintains tho attltudo that hs should
remain at the head of tho government
until 'Jila successor can bo chosen by the
people or by tho convention of Governors
nnd Generals that will convene here pos
sibly in October.
General Currnnza's attitude was ex
plained In a message which was placed
boforo General Villa's generals In Zaca
tecas today. In part It Bays:
"If the chiefs accept my resignation
when It Is tendered to them at the con
Tcntlon In the capital, I will gladly re
tire to private life with tho conscious
ness of duty well done. But If my resig
nation. Is not accepted I will fight tho
present reaction with the same energy
nd firmness that I fought tho usurpa
tion of Huerta."
. WANTS PEOPLE TO SPEAK.
In speaking of tho approaching con
ference General Carranza said:
"Wo want It to bo truly representative
of the people, so that It might be said
afterward that tho result of the conven
tion Is truly the voice of the people In
Mexico. If, when the convention Is as
sembled. It Is found that nil the chiefs
summoned have not come, wo will Imme
diately summon proxies, so that all sec
tions will have representation."
Ono thing Is certain: Carranza will
not stand by and sec Villa swept Into
power If ho can prevent It. The First
Chief believes that If he should roslgn
Villa should relinquish the leadership of
the division of the north.
There Is no news coming to the War
Department of operations north of the
capital and It Is believed that an armis
tice practically exists pendiu the result
of the parleys In Zacatccas.
Government ofllclals seized today at
the Bucnn Vista Railway station, 4S0
bars of silver bullion valued at 2,000,000
pesos, Two mining companies have put
In a claim for the property. It Is assert
ed that It was being shipped out of tho
country secretly by members of the Clen
tlflco party.
BRITISH CRUISERS GUARD
STRAITS OF MAGELLAN
Three Warships Move to Harass En
emy's Shipping.
PUNTA ARENAS, Chill, Sept. S0.-A
close watch Is being maintained hero for
German and Austrian ships passing
through the straits of Magellan by tho
British cruisers Goodhope, Monmouth
and Glasgow, which arrived hero yester
day, under command of Christopher
Craddock. Tho ships loft" Montevideo be
tween September 9 nnd U ostensibly for
this port.
Alt vessels going through tho straits
from the Atlantic to the Pacific slop
here. Tho arrival of the three cruisers
would Indicate- that the British Ad
miralty has decided to send them to tho
Pacific In search of the enemy's ship
ping. SENATE COMMITTEE
CONSIDERS CHANGES
IN HOUSE WAR TAX
Reduction in Levy on Bank
Capital and Revision of
Gasoline Clause Among
Proposals.
CARRIAGE BUILDERS DECLARE
FOR MERCHANT MARINE
Cheer Demand for Congressional Ac
tion Trade Misrepresentation
Condemned.
ATLANTIC CITY. Sept. SO. Cheers
followed the declaration of J. D. Dorl, of
Flint, Mich., In tho convention of tho
Carriage Builders' Nntlonal Association
today that overy representative Industry
In tho country should insist upon Immedi
ate congressional action for tho creation
of a merchant marine.
"Purchase of ships may create a few
millionaires or oven multi-millionaires,"
tho tMlchlgan man exclaimed, "but wo
should not let that narrow point of
view hold up the great destiny of this
country. Wo want action now when
action 13 needed."
"I do not believe the manufacturers of
this country, oven wlillo many plants
nro already working night and day to
fill lush orders from across the sea, have
even begun to icullio how immeasur
ably this war abroad is going to help
tho United States." said AV. C. Adams,
. Cleveland manufacturer. "Some people
nro still bo busy talking depression that
they nic going to be caught napping in
a whirl of pioapcrlty unless they wake
up."
I.ouls H. Itogge. a Dayton vehicle
builder, severely criticises uonnfllllated
manufactuicis whose misrepresentation,
he asserted, had given the tiade such a
bad reputation that the Saturday Evening
Post refused to sell advertising space to
several films.
WOMAN PREDICTS JEWISH
REBELLION IN RUSSIA
Titanic Survivor Declares Poland
Skeptical of Czar's Promises.
NEW VOniv, Sept. CO.-Mrs. Martha
Flnkonthal, a survivor of the Titanic
disaster, was a passenger aboard the
Scandinavian liner United States, which
arrived today,
"While I was In Warsaw," said she,
-i saw hi traimoads of dead and wound-
d Kusilans brought In from ono of the
it battles, The Jews In Poland ara
leptlcal over tlto Czar's promise, of au
noray, but If It does not come Russia
.111 have a civil war on her hands"
There were 3S3 passengers on tho
United States, most ot them refugees.
WILL QUIZU. S. OFFICIAL
Is to Be Asked Concerning White
Slave Conspiracy Charges.
CHICAGO, Sept. JO.-Charles F. De
Woody, former chief of the Federal In
vestigatlon bureau here, and one of the
Federal ofllclals mentioned In tho Inves
tigation in the prosecution of William
itufus Edwards. St. Paul lumberman, on
white slavery charges, was to appear be
fore Federal Judge l.andls today in the
Inquiry Into allegations that Edwards
was the victim of a conspiracy. United
8tates District Attorney Clyde said he
had received word that DeWoody would
return to Chicago to be quizzed today.
Miss Ada M. Cox, the stenographer
who accused Edwards of transporting
her to Mimuapolls for immoral purposes,
may be recalled to the stand today. Her
testimony yesterday was a complete de
nial of stories by previous witnesses that
he told them she paid large sums of
money to Federal ofllclals here.
Half tho t7.000 awarded her by a Jury
In her breach of promise suit against Ed
wards went to Attorney Drill, of St.
Paul, her counsel, she said.
j She exhibited securities worth tCOOQ and
evidences of other Investments that ac-
counted for her share of the J17.000, tend-
I Jng to disprove the story that she paid
lrge sums of money to persons Inter-
tctl In the prosecution. Attorney Drill
was under subpoena to appear today.
JAMES GLENNON
James aiennon. an rinploje of the
Bureau of Highways, was found dead In
bed jesterday morning at his home, 211
. Tioga street. Glennon was apparently
lark of heart disease was the cause of
death.
WASHINGTON, Sept. SO. The Senate
Finance Committee, whon It met today,
had before It proposals for several im
portant amendments to tho administra
tion emergency revenue bill, recently
passed by the House.
It has been proposed to reduce the tax
of 2 a thousand on bank capital and
surplus to Jl. Some members believe It
would be unwise to place a heavy bur
den on bank ccpltal at this time becauso
of disturbed financial conditions due to
the European war.
Advocates of this change would revise
the gasoline clause and place a tax on
automobiles based on horsepower instead
of tho levy of two cents a gallon on gas
oline. They say this would make up tho
loss of revenue due to the cut In the
bankers' tax,
Tho levy on accident Insurance Imposed
by the House also may be eliminated and
the commltteo Is considering readjusting
tho proposed tax on insurance policies.
Subcommittees of the Finance Commit
tee were appointed to consider the various
sections. They are : Tax on Gasoline,
Senators Williams. Shlvcly and Gore;
Banks and Brokers, Senators Stone,
Hughes and Williams; Stamp Tax, Sena
tors Hoke Smith, Shlvcly and James; on
a proposal to add two more classes of
cigarettes to those already taxed In the
bill, Senators Simmons, Williams and
Johnson. Senator Simmons, chairman of
tho full committee, Is an ex-offlclo member
of nil the subcommittees.
All the appointees to the subcommittees
are Democrats, as It Is planned to frame
the Mil with only the Democrats present
and then to call In the Republican mem
bers before the bill Js reported to the
Senate.
Senator Pomerene, of Ohio. Is fighting
tho tax on sweet wines provided In the
House bill on the ground that it will
give an advantage to. the California
products over tho Ohio producers. The
discrimination. It Is declared, comes In
the language "containing more than 3
per cent, of saccharine matter."
The tax on such sweet wines Is 20 cents
a gallon, while the tax on other domestic
wines Is only 12 cents a gallon. The
Ohio producers say they use sugar In
manufacturing their wines, while the
California producers rely upon fortifica
tion with wine spirits which they are
able to obtain free of taxation.
VIENNA VOTES FUND TO BAR
DREAD CHOLERA EPIDEMIC
Outbreak of Disease in Army Causes
Fear in Capital.
PAIUS, Sept. 30.
The Municipal Council of Vienna has
voted 1. 000,000 crowns for war purposes.
Two bundled thousand dollars will be
used for the construction of isolation
hospitals near that city In anticipation
of an epidemic of Asiatic cholera.
This Information was forwarded by a
correspondent at Milan of the Paris Midi,
which says that the cholera has been
reported In various detachments of the
army. Whether any cases havo yet been
discovered In Vienna Is not disclosed.
"THE MAN IN CHAINS,"
NEW NAME OF JOURNAL
Clemenceau, Evading Decree, Ironi
cally Changes "Freeman" Title.
TOULOUSE, France, Sept. 30.
In order to evade the decree of the
Government suspending the publication
of his newspaper for eight days, ex
Premler Georges Clemenceau today
changed the name from I.'IIomme Libre
to L'Homme Enchalne (The Man In
Jhains).
The article that the Government ob
jected to was an appeal for preferential
treatment of German Alsatian prisoners.
POST FOR NEW JERSEY MAN
Clarance D. Baxter Named Collector
of Customs at San Domingo.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 30.-Clarence D.
Baxter, of Paterson, N. J., Is to be the
new Collector of Customs In San Domingo.
His name will be sent to the Senate by
President Wilson probably tomorrow. This
was the nnnouncement made at the
Executive Office today.
Mr. Baxter Is to succeed Walter W.
Vlck, who liashad numerous clashes with
American Minister Sullivan recently. The
friction became so great that It occa
sioned an Investigation by the State De
partment a short time ago, the result of
which was that Mr. Vlck handed in his
resignation. It Is understood that Mr.
Baxter will assume (he olllce Immediately
on his continuation by the Senate.
MINOR TERRORS OF WAR;
ITS COMEDY AND PATHOS
A distinguished prisoner In Hungary Is
a Russian general, Eugene Mastlnoff,
General Mastlnoff still looks quite defiant,
although he has grown a shade more
modest since he was taken prisoner.
When brought Into the prison camp, he
asked, through an Interpreter, for the com
mander. Colonel Alfred von Obnuer com
piled with the request, and, with tha
courtesy characteristic of officers, pre
sented himself to the Russian general.
Tho cnged Russian Hon was tactless
enough to remain seated. Colonel Obaucr
then commanded, In a firm but quiet
tone: "Attentlonl" whereupon the gen
eral found It advisable to show, by rising
stiffly to his height, that ho took the les
son In military discipline.
A correspondent of a. Vienna paper
thus describes n war-prison sceno In
Hungary, between Estergom (Gran) and
Kenyermezo:
"Tou tlnd there next to Frenchmen,
with their well-cared-for complexions,
Russian officers, with effeminate features
and red-faced, weather-beaten Servian
officers. Beside llaxen-hnlrcd Cossacks
there aro four fellows with coal black
heads negroes from the .coal mines of
Cardiff, who were solzed on British mer
chant ships. Servian gypsies from Sha
bata completo tho picture. In the centre
of The circle thero Is a grindstone, on
which n Cossack dutifully nnd humbly
sharpens, for one of our Infantry soldiers,
a bayonet, which Is to do service against
tho northern foe. All around nro grouped
Servians nnd Montenegrins, who look on,
with ill-concealed nnger, while their
hoped-for deliverer serves the son of tha
Puszta. Now thero approaches the group
an elegant figure Captain Geony, of the
Royal Yeomanry, whom England's decla
ration of war surprised In Hungary nnd
who now waits In vain for tho British
Consul, who Is to liberate, him. Monsieur
G. Ralnal, tho former trapeze artist of
Ronncher's variety show, now French
lieutenant of tho reserves performs a
trick on a chair with three legs.
An Instance of how anxious Irish sol
diers nro to go to the front was wit
nessed recently at Chelsea Barracks,
where the Irish Guards were quartered.
Late one evening some ono spread tho
rumor that the Irish Guards were to be
transferred to ono of the army depots.
That evening was one of tho wildest
known nt Chelsea Barracks. Then camo
the announcement that the rumor was
true.
Immediately the Irish Guards sot up
tho cry, "Wo want tr go to the front.
Our plnco Is In France. Wo won't go to
any depots." For more than nn hour
the yelling kept up. Then the officer
made speeches telling tho men to be
patient that they soon would be off for
the scene of fighting. Even after these
promises a force of mounted police was
established about tho barracks to insure
peace nnd quiet.
Corporal J. Bailey In a letter home ex
presses lively contempt for German
marksmanship, as follows:
"On the firing line tho Germans seem
to have more ammunition than Is good
for them, and they keep firing away at
least ten rounds for every one of ours
without doing half the damage, or any
thing ltko It.
Tho Dally Mall prints the following.
"How he once had a fight with the
Kaiser In the old English stylo and beat
him Is related by Alfred R. Price, hotel
proprietor, Ufracombe, North Devon. The
fight took placo In August, 1S78. The
Knlsgr, then 19, was on holiday with his
SERVIANS IN DASH
ACROSS SAVE RIVER
REOCCUPY SEMLIN
Completely Surprise Aus
trians in Successful Effort to
Stop Shelling of Belgrade.
Success in Bosnia.
POLICEMAN LOSES PAY
No Money for Member of Wilmington
Force.
WILMINGTON. Pel.. Sept. 30.-rtrol-man
Wlllard S. Sharpies, who shot
George Hunter, Jr.. a Negro, after the
latter had beaten him, with the result that
Hunter died later in tho Delaware Hos
pital, will not receive his pay as a police
man for the time that he was suspended
The Grand Jury Ignored a charge of roan
slaughter against Sharpless and the po
lice commission suspended him pending a
disposition of the case.
8barpless asked for his money, but the
commission decided thtt he should not
have It.
NISH, Sept. 30.
It Is ofilclatly announced that the Ser
vians have reoccupled Semlln, on tho
north sldo of Save River, In Slavonla,
from which they wero driven a fortnight
ago by an overwhelming Austrian army.
Tho armies of the Crown Prince are
declared to have taken the Austrian
fortifications in a series of desperate
bayonet charges In which many Aus
trlans were killed and wounded.
Tho attack was a complete surprise to
the Austrlans, and they were compelled
to abandon great quantities of stores In
their flight.
The War Ofilce says that tho Servians
are now pursuing the defeated Austrlans.
and that the siege of Belgrade will soon
bo raised.
There is a lull In the fighting in Sorvln.
but the Invasion of Bosnia (Austria), is
progressing rapidly, says nn official an
nouncement. After occupying the heights
of Remaula. the Servians and their Mon
tenegrin allies occupied San I'lek, a sub
urb of Sarajevo, where they captured a
train of slxtetn cars. Six of these were
tilled with ammunition and tho others
contained field commissary outfits, mo
tors and guns.
CETTINJE. Sept. 30.
It Is officially announced that Monte
negrin troops have captured the fortifi
cations erected by the Austrlans about
Gorazda (southeast of Sarajevo on th'j
Drlna River), and are pursuing the Aus
trlans, who are fleeing In disorder.
It Is officially announced that a Servo
Montenegrin army occupied Pratza,
Bosnia, on Monday, nnd that the Aus
trlans there fled In disorder to Sarajevo,
where they will be unable to offer a
prolonged resistance.
FIRE ROUTS STUDENTS
250 Girls and Their Teachers Flee
From Normal School.
MERIDIAN, Miss., Sept. 30. Two hun
dred and fifty girl students and teachers
fled In their night clothes when fire de
stroyed the main dormitory of the Ala.
bama Normal College at Livingston,
Ala., early today.
Will Promote Trade With Greece
NEW YORK. Sept. S0.-.n office was
opened hero today by Consul General
Vassardakls. special representative of the
Greek Government, for the purpose of
furthering a movement to piomote direct
trading with that country In products
made In the United States.
Border Guard Re-established
LAREDO, Tex . Sept. SO.-The Ninth
Infantry Regiment today re-established
Us guard at the International bridge
following out orders from the War De
partment. The object of the guard Is
to prevent any filibustering parties from
ciostlng Into Mexico A cavalry patrol
also Is doing duty, covering a distance
of 50 miles In ea-h direction along th'j
rher tvrt IV u ri ,ity
tutor nnd others at Ufracombe. Mr.
Price was then 15.
" I was well paid to keep It out of tho
papers,' raid Mr. Price yesterday.
"The Prince had had his morning bath
In the sea, and while waiting for the re
turn of his tutor nnd the others, who
had gone for a stroll along tho shore, he
began to amuse htmsolf W throwing
stones at the bathing machines. These
belonged to young Price's father and the
boy told the Prince to stop damaging his
father's property. . .
" 'Do you know who I am?" demanded
the Prince. , .. ,
" 'I don't care who you are,' replied
young Price. . , , ,. . ..
"Tho Prince promptly knocked the boy
down with n blow on tho nose, aimed with
his left. The Devonshire lad got up and
fought furiously for 20 minuter) until
tho Oerman party arrived nnd separated
them. Both were marked, but the Prince
had the worst of the fight."
A correspondent of the Ttelch writes
thnt after tho capture of Tilsit the Rus
sians occupied nn estate of tho Kaiser
which comprises a model farm and nn
enormous garden, such as the Russian
soldiers had never before seen. Tho
exhaustcd Boldlcrs lay on the carpots and
slept soundly.
The following morning the men laughed
heartily nt the Idea of sleeping on the
Kaiser's carpets with their boots on.
Thev remarked:
"Thank you, William: we slept well.
Nevertheless we shall fight you."
The strictness of the censorship may
. ,. ........ t r.. nn nrilrtn fr.im n. rnrrfl-
spondent of the Echo dc Paris, which
begins: , , ,
"There li no dnngor of my being in
discreet. I know no more than any
body, nut I bcllcvo that without saying
too much I can say "
Then followed six lines or oianKnesa.
Tho censor evidently was of opposite
opinion to that ot tho writer.
The entire slock of pedigreed cattle from
Kalsor Wllhclm's great sporting ostnte
ot Romlnton, East Prussia, one of the
grent breeding establishments on the Con
tinent, hns been confiscated by tho Rus
sians, nccordlng to a Petrograd ofilclal
report. The prize stock has already ar
rived at Smolensk, nnd will be distributed
by the Russian Agricultural Institute to
the various breeders In Russia.
"There doesn't appear to be a man
among them who could score a 'bull's
eye' once In a hundred shots, and as for
making a good show nt Blslcy, they Blm
ply couldn't do It anyhow. German pris
oners admit that they are bad shots, and
they are amazed at the way we pepper
them when they arc advancing.
"It's very Jolly In camp In spite of all
the drawbacks of active service, nnd wo
have lively times when the Germans
aren't hanging around to pay their re
spects. "It's a fine sight to see us on tho
march, swinging nlong the roads as hap
py as schoolboys nnd singing all tho
old songs we can think of. The tunes are
sometimes a bit out, but nobody minds
so long as we're happy.
"We're a Jolly sight better fed than
the Germans, and In most ways better
oft than tho men In South Africa. Wo
always have as much bully beef as we
can eat, and potatoes nnd other vegeta
bles with Jam are nearly always served
to us.
"As we pass through the villages the
French come out to cheer us nnd bring
us food and fruit. Cigarettes wo get more
of than we know what to do with. Soma
qf them are rotten, so we save them for
the German prisoners, who will smoke
anything they can lay their hands on.
Flowers we get plenty of, and are hav
ing tho time of our lives."
An old lady of London, anxious to fol
low tho European campaign with the aid
of a war map which she had purchased,
took it back to her stationer, complain
ing that It did not show the battlefield
of Armageddon, about which she had
heard so much.
BROKER'S WILL FILED
Wife Named, But She Was Killed nt
Same Time.
WILMINGTON, Del.. Sept. SO.-The
will of Orvltle G. Gooden, the real cs
tate broker, who with his wife was
killed when a train struck their auto
mobile on September 22, has been filed
for probate.
The will names Eugene R. Gooden, a
brother of Gooden, and Dr. J. D, Cann,
a brother of Mrs. Gooden, sb tho execu
tors, and leaves an estate vnlded at
close to 30,000 to his wife during her
lifetime nnd then to Gooden's relatives.
As Mrs. Gooden died an hour after her
husband, the cstato will go to Gooden's
relatives. Hecauso she "lived for that
length of time, Goodnn's life Insurance,
which amounted to about $12,000, will go
to Mrs. Gooden's relatives.
TWO FEET OF SNOW FALLS
s1200
F.O.B.Dttrtit
f'iWMlr Tearlmt Car
md RisthUr
The Hup has
always merit
ed the buyer's
confidence,
and this car
will adhere to
th e splendid
precedent set
by past models
Tioga Auto Co.
33G N. Broad St.
Hell filmic Spruce 4903
Broad and Tioga Sts.
Ilrll flume Times 2113
Krjitone I'hone I'urk 3JI0 A
Craft Wrecked, HoiiBes Unroofed in
Newfoundland Storm.
CURLING, N. F., Sept. 30.-Mucli dam
age on sen and land was caitted by a gale
whleh sprung up Saturday night nnd
raged for 30 hours along the northern
coast of Newfoundland, according to re
ports received yesterday. Several schoon
ers wero blown nshorc, many Bmallcr craft
wero wrecked nnd houses wore unroofed
nnd blown down.
Tho wind shifted from the southeast
to north, bringing with It a sudden drop
of temperature to tho freezing point.
More than two feet of snow has fallen
on the mountains.
MURDERER OF GIRL
CLERK ADMITS GUILT
AND ASKS SENTENCE
Desires to Waive Trial
When Arraigned Tells
Police He Killed Victim
Because He Was Broke.
AKRON, O., Sept. 30. Harry Roomer,
26, "tomahawk murderer" of pretty Vln
nle Becker, tea storo clerk and mission
worker, 23 years old, today pleaded
guilty when nrralgned In court nnd was
bound over to tho Grand Jury.
The slayer expressed a desire to waive
trial arid accept sentence to the electric
chnlr. This the court refused. An In
sanity plea may save the murderer's life.
Boomer with utter calm, police say,
told how he entered the little Barges
street tea store where Vlnnlo Becker
was the clerk, how he proposed to rob
the store, she recognized him and he
struck her down, then finished the mur
der with a hcayy sleel hatchet how he
sunk tho weapon to tho handle In the
victim's skull nnd fled with $62, the con
tents of the cash register.
"I was broke. I went to the store to
rob It. The girl said. 'How Are you,
Harry?' She slooficd over a barrel to
get some oatmeal. I struck her. She
said, 'Oh, Harry!' Then I killed her."
This confession, pollco say, Is In the
hands of County Prosecutor It, F.
Castle nnd will be presented to the
Summit County Grand Jury which Is
now In session.
Boomer formerly worked In the tea
store, and knew the routine of the
establishment. Hn waited until Fred M.
Becker, the proprietor and brother of the
dead girl, left the place, then entered
and carried out what police say Is one of
the most wanton murders in tho history
of Ohio criminal annals.
Ho confessed how In primitive manner
he fashioned a rude tomahawk of wood
that he found In a lumber yard. Ths
weapon, tho confcsBlon says, was aban
doned when the murderer found a heavy
steel hatchet hanging on tho wall of the
little back room where he attacked his
victim.
A modern cash register proved the key ,
of solution to the murder mystery. Three
persons knew the combination to the
electric apparatus. These wero Boomer,
Miss Becker nnd her brother, the pro
prietor. Suspicion naturally pointed to
Boomer. Ho was found at his homo last
night, and after a brief struggle, In
which he attempted suicide with a newly
purchased revolver, he surrendered and
confessed.
Store Opens 8.30 A. M.
WANAMAKEITS
Store Closes S.SO P. M.
. .
Mfetoumii IB Hii
The Grand Organ Plays Tomorrow at 9, 11 and 5:15
WANAMAKER
AomMinices for Tomorrow :
Large Stocks Keep Selection Good
in fthe Sale of Bigelow Regs
Eveo after a week of the foimsiest rug selliaig Phi!a
delphia has ever known since our sale of Whittall! rug's
last year, sizes are almost as complete as at the starts
This is proof of the niagoitiuide off the purchase.
And in every size designs are in wide and
variety and will be to the end, for every pattern is pleas
ing. Best of all,
Prices Are Exactly a Fouarth Less Thaim
These Fiime Rungs Regolarly Sell For
Bigelow Ardebi! Wilton Rugs Bigelow Balkan Wilton Rugs
22 1-2x36 . . $3 27x36 . . . 52.60
27x54 . . . 4.65 4.6,x7.6 . . . 14.50
36x63 ... 7 6x9 . . 25.75
6x9 ... 27.50 8.3x10.6 . . 33.75
8.3x10.6 . . 40 9x12 . . . 37.50
9x12 ... 45
Bigelow Daghestan Wilton Rugs
27x54 ... $4
36x63 . . . 6.50
4.6x7.6 ... 13
6x9 ... 23,25
8.3x10.6 . . . 33.75
9x12 . . . 37.50
Bigelow Arlington Raags
36x63 . . . $4.50
6x9 ... 16.75
8.3x10.6 . . . 26,25
9x12 ... 28
Bigelow Bagdad Wilton Rugs
36x63 . . . $5.25
8.3x10,6 , 28
9x12' . . , 32
Bigelow Bagdad Brussels Rugs
27x54 , . , $2,45
4.6x7,6 , . . 8.50
6x9 ; 15"
8,3x10,6 t ." ." 22.50
9x12 . ; . 24,50
Bigelow Utopia Asminster Rugs
18x36 . . . $1.30
24x48 ... 2
30x60 . . . 2.75
6x9 ... 14.50
8.3x10.6 . . 22,50
9x12 . . .24
Bigelow Electra Axminster Rugs
18x36 ... 95q
27x60 . . .51,85
36x72 ... 3
8.3x10,6 . . 16,50
9x12 ... 18
Bigelow Middlesex
Body Brussels IRtgp
6x9 ... $12,25
8,3x10.6 . . 19,50
9x12 . , , , 21,75
Bigelow Puritagj Wilton Rugs
8,3x10,6 . , $24,50
9x12 . , . 27,50
The Sale is in the Rug Store, Fourth Floor, Market
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JOHN WANAMAKER
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