VEHtyq LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, TTTESDAY FBBRUABY 9, 1916; . iy Sunday's Sermon Today gjlly" Sunday s Dermon i oaay lUECTt "FISHERS OF MEN" ksi.v nral chapter nnd the 16th verse: follow Mo ahd I WIH Make You Fishors jf Mem ,.,!. r. .,i T nlll JeSU did noi Bay iuu,y .. .. - i . . j .!, 1h tnnnv St roil feeders ui mici.ii. .... . iirehW nine-ienmo ui .... - - . .- ,..JIry thn ohocn. FlftV WCCKS jftvia m kw.. .- - - R m year aro spent preacnine 10 latin nurcrl a"" "" "- .- >m one says. The sl"P need to bo Lffit they?' Surely, but the best way .'." . . t.iiv.nnd-nlno la to lornet M(m and S out after the one that Is tThe church that spends all of Its tlmo c ..ifinir ltd doetrlno and membership fi become an cvai.Rollcal church, but fci n cvanBollsllo church. The church P.?1.8." .I..! nvniicellcat Is the church IS lctl.o church that Is ovangellstlc is rVchurcVcouldti't bo evangelistic wlth . .,i .ttnnecllcal. but a church could u mngcllcal without being evangelistic. i,rt who seem to think the preacher's -::,. a,,iv u to orovldo them with predl- 'wiled religious food, which from Sunday 5 Buna&y they may bo ablo to bolt, beliiff ibutlietves relieved of tho process of mas llcilion and digestion. That's .tho reason to many who tako this attltudo toward lis ministry dlo of fatty degeneration of the oul. B'-'mUs did not say, 'Follow Me and I Sin m-.k you feeders of goats,' and yet 'certain men seem under tho delusion that tit one great task of religion is to toko 'Us gout, to feed and cultivate It that ho will ultimately become sheep in tho mas ter's lock. You cannot convert a goat into a sheep by any process of diet or culture. "NO COOKIE ROUTE." ""The thousand and ono makeshifts tho ceo!e now uso in tho placo of atonement 'ire well and good In tholr place, but Tlitlr place Is not hero. You cannot batho uybody into tho Kingdom of God. You ?innot give people- a cracker, a cookie, a elite of soup and cup of colteo and jet them Into tho Kingdom. You can rat.thange their heart by changing their imitation. .' "I. havo no auarrcl with social eervlrc, education or the Institutional methods in which tho modern church engages, pro vided u:h work Is not put In tho place of ; the. real work of tho kingdom, that of saving buuis. "If I havo to yank down my standard H because- you let theso things Interfere KWtU your belief In tho atonement, well itfjlgni ngni mere. .11 jiuvo iu yiuut uuwn Einy methods of preaching to please Soma Sold chap with his collar buttoned In tho bade-of his neck, then I'll stop. I'll go cut nnd sweep tho streets for a living be fore' I'll do that. '"l have never been In sympathy with a if.M. C, A. with a billiard room. I'm for the Y. M. C. A. and think it's ono of tho but Institutions on tho face of tho earth, blit I'm against tho billiard room. I con sider a billiard room or a pool room tho econd cousin of the saloon. I'm for tho rvmnaslums and tho libraries and tho 'swimming pools, but I'm against tho billiard and pool games. "It Is, an entirely good Christian thing to live the down-and-outer a bath, a bed iid'a Job-It Is an entirely Christian thins to establish and maintain schools and universities, but the road into the King dom of God is not by the bathtub, tho university, the gymnaBlum or social serv ice, but by the blood-red road of tho cross f Christ ?! "Someone says htiman naturo Is radical ly, good, that the power to uplift and abil ity to rise to the highest excellence Is In dependent of any external force some thing Inherent within Us. The Bible de clares that human naturo Is radically bad, nnd that the power to uplift Is pure ly external. Man has not tho power to suppress vice except as he develops vlr ttie. That power Is not In any man or Woman or system. It Is not In Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Milton, Uacon, Shakes pearo or Emerson, but by tho blood-red road of Calvary IlEMEDY FOIt WOUIiD'S WOES. "On comes tho statesman. He says the remedy1 for tho world's misery and woo Is to change conditions by wise universal system of government, lie assumes thnt vice flows from ignorance nnd economic conditions; that vlrtuo Is tho offspring of knowledge nnd plenty. It Is In the power of constitution nnd taws to restrain and protect, but not to chniigo man's nature. Tho law can. punish for breaking the law, but the gospel of Jesus Christ steps In and takes out of tho heart that which made you break tho laws, and puts Into tho heart that which makes a man keep the laws. Tho gospel of Jesus Christ Is tho remedy for the world's woes. "All Governments havo failed. Take the frntornal government of Jewish days It failed. Take tho Ilontaii Government It failed. Thwo countries did not fall be cause they had any particular form of Government, but becunso they wero with out tho right kind of religion. Tho Gospel of Jesus Christ Is tho hopo of tho world of today. So you enn understand why I've got to ilglit with you when I see you're taking tho wrong path. Aro wo any hotter than Russia nnd Turkey? SolnctlmcH I think that wo lead tho wholo world, and I am always proud thnt I was born In America. Hut It makes my heart acho when I think tho United States leads the world In crime, dlvdrco and social evils. "Tho scholar says tho remedy for tho world's vice is a universal system of education. Ho assumes that peoplo aro made purer In proportion as they aro made wise. Did the children of Israel wander 40 years In tho wilderness becnuso of Intellectual error? "Knowledge didn't save Solomon, Bacon, Poe or Byron. "Aro pooplo going to hell because they don't know? Aro they becoming drunk ards because they don't know? Aro peo ple libertines because they don't know better? The question we must solve Is not one of Intellect, but of morals. Tho world Is not dying for want of knowl edge, but for want of Christ, f "Tho twentieth century has witnessed two apparently contradictory facts: Tho decline of tho church and the growth of religious hunger in tho masses. Tho world during tho nineteenth and early twentieth centuries passed through a period of questioning and doubts, during which everything in heaven and earth was put Into a crucible and melted down into constituent elements. MOORINGS LOST. "During that period many laymen and preachers lost their moorings. Tho defi nite challenging noto was lost out of tho lifo of the ministry. Tho preacher today Is ofttlmes a human Interrogation point, preaching to empty pows. The hurrying, busy crowd In tho street Is saying to the preacher and the church, 'When you have something definite to say about tho issues of life, heaven, hell and salvation, we will listen; till then we havo no time for you.' "I believe wo are on the ovo of a great national revival. The mission of tho church is to carry tho gospel of Christ to the world." "The whole movement toward mothers' pension, aritl-chlld labor laws and the like have been started by tho Church of Jesus C-irist. For ovory reform started by an agnostic, 939 havo been started by tho church. "It a man won't do God's will ho will bo stripped of his power. Tho Lord Is with thee to save. What do you want, you fools?" fSunday Answers Doctor Hibben Co'-Uaued from I'age One brought it down on tho pulpit with a puiundlng blow. "I want to talk to Ifou on the real purpose of education. feu'Toti can't learn everything In books. puon 1 mane a com storage- plant of your bra!u. If you learn tlie virtues of sttck-Ito-lt-lveness. eaulllbrlum mid a. lot of H,lber-'qualltles that go along with an ed yicatlon you will be doing much. TVO KINDS OF EDUCATION. There aro two kinds of education. Th as you give yourself nnd tho one you receive. When, you leave these halls with tour diploma under your arm don't think ?ou know it all, for as a matter of fact Hw will nnd you are only beginning to rn uie a, u, u-s of life. You wlllflnd ouch of what you have learned will bo of bo more uso to you than a crane's legs Ift tln 1. i""! uy to xnocic tne leathers out f Jim eagle as it Is to hit tho proverbial urn door. It's like tho alligator, which. Igoti know, ncrer ceases to grow while it Kw Is only one way to rise in the ona. Unless you know moro about your KeuMntM than any one else you won't suc- iwiL .J ls BurPrlsing how many people "unK they know more about their own Wjlness than you do yourself. Perhaps Mew ot you hero think you know more toout preaching than your professors.' Wine. Of VOll lAVA llnrH .narT.ona nK.t. thoio who ara trying to show mo how to www. it doesn't bother mo, I assure Tou, when I read such trash In the JWWiDapers. BP water from a duck. No, I make a ywttaj th knocks don't oven touch ma. kStm who couldn't get into the newa- "m pernaps any other way. -"ranee ana stlck-to-t-lveness :-? ff a finger Into your systems and cut ej? " pin tea and ice water. And cut ti 7. wora fall.' L0n t SftV T nan. l .41.1 M (Tllt..M tl, . UP M(U, -UliljT jjfcj'"- v puinu -xou see urn M5?Vft cut out all tho slang from my !l ns in deference to tho demands "DON'T. ENVY TOUGHS," 3C0." h .-I. -.1 ..- .. I. i.-J $& ' an - envy and imitate toughs Bm?-.f Mounl smoking cigarettes, at Kw IS b00Z8 thclr way thr0UBh "' j" , ,"" -, usjr aro ajiniiuvr aim uuu. 4 fflrll. rmAmk.. .1 . .&..-MMA..- IK. :?.tad.ed' fudge-eating, ragtlme-play- wt of humanity who cannot slap a KB On the erlllHIa wllh,i) imnklnr lln i?.',!Iii0if nue, will never get anywhere. I pt Oil th. m.,pu.a...A...j nA aA .i,l, bJakin; tha7 vi r;:rr"" '"" ..! & i ?ay owo yu h6 chanc to earn Ut ty thre are no cros cuts to tho rift. 1 "' u iiivd vw vuua i.u iug mm and narrow path. RT""; mempers or tho Sunday party, Jt.SaJ0Ut tbt Mr- Sunday had not swnaed to SDealt at Princeton and Written a tetter to that effect to yaeittS Who hart lnnnl,l uhtllinF li iSatd consider such an invitation. Atten- rSf ?M a,- called to the fact that, no Ifcii, d been set aBld b? M"- Sunday ft "king an address unless a formal SBltatlOQ Is received from lha reoreaenta- Citl.ftn. nniT nmnara ty n .IV m In- NUon in question. v siuqentt had waited to extend the nU.t a formal Invitation until they vviMoea permission from President 4t alt th. BiiAntai nf ITA VHbju. Jteololcal gWHjinary hve bel hire Mr. StnOay preacA ut the Ub 'iSey caiu from time to time in companlcd by somo of tho University stu dents on several occasions, and, as tho result of tho visit of the collego men, efforts were mndo by somo of them to havo Mr. Sunday arrange to give them a special reservation In tho tabernacle so that most of tho student body could come here for a sorvice. Tho president of Princeton recently vis ited the tabernacle. It is understood that he was far from Impressed. Tho language used by tho revivalist, according to Princeton dispatches, was considered by President Hibben not to bo fit for the erudite cars of Princeton students. At any rate, a flat refusal was made to the students who wished "Billy" Sunday to appear. President Hlbbcn'a refusal to allow Mr. Sunday to speak 011 tho campus has a precedent in a similar action when ex President Roosevelt was denied tho uso of Alexander Hall during the political campaign of the summer of 1912. Mr, Itoosovelt was stumping New Jer sey at tho tlmo. nnd, although ho spoke in"Prlnceton, he was obliged to do so from tho balcony of the Nassau Inn, a hotel off the campus. STIRRING SCENE AS SUNDAY PRAYS FOR LOVED ONES OF HEARERS A stirring scene took placo Jn the tab ernacle when "Billy" Sunday asked whether or not there werd any persons present who desird him to pray for their friends. Hundreds of hands were raised and many persons muttered "Yes" and mentioned tho names of relatives and friends whoso salvation they sought. One man called out far back In the taberna cle,"Pray for my mother In England." The question was asked by Mr. Sunday after he had preached a powerful ser mon on "Fishers of Men" and 115 inen and women had "hit the sawdust trails" and taken seats In the glory rows. Almost all thesp converts asked the evangelist to prajr for their dear ones During his prayer, which he offered in a character istic, personal manner, Sunday asked God to bless Evangeline Booth, head of the Salvation Army in America, who is seri ously ill in Cincinnati. Once during his sermon "Billy" chal lenged his critics Jo come forward and prove that his preaching or his methods of preaching are wrong, "Some people say I'm ham-strung and I've got the asthma and all kinds of dis eases and And fault with everything I do," said the preacher. Then shaking his fist at the audience, ho yelled In a loud voice: , 'What do you want from this platform? BuddhlsmH Do you want to leave Jesus Christ out of It altogether? A Biblical ministry Is the only ministry we must have for salvation. Bring your Bibles and I'll line-up- and stand trial on the laws of that old book. I'm ready to fight the wholft bunch of you if you'll take the Bibles with us." As he said this, the flery little evangelist seemed to be over come with rage and he lumped up and down on the platform, pounded the pulpit with his fist and then stopped suddenly and smiled. , , . . The next sentence he spoke in a plead ing voice like that of a child. It was a direct appeal, a winning appeal and one that went right home to the heart of thehewer. for never had Sundays voice seemed more sincere than at that mo ment when he urged the people 'to count on nothing else, but Jesus hrlst to save their souls. . .,, Onoe during his sermon, while UdWw? of the various religious Institutions. "BUly" attacked the billiard rooms m the Young Men's Christian Associations. "BlUy" detdared his belief that t m on tUftv of a TM J"a,J?; .,i..i ti uu the oreaeher today was often a human Interrogation point, 4 crowd In the street said to tho church: I 'When V-611 hnv .....41.1.- 1,.tl,. In 1 say Rbout the Issues of life, Heaven, hell and salvation, wo will listen tilt then we have no tlmo for you." "Tho thousand and one makeshifts tho people now uso in the place of atone ment," ho declared, "are all well and good In their place, but their place la not hero, lou cannot bathe anybody Into tho Kingdom of God. Tou cannot give peoplo a cracker, a cooklo, a plate of soup and cup of coffee nnd get them Into the King dom. Tou cannot change tholr heart by changing their sanitation," TWENTY-THREE REVIVAL PRAYER MEETINGS TO BE HELD TOMORROW Twenty-three prayer meetings, 13 under the direction of members of the Sunday party, will bo held tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock In churches throughout the city. Tho BChcdulo follows! MftlhAe! saf,v,rB' im amf York . .tfX'!SVr,,1,lJ?,erf1,c'11' 12th " 0.fd bfl'.irnS,l,fh?'iKv:Vf,A '"d Co,um- ,.r,rfi. t?'0I.,Sa 10,h an,i Wallace etrcets: "Jack" Cardiff. ' Boring Garden Methodist Episcopal. SOtli and Spring Garden streets: the Ilov. Doctor Pohl. tnsti. Holy Trinity I'rottstant Episcopal, 20th and Walnut streets: tho Ilov, Doctor Tomklns. St. Luke's Methodist Kplscopal, llroaj and Jackson streets) Mrs. W. A. Sunday, J'resbyterlon Church ot tho t:nnsel, 18th nnd Tnsker strerH, Mrs. Hobert Rtover, Hlloam Methodist Kplscopal, Susquehanna avenue atovo Thcmrmn street; tho Jtev. Doc tor Hen, on. St. Paul's Ilcfonned Knlacnial, Droad and Venant;o streets: Mrs. William Asher. Erie Avenuo Methodist Uplsropal, 7th street and Erie, avenue: tho Itov. Ocorge Holm, Central Methodist Hplscoiml, Iloxborouzh, Ilov. Doctor Behrens. North Frankrord Bsptlat. Harrison street and Frankford avenue; tho nev. P.J. Wright. Trinity Lutheran Church, Cerrosntown ave nue and Queen lane: Miss Grace Eaxo. Logan JioDtlst, Yolk road and rtockland ave nuo; the nv. J. D. Hicks. F.benezer Methodist Episcopal, C2d and Par- rimi sirEPis; air itoopneaer. Kmmanuel Itoformed, .iMh and Itarlng streets: tho Jlev. J. W. Welsh. Tnbernaclo Presbvtertnn. 37th and Chestnut streets; Mies Jean LaMonte. Wayland Baptist, C2d street ahd Baltimore avenue; ths Itov. II. Iladcltfte. Fourth Presbyterian, 47th street and King scsslng avenue: the Itev. G, I). Adams. Second United Brethren, roth and Cath arine streets; Mian Hose Fotterolf. Woodland United Prohyter!an. Ofith street and Woodland avenue; rtonert stover. Funeral of Mrs. M. P. Tustlrt The funeral services ot Mrs. Maria Pro basco Tustln, mother of Ernest L. Tusttn, Recorder of Deeds, will he held tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock at the residence ot her daughter, Mrs. I. Harrison O'llarra, 1723 Cedar avenue. Mrs. Tustln died yesterday following a protracted illness of many months. She was tho widow of tho Itev. Francis Way land Tusttn, Ph. D., ono of tho founders of the University of Lewlsburg, now Bucknell University, where for 33 years ho was professor and vlco president OBITUARIES WILLIAM THOMPSON William Thompson, 73 years old, a former member of the Camden City Board of Assessors, nnd of lato years a con tractor, died yesterday at his home, 40t3 Jackson street, Camden, from a compli cation of diseases. Mr. Thompson, who was born in Norwny, settled In Camden when he was 16 years of age. Ho served in the Civil War, and nt its close en gaged in tho contracting business. Ho was a member of Post 5, G. A. R.; presi dent of the Veteran Charltablo Associa tion; president of the South Camden Building and Loan Association, and a member of Pottowattomle Tribe, Red Men. Ho leaves five daughters. JAMES O, PAEGO NEW TOBK, Feb. 9.-James C. Fargo, a retired president of tho American Ex press Company, died yesterday at his town home here, after an illness of nl most a year. Ho was SS years old. Ho was also president of tho Wcstcott Ex press Company and the National Express Company, .and a director of tho Chicago nnd Northwestern Hallway Company. With him when ho died were his sons, James F. and William C. Fargo, respec tively treasurer and secretary of tho American Express Company. ALBANUS S. GROOME Albanus S. Groomc, for 30 years In tho servlco of Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Ma chine Company, died yesterday at his home, 1829 South futh street, after a brief Illness. Ho was 63 years old, and a mem ber ot the Masons, Odd Fellows and several other organizations. He Is sur vived by his widow and a brother. The funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon, at 2 o'clock, at his lato residence. MHS. AMY P.ANFOBD Mrs. Amy Banford, tho only woman pensioner of the West Jersey nnd Sea shore Railroad Company, died yesterday as a result of a fall from her chair at her home, 228 Stevens street, Camden. While in the service of the railroad as a car cleaner at the Pennsylvania Ter minal, Camden, sho suffered a fracturo of the leg. She leaves a daughter. Death Notices on. Page 13 Unitarian Christianity The last two of the series of Spe cial Unitarian Meetings are set for. tonight and tomorrow at the Glrard Avenue Unitarian Church, 1620 Gl rard avenue. The time is 8 p. in., with an organ recital each evening at 7M5. ....,. The preacher for both evenings will be the Rev. George Croswell Cressey, Ph. t.. D. D., of New Tork, and the subleots are such as deserve a large audience. They are! For Tuesday; "Authority and Truth." For Wednesday: "Our Helpful Conception of God." To secure free literature concern ing Unltarlanlsm call at or address The Unitarian Bookroom 1815 North Logan Square UE8ORT8 BnowN'B-Miixs-iN-THK.ni'rEa, y. j. THG INN tsurUts. For bsalth. pleasure, sad rscrs Hon. Favorlts resort far Under new mansmnt. , I. L. M. 8. HUDDERSi. C1IAHLESTOK. 8. C. CALHOUN MANSION sens (or eicluelre patrons js; criminal Co lonial furnlsblnts! Bauthsrn cpoklns: yacht Ins. solf. tennis. Mr. A Mrs. J. B- Bsrtolstt BT. AWgnSTINBj, JXAj- Thebarcelona ff-.f -as;; Private baths i exclusive. A. K. BLAIB. ATtANTIO CITV, N. J. Untal VnrW'Brtcfc Hot and cold runolnj MOtei lOnvftUr. Nw -jorn Ave. 4 Ben. e HOTEUIUMBERU & OLD POINT COMFORTiyrX Vaster. Casstnut VT 12th U.) Raymond WWttomn .00.. w ato3-kbo5rcook 4 S. "0 C4Ut Ur- JSiw. Mir. rrrs. Ws, V. Store Opens 8:30 A. il. WANAMAKER'S Store Closes 5:30 P. M, What Do Furniture Names Mean to You? Such names as Chipuendale, Sheraton, Heppelwhite, Colonial, Adam, Jacobean for Instance? It is almost saddening to witness what they i Hlg' rT7PWWr: umun to some iurnicure stores ana some camnet makers. No shield-back and tapering legs ever made a Heppelwhite chair, although they are character istic of practically all chairs of the Heppelwhite period. Nor can any adornments of urns, be they ever so elegantly Grecian, impart to a sideboard the true spirit of the Adam style if it lay not in the man who designed the piece to impart it. In a word, classic furniture cannot be made like a pudding from a recipe (sometimes even puddings made after the recipe of a classic cookery book come short of the inspirational character). But a deal of so-called "period" furniture does indeed seem, as it were, made in that way. Now, to produce "period" furniture worthy of the name does not call for genius so much as for good taste and good common sense. Your rule-o'-thumb cabinetmaker who knows the characteristics of a style by' rote, imparts them to a piece of rote and without a true sense of har mony and proportion or of the true relationships of forms and decorative features. And so there is such a lot of furniture that helps to make the names of the old-time masters more or less ridiculous. In choosing period furniture, as in designing and making it, the chief requirements are good taste and good common sense. There is a certain fur niture maker whose Chippendale suits are different from all others in being more faithful to the feeling of the original, especially in their freedom from the conventionalities that take the life out of so many otherwise good reproductions. His Chippendale suits have interior improvements of construction and con venience at which Chippendale would open his eyes in wonder. Another maker imparts something to his Jacobean suits, which it is hard to define but easy to recognize, something true, something which other Jacobean suits do not seem to possess. Still another has mastered the essentials of Colonial, or Georgian, and brought them into a unison at once true and harmonious beyond that of any other furniture bearing the name. We have now been long enough in the furniture business to know where to find these makers. Their goods are here in greater assemblage than ever be fore, and the prices have never been as low. Dining Room Suits in the February Sale February Price $374 for 4 pieces of solid oak, William and Mary design, antique finish; sideboard, serving table, dining table and china closet. February Price $1-18.50 for 10 pieces solid oak, Jaco bean design, antique fin ish ; sideboard, serving table, dining table, china closet and 6 chairs. February Price $252 for 4 pieces mahogany, Queen Anne design ; sideboard, china closet, serving table and dining table. February Price $408 for 10 pieces mahogany, Heppel white design; sideboard, china closet, serving table, dining table and 6 chairs. February Price $410 for 10 pieces mahogany, Shera ton design; sideboard, china closet, serving table, dining table and 6 chairs. February Price $170 for 10 pieces mahogany, Chippen dale design; sideboard, china closet, serving table, dining table and 6 chairs. February Price $275 for 4 pieces of mahogany, Sher aton design; sideboard, china closet, serving table and dining table (fifth and Sixth Floors) February Price $200 for 4 pieces of mahogany, Sher aton design ; sideboard, china closet, serving table, dining table. February Price $299 for 4 pieces of mahogany, Co lonial design; fine detailed carving; sideboard, china closet, serving table, dining table. February Price $215 for 4 pieces of mahogany, Co lonial design; sideboard, china closet, serving table, dining table. February Price $361 for 10 pieces of mahogany, Hep pelwhite design; side board, china closet, serv-i ing table, dining table and 6 chairs. February Price $575 for 11 pieces of mahogany, Hep pelwhite design; side board, china closet, serv ing table, dining table and 7 chairs. February Price $315 for 10 pieces of mahogany, Hep pelwhite design; side board, china closet, serv ing table, dining table and 6 chairs. February Price $180 for 4 pieces of mahogany, Co lonial design; sideboard, china closet, serving table and dining table. ; rvlte' fnTWislH(lBliiIiYmraHSi!T isiHi lwpMsWllficMMi -i MHBHrWfWf fflWilWsWIIHMKW iswITmBRmnV ifMuMn mBSHwBsW: sVsKnvsliiifl Bl m i! 1 MTOwftvff BaulBllBisMHBMEjW? tdflMllllHini ollllllS BSKlnriUln i11h 1 II u iIIJaViiTihU IMHBasSIHflHflBsBlBlBM -"v 'i- rHSHBU BllllllH BVlllIUMMtt I UU JltiAlUWUllSJllllVvHBHilSPaSHv., -i5''7 The Shop Exquisite Has Moved to the Third Floor, Chestnut, and is now ready for visi- tors who like rare and curious things. Also it will take orders for fancy costumes. (Third Floor, Chestnut) On the West Aisle The following merchandise, mostly imported, from the Shop Exquisite, is to be cleared out at very, very little prices; Harriets for valentines. Painted atoois and inlaid boxes. " Knitting bags and pin-cush ions. Hatpins and veils. Puff bags and sponge bags. Collars and neck fixings. Shoe buckles and bead neck laces. - , (Went Al!e) 7000 Men's New Pajamas in a Sudden Sale at About Half Usual Prices Not bargain pajamas, but the good kind made for our regular trade year in and year out, and from a maker who lifts supplied us with thousands and tens of thousands. It is his Winter clearaway lot. 85c a suit for men's pajamas of domet (flannellet or brush cotton) ; pajamas in various striped effects ; all neatly made, with silk frogs and pockets. 85c a suit for pajamas of cool, wholesome pongee cloth (cotton) in natural pongee shade, white, light blue and ot)her plain colors; with silk frogs and pockets. $1.15 a suit for good madras pajamas in corded and jacquard effects ; silk frogs and pockets. $1.15 a suit for crepe cloth pajamas; not only very soft and comfortable but very handsome; silk frogs and pockets. $1.15 for twilled mercerized pajamas; silk frogs and pockets. An unusual opportunity such as shrewd men keep a lookout for. (Mnlu Floor, Market) In Came 1000 Oriental Rugs When Such Rugs Were Never So Scarce This applies especially to smaller-sized pieces, the prices of which have simply done some leaping within the last few months. The new bales are a purchase for which we arranged at the first likelihood of a scarcity. Here they are on the floors priced on the old unrisen basis. Anatolian Mats, $5.75, 7.50 and $9.75 up to Iran3, Kurdistans and Hamadans (4x7), at $30 to $45. Also Beluchistans, 2x5, $15; 3x5.6, $19.50; 8x7, $25. Mossouls and Guendjes, 3x6, $15.75. Mossouls and Hamadans, 3.6x7, $19.75. Cabestans and Shlrvans, 3x5, $17.50. - Hall Strips, 3.6x12 to 15 ft., $25 to $45. Kermanshah, Serapi, Mahal and Savalon rugs (carpet sizes) are part of the new purchase, and are now marked at specially low prices, and in addition our entire regular stocks of Oriental rugs afford splendid choosing at the old Unrisen rates. (Fifth Floor, Market) 5000 Yards New Spring Silk at $1 a Yard Eroche tussah crepe double width and the same beau tiful quality that you ordinarily find at three times this price for $1 a yard. Practically all the wanted street colors, including sand. (West Aisle and First Floor, Chestuut) About 150 Men Can Still Get Overcoats for $6.75 Your pick from the whole remaining stock in the Men's Clothing Store on the Subway Floor. Mostly wide-skirted fancy overcoats. Cut in the latest styles. Also a few heavy durable mackinaw coats for $5 each. (Bubtr&r XMooiyMark-et) JOHN WANAMAKER inii!rtrfrr"-i"'YJ- utu.eic About s. fy ww - pwacljJes; to wspty new. wbl - 6US
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers