litf J.;- -, tt ,.-- nnnh -trJ'"J "t - w-immwii1 .pjbiiB ; 7 ' 'W;-, - a ' .v.'WwjT-sn H EVENING PUfeDlO. IEDGER-!PHlIiADELPHIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 14,' 1918 t .mraniR. ' -. HIBKMF3 ,7 tfr 1 - &'J! PffP z TV- .i. ' Bt. V, $& A WORD TO MEN ABOUT CLOTHES T?OR a sound reason a very sound - reason men today prefer to wear clothes made by an institution they know. For a sound reason they prefer to deal with the clothier who offers them gar mentsnot from a nameless and unidentified source but from a maker of known and established standards. Woolen fabrics are scarce and growing scarcer More than half the cloth com ing from the workTs looms is adulterated with cotton Linen canvas, linings, thread, buttons every needle's stroke in a suit costs increasingly more than a few years ago. A tremendous pressure, this! And the clothesmaker who has no publicly recorded pledges of quality to bind him, may, perhaps, decide it is more profit able to surrender than .to resist Daily and ceaselessly conditions con tinue to change in the textile and clothing world but here in the Kirsch baum shops we know one single code of quality which never changes except to advance No compromise with cotton-tainted fabrics No tampering with the unseen and inner details. No white flag any where along the line Philadelphians! Visit our shops here at Broad and Carpenter Streets, always open to your inspection see for your selves the fascinating processes of good clothesmaking. Visit the stores which sell Kirschbaum Clothes acquaint yourselves first-hand with the merit of our product In Philadelphia at Lit Brothers, Eighth and Market Reid & Fort, 1204 Chestnut Street A-B' Kirschbaum Co '.' .Jtll Philadelphia New York. -4 ..'' iLtH-i . .. T "r V -XJ .1. , - ' .v. .:" , - . .v t . - i-vtS'g .Srt ?- ijy'toM'sv?fer'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers