Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, January 16, 1920, Night Extra Financial, Page 7, Image 7

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WEATHER
Cloudy
WANAMAKERS
WANAMAKER'S
and 4:50
Storc Opens at 9
WANAMAKER'S
Store Closes at 5
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One of the Best Things About This Store Is Its Refreshing Cleanliness
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Now the Winter Day
. . Lengthens and the Cold
Strengthens
Old Boreas as'Jyet is the only active street
sweeper, in this city. Most assuredly, according
to the opinion of many of our excellent doctors,
our sicknesses are multiplied by the clouds of
dust blown into the lungs and homes of men and
women and children. No wonder .that all the
hospitals of the city are overcrowded these days
with patients.
The almost permanent condition of filthy
streets affects the prosperity of the city in many
ways.
By. the use of vacuum cleaners and a large
force of men, eycry morning finds this big
storehouse "as clean as a new pin."
Signed
Jan. 16, 1020.
,W
Sterling eMbet for prtoesi
omg to ousfefeeepmg
Artistically designed period silver that one can live with for
years and find pleasure in using.
There are a great many patterns represented in our carefully
chosen collection; among others, Colonial, Adam, Louis XIV, Louis
XVI, Pompeian, Italian Renaissance and Daniel Marot.
Tea sets, $225 to $1750. Salad bowls, $45 to $145.
Coffee sets, $110 to $390.
Water Ditchers. $92 to $550.
Vegetable dishes, $110 to $500.
Bread trays. $22 to $120.
Gravy boats, and tray, $64 to
$220.
(Jewelry Ntore, Chestnut and Thirteenth)
All the Winter Coats and Hats
and Bonnets for Children
Come Down in Price
THE COATS are of' broad
cloth, of cheviots, velours and a
few chinchillas, in dark colors and
good styles. Some are trimmed
with fur and all arc warmly lined
and interlined. $10 to $75 are the
present prices and they are in 2
to 0 year sizes.
(Third Flour, Chestnut)
THE CAPS, HATS AND
BONNETS are of silk, crepe de
chine, velvet and fur in becoming
styles and shapes and colors. They
start at 65c for the caps and go on
up to $20 for the handsomest hat.
I Girls' Coats,
' Now $3.75 to $55
6 to 17 year sizes ana
coats of silver tones, veiours,
polo cloths, velveteens, mel
tons, serges and broadcloths
in many colors and even more
styles. Of course, they've
been much more !
The Reducing Pencil Has Been Vigorously
Used On the Winter Price Tags of Girls'
Suits, Dresses and Coats
j $1.50 to $55 are the New Prices
Hurrying out all the Winter garments to make room for the new Spring things (many
of which may be quite similar and muclvhigher!) brings prices down like this:
Junior Girls' Suits,
$12.50 to $30
These are in 15 and 17 year
sizes. Velours, tweeds, vel
veteens, silvertones and chev
iots in many styles and pleas
ing colors. These average
half the usual prices.
Girls' Dresses,
$5 to $50
G to 17 year sizes and
dresses of taffeta, crepes, de
chine, Georgette crepe, serge,
gabardine, jersey cloth and
velveteen street and after
noon dresses in attractive
models for girls and juniors.
(Second Floor,' Chestnut)
Women Who Find
Cream-Colored
I Neckwear Becoming
-and there are many of them 'will
be glad to know that we have just
received some delightful new col
lars and sets of this kind in fine
latiste.
Thev arp both daintv and un
usually pretty, being trimmed with
fine imitation Venise and Valen
ciennes laces and some of the long
traight collars have puffings of
the batiste.
The collars are SI to $3.50 and
tie sets $1.50 to $5.50.
(Main Floor, Central)
More Georgette
Waists
Thcie seems to be no limit to
tiiir nonularity, and especially
lifhen, like these, they are in white
and flesh.
A stvle with a charming little
Deck frill, finished with double
hemstitching, is $10.75.
Another, hand embroidered is
w-
A hieh-necked sort with small
tucks and hand embroidery is also
(15.
And one with real filet and hand
embroidery, ? shallow neck and
tat collar, is $22.50.
(Third Floor, C'hentiiut)
WUE bitter winds of
Winter cause women
Kith delicate skins to appre
ciate more than ever the ad-
vantages of a facial treat
ment in the Salon de Beaute.
Scalp treatments and sham
poos also are given. Incident-
, it will be found most
lalkfactory to make appoint
tents beforehand.
(Third Floor, Chestnut)
Women's House
Dresses
' commonly neat and attractive
V' oi percale, gingham and
Wimbray m checks, stripes and
to colors. Lots of them have
fc'ces are $2.85 to $6.50.
(Third Floor, Central)
Chiffon Rrnnri ninth
I Skirts Step Down
n to 12.75
ierv.qu?!i.ty ot broadcloth is
tther t 'J1 and tho tailoring
Vfll? ths and the 8tvlcs re
tf nnest that could be desired.
Uttu, Y women are asking for
GtX.these clors to wear with
"gette crepe blouses under fur
BrVrl;Vy b,lue beaver brown,
iZ,!unte,y .the-c are not all
Styles? WlSh !" a"y f
This Fur Coat Sale Comes at a
Time When the Fur Coats
Are Most Wanted
What .with cold weather here now and plenty more to come,
according to reports, this is certainly a timely sale of fur coats.
All the coats in our Fur Salons are now reduced a quarter below
their original price&, for there are some remarkable opportunities
for the woman who wishes a handsome coat and yet does not mind
saving dollars at the same time. .
Natural gray squirrel coats begin at $202.50 and go up to $575.
Moleskin coats arc $450 to the finest wrap at $627.50.
Nutria coats aie $262.50 up to a stunning wrap of generous
proportions, beautifully lined, at $450. Same nutria coats with
squirrel or Australian oposbum trimmings are $468.75 to $525.
Other novelty fur coats include the popular marmot, natural
racoon, muskrat, pony or leopard, and they start at $123.75 for
marmot and go on up to $487.50.
Small Furs Are Likewise Reduced
and these include every fashionable fur from squirrel to sable
$26.50 to $500. And there are neckpieces and muffs, too.
(Second Floor, Chestnut)
!
I
New in the Sale of White
About three hundred cotton bloomers, cambric, nainsook and batiste,
in white and pink the pink ones being almost all of the batiste. Prices
are $1 to $2.25.
Still plenty of the other and more flsual garments expected in White
Sales are on the tables nightgowns, petticoats, chemises, camisoles and
drawers priced at $1 to $5.
(Third Floor, Central)
200 Wash Dresses,
$1.50 to $35
6 to 14 years and these in
clude a few fine hand-made
dresses. There are frocks of
voile, linen and novelty cot
tons in white and colors and
scores of pretty styles. These
are very small prices, indeed.
A Woman's Tweed
Coat Belongs to
All Seasons
In the Winter she wears it as
it is or on extremely cold days she
slins it over her sports suit.
In Spring and Fall it is just
right, and in Summer she uses it
for traveling, rainy days or sports
wear. Many women feel that a '
tweed coat is the most useful coat
made.
Tweed coats of both domestic and
imported all-wool materials are
here in soft gray, brown, green
or heather mixtures, and some have
Scotch-looking overplaids. They
are conservatively cut to stay in.
fashion a long time and the prices
.are $35 to $75.
(First Floor, Central)
England Sends Some
Lovely Shadow
Hemstitched Voiles
The daintiest Summer cotton
fabrics you can imagine! They
have drawnwork squares and there
are three designs.
As for the colors, they are just
as pretty as tho voiles themselves
flesh, pink, butter, heliotrope,
coral, pale gray, primrose, Copen
hagen, light blue and navy.
The width is 39 inches and thd
price $1.75.
(Flml Floor, Chestnut)
More Balloon Cloth
Umbrellas at $3
The balloon cloth is a strong cot
ton of extraordinarily close weave
a tested cotton. The covers are
made over 7-rib paragon frames,
with mission handles. The women's
have loops and the men's are hook
shaped.
Price $3.
(Main Floor.-Marhet)
Where $12 Still Will Buy
the Finer Shoes for Women
Five years ago $12 was a high price for a pair of women's shoes.
Today it is, if not exactly a low price, n modest pricp. No woman
who knows anything about footwear expects to get a really fine
pair of shoes for $12. Not in the regular way, at any rate.
But it happens that Wanamaker's is making a disposal of
beveral thousand pair of women's fine shoes at a flat price of $12
a pair. All of these shoes have been regularly selling for two or
three dollars more and some of them for half again as much. At
$12 they are extraordinary values.
Among them aro six styles of low shoes and fifteen styles of
high shoes, every pair of them fine in fashion and of beautifuV
workmunship. , .,
(Flrt Floor, Market)
Toilet Goods
Specials
Hot water bottles, $1.15.
Rubber cushion hair brushes,
85c and $1.
Cocoa butter cold cieam, 30c
a jar.
Rose and almond cream, 27c
a jar.
Benzoin, glycerine and rose
water, 25c n bottle.
Witch hazel, 35c and C6c a
bottle.
Violet ammonia, 20c and 35c
a bottle.
Lilac and wistaria vegetal,
75c.
Tooth brushes, 20c each, six
for $1.10.
(West Alule)
"-i em tvAVxo Q-AmAA Xf Q.n.-m TTlctrQ
That We Can Sell at $55 Each
These ulsters have just come in
a sort of surprise party.
There are very few of their kind
on 'the market and these are the first
we have seen in a special sale.
Most overcoat sales elsewhere, as
most men know, bring rather skimpy,
knee-length kind of coats. that are no
better than they ought to be.
But these are fine, big, roomy,
Winter ulsters that wrap you up al
together and that can laugh in the face
of any sort of weather.
They are in dark grays and
browns, splendidly tailored, extra gen
erous in all their dimensions, with col
lars that turn way up, and 100 per cent of the best wool that ever came off a
sheep's back.
Outsiae of these 250, we cannot sell you anything as good for less than $10
more, and we doubt if you will find them within $20 of the price elsewhere.
Why Men Buy
Velour Hats Here
So many men have told us that
Wanamaker's has the best velour hats
in town for the money that we are
doubly inclined to think so ourselves,
even though we were convinced before
we bought these to sell for $8, $10,
$13.50 and $15.
(Main Floor, Market)
(Third Floor, 'Market)
Fine Gold-Mounted
Bill Folds for Men
Two-folds of dull and shiny pin
seal, walrus grain seal and cobra grain
seal, with two gold corners, $12.50
tb $16.
Three-folds of shiny pin seal, cobra
grain and English long-grain seal,
with two gold corners, $15 and $16.
(Main Floor, Cheilnut)
Men's Handkerchiefs
of Airplane Linen
Linen that the British meant for
airplanes. It makes very good hand
kerchiefs, for the weave is strong.
Made in plain hemstitched style,
with 14-inch hems.
$8.50 the dozen.
(Weft AIIe)
Boys Breasting an
Arctic Breeze
must have good overcoats.
We have good overcoats in a re
markably broad selection for
this time of year.
When we say good overcoats,
we mean it, overcoats made on
the best lines, made of good
woolen fabrics, made carefully,
not flung together, and finished
in a workmanly way.
In sizes for boys of 3 to 10
years at $15 to $40.
In sizes for boys of 11 to 18
years at $25 to $40.
(Second Floor, .Central)
Let Any Weary Housewife Look
at This Large Display
of white kitchen cabinets and
tables and chairs and she null see
right away how much better and
how much more economical she
can make her own kitchen.
Why keep walking back and
forth from cupboard to table, from
table to flour bin, from flour bin to
spice closet and back to the table
and around about a hundred times
when the modern kitchen cabinet
has all utensils in one place?
We have a carload of them now
both in oak and in white, beauti
fully equipped at $65, $70 and $80
(Fourth Floor, Market)
for oak, and at $74, $77 and 32
for white enamel.
73 white enamel kitchen tables
with porcelain enamel tops, every
table with a drawer, $13.75 and
$15.
100 white enamel kitchen chairs
at $4 and $4.75 each.
Light Cut Glassware
of a Much Better
Kind
Light.cut glassware is one of the j
things in which this China Store
xcels. There are good reasons for
this, the chief one being the fact
hat we have the cuttings done by
master hand in our own work
rooms. The superiority is recognizable
in the beauty of the designs and in
the fineness of execution. These
patterns, by the way, are obtain
able only in the Wanamaker China
Store. They are very much ad
mired, especially the assortment
wHich we are now showing. And
compared with the figures asked
for less attractive and crudely exe
cuted designs, prices marked on
these goods are remarkably mod
crate. Light cut water sets, 7 pieces,
$2.50 to $4.50 a set.
Goblet sets of 7 pieces, $10 to $15
a set.
Ice tea setsjug and 6 tumblers
$5 to $10 a set.
Berry sets of 7 pieces, $3 to $6
a set.
Sherbet sets, $5 and$C a set.
Cracker and cheese dishes, $1.50
to $3.50 each.
Handled sandwich trays, $2.25
and $3.50 each.
Flower vases, 30c to $2.25 each.
Candy jars, 85c to $4.50 each.
Plain blown tumblers, 60c a
dozen.
Colonial tumblers, COc a dozen.
(Fourth Floor, Chratnut)
The Oriental Rug Display Is a Place
of Delight and Opportunity
Practically all the rug weav
ing districts from Pekin to the
Caucasian wilds are represented
in it. The Persian pieces are of
course the finest. Among these
are Mahals of exceptional worth
in carpet sizes, 11.4xS.G feet to
12.7x19.4 feet at $3b7 to $1235.
Soft, delicately colored Ker
manshahs, 9x13 feet to 11.4x16.9
feet at $685 to $1095.
Araks, fine types of Mahals,
8.8x6.8 feet to 13.9x10.11 feet at
yi0 to $124'5.
Then: K an impressive show-
(Seienth I loor, Central)
ing of Chinese rugs in a variety
of carpet sizes and in a fasci
nating choice of colors; while
carpets from India andTurkey-
Asin givr additional ' interest
and diversity to the collection.
All these rugs are priced be
'ov prevailing rates.
Old-Fashioned
Chocolate Creams
60c a Pound
Luscious morsels of creamy
goodness, with a thick coating of
chocolate.
Old-fashioned stick candy and
01 the well-liked flavors, too 50c
a pound.
Fresh strawberry cream wafers,
80c a pound.
(Down Main Store, Chrntnut)
A Customer Said the Other Day
that he could save a ton of coal
out of every five he used since he
got one of these ash sifters but
we thought that was a little too
enthusiastic.
In fact, no careful man is going
to let 20 per cent of his good coal
go rattling through the grate if he
can help it. He may let 10 per
cent or more, but that 10 per cent
or more he can save if he gets one
(rourth Floor, Market)
of our cut-steel, cylindrical, re
volving ash sifters.
Right now, with coal going so
extra fast, is the right time to get
one and to get the best. -
This kind fits on tho top of a bar
rel into which the ashes fall, while
the coal goes out in front into an
other receptacle.
Only $3.50 and it ought to save
us cost every week.
The World Almanac
for 1920 Is Ready
And is crowded full of interest
ing facts including war facts.
Price 35c.
(Mnln Floor, Thirteenth)
A BOUT 2000 linen-finished
paper candle shades are
being cleared away at 10c.
Lota of colors.
(Fourth Floor, Central)
Basket Ball Is in
Full Swing
and we are ready to outfit teams
or individual players on very short
notice.
Basket balls, $G to $15.
Jerseys, $2.50 and $3,
Pants, $175 to $2.25.
Stockings, $1.50.
Suction sole shoes, $5.
Knee and elbow pads, $2.25 to
$3 u pair.
Pull-over sweaters, $9 to $15.
(The nailer-, Juniper)
Piano Buying Never Called
for Greater Care
It has always been advisable to use much circumspection in selecting 'a piano,
but this was never so necessary as it is today.
The possession of a piano has always been regarded as imparting a sort of pres
tige to a home, and from the beginning of the recent era of high wages there has been
a great demand for pianos and player-pianos of every sort.
The result has been a shortage in the supply of the better instruments and a
willingness on thefcpart of some dealers who had not handled inferior pianos before to
sell the&e rather than nothing.
Inferior pianos and player-pianos can be made much more rapidly than the really
fine instruments. The former can be ground out like sausages, marked with one name
or another and rushed into the market. Their makers, and often their sellers, having
no reputations to uphold, are careless whether the instruments give satisfaction or not.
Chickering Knabc Schomacker Haines Bros.
Emerson Marshall and Wendell Lindeman J. C. Campbell
The above are eight of the most celebrated piano names in America. Three of
them are among the first five pianos of the country.
In spite of the scarcity of instruments of this high class, we have an excellent
selection of player and reproducing pianos of all these makes and Wanamaker's ib the
only piano store in Philadelphia where any of them can be bought.
Unless you get a good player or reproducing piano you are wasting your money,
(Unntlun Hall, Hecond Floer)
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