, vl f! ?i c V W' tifi HWWM, re J " ; t( '' I. 'J If '! ii ",- aj " i '- ri .1- EVENING1 frUBfitO LteDGER-PHIADELPHIA, SATURDAY, JANtTABY 17, 1920 7 z l v r t. W. C. I. Band at 9: nrean at 11, 11:55 and 4:50 u " chime, t noon WANAMAKER'S Store Opens alt 9 WANAMAKER'S Store Closes at 5 WANAMAKER'S WEATHER Show o fam (n 2e Safe of Larries Starts Monday at Wanamaker's 9 This Is Benjamin Franklin's Birthday The drawing shown here will be a new picture of him to many, and without1 doubt must have been made during his lifetime. He was born at Boston, in New England, Jan uary 17, 1706. It will riot be difficult for many of us, familiar with the pictures of George Washington, Thomas Jeiferson, Alex ander Hamilton, Robert Morris and James Madison, to imagine them walking around Independence Square, discussing each clause of the Declaration of Independence with Benjamin Franklin. It is interesting to, read, from Franklin's Betters and Miscellanies, written during the times of the Revolution and of the formation of the Government of the United States, to realize that politics then was about as difficult as it is today. "Poor Richard" signed many of his letters "Veritas," and when he signed his own name it was generally "B. FRANKLIN" Evidently he had, with all his experience and ability, to encounter much bitter opposition while he was laying the foundations, of our country. It may be seen that a very bitter attack was made in 1763, in the shape of a protest against his appointment as agent of the Province of Pennsylvania, in which it was pointed out that he was unfit because "he had just failed of election to the Assembly," and for other reasons, some of them even insinuating his mismanage ment of public funds. In a reply to this he said : "My very zeal in opposing the murderers and supporting tho authority of the government; and even my humanity, with re gard to the innocent Indians under our protection; were mustered among my offences, to btir up against mo those religious bigots, who are of all savages the most brutish. Add to this the numberless false hoods propagated as truths; and the many perjuries procured among the wretched rabble brought to swear themselves entitled to a vote; and yet so poor a superiority obtained at all this expense of honor and con science! Can this be a matter of triumph? Enjoy it then. Your exultation, however, was short. Your artifices did not prevail everywhere; nor your double tickets, and whole boxes of forged votes. A great ma jority of the new chosen assem bly wero of the old members, and remain uncorrupted. They still stood firm for the people, and will obtain justice from the proprietaries. But what does that avail to you, who are in the proprietary interest, and what comfort can it afford you, when, by the assembly's choice of an agent, it appears that the same, to you, obnoxious, man (not withstanding all your venomoua invectives againBt htm) still retains so great a share of the public confidence?" In spite of the bitter protests and attacks so often made against him, Franklin still main tained a calm demeanor with the philosophic content of the man who knows that he is in the right, and when he was leaving for England in 1764 to submit the cause of the Colonies, he wrote: "I am now to take leave (perhaps a last leave) of the country I love, and in which I have spent the greatest part of my life. Eato perpetual I wish every kind of prosperity to my friends, and I forgive my enemies." How familiar some of these old, bitter bickerings sound nowadays in what we are pleased to call our days of greater enlightenment, and how small would all the little partisan quarrels of today seem to Franklin, whose labors concerned no little appointment to office or small offense to officials of the district, but no less than the construction of the world's greatest and most prosperous nation, that remembers today to venerate his memory. Walk down Arch Street today and stop at the grating in the wall of the graveyard at Fifth and Arch, and look upon the tombstone of Philadelphia's first and foremost citizen guide, and pray for more plain common sense and the spirit of Franklin to be given to our leaders and representatives in Washington. Signed January 17, 1920 QMnm. Thermometers te very much in fashion just at present; everybody wants to know low cold it is in the morning, pnd whether the furnace is doing its duty. Thermometers, 40c to $10. Window thermometers, $1.60 to ?3.50. Self-registering thermometers, ?5.B0. (Main Gallery, Chestnut) Only Women Who Know Something About Shoes li !t? "W'N'ato what it means to bo If'ttifl ooso from twenty-one of ,-wwt shoe styles in America at "(a Mil, n . .. t,i U. r . ' AH 0I meso snoes navo I rf Vl Juaet two wr i J0l'ars pair more and Bomo E J . V4 I1H!T Uwaltt Md vti,ah 'or half mflnna ravwh. Thore arc six styles of low shoes and fifteen styles of high thoes, every pair fine in fashion. Shoes for southern wear now, for spring and summer wear later ami for winter wear now, noxt year or tho year after. An extraordinary opportunity. Something like five thousands lamps, shades, fixtures and candlesticks are in it all at prices from a third to a half less than the prices they have been selling at on our floors. Here are the details 500 floor lamps at $12.50 to $150 half of regular prices. These are of mahogany-finished woods, solid mahogany, polychrome effects, richly painted woods, metals, cloisonne, bronzes and wrought iron. 100 floor reading lamps at $8.50. Short lamps of metal and wood, for use in bedrooms, offices and beside davenports. 350 table electric lamps at $5 to $150. Mahogany, cloisonne, pottery, wrought iron, polychrome and elab orate painted sorts. 100 electric lamps for the tabic at $12.50 to $35. These are metal lamps with shades of metal with rib bon and other glass panels. 75 metal lamps at $4.50 to $12.50. These have shades of metal parchment and glass some very beautiful. 500 lamp shades at $6.50 to $75.. All silk; some Japanese ; some flat with exceedingly deep fringe. 500 small shades at $1.50 to $10. Silk and parchment. 1000 candle shades at 50c to $5. They are of silk and parchment. Hundreds of candlesticks at $1 to $5. Wood, poly chrome, metal, silver and gold finishes, ivory and tinted ivory finishes. 200 pieces of electric light fixtures, brackets, indi rect lights and alabaster bowls at $10 to $100. (fourth Floor, Central) THREE BEAUTIFUL NEW ENVELOPE HANDBAGS All arc of fine polished pin seal and in rather square shapes. The workmanship in them is beautiful and the linings are richly colored rilks. Their whole effect is one of great good style. Prices are $13.50, $22 50 and $28.50. The $22.50 book isv in brown, gray, blue and black; the others are in black only. (Main rioor. Chestnut) WOMEN'S WINTER CAPESK1N GLOVES ALL WASHABLE Stout, comfortable gloves that are satisfactory to wear and that look well on a woman's hands, are these good capeskin gloves that may be freshened with soap and water when they need it. $2.75 a pair for gloves in tan, beaver, pearl, white or light gray, outseam sewn and with" 1 clasp. $4 a pair for fine quality gloves in dark brown, mastic, 'tan and pearl white, with pique or outseam sewing and 1 clasp. Main Floor, Central) i fans Reveals Some of fa Spring Fas - Secrets in These jj0k&s&fc Mew Hats XIWr 4 J mSinJ , To M TAILORED SILK SHIRTS A natural pongee is $3. A white crepe do chine, $9.50. White and flesh crepes de chine, $9.75. White soft taffeta, $12. Men's-wear crepe, $13.50. (Third Floor, Central) PLEASE NOTE Entries for the Exhibition of Photographs close, on Saturday, February 7th, 1920. The Exhibi tion itself takes place on March 1st to 13th, inclusive. (Main Floor, Chestnut) Coming, as they do, from the fore most modistes of Paris, these new hats are particularly interesting be cause they give some hint of the new Spring fashions to come in fact, they are the new Spring fashions ! There are new shapes, new colors, new styles. There are a number of all-white hats and a number of all black hats, not to mention any -number of bright and vivid hued colored hats, so that one has wide choice. There are hats from Jeanne Lanvin Odette Hermance Evelyn Varon Le wis One hat in a npw red brown has a brim wholly covered with bright colored beads in a striking design. Another unusual hat is of that much-seen new straw, cellaphone, which looks like patent leather but is much lighter in weight. And still another strik ing hat has the brim faced with black oilcloth and a wide band of the same shiny black around its high brim. There are delightful little hats which come close to the face ; there are small hats with bewitching black lace veils; there are small satin turbans with a maize of bright hued feathers. They are hats to wear South or hats to wear in the North just to wear one will be a pleasure ! They have heir first showing Monday. (Hecond Floor, Cheitnul) Sterling Boudoir Silver Has Received Additions Lately So that we will be able to match many scU, in the pieces needed. for their completion. Hand mirrors, $21 to $29 Hairbrushes, $13.50 to $19. Combs, $3.50 to $7. Puff jars, $12.50 to $19. Also all the smaller pieces at corresponding prices. (.loHclry Store, CheMnul and Thirteenth) .Salve jars. $3.50 to $7. Cloth brushes, $10.50 to $17. Hat brushes, $4.7G to $12.50. Lucie Hamar Caroline Reboux Marie Lancret Jeanne Due Good Blankets for "Old- Fashioned" Winter Weather Low-priced blankets of good, serviceable quality arc scarce n doubt about it. We have a lot at $10 a pair that vp believe to be the best low-priced blankets anybody can buy today. None that arc offered for less can compare with them. Wc have better ones at $15 a pair and still better at $18 a pair and so on up to the lrnc, all-wool blankets at $25 a pair. AH of them are white blankets with borders in either pink or blue. All are in double-bed sizes. Blankets of a corresponding grade can be had at proportional prices in single-bed sizes. 1 (Sixth tlaor, Centrul) A Few Fine Duvetyne Coats Are Very Much Less Marvclously lovely garments, luxuriously fur trimmed and they are designed in such a way that they may be worn for evening coats as well as day-time wraps. The fashions, too, arc very new, for these coats have only been here a short time. There are large collars, usually cuffs and sometimes entire facings of fur mole, blended squirrel, kolinsky, fitch and Australian opossum. In fact there is so much fur used in some cases that these new prices little more than cover the value of the fur alone, $200 to $350. (First Floor, Central) A Special Sale of Women's Sweaters and Scarfs We have taken from our good regular stocks 1615 women's sports coats, sweaters, slip-ons, scarfs and tam-o'-shanter sets and marked them an Average Less Than Half Price They are of wool, mercerized, artificial silk, linen and fine thread silk, and there are a great many different styles, though not every size in each style, as they represent odds and ends and discontinued lines. But 'the variety is so great that any woman can find something she wants at a saving of usually half or more. Prices are $1.50, $2.50, $3.50, $5, $7.50, $10 and up to $40. (Wot Aide) A remarkably good thing to put on your shopping list is The Winter Sale of White in which there are thousands of substantial undermuslins at $1 to $5. (Third Floor, Central) Corsets in the White Sale Parisienno corsets of pink coutil, topless, with wide clastic bands partly across tho top, and with long hips. Broken sizes only 22, 25, 26, 28 and 29 inches. Price $6.50. Other Parisiennes of tricot with low tops and light boning, sizes 25, 26, 27. Price $6.50. Letitia corsets of pink striped material, made with very low bust and long skirt. Sizes 22 to 28. Price $6. Another Letitia is of white batiste, with medium bust and long straight hips, $4.50. (Third Floor, Chrttnut) Shoes and Shoes and Shoes For Babies They arc shoes and slippers and moccasins of crepe do chine, of soft silks and of kid, as well as of washable white pique, and they come in white, of course, in delicate colors like pink1 or blue, and in black and tan. There arq many styles, and thoy go from $1 to S3.7B a pair. (rhlril Floor, Chestnut) T MANY WELL DRESSED GIRLS ARE WEARING REGULATION DRESSES becauso their mothers think regu lations are the most sensible prac tical dresses for school and general wear. They arc in good taste, they are becoming to most girls, they are comfortable, and the girl inside one looks well dressed for school or every day. Wanamaker regulation dresses are made especially for us, in our own workrooms, and to our own orders; serges in Norfolk style arc $27.50; in sailor style, $25. Wash regulations, in white or dark blue, are $16.50. All in 11 to 20 year sizes. (Second Floor, Chestnut) FINE DARK BLUE FABRICS ARE FAVORITES Womtn are particularly buying the finest all-wool qualities in serge, tricotine and gabardine for Spring suits and dresses and they are here in an unusually good assortment now. Various weights and twills, all are 51 inches wide, $3.75 to $10 a yard. (Flrtt Fluor. Chestnut) SUN-AND-RAIN . UMBRELLAS Little ones, s,ueh as are desirable for use at Palm Beach or for gifts to be used in the Spring. They have covers of plain green, purple, ,brown, blue or black taffeta, and of plaid taffeta. Thev ireneriillv lv i eight or ten ribs, together with the fashionable light tips, and blunt ferrules, and their prices are $5 to (Mnln Flour, .Market) wom'en'sIjm: brellas special AT $7.50 Covers of good silk taffeta green, garnet, navy and black; handles mission btyle; some with silk loops, and nearly all with bake hte tops. Uncommon for $7.30. (Mnln Floor, MurKet) Three New Books "Memories of Buffalo Bill," by his wife. Price $2.50. An intimate biography of one of the most picturesque characters in American history. "The Mjstery at the Blue Villa," by Melville Davisson Post. $i.75. Seventeen -bhort stories of mystery, of romance and of mysticism charming all "The Blower of Bubbles." by Arthur Beverley Baxter. $1.75. Fhc delicate, whimsical stoiies of love and adventure with the war for a background. (Muin 1 loor, Thirteenth) Table Cloths and Napkins of Fine Wearing Quality Wc hac two particularly good gioups, one embracing fine double damask table cloths and napkin belonging to a -ery good purchase secured last year in the Irish maiket, the cloths being 2x2 yards at $10.75 and 2x2 Vj yards at $13.75 each, with napkins to match in .size 24x24 inches at $15 a dozen. The other group comprises a remarkably fine lot of double damask table cloths and matching napkins, an impoiler's overlot, mostly in larger sizes, and these ve are offering at a largo saving from today's values. Table cloths, 2x2 yards, $14.50; 24.2U yards, $20; 2M:x2 yards, Matching napkins, 25.25 inches, at $22.75 and 27x27 inches at $25 a dozen. (I'Irst Floor, (hritnut) French War Cretonnes Down to $1 a Yard During sonic of her most anxious days Pans found time to design and make these chaming war prints, expressing her faith in the ultimate victory of the Allies' aim.'. Each of the six patterns has iU own story to tell. They arc hand-blocked prints and are delightfully unique for draperies, cushion covers and rcupholstenng furniture. (Firth i'liiiir, MurKet) Children's Velour "Tanis" Half Price at $4 We have these handsome lots in black, brown, navy, pearl, tauno and Rutsian green. ' ' v Their shape, their color, their soft and silky texture all combine to make them most becoming headwear for little folk. At $4 they are exactly half price. (Muln Flour, Marked WOMEN'S INITIAL HANDKERCHIEFS $3 A DOZEN Sheer Irish linen, spotless and snowy, and of unusually good qual ity with hand-embroidered ini tial in one corner. It's not easy to find hand-cm-broidercd handkerchiefs at this price I Ov'' AUU) . China and Persia Seen Side by Side in the Oriental Rug Event The Oriental Rug Event is particularly rich in Chinese carpets and there is a growing appreciation of the decorative adaptabilities of these interesting weaves. Because of their distinctively individual and unusual color effects and symbolic designs they fit into and accentuate the general effect of many a scheme in which rugs more neutral in shade and more conventional in pattern might fall short of the desired result. Apart from the unmistakable shades of Chinese rugs, in their remark able blues, golden browns, rose-pinks, tawny yellows and burnt orange their symbolism is a study. Almost every device you see on them is emblem atic, from the flower baskets, lotus pods and musical instruments celebrating the immortals, to the wheel and knob of destiny and the fish patterns of reli gious import. It is a pleasure to walk through this beautiful exhibition and compare these rugs with the fine weaves of Persia and other Eastern lands all of Which are Shown nr. VPl-V rnnrlnvnfo ni'iftoo ' (Heirnth Flour, tntra) ''1 tab ,4 i t ; I - I .fa ffl v I t &u v,n ffi m Mil f-r-i, h rf.t V "rt ytVfH rffc-M m ., ' 5i JLJf ." rJ&AiTV I -J-JUfaWtMV. , i jt . VVt!'4l4,,.)HWi',:;UAt)