itn T;." wr v "v-"-y- o. . . w , " -; A ' '"tOT?l r yu' r. a u . j T'.-V1;1H7,m . t -. '; 'Wr S TTW' ff5ra 4 .K- ' , T! 4 ' tn -jr ism lare v ' s V" v vittkMvmiMiBwm w vy'.'s? ' v w ' ' -v ." 'i w ' ',., r" v , fiVEftINC PUBLIC tEDGfeR-PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1921 Organ Plnys at 9, 11 and 4:50 Chlmei t Noon WANAMAKER'S WANAMAKER'S WANAMAKER'S WANAMAKER'S WEATHER Unsettled The Wanamaker Store Will Be Closed All Day Tomorrow For Jw Home JL k veryfooety Wit This Page About the Wanamaker Great August Furniture Sale erest A Bewildered Traveler After Nightfall in the Everglades of Florida might easily become entangled in a morass and find it difficult to reach solid ground. There are many persons so conceited and self-confident that they do not think it necessary to ask advice of the experienced before plunging into streams of all sorts of novelty business schemes, patent inventions and organized company undertakings that sooner or later demonstrate that they arc overboard in the sea of speculations, swimming after a "will-o'-the-wisp." By and by they will be stripped bare and be victims of a vicious hopefulness. Signed August 12, 1021. Oipmi THE business of life is to a large extent the making of better places to live in. When this ceases there is something wrong. When people show a particularly active interest in the making of better living places, that is, better homes, it is a sure sign that things in gen eral are on a safe and sound basis. Just now there is a tremendous amount of home - bettering and home-furnishing going on, and it is a very good sign of things. We cannot remember ever to have noticed so much interest being taken in the furnishing and refur nishing of homes. In this August Furniture Sale we are selling more furniture, both in quantity and in money value, than we have ever sold in any August sale on record. This is not told bv wav of boast ing, but to show you that, so far as a great retail business movement like this is an indication, conditions generally must be very sound. But primarily it all goes to show that the opportunities in the sale must be very good ; and indeed thev are. The Joys of Castle Building TTOME-PLANNING and home- idealizing are always a pleas ure, even if one's ideals never be come anything more tangible than so many "castles in the air," or "castles in Spain" or elsewhere. We know people who have managed to overcome a tendency to nervous sleeplessness by just planning and building and furnish ing castles of that kind, not that all the schemes call for castles, but just homes after one's own heart. You would be surprised at the number of these dreams that are "coming true" as a result of this August Furniture Sale. The People's Own Sale TT SEEMS to us that no sale ever appealed so to the people. And of course it is they who count. In planning it, we never failed to keep the customers' needs in mind; we have tried to make a sale solely from the customers' point of view, and there is every indication that we have succeeded. The customers' point of. view calls for many things. First of all, it calls for merchan dise of the kind that carries the sub stanqe of quality and value for the money which is to be paid for it. The customers' point of view calls for likableness in looks and de sign and decorative detail. It calls for service and beauty, for monev, value and furnishing: value. And it calls for the kind of economy that really saves one's money. The fact that we have never sold in any August Sale so much furniture to so many different people in so many different places, some of them thousands of miles apart, is a pretty good proof that the stocks in this sale are the kind that meet the requirements of the customers' point of view. The fact that this is the great est sale from the customers' stand point is the only reason why it is the greatest sale in every other respect. For a sale can . never become larger or greater than the people want it to be; and the people will always make that sale greatest which serves them best. They know why they have made this sale what it is. Anybody can learn who walks through the different furniture floors. The Wonderful Showing on the Fifth Floor T OOK AT the display of li ing--' room, library and individual furniture on the Fifth Floor, Chest nut Street. As a collection this is recog nized by furniture men to be the finest, most tasteful and most inter esting in the country; and, of course, it is the largest. Every piece in the magnificent assortment, no matter how rare, exquisite or luxurious it may be, is marked at a real, substantial reduc tion in the August Sale. You will notice how many de lightful individual pieces and sets there are here, most of them repro ductions or variants of some beauti ful old models. This surely is the place to come to, not only for the great, overstuffed suits that delight one by their soft, downy, luxurious embrace, but also for the uncom mon, the elegant, the individual things that give character and atmosphere to their surroundings. The bedroom and dining-room suits, on the Sixth Floor, are noted for three things the incomparable varieties included, the attractive ness of the different types, and the certainty that no matter which vou may buy, vou are not only gettine: "value received," which means sound alue, but effecting; a grood saving at the same time. Whether you consider the dining-room, the bedroom, the living room or library furniture; whether you consider mahogany furniture, walnut furniture, hand-painted fur niture or upholstered furniture, there is no stock of furniture any where else in which it is so easy to find the furniture one likes, because there is no stock that holds so much of the likable kind at the lowest prices, all essentials considered. John Wanamaker Philadelphia TTl!! (,.' i, '-, ,t ;.! ,flA $ ' -l. 1 ., &x u 7 ... i '! y.