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rR RRR REE ee te entre ——— — —— —— meee > tee - = THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1913. {SO HE TURNED ON THE GAS. Oa aces’ q The John Wanamaker Store Presents Monday TheFebruarySaleof Silks] — This Annual Event, of which the Great Roger Thompson Giver- naud Disposal was a Forerunner, Contains 153,660 Yards of Famous R&T Restricted Spring Silks and $25,000 worth of Finest Italian Satins—All to Be Sold—$200,000 worth for $115,000. Every great happen‘ng has its forerunner. Silk history was written when th's store took over the quarter million dollar retail stock of R & T ss : a ————- ' Atinek of “Shovel-Stif-Labor-iHo- ho — Controlling Power in PNOGHLE “PINCH” US GOVERNMENT HOTEL NAVARRE. REVERSESTHELUGK IN RATE GOMBNE GUEST SHOOTS) 8°75 OF WASYLSLOVE. WITH OGEANLIES? Sao WIMCELE DEAD| fet to “the first medical institution Detective Phflaster’s Lead of Congressmen “Told H Acts as) Suicide Was J. C, Smith, meg ng found the following letter lying near j since 11 o'clock Iast night. 1 hereby | party, T am Panama Companies. | you turn over the a = Roclalieat A guest om the third floor of the Hotel | Phied varre, at Thirtyeeighth street and! sorry to “1 meld 220! Lucky at iove and) WASHINGTON, Fev 1—That the 4 ; ¢ troubled you this way, 1 : A fi reg meky Iudtiy at noniehile both Ss WAT | Cutie ATAGan loereaeee: IS DwetY TE 1 a veniie gatly touaty taltonened | 1 VE Meare wet vote attack ot {ff silks and sold a large part in one day and practically all of it inside a week. rey oa, the thay af the Saratel Of Niake Aeleri ie 4 Sewn to Arvid Breien the aight chars | eat 1" Saree SMITH” No such silk selling has hd tink apo known in the whole yorld. A . SEL ecenia, you, bet ih lovense Sew York City wan |..2 2ust MORNE 6 atiot Inthe room next | aulteth, ous tuuearee the moored | It was because ““Wanamaker’s was doing things in silks” that this store had first chance to buy out the © Wilhelmus Phfia charged by Ro oH. Sohwerin, phat dl gee cae i shah | i en R & T retail store. for bustin’ f racic | M , i Wells fs om Hin Way. TH) stedant ‘ 4 08 WHT Rivet we oe orn aaccaaals Simuihy @ ieee lal Brown summoned Patrolman utes | LIVERPOOL, Feb, 1. ~ Bombardier We are still “doing things in silks” greater and ter each ne 4 Comme an over to the a&-| whe told’ the Congress Cummittes on [THN the policeman, Brown and the| Wells, Hritlan champion pugilist, toxday So Roger Thompson Givernaud offered to us first chance to select from an overproduct in their whole- for New York aboard the Cun- r Mauretania. He said the primary @im of his visit was to get a match with Luther McCarthy, | Ship Trusts that the Government, rep-|Paht watchman went up to the room | ® jast night the Httle| resenting the Panama Railroad and the|!n wirich the shot had been heard by | ™ oor in the back roo anama Steamship line, sent a repre-| the wakeful guest. The door was sentative to the. annual conference | jocked, but they broke it in and found meetings in London when coffee rates|(ne occupant of the room, who had were fixed. registered on Thi He added that the Government Nad) iin ot Kings Pai | endeavored to force a rate agreement le of a strong | vetween his line and the Hawall-Amer-/OUt on the bed in A revolver lay on the Raised Up to Lumps. Face Burned. Got to Be Like Running lead in hearts and a op of Knaves: | ican line, but that his line had declined Wasyl Szarobura 0 {8 a suave | to enter the agreement on the “ground! bed, There was a bullet hole in Smith's Sores, Cuticura Soap and Oint- meat Cured in Six Weeks, sale stock. Spring silks, these. Every yard just off the looms. Summer silks. Restricted silks—each one named and sold all over the country at a certain price. Silks every good store in the country must have on its shelves or its customers want to know why. Indro, Arab and Baroness, Tub Silks and Charmeuse— Among the best-made silks in America. 158,660 yards of them—enough to stock an average store for three months—yet not as much as we sold last season in a single week. * Also, these silks are exceedingly fashionable. Nothing is more typical of Oriental and peasant fashions than pongee, and our Paris office by last steamer advises us that satins promise to be great favorites this Spring. As we had first choice, we naturally sclected the most popular of all the R & T silks woven in the six Roger Thompson Givernaud mills. nue B. Ter helmus Phflaster’s unique strategy. He had “cleaned up" on his assign- ment through pinochie, Now, this is the bri dandy of the eart and who ts sald | that tt in violation of the Sherman | ref, temple. to pluck hearts.as casity as an ordinary j Sauces y aid Mr.] OM the bureatt law a hastily acrawied man takes a street car transfer, had a| a MT-! note which said: 1 ear ago Schwerin, “to force the Hawallan {ine Lo eh he gel Hla st Bell Ry maintain Its rates, threatened if it “Fou will Gnd a letter atésecsed . her home feut them down to put on a competing| to my atever. a. 0, SMITE. t Sixtioth street, | Nne with the Government behind it, At] Close by this note lay another one SAFER THAN A BANK WAS HER | present the Hawaillan line is operating | with the following address inscribed on WASYL junder tariffs fixed by the Government | qt; “Mrs, Marian Fisher, Onondaga . j through the Panama Steamship Com- Government,” reat, Syracuse, N, Y. Onondaga Had SASSI ona atcblte ea eines pany.” acces street in one of the finest residence Oak Ridge, N, J—"'T had been bothered It is the first time they have ever been offered to sell at less than $1 to $2.60. Our prices will be 76c now, so AUTOS KILLED six MORE be peas aha in Syracuse. The note | with pts ples which ¢ Ger the skin on to $1 4 banka in the country were going to ret my face, They were hard and looked red and ios : sl ‘ a i NOTE SENT TO SISTER IN At this very beginning of the Spring season, every woman is planni and Summer and adh bed Uatienrea thoumna, roots: CITIZENS LAST MONTH SYRACUSE. to'bs big umpe and my blouses, tl . gies 7 " — — THAN IN JANUARY, 1912. Seventeen Dead, Seventy-five In- jured Is Record; Trolley Car ee i say, dia Mortalities Were Nine. one he was, she a 1 tom found four pawn-tickets for a rt 1 i ft Russ! The January report of the National uy - ‘unning sore. eee a” Minn thucsie moumee {ne| Highways Society, made public to-day |® watch, a violin and a French horn. | cyused disfigurement for the time betag, for loss of a sweetheart and a thousand. | by Col, Bdward 8. Cornell, its Secretary, | ‘There were also three trunk checks on | when 1 scratched the ecabe off while they She also notified the police. shows that during that month, atx more | the bureau. | were heating they would leave scars. Three weeks ago word came to the| persons were killed by automobiles than| Inquiry at Kings Park elicited the in-| “1 go¢ a blood medicine which I took for senting the savings of honest toll. ‘Theat same day she consented to quaft a eco. of beer with her Wasyl, Somi thing was funny about that beer; when | Miss Gussie awoke her Wasyl was! gone. “My trunks are at the Pennsyl- vania station. Inclosed find the tickets for my musical instruments. Please pay my hotel bill, which Ie inclosed, J.C, SMITH." Besides the notes Coroner Winte: Men are just about to order silk shirts i This offer of the best reasonably priced silks in the world for the purposes will, we know, be immediately taken advantage of. i R. & T. Pongees Baroness Cascadeuse, $1.25 Yard Jasper. Pongee, $1.25 Yara Regularly $2 and $2.50 i Exceptionally heavy ribbed silk, resembling imported ‘de ee ee eee forming © soft gray cascadeuse. Black and natural, 27 inches wide. Never before sold by us for less than $2 and $2.60, Black Pongee, $1.25 Yard Regularly $1.50 and $2 : Arab Pongee, $1.25 Yard Roem: inches Heretofo Regularly $1.75 and $2 Pe tear: 7 cle i Mees chats, Two qualities, Arab and Arab extra. All colors in the ‘ard first, black, natural and white only in the extra. Both con- Indro Sor bee Ke og ¥ 75 street and eveni Soden dcibtaba tes dovaiis eatrenere: Joser in the ieart lead that. Wasy! | guring the corresponding month of last | formation that smith had for the last | over two years and tt did not make any dif- | year, ‘The mortalities due last month ¢ as back in his old haunts, Knowing that her Wasyl was an A No, 1 pin- ochle expert, Miss Gussie took the news of her recreant woer's return to| | jectiv. laster and tol | Re Wwaula probatis. cick ry Wanyhat! obites injured 7% persons last month the Lorelel. Thereupon the detective, ‘Polley cars, @, ani wagons severoly in dropped in on the club, played a few! Jured 21. Of those killed by vehicular | times and was invited to join. six months been employed as an orderly ference. I saw the advertisement of Cuti- In the insane hospital. His wife was | cura Bop and Ointment for pimples and I also employed there, but the couple left | eet fora sample. As oon as they camel two weeks ago without giving notice | commenced to use them and I had not used d not saying where they were going. | balf of the same before I could see = change Besides acting as an orderly, Smith also ta my face. I got some more Cuticurea Boap played in the asylum orchestra, He was and Otataent and was cured in aix weeks.” a skilled performer on the violin and (Signed) Miss leabella B. Chambertain, Aug. French horn, said the superintende: 11, 1012. gnd was popular with everybody. ‘Why not have a clear akin, soft white Smith was a man about fifty-five years | basds, @ clean scalp and good hair? It ts old, and when he came to the Navarre was neatly dressed and carried two handbags. Little was een of him about the place. His wife did not accompany im to the Navarre, but the su 4 ! tendent of the Kings Park Hospital dec With 22-p, @kin Book. Address post-card clared that the Smiths lived a harmont- | “Outéeura, Dept. T, Boston.” ous life, and that the couple left the! #@-Tender-faced men should use Cuticure {natitution of their own volition. | Soap Shaving Stick, 25¢. Sample free. trac, seventy-five per cent. were past Now, Phflaster is some pinochie| sixty years old or under sixteen. Tne player; he has not spent long hours in| mortalities due to vebicujar traffe in the back rooms of police stations with-| January, 1912, were: “Automobiles, 1; out improving his education, 80° the trotiey cars, 10, and wagons, 8. detective proceeded to clean up the| The report also shows that in New other members of the Lorelel Club. | York State, outside the Greater “ity, v nightly admonttion was, “Just | cight persons were killed by traffic last wait until Wasy! mont; three by automobiles, two by you will eee #0 ! trolleys, two by wagons and one in a Last night Wasyl did prance into the! collision _betwe Lorelei parlor and he found himeelf in a|Wawon. The m game with Wilhelmus Phflaster. The) sponding month latter was morally sure of his man’s mobiles 1, trotle; tdentity, but he had to be positive be-| fore he made the pinch. i siderably like fashionable ratine. For motor wear and traveling. Never heretofore sold at less than $1.75 and $2. 27 inches wide. Heretofore never sold under $1. R. & T. Tub Silks for Men’s Shirts, t Summer Waists and Dresses “Ah, well,” he sighed, after he had al-| lowed Wasyl to roll up a tremendous! score against him, “unlucky at cai and lucky at love. I've got Gussie Kunvtak for @ fine girl; she loves ine dearly.” “she my girl, this Gussie," Wasyl! exploded, ‘Keep away.” | That was clinching evidence and Wile | helmpe Phflaster watted no longer. eels “MOOTED” QUESTIONS,” SAYS SULZER, TALKING OF STOCK EXCHANGE BILLS. Without exception we believe them the finest made in America. They are the only tub silks we know weven both rae and woof of classical silk—the best raw silk of aly. These tub silks are regularly bought season after season by the fine specialty shirt makers, and are used in their 88 to $18 shirts. Striped Tub Silks, 95c Yard Tub C 20 Y Herecolere, $180 and 43° Twenty stripe designs and several colors in each pattern. $2 inches wide. Both of these washable silks are excellent for women's dresses, waists and men’s shirts. All have been boiled 24 hours, so it will be scarcely possible for the color to wash out. Plain Washable Silk, $1.25 Yard Regularly $2 Heretofore, $1.25 and $1.35 Habutai finish, 32 inches wide, 46 stripe desi colors in each pattern. scala White, pink, light blue, violet, green, yellow and other colors: for summer dresses, waists aud men’s shirts. 42 inches i wide, This has more body than Japanose silk. P R & 7 Satin and Charmeuse | Our Paris editorial bureau wrote us by the last steamer that “souple” silks and satins promise to have a record season this Spring. . Cashmere Charmeuse, $1.15Yd. Satin Duchesse. $1.38 Yard Exquisite ee had Regularly §2 vide "°°" ~— "This has been our regular price up until slightly glace. 36 inches wide. ‘1 : Charmeuse. $1.35 Vard "0%, Soft quality, 30 inches wide, $8 good shades. Regularly $2 ' 40 inches wide, 40 shades, including black Charmeuse Satin $1 85 Yard s > vi. Regularly $3.50 and white. 40 inches wide. White, black and seven Does Not Want to Put His Judg- ment Against That of Legislators on Wall Street Objections. ‘ALBANY, Feb. 1.—Bills embodying jie recominendations made by ‘Coy, fulser in his recent message to the Legislature concerning proposed leg's- | lation affecting stock exchanges tay | be ready for introduotion next week. ‘These measures are being drafted by the Governor, A committer represent- ing the New York Stock Exchange told the Governor yesterday that ft would be unwise to pass legislation requir- ne ing the exchange to incor) ia he Then and Now eerpertereseimnnntany to fix a maximum rate of interest for | tre U loans. to-day, if the bills would so provide, | replied: ‘hey are mooted questions and [ do not want to pul my udgment on them up against the Judgment of the Legis- Striped Satin, $1.38 Yard Regularly $2.50 Your great-grandmother was a good housewife. She knew oatmeal was a fine food and she cooked it all through the night Jature.” ie Black aot white pnd colored stripes in seed sina pitee. Same qualities we have a Pen i i -ni ing. various widths. Yard wide, sold tifully at $3.50. GERMAN DIPLOMAT DEAD. Ordinary*oatmeal or “rolled oats” requires all-night cooking. : plentifully a Dr. Theodor Vou Holl in Served as Ambnasador at Washington, $25,000 Worth of Finest Italian Satins The fourth class of this February Silk Sale is composed of Italian satins from a silk manufacturer who supplies all the best stores in America, His agent in this country had an overplus, every yard of which he turned over to us at a price. He has plenty more of these selfsame silks, but they cannot be purchased for one cent less than their regular rates. Woven near Como, these satins have a Posteri; brilliancy, elasticity and strength unap- Postcript Wedding Satins H proached, And while some satins are as Those who use H-O—the only oatmeal that can be thoroughly cooked in 20 minutes—save all that time, trouble and expense. The over-two-hours’ steam-cooking we give H-O in the mill gives it a delicious flavor not found in any other food, 7 . i , oP eae easily ruffled as a peacock this Italian satin aneme Of tae tinest walle ebtine ordinarily ] Before becomluk a dipiomat he had | has auch 8 closely woven face that it will from this same Italian pale 99 t0 been an ofiicer in (ae Prussian army | not rub. 4 H 7, H | ‘ em had fought in the war between | $25,000 worth in black satin duchesse, 6 nee ee ene Seo are com |! 2 a ne ales mousseline and charmeuse, 36 to 45-inch $2.50 yard, usually $4. FS ee a atm widths in fifteen qualities at seven prices, $2.75 yard, usually 8. am || art. 1 honorary doctor's yards will make a go vn. 83 —syard, usu: 95.50, i Se from Harvard Univoralty es will be 81.35 yard, $3.50 yard, ba $6. i we $4.50 yard, usually $7.50. “DROVE A CONFLAGRATION. This February Silk Sale tall be held in the i © Wauon's Afire,” 50 qual | Silk Rotunda and on many special counters on the Main Aisle, Main Floor, and Subway (0 qualities will be #2 Floor, Old Building, and Subway Entrance #5 qualities will be A New Building. JOHN WANAMAKER Formerly A. 'T. Stewart & Co, Broadway, Fourth Ave., Eighth to Tenth st. q Signal to Unger. qualities will be jorvis Unger, @ driver, of No, 10 stroet, Brow ot a shock | nen he was White % on Centve, and | H-O has more true fiavor after 20 minutes’ cooking than any other oatmeal can have, no matter how long it is cooked. A package of H-O makes 36 dishes and it's the best breakfast too’ invest- ment you ever made, Get it today. wp ign es mie sie urniture in) Unser un- | 1 for the fire | rument. A yon the Lafayette | | ' et house oacie ane pit out the blaze, ¢ was Mttle left of ive. How the fire net until ¥e