I 1 P iiir w WClmW iCOAL-MEN DODGE syf? !K'. Vii! w K fv MQBE, IS REPORT Jp Refrain Raising Price of lAnthradte Rather Than Face Investigation INQUIRY MAY BE HALTED V Attorney General Schaffcr "Ready to Present Report on Inquiry Into Iucrensc slli nather than submit to an Inquiry Into iFthe coal situation, anthracite operators tfhre reported' ready to rescind their order K(i ior a flfty-ccnt adance In the price of P.ijfcoal, effective May 1. W fca fe b; Bw EVENING PUBLIC LED(3rEK-i?HIIJAbjELPHlA, tffiHBDAY,. BCHlSj, lUttfcY 'f,V "' -' , ;" Y A( ' V" ?U ; : .'. i. i -v : 1 ' ' i ' s.'J . CROWD THRONGS ENTRANCE TO RUMMAGE SALE .A-T fr? fr . Reports of the backdown on the part mi me operator', circulated particularly drnbout the Harrlsburg Capitol, were said tMoliavo come from reliable rourcea 'ru Action by Governor Sproul on the coalj tlaituatlon Is expected today It was un-( m& wderstood a resolution was to bp nent to i i cune state Legislature calllnB for a probe 3st"r' Ointo coal prices, the resolution to be accompanied by a letter from the Gov-nmor. Attorney General Schaffer has looked up the laws on the question and Is said to hae prepared the probe resolution. If the operators rescind the order for the proposed Increase in price, the reso lution may probably be abandoned Representath e Leopold C CJlas, of Philadelphia, adopted a nw plan in bis efforts to Bet an Inquiry into coal and fooi condition in the state. Instead of calling- up his bill which would provide Lfor the appointment of a commission by he' Governor to conduct an investiga tion Into food and fuel prices, he In troduced a concurrent resolution which proposes the same thing The resolution does not can-v an ap propriation, but legislation can bo en acted later to appropriate money to de fray any expenses that might be In-1 curred in investigating coal and food conditions Under the rules of the House the Glass resolution was laid over for print ing Mr. Glass will ask for Immediate ac tion on the resolution, which provide' that the commission make its report to the present Legislature Refusal of independent anthracite op. erators to pay royalties to the Girard ;s .,. '1-.yYWW w iMr' M""""la':;'imiM ii"""m?i"ff" '"'''WTMHWBWBBHMiiBIMIIMMHffMWiBMMMriMMMBMMMI' , KT. t& Yi a rtw ma3aKj&ssstSi.!j V llironj; of cxpcitBiit shoppers on ClicMnut slroct vct of higlitli street waiting nr the doors to oi)en of the irtorv ruininiice fate for the benefit of Si. Kdmonil's Home for Crippled Children BAR SCALPERS' TICKETS ' SEEK COURT'S AID FOR WATER CLASPS WAR FIFE IN DEATH " Chestnut St. Photographers S.i Ciil War ctcran Wng Musician Font Theatres Open Campaign gainst Curb Dealers Detettivex cmploved bv lilt? Fori est, G.urick Broad Street and Kolth s The. atre minaRements last night opened a campaign against the operations of curb scalpels Thej approached even person the ticket venders accosted ,inil warned them before th- traniction was completed that tickets proem ed from scalpers would not be honored at the door of anv of ihose playhouses In manv Instance' p.itrons who In slsted upon purchasing tickets nt the advanced price of the scalpers despite the warning were refused admittance to the. theatres Some commotion was caused bv the .determination of the managements to abate the scalpinsr practice. Persons thus refused were refunded thp box I office pi ice of theii tickets, but lost 'liver fife with which ho inspired manv Inlon soldiers at Antletam CJet tvsburp tul clurtnfr Shenn m s inarch to the 'Ci Was clasped tiRhth In the hands of lames Canon, elghtv vears old, a Civil War veteran, when he died on umlnv afternoon at the home of his Fellow -Tenant Shuts Off Suppl Gilberi & Baion whose photowiphU studios oclupj the second and third floors of t!24 I liestnut street litve ,ip- I plied to Court of Common riens No 3 for an injunction against John Gold- 1 itfdtivuMii 1 1 tya 1i lDAtnntt In 111 III ikuiui' -i-ti in uiv imniium i n . - - - - - - - n ' 1" " an effort to Ftop him from interfering son v.n-u i.uion 04.0.1 iiuntrniw with tlio photogripherB' water supp!. The "Bed veteran served throughout It appears th it the stop rcgul itlng the w ir ns cliief musician of the 1 wen the water bupplv to the upper floors f ' IV -eighth fennsv lvanla ohinteer', and the piennsts Is In tho basement It is the. silver life was presented to him bv charged thnt Goldmtn. since December "'P olonel of the regiment in later 10 last, has repeittdls turned tho ke , Sears it became his most tiea'iired pos sliuttlng olT the wnter to the pholog-' cession raphcrs room' - 1 NEW LITHUANIAN CABINET I Estate for coal lands leased from the estate was discussed jesterday afternoon the difference between that and tho at-a. meeting of the committee on real advanced price paw tne speculator. SoiialUts Quit and Dovvdaitis I i-ked to Organize New Ministrv 1 iiu'iintie, SvvitFerlnnil, Mareii IS B A. P ) As a result of a ministerial crisis which hss arisen in l.lthinnla. M Dovvdaltls has been asked to form a tun c.ihlnet, according to tho Lithuanian newspapers heie NEED BLOOD TO SAVE LIFE Hospital Seeks Volunteer to Sub mit to I ransfiiBion estate outside Philadelphia of the board of city trusts. This discrepancy In many amounted to $1 a scat instances Tho life of a voung man in "Mount Kinal Hospital may be saved bv n blood transfusion Some one Is needed to make the stcriflce and the authorities Hive appealed for a volunteer For five weeks Harry Gant7 of 1811 South Fifth street, has been rlowlv Tho Christian Democrats will have i ! oUng .His mood supply Is H.carcrlj majority in the new ministry, to which one-tentn ot normal r.ie nospital re M Voranka. a leader of the Progressive Prts that M ease Is a rare one, as few party, has promised his support The j wrsorFi nr-p a ble 10 maintain life with Socialists have withdrawn. on'y 760,000 of the ordinary 5,000,000 ( red corpuscles Come to Darlington's for the Finest Silks Silks for sports wear, Silks for afternoon and evening dresses, Silks for every use, in brilliant shimmering variety and at moderate prices. Dew-Kist- H v Fan-ta-si $7.50 yard Baronet Satin 4.00 yard Kumsi-Kumsa $7.50 yard Pussy Willow Foulards $3.50 yard Satins, Taffetas, Charmeuse, Meteors, Radium, is ' mi R ft W h) FV Vfi r- 15 iS-1 t dependable quality in many colorings and a wide price range. -$6.00 yard Pussy Willow Satin $4.00 yard Foulards $2.25, $2.50 yard Printed Georgette Crepe $3.00 yard Crepe de Chine, Georgette and Tub Silks of First Floor New and Attractive Styles for Girls and Misses ' ! u S 1 . ' 1. Suit of navy blue serge wrth vclour vest; four-in-hand serge tie; sizes 16, 18 and 20 years $47.50. 2. Blouse Suit of serge with foulard lining, estee and collar of white silk; sizes 16, 18 and 20 $42.50. 3. Girls' Dress of linen with appliqucd flowers on pockets and front: handwork around cuffs and col lar; colors violet, light blue, green; sizes 6. 8 10, 12 nd 14 years $13.00. 4. Batiste Dress with white sash; hand smocking; Valenciennes lace-edge collar, cuffs and sash; blue maize, flesh, white with embroidery of different shades; sizes 6, 8, 10 and 12 years $10.95, Plain-color Gingham Dress, embroidery done bv hand; moire ribbon run in and out around waist squash color, pink, Copenhagen blue;. sizes 0 8 10, 12 and 14 years $10,95. ' Misses' Suit of navy Poiret twill; decided box coat, trimmed with buttons and hand-made buttonholes on each side; button hole3 on sleeve; deep band of diamond tucking around bottom of coat and bottom of skirt; sizes 16, 18 and 20 years $69.00. Navy Poiret Twill Suit, tailored and bound with silk braid; pussy willow lining; skirt is trimmed with braid; sizes 16, 18 and 20 years $59.00. Secona Floor 6. ml 4ly fill ttu' it is new and de sirable fin Milline7-y, Ifou will find'it lierct ? 6 M f M vjanma 3-46&tiru im& i Ssir&cP. (Sc?M mo. We Have an Excel lent Display of Cre tonnes on the Fourth Floor. DR. FRANK C. KN0WLES PROMOTED TO MAJOR Physician, Brother of Muuici' pay Court Judge, With Hospital Unit No. 10 TRIBUTE TO DUMONT BY CHAIJNCEY 0LC0TT jtVoril has been rteeled by Ills family that Captain Frank Crorer Knowles, M n (' , JO:.' Spruce itreot, has been promoted b General Vershlnjr to tho rank of mnjor in recognition of tho servjeo he gtie In the two years he served In Fi.ince with the Pcnnsyhanta Baie Hospital Unit No. 10. This is the second promotion awarded Major Knowles since he has been ocr seas He olunteered at the time of the formlnc of the unit and tfas com missioned i (lrit lieutenant. He was proinotul to a car-talncy In Jul, 1017, nnd his latent promotion was mado last month Major Knowles is o brother of Judge William Gray Knowles, of the Municipal Court Before leaving this city Mijor Knowle. wrote seernl papers on der mntoloRleal subjects He was the nu thor tjf t tr-xtlioo't on skin diseases and was connected with tho teaching staff of tho University of Pennsylvania and mnn hospitals here, includlrg the Pcnn sjhanla Hoipltnl Tresbytcrlan Hospl tnl Poljullnlc Hospital and St. Vincent's Home He was IMting dermatologist nt mnny charltible Institutions, prln cIim1I Church Home, Children's Hos pital and liaptlst Orphinage. ' "When tlaso Hospllat Unit Xo 10 went overseas It wax assigned to take chirgc of tho British Base Hospital No 16, at Treport. France Major Knowles wns In charge of dermatologlcal work of tills unit, nnd In addition to that, he or ganized and directed tho X-ray depart ment, where he peisonally conducted ns manv as 2000 examinations a month. He was later made consulting derma tologist on the staff of Colonel Hugh L. doling, at gcneril headquarters, where his duties conidxted of acting consultant for sixteen divisions of the American expeditionary force He remained In position until tho slgnlnr of the thnt .miiltlce at which tlmo he returned to i ! lurmer amies Jt Treport 'Last Great Minstrel,' Singer's Eulogy of Former Com rade Who Fell Dead t hauncey Oleott, commenting today on the death of Frank Dumont, "dean of minstrelsy," described his former fel low actor as 'the last great minstrel" Mr. Oleott was associated with Mr Dumont In minstrel shows hero so long ago that he refused to discuss dates But In the heyday of the minstrel show which Mr Dumont made a permanent Philadelphia Institution, Mr. Oleott nnd the dead minstrel man played together for two enrs at the old Hleventh Street Opera House. "Dumont was the last of the great minstrel showmen, the last of a genera tion of players who amused our grand fathers and our children with blackface burlesques on tho passing events," Mr. Oleott commented "Ho was one of the most charming men that ever lived, nnd every lime you saw him he was the same sweet old thing He possessed nn extraordinarily gentle nature. ) "Philadelphia la the only city In the United States that will support a min strel show the year round. Dumont was entirely up to the times in his theatre But some one must be found to con tinue the traditions of the famous Carn cross minstrels now that he is gone, If the minstrel, as Dumont made It. Is to live. Dumont wrote hundreds of bur lesques nnd they were always clean and wholerome. He was a charming man and the last of tho great minstrels" Mr. Dumont fell dead In the box of fice of his theatre at Ninth and Arch streets jesterday just as the curtain rose for the dally matinee Succumbs to Trolley Injnrie" William Francis, fortv-fivo years old, 622 North UIghth street, died in Hahne mann Hospital early todav from Injuries received last night when stiuck by a trolley car at Thirteenth nnd Commerce streets Tho police believe the man at tempted to cros the Btreet and did not see the car. His right leg was badly crushed What It Costs To Advertise The cost of successful advertising on a national scale is amazingly small. , If you were io spend one cent per family per year for advertising, your expenditure for the year would be about $220,000. tl The average total expenditure for advertising space (in fifty-six leading magazines) is less than one-quarter of this sum. In other words, the average national advertiser buys less than $50,000 worth of space per year, or less than one-quarter of a cent per family in the United States. 1 The largest user of space spends about a million per year in national publications five cents per family or one cent per person in that family. , This advertiser does a business of about $120,000,000 per year or a sale per family of $5 one dollar per person. Of course an advertising appropriation includes ex penditures in addition to the cost of space that are most necessary but relatively small in amount. Good advertising pays. Advertising space in the Butterick publicatims is for sale by accredited advertising agencies. Butterick Publisher The Delineator Everybody's Magazine Tuo dollars the year, each BBtfflBBBf mm T 1 Hi Look pp III JmMJ ' nil SSiBiKftfe& fiiCTifflrotratTOs inside the lid! If it hasn't this trademark, it isn't a Victrola You can readily identify the Victrola by the famous Victor trademark "His Master's Voice." It is not a Victrola without the Victor dog. This trademark is on every Victrola. It guarantees the quality and protects you from inferior substitutes. The word "Victrola" is also a registered trademark of the Victor Talking Machine Company. It is derived-; from the word "Victor" and designates the prdductofF ' the Victor Company only. : -"n'' As applied to sound-reproducing instruments, "Victrola" .' refers only to the instruments made by the Victor Com pany the choice of the world's greatest artists. Look inside the lid insist upon seeing the famous Victor trademarks. On the portable styles which have no lid, the Victor trademark appears ou the side' of the cabinet. Victor Talking Machine Co,, Camden, N. J. Victrola 7MM MBmSlfflEl&lS&l&MmSSPB&EB IH raggTOJgiiigyg ffvyH I IRS 8 nflvtillll sa I (HI BjIilJIjjjjHjl giiii if 1 ii IUHf 3s 1 II IkllH IBB II III! !kh! liatJ ;'; 'fttSsagat:;' - & tJB II' I iSilHiiillK"!' 1 1 I ll 111 IhI Haft lsijlt a . . all I SI II JNf'ffV sum! I ISftlpTjii' IBS! I Bill ill lis IB1 KftoGMgfe feV! "-gfg-ill ?c&,&,tffla$KS to 1 mm ,.. Mi; .. I. ' j F r V r Vr m,"- & r '(mi .r1?',- , r JtS , i w i V. (f?,