10 MOST RUSSIANS MUSIC LOVERS Masses of the People Crowds Theaters Despite War Conditions XiOndon, May SO.—One of the most interesting phases of life la Russia llince the revolution has been the passion for mfusic displayed by the masses of the people. Albert Coatea, an Englishman who has just returned from Petrograd where for years he was one of the prin- Cipal conductors of the Imperial Opera, says the Russian proletaria throughs theaters and concerts. The educated music-loving public of former days has almost entirely disappeared, Mr. Coates says. The EM i I ■ '• ,WE yNDPjBU,^^^^^^^EJJNp^ElL I Operate Sixty Retail Shoe I Stores, Doing a Total Volume of I Ten Million Dollars Annually t£." We have our own exclusive big warehouse in Boston, the greatest shoe market in the world, and our buyers are right on the job to take full advantage of favorable market condi ' tions. wjC That is why we are able to sell so cheaply. I! ufe ' p ™ ps4osf#rds ■ ed and turn soles, high or medium heels'. Priced I "|m $2.98 to $l9B "ft Wm, with a long slender vamp, celluloid covered The new Liberty Pumps for Ladies' White Oxfords and Low-heeled Pumps for the Ladies in a field-mouse brown. Pumps In canvas and poplin, growing girl. Pat. Colt Pump, carries a leather Louis heel with turns and welts in a variety wing tip. hand-sewed'soles, low a tongue effect at the throat of that includes all styles and heels shaped heel, a ft* O f\ O the vamp. We doubt If you can ft* 1 QQ to /ft O Qft shoe that looks .ft "1 MA | duplicate this style at less than .ft / ••'O ft J.7JO different w** \J $7.00. We are rt* ry q V■* . t . h !T. . . - Patent Pumps, with turn , .Sm'S: S3 rr $3.98 Dull Kid Pumps for Ladies. welted soles . styles w' w v w H , with turn soles and covered ''' ' IjOUis heels, dressy style. Pat- White Kid Oxfords with cov- Patent Oxfords, with a low ent . m he sarr| e ft* y f\ q ered Louis heels, ft* a f\ heel and med- ft* #% a\ f\ S£ -.""JiJ.yg zT„ M :" n ' i 53.98 Misses'andChil- $1.98 1 J T /\ Pumps; sizes up to 2, for dren s lan Ox- gg c , fords for Dress Better grades at I i or Play ; *1.25 *1.49 Misses' Tan Kid Oxford, I Children's White Canvas •welted sole, 111 Ml Oxfords, broad toe; sizes ■ ; $2- 98 " nd $2 49 B *'° $1 25 salidaf" 6 Btrap s2Misses' sizes in the same Misses' Mahogany Calf Ox- d? 1 A€\ fords, real high-grade shocmak- Jh I . 7/ ing, welted soles ft* ty £\ q ™ ,t b o r e°s ad °. r E . ngl . iBh ."O High Canvas Lace Shoes I up to size 2, Children's sizes ft* ty Af\ Children's and Misses' Bare- in the same .ft y CM. XJ foot Sandals, good heavy soles, ft | 3 C style at w soft flexible uppers— *P X •U U Play Oxfords, in tan and Sizes 6to * 98c Children' White Nubuck I heavy stitched soles, sizes sto ror *•- Button Shoes • sizes fSV-. to 2. Six different styles. Prices, Sizes 8% to 11 *■! 0(- DUtlon anoes, Sizes 0/ 2 to I Me $1.98 51.98 Misses' and Children's Mary ——— , i 0..,, , Jane Pumps in ft* /%g\ t t . > t,n r . ,o , Misses and Children s patent or dull, .ft / n M Infants White Kid But- high Nubuck Lace Shoes up sizes 6 to 8 at..™* •V v ton Shoes; sizes 3 to 6, to size 1 Sizes to 2 ft* 1 _ lu '• I 81.98 $1.69 $2.49 w Good looking Oxfords for men at $3.98. Tans or black in the broad or English toes. A big var r iety and complete run of sizes, all Qg I Better grades in Men's Tan Oxfords, modified I JT English toes; also the broader shapes, fine calf up jgr pers; grades selling up to $8.50, at $4.98 and $5.98 Eo >' s ' an English or Boys' Black Shoes in Little Boys' Tan Dress ESfI.T "jfoISS blucher or button; solid Shoes in blucher or bal, pop- ", vO leather soles, tf* S QQ <c a a m Boys' Dull English Lace sizes to 5 y 2 , * 2.98 *2.49 Shoes, sewed QQ . soles, to 5y 2 , ' T . _ , _ r — a Little Boys' up to 13in -, Lottle Bo J* , Tan Scout Boys Tan Elkskin Army . 7 ' _ ' Shoes up to at I wcaHnpshocs $2.98 81.98 ? 1.49 & *1.98 I G. R. KINNEY CO., INC. 19 and 21 North Fourth Street i 9m k J FRIDAY EVENING, HXRRISBUIiaTEOWKKPH ' MAY 30, 1919. one that has taken its place is a new public consisting of workpeople, peasants, soldiers and sailors. "I thoroughly realized during the revolution," he went on, "the force of the proverb, "Music hath charms to soothe the savage breast,' for whatever the 'people' do in the po litical and social sphere— and their record is pretty bad—at concerts and at the opera they sit as reverently as though they were in church, and listen with the rapt expression of children to whom fairyland is sud denly revealed. "It has often happened that after a concert some simple peasant has risen and formally thanked me and the orchestra for the pleasure we had given them. Often, after a symphony, a group of workpeople have crowded round me and asked to have explained things in |the music they had not understood. They showed a marked preference for modern and complicated music, in finitely preferring it to the older and simple brms of Russian music. Their special favorite, strange as it may seem, is Berblan, and after a performance of this composer's 'Poem d'Extase' that I was conduct ing at the Maryinsky theater, the public, which consisted almost en tirely of the 'people,' shouted them selves hoarse with enthusiasm. I had never dreamt they would under stand it. "After the performance I was con stantly receiving requests—workpeo ple used to stop me in the streets — to get up another concert and con duct the 'Poeme d'Extase.' " THE NEW BOY On the first day of school in an Ohio town the teacher- of the first grade was securing the names of her pupils. She came to one youngster whose father was noted for his profanity and said: "What is your name?" "Bobbie Hughes," was the reply. "Do you know your a-b-c's?" "Hell, no! I've only been here five minutes!" was the astonishing answer.—Everybody's. Danish Ship, Mary, In Port; Captain Tells of Hawker's Rescue Horsena, Denmark. May 30.—The Danish steamer Mary, which rescued Harry Q. Hawker and Lieutenant Commander Grieve, in mid-Atlantic on May 19, when they were com pelled to descend during their at tempt to fly from Newfoundland to Ireland, arrived here yesterday. Captain Duhn and his m#.tes told of the rescue of the aviator. At 6 o'clock oh the morning of Monday, May 19, they sighted the airplane, which came down into the sea off the bow of the ship. The crew of the Mary had considerable difficulty in launching a boat and Captain Duhn said he doubted whether it would have been possible to do so had the airplane appeared an hour later than it did. Hawker and Grieve were greatly exhausted after the rescue, the cap tain said, so much so that they de clined proffered food in order to ob tain needed sleep. Swiss Government Would Not Join In Blockade On Germany Geneva, May 30.—The Swiss gov ernment has decided to reply nega tively to the allied note concerrdng the blockade of Germany, if Ger many refuses to sign the Peace Treaty. It is held that compliance would infringe Swiss neutrality. Paintings Seem to Be Profitable Investments If the figures given out by Hor ace Townsend, the well-known art critic, in his article on "Art as an Asset," In the June Century, can be credited, investors will de well to put their money in modern American paintings. Paintings, according to Mr. Townsend, who supports his con tention with an imposing array of figures, are speculative risks of the highest grade, inasmuch as they give pleasure as long as they are in the investor's possession, and, if they are well-chosen, will sell in a few years for many times their purchase prices. He quotes Henry Ford's celebrated remark, "I would not give five cents for all the art in the world," not because the remark reveals an ig norant prejudice on the part of Mr. Ford, but because, "it is not likely that he voiced the unspoken thoughts of many millions of his fellow-coun trymen. The man in the street is j wont to regard the artist as a sort of fifth wheel to the economic coach." But this point of view, Mr. Townsend thinks, can be easily al tered. "One may point out that here in New York are many young men who, if they had taken to 'busi ness,' would be accounted fortunate if they were earning three or four thousand dollars a year, but who, as illustrators, are easily making three or four times as much. "It was in 1910," says Mr. Town- I send, "that the Yerkes sale broke all records in this country. The entire collection brought $2,155,579, of which the 198 pictures accounted for $1,695,550. To equal this we have to Journey to Paris, where two years later Jacques Doucet realized the tremendous' sum of $2,776,900, or an average of $7778 for each one. Large as the total seems, however, it is not to be wondered at when it is remembered that a pastel portrait of Duval de i'Epinoy by La Tour, which M. Doucet bought in 1903 for $•1040, brought $120,000, a wonder ful nine years' investment; that Mme. Vigee Lebrun's 'Princess Talleyrand, bought a few years earlier for $3200, sold for $BO,OOO, and that J. H. Fra gonard's 'Sacrifice au Minotaure, which in 1880 brought only $lO6O, was knocked down for $72,000. "However, these were not the only high prices brought in London and Paris about this time. There was the Rouart sale in Paris, for in stance, at which Degas, an old man bv this time, had the doubtful pleas ure of seeing a picture, the 'Dan seuses a la Barre,' which he himself had sold for $lOO. realize the huge sum of $87,000. It was in 1912 that Regnault's 'Salome,' sold by the painter in 1870 for $BOO, brought $96,000, and now forms one of the glories of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It was in IVI2, too, that Turner's 'Lake Constance,' a picture bought by Ruskin f6r $4 00, sold for $21,260; that an Hungarian collector paid $90,000 for Rembrandt's "Por trait of the Artist's Father,' which sold in 1911 for $lO5O, and that at the Weber sale in Berlin, Mantegna's 'Madonno and Child,' bought for $20,000 in 1905, brought no less than $147,500. "Many collectors play for safety and buy old masters for huge sums, but they buy in much the same way that they would buy city real estate; that is. after it has an assured com mercial value. But it must be re membered that at one time these same old masters were modern paint ers and had it not been for patrons during their own lifetime, these works would never have seen the light of day. The men alive now will in turn become old masters, and it is the Ibounden duty of their contemporaries to preserve their work for future generations. Pro fessor C. J. Holmes has given somo useful hints to private collectors: (1) Collect the very best things of their class; (2) Be generously sys tematic; (3) Buy what is strongly felt and emphatic, and not what 1h merely clever. (4) If you must buy • sentiment, buy it cheap and en graved." Make Policemen Agree Not to Strike Winnipeg, Man., May 30.—The city government of Winnipeg yester day took aggressive steps to end sympathetic strikes of public utility and service employes, when the po lice commission ruled that every man wishing to remain in the employ of the city must sign an oath agreeing not to Join any sympathetic strike movement in the future. Officials of three large iron works notified Mayor Charles F. Gray and Premier Norris that they would ac cept officials of the Canadian Rail way Brotherhoods as mediators in a discussion of labor problems with their employes. Thus far, leaders of the Central strike committee have refused to consider any conciliation conference between the iron works executives and their employes. Salvation Army Is "Over the Top," Is Belief New York, May 20.—While com plete figures are lacking, there is evory indication that the Salvation Army passed the $13,000,000 goal in its home service campaign by ap proximately $3,000,000, according to an announcement here by former Governor Charles S. Whitman, of New York, chairman of the Nat ional committee, i pl Q CUT-RATE PATENT VxldriV o MEDICINE STORES 300 MARKET STREET 306 RROAD STREET Thousands of Dollars Worth of Toilet Articles are Placed on Sale / Saturday Specials Take advantage of these exceptionally low prices. Remember, no matter how low others advertise you can always get it at Clark's for the same or lower. Compare these prices with others. None Sold to Dealers „ No Mail Orders No C. O. D. Orders Filled ®FACE POWDERS Talcum Powders Standard Patents Mavis ? aCC Mary Garden Tal- Pinkham's Com- / Powder ...38c cum 45 c _ pound ..........80c / War Tax of \ Azurea Face Mavis Talcum 18c Father John's .....43c I lc for each | Ppwder $1.19 Mennen's Talcum. .21c Scott's Emulsion, 1 2Sc and frac- I Floramye Face Lady Mary Talcum 38c 49c, 95c \ tion thereof J Powder $1.19 Johnson's Talcum .14c Pierce's Discovery 79c \ extra 1 Carmen Face Butterfly Talcum ,19c Pierce's Favorite N. Powder 34c Babcock Corylopsis Prescription 79c Djer-Kiss Face Talcum .........14c Nujol, 9-oz. 43c Powder..... 49c Babcock Cut Rose Nujol, 20-oz. __.79c Mary Garden Face Talcum 14c Usoline 39c ® t," Hudnut's Talcum American Mineral 1 La May, Face (Tin) 19c on 5Sc t ••• 19c ' 39c Riveris Talcum Miles Nervine 79c f o-at. \ Pn y J?. a r ry ace , 8r (J ars > 19c Miles' Heart Rem- / Fountain \ Wnodhurv Face '*" Jess Talcum .. 13c, 18c edy 79c I Syringe; 1 PnlrW Ir Garden Fragrance S. S. S. Blood Tonic 69c 1 $1.25 value, I P° wd " 18c Talcum 73c S. S. S. Blood \ 9 68c / Garden Fragrance Fiancee Talcum ... 89c Tonic .$1.15 V / Powder .........59c Rigaud's Lilas Tal- , Milks Emulsion ...83c Freeman s Face cum 59c Sloan's Liniment, Powder 21c igc 39c 7Qc Pussywillow Face Dental Preparations Bromo Seltzer ...'.75c I.- \ Pompeian Face* " " Kolyno. Tooth An e ier'. Emulsion y X. Pafete 19c 43c, 83c X X / R e( j Pepsodent Tooth Gude's Pepto- [ / Cross \ Paste 37c mangan 96c / Pluto \ [ Kidney 1 OINTMENTS Senreco Tooth Caldwell's Syrup [ Water ] I Plasters J Analgesic Baume c • • •• 23c ri Pep ""L" '' y 3Bc ' 73c I Q " art / \ 2 for 25c / (French) 45c S - S - Whlte Tooth Gl y co Th y™ ohn *' \ 28c / V y Analgesic Balm tp StC i r * "u"" t* i C, 77 C 'fiQ C V S (Park DavisV 43c Euthymol Tooth Listenne .18c, 37c, 69c \. w San Cura Oint. 21c,' 49c Paat< L •••••• }Jc so1 .'• J 9c ' 3 ? c ' 73c Capsoline 19c Lyon's Tooth Paste 17c Lavoris . .19c, 38c, 75c K Y Tellv 19c Sanitol Tooth Paste 23c Gray's Glycerine ®Konden Catarrh Kalpheno Tooth * Tonic 98c Tellv 19c 39c Paste 19c Sal Hepatica, *, Resinol Oint- ' Arnica Tooth Soap 17c 19c, 38c, 75c / H ment 39c, 75c Pyorrhocide Pow- Kilmer's Swamp- / Gude's \®S Mustarine 19c, 37c T der , •" 75c . Root ,, • 39c - 73c / Pepto- ]■ Vick's Salve ..17c, 36c Lyons Tooth Atwoods Bitters . 19c I mangan J I Musterole ....19c, 39c Powder 17c California Syrup of \ 96c Jm Mentholatum ,17c, 32c Euthymol Tooth Figs .. 39c \ + / Sassafola 15c Powder ...17c Limestone Phos- S Cuticura Oint- Sheffield Tooth phates 34c X. ment 19c, 34c , ••••17c Fellows Syrup Pnilam 43c Kalpheno Tooth Hypo $1.05 ®camp h or. le ::::::^ l c •* Fo r The Ba by Toilft Creams .. 15 c, 25c ™ Malted / \ § Pond s Vanishing p owder „ c Borden's Malted { ?J: 0 , o ,y, a ue \| r ' Milk, ,39c, 77c, $2.79 .3"" 1 Pond s Cold Cream 32c . Tm n.e;,i B a, \ Bottle I ns De Meridor Cream 34c Pills and Tablets Burden'* PnnHpnsnH 3 * or J I Stillman's Freckle Brown Mix. Tab., 15c MiJk 4 g _ \ J Cream 32c Pierce's Anuric ...39c VAT Othine, Double Stuart's Calcium 7 , . <ti n7 fl Strength .69c Wafers 33c J a ™ ' • 5L07 Elcaya Cream ....45c 100 5-Gr. Cascara •- . 0 ' j AQ Palmolive Cold Tablets 39c r . . a ® Cream 37c 100 5-Gr. 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Imported Bay , Roigs, 9 for 50c Djer-Kiss 10c | Cream V 3 j6c S / Rum 89c 3 Henriettas 25c Azurea 10c % 21c Js3 J Styptic Pencils ~..5c 3 Mojas for 25c Garden Fragrance 10c J H 6 Ever-Ready 3La Carma for ... ,25c Fiancee 10c Blades ..... 28c 3 Girards for 25c Ideal 10c
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers