Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, January 05, 1915, Night Extra, Page 11, Image 11

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    EVENING LBDGI3U-
PHILADELPHIA: TUESDAY.' JANUARY B; 191S.
-w4-
1 111 rr I 1 llnwifim i i
tt
THEARW '
LXt wflr Cm rHi srr"Jr h
Belascan Dream From
Hungary
At violence to Mother Goose or
ever the fellno authority was when
fvlv' away, tho cat will bo to Now
jj jn Be1rCli at mice, Tho Little The-
decided Monday morning mat ills
tlon was tho iietter pnrt of "Courage."
th.r rjlnyhouse. rondo un their
j. m have a general houscclcanlnit
t.narv 11. Ami so there Is nothing
do today but wrlto about David Ue
:o' newest production, "Tho I'han-
Blvali which is huw iu uo aeon m
New YorK incaire.
i. I'ThB Concert," It Is one of thoso
Malic crosses with tho pedlsroo, "by
Dltrlcnstein out ui i uerman,
haps U was tho Magyar tonRUo in
i.. iVr.nn Motnar wroto "Tho Phan-
KlVfll J "uli '" ""' lJ,1HEi vlo nsno
f.plnywrlftlit has transplanted action
OMSOnaBCS lo miiuiitu un nu um 111
eaie. of "The Concert." Ho has done
work welt, and It tho result Isn't
e to dellRhtful, It Is probably be-
Q Herman jjuiii a uuiuuu? la
mmed wltn nuinan namic, wiiuo Jir.
nars Is rather In tho nature of an ln-
,lous trick.
16 wan who put ino aevn on mo stage
nliv and exhibited hell as a police
rt In another, has mado. "Tho Phnn
nival a sort or inuoraiory specimen
the dream-psychologies of his dls
llihcd fellow countryman, Slgmund
yd.
Wife who Is eternally nagged by a
oti Tiusband dreams of a lovor. Ho
'ha ('bhantom rival" thnt her hitsbnnd
lit',, ho Is what Freud would call tho
ppressea. wisn oi nor ncari; anu no
nVout to bo, In sober matter of fact,
mine- Russian, Saciia, who once loved
I -who left her after writing a bcautl-
. . .-.-14 kA 2 1 Stl n It ft A A4 .
farewell jcniai unu iu imo nu- iu-
bed to America. In hor dream ho
fits back to her as all tho wonderful
li, successes and failures, that ho had
tttn her ho mlsht become before ho
Imed her hand. In tho reality after
drtam ho turns out to oo nono or
i thlnEfl, but a very commonplace
ng man, who got himself Into a soft
ce In the army on a trumped-up ox-
. .,..,. l ,, ml..... t. .... .
fO 01 Iiai joqu ihuh umutl to
(amers. '
ff. Belasco's work In "Tho Phantom
tJBal" has been to enhance the dream
Won or me piay u- some very ex-
ent stage management ana to neglect
manifest duty of using a narsii prun
knlfe on a BOod deal of tho bickering
locus between husband and wife that
flkes a too lengthy Introduction.
he dream Is, after all, tho substance,
1 there Mr. Belasco may bo judged,
i scenery Is manifest piffle canvaB coi
ns that look moro llko comic opera
in the hall of tho Van Ness mansion,
t th lighting, the carpeting and tho
life' Me another matter. A cringing,
trying- butler In black evening dress
lues up and lownsreat orange stairs.
try oream ngment or tno myriad
mentals who servo in i,.i..i.. .,.,
Bo&as't" ."I"1 " nbovo-Mr
lights hwAnS!!1"!? aS l,,r0Wn th0 f0t'
act on of ,(, ' Wher they b8lonB- t,1B
l"ee and llM,dream R,oes 'i at a
8haUenanbov-oUreal.tyrBSl0n JU8t th rlsht
nJUlL0 BM? BAch(l ent" a ffreat
MO M ,,""?n 'TPerlnl d",,omnt and ai a
lovrfrnn?.r,4.A8,CnCJ1' l,C
new mU i U' llu,;b"nd and plana a
swcent.Ll n" ln '""RMlncent,
CrnZ. BHf?shl0.? 0,lly eiunlted by Laura
?v m ro'n!l?t,c "Ptures ns tho wife.
2XV .,0 hurtn M her off Inlo the
rolnpLnM,mCeta tlle ,ovcr m u' f"-th
.h u JV,tlo.n. a ne-nrmca tramp. As
triM i, ?Ut t0. B?.wlth hlm- th0 husband
l t0 trangIo his rlval-and tho dream
tuu , ln,8 bie?n n ?ery "no dream,
full of weird whimsical high lights like
tho back butler and chalked faces" of
tho attendants who light tho diplomat
on nls way.
If Mr. Dltrlchstcln falls as adapter In
the lengthy tiuarrols of reality, he
triumphs as both writer and actor In the
dream and tho epilogue. Ho plnys the
romance of tho masterful general and tho
supremo diplomat with that hard cer
titude, that command of all things nmor-'
ous or mundane, which tho victim of such
attractions would moHt ndmlre. Tho tem
peramental tenor Is a distinct comic mas
torptecc; tho trnmp, a bitter little vignette.
In tho epilogue ho makes reality llvo with
nil tho humor of everyday humanity.
In such circumstances "The Phantom
Illval' becomes a novel nnd very enter
taining comedy, with hints In It of some
thing more.
Keith's Vaudeville
Kitty Gordon offered a reporter $2000
last night to keep her name out of the
paper. It seems that her husband was
hurt In a collision between to tnxlcnbs
nnd tho woman with him was also In
jured. Unlike other nowspapor men, this
reporter, on hearing of tho accident,
bolted right Into Miss Gordon's boudoir.
Sho was taking a nnp with two llttlo
puppies. And sho was angry so were
tho puppies. "When tho reporter told hor
all everything sho offered tho bribe. All
this took placo at Keith's, and after o.
fako attempt at suicide Miss Gordon
chanfied her clothes, or at least added
to what sho had on, and sang a couple
of songs. She was ably assisted In the
act, which was called "Alma's Iteturn,"
by Miss Helen Goff and a Mr. Hunter.
It received warm approval.
Without any Tubs or feathers Mario
Nordstrom played a number of dramas,
sang a couple of Bongs and mado tho au
dience lnugh and cry alternately.
Still another clever woman on tho bill,
Flo Irwin, sister of tho buxom May,
mado a decided hit In "Tho Lady of the
Press." Aa Nora Larkin, an advertising
woman, sho showed how easy It was to
land a Senator's son for her daughter.
Tho comedy was full of laughs.
Harry Breen camo out quickly and nn-
i cci n
vf"r v.
GRANHY
MCffa JADfftcOOSC
vr nrric air orttcaucAf
cnWAttr acorr
SOME IMPRESSIONS OF CHAUNCEY OLCOTT, AT THE WALNUT
CHILDREN'S CORNER
Cleaning Day
H a cold, dark, wintry day somo
treat white clouds floated across the
7 sky.
nd the clouds were some dainty white
BltsT
jBbe.''people on earth looked up and saw
Clouds and 'said, "Oh, dear, I guess
jolng to be a tad day!" You see.
l( didn't know about tho fairies up
ire' on the clouds or thoy wouldn't
re minded them so much. But not
awlns a"bout the fairies, they were
ry to see the clouds plla up.
ow, It Just happened that tho fairies
on the clouds looked down at the
f may yaa no longer dirty and
,,!lww, w I tb dirt and. the srl
SawL'o muu
ilav
gray.
mo
winter.
a they looked down qust aa the peo
W looked up) and they said, "Dear
ifeJISJr tnUSSV anil AVrtir , nM ivnrM
a .took! Tfci. .,,.1.. i. .. v.j
. -... uu.vtjr is a VQtjr uau
h
They talked about tho dirt and what
a bad day It was for tho old earth so
much thnt the fairy queen finally heard
them. "What's this you are talking
about?" she asked. i
"We're talking about the dirty old
earth," replied tho fairies, "and we wish
wo could do something for It."
"Well, maybo you can," said the fairy
queen, cheerfully. "Why don't you go
down, and clean It up?"
"Wo?" naked tho fairies; "we clean up
tho earth?"
"Certainly," replied tho queen; "why
not?"
"But tho earth Is such a big Job!" ex
claimed the fairies.
"Big Jobs aro the same as little Jobs,"
said tho queen, "only thoy take moro
bravery and ' more stlck-at-lve-ness!
Never stop because a Job sounds big!"
Tho fairies blinked. Tho queen talked
as If cleaning up tho earth was nn every
day Job thoy could hardly bellevo their
ears! But if tho queen thought they
could clean up the earth, why, maybo
they could at least they might try! They
didn't llko to disappoint her.
So they set to work. They called to
gether all tho fairies they could find and
told them about cleaning up day. Then
th'oy got busy at tho real work.
Down from the clouds they floated on
thrir mission of cleanness. Millions and
millions of fairies all dressed ln snow
whlto clothes and floating gracefully on
the breeze. You can qulto Imagine how
pretty they looked.
They covered the house tops, they cov
ered tho alleys. They hid the trash piles
and the heaps of dirty ashes. They laid
a blanket of whiteness over the dingy
garden and they propped soft whiteness
around the naked trees.
Oh, they were busy those fairies!
And when the day was over the world
was n longer dirty and gray; It was
fresh and white and gleaming.
The stupid earth peoplo said to each
other, "Dear me, but this has been a
stormy dayl" You- see they didn't under
stand about cleaning day and how the
fairies had worked I
CopvrioM, titi Clara, Ingram JuHioh,
nouiiccil that ho was crnzy. But an his
songs made tho people laugh they let It
go nt that.
Tho Meynko Sisters, two wonderful
girl ncrobntB, singers and dunccrs, mado
a deserved hit, Angclo Patrlcolo showed
that he was well acquainted with tho old
mnsters nt tho piano. Corclll and Gllletto
did somo acrobatics and talked. It would
bo better If thov confined themselves to
tho gymnastic work alone.
Paul Sunberg and Mile. Ileneo were
many miles In buck of tho show, which,
taken ns n whole, was all that ono could
wish for. Hnveman's animals performod
exceptional fonts.
News Notes
"His Hoyal Happiness." by Annlo Rus
sell in Sprlncfleld. Maim., lino nmvn.i it.
self all thnt the plot mndo one fear. The
Union says of It: "And even tho acting
of Annlo Russell falls to redeem the four
acts and live scenes from tho wllderrvbss
of words nnd from dreariness."
When "Sinners" changes the at
mosphere of Sing Sing for tho pure
ozone of the Gay White Way, tho cast
of Owen Davis' newcat version of "The
Villain Still Pursued Her" will contain
Robert Edeson. a cast Including Allco
Brady, Emma Dunn, Florence Nash. Ger
trude Dallas, Frances McLeod, Robert
Edcson, Charles Rlchmnn, John Crom
well, Walter Walker nnd James Seeley.
How amusingly tho managers explain
their mishaps Mr. Frohman has brought
tho tour of thnt silly business, "The
Prodlgnl Husband," to nn end, "In order"
that Mr. Drow and Alexander Carlisle
may appear In a revival of "Rosemary "
Mr. Drew will play "Rosemary" at tho
Emplro ln New York for two weeks, be
ginning January 13, and then take it
to the const and the Exposition. Sixteen
years ago It was first acted nt tho same
thcatrr, with Maude Adams In tho part
Miss Carlisle is to take.
Shakespeare having collapsed under the
strain of Introducing Phyllis Ncllson-Tcr-ry
to America, the young English woman
will go Into vaudeville And of all pos
sible companies she has chosen the
fourth act of "La Tosca" and Melburne
MacDowell, who played Scarpla back in
S3
I Vfcl TT-i T L. 1
(
THEATRICAL
BAEDEKER
photozTxplays
The plcturlzatlon of Hall Calho's "Tho
Christian," featuring Enrlo Williams and
Edith Storoy, was shown for thc first
tlmo In this city yesterday afternoon at
tho Chestnut Strret Opera House. Tho
work Is of the highest quality, and the
light effects aro really wonderful. They
begin wltih a benutiful sunset over tho
ocean nnd closing with tho lslonary
passing of angels nnd the shadow of a
cross on the floor, caused b tho moon's
rays shining upon tho figure of John
Storm, with nrms outstrctohed. Tho set
ting", with their period furniture and dec
orations nlso call for special mention.
Earle Williams Is the John Storm, a
man who has determined to devote him
self to humanity His onnctment of this
rolo Is strong, especially In tho Bcenes
showing the mob's demonstration against
him and his teaching and again when he
goes to Glory Quaylo's room nnd tells
her ho Is "going to kill hor body to
save her soul." It Is In this scene that
Edit Story ns Olory Is at her best, dis
playing considerable emotional ability.
Others In tho cast who do good work
are Charles Kent, Hnrry Northrup, James
Lackaye, Vincent Stornroyd, Alberta Gal
latin, Carlottn deFellce, Edward Kimball,
Rose Tapley and James W Morrison.
"Tho Chrlstinn" Is tho result of eight
JiEWHI "Susl," Willi Joso Collins and
Tom McXaughton and an excollent cust. A
muslcul comedy of Viennese origin Store
tuneful than clever, but well acted and
pleasing- 8. in
11HOAD-"Jerry." with MIm nillle Burke. A
comedy by Catherine Clilaholm Cuehlng
Miss Burke captures a husband In 8 con
tunics Amusing 8:13
KBITII'S 'Tho Ixwcsome LrmIcs," Nelllo V.
Klchol and a diversified bill of tho usual
quality 2 00, 8 00
OARIUCK "Potash and Perlmutter," Mon
taguo aiaen' popular stories of the nothing
trade mado over Into the season's mutt
heartily amusing comedy 8.13
LITTLE TlIi:ATItn-"Tlie Critic," Sheridan's
satire on things theatrical In his day and
ours A very amusing performance of this
trnnetiy within a comedy 30
T.vtMr?"The Peasant Qlrl. with Knuritt
Trcntlnl and Clifton Crawford. A Conli-,
r.entai opereuu rovvruun. ,,m wymm ui u
"milk-fed tenor" and "chicken hawk," br
Miss Trentlnl. The muslo la excellent and
Mr. Crawford most amuslnij ..... .... 8.1.-.
WAl,NU,P"Tho Heart of Paddy Whack "
with Chauncey Olcott. An Irish play of sen
timent and song 8.00
cases tho inspectors found tKot the
guardians club tho children together nnd
tnko In two of thorn for fl cents or three
for 8 cents. Tho guardian usually col
lects the money, passes Uio chltdien Into
the theatre and then leaves by n sldo
door to search for fresh victims.
A VERSATILE BABY.
A baby, 2i years, who earns 3 a day.
Probably one of the modt beautiful nnd
Intelligent children In the moving plcturo
profession Is Dorothy De Wolff, who Is
a valuable acquisition to the Lubln
Studio. Tho child Is unusually handsome
and gifted with a talent for acting that
Is surprising. Her parents are both
theatricnl people, having been In the
profession for many years. Dorothy was
torn In Pittsburgh, May 31, 1911, and has
been In the Lubln Stock for about three
months.
Two of Dorothy's great successes were
"A Husband's Awakening" and 'A
StranBo .Melody," In each of which
photoplajs espcclnl mention wns made
by tho critics of tho child's wonderful
nctlng.
SCORES CHARITY WORKERS
Dr. Leo K. Frnnkel Says a Majority
Are Not Fitted for "Work.
A shnrp nttnek on those who make It
their business to dispense charity was
made by Dr. Leo K. Frankel, former
mannger of tho United Hebrew Charities
of New York nnd now a vice president
of tre Metropolitan Llfo Insurnnce Com
pany. Doctor Frankel, who was once
n resident of this city, was tnlklng to
tho women of tho Kcnescth Israel Sister
hood a't their monthly meeting In tho
Alumni Building, Broad street and Co
lumbia avenue, yesterday.
"Chailty workers, for tho moit part,
aro no more lit to ndmlnlstcr to tho needs
of unfortunate families than you would
be to ndmlnlstcr to your children If they
had typhoid fever. I have Been girls of
IS, with no thought from one dny to the
next, enter tho homes of women who aro
struggling with their last breath and at
tempt to toll them how to relieve tho
pangs of misfortune."
VALUABLE CATS STOLEN
DOROTHY DE WOLFF
The two-and-a-half-year old star
ofLubin photoplays.
months of careful preparation, and tho
eight acts, taken on the Islo of Man,
where tho early part of the story is
developed, uro well presented. Credit Is
duo Eugene Mullln f6r tho perfected
scenario and Frederick Thompson for the
stage direction and the handling of the
mob scenes.
A JUSTIFIABLE CRUSADE.
At least 250 motion plcturo houses In
Now York city may bo put out of busi
ness If tho crusade which Commissioner
of Licenses CBell threatens Is carried out,
Children under tho ago of 18 years are
being admitted to tSheoe places, Commis
sioner Bell has learned, without regard
to a section of tho penal law which
makes this a misdemeanor. Consequently
the Commissioner has adopted drastic
measures to put an end to the violations.
In many Instances, theatres havo In
their employ official guardians whose
business it Is to meet children on the
street, escort them Into the amusement
places, leave them there and go forth
In search of moro children,
It is not necessary for the children to
have the nickel for admission into most
cue and 7th street, free. . ... . of tho cheaper houses. Three cents and
R BfS?o.rBkT.7reT,"rV.. "" " " I sometimes only i aro enough. In many
One
Germantown Police Recover
Missing' Animal.
Police of the Germantown station were
kept busy today recovering cnts stolen In
that section. Several of tho animals still
aro missing.
Mrs. I.. P. Pratt, E03 Westvlew street,
Germantown, complained to the police to
day that her Persian cat Chin Chin had
been stolen, Two special policemen wcro
assigned to the case and they nrrested
Joseph Dates, 171 East Sharpnack street,
In whoso home the cat was found Ac
cording to the police, the man abducted
the cat while removing garbage from
the Pratt residence.
Mrs, ,Edward Cope, E3I0 Wayno avenue,
also reported the theft of a valuable cat.
Many residents have complained to the
police the last week about the disap
pearance of pet cats.
It is not hard lo dlsengago from the
wealth of goodncts brought by the Boston
JJV'llll.l.M..,. ln. hI.LI 1 . . ..
, --....,...,,.., ,i,ow iiiKiii moss particular
( blessings which made tho evening glor
ious, They were tho nretimlm. ita lo,ir
I and Its soloist. Beside these three the
pinymg or a new symphony wns almost
nn Inconsldered trifle. a
Not thnt the fourth symphony of Guy
Roparts! Is light ns air. There are mo
ments In It when ono wishes It were;
wishes that It possessed tho tonic vigor
of air Instead of provoking murk In
whlrh It Is produced. (Were the com
poser a Debusay-lto Instead of n Frnnck
Inn, ono should call the latter ntmos
phere diatonic.) The Instant enthusiasm
In which the symphony produced was al
most negligible: In tho course of Its un
Intel rupted 30 minutes tho program
notes wcro almost as keenly followed by
a goodly port of the audience as wns the
music.
Yet there Is In this Ropartz composi
tion a certain degree of beauty; thore nru
appealing themes, generally unachieved or
frustrated; there Is nn interesting, but
not torrlfjing. complexity of orchestra
tion. The Inevitable ascending question of
tho pseudo-Frnncklnns Is heard, but (un
like French's fnmous question in his
symphony) the query Is moro Importunate
than dignified, moro a complaint than n
meditation. It Is asked In the woodwind,
to which tho tragic composers aro par
tial, but before It assumes any authority,
It Is elnbornted almost out of oxlstcnco
In orchestration.
Deep feeling and high thinking seem
equally nbsent In tho symphony sheer
tonal beauty there Is, but It Is subordi
nated to tho unsatisfactory emotion nnd
tho flaccid Intellect which tho symphony
must express. And tho fnct thot It was
Bupcrbly played, the string nnd wind
choirs being both at their best In It.
makes ono wonder whether even Its ob
vious beauties do not owe jthelr Inspiration
moro to Boston than to Nancy.
Doctor Muck could not havo expected
that after tho "Flnlondla," as he led It,
and tho orchpstra played, one could listen
with patience nnd responsiveness to Ro
part. To Franck, yes eternally. To tho
Francklnns, no. Bccnuso Doctor Muck's
"Flnlnndla" had a wealth of human
riches, hud his own understanding, his
thought nnd his Inspiration. Conducting,
as he docs always, with seeming indif
ference, ho evoked the music's own pas
sion. His hnnd was not raised against, but
with tho music.
Let It, be said with somo finality that
there Is moro than ono greatness, more
than one perfection In conducting music,
and that Doctor Muck has como closer
to one of these perfections than any
other conductor whose mensuro wo may
now take. If that perfection Is said to be
cold. It will be remembered that such
warmth ns ho brings from his orchestra
Is not often felt, ir It be called unimagi
native It will be remembered that such
ImaglnlngB as he stirs are thc guerdon
of hut two or threo other conductors It
our time. Thoso things It has been called.
But If you call it Inhuman, you err. It
Is meroly suporhumnn, nt times, and
splendidly humnn for thc most. But to
bo truly humnn Is a pleasure reserved,
nho for tho few.
Among them Is Mr. Krelsfer, who played
last night for the second time this season
In Philadelphia. His Is tho nrt which
leaves nothing to bo snld, yet It seems
to demand thnt everything bo snld again.
As tho conducting of Doctor Muck, It
Is the negation of everything wenk, of
everything febrile and excessive of
everything romantic, In fnct. Yet neither
Is clnsslcal: the Just term is humanistic.
Because In them there Is nil passion, with
a splendid dignity nnd discipline. Nothing
Is barred out; tho world Is accepted and
ordered nnd made beautiful.
Mr. Krelslor played Inst night a con
certo of Mendelssohn. Its nllegro Is of
an extraordinary virtuosity; the Impec
cable technique of thot artist took the
cadenzas with n noblo facility. But Its
second movement, tender and sentimental
and moving, was played with such ut
noss of feeling as' tf be heartbreaking.
"There la a high breathlcssness about
beauty which cancels lust and supers!!
tlon," a poot and philosopher of our time
has said. That beauty Is Mr. Kreisler'a,
Iho Philadelphia Orchestra
Yesterday afternoon In a concert at
Carneglo Halt, New York, the Phlladel
phla Orchestra played for tho benefit Of!
the Edward MaeDowelt Memorial Asso
ciation. Tho program repeated the VI
valdl concerto heard here last week, the
Fourth Symphony of Tschalkowsky.hcard
hero In October, and Included the dirge
from MacDowell's Indian Suite and the
"Emperor" concerto, played by Mm.
Olga Samaroff,
It was perhaps not extraordinary that
under thc strange conditions of the New
York trial tho orchestra should have sur
passed Itself. Certainly the strings played
with a more robust, surer tone In their '
concerto than they could employ here last
week. The woodwind In tho MacDowell
"Dirge" nnd the entire orchestra In the
magnificent outbursts of the opening
movement of tho symphony wcro In '
t&hnlqua and in spirit beyond uny
thlng heard here from them. Their ad
venture should return them with exalted
courage to their dally task of providing
for Philadelphia.
Tho concerto was unquestionably the
triumph of the afternoon. To note the
nc,cord between soloist, orchestra and
director Is to noto something whlcH should
In all cases be assumed, but which In
Its highest state Is rare and Inspiring.
Mmo. Samarort played the "Emperor" a
Carrcno must have playod It years ago,
with precision flrst, then with vigor, final
ly with power nnd control, so that Its
great numbers were greatly expressed.
Hero the concerto will be played by Mr.
Hofmann. It Is a concerto which Is best
left to men to play. But yesterday WIme. '
Samaroff added her name to the exclu
sive list of exceptions.
rilOTOrLAYB
Chestnut St. Opera House
Home of World's Greatest Photoplays
Afta.,1 to 6, 10c, ISc. Evgs.,7 to 11, 10c; 1&3. 5J
Another
Smashing Success
THE
CHRISTIAN
lias Duplicated the Great Triumph
Scored at This Theatre by
, "THE SPOILERS"
Hundrcda Turned Away Yesterday
Thanhouscr's Greatest Photoplay
ZUDORA
Ask the manager of your nearest photo
play theatre to secure this wonderful us
cess. It Is the blgcest, most elaborate and
unique production ever ottered.
1'KTKlt I'. GLENN, KeprnentatlvA
00J Filbert Street Thone Walnut C0TT.
The Germantown Theatre
Germantown Ave. and Brhoot Lane.
Today Mat. 1:30; Evp;. 7
SPOILERS
Hy MIX I1EACH
Direct from the Chestnut St. Opera Home.
TULPEHOCKEN S'WSSAftt.
HHATItE KnATUBBS HAILY
odav the juimik'h tvira:. othisiis.
Hear organ with wondrrfol human tnlco
BELVIDERE ,.7'". Z Toi
THE HII.I.IONAIItE. 3 parts.
THE IIKII Or THE PAST
THE MKTIIOIIS OE MAHUAIIKT
MIDVALE THEATRE, East Falla
HOME, KiraiST llllllli. UTUISItn
CAYl'OA. Germantown Ave. and Ctoruaa Bt,
CHOKVN U1IU.'H THANKSanlNO
WHEN THE HltlDES GET .MIXED
TODAY'S PHOTOPLAY CALENDAR
MRS. BLACK IS BACK
CABIRIA
ACTS "BILLY" FOR POLICE 'THE CHRISTIAN
WHAT'S DOING TONIGHT
I mtt I
"Billy" Sunday sermon, tabernacle, 10th and
Vine streets T:W o'clock. Free.
Chiropody Society. Hotel Adelphls: 8 o'clock.
Home and School League. Shlppeii School,
18th and Cherry streets; H, o'clock. Free
Lancaster Avenue Business Men, 3030 Lan
caster avenue. Free
Academy of Natural Sciences, 1000 rtace
street. , , . -. r--.i,un -,-
ConocasinK uuu , ....... ,-
Lieutenant Then Urges Bluecoats to
Visit Tabernacle.
Lieutenant Andrew T. Hamilton, of tho
Belgrade and Clearfield streets station,
told his policemen, after roll call this
mornlne, that "Billy" Sunday was the
greatest man that over camo to Phlla
delohla. Then ho gave what every one ngrecd was
a faithful Impersonation of Sunday and
got the men so Interested that six of
them asked how they could get seats In
the tabernacle. When It was all over
Magistrate Campbell, who was waiting
to hear cases, gave Hamilton two hearty
slaps on tho back and said:
"Good boy; very good, very good "
Contemporary Club to DIbcubs Peace
Prominent speakers will address the
Contemporary Club at u meeting to ba
held next Monday night at the Belleyue
Stratford, The subject for discussion Is
"What Can America Do to Bring About
PeacoT" James M. Beck, ex-Attorney
General of the United States, and ur.
Stanton Colt, lecturer and author, of
London, will be tho speakers,
ARISTOCRACY
I.EAI1EH
4lst and Lancs.tfr ATenue
IMroSRIAlV A ,
Both Street lielowr Walnut I
WINKNOIt . ....
Kensington and Fntnlifonl Avenues
THE GHOST BREAKER
CHESTNUT STUEET OI'EIIA HOUSE
AI.II.pinltA '
ysth and Morris Streets
THEKEY TO YESTERDAY
OVEItUKOUK
63d and HaverfoTd Arenue
THE LAST EGYPTIAN
MASTER KEY NO. 6
LOCUST
AM and Locust Streets
A.MUEU
Amber and Franaford Avenue.
MASTER KEY NO. 7
SAVOV
1811 Jlaruet Htreet
MONEY OTHER PICTURES
"Va'mii.v
1311 JiarUft M. fupp. unmAi.cr..;
OATH OF A SWORD
.Ittl'KKItKnK
iOtli St. below Dauphin St.
THE PIT
HEGENT
less Market Street
READY MONEY
nuuY
Market Street below Hf Tenth Street
ROSE OF THE RANCHO
CHEAT NOKTHEItN
Hroad and Erie ATCnue,
THE SPOILERS
UBItMANTOHN . ...
Ocrmantown Ave. and School Lane
STAR OF GENIUS
ULUEIllltl)
Broad and Susquehanna ATeaoe
Tillie's Punctured Romapce
l'ALACE
ltll Market Street
TREY O'HEARTS
H03IEII8ET
tils Kensington Avenue
ZUDORA NO. 5
ZUDORA
COLISEUM
Market Street below 60th Street
WEST ALLEGHENY
33th St, and Allecheny Are.
Mn TtOTnMi SIMPSON. THE VILLAGE QUEEN-IS CHEEZBURG DETERMINED TO KNOW "CON" TRAFFIC'S BUSINESS IN ITS MIDST!
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ly,"! wect., He WASN'T NViTCtJi" ; " AMgFORT.
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HAS CAiea a FUROR.9 IN CHeez0PR FOUNPSD WITH ft
NaeR.-n3 serrg im -rue town oi-- - A.. -, ,ugn ways. o-
KANMOIV f AOlatV CtOTHf AHAWN iCTV, iLli. I
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