EVENING LEDGEB-PHILAMLPKIA, TUESDAY, MAY U. 11S: 8 i t I trSbJk Stinting STr&gcr , PUDLIC LEDGER COMPANY crnvB . k. cuims, riMKT. ChrlM It. Ludlnton.Vlc PrtiMrnt j John C, Martin, Bwreturr nl Tresimreri Philip fl, Collins, John B, TVIIIUrtu, Director. editorial hoard i Ctsus 1J. K. CinTii, Chairman. P. It WIIAt.nr ExtaJtlre Bdllor JOIIWft MARTIN',. Otnttal IIiuIhih Manager rubllaheil dally at rente Utttatrt Dulldln, Independent: Squart, Philadelphia. Lttnn rrjMAt flroail ami Chtnuf fetreeu AT-ffTro Citi Prm-Vnlan Oulldlnt Niw YoK , 170-A. Motrrrnlllan Tower ClltCAoo..,, Ri7 ifntn Inurnc niilldlnr Lennox... s Waterloo I'larc. fall Mill, H. W. NEWS BUREAUS i K"&!La?, nc"t" The Poif ntilMlnr tJKSIX.H!"""1' "" Frl1rlchHra. n?..?'2J',,?"ul' a rn MII Et, B. W, Pil Dwiuo. .12 nuc Loula la Ornnd subscription- tbiimr P.".'. of Philadelphia, mrept whr forflitn Vil ?S .?S,,,ir4' Diilt ONI.T, one month. tttenty-nv eenta: D1II.T Oni.t. onf ynr, thro? .lolMrn All mull nub Krlptloni payable In advance nELt, JOO WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN lOofl BV Addreta alt communication In llienlnn Ledger, Independence Rquare, Philadelphia. r.tTBBto ir tub rmuncM'iiu rosrorrici x trcoxo ci. suit. MATTID. the average net paid daily circula. HON OF THE EVE.VINO LriDOER rou april was sj.ioi. PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY. MAY 11, I9IS It to safer to listen tn fooUnh tMnpi than to utter them. rpHEIlE In no ftltuntlnn now existing he - twecn Germany and (ho United Stutcri that ennnot lto solved ly diplomacy. There does not exist n,n Inovltablo casus belli. Our national Intercuts nro wrnppcd up In peace not war. Tho pnpalonn of tho mob will not dictate tho policy of tills Government. Its course will bo mapped out by responslblo men, whoso heads aro cool, who can think clearly and who nro not pnrtlsnn. There will be no war unless tho mnb spirit prevails. It IsJ tho duty of every cood citizen, whatever his party and whntever his prejudices, to do what ho may to check that mob spirit This Is a Government of common sense and not a Government of hysteria. An Admiralty of Excuses THE British Admiralty warned the Lusl tanla of the presence of hostile subma rines. But Mr. Churchill explains that ho Wns without resources to furnish it with nrmed protection. That Is a fatal admission. It means that KtiRland must leave her mer chantmen exposed and let them trust to luck. Thero Is no control of the seas In such a course. It will do England little good to ruin tho trado of Germany If Jicr own Is ruined also. That Is what her navy Is for, the pro tection of her trade. If It Is unable to per form that function, then qertnlnly tho Em pire has fallen on grievous days. But most Englishmen will conclude that the situation la not duo to any lack of competency In tho navy, but to a very obvious Incompetency In Its management. "Whero aro tho Blakes and Nelsons? Tho Ttevonge, In days gone by, fought a whole Spanish fleet. There was dnsh and daring then In English fjeets. No odds were too gren' for them. They saw their work and did It; they did not wasto time In explaining why they could not do things. England has the ships and men, but gravely needs a better Admiralty. Automobiles Have Some Rights rpHEBE will bo no Increase In automobile JL Ilcenso fees this year, tlmnks to tho com mon sense of tho House of Representatives. If It Is necessary to Increaso tho fund avail able for highway Improvements somo other way must bo found than by putting a heavier tax on motor vehicles. It is pos sible to nrguo for a special tax on horses because their hoofs injure tho highways. There is not a small town In tho Com monwealth In which ovldeneo cannot bo found of tho damago that tho horses havo done to tho roads. Beside almost overy hitching post thero Is a hole stamped out by steel-shod hoofs. It gathers water when It rains and Is a mud puddle after tho Shower and nn offenso to tho sight all tho time. But no ono will ever seriously think of taxing; horses for tho privilege of using the roads. Tho automohllo Is so common as a busi ness necessity that It has ceased to be a rich man's toy. Tho tendency of taxation, therefore, must be toward lower rates rather than higher. Tho House of Representa tives really represented tho most advanced sentiment on this subject when It rejected, by a vote of two to one, the proposition to raise the license fees. He Died Like a Gentleman IF WE may accept as accurate the defini tion of a gentleman ns one who always forgets himself and never forgets nny one else, then Alfred G. Vanderbllt went to. his death Justifying his right to the honorable title. As the ship was sinking he was seen handing his life belt to a woman without one. He was willing to take tho chance of Ettlng another, but hlB first thought was for tho Hafety of those who needed such pro tection as It wok In his power to extend. The most splondld traits of humanity manifested themselves In thn great tragedy brought about by the moat brutal exercise of power In the history of modern civiliza tion, and they shlno luminously by contrast with, the blackness of the background be fore which they were displayed. Another Try for London IT IS generally believed In Germany that the date has been fixed for a raid of air ships upon London, when bombs are to be dropped upon the city from the sky, and German sympathizers on the ground are to starf 'es simultaneously In three or four hundied places. But whether the date is definitely fixed or not there Is no doubt that the raid Is In tended. The appearance of airships at the J mouth or tne Thames several months ago Lj- WM a, reconnolterlnff expedition, and ln xenqea aiso to test me amiuy of the airmen ,to reach the British coast. The raid on Mon day, wheji a fleet of Zeppelins and aero planes flew up the Thames valley from Southend to within 12 miles of London itself, dropping; bombs on the way, was also tufty a tcoutlne expedition to familiarize the men who are to do the work with the. nature of the country and With the land marks to be followed jn the final desnt,of a grat aerial fleet upon the British capital There has Un a disposition outstda of Girmmny to regard thi talK of the effective-r.- m of tfeA tr cit Xur ouytkiisy but seeut duty as mere bluster and bluff. But the Ger mans have succeeded In bringing their under sea cruft to a. state of perfection which leads the observer to believe that they havo the mechanical ability to perfect tho airship also, and to make It hb destructive when operating above the land as the submarine Is beneath tho waters. So wo must await the new horrors of a humanly contrived hell on earth. Stand by the President THE way to stand by the President Is to stand by him. That means not to goad him. It means, too, that whatever he does he must have tho backing of tills people. "Our country! May she nlways bo In the right; but our country, right or wrong!" means more than taking up arm when she engages In battle. It means to bo for her, patiently, fervently, whole-heartedly when sho stands as the cornerstone of peace and sanity In n world gono mad with passion. It la an easy thing to rush Into war. Any nation can do It. But to stand four-square with reason, unswayed by fury, and hold strong to peace, that any nation cannot do, America must. Tho President Is not going to unleash tho dogs of war until every rccourso for pcaco nt his command has been exhausted. Ho is not going to make demands of Gurmany that cannot bo sustolncd. He Is not going to do nny of tho wild nnd furious things which the passionate aro urging him to do. While Eu rope Is yet a groaning cxnmplo of tho idiocy of war, ho will not drive this nation Into tho sclf-samo shambles. Why urge hlm to nnd why Inflame tho people? All leaders of men havo on their shoulders today a fearful ra uponsiblllty. They must counsel coolness, not heat. Wo nro already sick with horror. What man dare advocate that wo multiply tenfold tho anguish? Wo aro unprepared for war and tho national Intelligence shrinks from it. Not that wo will not fight, for our courago Is undisputed, but that we will not Join In an orgy of carnage until reason hart exhausted Itself and thero Is no recourso left but arms. Tho temptation to leap Into tho abyss is great. Tho provocation is great. For weaker causes nations havo entered the lists'. But we, thank Providence, havo been taught In a finer school. Wo have learned patlcnco nnd have become skilled In self-restraint. Wo know bow to listen tn both sides. In be tween tho partisans, tn tho mlddlo of the road, stand tho great majority of Americans; willing and ready tn trust tho nation's honor to the President, anxious to glvo him their full moral support, whatever his decision. There Is tho true patriotism to stand with him even at the risk of Jeers, to back him up If ho undertakes tho harder task of preserv ing peace. Havo dono with tho mob spirit; . It has no placo In this crisis. On domestic policies men mny differ, but they must stand together ns ono in support of the nation's foreign policy. That is tho function of patriotism. To stand by tho President now Is to be a good American. , Heathen Nations Compose Their Differences THE world at least will be spared a war between Japan and China. It apparontly has been averted. Nor does It motter much how this result was brought about. It Is comforting to know that even If Christian nations cannot restrain themselves from sav age combat, heathen nations can. China, acriulescent and sensible, is n living proof that tho wholo world has not gono mad. The Great Adventure SHALL never know what was pass W ing in tho mind of Charles' Frohman when ho remarked to a young woman beside him on tho deck of tho sinking Imsitania, "Why fear death? It is tho most beauti ful adventure In life." Tho young woman was saved and Kroh nuin was lost. Ho may or may not havo been awate of tho fato before him. Ho may havo been trying to reassuro tho young woman, or ho may have been expressing tho philosophy of his life. But whatever his purpose, ho expressed the sentiment which nil philosophy nnd all religion have striven to Impress upon tho mind. The feeling that death docs not end all Is well nigh universal! But exactly what Is it that comos nftcr? The Buddhists say that It Is ono thing, tho Mohammedans another and the Christians still a different thing. But to all It Is a great adventuro Into tho un known, even though they may have different theories about its nature. Kcar of death Is due largely to tho animal Instinct of self preservation, but tho reason has overruled that fear In many notable Instances, and men havo started out on the adventurous Journey between tho two worlds with a smile on their faces and with confidence in their hearts. There were doubtless many other brave men on the Lusltanla who would have uttered tho same views that Mr. Frohman expressed If tho listener had seemed to need reassuring. These are days when every man should try to keep his head. And Mr. Bryan will sign the note which the President will write. They had to put up a guard about the big gest American battleship as he navigated in Syracuse, Admiral Benson knows exactly what ought to be done to the Delaware River, and he la now In a position to make his knowledge ef fective, TJie Delaware shipyards will be busy for a while longer. The Cramps have Juat secured contracts for three new vessels, to cost JS.000,000. ' A hundred thousand dollars In gold for the Belgian relief fund went down with the Lusltanla- But what do the submarines care for Belgian relief? This is soft pedal week for the suppression of eupernuous noises, and every patriot will take particular pain tq put the softest pos sible pedal on war talk. John P. Connelly la not pleated with the attention which he receives from the news papers, yet there are men who hire press sgnU to get publicity, and nothing dis pleases them so much as to have the papers ignore them. THE GRAVEYARD OF THE SEVEN SEAS King Neptune's Appalling Toll of Human Lives Famous Ocean Dis astersShips That Sailed Into Eternal Silence. Dy EDGAR MELS MS rNV years ago n great poet npostro- hlzed the ocean In words of fluent music. Ho bewailed man's helplessness. "Ten thousand fleets sail over thoo In vain," "Man's control stops with tho shoro," he xvrote. And the tcrrlblo disaster In St. George's Channel, In which the mighty Lusl tanla went to tho ocean's depths, bears him out. We all rrrall tho horrors of the Titanic dis aster. Even the burning of tho OeneraJ Slo cum In tho East River, New York, with Its 1000 victims, most of them women and chil dren, Is still fresh In our memories. But there are other tragedies of the sea of tho dimmer past, nbout which time haH woven tho glam our of romance. What school child does not remember tho pathetic story of Theodosla Burr, who sailed from her homo In tho Southland to Join Aaron Burr, then In New York? What became of her what her fato? To this day the deepest mystory surrounds her last hours. Was sho captured by pl ratp", ns gossip of her day had It? Did the vessel bearing her go down? No one knows. Mysterious Disappearance But there aro other mysterious disappear ances chronicled In the annals of mnrine dis asters. On March 11, 1841, the steamship President, the Lusltanla of her day, steamed from Now York for Liverpool with 1.16 pas sengers aboard. Tho days passed, nnti no word was received from or of her. There wero no cables nnd wireless In those days, nnd anxiety grow by leaps and bounds. All kinds of rumors wero rife sho had been seen sho was safo but to this day tho only cluo to her fato was n noto contained 'In a bottle. The note, written by Tyrono Power, nn actor (not tho comedian of tho present era), said that the ship was sinking. Thirteen years later, on Match 1, the City of Glasgow left the Mersey, bound for Phila delphia with 111 saloon passengers, 2flJ steer ago passengers and n crow of 7(5, a total of 4S0. Tho days grew Into weeks, and April arrived, but the steamship was not reported. On May 10 tho owners received a message at Liverpool from London thnt a ship of her de scription had been sighted by an arriving vpsfcI somo tlmo previously, making for tho Azores nnd apparently crippled. Hopo re vived again, until exhaustive Inquiry dis closed thnt Ibis wnw another hoax, and that nil roncerned in her safety hnd been sub jected to cruel and needless suspense, Only two years later, on January 2.1, 1856, tho Collins liner Pacific left Liverpool for New York with 245 persons on board. Sho was ono of tho crack flyers of her day, built for tho express purpos-o of capturing tho rec ord of the fleetest ocean greyhound, for the era of transatlantic racing was then dawn ing. What luckless fate befell this splondld vessel, tho finest triumph of shipbuilding to thnt date, can only bo conjectured. Whether storm. Ice, derelict or Internal explosion wrought her ruin Is untold. The catastropho to her consort, tho Arctic, eighteen months previously, which sank from collision with a collier off Cape Rnco nnd carried down with her 3.12 persons, cannot strictly bo classed among mysterious wrecks, but tho two tragedies wero tho prlmo causo of putting tho Collins Lino out of business. Tho following years brought a dozen more mysteries of tho deep. It was not until 1S70 that tho world was again aroused to tho hor ror of wholesalo deaths. Tho Inman liner City of Boston sailed from tho city bearing her nnmo to Halifax, arriving thero throo days later and sailing again on January 28. Ono hundred and ninety-one human beings vanished with the ship. Women and Children First Still disappearances aro not tho only form of disaster to hhlps. But In most Instances tho rule "women nnd children first" Is ob served. On February 26, 1852, in Algoa Bay. Cape Colony, South Africa, tho troop ship Birkenhead, carrying British soldiers and their families, struck a reef and went down. Six hundred men died bravely, but all tho women nnd children wero saved. From this orglnated tho "Birkenhead drill," through which tho weaker aro sent to safety first. Tho largest loss of llfo recorded In nny modern sea disaster was ono on December 21, 1811, when tho British ships St. George, Defense and Hero were stranded during n hurricane near Jutland and 2000 lost their lives. Next In number was the Titanic, with 1G35; tho Sultana, with 1100; General Slocum and tho Japanese steamship Klckemaru, with 1000 each; Princess AIlco sunk In a col lision In the River Thames, 700; Norge, stranded, with 700; another steamship of tho same name foundered In mldocean with nbout ns many. The Sultana horror was one of the great est In Inland shipping history. It was ob scured by the assassination of President Lin coln nnd tho public, aside from those Imme diately interested, paid llttlo attention to the catastrophe, In which 1100 lost their lives. In all times. In all climes, tho vast depths of the sea claim their moiety of humanity. The toll must bo paid so long as men go down to the sea. And human Ingenuity capable of the Impossible finds that Its con trol of the ocean "stops with the shore" Neptune la still king! THE PLEDGE From th Nw York Sun, In common Justice to the President the fol lowing form of pledge or promise Is proposed by The Bun for the serious consideration of all concerned! "In caee war between the United States and Germany and her Allies should reault from the courts now taken by President Wilson's Ad ministration with regard to the German mas sacre of noncombatant American passengers on the British ship Lusltanla, I, , an American citizen by birth Tor naturalisation, pledge my entire fortune, f required, and my life, If needed, for the prosecution of hostllU ties. I promise, on my honor, to put my per son at the disposition of the United States Government for military or naval service im mediately after the declaration of war or the beginning of a state of war thus Induced." We maintain that any cltlien willing to back his sentiments with a pledge of this character la entitled to demand of the Presi dent Immediate action leading to war. He Is qualified -to urge the Administration to lose not an instant in swinging wide open the doors OI tne uempie ot uanus. j PRESIDENT WILSON, HELMSMAN Hirvey. in the North Araflca n trior. It is not too much to say In truth, and not less than should be said In fairness and grateful ap preciation, that the guidance of our Ship of State by Wdrow Wilson and Robert Lansing through the whirling pools of this European conBlct has never, tn essential sagscity. reso lution and vtltnc4 been surpassed In the hj tory cf the KepuMto. "IF THOSE EUROPEAN SHIPS OF STATE HAD ONLY A SKIPPER UKE MINE-j -ssWteSr : SCOKN OF THE FIEST SUBMARINES New Mode of Sea Fighting, Which Was Denounced as Unsports manlike and Revolting, Originated in the American Revolution. By ROBERT IT AS the submarine been vindicated? Tho answer depends, perhaps, on whether tho question refers to naval policy or tho ethics of warfare, though, In tho very earliest days of tho submarine, objections wero raised on both accounts. A number of years ago a writer In a British naval paper said: "Tho submarine craft 1b a miracle of Ingenuity, though Nelson nnd his hearts of oak, fight ing only on deck, In God's frco air and with 'tho meteor flag of England' fluttering over head, would havo loathed and scorned her burglarious, nroa-sneak dodges down below." In tho development of tho submarine there Is tho same romance which is to bo found In tho other stories of scientific Invention, but tho romnnce, from tho very first, has been well mixed with execration. In Eng lnnd, France and America, whero It orig inated tho piospectlve mode of warfaro which should utlllzo the diving boat was stig matized as "revolting to every noblo princi ple," "dastardly," "dishonest nnd cowardly." This long opposition to tho submarine on moral grounds is an Interesting fact to con sider In connection with military nnd naval sportsmanship. Thero havo been other ob jections, of course. In 1802 M. St. Aubln asked; "What will become of ijavles, and whero will sailors be found to man ships1 of war, when It 1b a physical .certainty that they may at any moment bo blown Into tho air by means of diving boats, against which no human foresight can guard them?" It was an American who Inaugurated tho era of submarine warfare, and up to tho present European conflict It was only in wars In which . America has engaged that submersible or diving torpedoboats bore any prominent part. Tho names associated with tho development of underwater fighting craft are mostly thoso of Americans David Bush nell, Robert Fulton, John P, Holland nnd Simon Lake, Though France added a sub marine to Its navy eight years before the United States purchased the Holland, Eu rope received Its ldeaa from America, and Germany has been accused of Infringing upon the Holland patents. Tho First Divine Boat Bushnell was the first Inventor to combine in his design submarine navigation with tor pedo warfare, and his Invention, crude though It was, was the embryo of the mod ern diving torpedoboat. It haa been mis takenly aald that the submarine is the child of the surface torpedoboat. Bushnell devised cases filled with explosives, so arranged as to go off at a fixed time by clockwork; and for affixing these cases to the sides of ves sels he Invented the first boat capable of div ing beneath the waves. In 177 ho attempted to blow up the British frigate Eagle by fastening an explosive case on its bottom, and In 1777 he tried to destroy the man-of-war Cerberus by means of a towing torpedo. He failed, according to a naval historian, because of the lacK of skill of the operator and not because of any defect in the apparatus. Though no Injury was done to the ships, three of the crew of a prize schooner astern of the Cerberus, In hauling one of the, drifting torpedoes on board, were killed by Its explosion. After Bushnell came Robert Fulton. It was shown that his torpedoes could sink ships, but in actua) warfare his diving tor pedoboats accomplished nothing After an unsuccessful attack: by one of Fulton's un derwater craft on the British warship Ra mm!, Sir Thomw Wardy, mntifar of HILDRETH tno North American station, notified tho President that ho had ordered on board tho Ramtlllcs n hundred prisoners of war, who. In tho event of the effort to destroy the ship by torpedoes or other Infernal Inven tions being successful, would share the fate of himself and crew." In a book published In London in 1818, tho author, James Kelly, commented with great severity on "somo Infamous and Insidious attempts to destroy tho British men-of-war upon tho coasts of America by torpedoes and other explosive machinery." Tho reference Is to Incidents of tho War of 1812. Exploit of the "David" In only ono Instance prior to tho outbreak of tho European war did an underwater ves sel ever succeed In sinking a hostllo craft In actual warfare, and oven then It was being navigated In tho nwash condition and not completely submerged. This occurred on February 37, 1861, when tho Confederate div ing boat David, armed with a spar torpedo, sank tho Federal frigate Housatonlc off Charleston. Tho submarines of tho Revolution, the War of 1812 and tho Civil War were crude affairs compared with tho submarines operating to day In European waters, but they were tho forerunners of the mode of sea fighting which Is now giving tho world so many tragical surprises. The torpedo Itself haa undergone a remarkable transformation since Bushnell Invented the explosive case. The submarine has been used In some of tho third-rate South American wars. In the war between Chill and Peru a, torpedo was launched from a submarine only to 'back through the water and nearly destroy the vessel from which It was projected, this back-firing belng,due to the unimproved state of tho gyroscope, or balance control, within the destructive missile. DREAMS AND ACTION From the New nepubllc. It Is a pathetlo weakness of human effort that In order to act at all its dreams must o often outstrip the possibilities of Its action Let him P" himself on nis rea8m as h2 may hthe mind of the stancheat realist tires and nags be fore the mere extenslveness of reality, (W S! slrea are too passionate nnd our pa lence too Immature for us ever to know, or be willing to -.uo W Wii is wean and the AMUSEMENTS GLOBE nWf" JJUC 15c 2ftrt .EDMUND BREESE in arlppln. pjy of Baow World th- SHOOTING OP DAN McGREW Thud.y, Friday nj 8.turd.y3ORX..Y MARKET ST. ABOVE 1 Stanley " MARY PIOKFORD AS "FANOHON" Next Week "THE MOTH AND THE I FLAMBm CROSS KEYS THEATRE PARAMOUNT PICTURES "TOP UNAFRAID" NE3W WOODSIDE PARK THEATRE "The Chocolate Sojdier" Mat PUr. 3i0 P. M-, IQo ip&nl NUM.. Sits D V M O N T S SVi38 oN8TRBi ltarUMU "RlmlM5,?tLA"Dn.AHCH 8T8. CASINO. WuattVtUo Inertia of the world almost Irresistible, liecauit our mind is finite and detail Infinite, we mustl summarize and make pictures for ourselvei anil tplial riltt I ma frlnnMnn nikon nA Irnnm It ! Ai celvlng us. 3 It Is only when certain moods and grievance-; lend themselves to a fantasy In which they cm be grouped and expressed that men ever musterlfi uic ailBUBUl LO Hlll'mpi muicill UCUUI1. DUl Iiw matter how profound the revolution. Its rejulu' are lnvarably less magically entrancing thai; tho myth which proflgurcd them. 'J BULLET-STOPPING DEVICES , ) From Tld Dlts. t Five feet of clay, thrco feet of loose erta or two nnd a half feet of sand will stop a mod ern rifle bullet at the closest range; but, curl.' oualy enough, as tho layman may think, ram ming earth hard reduces Its resisting power, and high velocity bullets have less penetrstlca In ftnnfl nt ehnrt tVio.i nt mAHIiim fAntft. Eighteen Inches of sand between boards Is bu!-' J let nrnnf. nml nl. Inh.a nt icaII hnllt hrlck!-. work. Soft wood, like fir. across tho grain, Is bullet. proof at point-blank range if 48 Inches thlcfca or at EOO yards If half as thick. Similarly. HJ Inches of hardwood, like oak. Is polnt-bUokl proof, or 15 Inches at BOO yards. Half an Incfcj u. muuBui. nun ur mini Bieej, u. qutiiici u Inch Of hftrrl Kt0Al ny n Ofth fit nn Inch flf 8M clal steel la bulletproof. So ore six InchM oil sningie. id inches of coal or, as some peop may be surprised to know, eight feet j snow. j IF YOU COULD HAVE A PERFECT DAY If you could have a perfect day fl i ureara 01 wnen your me were acus, Would you choose one nil clear, all gay If you could have a perfect day The airs above the wide greenway Sheer virgin blue with crystal sun? If you could have a perfect day To dream of when your life were done. Or would you have It April's way, Haphazard rain, haphazard sun, TllirtnA nml aneM .Ia.i. n..4 crnV Dyed like these hours' own work and plan '3 All oUa, ...,tu -.-, - a 1 l-, ! Haphazard pain, haphazard fun If you could haVA a nrfeot rlnv To dream of when your life were done! J Edith Wyatt, In Fwtry. j AMUSEMENTS A R Q A- D I A JTtV. CHESTNUT. Blow 16th St. XX Photoplays-.Continuous 10 A. M. to 11:30 r M. DUSTIN FARNUM In the Romantlo Drama i "CAPT. COURTESY" ADDED ATTRACTION WEBER & FIELDS IN A REAL, FUNNV COMEDY "TWO OF THE FINEST'H B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE CHESTNUT AND TWELFTH STREETS 4 BILL OF INTERNATIONAL STARS GRACE LA RUB TIM1 T. r , m n- . Al. MTrntmr TJUUt Doyle & Dixon; Reynolds & Donrgan, end Ouuxi,f BPEoiAir-uovwa najvREa of ww-' IiEJLVINO NIIW YORK O.V HER LSBT VOYiOU GARRICK 10c, 15c, 25c CONTINUOUS 11 A. M. TO 11 P. M. TJfR wif T.ii.fBnu uvnotniTinN O TT T) 1T A nixin MOVBfd O U U V1 1 Ml FICTUKW, Only Fllmi of Kind Evr Taien. S REELS CHAPLIN LAUGHS ALSO FORREST Last 5 Evgs. Xm "SSSS THE .LADY IJN Jli NIXON'S GRAND Today.2tlS.TAB TROVATO. THE MUSICAL CgS IUSt LADY BETTY; THE LW DONSi INNESS A RYANl Tl BROS.. STUART 4 KM'A LAUGHING PICTUREa A DP.T ,P HT TONIGHT AT 8.15 , n -J yn"JLJon KITTY MacKAg LYRIC " T ,JS0JKfe.&V TONIGHT'S THE NIGHT, Witherspoon Hall, Tonight, Sj naeuai Fi4nENCB ABELS wum; Guroty Matto tieats, II 5". 11 aProcsderoi, witrae,