.KVSmTXXf EBlXJITR-PHIE-ADBfiPHIiS:. TUB SPAT, SEPTEMBER ST. ' 191.8? U "'I &&!&& FUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY , . CTRUB K. K. CURTIS, P!rt. ,. Jfcaatas K. Lealncton, Vloa r r(ant i John C, Martin, mtqt and Traaaarari Philip B. Colllna, John B. wnilifn, Plrtctora, ncrrohtAi, no Ann i Craca It K. Cuith, Chairman. 9. It WKALBr.. KaecnttTa Editor WW C. MARTIN General Bualneta Manacer PuMuhod iSiiir t roue Lidoik nuiidiBf , Independence Square, Philadelphia. OaxniL... ....... Tread and Cheatnut Btreete ktio cm..... ,T-i7iiia nuiidinr ioic...... i.iiu-a. eiropomin lowir rf. ...... M Kord Jlutldlnc l4uia.,.,.,. 40 Oloba Democrat Rulldlnr KIOAOO ,.... ,iuj inovne ifniiairr ook Waterloo Place, 1'all Mall, B. W. mews bureaus VinniKTOK Unlit,.. .The Peel Building Jraw Tote: Bcaaiu..,. ..The Tlmrt liutldlns Dmlim Hotu W Frledrlchetraete JAHMN Dnul., ............ 2 Tall Mall Eaat. B. W. 'uii BBauD 82 Rue Ixnite la arand subscription terms T carrier. Dittr Okit, tlx eenta. Br mall, poetpeld malde of Philadelphia, except where forolrn poataca (required. Direr 0li, on month, twentjr-fleeente BittT OnLT, ena year, three dollara. All mall aub aerlptlttne parable In adranea. Norms Subecrlbera wlihtnc addreee chanted muet fire eld aa wall aa new addreee. MU, KM VALWUT KETSTOiTE. MAtH tMi ty AeVtreee all communication to Xifntnp Idntr, Independence Square, PMlaMphla, at thi rHOiDcrau roiTornci e iioonb ou i a kiiti. xirrn TRH AVERAGE NET PAID DAILY CincUTJL- TION Or TUB EVENING LEDGER FOR AUQUST WAS S,g. raLABZLPBlA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 111. 'A politician U known &y the dealt he makes. "PIKERS" IN THOSE DAYS SFBAKBR HEED boasted that this was a blllton-dollar oountry, but In giving pub licity to the Idea he scarcely expected a com mittee of gentlemen from Europo to take ad vantage of the fact by coming over and undertaking- to borrow the amount. A few years ago a million dollars woa an enormous sum. We apeak of It almost with contempt now. We have paused from thou sands to millions and to billions. Two '"cen turies ago many Englishmen argued that their national debt was too vast ever to bo paid and that sure bankruptcy was nhea1. That woa before the Napoleonic wars were financed. Yes, they were "pikers" In thoae days. "Lend me a billion," la the measure of the world's Increase In wealth since the advent of machinery. The world staggered along bo fore on an agricultural basis. When man kind learned to change raw materials Into flntshea. produots by means of machinery wealth was multiplied by a thousand. The cost of living went up also. The yearly budget of one great city now is as great as the entire national expenditure was before the Civil War. A alnglo dreadnought costs as much as a whole war used to cost. An artillery engagement will wlpo out a million dollars. What's a billion, anyway? Within a few months the Allies may be back wanting to borrow two, and It would not be beyond the resources of this country to provide It. VICE GETS WHAT IS COMING TO IT XTO SOPHISTRIES about denvlnir to Mnr. i? JLN ket Street resorts the nrivllprrpa n1nvnd by the first-class Broad street hotels con- 4!used the thinking of tho License Court when It closed a notorious place near the West Philadelphia station. The distinction between a disorderly resort and a respectable hotel or a decently con ducted Baloon Is so clear that thero never need be any confusion in tho mind of a man who wishes to bo fair. The difference does not consist In the presence or the absence of music or in the parade of paid performers among the tables or on a place cleared for them in a dining room, or tho absence of such parade. If the, primary purpose of a place Is to cater to tho vicious it should be closed, whether It attracts patrons' by muslo and cabaret shows or not. The stupidest delectlve on the police force has Intelligence enough to make the distinc tion between legitimate hotels and saloons and those that ought to be closed, for vice obtrudes itself so conspicuously that It can never bo mistaken for virtue. SPECULATING CLERGYMEN NOW that the Rev. Dr. Newell Dwight Hlllls, one of the best known clergymen In the country, lias publicly confessed that he made a mistake when He began to devote his attention to accumulating a fortune by speculation of one kind or another, the rest of us can agree with him. We can go aa far aa he went In his remarkable confession In his pulpit, and say that the first business of a minister Is to preach the gospel, and to preach It and live It with all his might. There Is nothing new In this. The sur prising thing about It Is that Doctor Hlllls had to learn It In the bitter school of ex perience. He was not Ignorant of that old proverb In which Is concentrated the com aon sense of many oenturles, namely that tho shoemaker should stick to his last. The trouble with him and all others like him U that he and they came to think that they h syJrel the oPtlon that proved the rule. THE PHOENIX DUMA TnE proroguing of the Duma by the Czar and the arrest of eighteen Social Demo eratlo representatives, among thom that dauntless fighter for liberty, Tchechidxe, Is unquestionably a great disappointment to those who saw in Russia's alliance with the politically Democratic France and England a step forward toward the democratization of the vast Slav empire. But to those who are Intimately acquainted w4th conditions In the Czar's domains and -th deep social disturbance in tho minds of the peeple as a result of the war, the fate of m rowin ouma will not appear surprising. ,rar, although, on the surface, that, fate is is see suirerea by the first and Muscovite "parliaments" (the third jateU arthe4ex) la reality the dispersal lie fourth Duma marks a new chapter In "J " nuaaeaiB poopi-f, HMt an4 second Dumas were abolished Me wtt the advtee and co-oeer. Fataaaw, The fourth DvMaT died K a formidable stuafc-iiiur In the ptajh of those, who desire ta kee d yoke of fpralon, both Russia ami m. uo she . at Russia a4 he. U opposltloa t tho Dvamber w aot otrfy BMal-Dewoerat. ta. -'IkSfttes and Constitutional Demeetats, bwt fit Ofctlahriats and WatlooalUU a well Cms but read the kaU la Hm 1U War. haf Ksashy ta Duma on the aemsion of great1 L!MH at tha IsefQetoaey, ernment. It t easy io see from those de bates, perhaps the most memorable docu ments In Russian history, tb&t new power la rising; In that country, a power compose! of that constructive force and spirit of nc tlon which characterized the greatest of the Crura, Peter the Great, and the force of lib erty, atrenjrthened by the happy alliance with the democracy of western Europe. Who dare say, In tho face of this power, that "Mother Russia" shall remain enslaved T Tho Duma Is not dead; It Is immortal. THE TIME TO STRIKE XTO REPUBLICAN today need hide be- ' hind Protection In casting his vote. The point has not yet been reached when It Is claimed that to vote as tho Vares and Mc Nlchol command In n primary Is to be a Re publican and to vote against their orders is to be a renegade. The primary was estab lished to enable citizens to select their own candidates. They can If they will splice the Gang's guns today and wet Its powder by re pudiating the candidacy whloh has been foisted on them. Thoy can send a message to the national party that will not be mis understood. Lot no man be deluded by the noise of tho Organization into bellovlng that It Is time to got on tho band wagon and voto with tho Gang. It Is, on tho contrary, most obviously a time when every good Republican should go to the polls with resentment In his soul because of tho manner In which tho party has been maltreated and bctrayod. It is a time of all times to register a voto of protest, a tlmo for every Individual to make. It his personal duty to ballot against CzarlBm, Ir respective of Its apparent power. There can bo rolled up today in the Republican primary so magnificent a vote In opposition to Smith that a splendid victory for the people and the community will be augured for Novem ber. If all tho unbossod Republicans of Phil adelphia cast their votes today against tho bosses' creatures, he and the men back of him will bo whipped beyond all possibility of rehabilitation. Were Smith the most efficient executive living, the manner of his exploitation should assure his consignment to oblivion. Had be a real record of accomplishment, still would his acceptance of the Job of puppet and straw man render him unfit for elevation. The con spiracy could not have been put through without his consent. He Joined in the decep tion when he protested his Innooency at the very moment when the final plans In his favor were being consummated. He was a willing dummy, and what he haa been as oandldato he would be as Mayor. Let every man carry his conscience with him to the polls today. He need only bo a real American to resent tho Insult that has been heaped upon him. Ho need only be a good Republican to know that hla first duty to the party Is to froe It from the parasitical leadership which has been strangling It. He need only be devoted to tho principals of Lin coln and McKlnley to realize that the first would have utterly repudiated, for moral rea sons, the Smith connection, while the sec ond, for economic reasons, would have pur sued a similar course. Not through Smiths or Vares or McNlchols Is Protection to be achieved, but through real fighting, thinking, Independent-minded, able, constructive and efficient citizens, who are Republicans because they believe In the prin ciples of Republicanism, and would be Re publicans, not Tammanyltes, If they lived In New York. EVERY LINK MUST BE STRONG NATIONAL defense can be effected only by a long chain, the strength of which Is no greater than Its weakest part. Russia has been driven back on Its west ern front because its railroads broke down. The reports from Potrograd announce that tralnload after tralnload of ammunition was held up on tho railroads because tho locomo tives wore not equal to tho task put on them. Russia had the soldiers and it had tho ammunition, but It did not have the means of getting the two together in the right place at the right time. The British have the soldiers and they have adequate means of transportation, but they have not had ammunition when it was needed. By stupid blundering the munition workers were taken from the factories and Bent to the front at the beginning of the war. The failure on the supply side of na tional defense brought about a Cabinet crisis last May. The British think that they can muddle through somehow. But their blun ders are not cheering to any one but their en emies. They ought to be Instructive to every American who thinks that It Is possible to improvise efficiency in a profession In whloh success depends on the most exact atten tion to details. The neglect of one link in the long chain destroys the value of all the rest, a common, trite and obvious saying, but nevertheless o true that it has to be said time after time lest It be forgotten. It Is a gloomy day, but it can be made a bright one in the history of Philadelphia: Swiss watchmakers are turning out muni tions for the Allies with clock-like precision. Benator'Btone continues to be in a minority of one In demanding an extra session of Con gress. The dismissal of Dumba is not due to an error In translation, but to a mistake la In tention. ' For the du Fonts to build a gunpowder factory la China, where powder was Invented, would be like taking coals to Newcastle. The great question la: Would tho hyphens refuse to werk In the munition factories if the United States were at war with their hyphen-land? There was a time when all a man had to be was a demagogue to get a political Job, ut It takes triekery as well to put that sort jU fellow, ever these days, 1 ' in i Wetter used t hut that "wlddeW he apetUd wHh a "we." K sees. Wei. 1 kaewledce wuid tell ua ' I) VHm , WMm he mttM Ms GLANCING AROUND THE VARIED SPHERE Glimpses of Men and Places That Figure in tho News Romantic Career of Baron Reading:, Head of Allies' Loan Commission By LUKE GUARDIAN THE man who heads the Anglo-French Commission on Borrowing Money In America Is tho first Lord Chief Justice of England to wear a monocle. Of courso, that la ono of his least distinctions, and so Is the fact that he la ono of the beat dressed men of Lon don. Ho was ono of the Intimate friends of the late King Ed ward, and used to play bridge whist with that monarch. In Jest tho King once remarked, "I like to play with Isaacs, because ho' doesn't know any mora about tho game than I do." Ono might nat urally assume, how over, that Rufus DAllON BEADING Daniel Isaacs Mr. Isaacs that was, Baron Heading that is known a good deal about tho flnnncial game. Ills beginnings In busi ness were not at all promising, for after his parents had provided him with enough cnpl tal to secure a place on tho stock oxchango he managed to bring himself face to face with financial rultj at tho ago of 26. But slnco that tlmo Mr. Isaacs has fared better. Previous to that tlmo ho had some Interest ing adventures that ought to bo mentioned for tho soke of the romance which pcoplo llko to find In tho lives of great men. His parents were wealthy, but tho boy had read so many stories of the sea that ho ran away from home and shipped aboard a vessel bound for Rio de Janeiro. Ho visited many foreign ports In the, next few months. Ho soon tired of the llfo of a common sailor, however, and returned to England. He had already begun his education at tho Uni versity College School nnd had studied In Brussels and Hanover. His family now tried to persuade him to finish at Cambridge University, but na he was anxious to start on a business career, his father gave him tho money which the young man quickly lost on 'Change. And then tho future Chief Justice mot on American girl. Miss Alice Smith Cohen, who fired his ambition anew. Sho urged him to study law. They became engaged nnd tho couple spent their evenings pprlng over legal tomes. After a year of study Isaacs was ablo to pass the bar examinations. A little later ho became a full-fledged lawyer. His mar rlago to the American girl followed. Isaacs speedily won a great reputation as an expert in commercial law nnd bankruptcy cases, and many were tho business tangles that he unravolod. His "head for business" was now proven. Ho entered Parliament and rapidly rose from one high office to anothor, though the Rquabble over Marconi shares threatened to end hla brilliant political career. The Investigating commission, how ever, exonerated both Isaacs and Lloyd Qeorge, and It was not long afterward that Isaacs was elevated to the highest position to which a British lawyer can aspire. He Is the first Jew ever to become Lord Chief Justice. Ho is 65 years old and receives a salary of 840,000 a year. Ho has a life tenure, but can retiro any timo ho pleases on a pension of two-thirds his annual salary. Munitioning the Allies The morality of "munitioning" the Allies with funds Is not so very different from tho morality of "munitioning" them with other goods, and there can be no doubt about tho morality in either case. Secretary Lansing, In his note to Austria-Hungary, showed the close relation of tho moral and the legal as pect of the situation which he so clearly il luminated. As to governmental Interfer ence, In neutral countries, with tho trade of citizens in contraband of war, it Is inter esting to cite the words of two of tho ablest Jurists of Amorlcan history. Chancellor Kont, in his famous Commen taries, Vol. 1, page 142, says: "It was con tended on the part of the French nation In 1796 that neutral governments were bound to restrain their subjects from selling or ex porting articles contraband of war to the belligerent Powers. It was successfully shown on tho part of the United States that neutrals may lawfully sell, at home, to a belligerent purchaser, or carry, themapiv. to belligerent Powers contraband articles, subject to the right of seizure In transition. The right has since been explicitly declared by the Judicial authorities of this country." Speaking for the Supreme Court of the United States, Justice Story, perhaps the ablest Jurist the United States haa pro duced, certainly one of tho most accurate In statements of what Is law, said In the case of the Santiselma Trinidad, 7 Wheaton. 8401 "But there Is nothing In our laws or In the law of nations which forbids our citi zens from sending armed vessels, aa well as munitions of war, to foreign porta for sale. It Is a commercial adventure which no na tlon la bound to prohibit! and which only exposes tho persons engaged In It to the pen alty of confiscation." Another Runaway Boy Everybody knows that Baron Reading Is not the only famous man who ran away from homo before he was either a man or famous Ex-Benator Foraker, who for many years was known as "the greatest bulldog in Amer ican politics," Is now putting up a fight against a serious Illness, but began his fight lng days when he ran away from an Ohio farm to fight for the Union. He was sixteen years old then. He was lgnomlnlously brought home, but there waa no keeping him so In 1883 he went to the front- He has many times told the reason why he draws no pension. The flaw In his record Is this He was two years under the regulation age when he enlisted, and to gain his point and yet save his conscience he marked the figures "18" on the soles of his shoes, boldly declar ing that he was "over 18." When Sherman's march to the sea had been completed, and Savannah had surrendered It was young Foraker who waa chosen to row down the river, dodging aa beat, he could the Infernal machines sown broadcast to communicate with the Union fleet and thus with the world a nu" AFKAID OF THm JDEITI rr?.." " "W . seeaaa. the sra. SSBBBBBBBBBBBBSW eBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBsi THE RESPECTABILITY OF PIRACY Charges Against British Prize Courts Cannot Stand After Con sideration of the Glorious History of the Profession Honored by. Captain Kidd and "Blackbeard" By ROBERT "piRATESI" shout the meat packers to the JT British. And "Pirates!" shout the Tou tophobes. It is on old name, older than "freebooter" or "filibuster" or "buccaneer." Piracy has been known since the days of Homer. Tho word, Indeed, Is Greek via the Latin. An attempt, unconscious, perhaps, has lately been made to limit the term to In ternational law and to leave to the other words the highly Important function of sug gesting tho romance In tho splendid-Bounding exploits of Captain Kldd and Morgan and Drake and Hawkins and Bonnet and Jean Lafltte. That's quite wrong, but, after all, there's a definite historical distinction which sets the buccaneers In a class by themselves. The title Is applied to those daring seamen and fighters who made llfo miserable for the Spanish settlers In the West Indies in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Their depredations were Inspired partly by tho re ligious conflicts of the time, but principally by English and French objection to the fool ish pretensions of tho Spaniards to the trade of their own West Indies. A state of mari time warfare grew up between Spain and the French and English traders, who styled themselves "tho brethren of the coast." The Island of Tortuga was tho headquarters of tho brethren, and here they established mag azines for tho lodgment of goods. Hither they repaired In times of danger. Driers of Beef Tho Spaniards richly deserved all tho trou ble that tho buccaneers gave them. They had killed off so many of 'the natives of Hlspanlola that at this time the Island was overrun with wild cattle, and It was this fact that led to the coming of the buccaneers. How the name "buccaneers" originated Is told in a curious little book written by James Burney, a brother of Fanny Burney, and published a century ago. The Corlbbe In dians, so he tells us, had a way of curing meat on a hurdle, which they called a "bar becu." We have the word "barbecu," by the way, from these Indians. Under the hurdle a slow fire burned. When cured the meat was called "boucan." This word the Indians borrowed from the French, but the French and English borrowed from the Indians their mode of curing meat, and hence thoy came to be known as "boucaniers" that is, "driers of beef." They ha4 established in Hlspanlola. despite Spanish opposition, a flourishing bus), ness In chasing wild cattle, curing the meat and drying the skins. "Many of the French hunters," says Burney, "were nativea of Nor mandy, and it became proverbial in some of the seaports of Normandy to aay of a smoky house, 'C'est un vral Boucan.' The Frenoh buccaneers and adventurers were also called "flUbustlers." Tho word flllbustler Is merely the Frenoh mariner's mode of pronouncing the English word "freebooter." But these distinctions, historical and ter mlnologloal what do they matter? A pirate's a pirate For a that and a' that. Then ho for a pirate's life! For piracy la eminently reapeotahle. It Is true that German submarines do not fly .the black flag with the skull and cross-hones (a flag would get wet on a submarine); but.the rrfan who sank the Lusltanla was awarded special honors by tho Kaiser. The British prize courts, too, have recently set the seal of respectability on piracy. One common form of piracy, as everybody knows, la called "tho freedom of the seas." It Is sanctioned by in ternational law and final approval In particu lar cases always rests with the Judges of his Majesty's prize courts. But plraoy waa in good odor In earlier tlmea, for the world does not owe all lta progress to the present age. The buccaneers of whom we have Just been speaking operated with the tacit and some times the explicit consent of the French and English Governments. Some Illustrious Pirates It Is pleasant to think that the first of the pirates of the New World waa no less a per. sonage than Christopher Columbus, His mo tlves and actions on his famous voyage of 1492 were Innocent enough, verily they were highly praiseworthy, but how much more laudable according to modern standards of conduct wore the plundering expeditions oa wiMwi nv uwwu ma simple, moisensivo aa. tlyoa pf America of jhelr gold and ether tee. sessions and foUowed that up by a peUey f aaelavimr aad extermlaattnt- ( people theaaselveal Hew - r'"tin aad soft- heUd maajaJauaa. fee paer Quaes Isabella. SOUND ADVICE HILDRETH mining terrible atrocities and had him sent back to Spain In chains as a wicked plratel But so many other great men of the world's history have lost their paragonlo reputations that wo need not now wasto time trying to prove that Columbus was the victim of a dreadful error of Judgment on tho part of poor Isabella. Then there was Francis Drake! Ho waa a pirate puro and Blmple. Queen Elizabeth knighted him for piracy. Monorchs were no bumpkins event at that early dato. He pil laged the rich Spanish possessions In Amer ica, came back to England loaded with booty, capturing a Spanish treasure ship on the way home, then started off again for Amer ica, attacked towns, carried off treasure and captured merchant vessels, until he was afraid to return to England tho way he came. That was how ho happened to call around the world, gathering tho spoils of piracy as he went. And when ho did reach London, the Queen, the Ministers, the cour tiers, the citizens and Drake and all his crew shared in the, plunder taken from the Span lards four million dollars' worth of It. King Philip protested against the outrages that Drake had committed. So good Queen Bess knighted the freebooter and Drake thereafter was Sir Francis; It would be easy to go on and mention many other names that have shed lustre on the practice of piracy that of Peter tho Great, for instance. It can bo easily shown, moreover, that piracy began in legitimate trade and commerce. Perhaps that is tho reason why some of our prominent captains of Industry and commerce of today are called "buccaneers" and "pirates." Captain Kidd Vindicated Where, one may rightly ask, Is the igno miny of such an entitlement? We have wronged the reputation of many an esti mable gontloman, Including Captain Kldd. Up spoaks Mr. Ralph D. Paine to set the mat ter right for the much-raaligned captain. "uumcu lo inramy undeserved, his name reddened with crimes ho never com mitted, and made wildly romantic by tales of treasure which he did not bury. Captain William Kldd is fairly entitled to the sym pathy of posterity and the apologies of all the ballad-makera and alleged historians Tv? ttVJ? obBOUred ta A8 n a cloud of fable." Read further: "Fate has played the strangest tricks imaginable with the memory of this seventeenth century seafarer who never cut a throat or made a victim walk the plank, who was no more than a third or fourth rate pirate in the era when this Inter, estlng profession was In lta heyday, and who was hanged at Execution Dook for the exces. Blvely unromantlo crime of cracking the skull of hla gunner with a wooden bucket" Nothing more than a vindication of Captain Kldd l8 needed to remove the stain from tte fair nam. of plraoy. Everjr professloa. IU Blackboard, a swearing, swaggering, throat cutting pirate, if there ever waa one, only shows tho possibilities of excess The inevitable conclusion of the matter is that piracy 1. mostly fiction. And eve" so" wit V subl4Ct VM Produod dea t5 with treaaure-huntlng rather than piracy it se f. Stevenson's classic story of Long John Silver and the jest la a case In point "The Gold Bug" and "Wolfert Webbed are other examples. Farther reaching yet la the InflT ence of plraoy on literature (to omit v mention of literary piracy), Do you reaHy want to know why the writing, 0 " ItaS Jamea are so deadly dull? It Is hecause H a boy, he, never went on a quest for burtM treasure. Stevenson did. So did Mark Twala Sawyer. ' -aventure, of Tom ITALY'S MUSIC IN TRENCHES BuToPsanstru 'of.' 22WST fr " added to th claw of InitrSSSnta ?" b?n favor in the trenches. Th, Tri? ,'n P511 have been begging to be 55T tl!f f lM their mandolins with them t?2e ftS.l0.tak the Italian Is an omnSi ,!'""' tor purpose, abroad, he U a K'VM!?1 own srfalra pf love and war at boW t0t W A contingency unprovldad i ' 3BffSSiB5s fervor during tho last war with Aimtri. J? been completely sold out and bids fair to rtak next to the "Marcla Reale" as tho most dobh.H larlar Italian composition during the present1 campaign. Both Mercantlnl's famous "Itosa' to Garibaldi" and "The Bersagllerl," the tost of Italy's crack reclment. however, win . a cloje run for second place. Chicago UenUlw RANGER'S SONG When dun smoke hides tho mountains from Then's when's work for a ranger to do. xnen on ror tne forest and trackless wutaTI mi... M... I- - . . , - . . - . mo io iukiiik, imBiu, ranger, nasioi The waiting wilds are calling to you There's work, man's work, for you to do. Hurry, hurry, don't tarry, don't wait Hasten! hasten; or you'll be too latel Greodlly, hungrily, writhing, twining. Wicked red, flaming, shining. With deadly fangs envenomed darting Hither,, thither, blighting, smarting, Fiendish, hideous, dastard fire! Creoplng, leaping, farther, higher! Puny man, you could as well Storm alone a citadel. As combat with this ratrtntr helL Olaf Strommo In the Seattle Post Intelligences AMUSEMENTS FORREST Now' Mat8"2: twich nxTi.T i-N U W Evgs. 8:1 D. W. GRIFFITH'S THE BIRTH OF' A NATION 18,000 People 3000 Horses B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE VAUDEVILLE'S SUPREME SENSATION! Gertrude Hoffmann COMPANT OP 60 PRESENTING "SUMURD N" Stupendous Surrounding Show! BOPHIB TUCKER: CIIAS. MACK & CO.: DOTtlj a DIXON; WRIGHT & DIETRICH. OTHERS. T.'V'RTn t Week. Evenlnia. 8:15 ?,. ,? Tomorrow. Beata 60o to $Ma Victor Herbert' Corala Opera Bucceaa J "THE PRINCESS PAT'I "Production a delieht" Record BEa'NNIKQ NEXT MON. EVQ. Seat! ThurS.j ANDKEAS DIPPEL Presents "THE LILAC DOMINO" Comlo Opera In 3 Acta by Cuvllller. WALNUT 3aiSt, MATINEE EVERT DAT. 2:15 SECOND BIO WEEK RICHARD BUHLER in "SIGN OF THE CROSS" MATS.. 15c 0c EVE8., 25c 78 ' Philadelphia Orchestra SEASON SALE TO SUBSCRIBERS Mfnur ON AT HEPPE'S. 111 CHESTNUT "v" STREET. AND WILL CONTINUE UNI WEDNESDAT, SEPTEMBER 22, Inclualra. H All Mofcata remaining unclalmtd afttr 8trtil rutcnbra. T "YDTT1 mU 1 MARKET 1MB 3ujdhi iiietare juniper Tstmwh! vaudeville Continuous 11 A. M. to 11 P. J MUBICAI, COMEDT IN THREE SCENES "Coney Island to North Pole" 1tTP -tirmrnTrr n. nn i NOTE PRICES lOo, 15a. Hni GARRICK Mon. Sep. Beaaon POTASH & PERLMUTTER' KNICKERBOCKER mffiJTSJ &'!! "WITHIN THE LAWj MATINgEBrT.r4Tt.!.S. ADELPHI Begin. Next Thurs. E S What Happened" Sk4 THE Stanley MARKET BT. ABOVE 10TV ii a. . to 11 no e. m. rirai rreaentation VOV TKLLEOKN U 'THE EXPLORER" IBBBff "War Brides' GRAND Today 8 116 79, ft AND 5 OTHER APT T A T . A rT?. 1214 MARKET STnEET -wj ContlnumiM in a m ,n tia 9. 'SftSrnEK."i 3U ""SB"' HAZEL PAWN lo 'THE UEART OV WENNIF illAnknnii Frankford A A1lhnv Avumae Huron) Kmtaett Tonaj Gaflando, leva 4 WUSO t Kenny ft lioiii., .,' DUMONT'S DUMONTS MINBTB i u"u .. ftTH iNn ARCH BT l nuneaqua "PUbtlng tha Mtcan Bandlta.'' ' Troendero 01f,t?g, La Lun FOPLaMU.NOV.HAPPV HElNlJ j rdSrt T-sP.SRF fiwsw rn , .vc.'Si'jai .j2ki. Jli.& jBaasaBSkBaajajBj -WiMsM dTeaalta.' f.' PSiiwTsfr '' rv BBTlflMBMBsaMsaMililftlM ' --V i fa fc "fc ,