s BTUKIWG EEPGiEm-PHILADELPHIA, THTTBBPAT, 8BPTBMBBB Zt. Xtlg; - T 1 .LHi- jNnt,:: U5M Cumtitg gJ5ft$& ifc&grc rniUC LEDGER COMPANY CTKDB It. If. CttnTIS. PaaelMT. X. Ludinrion. vice rreaidenti jonnu Martin, mmi Tnaaureri Fbllip B. coiiina, John n. Directors. EDITOntAL BOARD Ontl II X. Come, Chairman. . K. TTHAiiuT Bxecutlt-a Editor i MR? O. MARTIN .General Baalneia Uuicir 1-ubllihed dally at Ptauo Ltsota Bul'dlnr, Independtnca Square, Philadelphia. baMa C-otiil .. Broad and Cheetnut Btreta AiUM-no CITt,... rrt-Inlm Building Mmm TotK. 1T0-A, letropolltan Tower Kiit, -MU'V,';- f26 "" !,u!3!n S. LoTJle, ....... ......400 Olobo Democrat Hulldlni eVfJeiOO...... ,1202 Trlbun; lluildlni- law-tot., Waterloo Place, rail Mall, S. W. NEWS BUREAUS I Waii-sT0 tnuv Ttia Pail Tlulldtnc mt Toas Beaut-.,. ...The rimes Ilulldlnc MM.tN nmuv no rriearienerao ffl.nin UUIMVtlliMIIIIMIM . m, .',BI, .am.. ... ... ll J3C1U0-..... 82 llua Loulj la Grand BuuscnnTioN teams 9r oarrlar. DutT Oftr, alx eente Br rmll, poetpald malda of Philadelphia, except where foretm postage If reejulred. Din-r Ojo.t, ena month, twentr-flre eente j B-.H.T Ohlt, ono year, three dollar. All mall eub aarlenltms parable In adranro. Norte Bubecrlbera w1htn addreee ohanred mutt 4ra old a wall aa new addreee ml, km xxunrt KKTSTOIrt. MATH lM ST Atirttt oft communications to ICvmtna Xtrr, Indtprndnct Square. Philadelphia. wmns at m roaiDtrrnu roa-romca it iooko ousa urn, Mima TWO AVBRAan NET PAID DAILT CIRCULA TION 07 TUB EVENING LEDOER FOR AUGUST WAS S,81S. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER M, IMS. "-a"- , met ofio ha lott HU good nanus It t ftoeiv to recover It at the man oho hat lott hU umbrella. 80 IS POLITICAL 1TIST0KY MADE ABOUT on moo In ten thousand la willing XX to think. That weary looking olerk Whom you leaned against In the mibway lout Bight Is ready to carry out orders, but he suet have the orders. Ike a floolc of sheop, the mass of humans look for leadership. They want somebody to think for them, somebody to tell them what to do. To con ceive something on his own account, to Initiate a great enterprise, Is a task far too stupendous for tho ordinary individual. He Beeda must have some one to tell htm what to do. This being the case. It Is not remarkable, b It, that thousands of citizens are glad to have this or that leader seloot a Mayor for themT They are used to Just that sort of thing-. They have been sheop for years, In the ordinary course of their activity, and .sheep they will remain so long as breath re mains In them. But now and then some fel low breaks away. He opens his eyes, he has a vision, a thought Alters through to the seat of his Intelligence, he flaps his wings, crows, leaps out Into the golden sun shine of, achievement and behold a Jack son, a Lincoln, a Grant, a McKlnloy, an Edison! i Popular government presupposes Intelli gence on the part of the people, a willing ness to think. But the boss knows that they Will not think. So he greases tho machinery, sets It Into motion, converts dollars from tho publto treasury Into his private vault and becomes a great man. It Is so easy. And the sheep gather at tho trough, take What thoy can get, and ore passively grate futhat somebody has stepped forward and relieved them of tho necessity of using- their own gray matter. Bo Is political history made. VILLA WAS A BAD BET WHEN the Washington Administration staked Villa after forcing Huerta out of Mexico It showed bad Judgment. Villa has never for a moment Justified the confidence put In him. The experts wh. lescrlbed him as one of the greatest fighters since Na poleon have classified themselves, and their services will not again be In demand when it Is necessary to appraise Mexican soldiers or statesmen. Villa has been defeated time after time In the past year, and he has at Inst been forced out of Chihuahua by Car ranza. Bo long as he Is alive and remains In Mexico he will make trouble, but he has eased to be an Important force to be reck oned with by the United States in making plans for the future. ROAD FOR MEDICINE TO TRAVEL WHEN Dr. John B. McAllister, In his presidential address before the State Medical Society, sold that there must be standardized education and training for phy sicians, he formulated a conclusion from w-hlch there Is no escape It the suffering Srabtlo Is to be protected from the blunders et Incompetents. No man ought to be al lowed to prescribe for the sick who has not rseelved the best instruction obtainable In the fundamentals of- the healing art. 3oetor MoAUIster might have gone further and have said that the time must come when there Is a distinction between physicians and surgeons and when no man who has received merely a general medical education, without special instruction, in surgery, shall be per mitted to perform a major operation. There are Men in the United States no more fitted than one of the beef trust's butchers to fwctlco surgery. Some of them do not even snderstand anatomy. Tet the unsuspecting public entrusts Itself to their hands. TIIE PLACE TO WATCH NEXT D1 H- E. J. DILLON, one of the most ex pert observers of the signs of the times. .prophesied In London on August 28 that Con stantinople would be In the hands of the Allies within a month. The time has expired and the Turkish capital has not yet fallen, nut nil Indications point to Its extreme peril. I There Is no other explanation for the mass j teg of German troops on the Servian fron gtetfrer preparatory to forcing a way through JJJrvIa an(- Bulgaria to the Dardanelles and JUaotfae Boephorus, IM Tho Turks are aljort of ammunition and ?' t need of coal. Th Alllna ln. hun lne at tl-e gates persistently for months and their blows have left reaches In the defenses. There has v-M-oluttonary rioting In Constantinople supremacy of tho Young Turk party ened. The downfall pf the Young taHmld maVw li necessary for Germany oHtrp! at whatever new party as- i tin reins of government. So Germany input to strike hard and to strike quickly While tkre 1 yet time. The success" of Us 1st JBavtern program depends on keeping the Tlirk In Constantinople. - Tfef aTpprsts vf tjje grand strategy at Jw "ft ,. sr ana not disclosed, but it has been sue- .(.'.TdhikI wttl omwi show of plausJ-tjUHy tht ""tH dpfltt- the 0fb4 Duke Nrchol ' fim eomirajid of ttf HussJfln trstlaa- if B1"' ii. ;i-r. ry jinij -.flat lie MS (MM tm tv Uw i u ..ism for the puxp at appro&ofclBs; OoneUntlnopfe from along the southern shore of tho Black Sea, conquering the dissatisfied Turkish provinces on the way with the ulttmato purpose of making the BlAck Sea a Itutislan lake and extending Itusslnn dominion not only to Constantinople, but over a large part of Asia Minor. A Russian force can be landed on the south shore of the Black Sea within marching dis tance of tho Bosphorus quickly enough to arrive before Germany can get her troops through Bulgaria to the same destination. For the next fow weeks, therefore, the cam paign for tho con trot of Constantinople ought to absorb tho attention of tho-ie who wish to follow tho most significant moves of the armies. WAITING TO SMITE TIIE GANG FT1EN8 of thousands of good Republicans ro malned away from the polls on Tuesday. They knew that tho primary was "llxed," that the Organization would drive Its cohorts to the voting places and take care of the nomination. They preferred, therefore, to Ignore the preliminary election and wait until November to voloe their protest against the seduction of the party and the overt conspiracy to drain the treasury of "Philadel phia. It was not surprising, In view of the sit uation, that 100,000 of those registered did not vote. But It was amazing that so many ballots were cast for Mr. Porter. Evidently there were many who wished to reglHtor their protest twice once In tho primary and onco In tho general election. The enormous votu prophesied for Smith failed to materialize. On the contrary, tho Porter voto augurs a formldablo beginning of the campaign to re tain good government In this city and re buke tho pretensions of McNIchol and tho Vares. It Is a campaign which will gather strength as It progresses, and as the people beoome more and more sensitive to the Insult which has been heaped upon them. The Organization carries an air of Jubi lation over Tuesday's voting, but It has cold chills running down Its back novcrthelctb. It realizes that It Is facing a real battlo, and that tho pillage of Philadelphia will not be accomplished until tho resources of good and forward-looking citizens havo been utterly exhausted. There la no toga on Smith yet. and he has a long way to go beforo he lands in City Hall. A VALUABLE PUBLIC SERVANT ANTHONY COMSTOCK, who is dead at 71, . after a life Bpent In protecting tho public morals, won notoriety by his mistakes. His substantial reputation for honest, conscien tious and effective, work was won by deeds of which the public know little. The Indecent and obscure publications of one kind or an other, the suppression of which ho secured, were not advertised by any proclamations from his office. He had them seized by th Government and the rest was silence. If his record could be examined It would be found that ho did ten wlso things for every foolish one. If his successor can do half so well ho may consider himself fortunate. ACCIDENTS ARE ONLY ACCIDENTS KTOTWITHSTANDING all the assumptions JJN to tho contrary, man is neither omnis cient nor omnipotent. The inevitable demand after every accident that the persons re sponsible shall be punished to the full extent of the law Is the form In which the belief In man's omniscience usually finds expression. The public that Is, you and your neighbor and the man who lives next door to your neighbor and so on down the street Is un willing to admit that an accident can happen. They forget that an accident Is something that happens because it was unforeseen and unexpected. By its very nature It cannot be guarded against. If wo know that the surface of the street Is going to sink, as It sank in Seventh avenue. New York, yesterday morning, and that it will engulf scores of people and kill several, and do not take precautions to prevent It, the thing that happens Is not an accident, but a crime. It loses all the essentials of the unforeseen and the unexpected without whloh there are no accidents. Yet bo Insistent Is the Vanity of man In the mass that three or four different investiga tions are making Into the Seventh avenue disaster for the purpose of fixing responsi bility, punishing some one, and satisfying the demand for a victim. It Is forgotten that tho road over which the world advances is paved with disaster. Progress is made because we learn by the unexpected and unforeseen wrecks that destroy our castles, and then provide against a repetition of the samo calamity. When the span of a cantilever bridge under construction across the Bt. Law rence River collapsed a few years ago be cause of the buckling of some of the girders the engineers discovered that their estimates of the proper weight of such supports were wrong. The lesson was expensive, but It has been learned, and engineers now err on the side of safety when they err at all. It 1h too much to hope, however, that the publto will ever learn that accidents are accident! as really as "pigs Is pigs." So versatile an impromptu speaker as Mr. Bryan Is naturally opposed to preparedness. The man who Is making soap for the Moras ought first to have asked them whether they had any use for It. Not every man Is so fortunate ns to get the Wharton Association to act as his press agent without charge. It sounds bigger to call the Stonehenge pillars megallthtc monuments than to refer to them as Just big stones. A bronte statue of Dante has been put Into the melting pot and turned Into a cannon. It will be no novelty for him to pour hot shot Into his enemies. That bale of hay mistaken for a floating mine la the English Channel must have been dropped there by the Germans to feed tfee mounts of the horse marines. Having humiliated the nation, Mr. Bryan now proposes to lead the flgfct to make It defenseless. He was Just as anxious to make It bankrupt in HM and failed, so why should anybody worry? Th M friss-te Iwaegansenoe has burns tor hsr .mm-!. Let us hope that Uncjk Sam's -Hm ossr,-riysl i4 pnlac amyjwar sot In sum a bad state sc j-epalr t r mm w( Tm tmW4 t -Wt th torch o It, h orsmr m wv hm HmUi as Junk, FROM LOUVAIN TO PHILADELPHIA Professor Cnrnvoy na Ho Takes Up His Work in Hia Adopted Homelnnd Some Personal Trnits of an Optimist By CHARLES VINTON WATERS THE nverngo optimist Is ono who has no particular reason for being anything else. It Is only tho man who can bear up bravely and smile cheerfully under nn accumulation of misfortunes that deserves the name. Under any definition, however, Dr. Albert J. Carnvoy, a Bel gian scholar, who has come to tho Uni versity of Pennsyl vania as research professor In Sanskrit and Creole In tho Graduato School, can Justly lny claim to tho possession of truo optimism. That he does not do so makes his title all tho moro clear. In Doctor Carn voy's cose, to tho DIl. CAnNVOT misfortune of losing nearly all his worldly posses-dons, of seeing his homo destroyed nnd tho well-defined and apparently bright prospects In his chosen career snuffed out, has been added the greater trial of expatria tion. Many of his fellow countrymon havo been compellod to enduro similar tribula tions In tho last year, but It Is doubtful If any of them has bcon ablo to show a moro cheerful philosophy than radiates from this exile from his war-stricken land. After Louvaln Fourteen months ngo Doctor Carnvoy was peacefully engaged In as peaceful an occupa tion ns can well bo Imagined. As a pro fessor of ancient languages In Louvaln Uni versity, tho oldest as well ns tho largest of Belgium's educational Institutions, ho had found what to him was an Ideal vocation. Years of preparation nnd application at Louvaln, at Cnmbrldgo University and In Berlin had fitted him for his congonlal task, nnd ho lookod forward with assurance to a futuro that would be useful, pleasant and profitable Tho coming of the Germans changed everything. Compolled to fleo from his home, at first ho found a haven of refuge In that tamo Cambrldgo whero, years before, he had been a student. But It was not for long. Within six monthi tho little group of Belgian university men who had gathered there with the laudable pur poso of continuing their studies was broken up. King Albort's call for soldiers took so many of the physically fit to1 the front that only a handful was left. Besides, the great English university Itself had fallen upon evil days, and In the absence of so many stu dents, gone away to the wars, It could hardly find Bufilclent work for Its own In structors. Six months ago Doctor Carnvoy came to this country. An Invitation from Columbia University to deliver a course of lectures, while It held out no promise of permanent employment, was yet too good under the circumstances to be refused. With only a small part of the scholastic year remaining, the newcomer In the field of American edu cation had email opportunity to prove his mettle. Yet his work was of so high an order that It attracted attention both In and out of the New York school, and finally pro cured for him tho offer of a chair at Phila delphia's great university. Fond of Bicycling Doctor Carnvoy Is still on tho sunny side of BO. Well abovo the average height, he gives the Impression that he would have been a good athlete had he followed the bent of the average American student of the present day. "Athletics In the form whloh the Amer ican and English youth have known It for so many years had little place In the re gard of the Belgian students of my day," explalnod Doctor Carnvoy. "Their leisure was devoted to play, not to sport as the I 7 American student sees It. Of late years there has been a decided change, and now Belgian university boys Indulge In many of the time-honored sports of England and this country." "At least, they did," he added, with a smile that had more than a suggestion of personal grief back of it. "Now there is lit tle or no exercise among the youth of my country eovo the exercise of arms. In fact, for the time thero are no university boys and no universities. Education In Belgium to day Is confined to the elementary and sec ondary schools." Tho slight stoop of Doctor Carnvoy's shoulders, not unusual with tall men of mid dle age, and In his case suggesting scholarly habits carried almost to an excess, does not mean that he is not an out-of-doors man. On the contrary, be takes every opportunity to get out Into the country, either for long walks or for bicycling trips. "I cannot understand," he exclaimed, "why Americans should have given up cycling, as apparently they have. There Is no other means, certainly, of enjoying the beauties of the country that can compare with It, unless It be walking. And Americans do not seem to walk much, e.ther, I find. They prefer the swift-moving automobile, which permits one to see only a very little and not to ap predate even that little." America's Oaks Another thing that" takes Doctor Carnvoy outdoors whenever the chance presents Is his admitted hobby botanizing. "in an amateur way only," he hastened to' explain. "I am only an amateur, but I find much that delights me In the floral wealth oflthl country, bo much that la new and strange. It does not seem as if Americans half ap preciate the bounty that has been bestowed upon them. Look at the oak, for example. America has, I believe, some It varieties, while Belgium must he content with only one." Doctor Camvoy's work at the University of Pennsylvania will be devoted largely o teaching In the Graduate School; but he will also come In touch to some extent with the undergraduates, concerning whom he appar ently has no Mttle curiosity. "I like their looks," ho said, "especially their frank, hon est eyes; but I have been told that they are not Inclined to hard work unless they think it absolutely necessary. The graduate stu dents with whom I came In contact in New York were much ths sams type of srios mind youn san that I knew dotaV stmlmr work H XtMum. f m49t1mUl, uats wr t dlKsmart. Th ks y to laM-a- FEW A DEATH GRAPPLE IN THE NORTH SEA Today Is the Anniversary of the Famous Engagement of the Serapis and the Bon Homme Richard A Famous Reply. Jones an American to the Last By CHARLES THE Great War has broken many records, but It hasn't yet destroyed the distinction of tho famous battle of the Serapis and tho Bon Homme Richard as the bloodiest naval engagement of modern times. Today Is the anniversary of that conflict, a battle of tho good old days when ships were lashed to gether and tho sailors fought hand to hand. Upon the outbreak of tho Revolution, Jones, a Virginian, born In Scotland, offered his services to the Conti nental Congress. At the age of thirty he was placed In com mand of the Ranger, the first naval vessel on which the Stars and Stripes were hoisted. PAUL JONES. Tho battle which gave him his lasting fame occurred on September 23, 1779. Jones for two years had been hovering about the coasts of England and Scotland, destroying shipping and capturing vessels. In August of ...j he had sailed from France with a squadron of five vessels, three of them American and two French. 9ft Flomborough Head he fell In with a fleet of 41 British merchantmen, con voyed by the Serapis and the Countess of Scarborough. The battle that followed, Just as the sun went down, was the battle of the Berapls and the Richard. Nightfall and Battle It was dusk when the Bon "Uu.nme Richard came close to the Serapis. The Pallas was Balling for the Countess of Scarborough, but tho otb,er ships of the American squadron had basely deserted their commander. In but one consideration was the Richard superior to the Serapis, and that was In the person ality of the American commander. The breeze was bo light that the two ves sels approached each other slowly. When almost within pistol shot and coming to gether, bow to bow, tho captain of the Berapls balled the Richard. "What ship Is that7" he called through his trumpet. Paul Jones, In order to gain time, called back: "What Is It you snyT I can't understand." "What ship Is that? Answer Immediately or I shall fire Into you," was the English re ply. Simultaneously from both vessels a hroad sldo roared out. The flash glared over the waters and showed the gunners of both ships, stripped to the waist and at their guns. That very first fire was almost fatal for the Bon Homme Richard, Tje battle was on. The decks already flowed with blood. Just as the Richard's rigging was shot away so that It was helpless, the bowsprit of the Berapls thrust across the stern of the Richard and struok the mlzien mast. Paul Jones saw his opportunity and made the two ships fast with grappling Irons. That tied them together, side by side, and miti gated to some extent the British superiority In heavy guns. The two ships now drifted along, looked in a deadly embrace. The RIoharl began to leak and Paul Jones soon saw that be must be defeated unless he struck an effective blow. He sent a party of 20 soldiers Into the crosstrees of his ship and ordered them to clear the enemy's decks by a hot musket Are. ITadn't Began to Fight All this time there was not a moment's oessatlon of the cannonade. Huge gaps wore opened in the tides of eaoh ship. The Rlohard was leaking so badly that the ship's carpenter, thinking all was lost, rushed to the fighting decks and spread the alarm. The gun crews rushed for the small boats and would haye left the ship had not Com modore Jones and Lieutenant Dale met them with cocked pistols and ordered them back to fighting. The prisoners broke loose la the hold and threatened to swarm out and over power the Americans. Guards soon mastered them and put them to work on the pumps. Behind the dense olouds of smoke that blotted everything from view Commodore Jones now organized a bearding party ef 100 men. He armed them With cutlasses and pistols. With shout and cry they swarmed over the gunwales of the Serapis and onto its bloody dscks. Although they fought fiercely the boarasw were driven b-wslt. Half of their number and as many Bngllshmen were killed w wounded in the fray. As they cam lcaplm back to the Richard's decks, the two cap. tains, saeh en their own quasie dek, wai only a Uv ftmt art. In th darkiUss the Asa eould not Vs -. Ctan-mla JPearaon of tks atatapis, oalMI st! ' TsUw vmj farm tmr Ur DRY AND NONE COMFORTABLE P. KINGSLET "No! I have not yet begun to flght," was tho heroic reply of Paul Jones. By 10 o'clock flames wero bursting forth from both ships In many places. Lieutenant Dale went to Commodore Jones and asked permission to board the Serapis again. The permission was granted. Followed by Midshipman Mayrant and a party of sailors ho leaped to the British decks. An English sailor thrust a boarding pike Into tho midshipman's hip. Tho sailor was killed with a pistol. Tho Americans swept everyone from the main deck, and Lieutenant Dale rushed to the quarter deck whero Captain Pearson stood alone. Captain Pearson, tho linage of despair, now gavo up all hope and struck his colors with his own hand. Jones was the hero of Europe and America. The King of France decorated him with the cross of tho Order of Military Merit. The American Congress gave him a gold medal and proposed to create for him the rank of rear admiral. It Is certain that Jones aspired to that honor, which was never granted, and some have said that Jones con sidered himself ungratefully treated by the new nation In the West and that ho left.lt In disgust Catherine n of Russia offered him a command with tho rank of rear ad mtral nnd Jones rendered valuable service In the war against the Turks. Probably the real reason of his acceptance of tho com mission was his love of adventure and naval life. Though ho never returned to America after 1787, he was emphatic In his state ments that he would never renounce his American citizenship. In 1792 he was ap pointed United States Consul nt Algiers, but died In Paris before his commission arrived. So It Is quite evident that he remained an American to the last. THE BALKAN AMERICA Bulgaria Seems More Like a Republic Than n Kingdom Modern Bulgaria Is only a couple of genera tions old, and though all this part of the world has been Invaded and relnvoded, and fought over since the beginning of things, the little kingdom (It seems more like a republic) has the air of a new country. The aristocracy had been wiped out long be fore Bulgaria got her autonomy In 1878, and unlike Rumania, where the greater portion of the land Is In the hands of large proprietors, Bulgaria Is a country of small farmers, of shepherds, peasants, each with his little piece of land. The men who now direct Its fortunes are the sons and grandsons of ver,y simple people. Possibly It Is because we Americans are also a new jieople, with still some of the prejudices of pioneers, that we are likely to feel something In common with the people of what has been called the "peasant State." .Cer tain It Is that the Bulgarians seem the most American" of th,e Balkan peoples, the most "Western" of these Near Easterners, Snow-capped mountains rise Just behind Folia, and the brown hills thereabout, like the rolling plateaus along the shoulders of which the train crawls on the way down from Ruma nia, are speckled with sheep. Sometimes even In Sofia you will meet a shepherd patiently urging his little Jlock up a modern concrete Btdewalk and stopping now and then for some passer-by to pick up a lamb, "heft" It. and feel Its wool before deciding whether or not he should take it home for dinner. .J,.e2P.tei0nv.thB "tr)ta "-a ,n the P" were "nice" looking rather than smart, and the young offloem from the military school: who were everywhere, as flne and soldierlike youns men as I have seen anywhere In Europe. They and the common soldiers, with their fine shout- t FM ChMU 'nd. - tno'' looked as though they were made for their work and tnv td It like duoks to water, took There is a rnusto hall In Soda, but en the In the audience. There are various beer ,, dens with music, and of course moving ViH tures, but it was Interesting, in contnuf with Bucharest, to find the crowd going to the Na The stock company, moderately subsidized by the Government, give, drama and opera on aN ternate nights. I barely got a seat for tha To toy play and the doorkeeperTald ?Vhat th. house was always sold out. The Bulgarians, In short, are elmnla. mh what the Rumanian, would 1 -"ericm? ru.mUBt,.fb,u,,-w no"n of flndUig hew anything like the little comlo opei-a kinrtoS Invented by som .of our best sellTr novVluus! It was In Bulgaria, as I recall It. that m, Shaw put "Anns and the ManT" V r ShaWs fun la all right of lUe but has abft" a. much application to Bulgaria or Sorii . VI Wyoming or Denver.-ArthKuSf fnflCVu"e-i. 8IR JOHN FRENCH SK tte-1S n conveying that Impresilon which 1. ?J?,!S -, Tsyllght mta7 lXlu L2 si tis i?"?'-' 2W? yTttEis taint of the doctrinaire. He Is, In a word, tfe ordinary roan In an extraordinary degree fat less of danger. Imperturbable in action, frt alike from exaltations and despairs, cool wbt the temperature la highest and warm when U blast la coldest, and, In all circumstances, hi man, generous, a little hot-tempered, and a ways comprehensible. One would be tempU to say that he was the beau Ideal of the Enp Ushman but for the fact that he la Irish Al fred G. Gardiner, In the Atlantic "J THE DUAL ALLIANCE The propaganda and the periscope are dote execrable team work. Cleveland Plain Dealt 1 na THE LONG ROAD We are women together my mother and ma, witn our eyes on tne auu gray past. tat, a And the pain she knows Is the pain For our ways are one at last. Oh, the roads were rough and the sharp wt tore j As she battered fiercely ahead; g And my brain grew sick and my heart rrt sore. But I followed her whither she led. For a mother's cry is a daughter's cry And the load Is the same hard lond. And tho mothers lag and the daughters fly Till tney meet on tne runt-strewn road! It was sweet to rush to her yielding breast, But It's better to clutch her hand, fl And we know our love Is the love that's best For both of us understand. " Jane Burr, In New York Times. AMUSEMENTS F(2?5ST--Now ftg D. W. GRIFFITH'S THE BIRTH OF A NATION 18,000 People 3000 Horse B. F. KEITH'S THEATR1 CHESTNUT AND TWELFTH STREETS J Unioaralleled Vaudeville Feature!) Gertrude Hoffmann COUP ANT OP 00 PRESENTING "SUMURU N". Stupendous Surrounding Show! SOPHIE TUCKER; CHAS. MACK & CO.: DOTI & DIXON; WHIQIIT & DIETRICH. OTHERS T,VPTP 1'AST FOUR TIMES ,7".V , .LAT .MATINEE BATURD Victor Herbert a Comlo Opera Succua "THE PRINCESS PAT" 'Production a delight" Record Beg-lnnlng Next Monday Evenlne Seata Todai ANDREAS DII'PEI, I$eaenta THE LILAC DOMINO" Comlo Opera In 8 Acta by CuvlI!Ir. WALNUT ( 20 MATINEE EVERT DAT, 2:18 8ECOND UIO WEEK RICHARD BUHLER ' in "SIGN OF THE CROSS" MATS., IBe SOc EVES.. J5o 70ft Next Week EDITH TALIAFERRO In "REDECCA, OF SUNNYUROOK FARM" GLOBE Theatre Ke Vaudeville Continuous 11 A. M. to 11 P. I MUSICAL COMEDY IN THREE SCENES "Coney Island to Ngxth Pole'te; JOB HORTIZ & CO. NOTE TOICE3 iQo. IK, ADELPHI First Time TonigS A TLAT THAT'S DIFFERENT jl "WHAT HAPPENED"! A Comedr Drama, by Quy F, Bracdon Bomathlnf Bi Happening Tonlaht, jj Thanl GARRICK Mon.Sep.i eeaaon BEATS TODATI Potash & Perlmutter Brta., cog to U.BO. Wednesday Mat., Beat Bealifi Philadelphia Orchestral Bubacrlbara who applied for CHANOEB pleai I at ueppe'i, iiiu uneatnut Bt. TOMORROW or I URDAT. ADVANCE ORDERS filled next week. uunuAi 10 uiuuouai, ineiualva. KNICKERBOCKER ""JfisST S2ESZ "WITHIN THE LAI S rn.E8.- "ft.," m: " -..-.- - , "" ' -"-aee.t. UaTHa CU POatH. AlleCrhenV Fr''.0.l'- Allea-heny Avan- " "vm -i-.u ilia i uiijr j-2intr&ia : ho Kenny flMollla. eto. F PALACE -151' ,U"KKT OTREBT A .fXJ-iI3.VJ.Lj I Contlnjou i JO A M. to JltlP ! .J. 7?...??"RW'I-BUKANF. " -" wtwia WAOiUt vir TJiB , ng "WarBridi Today 3 116 T A 9, AND I OTHER AC TJIE Stanley H?K.ET. .BT" ABOVU 1T " W aailaU JT DONALD BRIi -YUH-JS JN THM DUMONT'S 'SBPHEiKS -rt.btaZttM'TLdi,.,-Ai PKOPLES NOW H A ppv s-SaS-Hsfc-fltf. Jatej-. sh u. i 4 -roc4lero "Sg-JSPLJ- La EBWU