rn X ISVEIa LEDaEB PHILADELPHIA, FBIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1915; f T 4 ft Cwmtttg gjj& Utcr PUBLIC IEDGER. COMPANY , , . CTRtlfl H. 1C CURTIS, PiItiitT. JPM X. Utettnsten. Vlr rrnMrnu John a Martin, ssnurr and Treasnref; Philip S. Cellini, John B. Wllliw. Dtrtctors. EDITORIAL BOARD) Cnci H. K. Count, Chairman. . M. 'WXALET.. EwCntlTa Editor CJsPt C. MARTIN..... ...General Business tomtir Published' dally at Pcauo Ltiw is Building, i IndtaendeBC Square, Philadelphia. -CaxTHU... ,.,.... .Broad and Chestnut Streets kn (S.v l'rmt-Vnlan Thlllillns re,i....4..,..w.'.170.-A, Metropolitan Tower ' - , ' . ifta niAh nmrw.rt llnlMlnv i 1202 Tritons Rulldlnr ,,.., 8 Waterloo Place, rail Mail, S, W. NEWS BUREAUS! Wlimwwii Hciui.i, .......The rol Bonding Ml Yeas: Bcnuc ... The rimes Building SssM-in Bcstiu...... ...60 Frledrichetrasse Umw BtmiO. 3 rll Mall East, B. W. Psats nun ..82 nu Louis ) Orand BOTscnnrnoN terms Br aarrler. Dsrtr Oirex, si cents Br matt, postpaid asstiHi of Philadelphia, except wlwra forelrn postage rufislriil. DitLT Omit, on month, twenty-firs cents i pasta- Onlt, one rear, three dollars. Alt mall sub--; sgsjfeiUefi rarnbl In adranco. Itaoi Subscribers ulshlnr address changed mutt old aa wall at new addreu. MM WALNUT KETSTOItt. MAW IM tT Address ad communication to Evening httfrr, tndtptndfnce Square, PMlodslynta. mm At tkb rmriDixritu roSTomos as ikohd cuii MAU, UATTU AVERAOE NET PAID DAILT CIRCULA TION OP THE EVENINO LEDGER FOn AUGUST WAS S,61S. rKlLADEUMtlA, FRIDAY, SErTEMBEn St. 11J. ...,., , T lie that ioould.have Mture In old age must Be lusv n Mi youth. FIGURES TO TIHNK APOUT THE Organization leaders are Bald to be worried by the primary figures and to grow more worried the longer they consider them. That there Is ground for alarm In the camp of the contractor-bosses Is evident from a comparison of the primary results this year with the primary results four years ago. look at the figures for this year first. Here they are: Total registration 190.168 Total vote 185.000 Thomas B. Smith 121,664 George D. Porter 44,330 Sheldon Potter ...' 8,140 Combined Porter and Potter vote.. 62,470 Now look at these figures of four years ago: .Total reglatratlon ... ..... 195,717 Total'vote .. 243,710 George II. Earle. Jr. 106.4S5 William S. Vare 82.258 Combined Karle and Vare vote 187,711 Rudolph Blankenburg 44,947 If 187,700 votes In tho primaries for the dang candidates and 44,900 for the candidate bf tho opposition meant the election of Ru Holph Blankenburg in 1911, what does only 1(21.000 primary votes for the Gang candidate and '44,330 votes for the man on whom the adrooatea of decent rule havo united mean In, 19157 Or, If we take the police figures, What does 56,000 for Porter mean? The Gang knows wEat these figures mean andbecause of that it will fight for its life tv Kit an appetite sharpened by four hungry years. But if the men who loved PhUadel jb4e. and clean government bettor than they loved, the Gang four years ago do their duty tlile year all the efforts of the hungry hordes "put forth in vain. MORE WORK THAN WORKERS TTTitFIOYHENT agents are saying that XL there Is work for 10,000 more men and women than offer themselves for the waiting Joke In this part of the State. Last winter there were 10,000 more people willing to work than could find anything to do, and the chari table societies were put to It 'to relieve the suffering. The changed conditions are duo to a score 'of reasons, but none of them is so Interesting as the fact that the man or woman who wants work can get it today if he is willing to take what offers. The employment agents, 'however, report that the workers are begin ning to get particular about the kind of work they -will do. They do not want a job for a few weeks, but are holding oft for permanent employment. If the- temporary Job takes them a long distance from home they may ba 'wise In waiting for a better one nearer the city, but prudent men will take work when It comes rather than let their families suffer. THE PROVOST'S NEW HOUSE N ONE will welcome the news that the provost Is to have a house provided for him by the Mask and Wig Club more heartily than the returning students of the TJnlver Ry. It Is the custom of great universities adof small ones as well to put the chief tlve In a residence adapted to the social demands of his office. Those demands do not that be is to give tango parties and nk teas, but that he Is expected to enter jnifi human relations with the members of the faculties and with the distinguished jgaeate of the institution. Harvard has long had aa official residence for Its president, and H few years ago It built a new one because Ute university has grown so great that the oM house was no longer adequate to the institutional purposes which such a residence m supposed to serve. The house in Pine ,'setreet oan be adapted to meet the needs of tfee provost and of the University. POINCARE'S TRIBUTE MADELINE DANIAtT, the 14-year-old French girl, who has been decorated y President Polncaro with the Cross of Liumlau. is not the only nonmllltant French cttteen who has risen to the occasion and hw duty, to girl, when her father, the village r, was summoned to the colors, lit the bps-y furnaco and, with the help of her ' 1 r.Wd brother, tried to All his place. x,k aoMlers who are fighting the battles r i-mmri ape 4ecn4ed from such mothers 'Hi tft M4 tfcooe ittta her wiH Make. I'vtfifMf hvors all Trench womea when he 3 ' T iTWra MMAJURING - jrfftpHaf mm twe ? te wmwi a ves ,imi M i the regular a4 Mm ether la Ms JUewion wT. ?M Wtr war U U MtsmAf, & thm mue Maal "mutm $m kty oarrr, aUws)wis .bsteg m4 tor tt space puou4d fcy the smtjss, hetl ra, etc The Amr4ju way ia praotteatty to fMtei W aik-wanoM, thus giving the laUfc a, iICUws tiryltig capaclqr OMNMiWavl capaUtj, Ms tmem la Uit' Only Mi; Hkjt If tw exaetlr tttaUar vesMls enter Hoaftg, mtf, M AMrtsaa and MM WMM ean erafi )ll have to pay t or ttfas susv- rtrtdsifs 9iQ9 PQFt diatt taleA dafeva afl We have our own method of determining tonnage, and its chief value seems to be the advantage It gives our competitors. Ask a sailor why there is this difference In finding out the tonnage of ships and he Will probably not be able to tell you. No body knows. It Just happened. Borne day Congress will correct It; but not so long as La Kollotte and other landlubbers write our maritime laws. EUROPE IS USED TO DIG DEBTS TUB American national debt is so small the average citizen stands aghast at the discovery that the British debt will soon reach tho sum of 311,000,000,000, It does not seem possible that tho interest on this vast sum can ever be paid, to say nothing of liquidating the principal. But European financiers, who are accus tomed to dealing with big debts, are not shrinking from taking up the burden of pro viding ways and moans for preserving the national credit. Tho debt of the United States at the be ginning of the Civil "War was only 360,000,000 and the national wealth was 315,000,000,000. At the close of the war the debt had grown to more than 32,000,000,000. It has now been reduced until it Is only 31,000,000,000, and tho national wealth has increased till It reaches the enormous sum of 3160,000,000,000. Tho Government owes only ono dollar out of every 3150 of the national wealth. France, how ever, at tho beginning of tho present war had a debt of 36.343,000,000 and a wealth of only $50,000,000,000. That Is, the French Gov ernment owed 36.34 out of every 350 owned by the people. The wealth of Great Britain and Ireland amounts to $80,000,000,000 and a debt of $11,000,000,000 means that the Govern ment has pledged for national defense 3U out of every 380 owned by the people. . The present war debt of the British is therefore only a llttlo larger proportionately than the peace debt of Francce. If those nervous people who think that Europe will not repay the loan of half a billion or a billion which it is seeking here will study these figures they may discover that a burden which would seem intolerable to us will rest on shoulders already calloused by heavy loads and accustomed to bear them. If thero Is any reason for declining to advance to England and France the money they need It does not He In the prob ability of repudiation. CANDIDATES, PASSIVE AND ACTIVE WfllLB reminding the Interviewer that he Is tho favorite son of Ohio, former Senator Burton denies that he Is an active candidate for tho presidency. "Passively I may be regarded as a candidate," said he. This means that his lightning rod Is up and that he Is patiently waiting for It to strike. Ellhu Root has denied that he is even passively a candidate and Justice Huihes has told his friends that he will not consent to have his name used, but Victor Murdock Is convinced that Colonel Roosevelt could be persuaded to run If he were sure of election. Then theie are Senator Cummins, who wants It, and La Follette, who is eager for the nomination. And Mr. Knox would not re fuse It and Senator Weeks is willing, and Colonel George Harvey, who thinks that he Is some pumpkins as a prophet, put on his robes about two years ago and announced with great solemnity that Senator Borah would be the raatu. But Colonel Harvey is probably the only man who thinks he knows what the Republican Convention will do next year. THE NEW SPIRIT IN EUROPE "rpHERE Is nothing easier than to proph- JL coy," said Edmund Burke, "except to be wrong when one prophesies." There is, however, nothing more necessary than foresight. It would be ruinous for this country not to anticipate the end of the Great War, not to prepare for the financial and social cataclysm which that end may bring. Dismissing for the moment tho In volved financial problem, we .must consider deeply the social changes which the course of present events unmistakably indicates. Germany is the highest example of mon archical socialism; opposed to that system is the highly socialized democracy of France. In spirit England was almost as unsocial as Russia, although in actual fact it had a socialistic budget, with old-age pensions and inheritance taxes and a general sug gestion of paternalistic government. So the chief belligerents stood at the beginning of the conflict. The fact which America must first under stand Is that at a moment of crisis Ger many needed to make no change. France and England and Russia were compelled to adopt the very methods they were fighting, the socialized control of all Industry. Rail roads were taken over by the English GoV ernment the week war began, and it seems to be only a question of time before all in dustry will be governmentally operated. What the industrial outcome of these emergency measures will be cannot be said. They may be modified or abandoned. Tho social effect Is inevitable. America will have to face, after the war, a Europe In which the solidarity of the citizens will be com plete. Win or lose, the Entente Powers will be bound to a new Idea In government. Es sentially that Idea is that the Individual must give himself up to the State In order that the State may give Itself up to the people. This country, devoted to the highest type of Individualism, unmoved by catastrophe, may persist in its extreme opposition to that new idea. It may, on the other hand, draw frpm it a fresh Inspiration, combining a new service with the older freedom. It should be able to accomplish what Germany failed to accomplish a. welding together of free dom and unity, of Individual power and na tional strength. These nre the days when a fire in the fireplace makes the house feel homelike. Uncle Sam was always gallant He will assure Doctor Dumba's wife a safe conduct home. ' " Perter baa resigned frem the Police De nMrtment, but he eapeet te appoint his per- "ill fl If-"- alAAAMaA FW444pMa Is aa attractive city for con villous, not because It ta sear a great sea afesetWert, Imt because aaseng other things U Ji'tU a In f a swat purchasing cb- Champ CUHc is tWsaassHvs ww he pro tests alat tm UUc abeut tfc IMfcatMwt SHwkf tratinvi as. ut rrrtiisxi IM kJMNM that tW W Mttfs 4M4kM rtw sm t Dataware, with nor oom wim ttmm any ether tsUaad strewa j that MMtBtry, orrlag tm a sHwt GLANCING AROUND THE VARIED SPHERE Glimpses of Persona, Pdoplo and Plnces That Figure in th'o Nofrs . of tho Day Treasure Hunt ing Up-to-datoi , , ', By LUKE GUARDIAN FORMERLY It was the Mediterranean that was infested with pirates. Now It's the' North Sea and the British Channeland thereabouts. But Eurocean waters are. not" the only remaining operating 'grounds of piracy, for off the South China coast there la, , still peril of attaok by scoundrels seeking' what booty they may capture from passing ships. As In the old days when piracy Was In flower in the Caribbean and the Medlterrn-f ncan, these Chinese pirates do not stop at murder. On a reoent occasion, when 'the British steamship Tal-On was en route from Honir Kong to Canton, the officers were attacked by a band of pirates who had boarded the vessel with the two or three hundred Chinese passengers. The pirates were well armed and opened battle one night as the ship was passing close to an Island which was their frequent rendezvous. The white officers mado a bravo stand on the bridge and beat off their assailants. The passengers were or dered by tho pirates to go to the bridge and beg the officers to surrender. The passengers who refused were shot down. The pirates took possession of the engine room and stopped the ship, then set fire to the vessel beneath the bridge In an effort to dislodge the officers. A strong wind oame up and fanned the flames to fury, and so rapidly' did the fire spread that pirates and passen gers were forced to leap into the sea. The officers were the last to abandon the ship. Vessels attracted to the scene by the fire picked up scores of struggling men and women, Including many of the pirates. The latter were taken ashore In chains. What became of them afterward the account sayeth' not. A Pot of Hoosler Gold Speaking of pirates: In tho llttlo Indians town of Richmond there's great excitement these days over the treasure of Captain Kldd. A colored seer and clairvoyant knows the lo cation of a pot of gold. For a century the treasure hunters have mistakenly given their whole attention to the Atlantic coast, but the truth Is, according to this woman, that de serters from the captain's pirate ships stole some of the tainted money vwhlch Kldd had, burled and carried it Inland, burying it about thirty miles from Richmond. Speaking of treasure hunts: The reception of Stevenson's story, "Treasure Island," reads like a fairy tale. Graham Balfour, in his biography of the author (now published In a one-volume edition) writes; "States men and Judges and all sorts of staid and sober men became boys once more, sitting up long after bedtime to read their new book. The story goes that JJi, Gladstone got a glimpse of - It at Lord Rosebery's house, and spent tho next day hunting over London for a second-hand copy. Mr. Andrew Lang spent over It several 'hours of unmlngled bliss.' "This Is the kind of stuff a fellow wants. I don't know, except 'Tom Sawyer and the 'Odyssey,' that I ever liked any romance so well." Speaking of "Tom Sawyer," his best tale, Mark Twain observed, "There comes a time in every rightly constructed boy's life when he has a raging desire to go somewhere and dig for burled treasure." Tom's, apparently, was a rightly constructed boy's life. He planned for himself an entrancing career "At the zenith of his fame, how he would suddenly appear at the old village and stalk Into church, brown and weather-beaten, In his black velvet doublet and trunks, his great Jack-boots, his crimson sash, his belt bristling with horse-pistols, his crime-rusted cutlass at his side, his slouch lrat -with wav ing plumes, his black flag unfurled, with the skull and cross-bones on It, and hear with swelling ecstasy the whisperings. It's Tom Sawyer, the Pirate I The Black Avenger of the Spanish Main.' ' Tom and Huck Finn did go hunting for treasure. "Where'll we dig?" said Huck. "Oh, most anywhere." "Why, Is it hid all around?" "-o, indeed. It ain't. It's hid in mighty parUcular places, Huck, sometimes on islands, sometimes In rotten chests under the limb of an old dead tree, JusP where the shadow falls at midnight; but mostly under the floor In ha'nted houses." "Who hides it?" "Why, robbers, of course. Who'd you reckon, Sunday school sup'rintendents?" "Don't they come after it?" "No. they think they will, but they gener ally forget the marks or else they die. Any way, it lays there a long time and gets rusty; and by and by somebody finds an old yellow paper that tells how to find the marks a paper that's got to be ciphered over about a week because it's mostly signs and hyroglyphlcs." Only Plough-deep In another age than this Baron Reading and his colleagues would have sought the money they want by chasing Spanish galleons or searching for burled gold, or, as a Massachusettes Governor once did, salving a sunken treasure ship. It has Just been reported from Sunbury that a farmer of that neighborhood has fished UP from a well a bucket overflowing with doubloons and silver pieces. The only passible objection to this tale is the fact that the old bucket carries no evidence of piratical history and is supposed to have belonged to some miserly hermit. Ben Franklin hod no use at all for tales of pirate's gold. He lamented that bo many Phlladelphlans of his .day were smitten with "odd humour of dlgglnjr for money, through a belief that much has beeft hidden by pirates formerly frequenting the Schuylkill River." In one of his dldactlo essays he wrote: "I shall conclude with the words of the discreet Friend, Agricola, of Chaster County, when he gave bis son a good plantation. 'My son,' said he, 'I give thee now a valuable parcel of land; I assure thee I have found a con siderable quantity of gold, by WKig there; thee mayeet do tho same; but thee must carefully observe this, Never te dig mora than pteugb-deep,' " ' i " . WOMEN IN PUBLIC OFFICE A woman has Just been acting Mayer for a 4ay of th city of Los Antrim. a4 ho cooa- autnt damage t the city's lutwula Is ft- . Te dtottwwtssw sjslmtusy is Maw aHi ,Lrf I litany, the eady woman mam ber.ta k Ctty Council. Woman in stcCr HtaUw ft ben gja t rusbta tm - saost Mit la Uwthar tWr 75S Usr kaM "WHY, IT'S NEVER TOO EARLY TO THINIt DOES PREPAREDNESS MEAN WAR? The Several Kinds of Militarism as Illustrated by Contemporary History American Foreign Policy Builded. on Bluff. Why France Got Out of Mexico i By WARREN BARTON BLAKE MILITARY preparedness Is, first of all, a relative term. Allowing for the limita tions of numbers and national wealth, there are no countries In Europe better pro pared for war than Holland and Switzer land. Holland has a war strength of 200,000 trained men. Switzerland has a war strength of 260,000 trained men. For months now something approaching their war strength has been held under arms, at great cost to those countries. Switzerland and Hol land have thus stood ready to defend their national self-respect and their national territory against violation by any stronger Power. To put it more accurately, these forces have been mobilized to guarantee for their oountries poaco Instead of war. Had Holland been literally or practically un- . armed it would have been an almost Irre sistible temptation for Germany, and an even greater one for Great Britain, to march across her territory. Probably that would have made a shambles of Holland In the end, as Belgium has been made a shambles. Switzerland Is In much the same case. The mountain State borders on the war fronts of three belligerent powers. But neither of theso well-prepared countries, neither Hol land nor Switzerland, has had to complain of any more serious violation of her rights than the occasional flight of a careless air ship of some belligerent nation over her soil. Then a protest has been made or perhaps shots have been flred at tho airship. Inci dentally, It is a long time since either Hol land or Switzerland tas been at war. In cidentally, too, both of these countries are prosperous and well governed. In neither has that form of militarism which spells na tional preparedness brought In Its train autocracy or a reactionary kind of govern ment. Holland Is a constitutional monarchy. Switzerland Is a republic a republic older than the United States. These countries are, in the loose sense of the word, "militarist." But they are not, I believe, militarist In any sense to which Mr, Ford can reasonably ob ject. They haven't the German type of militarism, the type of militarism which crowds women off the street Into the gutter, the type of militarism which maintains an obsolete and Irresponsible dynasty and Is dis graced by Zabern affairs and scandals, pub lic and private. The national policy to which Swiss or Dutch militarism lends vigor is not, in fine, a policy of aggression. Mr. Ford, do you mean to spend your million dollars, or your ten millions, combating the Prussian form of militarism, or the development of such latent force as may enable the United States to resist, If need be, either the 'Prus sian militarism or any other hostile force? It makes so gravo a difference. In the first case, ypu are merely wasting your money; the Prussian spirit can never be evoked" Irt A LESSON IN PROTECTION Germany Is Strong Bepnuso She Has Spent Her Money at Home Every paper that can print anything worth reading has something to say about the world's awful war. But one of the war's greatest lessons we do not remember seeing mentioned anywhere Germany, as a result of her almost inhuman, almost uncanny, almost altogether Incompre hensible efficiency, Is making all her own war supplies, all her own munitions of every sort tier autotrucks, her steel supplies. Is feedjng her own country, Is making and preparing all needful chemicals and hospital supplies. And this means that, Irrespective of the ex tent to which her finances may be crippled or Involved, her national treasury exhausted, or her foreign exchange epreclat4. UWH HAS SPENT THE MONBY AT HOMjfWITH HER OWN PEOPLK. , And they stilt have the aoMl in 0Fway. With the Entente Powers, the sttwrtiea is largely reversed. They have b amMitg a regular NJagara-lIfce defctge f gold U Awrtca for supplies and squlpesept of aM kl, ton taw, to a large extaat won fornagn sawtria. la ethr wor4, triajyt by every mmm In hr( wr. eoaHfrtsated, durfmr $ yars, all her woa bulling nn her owst gJ, Mr laytwames, fcar w lawitM btrW eaUnrins.tW of" ootwnareial loatlay- at haw a4 iaia4, bar own nwrobajrt SSaUftoS. OsnasMiy has ta fV war Hk btttmnlg up of the wUth ef oreagN oattmirtm M ttw eU' CMrraauy, and has eJMfiaat ts 4atru? .of Protection and the doetrte of UWIWIgr""' W wn maannai, w.wa uuaaw Dvar wrura raroyf wf a. pwuan a MM1 atf "ft J. JmNkk MMRSi ' ewanwam 4 -rt"t 5 HHI fl -ssafsal aflaflaflflaaHaBaaBRmflffftfr7' Individualists America. In the second case, you are planning but no, I won't apply that word to Mr. Ford. Builded on Bluff ' Now, the New Testament contains a parable In It concerning a houso built upon a rock and another houso built upon the sand. It has nothing to say, however, about houses built upon a bluff. Yet, American foreign policy since the Civil War has been founded upon bluff. Julian Street tells In Collier's of the conversation aij American army officer once heard when he was attend ing the French army maneuvers In Touralne In 190S. Ono day at luncheon the talk among the French officers turned to Mexico, where, as it happened, the general seated at the head of the table had served as lieutenant during1 the French occupation of J864-5 i. "General," said a young staff officer,' "there Is one point in French history on which I have nover been clear: Why did our army get out of Mexico In such a hurry?" The general laughed and pointed to tho young officer In the uniform of the United States Army. "Because," he good naturedly explained, "there were then in the United States more than a million men wearing a (blue uniform and trained through the Civil War, and they asked us to get out!" I don't vouch for the Incident but accord ing to Mr. Street, that was the only period lnour history when we were really prepared to fight and, as you see, we didn't have to do It. ' That our bluff has never beon called, In spite of the Venezuelan controversies (that twice brought us faco to face with war, once with Germany and once with Britain), in spite of John Hay's stand for the "Open Door" in China, in snlte of our Colonial ad ventures. In spite of our diplomatic diffi culties with Japan, on account of exclusion laws and California grievances that our bluff has never been called Is due less to the guardianship of some devoted angel than to a combination of lucky circumstances, not the least of which has been tha fact that the Monroe Doctrine has admirably suited the policy of the British Empire, which has needed no new colonies for glory or expan sion, and has been exceedingly glad that there was no prospect of Germany obtaining large foreign colonies ,in jthe now world,, Clausewltz said; "War is only a continu ation by other means, of national policy." If this be true, we must either face the pos sibility of war and adopt tho most Intelli gent measures of insurance against it, or we must give up the Idea of having national policies. Would It bo too much to say that the negation of Clausewltz's dictum Is equivalent to abandoning the principle of nationality? aging her manufacturers to go abroad for their purchases of all kinds the British Gov ernment Itself often buying materials abroad tather than from British manufacturers, when tho price for the foreign article was a shade lowor. ' And. now. see where they are! We have a great many thousands of these theo retical, vlBionsry, Impractical, unbusinesslike "theosophltlear and 'lrabecIlical, (a couple of nW words to fit the occasion) freetraders who want to follow England's plan who be lieve In buying everything where It can be se cured most cheaply, and let the theory of "America First'! go hang !(?( )n the. wood hed book-wle men, of course professors and professional preachers but not real doers, con structors or upbullders not ono of them. The latter are the producers, and the men who have msde America, and who must be depended Upon to make America in, tha future. While the former are sent to us no doubt for eewe seed reason, like all pestilence graMhop pre, ipiaaaaM, aalagns ana drouths to chasten u ml 4autt far some good cause. ' FsriWM forHfca reasen thta dec has fleas, "Kaaata hi item thinking he Is a dog." DaHy rct Tg. NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW The greavUst contribution to Justice within our pewwr would ba to reacu the ihHMohs of Maxl sm'immmmi from the mlarale and cruatty thai otWwia wHl be their terrtUe atid trade tut for wtd neaeraUops. Kew York Mill, -WW Mr, Yilaoa mtlf a threat of taVastea ia pfalar ta wait tits Max leans agalast us, aa4 tfean msosbUs m tbair, President and falf whew thy avalaot ta laad them? That mlM ba a tttrty Wltoesaan exialnta4 H saiftat b battor, than the present confusion. oMa Trawaorlpt, iMm a wW- -test of s will eon to -att-va Hist 111 hull ttar baa tea- Iota about Alas ABOUT THAT!" ka is true. It is difficult to get 'over that lcm3 fixed habit of thinking about this Arctlo cer-j ner as a frozen wilderness. But with a (90,090,? 000 railroad pushing Into tho interior it will notf be long before tho tourists, in 10,000 lots, will baj seeing for tnemseivcs. uaitimore American. COUNTER-ntRITANTS T. R. calls names as he declaims For everlasting war. And Bryan coos the while he rues J.10 names kajiio uc&uio. ;j T. R. Is out for battle, and William Jl fori neace. I . The country's really lucky that they do noB take surcease. For T. R,'s roar that we shed gore, And shed It p. d. q., Is offset by BUI Bryan's cry, "A wicked thing to dol" No word or act should be allowed one of thlil twain to balk. For each drowns out the other by his oeaw? less flow of talk. W. A. MoO. AMUSEMENTS FOSRBST-NOW TWICE DAILT D. W. GRIFFITH'S THE B I ET H OF A NATION A 18,000 People 8000 Horses J B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE! CHESTNUT AND TWELFTH STREETS Unparalleled Vaudeville Feature! Gertrude Hoffmann COMPANY OP 60 FIIESENTINCI "SUMURtTN" Stupendous Surrounding Showl . SOPHIE TUCKER: CIIA& MACK ft CO.I DOTUaJ ft XJlA.un ; wjiiuiu: at maimtu, irrjittna, T VI? TP LAST THItEE TIMES M Jj X JXLKJ LAST MATINEE TOMOBROWj Victor Herbert's Comlo Opera Bucce "THE PRINCESS PAT" Tonight Mr. victoh iiehukht win perionauB conduct tho orchestra by special request. Beginning Next Monday Evening SEATS NOWfi A.J.nnnTlminl Presents AUU1 COB J-upjJCi "the i,rLAC DOSI Comlo opera in a Acts vr uuvuuer. WAJLiiNUT wiiSroTi, MATINEH EVEHT DAT, 3115 SECOND BIQ WEEK RICHARD BUHLER in- "SIGN OF THE CROSS"j MATS.. lBo BOO. EVES., 26o T8-f Next Week EDITK TALIAFEIinO In .'J nr rvoTH rni,i market ANpi yjjxix j-iicaixc junifeii stubs Vaudeville Continuous 11 A. M. to 11 P. ', "Coney Island to North Pole" JOE HORTIZ & CO. NOTE PRICES., ,.. 100. Me, i k TvnT TJTTT TONKJirr AT 8:15 iUlil JU171.il. MATINEE TOMOF A. PLAY THAT'S DirrEHENT "WHAT HAPPENED"! A Comedr Drama by Oar V, Dragdon , A UNIQUE HIT I ' Philadelphia Orchestra, mrvTN A "V Subocrlbara who applied for CHANS. XyJU-n-J- please 'call at Ileppo'a, 1110 Chert street. TODAY or TOMOnnOW ADVANCE ORD1I hAs i nil" 4?ah' jTfkyw A 7 a a. tWYTYTVn 0n a flBuilvtsJ UM "Wl w iUWMA W AfUVOWA iV4H GARRICK W Mon. Sep.2 ueason SEATS NOW Potash & Perlmutter ETgs., COo to f 1.50. Wednesday Mats., Best Set,l VnnVT?1)TirtnWl Theatra-Plar avii ivxujxvu u wi.vu.v Market A' gSSuV'S "WITHIN THE LAI MATINEES. Tues., Tours., Sat. Yyjgat ' Beats, THE MARKET (ST.. ABOVB U " 11 A. M. to lliilB P. U Stanley donald brianj "VOICE IK THB rOT PAT. Am?. ".. MAHITJW-BTMWW . iuuwu com Continuous la A. u. n tlitn tvl 1TME MAOTSs 3TTlfl8 HOUSE" WLW "WarBride GI Toiay RAND aa t. AMP fr OTHER ACTS AllarrVienv . Tnnktari A Allashanr Avaa rYUWfcjneJiy iux.OMr. ri too; Wvss.. JOa, Htamst Vakk aad Mia JolUtMlaatralai Holdsi Htre 1SMSMU Ttma; OajjaBdo: Lo-vS Wit Eartao,u "rtsrfcttns the M!ciinMndii PBQprjgs now-Sappv HKIl Mftt Was -Fat WWU lu taw I- Trocadero a'SSa?,LIHJl La U r C ' IT T