EVENING L'BDGBR-PHILADELPHIA. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1916: I. i r i ! ', r t , i - I rUBUC LEDGER COMPANY CTIU'B It It CfMTIfl, ritKTBKtT , ltln )t. Ludlntton, Vic Praaldant , John C Martin, atntary and Treaaurer, itilllp 8 Colllne, John II. WUllama, (JPlrntort editomal noAnn. Crf II K Ccafia, rhalrman T. M. WHALEr . . Btecutlra Editor OHN C UAIITIN Ornaral Ilualnaea Alanater Publlahtd dally at Tl'tLio LtMta Hull Jin J, Independence Square Philadelphia. LxtKirn Cbxtiui . llroad ami Gneatnut Streeta AIURTir Citi Jrru-Vnlan Uulldlnc Nw YoaK ITo-A, UIIpolllan Tower UrrtolT , 8W1 Fnrd llulMlnir FT. Lome 409 Ul1 Ixmocrt llull1lr Cllluoo .104. Tribune llulldltir Wltiojiu 8 Waterloo llaee, Pail Mall, 8. W. NEWS BVnBAUSi tTiiinVoTO" Tlcawc , ....The rait Oulldlni KKtr Vouk Hi arte The Tlmea llullillni IttaMN liorno ... HO FrledrlehatraMe Lrtsnojr lli'acAO 3 Pall Mall Ran. S W. raia Initio. . . .... .it Una Louie 1 Orand srnscntrno.v timuk tly farrier Dutx Oxit. alx eenta lly mill, pnalpald eutrlriA of Philadelphia, except where forelm rta I required, DillT OxtT, one month. twenty-five rente: Dii.t OvtT one year, thru dollare. All mall aub eciMptlona payable In advance. NOTica Subrcrlbera wlahlne addreaa chanced tnuat tiv old aa well aa new addreaa. nnx. M0 TTALNIT KEYSTONE, MAIN SMS CT Aidrrn oil commimlmflon. to Kvtnlna Ledntr. Initrprndtnce Bauare. Philadelphia, iMttno it tub MiiLinrt.niu roeTorrica a icond- CLAIa U1IL MiTTIS TUB AVERAGE NET PAID DAILY CIRCULA TION OP THE EVENING I.KDUF.n ron auoubt was rs.sis. rillLADELrillA, TIIUnSUAY. SErTEMDCn JO, 11S. You never can measure the size of a man's intellect bv the bigness of the noise that comes out of his mouth. MERRY MOHAN'S MIRACLES AFTEIt aa brilliant a campaign as over Xi. characterized tho light of a ball team for a pennant, Moron's "Dusy Berthas," tho outcasts of tho spring dopesters, rushed pell welt ovor tho Bostoncso yesterday and clinched mathematically the crown which It was already morally certain they had won. Ono by ono they havo met their antagon ists and beat them back. It Is a fad to say that tho Phillies won becauso tho league was weak; It Is o, fact that they battcrod their way through the most ovenly balanced clubs thd league has yet known, with no weaklings In sight to easo tho tension. They won bo causo they had tho goods. "When Philadel phia cannot turn out a winner In one lcaguo, it can In tho other. It is comforting to feel, too, that what Alexander did yesterday on tho Braves' field, he will do again In tho samo place, with some other BostonoHO ns his victims, while Cravath smites the sphere and his exulting confreres dart along the bases. Hats off to Tat Moran and tho Moron clan I HANDING PHILADELPHIA A LEMON THE announcement by Senator Penrose In Baltlmoro that ho thinks thd Republican Rational Convention will bo held In Chicago, taken in connection with.' the pathetic failure of the Finance Committee of Councils to do anything to hasten tho selection of a slto for the proposed Convention Hall, seems to indi cate that the politicians intend to give the city tho laugh, as they say in tho vernacular, trusting that a lemon will be satisfactory. Quito probably tlo Senator will still use his best efforts to wm the prize for Philadelphia, albeit with no great enthuslnnm. Vet It Is Philadelphia that must send a rousing messago to tho nation by electing Smith, for tho good of the Republican party, wo oro told. Tho greatest Republican city ought to be a good placo for the party con vention, shouldn't It? A winner was nom inated hero In 1000. A winner could bo nom inated here again. But that trip to Chicago mnkeH tho mouths of potential delegates water, and what do they care what happens to Philadelphia so long as they get their Junket? Verily all the lobsters are no't on tho Great Wlilto Way. A NAME TO CONJURE WITH NOTHING short of Inspiration has led tho Independents to call their organization the Franklin party. Franklin was one of the first great civic patriots in tho United States. Ills genius for efficiency and economy was used early in his llfo for pointing out tho way to reform the abuses in local govern ment. Take tho matter of policing. There were ward constables in his day who patrolled the streets at night, assisted by tho house holders whom they called in turn to assist them. Tho man who preferred to pay six shillings a year to doing his share of police duty was allowed to compound for his serv ice in this way. Tho constables, Instead of hiring capable watchmen to .guard tho city, pocketed tlio money and gathered a lot of ragamuffins about them for a few drinks a night, and property was not protected. .Franklin demanded that this source of graft 5be closed and that a regular police force be employed. His plan was Anally adopted. Thero was a cleaner and a purer Philadel phia in tho 18th century becauso Franklin lived here. There must bo u. purer and cleaner Philadelphia in the 20th century berauso tho men of high purpose and clear Vision have invoked his spirit to guide them. WHO OWNS PHILADELPHIA? Naked came I Into this government, and naked corns I out of it. Saneho Panza. EVERY honest public servant must per force repeat .this saying of Don Quix ote's worthy page on his retirement from office. If he cannot say it with any show of sincerity h lays himself open to the sus picion that he has lined his pockets at the expense of the people. Government Is not maintained for tho sole profit of tho governors. Public office is a public trust, as Grover Cleveland said, and h,a William Penn said two centuries beforo Cleveland was born. But many men who plot to get control of public affairs hold, after the faihtpn T the rulers of the Central American republics, that public office is a private perquisite. CREDIT IN 1915 AND 18G3 AJfT PNE wishing- to understand the slg tfVnlflcunco of the successful negotiation of Ave per cent loan by France and England in tlm United States at 98 has pnly to com Hre U price at which the securities will bo Ukn fry American investors with the price which Ajnsrieaps, who were fighting for the, IHrwServation of, the Union, were willing to isi-. Vf securities of tliejr own Government Iji IMS, just bvfere the battle of Gettysburg, 'ffct f.'ovwnment bad. made a, new Issue of at pi cent. M feonds In the sumfr of that, mw. jay VmvL, of this city; wtw tlw aat through whom they were sold to the public. They Were issued at par to take up a lot of greenbacks, and the greenbacks were ac cepted at par In exchange for the bonds. The transaction meant that a non-lnterest-bear-Ing note of llio Government was to be taken up by tho lsuo of an Interest-bearing bond. These now securities were sold In the open market at a small premium; but when we recall that gold was worth from US to 147, nntl thnt It would take Nearly $3 In green backs to buy 12 worth of gold, tho real value of tho securities is apparent. At tho samo time It took t.E0 In paper to buy tl In London exchange. Tho prestnt rato of London exchange, with a pound sterling worth only $1.70 In New York, shows no such demoralization as existed in 1864. And tho ability of the Allied Powers to float a loan hero on terms as good as prevail In ordinary peace times proves that their credit Is still unstrained, and thnt money, tho most timid commodity In the world, still hns con fidence Jn tho reserve powers of tho great no tions. ENEMIES OF TRANSIT rpilR Woodland Avenuo Business Men's As--soclntlon hns selected a good time to bilng to tho attention of citizens generally tho gravo results likely to follow the omis sion of the contemplated Darby elevated lino from tho transit Improvements authorized by Councils. Tho futuro of transit Is wrapped up In tho present political campaign. Phllndol phlans may ns well despair of n universal B-cent fare and adequate facilities for all parts of tho city If Davo Lano's creatures arc permitted to get Into office. Mr. Lnno seems to hate Improvement of any kind, but most of nil he hates transit Improvements. Tho nicro montlon of them sets him In a rage. He Is against tho improvements al rendy authorized. They are, to him, an evidence of public hysteria. It has been sus pected, too, that Senator Patton favors the Darby lino In theory but Is against It In practice It might pay West Phlladolphlans to find out l Just whero their representatives really stand. Adopting resolutions Is a good thing, but It is a far better thing to elect men who will make them effective. Tho figures presented are convincing. By January 1 thero will bo approximately 36.000 men employed at nddystonc, all of them earning good wages. They and their fami lies comprise a population of almost 200,000, a veritable city, and they will not be Phll.a dclphlans unless they have adequate facili ties for reaching their work from their homes In town. It would cost less than live million to build the proposed line, and tho 36,000 workers would be worth more to Philadelphia yearly than that gross sum When looking for business nway from homo, It is not wiso to lose business that Is already at home. West Phlladolphlans and other Phllndel phlnns have the situation in their own hands. Thoy can put the comprehensive Taylor transit plan Into effect if they want It. But they cannot do so by voting for politicians who are against it. How, Mr. Citizen, do tho candidates In your ward stand on rapid transit? v- WHERE CENSORSHIP TENDS The free communication of thoughts and opinions Is ono of the Invaluable rights of man, nrid every citizen may freely speak, write and print on any subject, being re sponalble for the abutte of that liberty. Article I, section 7, of the Constitution of Pennsylvania. THE lower courts havo held that this does not apply to tho right to exhibit pictures and that the "movie" censorship has been established without violation of any of tho fundamental liberties of the people guaran teed to them by the Constitution. Their attempt to override the principles of freedom has produced tho kind of complica tions which prudent persons foresaw from the beginning, and the State censorship has deprived the police authorities of the cities of tholr power to hold the proprietors of moving plcturo places responsible for tho consequences of the exhibition of objection ablo films. Tho late Mayor Gaynor, of New York, who vetoed an ordinance empower ing the Board of Education to censor the "movies," was better advised than tho Gen eral Assembly of this State. Ho had the wisdom to see that if it wero constitutional to decide in advance what pictures might bo shown it would also be constitutional to put into every newspaper office a censor to de cide what might be printed nnd thereby to destroy that great bulwark of popular gov ernment, a free press. Tho fear of tho libel laws keeps the press within bounds and the fear of the laws against exhibiting Indecent, libelous or im moral pictures will prevent the "movie" managers from offending public taste, es pecially if thoso who transgress are rigor ously punished under the general laws cover ing such offenses. Moving pictures that are not indecent but simply untrue to the facts of history, carry their own correction when ever they are shown. What's half a billion between friends? Tho mother instinct will sometimes move a woman to do strange things. The odors in Rlttenhouse Square are not to be compared with those in Penn Square. Not even the care- of a mother who is a trained nurse ran save tier children from the accidents of prophylaxis. Returning Bryn Mawr students are learn ing to their delight that tho higher educa tion is not a bar to marriage. Poor Phillies! They've got no tnfleld and they've got no outfield, yet even their bitter est critics will admit that they've got the pennant. President Wilson need not be ashamed of the tears that he shed as the Grand Army veterans passed in review before lilfn. It was a moving sight. i i' Were Franklin alive he would be fighting for rapid transit, and that Is what enterpris ing citizens of this community will be dolne during the next few weeks. W II I IIIM.il. II , M Offering tho Alllf loan in bonds, of aa small denomination as $100 fs a wise move. Much of the demagogy In (his country would come to nothing wes ralkMid and ojher )wuea mow widely UsM. 4 .fi T tt"V m THE COUNTRY AND BUSINESS Lending Banker Describes Finnncinl Conditions and the West's Atti tude Toward tho Loan to Eng land and France By WILLIAM A. LAW Prealclent Klrat Natlenal nank of rhllatlelnhtft sntt exI'realri'nt American Hankers' Aaaoelatlon. The author of the following article has fust rrtnrntil to the eitu from a trip through, the West. At Seattle he preslArd over the sessions of the American Hankers' Asso ctotlon. He has lately, therefore, come in close personal contact with bankers and business men of all parts of the country. WHILE thero Is a widespread wish In the West to uphold Presldont Wilson in his handling of tho problems nrlslng from the Kuropenn war, thero Is a decided difference of opinion ns to wheth er tho Democratic policies have been beneficial to tho coun try ns a whole, nnd homo of the great par ties can ns yet safely claim n preponderat ing Inllucnco in tho coast States. On tho coast one hears much less tnl" about tho European war than In tho East, but Its effects upon m a n u f acturlng, the export trade and mar WILLI VM A LAW ket price") for staple products are nono tho less distinctly noticeable. In Seattle the lumber trndo Is badly out of Joint, and, whllo many mills are operating, tho volume Is much reduced nnd llttlo export business is being done. However, great ac tivity is reported in fisheries, and thoso en gaged in raising cattle and sheep aro expe riencing quite satisfactory conditions. Tho manager of tho largest department store in Seattle told me that his sales, nil of which aro for cash, wero well ahead of last year's totals. Whllo there Is a lull In the great con. struction work, both public nnd private, which usually goes on, people have by nu means lost courage, nnd we heard no gloomy views as to the futuro. Tho opportunities nnd possibilities of Alaska laro realized only when one consults the practical men who ure co-operating In Its development. On the Const Further down the coast tho low prices for agricultural products such as fruits and veg etables reflected decreased purchasing power and the cessation of exports. Orange grow ers nro suffering by the complete closing of German and Abstrlan mnrkcts. In San Francisco and Los Angeles tho bankers complained of the samo plethora of monev from which wo are suffering In Philadelphia. All along the coast there is tho most in tense criticism of the La Folletto seaman's bill, which has taken the American flag oft tho Pacific Ocean and transferred to the dis liked Japanese the power of carrying or re fusing to carry American products to thoso in foreign lands who wish to buy them. This matter is viewed with tho utmost serious ness, nnd, with tho tariff changes by which Canadian lumber Is admitted, will play a largo part In national politics In tho States along the const. As few tourists are going to Europe this year and the San Francisco Fair attracts many of them, more Eastern people "havo visited tho coast this year than ever before. This has brought a good deal of money into that section, and, what is much more Im portant, has educated our own countrymen to ttie conditions and possibilities of that most Interesting region, nnd has afforded them delightful experiences in genuine Western hospitality. The Trend Toward Prosperity In New- Mexico we had our first reportB of entirely satisfactory conditions. Last win ter's snows, combined with a satisfactory dis tribution of rainfall, enabled the herders and cattlemen to produce an unusually largo yield, and, having obtained exceptionally good prices for wool, hides, cattle and horses, the section ns a whole Is exceedingly pros perous. In Kansns City there hns been a decided revival of trade, and tho banks are experi encing n normal demand for loans, though rates aro still much too low. But here, as elsewhere, there was considerable comment upon the slow grain movement. Wheat growers expect high prices, whllo the millers are unwilling to buy, anticipating a sub stantial decline, nnd ofttlmes objecting to tho condition of wheat. Ah Is usual with other farmers, the wheat growers quickly adjusted themselves to tho recent abnormally high prices and regard thoso now prevailing ns Inadequate. Wo heard this view cxpressod by bankers from many of tho wheat grow ing States, and it was commented upon oven more than tho size of the record crop. The St. Louis bankers told us that Condi tions, both Industrial and commercial, were steadily Improving, nnd that their great Southwest territory had been greatly re lieved by tho advance In cotton. It is now generally recognized that cotton occupies an extremely strong position, considering the sharply reduced acreage, tho smaller yield, the lower cost of production and the easy financial position of the entire country. Thcso elements appear to offset any reduction In foreign consumption, and tho dry goods trade has already felt the stimulus of increased prices of raw material. Effects of Allies' Loan At many points the Anglo-French loan was seriously discussed; especially in San Fran cisco the leading bankers realize that the successful distribution of this loan is most vital toward sustaining the normal move ment of this country's important agricultural products. Broad-minded bankers expressed the willingness to support such a loan for such purposes wore it offered either by Ger many or Great Britain, A prominent Ger man banker, while feeling that tho loan would bo unpopular, expressed the opinion that any one doubting the soundness of a loan guaranteed by Great Britain would only reveal his Ignorance, as there 'was still no better Government socurlty -than a British Consol. Upon those who are well informed regard ing the economic effects of this loan upon our domestic commerce there rests the retjponal bHity of informing bankers, Investors and the people generally of the actual influences and effects involved in the transaction, for'at the presetit time there are many aspects of (he matter which have not been fairly and thoroughly considered. GOOD SOLO WORK Bounalng the keynots of the Piofrelve cam. pjjljrn brings out some first U solo worir.- GUN-CURE FOR DUAL CITIZENSHIP Patriotic Exploit of American Naval Officer Case in Cleveland Court, Involving Vienna's Claim on Ciepielowski, Recalls Famous "Koszta Affair" BY HERBERT IF NOT exnetly parallel, tho case in the Common Pleas Court of Cleveland, Ohio, the centrnl flguro in which Is a munitions worker of the namo of Ciepielowski, can hardly fall to bring to tho mind of the stu dent of American history an Incident of Inter national celebrity dating back more than f sixty years. Tho extradition of this humhlo artisan Is demanded by tho Austro-Hungn-rlan Government, on tho ground that he made "treasonable" remarks about tho Fatherland. Associated heroically with tho "Koszta nf falr," tho name of Captain Duncan Natha niel Ingrnham, U. S. N., shines with a lustro still undlmmed. That Intrepid officer, whoso conception of the dignity of his Government ledhlm successfully to defy a wholo fleet of Austrian warships In tho harbor of Smyrna, Turkey, In 1853, trained the guns of tho sloop of wnr St. Louis on tho Austrian brig Huszar, though the latter was supported by half a dozen ships, and won his point against a spirit which now seems recrudescent In Vienna. Koszta Seized By Austrians Martin Koszta, a Hungarian by birth nnd compatriot of Kossuth, had taken part In tho revolution of 184S-49, which had for Its object tho detachment of Hungary from the dominions of tho Emperor of Austria, nnd emigrated to tho United States shortly after tho failure of that movement. In July, 1852, ho made a declaration of his Inten tion to become an American citizen, at the fcame time, of course, renouncing allegi ance to any foreign Power. The following year private business took him to Turkey, whero ho placed himself under tho protection of American diplomatic representatives. I was while ho was under this fancied security that a plot was concocted by some Austrian officers In Smyrna, Inspired by their Govern ment, to effect his capture and return him to Vienna to stand trial for "treason," the samo charge that is now made against Ciepielowski at Cleveland. He was seized on the streets by a band of mercenaries employed by the con spirators and carried aboard the Huszar, a warship lying in Smyrna harbor. Despite his protests he was' confined in irons and subjected to great indignities. It was on the day following the selzuro of Koszta that the sloop-of-war St. Louis, flying the Stars and Stripes, sailed into Smyrna harbor. Captain Ingroham, its commander, apprised of Koszta's plight, sent to the captain of tho Huszar a courteous request for permission to seo tho prisoner. To this request assent was granted, and Captain Ingraham, after a con versation with Koszta, assured the latter he. was entitled to the protection of the American flag. Prompt demand for tho prisoner's re lease was made by the commander of tho St. Louis, which demand was contemptu ously refused. Thereupon Ingraham com municated tho facts to the nearest United States diplomatic ofllcer, who happoned to be Consul Brown, statlonod at Constantinople. Meanwhile, six additional Austrian warships had come into harbor and anchored ejose to the Huszar, While Captain Ingraham was waiting for a reply to his message to Consul Brown he noticed tho Huszar, with Koszta on board, getting ready to leave. Shortly afterward the Austrian was under way. "Clear for Action!" It didn't take a man of Ingraham's calibre long to make up his mind about a matter which to his way of thinking Involved the dignity of the American flag. He put the St. Louis in tho Huszars course, and a shot from the sloop's guns went flying across the bows of the Austrian bftg-of-war, Tho Huszar hove to at this emphatic summons, and in reply to Captain Ingraham's .question as to the meaning of the warship's summary departure was informed that tho Austrian Consul had directed the Huszar to sail for home with the prisoner Koszta. The captain, of the Bt, Louis vigorously protested, telling the Hussar's commander, what he already knew, that the matter of Koszta's standing had been referred to the American Consul at Constantinople. The Austrian, glancing at the fleet supporting him, replied that he would dj as he pleased. "Clear the guns for action" was Captain Ingraham's rejoinder to the Austrian, The sight of the gurts of tho gallant Amer ican rtoop turned broadside on the runaway Huszar, and the knowledge he, had gajnel of Captain Ingraham's rtrmlnd though our tua JuirMtM-, tfarMigfc paraaat.' pwUt "WHAT? ISN'T THEE SATISFIED H JfefiiqL iwl JOHNSTON with thnt Indomitable American officer, per Buaded the commander of the Huszar to tako pause In his contemplated flight, oven with half a dozen other Austrian warships close at hand. Temporizing was attempted, but Captain Ingraham was resolute. The Huozar, with its captive, turned back, Its commander having a wholesome regard for American prowess as well as American diplomacy in thoso days, and manifestly having no hanker ing after an international complication such ns Ambassador Dumba succeeded In inviting by his meddlesome Interference with Amer ican industries. America Enthusiastic Captain Ingraham's action was hnlled with acclaim by tho American people, but so In censed the Austrian Government that, acting under instructions from Vienna, Baron Hulso mann, who back In tho 60s held relatively tho samo position as that from which Dr. Con stantly Dumba has virtually been thrown out head and heels, wrote to the Secretary of Stato asking the United States Government "to disavow the conduct of its agents." Did the United States Government heed this arrogant demand of Vienna? It did not. The Secretary of State In 1S53 was William L. Marcy, who in his stormy political career had never been accused even by his most ardent enemies of being a "pussy-foot," or what Mr. Roosevelt today would designate as a "molly coddle," and. he defended In a ringing letter, known as the "Hulsemann letter," the posi tion of the United States throughout. Marcy's letter was received with unbounded enthusiasm throughout the United Statci, nnd the Btand taken by the Secretary of State was Indorsed by competent authorities on In ternational law. It is needless to add that Koszta, who after Captain Ingraham's gal Iant coup had been turned over to the custody of the Consul General of France, pending final adjustment of this celebrated case, was ultimately released and returned to tho United States, a notable examplo of the powor of diplomacy backed by what In this twen tieth century Is forcefully, If not elegantly, 1 designated ns "American pep." THE THINGS THAT COUNT What, when our time comes, does it matter whether we have fared daintily or not, -whether we havo worn soft raiment or not, whether we have a great fortune or nothing at all. whether we shall havo reaped honors or been despised, have been counted learned or Ig norant, as compared with how we may havo uaed that talent which has been Intruded to us for the Master's service? What shall it AMUSEMENTS BROAD ?on, Next Monday Seat Sale Opens Today KLAW & EnLANOEn Praaent Henry Miller AND It Ruth Chatterton In Jean Webater. Faaclnatln- Coraodr Daddy Long Legs Wednaaday Mata., Boo to tl.r.0. m -tn B0 PALACE iSS; and. ITALIAN and dERMAN 'u0 10c WAR PICTURES in ACTUAL NAVAL IiATTLB LYRIC TONWIIT AT 8:15 " ANDP.EA8 PIPPEL Tl'-?!f "T. , 7w c&SS U ter?omino" Th 0v Big iSutical Bkt hr. A Oortaoua and , Mainlne.nt ProdwtSn Bayond Comparlaon """""'"n KNICKERBOCKER .,.- THE WHITE Tiffl,. T i .rkf l ou ULAVE PLAT ljlttle LOSE SlH-p MATS. Tuaadar, nsJ2S&8 Ifoa... Philadelphia Orchestra TODAY gW&ff isa Stanley fttfffrgW D V PNT SiSS YET?" matter, when eyeballs iglaze and ears grow dull, If out of tho darkness may stretch a hand, and into the sllonco may come a voles; "Well done, thou good and faithful servant; thou hast been faithful over a few things; I i" mane meo ruier over many inings; enter m thou Into the Joy of thy Lord." Henry (leorge, fl in bu?iu.i x'roDlfims. ST. HELENA IS WILLING We can assure tho Imperial Government of the willingness to become doubly historic u an Imperial prison by keeping behind her outer cordon of precipitous cliffs In safe seclusion a mnn whose head Is much too small for Na. poleon's hats. St. Helena Guardian. "HOLD-OVERS" Tt'fl nstnnlnrilnp' tinw mnnv faMc -nrfen unT. .. boat survive until the opening of the huntlnj jfl Dwwwii, uyaiun xiimacripi. AMUSEMENTS METROPOLITAN' OPERA HOUSE Direction Measra. Shubert : Allurlne New Policy OPENS NEXT SATURDAY NIGHT AT 8rl5 EXCLUSIVE PHOTOPLAYS OPENING FEATUHE "SALVATION NELL" . Sensational nnd Thrllllne LIGHT OPERA COMPANY OP BO IN "THE MIKADO" The Gilbert and Sullivan Masterpiece AN EXTRAORDINARY ENTERTAINMENT AT MOST REMARKABLE PRICES! Renowned Hippdrome Quartette in Operatic Selections Symphony Orchestra Mammoth Pipe Organ Iridescent Fountains in a Real Lake of Real Watpr AMAZING! DAZZLING! PATRIOTIC SPECTACLE ENTITLED "THE SPIRKT OF 76" PRICES A7INEG DA'LY: Dalcony. 15ct "vuu Orchcatra, 2."c. TWO PEnPORM. ANCES NIGHTLY; Family Clrel,. lSo"orch..ui and Ualcony. 2Sc; Itcaenad and Bor 8ata. BOc. B. P. KEITH'S THEATRE CHESTNUT & TWELFTH STUEETS SCORING A MUSICAL TRIUMPH! DAVID BISPHAM EUtUBNT AUEttWAlt OPF.RATW BARITOHB STUPENDOUS SUPPORTING SHOW! ''SHIPS THAT PASS IN THE NiailT" "tTfr H IjXs. UA" "AWKS." FORREST Now TWICE DAILY A'V'' Mats. 2:18 j Evgs.8:15 D. W. GRIFFITH'S THE BIRTH OF A NATION 18,000 People 3000 Horse j (iLO"R"rc Thveatre K! VJ XJyJUXX VAUD-KVILLE-.... Contlnuoua 11 A. M. to 11 P. at. comedy The winsome Widow ISia8S.c "The Devil's Mate" NarEPRic.rr..v.':f:.f.7..r.. loc, . ; THE WALNUT Ms EDITH TALIAFERRO . anil EAIILK IinOWNK In ItEBECCA OF 8UNNYIHIOOK FARM Tomorrow Attarnoon, nectptlon on btata t7 MltfH Tnllfrrst ""CEB ," .is,., .jo. M,, "The Six-Sided Success" DR. NEFF, Praaldcnt of Naff Colleaa. wUI lectwaa Vk iljMi Aia? .oni'.'r' Tutaiav and Friday. Opt.8 Siif..J.n5 "o.8 K' , I'uWIo Invited. OpenlM-S Saturday and Evantnc Courata. J iNisyy UULLEGE. 1730 Chestnut St, GARRICK 3? and N"t Waek. Eva. iir T "iwi waantaday and gaturaaf n .POTASH & PERLMUTTER ......... ,.v, .Tuueuay atlna, ' Beat Beat! MTYfiKT'C! CAPT. BACHO demooetraU Vt? a TvtVv' V10 Hul'MAHJNE. nnd ot It K, M 1 II uoam-aeaiin Implementa or wi " --- -. v IUUUI4I, O U Allien eftV A C A D " I JRHK?T EUT ow th Bt, It ancb Bwmi and Carlyla Meffhenyv!&V?fi' Ait. WAHftEN 4 CONLEV, CIALLON-rl DALB I . UOTLE AIITOI8 U'noa AL llAlilAN. PSSfiFdft White " S&r l .Is city; wtw r .1 Tmadro T5alSc"JMf Aloha Twin H