s 8 EVENING LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 191S: iEmrtttng rfi& Uier KJ1LIC LEDGER COMPANY CTRWH It. K CURTIS. Piihit riH Ludlngton, VlcarretldentiJehnC Martin, anr and Treasurers Phlllo S Collins. John n. Willi llllamt, Directors, editorial no Ann : Cruoa II K. Ccaria, Chairman. T. K. WHALEY . Executlra Editor JOHN C. MARTIN Oenera.1 Buslneas Manner Published dally at PciUO Ltoata Building, Independence Square, rhlladelphla. Linos CrNTtit, Bread and Chestnut Streets Atlantic Cut...... Iree-iiioi Building N'lw ToiK 170-A. Metropolitan Tower Duaoir ....... S20 Ford Dulldlng St Loin. ............ .100 Olobe Democrat Rulldtng Cmcioo ...... .1202 Tribune Rulldlng Lokwn 8 Waterloo riace. Pall Mall, S. W. NEWS BUREAUS! , WttniNoro Bono,..,..... Tha rest Rulldlng New ToaK Bcaiiv .The Ttmr.l Rulldlng nu Ilnmio no Frledrlchstraste 1-ONroM Bnuu 3 Tall Mall Kast, 8. W. Piaia Bctaio ,32 But Louis la Grand SUBSCRIPTION TERMS Br carrlar. Dttr Omit, six eenta By mull, postpaid eutalda of Philadelphia, except where foreign poetaga It required, Diilt ONLT, one month, twenty-live cents; jjni-T ujli, on year, tnree aoiiars All man suo- crlptlone parable In adranr. NoTica Subscribers wishing addrese chanced ntiit lva old aa wall aa new addreaa. BK.L. InM WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAW I06 D- jL&dm alt rmmun(mtont to RvenHo Ldeer, fndependeiiee Square, PMIactflpnta. SMTBsra at th rHU.iDit.rnu rosTornci it iioomb. cubs uiiL ultra THE AVERAGE NET PAID DAILY CIRCULA- HON OF THE EVENING LEDGER rOR AUGUST WAS 5,1. Philadelphia, Tuesday. October -i, ltis. Today is the day for which all your previous efforts have been qualifying you to do your task better than It S was ever done before. REVIVAL OF GRAIN SHIPMENTS THE increase In tho Brain export business of this port In the past nlno months is satisfactory only to those who do not know what has been happening at other American porta. A little more than twice as much wheat, oats and corn have been shipped from Philadelphia In the period mentioned this year as In tho some period last year, but tho exports of wheat and flour from the whole United States Increased from 142,400,000 in the fiscal year of 1914 to $482,400,000 in tho fiscal year of 1915. Philadelphia has shipped abroad 17,900,000 bushels of wheat in the past nlno months, whereas In tho corresponding period last year the exports wero 12,000,000 bushels. With all that has been done to attract business hero, it Is evident that we have not succeeded so well as wo should. There remains much to be done before the port will rise to the rank to which Its location and facilities entitle it. It will be a mistake to assume that oven the grain business which once came here Is to come again without any one going out to get It. The exports this year may be larger than in any pre vious twelve months, but other ports are competing for the trade. It Is necessary to make conditions so favorable here that those who use the port once will use it again. It is Important, also, that the Philadelphia busi ness men set an example to business men In other parts of the country by doing their waterrborne business through the Delaware Klver Instead of at somo other port. A DINNER TO THE GOOD rf-AYE" LANE protests against the hy U pocrlsy of members of the city Admin istration when they criticise him for asking campaign contributions from officeholders. He says that the present Administration has enforced more contributions for dinners to exploit the heads of departments than were received by the Republican City Committee. If this is true, the men got the dinners they paid for, didn't they? And they kept their jobs, too. Under tho old regime, the one that "Dave" ane and his friends are trying to restore, the men made their contributions, but they did not get anything to eat in return there for. Under the reform system the men seem a dinner to the good. That Is some gain. HOPE FOR RUSSIA THE Czar, it Is announced, will presently recall the Duma. Early In November it will reconvene, at His Generous Majesty's invitation, to take up Us noble work. On that occasion its chief Interest will be passing a budget of war expenses. When that engrossing work Is accomplished tho Duma will probably turn its attention to Russian freedom, and will bo promptly pro rogued. But Isn't it magnificent of the Czar to call It together at all? WEALTH OF THE BELLIGERENTS STUDENTS of international politics never doubted that the Allies would bo success ful in floating a loan of practically any size in this country. At the same time, they were equaljy certain that the Teutonic nations would have great difficulty in receiving credit to the extent of a billion or half a billion at the hands at American bankers. The reason is apparent from a glance at the figures showing the wealth of tho nations involved. Tho Bureau of Statistics, Department of Commerce and Labor, estimates the wealth of the belligerents as follows: Great, Britain and Ireland ($0,000,000,000 France 65,000,000,000 Russia , 40.000,000,000 Italy 20,000,000.000 Total wealth of Allies ,316.000,000,000 Germany JCO,KO,0O0.000 Austria-Hungary 21,000.000,000 Total wealth of Teutons $83,500,000,000 Both the Allies and Teutons have a com bined debt of approximately 8 per cent, of their respective total wealths. But Jl, 000,000.000 Is only l-205th of the Allies' wealth, and 1-SBth of tho Teutons. A BIT OF HUGO AN INCIDENT of lofty romance has been .reported from the high seas. In itself a4 in the associations It brings to mind it in -wf tfiy of note at a time when Romance. Ut capitalised, is said to be moribund. Ob board the Almlrante, 100 miles south of Ittnajiton. Jamaica, was repeated, in essence, tfet tkvrMHng story of the wild cannon which l, tfiU by Victor Hugo In his 'Ninety. Hire That story, perhaps the first bit of Hugo which the English-speaking child Is Mli4n to ryad, tells of the mad fury of a , cSjAusan waleasfaed in a storm at sea, In this eta It whs a safe that came loose and, cstMUiuv through the purser's stateroom, ! m 4 to ioutroy the ship on -whiah K SRuttenuius (Ubnuct) started. Mrtnwhtl. a KftU of le miles drove th whip ut wf Its. r course, and breakers were driven so high that they actually cleared the ship instead of swamping It, Every day, in some obscure fashion, romanco plays with tho lives of men, and every- day men take the splendid hazard of finding romance around the corner. MORE DEMOCRATIC FOLLY TT IS not n all likely that Congress will appropriate half a billion dollars this win ter to bo spent In Increasing tho efficiency of tho army and navy, in splto of reports from Washington that the Congressional leaders havo told tho President that tho appropria tion can be made under certain conditions. Tho nation Is confronted with no crisis of sufflolcnt gravity to Justify the expenditure of so much money beyond tho usual amounts required for maintaining tho mili tary and naval establishments. But Con gressmen aro willing to spend It, however, If public shipbuilding plants aro to bo estab lished and if the Government will go Into tho business of making guns and explosives on a much more extensive scale. The pa triots nro not willing to patronize the exist ing prlvato companies because, forsooth, tho owners of tho companies would mnko a profit from Government contracts! In other countries, where wiser councils prevail, Governments deliberately encourage the establishment of prlvato shipyards by awarding contracts for warships to prlvato corporations. They believe that It is better to have several shipyards equipped for the enlargement of tho navy than to conccn ttato all business in Governmont-owncd yards Their theory works out well in prac tice through the development of the ship building Industry. Whatever the Administration may decide to do about the manufacture of explosives It will make a grievous mistake If It turns its back upon tho private shipbuilding plants In this critical time when an attempt Is being made to revive the American merchant ma rine, even If It Is Intending to drlvo privately-owned American ships from the seas through sondtng out Government-owned merchant vessels In competition with them. In such an event there would bo no private shipyards loft anyhow. "SENSELESS SPECULATION" SOBER words on a sober subject were written by Samuel Untermyor when he warned the general public against speculation in war stocks. Tho Stock Exchange, as It is now consti tuted, and under the hectic Influence of the war. Is no place for any but tho expert and the experienced. A sudden change in the fortunes of war, or the abrupt cessation of hostilities, would cause an almost cata clysmic change In values. Trained minds are unable to predict tomorrow on the Stock Exchange. What chance is there for tho amateur? There are plenty of good American indus tries, not war-industries, which need devel opment. They are the proper field for In vestment; they are the safer field. INCREASING THE WRONG WAY EVENTS do not always turn out as wo ex pect. There Is that boom In South American trade that was to follow the out break of the war In Europe. But the export figures do not disclose any boom, In 1914 the United States sold to Argentina goods worth $45,000,000, but In 1915 the exports to that country slumped to $32,000,000. There has been a decrease of more than $5,000,000 In the exports to Brazil Instead of the anticipated increase. Business depression in South America has been partly responsible for the decline In trade with this country; but the' depression Itself has come about through lack of capital for carrying on tho business. American in vestors havo not been willing to supply tho capital and the Europeans who have been wont to flnanco South America have had other uses for their money. We cannot Increase our trade with Latin American Republics by simply saying that we should like to Increase It. A SILLY QUIBBLE THE election laws make explicit provision for the pro-emptlon of a party name by tho signing of the proper papers by a speci fied number of electors and the filing of the papers in the proper place. Tho attempt, therefore, to make It appear that the men who havo taken the name of the Franklin party for tho purpose of nomi nating candidates by petition have no right to participate in the organization of the party because they may havo voted at the primaries of another party for the candi dates whom they wish to support, is a quib ble unworthy of full-grown men. The earth continues to slide at tho Culebra cut, Just as the engineers expected. "Lollypops Some have others. Kill Chickens." News Item, stronger constitutions than They may be able to Imitate the name of the Franklin party, but would do better to imitate its virtues. The Swiss cavalry has been sent to guard tho German frontier. The Swiss navy has not yet been mobilized. "Champagne Charge Led by Americans" runs the report of recent fighting, Usually the charge is led against them. Thft Germans insist that tho French vic tories have not been brilliant, but as they do not deny the victories the French will not be disposed to quarrel about the qualify ing adjectives, Eugene Foss, the Massachusetts ex-Governor and. chameleon Of politics, has come out for a protective tariff. After all his ex periences as Progresslvo-Democratlco.Repub-Ucano-Heaven-knowS-what-next in politics, it Is reassuring to find Mr. Foss for once In good' company. The assessors who added three billion dol lars to th value of the personal estates of citizens wanted to make the foreign finan cial coinmlsaton think that New York is a rich city Now the lfllgBnt grocers who were assetstea at aK a minion doMars when tavy do not w " than KM are swsao . WIZARD CARTY OF THE WIRELESS Great Engineer Never Stopped Work Long Enough to Consider How Much Science and Progress Owed Him By CHARLES F. KINGSLEY THE growth of the fnmo of John Joseph Carty has been the slower by reason oi the custom of many great corporations, Includ ing tho concern of which ho Is chief en gineer, of nnnounclng to tho public great re sults as having been accomplished "under the superintendence of So-and-So" or "by Such-and - Such a department." Mr. Carty has read many pnpers beforo engi neering societies and has lectured nt tho Sorbonnc, describing experiments which had been carried on in the engineering department of tho American Telcphono and Telegraph Com- J. J. cautv. pany, but giving no intimation of tho fact that they had been his Immediately personal work. And now that the dcelopment of wireless telephony has reached a new hlghwatcr mark, Carty Is the last man who would minimize tho achievements of Bell, Marconi. Pupln and the many other scientists and engineers who contributed this or that to the great success that has crowned tho efforts of them all. Carty was born In Cambridge, Mass., 54 years ago. As a boy ho showed n great liking for mechanical experimentation. After graduation from tho Cambridge Latin School ho would have entered Harvard but for serious trouble with his eyes. Ho found himself attracted to the telephone business, which was then in the stage of difficult ex perimentation, carried on without textbooks by a small band of constructive pioneers. Ho was first employed In the old Tele phone Dispatch Company, of Boston, In 1879 as a night operator, and then and there he began a long series of contributions to tho technical knowledge of telephony. Last June the Stevens Institute of Tech nology conferred on him the degree of doctor of engineering, and on that occasion Presi dent Humphreys, of the Institute, said of Mr. Carty: "He has probably done more than any other one man to make tho telephone, as it is today, the ready and efficient ser vant of mankind." Carty has received most of the professional distinctions which can come to a practicing engineer. Including tho Edward Longstreet medal of merit of tho Franklin Institute of Philadelphia, Twlco he has received tho formal thanks of the Japanese Government for services In con nection with the establishment and develop ment of tho telephone system of the Mikado's country, and by tho Emperor he has been decorated with the Order'of tho Rising Sun and tho Imperial Order of tho Sacred Treas ure of tho MelJI. Going to College at 28 In 1889 the young Boston engineer was Invited to reorganize the entire technical equipment of'the system of what Is now the Now York Telephone Company. While en gaged In this tremendous task, in order to make up deficiencies In his engineering training, he carried several courses In Co lumbia University. Evenings he might bo found in his little npartment doing calculus or quaternions. This little story out of a successful career well Illustrates the thor oughness with which he has always tackled the Job of making good. A few Incidents will serve to reveal somo of his other leading characteristics. He discovered that ho would have to do many unpleasant things when ho was selected in 1907 as englneer-in-chief of the Bell system. "Last night," ono recalls Mr. Carty saying with a wry face as he smoked of an August evening on the piazza of his North Shore cottage, "I visited with ono of my oldest and dearest friends, an engineer connected with the Boston office; this morning I wrote him a letter firing him." It was only for the good of tho service that was all. Ho had to do It. And his method of gathering his staff 1b Interesting. He adopted It years ago. At first at Columbia, and later at New Haven "Shef and Boston "Tech," ho began to He In wait for the most promising men of each graduating class. His method of recruiting was characteristically original. Instead of having the boys sent to him, he would go to them. If such and such a senior had been recommended as a likely candidate, the engineer would quite unexpectedly knock at his door, spend a few minutes in conversa tion and quiet observation, and then invite the lad to take a little walk. In an hour's stroll and talk It was generally possible to get the candidate to drop all constraint pni to reveal his natural aptitudes and limita tions. One JDay for Worry There Is another story quite as illuminat ing. "I come of a worrying race," he once said. "Wo worried a great deal at home, and I was likely to grow up into a worse worrier than my father, a dear, good man and very competent in his calling, an expert at handling church bells, you may believe me. Then once as a youth I suddenly saw the light of reason and one day I proposed to my father that wo each select a single day a week on which to do our worrying. In that way we would keep six days clear for work and have only ono brief time In the week for being of no use to anybody. My farther saw the point, in a measure; and I deliberately set Sunday asldo for my Worry ing day, but when Sunday came I had gen erally forgotten all about my troubles," This little Irish-American man of roc t HI near features, clear eyes and high brow assumes no title to greatness. A few years ago he said to a friend, "I often wonder how safe I really am. Things are' thrown at mo for decision from every quarter of the universe, I try to look at each question from every possible angle, above, around and through but I havo to give my Judgment quickly because 1 am dealing with that kind of men, A wrong Judgment may cost mil lions of dollars. Do you wonder that I value my sleep?" A ROOTER FOR THE "PHILLIES" Just as the disinterested avortsmen of Amer ica "pulled for" the Bostea Nationals lat year they will "pull for" the Philadelphia Nationals cms year, ror yuasricaM rove a courageous con Under who to accept a preconceived verdict of y and dashes down the aiiatocrats r flMlJ. f ' :ssBl lasssHslsssBR slBlBlBlBlBlBfllaT awa a monopcly of th Mala DsaUr, BALKANS OFFER NEW WAR PROBLEM Situation Produced by Bulgaria's Expected Entrance Into Great European Conflict Will Almost Exactly Reproduce Crisis of 1913, Expert Points Out By FRANK H. SIMONDS THE entrance of Bulgaria Into tho great War as tho ally of tho Central Powers will almost exactly reproduce the military problems at the outset of the Second Balkan War. Then as now tho chief objective o( Bulgarian strategy was the Oriental railroad, which connects Belgrade with Salonika and binds Scrvia to her Greek ally. In 1913 General Savoff, chief of tho Bulgarian General Staff, planned to dispose of Servla by one tremendous surprise blow with the main mass of Bulgarian troops, using a small containing force against tho Greeks. His whole strategy lay In isolating the two allies by cutting the Oriental rail road, the only line of communication betwoen the two states. ' Today the. first aim of the Bulgarians must be the same. Servla, isolated from her Greek and Entente allies, assailed In front by the Germans cither along tho Danube or on tho Bosnian frontier, dependent upon Salonika for all supplies and reinforcements, should provo an easy victim if the railroads wero once cut. Tho aim of the German, as contrasted with Bulgarian, strategy must bo to sweep south along the valley of the Vardar, moving by the Salonika railroad until Nish is reached, and then turning east on the Nish-Sofla-Constantlnople railroad. Bulgaro-Gcrman Strategy Thus tho twofold purpose of Bulgaro German strategy must be: An attack upon tho Salonlka-Belgrado railroad by tho Bul garians, designed to Isolate Servla; a great "drive" by the Germans south from tho Danube to tho Bulgarian frontier, opening the Oriental railroad for tho transport of German troops and munitions to the Turkish capital. In 1913 Savoff approached his simpler problems In the following fashion: Bulgar troops wero in Macedonia and occupied all the district between Kustendll and Istlb. Th0 main Servian forco was southeast of Uskub, facing Istlb, and behind the Bregalnltza River, Just east of Veles. Against this army, without warning and without declaration of war, Savoff hurled tho victors of Lule Burgas. At the same hour the second Bulgarian army about Kllkls, 40 miles north of Salonika, detached a force which cut the Salonlka Belgrado railroad at Guevghell and for the moment Isolated Servla. At the same time the balance of this army undertook to hold In chock the main Greek army advancing from Salonika. Unfortunately for the Bulgarians their numbers were Inadequate for tho work undertaken. After a brief period of confusion the Serbs rallied, took the offensive, and In a five days' struggle cut the main Bulgar army In half, driving ono portion through Istlb and over the mountains Into old Bul garia, around Kustendll, and the other south upon Strumnltza. At the same time a Greco-Serb force expelled the Bulgar detachment from tho Vardar Valley, at Guovghell, driving it alsi in on Strumnltza. Finally, the main Greek army easily and quickly overpowered the second Bulgar army about Kllkls and drove it northeast of Strumnltza. A small Bulgp.r force operating around Seres and Kavala waj also obliged to flee north to escape capture, and the three beaten armies made their escape through the Struma passes. Czar Ferdinand's Task Today Bulgaria will have to start behind frontier drawn by her old enemies, she will have to begin any attack upon the Oriental railroad between Uskub and Veles behind the mountains which separate her from Macedonia; that is, she will have to start at Kustendll instead of at Istlb. At only one point will her armies be, at the outset, within striking distance of the Oriental railroad, and' that is at Btrumnltza, where Bulgar territory is within a dozen miles of the railway. It Is at, this point that Macedonian comitadjls made a foray some months ago, Meantime the Allied troops landed at Salonika can be transported by rail to th Ouevghel! danger point in a brief time. Wil garia, pn her side, will have to operate Mr from railroads, depending upon tuouatsla roads and paths. This was one of the uau I of hr dfU in 11 mU may prova disastrous SMALL POTATOES i -ll i-n again. From Nlsh to Guevghell, Servla and her allies will fight with their backs to a railroad, thus being assured of supplies and munitions. As for XJreece, If sh,e undertakes to hold her own northern frontier, from tho Vardar to the Mesta, she will havo behind her tho Constantinople-Salonika railroad. It is conceivable that Bulgaria will con centrate her troops west of Sofia and drlvo northwest through Pirot to Nish, while the Germans drive southeast from Belgrade and Semendrla toward Nlsh. This would open tho Belgrade-Constantinople railroad, but It would leave tho Servian armies on the flank, and until the Serb force, with Its Allied re lnforcements, Is disposed of, such an avenue would be exposed to attacks and wholly In secure. If Germany actually means to hack a way through Servla to Bulgaria, It would seem necessary first to cut the Oriental railway north of the Greek frontier, thus isolating Servla, then destroy the Serb army and repeat the Belgian exploit in the little Slav king dom. Servla once eliminated, Germany could leave to Bulgaria the task of holding Mace donia and thus keeping tho Allies far away from the.Belgrade-Nlsh-Constantlnople rail way. Tho key to the whole Balkan conflict will be found- In the railroad map. The line from Belgrado to Constantinople through Nish Is the pathway of German advance to Con stantinople, as it was that of tho Crusaders In another century. Tho railway from Nlsh to Salonika is the lifo line of Servla and tho only route by which she can bo reinforced and munitioned. THE GOD OF BATTLES Mr. Robert Service, the Canadian writer, who is at present engaged in Red Cross work in France, has sent to the Paris correspondent of an English paper what he describes as "the best war poem I have seen." The verses, which. Sir. Service says, were found by a French priest on the body of an English sol dier killed at the Marne, run as follows: They say that war Is Hell, the great accurst, Tho sin Impossible to be forgiven; Tet I can look upon It at Its worst, And still see blue In Heaven. For when I note how nobly natures form Under the war's red rain, I deem It true That He who made the earthquake and the storm Perchance made battles, too. As a matter of fact, the lines were written In a time of -profound peace, like most good war poems, and by a man who was an ecclesiastic, not a soldier Their author was Doctor Alexan der, the late Lord Primate of Ireland, and they were first published In the Times some seven or eight years ago. Manchester Guardian. THE LOVE OF TREES That one should feel affection for great trees Is natural. In the Minnesota forests I met a lumberman who told me he wept bitter tears when he got orders to cut down a fine hemlock Every stroke of the axe seemed to him to bo felt by the sturdy monarch whose life he was taking. When I havo revisited the "woods" In which as a boy, I gathered nuts, I have fancied the trees I used to climb recognized me. They AMUSEMENTS FORREST-NOW gigj TWICK DAILY . o.lO D. W. GRIFFITH'S THE BIRTH OP A NATION 18,000 People 3000 Horses Knickerbocker ''"MXnffi? 4MZ BOUGHT AND PAID. FOR 0TH HATS. Tua PON ase. GARRICK-Last ,r&w' POTASH & PERLMUTTER U Foautar Prlca Mat. Tomorrow, but ..... THE Stanley MARKET BT, ABOVE lOTM vjsmwrhssssaBSk "ZAZA" CaC PALACEJ " MARKET STRKItT JToaorrowjdjPfcuirOAi or MBCKT" hij. . -r, -Vt. -'.., "i. V1--. 1. S. "u'H -v. looked the same. They hadn't aged. The shell- bark hickory trees seemed a trifle more danger' ous to climb than of voro and the walnuts has gained noticeably In girth, so that my length?! ened arm had barely kept pace with the ex panding bark. I could still encircle their trunks and could havo climbed them If necessary; but tho Towards of a winter's store of nuts no longrJ; appeal to me. The walnuts and hickory nuts one uuys ao noi taste uko moso gainerea wnn one's own hands. Julius Chambers, In the Brooklyn Eagle. NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW Nations, like individuals, "rise on their dead selves to higher thlngs'-Washington Star. The National Institution for Moral Instruc tion has offered a prize of $5000 for a moral code. We submit the Ten Commandments, and prefer the money in $100 bills. Boston Evening -M Transcrirt. The achievements of peace are perverted to the havoc and butchery of war. Let us be glad that America has still her chance to bend the waves, the atr and the earth to the service o' peaceful commerce. Boston Transcript. A century ago Lord Nelson published his dis covery that "a line of battleships is the beat negotiator in Europe." An adequate army and navy, and adequate coast defenses, will be the best negotiators for our own safety when some evil day shall declare necessity to be our su-i preme law. I'eorla. Transcript. AMUSEMENTS LYRIC LAST TIMES Nl(thta8:lS Mata. Wad. A Bat. "THE LILAC DOMINO" COMIC OPERA IX 3 ACTS. Tlu Only Bio Uutteal Snow n Town. A Gorgeous and Magnificent Production Eeond Comparison. SaTeS, That Is the Night! J Scats Thursday. Open Your Eve Wide and Btholi j "Hands Up" wmt Maurice i and FLORENCE! ' Walton ' rend Franklin DUUT0N Green 100aIRLa Nf.w Torlc's Summer Sensation Naughty! Well Prices SOo to - Wed. Mat. SI. Sat. Mat. $1 S3. B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE ' CHESTNUT AND TWELFTH STREETS The Brilliant Viennese Primadonna FRITZI SCHEPF New Repertoire of Sparkling Solections ' All-Star Supporting Show BERTHA CREIGHTON & CO. WILLIAMS & WOLFU8: METROPOLITAN DANC INO OIRLS; AL LYDELL A CO.; HEATH l'ERHY. OTHERS. "RT? n A n Thl Next Week. Eves, 8:15. DJXVJAU Mata. Wed A 8at , 2!. Extra Mat. COLUMBUS DAY, TUES., OCT. 12. GREATEST COMEDY HIT IN YEARS KLAW ft ERLANQER Present HENRY MILLER AND RUTH CHATTERTON In JEAN WEDOTEn'S Faaclnatlng Comedy DADDY LONG LEGS TOPULAR PRICE MATS, TOMORRROW AND TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12 60o to 11.60. T.ncf R Tinra ot ,ne Chicago Tribune's Stu XJclbb U XJtXya pendoua Moving Picturea or THE GERMAN SIDE OF THE WAR TEN THOUSAND PEOPLE HAVE SEEN THEM EVERY DAY. HAVE YOUt 11 A. M. to 11 P. M. ALL SEATS 25i; ADELPHI THEATRE NEXT WEEK SEATS THURSDAY Tba Man From Home WTLLIAM HODGE Cornea Dack Again In Hie Latest Buceaas "THE ROAD TO HAPPINE88" 1915 ACADEMY OF MUSIC 1918 BOSTON MONDAY EVHNINQS NOV, SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Da. Km, Muck, Conductor. J, Nov. so, Jan, 8, P. 11. March IS. Soloists; MELBA. FARRAB, KREISLEU, SCHELLINO Reason Sale, Monday, Oct II, tica-i-ivo, jiiy cnesmui oi, Prices, ID, tT.50, IB, 13 BO. H Boxes. tTB. 0O, OT iO"R"R Theatre "fflkS . VjJUVJDJii 'VJLUDBVILLK Contlnuoua SENSATJONlMoVAVfTPLTY " "f "EVERYBODY" Fo".Lr5c,S.,,A,t.D"t,rnt Characters. "BIX BONO BIRDS" Ana Others. THE WALNUT w twSnut POSITIVELY LAST WEEK "nU,:W Edith Taliaferro in POLLY OF THE CIRCUS PRICKS , tuMIMUMM Mm.Mt lPot 3C ! NIXON'S EUGENE BLAIR & CO. GRAND iV Wr.SM'D.'y0" pu" Todaya.lS-TfcB. "' OTalWlM a&S. , ARCADIA tom wise M .TiA "BLUE GRASS- .. WW lotu ana mu Tmadero TS tSSiSg FANITi -r' r-wr"-k,v 9 i" PEOPLE'S-BriiiMig Up Father.