EVENING EEDGETRfi-PHIEADELPHIA", THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1915: 8 !& Heftgitr MJBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CTnf a it. k cimTiB. rtiitT. Oarlea It. Ludlncton. Vic President l John C. Marttn, secretary and Treasurer! rhlllp S. Collins, John D. Williams, Directors, EDITORIAL IJOATIDI Crars It. K. CctTU, Chairman. T. H. TrHALET Eiscutlre Editor JOHN C. MAIVriN General Cailnm Manatar Published, dally at Public) Lxmxi Building-, Independence Square, Phlladtlphla. Ltoail CBfTail. Droad and Chestnut Pi r Mil Atlaktio ClTl Frese-ttiion Bulldlnr Nan T0BK 170-A, Metropolitan Tower DlTJOlT. . ... "2S t"onl Ilulldlnr St. Louii. ............ ..400 Globe Democrat Ilulldlnr Cnicioo. . 1102 Tribune. Ilulldlnr Losdox ....8 Waterloo Place, Pall Mall, 8. W. NEWS BUREAUS! -WiIhikotoh Brotur .The Pott Ilulldlnr New York nciritr ........ The Times Building- Jlnttw Ilctlin BO FrledrlchstraMe Londov Ileum ....2 Pall Mall Halt, 8. W. FiUi EcaiAO 32 ltua Loula l Grand subscription terms By carrier, Dittr OtLi. alt centt. Br mall, postpaid utstdt of Philadelphia, except where forelrn postage is required. Dun Onlt, one month, twenty-flve cenlei Dut-T Onlt, one year, three dollars. All mall tub. crlptlona payable In advance. Noticb Subscribers wishing address chanted mint (lr old aa well as new address. bell, im walnut KEYSTONE. MAIN Io0 CT Aidrnt oil communication to Eivnlnff Lttotr, Independence Square, rMladelpMa. Wftnio at ma MitLitiELrnu roiTomoi ia eacoHD. CLIH Will. M1TTEB THE AVBnAOE NET TAID DA1LT CincULA- TION OP THE EVENING LEDOBR FOIl SEPTEMBER WAS 100,608. STATEMENT OF THE , OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT, CmCUIjATION, of the ETC. llanming lzb$tr October 1, 1916. Btatemcnt of the ownership, management, clrcu- latlon, eta, of tho EVENING LEDGER, aa ot October 1, 1916. Published dally except Sunday at Philadelphia, Pa., required by the net of August 24, 1912. Executive Editor V. H. Whaley, Philadelphia. Managing Editor II. St Eaton, Philadelphia. fBeneraJ Ituineat Manager John C. Martin, Philadelphia. ruMljher PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY, Phil- adelpMa. Owner PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANT. Stockholders holding 1 per cent, or more ot total amount of stock Cyrus II. K. Curtis, Philadelphia; John Grlbbel, Philadelphia. Known bondholders, mortgagees and other se curity holders holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages or other securities Fennsylvanln Company for Insur ances on Lives and Granting Annuities, Trus tees for Estate of Anthony J. Drexel, de ceased; Adolph S. Ochs, George W. Ochs. Average number of copies of each Issue of this publication sold or distributed, through the malls or otherwise, to paid subscribers during tho six months preceding the date of this statement Daily, 92,022. Average net paid circulation September, 1915 100,603. The circulation figures In this report are abso lutely net, and represent the actual number of papers sold by the PUBLIC LEDGER COM PANT for cash. All damaged, unsold, free and returned copies have been deducted from the totals given in this statement. JOHN C MARTIN, General Business Manager, October 6, 1915. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 6th day of October, 1915. Lincoln Cartledge, Seal Notary Public. (My commission expires 'January 25, 1919.) PHILADELPHIA. THURSDAY. OCTODED. 7. 1915. The. educated man knows the things he ought to know when he needs to know them. "PRIVILEGE AND RESPONSIBILITY" THE brief statement Issued by President Wilson, In declaring- himself for woman suffrage, is a document of surpassing- inter est. It Is the most definite word given by a President of the United States since Lincoln's famous dictum. It Is clear and forceful and final. The President speaks not as Chief Execu tive of the nation nor as head of his party. He has maintained, with sober reason, that suffrage should be neither a national nor a Tarty Issue. But the prestige of his position cannot bo separated from his acts. There Is no fanaticism In the President's reasoning. There Is even a lack of enthu siasm. Tho President speaks purely as a be Jlever In democracy when he says that his State will be greatly benefited by the chanse. He speaks as one who knows tho essential truths and tho tremendous, the glorious dif ficulties of democracy, when he speaks of suffrage as "that privilege and responslbil- Beeanso without responsibility privilege be comes license. Without privilege responsi bility becomes tyranny. Tho President has ut the wbolo argument for suftrago Into his pregnant phrase. 'a WHOLE DUTY OF MAN ' In order to hold your Job as long as pos ' title, do your duty at all times; keep your eyes and ears open and your mouth chut, and beep away from booze. Booze always sets a cop when he ain't looking. Sergeant Clayton Wilson. WnLE the friends of Police Sergeant Wilson were congratulating- him on the ompletion of forty years of scrvlco on the force, some of them recalled to his memory the advice which ho Is In tho habit of giving to new men. Part of It Is quoted at tho head of this article. It Is good ndvlce for bookkeepers, stenog raphers, salesmen, bank tellers, trolley car conductors and motorraen, carpenters, ma chinists, printers, reporters, doctors, most clergymen, many lawyers and the rest of mankind In general. If It docs not cmbraco the whole duty of man It Includes a largo part' of It. "ON NOTHING A YEAR" T)ECKY SHARP was the first society JL) woman on nothing a year. She made the phrase famous and the fact Infamous, But there are circumstances under which nothing a, year can be a blessing. The secretary of the Christian Association f Mw University of Pennsylvania announces JIM, wtr 800 Pennsylvania men are already Mill with, work to help them through , tJrrtfti0 'J, tbotr college years. In other colleges, per- 1mjm in every college, men are being so &ldd to gst their education. And a surprising tiumter f tliwKunen have literally nothing a year b Ida the Income from their work. Thi wilt always t a serious doubt In the nun4 rf men whether working one's way ttMvuast eeMeee really pays In th a4. Coiled jsfjldsnts Maya frequently be oied aa advlain students U borrow whll lfcy !' at cUjt so that thlr minds 4 shadr ttme may t free for thttfr Wile ws jmM riNur, 11i two t4Mtr wato v college Jlfo. A book education without a social education is hardly worth having. Tho college man who works his way through mlsscb much, to be sure, In social contact, In tho graces of Intercourse with other men. Ills collego Is chiefly a place for lectures and "exams," Tho larger edu cation he gets, In pursuit of his tuition fees and room ront, Is hardly of the polished and suavo kind which collego should bring. It differs not at all from what ho will meet later on. Collego as a preparation for living ought to bo broader than any one life. As a founda tion for character It ought to bo broader than any career. That Is why tho man who works his way through really loses because he Identifies collego with life too soon. 100,000 CIRCULATION! THE circulation of the Eveniko ledger definitely passed the 100,000 mark during September. Tho average for the month was 100.C03. Tho average net paid circulation of the paper for tho first six months of Its exist ence was 68,385. For the second six montlif, ending September SO, It was 92,022, an In crease of 33,637, or about 58 per cent. The circulation for December, 1914, was R3.6H. During tho nine months, ending Sep tember .10, thero has been, therefore, an ac tual Increase of 46,994, or more than 88 per cent. This represents an average Increase of more thon 6000 a month. Only during one month was there no gain, namely, July, when most afternoon papers lose heavily In circulation, owing to the large number of citizens away for the holi days. During August, however, tho normal rate of Increase returned. A significant feature of the paper's growth Is the consistency of It. Tho gains month by month have been approximately the same. There has been no sudden leap upward, but a gradual and sure enlargement of the Ledger family of readers. ' STEEL ADJUSTS ITS CROWN THE late Abram S. Hewitt, who was In the Iron business, used to say that steel Is either a king or a pauper. It has been king In tho United States for a long time, as the lean years havo been few, and It Is likely to be king for some years to come. In this brilliant prospect is to bo found the secret of the Incorporation of the Mld valo Steel and Ordnance Company with a paper capitalization of $100,000,000. The new company Is to take over the property of the Midvale Steel Company, and It will at once absorb two other companies. Whether It is to be a holding company or Is to buy the other companies outright Is not material. The fact of Importance Is that a new steel combination Is under way. It Is not likely that tho big business men behind this deal are counting on war con tracts alone to Justify tho consolidation of a group of steel mills and metal worktng com panies. There is great profit In the manu facture of munitions of war, but there will be a living profit In tho manufacture of steel that will bo needed to rebuild the railroads, bridges and other structures destroyed, per haps by shells made In America. Tho first orders for this kind of steel after peace Is declared are likely to be placed In this country, because our mills are In shape to do the work quickly; and because, even If the European mills were put In shape at once, they would not bo able to supply the demand, so much steel work has been turned Into Junk. It Is not at all surprising, there fore, that steel should be adjusting its crown for a long reign. GERMAN DIPLOMACY IN GREECE DIPLOMACY has won a preliminary vic tory for Germany In Bulgaria and In Greece, Ferdinand of Bulgaria Is a Ger man, and his family and financial Interests are tied up with Germany. He has been able thus far to stand off the Bulgarian patriots who have been doing their utmost, short of open revolt, to attach their country to the Allies; and tho German agents have been promising him Constantinople as a reward for his faithfulness. In Greece the German Queen, reinforced by the German agents, has been able to keep King Constantino In line. Venlzelos, who promised aid to the Allies, was forced out of tho Cablnot In March, but he came back again after an election In which the pro-Ally party won by a largo majority. And now King Constantino has again demanded and re ceived the resignation of the greatest states man In his country. Tho pro-Ally majority, however, continues to control the Parlia ment. It remains to be seen whether German Influences can prevent a domestic outbreak In Athens. Tho Allies must have known what was hap pening behind tho scenes, for they landed 75,000 troops at Salonlca while Venlzelos was still in power and still willing to permit a march through Greece, to tho relief of Serbia, after only a formal protest. Both Greece and Bulgaria were neutral yesterday afternoon, but events are moving with suoh rapidity that today ono Power or the other will doubt loss bo drawn Into tho war. Judge Bonplwell Is now a real "flro laddie." The President believes In State's rights, as well as women's rights. The boss system is so friendless that only the bosses do It reverence. James Whltcomb Riley never complained that people do not read poetry. T, St. John Gaffney has at last resigned, but ho still denies that his namo Is Dennis. Dr. Alexander II. Itlce, a distinguished ex plorer, has Just entered upon another Great Adventure. Will some kind sculptor please make a statue of Alexander weeping for more Sox to conquer? i King Constantino may discover that when Greek meets Dane then comes the tug of war. lie has not yet defeated Venlzelos. Only twenty-four hours to the beginning of the world's series, repgrts of which vill crowd other war news front the first page. Rudyard Kipling, whatever his virtues and whstaver his faults, vu as a father, merely a father. He suffers less ana no vm tl)n ..others who hs-ve lost sons la tfea wr. Ho shares in tK sympathy they racelve; but t a gTsater tt, bcsus the world knows from "Wse mik WWi" aad "Ths TrtM f ths yprs M Mf that Mr Kipling both a aoa teUr and a oo aea. "JIM" RILEY, THE BELOVED HOOSIER The Sixty-sixth Birthdny of a Man Who Never Quite Grew Up and Remains True to His Lifelong Faith in Little Children By ROBERT HILDRETH TODAY is "Riley Day" In Indiana. It Is "niley Day" all over tho country. In diana has no monopoly on the Hoosler poet. Indiana Is too proud of him to deny a "Itlley Day" to tho rest of tho country, oven If it could. But pride Is nothing compared with tho real reason of tho celebration. Governor nalston, In his proclamation, de scribed James Whlt comb niley ns "Indi ana's most beloved citizen." That Is much better than "most distinguished." The Kipling and and Whlttlcr of tho Mlddlo West Is 6G years old today. "Old!" How Klley dls- "J1M" niLnr likes the word. Ho dislikes It almost ns much ns ho docs wnr and politics, and these things he hates, so far ns he is capablo of hating, "I never want my friends to think I'm getting old," he says. Four years ngo he suffered a para lytic shock, and his right hand Is still help less, but his general health is good. So much for his physical age. Ho need not fear that his friends will think of him as really, truly old. for he has never grown up. Ho still has Iho heart of a boy who used to play "clown" with the "fellers" up In tho hayloft. Ho Is still on his "long, sweet way across the orchard." Riley's Success His career has often been cited as an ex ample of success attained after humble be ginnings. To an interviewer ho said: "I left school when I was 15," and went on In the drawling enunciation once so familiar to tho lecture-going public: "I know I had to provide for myself, but couldn't settle on anything. At last I hit on painting and took lessons that's tho way I now state It in tho graining of doors and tho varnishing of miscellaneous woodwork." His life has been full of years and honors. But success 7 He has said to a friend: "Tho world dif ferentiates happiness and success with cold sophistry. But they are Inseparable." He knows success In the terms of his deepest faith: Long life's a lovely thing to know. And lovely health and wealth, forsooth. And lovely name and fame but, oh, The loveliness of youth! Though Ulley may choose to speak .humor ously of his ventures as a painter, tho artist In him appeared ln his boyhood the artist and the actor and tho poet. Ho used to make charcoal and brlckdust daubs on tho neighborhood fences and barns as a very llttlo boy, receiving, however, no encourage ment at all. And years afterward this man with the wonderful need and capacity for friendship said to one of his friends: "Poetry, music, painting a song, a sunset or a sym phonyIs nothing but the expression of ono heart, ono soul. In this expression" there may bo reflected a great universal note; but it remains primarily the voice of some ego. And who shall Judge your soul or mine, ex cept when its expression finds an affinitive chord?" Tho actor In niley was likewise visible, If unrecognized, at an early age. Once he gave a performance to empty soap boxes In his back yard from beginning to end, even though his pen and Ink posters had failed to attract any spectators. Like many an other boy, he was ambitious to "go with tho circus." And by and by he went. Not with tho circus, but with a medicine show. His father had set him to studying Blackstona In tho hope of making him a lawyer; but Blackstono would not scan, and so ho de parted from Greenfield, a runaway, with a "Highly Entertaining and Instructive Mu sical nnd Specialty Aggregation." As tho ghost walked Infrequently he camo home. Perhaps thero was llttlo of the histrionic In beating a big bass drum, but there was plenty In the readings which ho later gave on the lyceum platform. Ho not only acted the part ho read, ho was the part. Tho home sick man, homesick for tho scenes of his childhood, saw back to the old swlmmln" holo and the road to old Aunt Mary's. Tho "show" was very human. Wasn't It a good time, Long time ago When we all were llttlo tads And first played "show"? You know Sir Henry frvlng declared that niley would have made tho greatest actor on tho American stago if he had so choson. A Dance of the Rhymes The rhymester was dominant over tho ar-' tlst and tho actor. Little Jim made up jin gles and scribbled them on the walls at home, and even then they were about the things great In chlldh'ood and In the heart of all. He scribbled rhymes on the margins of his Blackstone. When he became a "paper 'man" ho turned them In for copy. And his fame grew, slowly, illttlo by little. In ever widening circles, arid he nover know tho meaning of professional Jealousy. Ho over flowed with rhyme. "I walk, I run, I write and wrestle, but I cannot shako it off, I Ho down to sleep and all night long it haunts me. Whole cantos of Incoherent rhymes dance before me." At last, as he described these experiences, "I wake refreshed and freo from tho tolls of my persecutor. But some senseless piece of rhyme Is printed on my mind, and I go about repeating it as though I had committed it from the pages of somo book. I often write these Jingles afterward, though I believe I never could forget a word of them," "Rhymes," "Jingles," so ho has always called them, never "poems." What matter .what they are called to those who know "My Grandfather Squoers," "Old Aunt Mary's," "Llttlo Orphan-Annie," "Doo Sifers," "An Old Sweetheart of Mine," "The Ragged Man," and, oh, a host of others? But "Riley Day" means partly that poetry is appreciated In America. James Russell Lowell knew Riley for a poet as soon as he had read "Kneo Deep in June," Its author ; neither Kipling nor Whittier nor both, but IRllcy "Jlra" Riley, MY COMHAPI! I never build a soag fcy Rio er ay. Of breaking ocsaw or ot MewM whin. But In soma wondrous tmaapaatM . -"Utae Kent upon a road, py lv pomes la. Ana when I loat niM um f hill, My heart Is lifted e Mnrtsstaiw wltusas My ) w im there to " tf. ? rr she ess Uke away rad etf tMncs. A sy-fpyjifgYffjy&?:c- - i vtxV . . . 0r?S sssskHiB? y-9SHEArnlssDr ""at-w' jt-tk , ' jw.i j " vi -v.sssa. m-rWBczz-jzrTri-iri -""vrsliiW) W "S- " B&9Kmt ,,, VENIZELOS AND HIS KING Irreconcilable Differences Between Greek Ruler and Premier Which Led to Latter's Forced Resignation The Balkan Situation From the Hellenic Point of View By FRANK IT IS wholly simple to reason In the case of Greece, as in that of Bulgaria, that gratitude and self-interest alike should lead the nation and the King Into tho Allied camp. Yet In both Instances thero are very sound reasons for an opposite course. In tho case of Greece, moreover, the question does not He between making war on onp side or tho other, but between war and neutrality. Tho case for neutrality, which Is the course advopated by King Constantlne, Is this: Ho has tho pledge of his brother-in-law, the Kaiser, that neutrality will earn him German protection in case of German victory. Now, on one historic occasion, the Kaiser did make good his friendship for Constantino In a very signal fashion. After the treaty of Buchar est Russia and Austria were both ready to favor a revision which would return Kavala to Bulgaria. But the Kaiser sent a message to Constantino declaring that he recognized the settlement as definitive. Naturally tho King of Greece has since held the German Emperor a friend. Now, when he has to choose between entering a doubtful war and risking all the great gains of his two successful campaigns and neutral ity with a guarantee, he Inclines to tho lat ter course. It Is true that his sympathies are Teutonic, that his wife Is a sister of tho Kaiser, that he had his military training In the German army, but these are only con tributory Influences. Italy's Aspirations It Is true that Bulgaria Is. the historic enemy of Greece, that Ferdinand hopes to regain Salonlca and Kavala and bo crowned In Byzantium, but Bulgaria Is not the only enemy. It was not Bulgaria, but Italy who prevented Greek annexation of Northern Eplrus. It is Italy and not Bulgaria that holds Rhodes and the adjoining Islands which are Greek by population and history.. More than this, It Is Italy who aspires to seat herself In Asia Minor from Smyrna to Adalla where the coastal population Is Hellenic. As the ally of Russia, Franco and Great Britain, Italy can expect the support of these Powers for her plans in the Near East, Who knows what promises Italy obtained from tho Sea Powers before sho entered tho war? Certainly Athens does not know. Conceiv ably those promises included tho permanent possession of Albania', Including northern Eplrus, which is Greek by race, together with tho Aegean Islands and the adjacent littoral of Asia Minor, But If Germany wins, she and Austria both wjll havo every reason to favor Greece against Italy In Albania and In the Aegean, Conceivably Germany may compel Greece to give up the Kavala district to Bulgaria, but tho Allies asked and Venlzelos agreed to this sacrifice last spring. In opposing this the King hod tho support of the Hellenic nation. Turning now to the case for participation, advocated by Venlzelos, the arguments are equally potent. Greece, by her geographical situation, is and must remain at the mere of tho Sea Powers. She owes her liberty and her development to France and Great Brlt aln. With their backing, her position In tho Aegean Is assured, and it Is only with their permission that she can hope to cross the Aegean and regain those Greek colonies which provoked the Persian wars at the very dawn of history. However the land war turns out, it Is clear now that the sea power of tho enemies of Germany will not be shaken. If the Allies win, Turkey may be partitioned, but at least Greek inhabitants of Turkey and there are at least 3,000,000 of them will bo protected. But If Germany wins, then Asia Minor be comes n GermRn colony and the hope'of re stored Hellenism, which has lived through so many .centuries, Is postponed again. Venlzeles Dream If Greece enters the war her financial sit uation, which Is desperate, will be assured. She may hope to take from Bulgaria tho Aegean coast from the Mesta to the Maritsa, which Is also Hellenic by population, and a fraction of the ancient Byzantine Empire, that the Greeks sfllt hope to restore. With northern Kplrus, wetrtsrn. Thrace, the Aegean Islands bow held by Italy and the foreshore of Asia Minor, Greece would he com a nation of more than 8,000,000, toa powerful ever to far Bulgarian attack-, aad etablMisd as the cenaldsrahte Fowff in th aatara KMsHfrranean. All this Is pclble only with the hatp, aad ent the 0ea Town, . It iftwalble ely If t Allies suppmrt Oreaes alnat Italy-tot it is possible. This ! V-alsalos' VICTORY FOR HUMANITY Wi-rnt.;'-'- v - iisjiBHTnTsfljr" w - fin a i - """ tMrWI daaaaKfft T9.StSia&i. W AVE r I? -irfM . r H. SIMONDS dream. This Is tho dream of all tho Greek world; this Is tho Greater Greece, tho dream of restoring Hellenism at Constantinople and, with tho years, recreating the Byzantlno Em pire. As compared with tho vision of Venl zelos, the purpose of Constantino Is narrow. He seeks to keep Greece ns sho Is, rather than to risk all on a desperate venture. Con stantino believes Gormany will win. Venl zelos believes tho Allies will win. This Is the sum of their differences. But It is not fair to say that one Is moro of a patriot than tho other, or that elthcr's policy Is not patriotic. As to who will succeed, this Is mere specu lation. Tho fact that Venlzelos Is a Greek, knows his people, has been the maker of tho new Hellas, will weigh heavily. But Con stantlne Is the conqueror of Janlna and Sa lonlca and the victor of Kilkls. Ho Is, too, the son of tho King who died a martyr to the Greek cause. Those who know Greece best believe Venlzelos will triumph, but what must be reckoned with Is the possibility that before the King can be shaken from his posi tion Bulgar-German success will change tho whole face of the situation. "THE ROYAL ROOTERS" To the Editor of Evening Ledger: Sir I am wondering If tho management of the local National League club should not at tempt to curb, to somo extent at least, the of fensive "rooting" of the "Royal Rooters." When we pay for grand opera we want grand opera. We do not want snake dances, bur lesque or Wild West antics. When we attend the world series we want baseball. We do not want vaudeville or band music, at least while tho game la in progress. J To my way of thinking, it was an unwarranted assumption on tho part of the Boston rooters to Inflict on Philadelphia an unsolicited musical (?) program during the last contest. Let the boys have a chance during the game to play ball. Let the noisemakera get busy after the game If they feel that way. Philadelphia, October 4. W, R. PniEST. THE HONOR OP A LAWYER General Benjamin F. Tracy, former Secretary of the Navy and leader of the New York bar, leaves only $5PO,000. What General Tracy gave of himself during a long life cannot bo ap praised In terms of figures. When somo per jured witnesses were called In a Brooklyn di vorce case. General Tracy took the opposing lawyer aside nfter the Jury had gone out and said to' him. "I cannot understand how a man of your ability, of your prominence In this com munity, could employ lying servant girls to ruin a good man." In reply tho eminent lawyer said: "But, General those witnosses were AMUSEMENTS FORREST-NOW gfitSSS TWICE DAILY fc.o.D D. W. GRIFFITH'S THE BIRTH OP A NATION 18,000 People 3000 Horses BR0ASTSaH?-!,; HENRYMILLER RUTH CHATTERTON In Jean Webat.r-a KaaolnatuV C$tdy DADDY LONG LEGS BOo to 11.60 at Matlnaaa Wad, and Tut... Oct. la ME Tr,?PP L I T A N "Salvation Nell" , .,, ,M .UA-C, 00 "The Mikado" rnoiopiay Faatura Shubert Quintette 'Spirit of 76" iZJTZL.r;-'.... I. oe Bpacta uraaa uparm "ioiio opectaclt Mat.. Dally. aaSSTSSSrSSl,&nW"t' . 1 , "' e saiiu V, ALPHABETICAL COUNTY PAIR Baturdar. OctoUr t, From 10 A. M. to 10 P. M. St. Francis' Country House for Convalescents laTH AND LANBDOWNB AVB run,. "LAO BA1BW, WvhStflfS PALACE StD AdmU.lou.0o CASRfe, In Much Canaorajyiay, ! ATAL CAKiy' 5525'sfi & Nw brought to me. I did not invent their atatil What was I to to do?" With flno scorn, tttf notiy indignant General turned upon hlsiS "What were you to do? I know what I wouldfi have done. I would not have allowed them to on the stand." A lawyer who tries caaei J5 uenerai iracy inea mem piles up treuufM more valuable than money. His life Is an aww.1 nnce to young men of fine spirit that a treat? lawyer is first of all a great man. Brooklyn! n.agie. NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW Thanks to the victories of the war-torn ahttWi the (stability of this nation is at present tsaf one rocK in mo maelstrom or wona polltlci,-! urand Kapids 1'ress. Certainly, no greater duty confronts a aatl wnicn news to tne nner ideal than to suta Itself strong enough in the control of the power of destruction to prevent the misuse by others of the power to destroy, Kansas Clty2 star. The nations upon tho continent of Europe Judged by tile most tremendous test that eaai come upon a people, have a right to UvtI to work out their destinies to be themselves They have been weighed in the awful balanwi of war and havo not been found wantlng.- inicago iieraid. AMUSEMENTS T VDTfl LAST 4 TIMES AJ J. J.VJ.VJ Tonlfcht, S:1B. Mat. Sat, J:ll "THE LILAC DOMINO" COMIC OPERA IN 3 ACTS. The Only Bio ifuttMU omiw in j awn. a uorseous ana AiacmuCtnl Production Byond Comparison. MIDNATE0vfNTa That Is the Night! Sata Today. Open Your Eyes Wide and BehoHJ "TJovr, TTW WITU Maurice! J.J.CU.H-10 J U and FLORENCE Wnlrnn irenb Franklin bukton Qreen iooamtaf Kiw TorK'a Summer Sensation Naughty! WtD-iFH a iii-cn uvu tu . tycu. Jiai, 94, on I, JU&Ea fl.ff. B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE CHESTNUT AND TWELFTH BTnERTB The Brilliant Viennese Primadonnal FRITZI SCHEFF Now Repertoire of Sparklinjr Selections All-Star Supporting Show BERTHA CREIGHTON & CO WILLIAMS & WOLPua; MErnnpnr.TTN niHrj.3 INd Q1RLS; AL LYDELL & CO.; HEATH tVl WH1. XJlllMlB. T.oaf Q Tiaira of tha Chlcaeo Tribune's 8W. Udbt O Ud.yH pendoua Movlnr Pictures eH THE GERMAN SIDE OF THE WARl TEN THOUSAND PEOPLE HAVE SEEN THEM EVERY DAY. HAVE YOUt 11 A. M. to 11 P. M. ALL SEATS 9fc3 ADELPHI THEATRE NEXT WEEK SEATS TODAY Tho Man From Home WILLIAM HODGE Comes Back Again In Ills Latest Success "THE ROAD TO HAPPINESS" (TTifVR"CT Theatre "eSI KjXJKJljlli VAUDHV1LLB Continuous ftj a. ai. 10 ii !. m. loo. loc, .a "EVERYBODY" .SP""'"'-.1 Different Charactsrs. "BIX BONO BIRDS" And Others. 1915 ACADEMY OF MUSIC 19lJ BOSTON MONDAY EVENINGS We3 SYMPHONY " Mah i3. "" r - - -a Mrtw wtn T IT It T-"l n'RnTT'li'.QTPA SoIoUtet MELBA. FAWUB.J ---"-' -- VnvTDrwn omfvTfnll Da. KllL tlPOK, Conductor. Season Sale. Monday. Oct. laVfl """"-. .". HErPS-8. 1110 Chestnut SVfl Prices. P. tT.SO. IB. i3.H0. Bom., 1TB. ISO. Mfcf FRIDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 81 lAiier the Theatre) "PHILLIES' NIGHT" AT THE CAFE L'AIGLON SPECIAL DECORATIONS J 80UVENDU muup. ppruce luu ior Tame Reservations THE WALNUT nu M2RS rvaiilYUUX XjAPT WEK11 Edith Taliaferro in POLLY OF THE CIRCUS PRICES..... ,,166, age, Hj d A RRTr,K"LT ,n cf a -WirrVir o tJJ-.J - -- -uwu ungjivo est. POTASH & PERLMUTTER & UNDER COVEi Knickerbocker th"tb!,arI?a UUUUHT AND PAID FOR . JsvtiJiKO rBJOaW I5c 36c, Kt. Mo , - .1 MATS. Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday. Beet Beats, ffcj PHONE OltDEKBbALL BAklNQ 5ig 3 Market Below Boreal Dally, Oo i Kvemn ROUBKT WAKW, t'Vlnfth ni an UmaralO Tomorrow HELEN WARE In "THE PRICK" j. arcadia :;g " " " ' . i a i i s i .ii I T CHESTNUT Below li Stanley MARKET ABOVE 1T Laur Hope Crewn "BLACKBIRDS" PEOPLE'S Bringing Up Fat!tr NjxTfriiic uwoliT tom's Fawn .. m t: Troeadero E!S tlSSft8 FANl'f A
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