Etmttf tig gjjy ilter PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY OkaHea K, Ludtfltnon, Vic rreildent (John a Martin, mg nary and Treasurer ( I'hlltp S. Collins, John 0. WHltaan, Directors. EDITORIAL BOARD) i . , Ciiti II K ccitii. Chairman. . WNALKY... Eiecullre Editor MM c martin. . General Business Manager Published deny at Pcsuo Lido it Building-. Independence Square, Philadelphia. tsim Cixmt Broad and Chestnut Streets AtUKTlO ClTI ITttt-Vnto Building Nw Toil , 1J0-A, Metropolitan Tower DrMOIT , MO Ford Building Br Loin 409 ulsne Democrat Building Cmcioo. ,. 1202 Tribune Building LKVus. .. ......8 Waterloo Place, Tall Mall, S. W. . NEWS BUREAUS I Waam,oTO' Bcatitr The Pott Building Mv Ynt DCIUI The Timet Ilulldlni MM.IM BtjarAU rtO Frtedrlchttraena UMH nttnu 2 Pall Mall East, R. W. ra Dcttiu ,32 Hue Loula le Grand subscription terms Br carrier, Dtir Ontt. tl cents. By mall, poelpald utafde of Philadelphia, ncept where foreign postage Is required, Dailt OitT, one month, twenty-five cents: &UJ.T OM.T. oia jrear, three dollar. Alt mall tub saeasttlnna arable In avatiNt t" .' jeoricn Subscribers wishing addren changed mutt rt i oiu a wen at new aaaress, , "M3.U INK) WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAW 1KW E3" Adimn all communication? to Kitntno tLedper, Independence Square, Philadelphia. HTitto r tin riiiLADiLpnu roTomc is bzcoxd. CLAM MAIL U1TTES the AvnnAon net taid dailt CIRCULA TION OK THE EVENING LEDGER 1'OU SEPTEMBER WAS 100,008. PHrtAUELntlA.'WED.NESDAY, OCTODER 1J, 19J5. Good fortune, like strong wine, goes to the head Of the tccakUng and makes Mm disclose Ms foUv. UP, GUARDS! AND AT THEM! THE thrill of lighting nt the lhst ditch Is granted to the Phillies today. They will "be fighting at the last ditch If they win, and they must keep on winning to keep on fighting. Consolations are not In order. The Phillies are the gamest and bravest of teams. What man can do they will do today. Not even the Red Sox can do more. As for taking three straight, which the thlllles need for the series, why, that Is cx :tly what Boston did. It's possible for the hllllea to do It also. f MORAL FORCES ARE INVINCIBLE TTnOM the two neutral Balkan States, out f. of the mouths of two former ministers, save come strangely Interesting pronounce ments. By way of Milan one reads that Tako Jonescu, the former Rumanian Minister of Jhe Interior, believes In the ultlmato partici pation of his country In the war, not for ho sake of aggrandizement, but because Ve believe moral forces are Invincible." At ne sarno- time Eleutherlos Venlzclos, de mised Premier of Greece, declares his belief lat the national soul of Greece makes war tevitable. "ynlcs may protest that there Is no such k as a national soul, and that moral ,es are mere figments of the mtnd. They ton without facts. In time of crisis. In h of great victory or of great disaster, 'c.does emerge In every country a unity tiling which can truthfully be called a tonal soul. And when great decisions are to made there is a perceptible swinging he people to the side which expresses Jrjrmer determination and their spiritual coW justice. The recognized and estab d sense ot righteousness ls a moral b against which no force of arms can .jf U. It Is superior to the individual, be- it outlasts generations. And It Is In )lo. So CELEBRATES COLUMBUS DAY? any It chief celebrants of yesterday's annl sultary of the discovery of America were eacilghts of Columbus and the Inhabitants tjjjle Italy. The former are chiefly re sole for the holiday; the latter might Bcailngle gratitude with a certain pride In EPcountryman. All of them aro good trlcans and celebrate the day for Amerl beasons. e surprising thing Is that so few others d part In the holiday. It is still com itlvely new, and has not yet woven lt- Into the social and, what is equally Im plant, the business life of the American Immunity. But as the whole nation com- ' .Amnrntag Ha hnirlnnlnr. nnr. I, a nA.,i..an bn, It should unite In marking this one day which the others depend. There Is no question here of, the melting W. In celpbratlng our existence here there no room for division of opinion. - THE NEW WAR SPECTACLE .T REGULAR Intervals the war seems to Xfall Into a rut of futility, when neither &o advances and there Is no hope In the decisive fighting of an early end. It must ' 4 realized that only a great victory for one le or the other can decide the war. A twn conclusion will lead not to peace, but xi armed suspension of hostilities. That Is why there Is some hopo In the resent feverish activity on all fronts. In ranco there can be only one conclusion ,awn from tho reports. Slowly, but with eadly accuracy, tho Allies are reaching lose lines of communication on which Ger many's hold depends. The bitter counter-attacks at Loos and Lahure have failed. If Allied munitions and men hold out and no reinforcements come to the Germans the further German Invasion of France is loomed to failure. "Unquestionably the Allies will also make a treat effort to combine two other fronts, the jjlUMian and the Servian. For this purpose )rand Puke Nicholas may be recalled and placed In supreme command, Rumania Is till not given over Xo neutrality. Her en trance into the war would make the Austro 'tMiton drive to Constantinople a vastly ( re difficult project. The Germans hold Franco not because -Ijr yant France, but because they want i jjKimttBOple. They hold Servia for the ;; WS reason, All military roada Jead to the j'-tHMrwft, and all political questions may eUUd on the heights of QalllpoU. The thruM at (fee 'Kaiser has only one ob- JIb sinyifH.h i he I .waging the most RM- few since the time of Napoleon. Y Bm far as the war Ja spectacu- H Umm can x hope of Its ending. tAlten GREAT RESOURCES were ttot bankrupted by the "WitqUonic wars, although the average ' iwr d was only $75 and the taxes m $t( of ft. 9h average Income last year jM mmI tM vrae per capita tax was ' ftlM, Th "(puktlon has increased iol ' tnv M , half times In the past nun- rirtv and the national Income has In. lM tlm. M rt4)iU ttuU tha nation baa resource 1 v i 0 eb d enough to continue fighting n. long time. It Is evident, also, that tho British citizen Ij witting to pay whatever taxes the Govern ment may levy. Ho Is rending tho budget estimates with calmness and preparing to pay the new taxes ns the price of success. While the Germans are talking of victory the British are preparing to spend their last shilling before they will surrender. Their ability to pay their sharo of the now loan floated In America Is undoubted. UNIVERSAL FREE TRANSFERS TN CLEVELAND and elsewhere they have been experimenting with threo-cent fares. It Is In Philadelphia that there aro such things as exchange tickets, whereby a work man Is compelled to pay eight cents to get home at night. A salient featuro of the Taylor plan, therefore, In addition to Its provision for high-speed lines to all sections of tho city, Is Its arrangement for universal free transfers In a forward direction. It is absurd, says "Davo" Lano, who se lected Smith as a candidate for Mayor, to suppose that there can ever bo a universal five-cent faro In Philadelphia. Quito a pes simist ho Is. Other cities, where tho tralllc Is not in any respect so heavy, have a uni versal five-cent fare. It Is economically pos sible, as moro expert financiers than "Dave" Lane have agreod. What "Davo" Lano doubtless meant was that ns long as he re mained City Chairman of tho Organization and could "put one over" on the peoplo of Philadelphia ho would see to It that a uni versal five - cent fare was politically im possible. But Is It? Not unless the people of this city aro sound asleep and as thriftless as Rip Van Winkle. The extra three cents which many citizens aro paying would look good In a savings bank. Men aro not likely to 'vote ngalnst their pocketbooks, and there aro not enough Jobs to bo distributed at City Hall to persuade any great multitude that they ought to throw away their money In tho hopo of getting sinecures. No, the only way In which tho people can bo euchred out of quick transit and universal five-cent fares Is by tho election of "Dave" Lane's candidates. There aro a good many Organization men In this town who aro Just as opposed to tho Lane tactics as other citizens are. They resent the effort to force anti-transit men down their throats. They are going to de mand that tho candidates they vote for take a transit pledge and stand unequivocally In favor of tho comprehensive transit scheme evolved by Director Taylor. Lot tho obstructionists beware, no matter on what ticket they may be. Philadelphia Is determined In this matter absolutely de termined. There Is only one kind of Coun cils that will bo elected this year, and that Is a transit Councils. There Is only ono kind of Mayor and only one kind of City Solicitor that will get to City Hall, and that Is the transit kind. The voters will attend to that. COMBINATION VERSUS COMPETITION BIGNESS Is not necessarily greatness. The men who aro planning to unite the Medi co -Chlrurglcal College with the medical school of the University of Pennsylvania are doubtless aware of this. But conditions are now favorable for a union of these two great schools to tho advantage of each. The city Is about to take the buildings of one of them to mako room for the Parkway, and it will give for them a sum large enough to pay for erecting a new group of modern buildings, which, If combined with tho buildings that the University has or Is ready to put up, would provide ample accommodations for a, school superior to cither. "THOSE THAT ARE FOR AMERICA" THE President's speech to the assembled Daughters of the American Revolution contained no more sympathetic and Incisive passage than that in which he declared his firm faith In the American citizens of for eign birth or descent. There has been far too much agitation concerning the "hyphenates.1 They are few In number and not too potent In Influence. They are, as the President said, tremendously vocal, Mr. Wilson Is right in declaring that they should stand to one sldo and let "those that are for America" stand on the other. Pleasure In the sane view of the Executlvo Is made even greater by the excesses of those whom he criticised. On the cover of The Fatherland of October 13 appears this legend: "This IS a magazine for Hyphenated Ameri cans." The Fatherland is confessedly pub lished In the Interests of Germany, yet It defends Itself by saying that 90 per cent, of the American people are hyphenated, and in sists that for this majority The Fatherland Is published. One wonders what Is the preclso degree of pleasure taken In The Fatherland by Ameri cans of French and English and Belgian extraction. Then one Is consoled by the thought that the President is right. The Fatherland does not speak for German-Americans, but for Germany. There can be but one loyalty among us to America first, last and all the time. Good morrow 1 Has your candidate taken the pledge? The cold, intellectual atmosphere of Boston does not agree with the Phillies. Qbregon says that Villa will be dead within 20 days; Just as If he were not a dead one already, Bishop Klnsolving, who says that the Ger mans' in Brazil are armed and ready for an uprising, might be described as an alarmist. Mr. Lane Is doubtless In favor of tho same kind of rapid transit that Mr. Smith wants to see, and everybody knows where Mr. Lane stands, " i " When a candidate resents blng asked what ho jntends to do if elected, put It down that if he has any Intentions nt all they are bad ones. The court has wisely decided that the mer fact that a man has repented of his bargain in not sufficient Justification for divorcing his wife. i Strange as it may seem. Senator du Pont, of Delaware, Is in favor of increasing the capacity of the American army and wavy to 8urn powder J"S GER - pH MfADEiiiPHrAr wi THE PITCHERS' HALL OF FAME Slab Artists Within the Memory of the Oldest Fan What Became of Them When Their Dia mond Days Were Over By THEODORE EDWARDS WHAT bocomoi of all tho great pitchers who thrill tho baseball populace for a day? That depends upon the ago In which thoy lived. If a man won his fame In tho period from 20 to 40 yearn ngo, ho prob ably went back penniless to manual labor whonco ho came, else ho found nn early gravo from dissipation and drink. But If ho was fortunate enough to make his baseball famo within tho last scoro of years, he may still be drawing a good salary from some club treasury. Or he may bo enjoying pros perity n n successful dentist, physician, teacher or business man. Some of tho heroes of tho mound wo have even sent to Congress, ono ft) nn cx-Govcrnor 'of our own State, whllo those who have been elected to munic ipal olllcoa nro too numerous to mention. A. G. Spalding when ho died, a few weeks ago, was head of the great sporting goods house which still boars his name.' He was ono of the few men who won nation-wide famo on tho diamond ln the earlier period, wai absolutely unspoiled by "it and then fol lowed It up with even greater famo In tho business world. Spalding Jumped Into tho limelight us a 17-ycar-old boy with the Rock ford, III., Club, wav back In 1867. Talk about tho endurance of tho modern twirling giants! Even Alexander tho Great couldn't duplicate Spalding's performances. Just consider what this original Iron man did In tho early '70s. During that period ho was a member of tho Boston Nationals, and he won tho league championship for IiIh team four years In suc cession. Ho was Boston's only pitcher and he twirled every game tho team played, though In those days games wcro scheduled only every other day and tho season was shorter than It Is now. Eighteen Straight Games Old timers lovo to dwell on tho prowess of Charles Radbourne, who shono with quite as much brilliance as Spalding until consump tion cut short his career, about 26 years ago. There wero contract Jumpers In those days Just ns there aro now. Radbourne was a member of tho Providence team, and when Charles Sweeney deserted that club In mid season only Radbourno was left for slab work. But that didn't bother Radbourne, for ho not only Jumped right In and did all tho pitching, but he made a new world rec ord by winning 18 straight games and tho championship for Providence. This game ness, however, cost Radbourno his life, for his health broke under the strain, which was generally credited with having caused his consumption. From day laborer to the world's premier pitcher and then back again to digging trenches Is, In brief, the history of Amos Rusle, who from 1S89 to 1894 thrilled tho baseball world. Ruslo had a narrow escapo from being cast Into the utter darkness of oblivion beforo he could get started. The first day ho entered the big league ho was weighed by Bancroft, the manager of the Cleveland team, and found wanting. After watching him pitch ono game Bancroft sent him nwny on the next train out of town. But John T. Brdsh, owner of the Cincinnati Club, had faith In this youngster, gave him his chance and suddenly the recruit blos somed forth Into tho greatest pitcher of his day. But prosperity and the applause of tho unthinking crowd wero too much for Rusle. Old John Barleycorn attacked him, too, and soon this man with the unhlttablo curve ball dissipated himself down and out. Until tho present year, when tho Seattle, Wash., club found him and gave him a Job taking tickets at their baseball park, Rusle was Just a com mon day laborer, glad to earn a living dig ging trenches. It was drink, too, that ruined Charles Sweeney, who had his fling during the period intervening between Radbourne and Rusle. In 1894 this man Jumped from organized baseball to the outlaws. Then ho further ruined his career by trying to prove that a man can play winning boll and patronize tho bar. Always an uneven contest, drink won, and Sweeney died becnuso of his dissipation. A Veteran "Rooting" Now Then there were Tim Kcefe and John Clarkson, about whoso respective merits the fans aro still divided. In 1888 Keefe won 19 straight games for New York, while in 1899 Clarkson pitched 72 games for Boston, win ning 46 of them. These two men, whoso ex ploits were heralded from ono end of tho country to the other, were radically different In temperament. Clarkson utterly ruined his health by dissipation and died In nn Insane asylum. But Tim Keefe, thrifty soul that ho was, retired with money In the bank, and Is spending his old ago In Cambridge, probably rejoicing this day that Boston has tho edgo on tho Phillies. Probably moro printers' Ink was used to tell of the exploits of tho eccentric "Rube" Waddell than any other baseball player that ever lived. Rube was always good for a story no matter what ho did. On tho dia mond this man was forover breaking records, first In Jumping from one team to another and then by making now Btrlko-out records. Probably his greatest feat was when ho called In all tho outfielders and then retired the side In order. But last year consumption finished his broken-down constitution. Cy Young belongs to a different school of pitchers. He was a shining example of base ball longevity founded upon clean living. This marvelous man, who broke Into major league baseball In 1890, pitched every season for 22 years, a record still unequaled. NOT ASKING MUCH A million years how that thought staysl I'd love to walk in these same ways A million years, and years, and years! Why there'd be music for my oars That they would bend for even then.! To hear the mocking birds again. To hear the whlaper In the trees, To hear the booming of the bees, To hear the laughter of a child Why, all the music that Is piled In m'isle racks here, everywhere. Holds not a note which can compare For, one small moment with the notn Of gladness In a baby's throat. And so I love these Texas ways, , Her perfumed nights and golden days, I love the children I have known, Whose hearts I've tried to make my own. In all the coast and Inland towns; I lovo the babies' tousled crowns; I love the mother as she croons In the dim light the by-lo tunes; 1 love the men, big and strong, With truthful eyes and hearts of song Who, whn ttr crop or price fll Do not ti a sorry wall. But buW t try anew! A rsllWen Lord, grant m two! -Ju4 MrtttMT Xwta, to VouaU p0k. TODAY ) 2ffl2MiiFim irir I iiitmifii m .. ... . . ., V m fess!amM I hlUillf flllll WM i.n, .. . JlatlPLAYFRsl J In ' lllMfrta ENTRANCE'1,11 "Wf W l W Hlffltlw HENRI FABRE, THE INSECTS' HOMER Best Read Man in the Book of Nature Was Born of Uneducated Parents, But Became One of the World's Greatest Scien tists and a Poet in All His Writings By C. F. KINGSLEY IN ANOTHER two months "the venerable anchorlto of Serlgnan," 'as Maeterlinck called him, would havo como to his $2d birthday. A friend who visited him on a recent birthday speaks of "the magnificent spectacle of an old man of whom the soul remains young, the mind clear and from whoso lips you hear no word that resembles a com plaint and who now takes the road to the end without re grets and with se rene resignation." It was Maeter- wwwwwpww i nii-rv. iuu, v uu fio Fabre the appella-J-HENRIFABItB t , n the ,MecU. Homer." Homer, If wo mistake not, was a poet a poet of both the homely and the heroic. So Kabre sings us the Iliad of the insect world, a world so unllko ours and so Btrange, says Maeterlinck, "ono would think that It was born of some comot that had lost its course and died mad In space." If Maeterlinck's publicity work for this scientist and poet of a little village of Prov ence did much to spread the namo of Henri Fabre, a service had already been "rendered In the opposite direction, .for 4to Fabro tho younger man owed a great deal. At least It Is certain that Maeterlinck was Irlsplred to write his "Life of tho Bee" by his talks with Fabre. With this book ranks tho tat ter's "Life of tho Spider." To tho few Fabre was known many years before his popular fame. Darwin called him "the incomparable observer." For the scientific accuracy of his Investigations and writings was as marked as the grace and dellghtfulness of his literary style. The Boy His Own Teacher How ho came by his love of learning, of literature, ot nature, of science, Fabre him self never knew. He was born of very poor peasant stock. Few of his Intimate forebears could even write their own names. His father at one time had a Httlo farm, but neglected It and finally went to keeping an humble cafe in one small village after an-SJ other. Heredity Is hard put to it to account for Henri Fabre. Ho was born at St. Leons, In Vezlns, and was Provencal only by 'his later adoption. He received nothing but the most haphazard education In the rustic schools which he attended as a tiny boy. Mainly by his own Initiative and effort he learned to read. He learned also a little arithmetic. A year or two later he obtained free Instruction In a secondary school, In return for his services as an acolyte In church, but principally he taught himself. Finally he secured a position as teacher of mathematics In the College ot AJacclo. Fabro was endowed with a positive lust for work. During his 20 years as assistant pro fessor of mathematics at Avignon he es caped on Sundays and holidays into the country to prosecute his observations on In sects In the open air. His genius became recognized. He was sought out by such men as Ylctor Duruy and Pasteur, He corre sponded with Darwin, and made a number of experiments for the English scientist. He was dragged to Paris, much against his will, presented to the Emperor Napoleon III and decorated with the Legion ot Honor. Nevertheless, he lost his Job.- Ills trans lator, Alexander Tetxelra do Mattos, -tells tho story as folows: "There Is no doubt that Fabre Is a supremely Christian philosopher and that his quarrels with the evolutionists are due in no small measure to his belief that they are prono to leave tho will of God out of their reckoning. Now the Irony of fato brought about that Fabre himself, be cause he talked to his pupils pt tho beasts and the flowers apd the stars and all the wonders of nature, became looked upon, by the narrow-minded Inhabitants of the pro vincial town where he resided, as a 'danger ous and. 'irregular person. It also happened that at this time he had lost his protector, Duruy, who had himself fallen Victim to the persistent attacks of his obscurantist adver saries. The opportunity was trelzod to form a local cba against Fabre; and his enemies 'made tool of two maldwi tedtoa, a pair of elderly aptaotetw wit own the bous In . 4 R V - fl isl isl isl isl Hil isl isl HB EH I HH ' which Fabre lived, and Induced them to give him a month's notice to quit. Ho held no lease, had ndt tho least scrap of a written agreement to show, was without remedy of any kind; and hehad to submit and go." A Friend in Ilia Need Fabre was then so poor that he had not sufficient money to remove his belongings. His salary had always been small, and he had spent It all in support of his family and In carrying on his observations and experi ments. In his distress he turned to John Stuart Mill, then a member of the British Parliament, with whom ho had lived on terms of intimacy In Rome. Mill imme diately sent him 3000 francs, asking no ques tions fcs to security or repayment. Fabre shook the dust from Avignon off his feet and went to llvp in Ordnge, and later In Serlg nan, In Provence. The debt was discharged within two years. Though many are tho tales of Fabre's poverty In his old age, they aro much exaggerated. A son and a diugh tcr wero living with him at the time of his death. Of Fabro's philosophy he himself wrote In deep humility: "Because I have stirred a few grains of sand on the shore, am I In a position- to know the depths of tho ocean? "Life has unfathomable secrets. Human knowledge will bo struck off tho archives of tho world before we possess the last word of a gnat. "Success Is for the loud talkers, the Imperturbable dogmatists; everything is ad mitted on condition that one makes a little nolso. " "Hypothesis is succeeded by hypothesis, tho theoretical rubbish heaps up and tho truth ever escapes us. To know how not to know might well bo tho last word of wisdom." THE GREATNESS OF A CITY The Philadelphia Dvenino Ledoeh has a short editorial on "What Makes a City Great " and this Is tho way It answers the question: The greatness of this city, blessed with a location unsurpassed among Inland cities of the world, can never surpass the greatness of tho living men who aro in charge of Us de velopment. Why handicap It by putting little men In power, who could not do great things even lf.they desired? It Is tho men wlio make a city. A grand city cannot be expected from men of low Ideals. A stream rles no higher than Its source. If you are to have a good city you havo to have good, tlean, upright, courageous men devoted to Its aeyelopment. We don't gather figs from thistles neither In nation nor In society or Government I a?, Sr lU6"'", Bld Henry aeree. and that should be the platform of every true citizen Men are wanted who will not waste themselves n pleasure, but who will devote themselves to the happiness of the people. Let neither party, sect, society nor church Interfere with tho practical application of this tdea.-Ohlo State WAR AND CUSTOMS It Is curious to observe how the war news ts linked up with social customs. Semendrla for example, on the Servian frontier where there has been heavy artillery Hrlng, has quite a con vlv al, connection. The town is believed to stand on the site of a noman setUement, and tradlUon ha. it that the famous vineyards' which $ nudapest and Vienna with some of their Shest table grapes were planted by the EmoSrer Probus In the third century of th" ChNstfcn era. Twelve centuries latej- the Servian Prince George Ilrankovlch became lord of Tokay in Hungary. He there planted vines from Semen, dria, and from them the famous Tokav wln takes lis name. London Chronicle AMUSEMENTS M e TKOPOLlTAvr o rE n a ii n 11 n i. JLN Another 12 Kntartalnment Da Luxa for 9k. Llht Opara Cla..lo, I Th. sS, .SUA1 Chimes of Normandy Allegorical Living Picture "LIUEHTV" ARTHUR ALDIUDOB Famous Wlnttr Uarden Tenor. 1-t.otcplar 'TUB Blindness of Virtue" CaV.llVrU Huatlcan? A Symphony Orch. Chorua of CO rov.tora and Lucia. Q Irldeiunt y.T... PuJona M,u' pU)r' 16 n1 6o, ToV.rZ rrices ncs wiihtiy g . j iT rlSS. 1915 ACADEMY OF MUSIC 1816 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA MONDAY EVENlNps . N J, Nor, JO j.n, s. F,b, iT' March la "" ' Sololata; MEL1.A. TiBDia KJlEISLErU SC&iSAtS5AR' Eg, KlU MOCK. lii&T.ri-.a..to Conductor lUO Cbtstnut Prlcet, Mt yjJ.W'JW'W Boxes, stb. He 14a, DUMONT'S ffZ?$$ MAT1NKB TODAY. 160 and jog CW r"' PKQPLES UNCLE TOM'S CABIlf -f?."' - ,--. -" . siiaM. . n AMUSEMENTS W A T TMT TT nn 'AND walnut VV AJN.U JL Phone Walnut 20SU Triumphal Success Kathryn PURNELL IN THE "VA M P I R E" Startlingly Sensational Mat. TodayiSgS Evgs.,8:15 WILLIAM HODGE AT THE ADELPHI T?5T Pop. $1 Matinee Tomorrow IN HIS LATEST BIO HIT "THE ROAD TO HAPPINESS" "Jim Whitman suits Hodre aa admirably as did The Hn From Home.' "North American. FORREST-NOW Sfeg,' TWICE DAILT D. W. GRIFFITH'S THE BIRTH OP A .NATION 18,000 People 3000 Horses B, P. KEITH'S THEATRE CHESTNUT AND TWELFTH STREETS "Beat Uuiicol Jlttvut n Jatty Beat on t " Evr. Ledf . GILBERT & SULLIVAN REVUE "Pinafore" "The Mikado" "Tho Gondoliers" "Pirates of Penzance" STUPENDOUS SURROUNDING SHOW! Charley Qrapewln & Anna Chance: Gertrude Vander- ti Anna Chance: Gertrude Vand Moore; Al Golem Company; Din a ueorce Moore; Al Golem Com; Ityan ft Tlerney. Other Features. T3T?r A "H Nioirrs at sub tfJXUAU MAT. TODAY at4 BPECIAL EXTRA MATINEE FBI DAY KLAW & EltLANOER Prtient HENRY MILLER and RUTH CHATTERTON Jn Jean Webater'a Faacinatlnr Comedy DADDY LONG LEGS 50c to $1.50 AT "TdeKtpat APflA FIT A CHESTNUT BELOW 1BTII XXVV-'l-l TODAY ana TOMpRROW WM. FOX Presents FOR THE FIRST TIME "THE LITTLE GYPSY" Magnificent Photoplay Dramatliatlon of Maude Adama1 Hucceas, "The Little Minister." DOROTHY BERNARD as "Babble." GL0BJ3 Theatre "SkS srs. VAUDEVILLE Conttpuoua 11 A. M. to 11 P. M. 10c. ISe, Sfe. Pretty Girls PTT?P 9Q" Mutlcal Funny Comedian. A Xill.IV &0 Comedy CARDO and NOLLS ttfilft.iu RESULTS OF WORLD'S SERIES GAMES TRIANGLE PLAYS Twice Dally. 3 ft 8 P. m. RAYMOND HITCHCOCK In "Stolen Magic." '"OLD HEIDELBERG," with Dorothy Glih. EDDIE FOY in "A Favorite Fool," Frank Keenan In 'THE COWARD." 250 good seats, 2501 300 good seats, 60c, others at 76c. Better ones at II and 2. Chestnut St Opera House Btf CTu LYRIC Popular $1 Mat. Today TUB ONLY MUSICAL BUOW IN TOWN "WAMFiQ TTP" "IM mauricb nd rlAiN UO U iT FI.ORENCB WALTON FANNIE BRICE, BOBBY NORTH, OEOROB HA88ELL, WILLARD SIMMS, . ARTIE MEHLINGER and 100 PAY OlBLS "DATA HI? MARKET STREET .17 A1XVU TODAY and TOMORROW admission too MARY PICKFORD In " R A O S " COMINO FIRST PRESENTATION Charles Chaplin In "Shanghaied", THE MARKET ST. ABOVE 10T8 C&rtvJsv. MARIE DORO Otailley "The White Pearl" Aaaaa Attraction Vincent A tor cup Race. Coming Qeraldlne Karrar In "Carmen." GARRICK MAT. TODAY ,"$! UNDER COVER &&, Nlsjbte fc Bay Mat.. 60o to 11.60. No Higher. . PT?f1T?"MrP MARKET Below SEVENTEENTH JIVJJ11N JL DAILY 10c. KVKN1NOS & , .. TODAY en4 TOQBKOW CLARA KIMBALL YOUWO HEART OF BLUE . MlDflB NIXON'S "OnthegdawlFtayTouiidH .GRAND "Sffijg TJara,ifcLre. wgyj- sonudy with KJ Brand! ci jaoraao, p viaar en, t.Hf hy mftcUl Wirt. TroojAw & ROSEADI