rv ' ( - ;' - A. b "V ft W Wi "Sv ini. us Mr- W K'.V sSA .. mmmm NOTHING ON JACK BARRY, FRED MITCHELL OR JOE WOOD IN THIS YEAR OF l! tfHREE CASES WHERE SUCCESS OR FAILURE OF BALL CLUB RESTS ON V SHOULDERS OF SINGLE INDIVIDUAL 'iT -.1 T TTr.n .,, TIT 1 T- 1 T i. .vypcK. carry win JCiitner maKe or rjreaK joosum j Red Sox Fate of Chicago Cubs in Hands of Mitchell What Wood Means to Cleveland - TL'ST how big a (actor In baseball la tho Individual? Tor ohvloua reasons club "' owners are not willing to concede that tho fate of a club en n rest on the shoulders of on man, and the managers arc ever emphasizing tho power of concerted effort, co-cptratlon and teamwork. Their wisdom In doing so c-innot bo questioned, but mi tho same time If you suddenly put the above question to Pat Morun ho would Involuntatlly glanco at drover Cleveland Alexander. If you shot tho query at Hughle Jennings, the name of Ty Cobb would naturally come to IiIh lips. It mutt be granted that no ball player In tho world can carry a team throunh If the essen tials of co-operation and teamwork ure missing, but nevertheless nn Individual can either mako or break a ball team, and tho personul equation Is not to bo frowned down. For Instance, this season tho fate of at least throe ball clubs rests on the shoulders of an Individual member of each club. Whether tho Boston Hod Box can repeat depends. It Is generally admitted, upon whether Jack Harry can drive his men at tho same speed attained by Hill Carrlgan. Out In Chicago I'rcd Mitchell will cither mako or brenk tho Cubs, and Joo Wood can cither make tho Cleveland Indian's dangerous to any team or an also inn. Consider, first, the situation In Boston. The class of the Hed Sox cannot be denied they aro champions, have been champions for two car, and, wore Cnrrl gan again handling the reins, It Is reasonable to suppose they would remain chain plons. The stuff Is there and It Is simply a question whether Jack Harry can brlns It. out. Let It not bo said that Jack faces an easy task. Theio aie u number of cir cumstances whlcfi make his path a thorny one.' He Is handling u number of vet erans, older' In years and baseball experience than ho Is, men who were blazlni? stars on the Hub baseball horizon long before Harry left the Athletics. This is only one of his difficulties. There are many others. ;! ,4 TTAS Barry tho executive ability to take the hazards safely nnd keep tho , - Sox on the trail of triumph? It Isn't a question of baseball In Boston Barry knows the game from every angle. It Is a mnttcr of leadership, of personality, of executlvo forco mixed .with tact. It Is distinctly up to Bary, the Individual, Mitchell Also Has the Baseball Goods Can He Deliver? iTIHE situation In Chicago Is similar. Few will deny that tho Cubs are a great ball team, and tlielr failure year after year has been a sore disappointment to the Windy City fans. Students of tho game ogreo that tho Bruins have suffered from poor management slnco tho days of Frank Chance, nnd their failure Is attributed to poor leadership and to this alone. Evcrs, Bresnahan, O 'Day, Tinker alt failed one after another and went their various ways. Two of them Evcrs and Bresnahan can blame their failure on tho fact that they tried to npply tho , methods of Frank Chance, a school of management that could only bo successful when executed by a Frank Chance. But It was all they knew, and they went through with It to failure. Tinker never did havo tho necessary qualifications to succeed as a manager and Hank O'Day let tho club run away with him. So It has been that a great aggregation of ball players disappointed their fol lowers year after year. The Cubs still .have the latent strength. Will Fred Mitchell be able to develop maximum efficiency and get results or will his name bo added to the list of "thoso who failed with the Cubs"' Ho is in charge of a good club, he has an owner who will spend unlimited money to Rtrongtnen the weaker points, and he has been promlied absolute nuthorlty In the playing end of the game. "TTILL Mitchell make tho mistake of Kvers and Bresnahan and try to apply the methods of Stallings, with whom he has worked for years, or will he study the men he Is handling nnd direct them as they should bo directed? It Is distinctly up to Mitchell, the Individual. The Case of Joe Wood and the Cleveland Indians JT1HE situation In Cleveland Is Bomewhat different Wood Is u. player, not a - manager and SUCH a player WHEN HE IS IUGIIT' If Wood Is tho "Smoky Joe" of yore, what wonderful things ho can accomplish for I.eo FoIiI'm tribe! The great pitcher says he Is right, that he has nursed the old salary wing I along and Is ready to jrepeat the performances that made him the sensation of 1912. Working with Guy Morton, whose nrm Is said to be lit for yeoman service once more, the pair can. make tho Indians one of tho most feared teams In the American League and tighten up the race In n way which will bring many extra dollars rolling Into tho coffers of the magnates. Last season the power of tho Cleveland team amazed tho baseball world, nnd with tho addition of Joo Wood the Wood of 1912 what heights may It not achieve? W1 r Jlttlt Wood "come back"? With him In form tho Indians must be reckoned with: without him they can hope to accomplish llttlo as they now shape up. It Is distinctly up to Wood tho Individual. Champion Herman Sticks to Own Profession ' PETER QULATTO, otherwise and better known as l'ele Herman, the new bantam champion. Is the only present ring champion who has not been lured by the footlights. Furthermore, It Is not that the New Orleans lad hasn't had tho opportunity to do tho "two-a-day" stunt. Tho day after Peter dethroned Kid Wllllarss ho was offered a theatrical contract, but he gave tho vaudeville folks to understand that he was a boxer a good boxer and not an actor. Justi now Herman Is not getting the boosting a champion should be given. It Is apparent that the new tltleholder would rather stay In tho background than get out and let the world know what tlmo he takes his morning bath or when he indulges In strenuous pinochle games. Herman Is credited with saying that he Is n boer and will do nothing else. This Is the right spirit, but foreign to tho present money-grabbing methods of most boxers. t WHETHER Herman will be able to live a life of fame without develop ing a swollen cranium only time will tell. Basketball Players Slowly Developed THE promoters of the proposed new basketball league aro to bo commended If they adhere to their determination to havo the various clubs composed of three professionals and two amateurs. One can eaBlly count on their two hand tho ' boys developed In these parts in the last ten years. Jack McGraw, the old Jasper Itar, who was the hero of many a cage battle, was discussing tliN phase of tho situation while a spectator at the Greystock-De Nerl clash on Saturday night. He was commenting on the grand work of Tommy Barlow nnd launched Into n discussion -of just how many good boys had broken Into fast company In ten years. It took all this time to develop Cross, McWilllams, Lawrence, Cashman, Delghan, Kerr and Barlow a pretty poor showing. Say a league was allowed but threo professionals and put n trio like Sedrow, Friedman and Fox together! they would develop two younger boys Into big leaguers the same as they did at Carbondale. A three-and-two rule means the making of basketball players in this 'vicinity something absolutely nepessary if the Indoor sport Is to be perpetuated. Most of tho topnotchers have been at ' the game for from ten to fifteen years, and as they must "cash In" some day tho developing .of their successors is an Important Issue. Thoso fostering tho new organization, and their Identity Is a mystery worthy tho great Sherlock Holmes to unravel, have not been guilty of "blowing .elr heads off In regard to the new enterprise and are learning to creep before they walk. Out-of-town correspondents appear eager to learn of the new venture, nccordlng to reports. Boxers Do Not Jump Into limelight Right Off Reel FEW boxers ever placo themselves before the public ns star performers until after several years of active service in the squared circle. A majority of tho present-day headllners had to do preliminary work for at least five years before being recognized as stellar scrappers. Bobby Reynolds Is In his seventh year as a glove wlelder, and now It appears that he is about to place himself before the 'spotlight, Reynolds's bout last night against Jack Duhleavy proved that the rhlladelphtan was as clever as he ever was, but for the first tlmo In his career Bobby showed that he could hit. He uses his right In a short right-cross move ment, and neynolds may prove himself another Benny Leonard. Leonard was a diamond In the rough for about seven years before he knocke'd out Joe ' Jiandot and then developed Into the greatest lightweight knockerout In America. ( PHILADELPHIA has one or two legitimate lightweights .who can fight a"tad give the best In 'their weight trouble, but there are non at the top , now who can box and punch well enough to be ranked with Benny Leonard, Johnny Dundee, et al. t Four Trapshooters Make Perfect Scores "VNLYa quartet of gunners out of the many hundreds who line up at the posts -'oi the Trapshootera' League have thus far experienced the "grand and glorious . .ellng" that follows the satisfactory performance of making a perfect score In a tJM,-mateh- Twoof these break-alls are local men, VIncent'OIlver, Clearview Ctvb, a4 Harry 8!oV, of Meadow Springs, while E. R. Jenks. who represents the IfWKiM VJHH"H-V una I -ercy jiicuui, mu iiiauaia Bmr, complete jne list. m&t'.it th 66-outof-60 scores were made when the gunners were visitors over trap. "Vtace" Oliver is the only man In the league who has turned the Ml kis t-MM grounds. . i u i ? 'fl . . t.tmFlvr Seeks Basketball Title JUXX.',bwiiMbi team ,1s out. for' tho championship of Philadelphia, and ts-iv'.b -wtimer of the Dobson-Hancock contests no rest until n ftoMtfer lrlOT fatMUv Manager Ryan believes that his charges hare i - . . K. . r -i !. -l' . K , tfHMtor-thto'AasMJQst.oMorty-nvs appearand) in Xj ferty-Uve ttittes. a batting ay. rut i-. . .jL . .". . .'. L " mi- THE BIG ORDER ffVY . WZ(m UP f LoT OF MICE RffM-MBEfT IT- 100K AT TmT Wfr&XZM RMrt HAM AMD mis CMt-CH"- P.ST LAY crpjf 0? IHDUTCM- fVjXJWT GO q ArPL& PIC- MOOODV ELSE ('.JACK- tST 0. n.AT5TVrr-n EAPeMSe- I F " - -. ,3-mAldMT V-u,.,.-. -TLA!- IT- HP SEVERAL BASKETBALL PENNANTS MAY BE DECIDED AS RESULT OF THE MANY GAMES SCHEDULED TONIGHT BASKETBALLICALLY speaking tonight Is one of the busiest over recorded In our recollection In theso parts. All kinds of Important games are down on tho schedule for decision. . In the Eastern League inn battles are on the cards At Cooper Battalion Hall the champion (ireys tee off wth Ue Nerl and ocr at Camden the Skcetcrs meet Trenton The Camden City Industrial League pen nant may also bo determined when I'cerleus Kid faces McAndren-s & Forbes Here in town another championship may be decided when Dobson clashes with Hancock In the city play-off cerlcs Dobson vs. Hancock. Hancock of the American League, will be crowded city champion If It succeeds In putting ner another victory at tho expense of Dobson, winner In tho Indus tr.al League. The first meeting nf tho combatants was fought with plenty of ex citement on Tuesday night, when the boys from the Falls were nosed out by a point just a putllclent margin to gain the er dict Tho Worklngmcn's League landed the honors last ear In straight cames nnd tho Americans arc out to turn the trick this Bcason, and surely no one can hate them for that. According to repoits Dobson Is fully aware of the mistakes iraJc in tho opening clash and Is anxious to reedem Its mistakes The Peer'ess Kid- McAndrews and Forbes setto will he a hummer. They were deadlocked prior to Wednesday eve ning when tho latter won and assumed first place According to the "dope" Peerless Kid would win In a can'.er, but It received a rude petback. And hata-off to tho ball d'splayed by the winners The way they passed tho leather In the final minutes was a treat to wltnesi and tho headwork dls lta.cd would hae done credit to Joe Ko garty himself All of which Infers one to believe that tho so-called stars of Peer less Kid will have to show something more tonight of they Intend to tlo up their rival. Statistics of Intercollegiate and Eastern Cage Games fires lork Trenton. JuNPrr i:sti:rn i.iiAdi'i: HM..P.C 11 A .nxx Cnmilen II H Mil Ilriulhv! 0 8 ..'..!) lip .Srrl w.i. r r. H II .471 H II .171 T 11 .S13 .srni:ni'f.n rim i:i:k Tonlslit lie Nrrl nt Crejulorkl Trenlnn at Cninden. Mitunlny Jaoprr nt Dn Nrrli ,rejlork nt KejiUfic, iNTr.Kroi.ixr.i.vrn i.n.dt'i. w.i. l'.r. v.i..ir Vnle 7 1 .H75 Ilirtmnnth 4 I .BOO I'rlnrelon 7 1 .M7.1 I olnmbla 7 .300 I I'riinu fi 4 Oil) turnrll 1 U .100 scni:i)ti.i: i im wr.r.K I Saturduj Princeton nt I'eiinhantai -ule nt Iliirtmoiith. IPll ill I The Peerless Kid team m.i no till right, but what's In a name anyway Grays Meet De Neri Thero are few basketball fans who hae not conceded the second half Hastcrn League pennant to Greysto-k, but It must bo admitted that methematlcally speaking It are not the winner as ct. it col lides with De Nerl this evening, and If re turned on the long end of tho score cannot be beaten out no matter what happens. Hut It Is not sure of winning, accord ing to advices emanating trom the De Nerl camp Myers's proteges aro out to defeat tho Churchmen and have really been In training for tho event We have this as olllcial. Stretch Harvey, who essays the rolo of center for tho Musical Fund war riors, has been playing poorly for several weeks and tho work of Do Nerl has shown It. But the slender one promises a different talo tonight, and olllcial scorers are hereby notified to carry a couple of extra pencils to record the baskets he shoots. If all this proves true Greystock Is beaten before tho game really starts. The dope may go wrong Camden is out for revenge over Trenton, as the Skeeters have not forgotten the way they were laced by their brother Jerscymen the last time they Invaded Skectervllle. But It must Just be remem bered that Trenton Is going some. Big Fight in State There Is a big fight on In the Pennsyl vanla State League. Carbondale at present Is not a member of tho organization. It Is going a long distance from home to get news, but we will predict that the present Carbondale team will not be a member of the league next season. This may prove a surprise, but wonders never cease. From a neutral standpoint It really does look as If Carbondale Is getting a raw deal. Here aro the facts In the case: On Monday, February 26, Andy Sulla ordered his team to leave the floor at Pitts ton after a mix-up with Referee Jack Evirs, and from all accounts the 'official was at fault. Carbondale had a contest booked at Hazleton tne following Wednesday evening. Sulls expected to be fined, but no word was .BOXING MONTHS' rOUIlSE PHILA. JACK O'BRIEN S. E. Cor lath and Cheitnut O'BRIEN I Cheitnut SU. I OLYMPIA A. A. SBSftftSSKHB,. MONDAY KV.-NINO, MABI'lI K iouuf Jm llorrtll t. Mike llawell Jocr Ill-r v. Frnnkl- OUrk I lilck Mren t. luttllnr Mill i UULy UeTiin . (Juail Lwb Johnny Tillman vs. Benny Leonard A.m. tSt. Ilflt- ni. SOe & 75e. Arras Bet. (1 SATURDAY NIGHT SATUIlDAY MOltT NATIONAL A. C.ii,n and Calha'rln'a'l OKOBOK rllAMEY VH. JOHNNY MAYO j.aCM I M. Ifp STAB III Knoekant Kins I.atcal Kins Renaation FJ1DIK FIT7.IMU0NS H, TIIBHK linRK AM-STA ADM. tSr.l HP). B0 AUfS ANf.KY WILMS IOIITM TIIHHK 75e. and SI. CAMBRIA A. C. '0Hvn.BJiS TAK BOUTS i r- MTAB HUDTS' !Eastern Leajcue Basketball WALL received nnd he pl.i.ed tho game, but lost. At the conclusion he. lecelved word that even If Ills team had won tho gnmo would have been for felted. Carbondnlo was fined $-5 The money was sent Lewis, as Pittcton was scheduled to play at Car bondale on Wednesday night liven with the tine paid, .Manager Hills tefused to play at Carbondale nnd as "a result Hulls ar langed a series with Scrauton Now Lewis has fined Plttston for Its failure to play Carbondale. It Is a grand, mix-up, but may soon be settled. Jasper a Winner Tho traveling Jasper Jewels returned home from New Hngland last evening and pleased a largo crowd of Kensington rooters with a 11 no display of scientific basketball, which was punctuated with streaks of passing reminiscent of the games of tho early beason. The old line-up of Hough and Sedran, forwards; herr, center, nnd Fox and Fried man, were on tho Job, and Hough gave a great demonstration, which had the crowd going wild. The Hears wcro minus Johnny Heckman, who Is laid up with the grip, and White nnd O'Donncll wero the forwards of the visiting team, Heggs and Morris, guards, and llaggery center. Tho scoro at the end of the first half was 10-6, and nt the finish 21-11 Tho visitors were held to two field goals, ono In each half, and they both went to Charley O'Donnell, Jas per made six Held goals nnd they went to: Mcdrun, 3; Hough, 2, ard Friedman, 1 The Intercolleglato pennant may be set tled tomorrow night when Penn meets Princeton at Welghtman Hall TEN SCHOOLS IN ONE-MILE RELAY Big Meadowbrook Event May Have to Be Run Off in Heats JOEY RAY NOT TO RACE The one-mile high and preparatory school relay race In tho Meadowbrook games to morrow night In Commercial Museum will havo to bo run In heats, It Isn't often that a relay race at ono mile has to be urn In heats It has never been done In America before but In this race thero are ten entries nnd It Is doubtful If ten teams can tako the mark nt ono tlmo and run tho r.ico In a satllfactory manner. Tho teams entered arc: Hplscopal Acad emy, Merccrsburg Academy, Hethlehcm Prep .School, Tomo Institute, Baltimore Poly Prep, St. Henedlct's School, Newark, N J ; Pcrkiomen Seminary; Chester High School, Northeast High School nnd Central High School. Tho trophy for this raco Is held by St. Albans School, of Washington. D. C, which Is not represented this time. Georgo Green, tho former St Albans coach, Is now coach ing tho Tomo Institute, nnd Is after tho trophy again, Previous to tho St. Albans victory Mercersburg won the raco threo 5 ears In succession. It Is more than likely that thero will be two heats of five teams each, with the first two teams qualifying for tho final heat, Thero aro thirty-seven events on tho program. Tho Meadowbrook Club put on a one-mile raco at the suggestion of Joey itay. of the Illinois A. C, and gathered together the fastest milers In the country, but durlrig the last two weeks the Meadow brook Club has been unablo to get nn answer to nny of their commulcatlons from Hay, and It is said that ho doesn't Intend to mu he?e, but that he will run In St. Louis . Ivan Meyer Is coming from the Illinois A. C, however, and will run In the event The medley relay for Philadelphia schools attracted the entries of Hplscopal Academy, Germantovvn. West Philadelphia. Northeast, Central and South Philadelphia High Schools. In this raco tho first boy runs '0 arils, the second, HO; tho third, &S0, nnd the fourth, ono mile. Mayor Smith will tiro tho pistol for the first raco at 7:30. ALL OUR SPOOFING ABOUT CRICKET ' IS MISPLACED, SAYS PLAYER; FINE1 POINTS OF GAME NOT UNDERSTOOD! : ' -'W My GRANTLAND RICE Vnn Knrnr ITnw It Is ? . ' There arc daya when you play around par or below There are days when you can't play a .lick; And the 'clofitis you may foozle when well, ' And make your best scores when you'rs sick. For there ain't any answer in sight. ' You never A-hohi where you belong; You'll blow when you think you aro right, And you'll blow when you know you arc wrong. IS THi: old-fashioned art of training camp writing fading out? Not a scribe yet has discovered a pitcher with a new-rangled curvo that breaks threo ways at tho name moment known as tho triple prong or the whirling dip. Concerning Cricket According to F. C. T., a well-known cricket player, most of tho spoofing, Josh ing or kidding which cricket receives In this country Is duo to a lack of knowledge cf the finer points of the game; Just as golf was once a leading denizen of The Spoofery for tho same reason, "I have plaved," ho writes, "with great pleasure and benefit baseball, football, hockey, ten nis, golf and soccer, nnd nt no time have I found among the players of theso games the same keen and lasting lovo of tho gamo as I have observed among cricketers, both American and English It Is also my belief thnt cricket Is the more varied and scientific, and presents greater possi bilities of diverse talents than 6ther games. Cricket Is played extensively In this coun try, pontrary to popular belief, and, llko golf nnd baseball, contains a bottomless well of reminiscence. I write this In behalf of a great game that has been misunderstood." ' No sport-loving nation, such as England Is, could ever take up n game to BUch an extent that cricket h'as been taken up unless the gamo Itself was of high rank. Another Anglo Dear Sir: Several years and ns many months ngo I came out of the South Ken sington Museurn at noon. TlJe day being exceedingly fine,"! decided to see what Lon don had to offer In tho way of sport. So after getting lunch at tho A. B, C. I Jour neyed out to Lord's to witness my first nnd perhaps last game of cricket. 1 was nmused for a tlmo and then bored. Tho game to me was listless and dull Since reading "Canuck's" paragraph on "Bomb-throwing, Baseball and Cricket" I see where my trou ble was. Cricket Is a form of prepared ness and, being nn American, It la no could not see any SLiKl.l'Y STLVI .1 ;'thlng I, A : Gol.5,!' wonder game. Slack's Hard Luck Connie Mack has found It ImposSnj, 1 Dlease. Ho drat ilovclnn-,! a v,n ,...". ' nobody could beat and tha entire lJJS broke Into n roar, claiming that ha i! killing Interest In each year's race n then offered a hall club that everiti could beat five days a week, and this ul failed to please. Yet thero" are folks' & wonder Just why It, Is that Connlo anH "' """'" -. - uno who is "mood, silent, taciturn nnd nronn In mi-v... '" Ho has discovered In his varied career Uui apparently you can't please any of tha ! pie any of the tlmo.- """ Connlo has undoubtedly Imnrovc.i t,t. i. more than a mero trifle for the 1917 rt,, . palgn. Cna- But whether sufficient Improvement hu come to lift tho club out of last placju something on the side. ' Last fall Mack's cluh finished uctr forty ball games back of Washington, h ' scyenth place. It won forty less and 1m H forty more. When a ball club finishes forty games back of n club In seventh place thi uplifting process' will have to bo an ab normal affair. Mack might win twenty, t five, more games this season than he a last and still finish n very bad last. i With Thrasher and Bodlo ho has adit, i punch to his outfield with Strunk tun around, while Bush nnd Myers form tht ' nucleus of good pitching possibilities. The weak spot at present Is where tin " club was once greatest-around the l field. Stuffy Mclnnls remains, but tha re mainder of tho Infield cast has yet to ihow any first division possibilities, Overt Acts in Golf 1. When your opponent holes a 30-foot putt 2. When your opponent's topped shot Jumps a trap or bunker. 3. Any hole that costs over ten shots. 4 Any player who says, "That's thi highest." B. Falling to replace a divot. L. L. Q. Disston to Play Putnam March 31 Pl-stnn nntl Putnams wltl play their post pone'! American League match on Haturday. March :tl It aU was announced that the lilBsiona-New York National Cup match will be placd tomorrow. winiiniiiiiDiniiiuiimn ;;iiiiii!iiiii;ii:iiiirii!iiiiii!iinii:iiiiiiia!rNiii!iiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiEiiiiiiiraiiiiiiiii:ti!iiiiiiiiii Your Same Favorite Cutter The same tailors. The same linings. The same carefulness as to detail of tailoring. The same high grade of worsted suitings. Every one new. $21.50 For $30 & $35 New Spring Cloths of Guaranteed Quality Built to Measure Opportunity ends March 17. Wanamaker & Brown Market at Sixth for 56 Years iiuiiii:iin.ii!iH fllllllllllllUIIlIM gjpS! ' . --, El x&Lmm I mmlm egg OTW$ll7 j ? v6 mW fill ffSJiu-'vSm' ij lsirN B i f t Ulii 9 ENTIRE STOCK Of Wind & Co., Merchant Tailors N. W. Cor. Tenth & Arch Streets NOW ON SALE S 13th & Market Streets s-E-Cor-EntraBCC op 13th strccl OPENING DA Y, SA TURD A Y, MARCH 10 TH To Order Reduced from $30, $25, $20 SUITS DAY, MARCH 10TH itso Market St. Storo Open Er.rr Evanlnr Till ? P. M. Arch St. Stora Open Mon day and Saturday Even log.. Till 9 P.M. HaviijB purchased the entire stock of Wind & Co., merchant tailors, N. W. Cor. 10th and Arch streets, we will make Suits to your order for $11.80. The original prices of the suits were !p3Ut $25, !p-iU, You notice we give the exact namfc and address of the firm whose goods we are advertis ing. Call early and get first choice. Blues, Herringbones, Grays, Browns, Blacks and Fancy Mixtures. i Heavy, Medium and Light Weights WE GUARANTEE the Cloth, tho Fit, the Workmanhip ' PETER MORAN & CO. imSi '&. S. E. Cor. 13th & Market Streets (EntrCeoi3thst.) S. E. CORNER 9TH AND ARCH STREETS 'I 1 f i ? T .. 7 .i. . -.-V !9HIilrf-.l.'l-.U-rMv jjli I-Jmh .