WrXfrmT' " I' 'rl EVENING PUBLIC LED&ER l?,HITJM)IDjiBHIA FRil)Y, JANUARY- 1920 m Kris tli )M TviC Phd til I- .PBJS a. -HOVVTtfl MffiffEM thaU -"lattl hypo5 Bcno inss .1 MP a; w v run-tat . :a i HATRED SHALL SULLY OUR LIPS," MERCIER TELLS FLOCK i IC Cardinal, Addressing People in St. Gudide Church on National Day, Says 'We Are Not of the Old Testament That Sanctioned the Law 'j 4J i -. 99 Trw. or retaliation XZ Explanatory Comment rpHE Belgian national holiday, which in 191G inspired the Cardinal once more to stir his compatriots with . passionate fervonand glowing hope, occurs on July 21. The event signnlizes the entry into Brussels in 1831 Leopold I, first king of independent Belgium. The revolution, then brought to a spectacular climax, had broken out nearly a year earlier. "... Oddly enough, it was an opera which set the match to the long-smoldering flame of liberty. Auber's & Mucttc di Portiei" has for its hero one Masanicllo, a suburban Neapolitan revolutionist and patriot. The libretto contains frequent allusions to liberty. When performed in Brussels on August 25, 1830, the work deeply aroused the audience, which rushed into the str eet crying "Imitons les Parisiensl" -(Let us imitate the Parisians!) The allusion was to the July Revolution in Paris, where the Bourlions had been finally over thrown and Louis Philippo installed as "Citizen King." For fifteen years Belgium had been under the rule of King William I of the Netherlands. The two coun tries had been united by the ruling of the Congress of Vienna, which devoted itself to remaking Europe after the first downfall of Napoleon. The arrangement of 1815 was emphatically ill-advised. The Dutch differ from tKe Belgians in character, habits, ideas and religion. T he priltical breach goes back to the days of the Dutch revolt against Spain. Philip II lost the Netherlands, but Belgium continued to be an appanage of the Spanish crown. f- Later the sovereignty fell to Austria, which held the country until, inspired by the French Revolution, the inhabitants threw off the yoke and in 1790 organized the country into the "Belgian United States." That nation was short-lived. 'The Austrians returned, but they soon suffered defeat by the French, and in 1801 Belgium was incorporated into Napoleonic France. Thesecession from the Dutch in 1830 was sanctioned by a conference of the powers, as was also the dynasty of the first Leopold, who was of the house of Saxe-Coburg and the widower of the Princess Charlotte of England. It is to this line that King Albert belongs. Cardinal M ercier s St ory Including his correspondence with the German authorities in Belgium during the war, 1914 to 1918, edited by Professor Fernand Mayence of Louvain University and translated by the Bene dictine Monks of St. Augustine's, Ramsgate. England. CHAFfER XXV emotion, kindly refrain from showing it. The hour for expressing adequately the intensity of your feelings has not yet struck. "'Jerusalem facta est habitatio exterorum; dies festi ejus conversi sunt in luctum.' (Jerusalem was made the habitation of strangers; her festival days were turned into mourning.) Machabees, Book I, chap ter I, verses 40-41. "My dearest Brethren We were to have gathered here together to celebrate the eighty-fifth anniversary of our national independence. "Fourteen years hence on this very day our cathe drals restored and our churches rebuilt will nnpn nrirlrt Protest of the Bjshops Against the Enrollment their doors. The people will crowd them, our King "' , : i r a r -v t i Albert, standing on his throne, will freely bow his , t in the German Army of Young Belgians nconquered head before his Majesty, the King of Kings. of German Parentage The Queen and the royal princes will form a group T . . , . . , , . . around him. We ourselves shall hear the joyous pcal- Hh imperial government declared its intention of ing of our bells and throughout the entire country, under forcing into the ranks of the German army all young the vaults of our temples, wo Belgians, hand in hand, men of German paientage born in Belgium, but who had v ill renew our oaths to God, to our sovereign, to our become legally naturalized Belgians through having liberties, while our bishops and priests, true interpreters publicly declared in favor of the country of their birth. 0.- the soul of the nation, shall intone in the enthusiasm At various places, notably at Brussels, Verviers and of their gratitude a triumphal Te Deum. Nivelles, a number of young men in this category were "Today the hymn of joy dies on our lips, summoned to appear before the military authorities. ji,0 Jewish peopic ;n captivity in Babylon sat After undergoing a medical examination they were and wept on the banks of the Euphrates and watched NITTS RICEVE DEI GIORNALISTI ESTER Egli Dichiara che Nessun Peri- colo di Rivoluziono Sovrasta I'talia Cable Briefs Published ami retributed Under . permit no. an. Authorised bv the ct of October 6, 1017., on fllo at the Toatomcft of Phlla rlDbla, Fa a s. burleson. Postmaster Oeneral. given a temporary holiday to await being drafted. Frustrating an Unjust Draft The Cardinal, together with the Bishops of Liege, Namur and Tournai, protested against this open vio lation of The Hague convention. Archbishop's House, Malincs. y July a, 191b. jo ms jcjxceuency Daron von Dissing, uovemor uen eral, Brussels. Your Excellency The whole Belgian nation is deeply moved at the news that young men cf German extraction, who have declared for Belgian nationality, are threatened with enrollment in the German army. Such a measure is opposed to The Hague convention, to which Germany has put her signature. It does violence to the deepest sentiments of our Belgian fatherland by dragging away from it its adopted chil dren. It outrages Uic conscience of many yountr men. flS.es-SeSr2? already saddened by their present inability to & . serve their country, see themselves compelled to take arms against her. For these reasons the bishops of Belgium in the interest of morality, with the guardianship of which th-y have been intrusted, have recourse to your Ex cellency. They venture to express their confidence that you will spare no effort to prevent the authori ties of the empire from committing such a flagrant Infringement both of the international law and the rights of conscience, and further that your Excellency will make an effort to spare our country, already so sorely tried, the infliction of so cruel a humiliation. Kindly accept in anticipation the expression of eur thanks for the intervention we solicit and feel sure you will not refuse, as also the assurance of our sincere esteem. (Signed) D. J. CARDINAL MERCIER, Archbishop of Malincs, (Signed) TIL LOUIS HEYLEN. Bishop of Namur, (Signed,) M. H. RUTTEN, Bishop of Liege, (Signed) AM. M. CROOV, Bishop of Tournai. The Governor General replied neither to the bishops' letter nor to a petition on the same subject addressed to him, about the same time, by a number of notabilities of the legal and political world dwelling in occuuied parts of Belgium. Nevertheless, these decrees which had begun to be put into force were allowed to lapse and the plan of forcible enrollment in the German army of young Belgians of German parentage was not car ried out. t Hr" the waters of the river as they flowed, while their harps hung silent amidst the skirting willows. Who would have the courage to sing the song of Jehovah in a strange land? 'O Jerusalem, our fatherland,' cried the psalmist, 'if I forget thee, let my right hand be forgotten! Let my tongue cleave to tnv jaws, if I do not remember the.;, .'f T make not thee the beginning of my jov.' "The concluding words of the psalm, embodying a kind of curse, we pass over in stern silence. We are not of the Old Testament that sanctioned the law of retaliation, 'Eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth.' No words of hatred shall hully our lips, cleansed as they are by the fire of Christian loc. "To hate is to aim at doing ill and lo take pleas ure in it. Whatever may be our sorrows, we will not pursue with hatred those that inflict them on us. "National union of hearts is linked among us to world-wide brotherhood. "But above this sentiment of world-wide brother hood we place respect for absolute right, without which intercourse cither between individual or between na tions is impossible. "Hence with the greatest authority in Christian theology, St. Thomas Aquinas, we declare the prose cution of crime by competent authority is a irtuc. Crime, injustice, disturbances of the public peace, whether by individuals or by bodies of men, must be repressed. Conscience is disturbed, troubled and har assed so long as the guilty, according to the common expression, so true and at once so expressive, has not been "put in his place. To put things and men in their proper place is to re-establish order, restore equilibrium, to reintroduce peace on a basis of justice. Public ven geance understood in this way may offend the sus ceptibility of the feeble minds. It is, nevertheless, ac cording lo St. Thomas Aquinas, the expression, the law, of charity and of its flame, which is real. The conse quent suffering inflicted on people is a weapon for vin dicating outraged right, not an aim in itself. The Grandeur of Just War "How otherwise love order without detesting dis order? How wish for peace intelligently without elim inating whatever undermines it? How, lastly, love one's own brother that is, wish him well without at the name time desiring to see his mind willingly or by compulsion conform to the immutable dictates of jus tice and truth? "It is from tuch high btandpoints hat war must he viewed in order to understand its grandeur. Once more I repeat there may be certain effeminate souls, in whose eyes war Is merely the exploding mines, the bursting of shells, the butchery of men, the shedding of blood and the piling up of corpses. Short-sighted politicians may still be found with low views, for whom the stakes of battle are but a passing interest, the seizure or re conquest of ground or of n province. "No. If, in spite of its horrors, war understand glioma, 1 cennoio. Ncl glorno di Nntalo l'On. Nitti ha ricevuto un comitate dcIl'Associaztono della Stnmpa Estcra in itomit, per nlctino richlcste e specialmente per unn petizione con In quale b! chicdeva l'abolizionc della censura. Durante l'intcrossantc conversazione che avvenne con i Riornnlisti formnnti il dctto comitnto l'On. Nitti ebbe ha dlchiarato che cgli non credeva che in Italia potesse scopplnre unn rivoluzlone. ma clip el nttcnilcvn del disordini isolnti i qunll non nvrebbero mni pntuto portarc ad una rivoluzlone. L'Orf. Nitti disse che la piu' importantc qucstione per l'ltalia era lo scria difflcoltn' per la mnnennza' del vivcri, che speravn potcr superare. In qunnto aU'nffare di Fiumc disse che nll'Estcro vi si darn troppa importnnzn. L'ltalia ha da risolverc questioni piu' important!, come nd csempio quelln dclle importn zioni, dclln rata del enmbio c la deficenza del materinle, Rregcio. Disp di spcrare in un nccordo con i Jugoslav! e che In questione Atlriatica dipendeva dalle relazioni di amicizia con i popoll daU'altra parte dell'Adriatico. In qimuto acli element! socialist! entrati nlla Camera dichiars che non rap presentnvano un pcricolo iminincnte e che si attendeva In loro coopcrazione. La situazionc politica in Italia, dissc pure l'On. Nitti, non -c' pegRiore di quelln in altre nazioni dell'Luropa ocedidentale c meridionale. Tutta l'Europa oru risente le conscgucnzc della jnierrn. Egli paragono' tale stato a quello di una citta' vlsitnta dnl tcr rftnoto c in parte distrutta, ovc gli nbitanti hnnno perduto l'equillbrio e che, nnzlchc' pensarc n rieostruire le loro case, divengono turbolenti e si nbbandonano ad cecessi. Parlando di quanto si e' -critto al l'Estero relativnmcutc ni lent! metodi del Governo Itulinno c della sua buro crnzia. Nitti disse che nuaudo si reco' in America era molto nnsioso di vedcre il Invoro del dipartimenti govcrnativi a Washington, ove si aspettava di vederli splendidamentc organizzati. qualche cca di piu' modcrno e piu' sollccito. Ma con sorprcsa trovo' che i metodi nmcncaui emtio rome tiuelli dell'Luropa. no' meglio, nc' peggio, nc' Roma,. " gennaio. Gli impicgati dellc compagnie del carri rlcttrici si sono posti in'sciopcro chiedendo uu aumento di puga per fur f route all'allo costo della vita. Lo sciopero c' limitato ad una sola giornala. 11 Governo per mottere in grado lc Compagnie di af frontarc le richieste dcgli iinpegati, lc ha autorizzate ad aumeutare di un soldo la tariffa per i passeggieri. EBERT CALLS FOR UNITY In n remarkable interview Mnrshnl Foch declares God willed the allied vic tory over the Germans, and that he wns the divinely inspired instrument chosen for the purpose. He declares tlint from boyhood, when he saw the Germans at Sletz, he lived for but one purpose revenge. Paris editors nrc unanimous in counting 3010 ns "a year lost." With the war over nnd won, but pence not et accomplished, they call it the "year of human folly." But for 1020 they are hopeful nnd see an opportunity of regaining all that hns been lost. Dispatches from Itiga indicate that the food shortnge is becoming despcrnte. Army supplies nre very limited nnd the situation is fraught with danger to the whole anti -Bolshevist campaign in Lctvin. When the .French Government bought the property of the A. E. F. there were included a number of safes, belonging to the paymaster's department. But when the A. H. F. sailed away it for got to tench tho Frenchmen tho, com binations to the safes. M. Vautcl, who hnd charge of them, sent to Brcsnes for a couple of expert erncksmen and put them to work on the American snfes, who, for n reward, quickly swung open tho big doors Inndcqunto railway service -la blamed by tho Berlin government in lnrge pnrt for the failure of tho economic situa tion to improve. Food conditions, as n result of early winter weather, arc reported growing worse. In n book entitled "The Economic Consequences of Peace," John Mny nard Keynes, who was chief represen tative of the British treasury nt the Pence Conference, shows thnt President Wilson wns outwitted by Premiers Clcmcncenu nnd Lloyd George, owing to Mr. Wilson's incvitnblc lack of ac quaintance with European conditions, lie describes how the fqurtecn points were whittled down by mnny ingenious devices produced by "the subtlest sophists nnd the most hypocritlcnl drmightsmen." ::C CHAFrER XXYT The" Cardinal's Puhlic Address in the Church of St. Gudulc, July 21, 1916 THE Governor of Brussels, Lieutenant General Hurt,-? Just warpossesses such stem attractions, it is sim forbade the celebration of the National Dav, July 21, p,y becaU!e jt is llle disinterested act of a people that In a manifesto published as early as the 17th, he pro- -vield "P. r is disposed to yield up, its most precious pos hibited under a penalty of six months and a fine of 20,- se8s,0y. l 1'fe, in defense and in vindication of some 000 marks any "demonstration on the occasion; such thne Jhat cannot be weighed, or counted, or purchased as public meetings, processions, speeches, addresses, iUbtlce' honor, peace and liberty, school treats, the floral decoration of certain statues, "Have you not felt during the last two years that beflagging of buildings, public or private, early closing lle war' the keen usta'ned attention you bestow upon of shops, restaurants, etc." lt (even from "ere), purifies you, delivers you from On the eve of the celebration appeared a further aross' ralms you' maKes you looK up t0 something warning of the Governor, in which the public was better than yourself? It is toward the ideal of justico snv advised to have nothing to do with a certain section and 'I0"0,1- ,that you P- Its charm llfts you UP- of irresnonsihlo iwnnlr whn if ,mnv,i ,,,,. - And because this idea if it is not a vain de- ,J , flavoring to influence the population against the ob- luslon' whlch takl3 fl,Bht Hke the ""substantial figment r. servance of the decree and that penalties for infraction ( a dream ought to have its seat in a living, sub Ob of the order would bo applied ruthlessly and without s'sting subject, I am never tired of asserting this truth tM niercv. ........ ..r - ..,.. .Vl3 j,f ..,., .. c.aw 'IT - Jta - T-I inlf n 41. wt virgin nflvnubtaalf w Mt4 na.) l- KJ11 4 JZ TllMP fhronts vr fn Imvorl liv !,. annoovoo ?n "iocn oa uic inaaicj utci tilling uvuuui aim uie V1I1S OI f-the'streets of patrols of armored cars, designed to in- lnen' "!e ?fred """ter of the universal conscience. ,f ! "" . . . . . ' . . 4flVi it -warn ftiln in nlocn in aiii nvtvtn mi. l. s- i sttu tear into tne people's mmds. The only result or '",' . .. y " , ,. "' ""' """." "UI "' these measures Has to stimulate further the desire of roe,s' who a the front are fighting for us, or, in their Athi" inhabitants or Brussels to manifest their patriotic underground sheltera, impatiently await their turn to T ':.rTAnr wn- win. nont,n m. !- r i, j advance to the firing line; if we were allowed to catch they had recourse to numerous devices, each more in- an.d u"derstand the beatings of their hearts, is it not " genious than tho other, in celebrating the National Day. thJ3 fhey wou d say lt? U8L am d,01Ane1"ly duy' l am, In mot rhurdiea a dirge was substituted for the cus- offe"nff 3wlf a victim of justice.' And you wives and tomary Te Deum. Tho ceremony in the Church of St moUers relate l. me in your turn the beauty of these Oudule was graced by the presence of the Cardinal. ?slc ycar3' w,v.cs "fosc cvc thought, sad but at The great church on the occasion was filled to over- !he same V re8'ne.d' goes out,to the a.b.!ent onc-tel1' flowing; hundreds of pcqple. unable to obtain access to ,ng h,m of your ,onBnB?' yur lon(J filing and your it, stationed themselves in the adjoining square. P"ycrs: m?thfrs whose hearts are rent by the anguish of every minute, you who have given up your sons and Mercier and the National Holiday will not take them back, as we contemplate you, our After the gospel the Cardinal ascended the pulpit in admiration for you at every moment 4iolds us breath- vftstments and miter and pronounced the following al- less. 'lHl Hon; neore beginning I want you to do an act of self Kskaint; should any of you feel overcome by strong (CONTINUED TOMORROW) Copyright, loto.Aiy Puilin Ledger Co, Cowrioht, Canada, 10S0, by 1'uhiU Ledger Co International Copyright, 19t0, bu Pvlilio Ledger Co VfflVA I 1920 Needs J ' Transfer Files and New Blank Books BLANK HOOKS Bound and Looao I.eaf LiTTHOCtnAPHlNG PIUNTrNO KNOHAVINO OKFICU Statlonerv and Supplies niHE Jlann Quaker Clt flla Is ready to receive your records and 'eep them dust-proof. Transfer files, steel or wood, as sou prefer! Immediate delivery If you wish HI Blank books, bound and looso leaf, all rul ings, Eiies and styles from which to select. WILLIAM MANfr COMPANY 529 MARKET STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. New York Offices: 261 Broadway. Founded m 18i8, New Year Manifesto Says It Is Needed to Preserve German Nation Bcrlm. .Thii. 2 (By A. P.)-l'resi publish the following New Year mani dent Ebert requested the chancellor to nublis festo: 'In the year just ended chaos was averted and the unit of tho empire was maintained und consolidated. Under pressure of a reckless force c were compelled to conclude a peace threaten ing the honor and welfare of our nation and placing the fruits of our ork of past and future jcars ut the ruprev of foreigners. "Tho year which begins must decide whether Germany, despite all difficul ties, iUI maintain herself as a nation and state und develop her economic life on a bound basis or whether through internal quarrels she will finally collapse and bury the hopes even of her future generation. "With these prospects of our fate be fore my eyes I urge all thoie railing themselves Germans, in view of tho common danger, to close their ranks in order that each one according to his capacity may help tt the utmost in the restoration of the fatherland." 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Cpur Travel Bu Dooklet Cablo addrcts Hotel Bermud I'linrori.viS l'linTnrf.AYH If Vou Cannot fall, Cut Thin Coupon Out und Mall Tonight llHMCIl' (.It.MONOI.A 6IIOI', 1100 Chestnut bt., Philadelphia WlUIOUl any ooneaiiono ,viuiie,er un in) I'aii, pi-nu iii piiuiu- cranhs and descriptions of )uur latest Alouels of urafonolag- Com- Tortablc Hearing Itoonis KIIL'CATIONAI. lloth Weiea Our graduates are In constant demand for cood-paylng positions. lregr Hhorthand. the easy, speedy system. Complete business and secretarial courses. Bay and Night Classes intensive training, enroll any time, ('all or write for full particulars und catalogue. P1III.A. IIUrilNKKN COI.LKGK and College of Commrrre 1017 Clienlnut r)t I'lilladel ph la Strayer's Bu&lncss College Philadelphia's Greatest Business achool 807 Chestnut Bt. I'hone Walnut 381 WINTKB BKNOIITS CAM11KN lli;inilTH. S. . THE KIRKW00D ON CAMDKN irEIOnTS SOUTH CAROLINA Open January to Mar i-hole aour polo rioinu cmuatb T. EDMUND KHUMHHOLZ CI.KAKWATKB. VM. WHITELEDGE HOTEL82lKSfi Amer. or Kuropean plan, fiolf, fishing, .to. & run, water la every oom; irlvatt btljis. Invest That Gold Piece You Received for Christmas BRING your Christmas money to the Electric Shop, at Tenth and Chestnut Streets, and invest it in something that will give you years of pleasure and satisfaction. A few delayed Christmas shipments have brought our stock of table and floor lamps to pre-holiday freshness and completeness. Prices range from $2 for a dainty silk candle 3nade to $90 for a lovely mulberry floor lamp shade, and $3.75 for a mahogany electric candlestick to $135 for an unusual Chinese blue pottery lamp mounted in silver. Such substantial gifts as an electric sweeper, washing machine, sewing machine nd dish . washer are here as usual many people will apply their gold pieces as first payment and take advantage of our popular plan of deferred payments. And then percolators, toasters, irons, vibra tors, curling irons, chafing dishes, grills a variety of different, reliable makes and fresh, complete stocks for the after-holiday shoppers. The Philadelphia Electric Company Tenth and Chestnut Streets PHOTOPLAYS THRU IBFJMERICA Tho following theatres obtain their pictures through the STANLEY Company of Amer ica, -which ia a guarantee of early showing of the finest productions. Ask for the theatre in your locality obtaining pictures through the Stanley Company of America. AIKw.Un 12th, Morris Passyunk Ave. Alliambra Mat.Dallyat2; KvSs.0:45,. CONSTANCE TAL,MADGr. In "A VHITUOUS VAMP" A Di"M I C &2D THOMPSON 8TS ArULLAJ matinee daily EUGENn O'UKIEN In "SEALED UEAlVrS" ADPAniA CHESTNUT Pelow 10TH AKLAU1A JO A. M. t 11:101'. M. WALLACE UEID 111 "HAWTHORNE U. S A." DI 1 ICnlDr liHOAD STKEET AND DLUlliDlfS.L' KTTfcQUEHANNA AVE. DOnOTHY GI&H and OWEN MOOIIH In "BETTY Ol' GnAYSTONE" BROADWAY oWm1 NOnIA TALMA DUE 111 "I&LL1 Or CONQUKhT" rAPlTni 7" MARKET hTIlEET VArllJL. 10 A M. to 11.151'. M. ANITA .STEWART 111 "MIND 'HIE PAINT Ollll." COLONIAL G,n,.M7pa,T? CONSTANCE TALMADtll. "A VJimfOUS VAMP" Aas. M. tTRIPDCQCi MAIN ST.. MANAYUNK rl,lVlriIljO MATINEE DAILY "THE MIRACLE MAN" DAI ArT 1211 MARKET STREET 1 VU.rAVI-, io A.M. to 11:15 P M. WALLACE RE1D in "HAWTHORNE U. R. A " PRIMPPQQ 118 MARKET STRBET rrUNL.I100 8:H0A.M. toll.lBr.H. WILLIAM DESMOND 111 "BLUE BANDANA" DCPrMT MARKET ST. Below 17TU IA1JIIN I 11 A.M. toll P M, DOROTHY DALTON In "IIIH WIFE'S KRIEND" D I A I TO GERMANTOWN AVE. r"-' yj AT TULPEHOCKEN EI. "THE MIRACLE MAN" ' DI 1DV MARKET ST. BELOW 7TH 1X-'IJ l 10 A. M to 11:15 P M EARL WILLIAMS In "WHEN A SIAN LOVES" SAVOY 1211 MARKET STREET S A. M TO MIDNIQHI TOM MOORE in LORD AND LADY ALGY ' CTA MI PV MARKET ABOVE 16TII OllNln,I n .in A. M toll:15P M. DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS In "WHEN THE CLOUDS ROLL BI ' I7A1III V THEATRE 1311 Market rlVliL.I OA M. to Midnight. I-RANK MAYO in "LAbCA" C A ID TV4-M 1MT SCth & (IIRARD AV, V t-lliyiJjn I MATINEE W S 1URT In "JOHN PETTICOATS" E DAILY' SATUI CT THEATRE Below firruie. JO InOI. MATINEE DAIL mVKTANCi: TAT.MAIJfli: III "A TEMPERAMENTAL W1TE" LY FRANKLIN ,WD &?&?& CHAPLIN' In "A DAY'S PI.EASUIIE" CASSINELLI In "THE RIGHT TO LIE" Great Northern B,,oa,12s,7' '"j, NORMA TALMADOi: In "THE ISLE OF CONQUEbT" IA1DPD I A I 00TII & WALNUT HTH. llVlrCiII-l-. MatB 2. .in. Ega.7i:l). NORMA TALMADOi In 'THE ISLE,' OF CONQUEST" I PAnCn ls'r - LANCASTER AVE. l-itiM-'L'IX MATINEE DAILY ELHIE FEROl'SON in "COUNTERFEIT" I mCDTV 1'ROAD rfll.UMRIA AV. LJOCrx t I MATINEE DAILY LUCY COTTON 111 "MIRACLE OF LOVE" 333 MARKET $Z 7W MARY 1'ICKFOHD In "HEART O' THE HILLS" TinnPl 42S SOUTH ST. Orchestra, lVlVJUCL. Continuous 1 lo 11. FLORENCE REKT) "WOMAN'S LOVE" conDnni' id and J V i-ilXlJl'VVV-'l-W i MRH IAVERFORD AVE, t'IMRLIW CIIM'MN hi fUKlHIMll.N VICTORIA ""iK'S'.a ill MARION DAVIES In THE CINEMA MURDER Th. N1XON-NIRDL1NCER! THEATRES BELMONT 02D ABOVE MARKET EUOENE O'llRierM In "hEALED HEARTS ' CEDAR COTH AND CEDAR AYENUU BltYANT WASllnURN In "I I' PAYS IO ADVERTISE' FRANKFORD 4715 FranUford An. NORMA TALMADGE III "THE WAY OF A WOMAN t (.-. ,--.-.V, L. P rtt,, AITt", AVW. JUMbSU Jumbo Junction on Krankfora "h" .MAURICE TOURNBI'R'S "THE LIFi; LINE" IOPI1CT T-0 AND LOCUST STREETS! L.UV-UOlMat 1 -80.3.80 Egs. U.30 to H I MAROUERITE CLARK In "A (URL NAMED MARV" NIXON O'JD AND MARKtrr bTS JAMES AUBREY In "SWITCHES AND SWEETIE' RIVOLI C2D AND KU DOROTHY DALTON In "HIS WIFE'S KRIEND" S 1 KAfNU "" at Tjwam. DOROTHY DAL'lOV In "HIS WIFE'S FRIL'ND' WEST ALLEGHENY $&4 DOUOI.AH JIcI.TJAN In TWUNTY THRtK I AINU A I1A1.1' MUUllPt itcn . wFm v mm m up m mmmmw m'm n w u nmmm m m m w m i ii m r ----------- .-. fTtMfir--.... '" BROAD ST. AUDITORIUM .."stfnS ETHEL CLAYTON In "MORE DEADLY THAN THE MALE" POT I?PT 11VI MARKET 11ETWF.EN IVJLiIOEjIJIVI RUTH AND (10TII DOUGLAS McLEAN In "TWENTY.THItnil ArtD A HALF HOURS' IJBAVK" Completo nhart ehowlna prosrama (or tho week appear Saturday evening and Sunday. EUREKA orn & fflrUt "Tin Dl-V TllPAf-iriH UIRI. FROM OUTSIDE" JEFFERSON .. . i.ln S'l win waui-i - - f r MATINEE DAIt'J I) W ORIFFITH'S "SCARLET DAYS" PARI RIDOB AVK. & DAllPHHiffitJ VIOLA nwu w "PLMA8H ai!T MARRIED 4 rf o'A ' -A l. 97 -.fttHf.! i .Ifi'Btf'-i SWtc t Sr-rr VA-iS T,&er
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers