!AW m& SMV' i I ;?!. . v Wj - t ''- , '"fen, K 4 1 'V 1. .1 1 1-4 1 a.- fc 10 MfiN&fe Uuhtic Helmet Bitlb LEDGER COMPANY -, OTHOB II. K. CURTIS. FnimlDiNT 'CfeaflM If T.tMinvion. Vlr President! BMwt q, Martin. Secretary and Treasurer: ,Mw 8j Colllna. John D. Williams. John J. (mirnton, Directors. nntTontAt. hoard: I ;'i..'.-CtBD II. K. Cuius, Chairman ti" AV1D E. SMILEY Editor JOHN C. MAIITIN... Urneral Business Mar. tVubilstied dally at l'L'BI.IO LenoKn Bulldlnf, ' f .Independence Square, Philadelphia liAMTIO WITT, ,... .ITCSa-union uuiiuiii YobK. 30 Msdison Ave. OHT tui l'oro uuimins Mnia innft Fullerton Rulldlnr ago 1302 Tribune Bulldin . ' Vt:wn bureaus! WiMiixnToN ncsiuo, , t ., Cor. Pennsylvania Ave. and "th ',KV Tome Ucsiuo Tho Sun Bulldlnr V , subscription hates "iflfl JSTXniNO fUBIIO I.IDOKR I BCini . ' Mbacrlber in Phlladolphla and surrounding t ....... .ft .... .... a . l. fill n.tit. r ,1'ivnni Mth ma rmo Ql iwcivu w .... ... ATtPKi, oayaoia to the earner. i v. f1?. raau io points ouisiae oi ruimuwif uir. V 111 "' United Btatei. Canada, or United Statu possessions, potlase free, fifty (BO) r k cents nor mont Six (10) dollars per year. IV jayabfe. In advance, L- ao an. xoreii foreign countries on (tl) dollar l? 'Notiob Subscribers wishing- address changed must Rlvs old as well as new ad dress, v HM.I,, 1000 WALMJT KEVSTONE. MAIN JOOO Ky-Aiilrei nil communications to hventno r i Iwbt(o Ledger, Independence Square, Philadelphia. Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PRESS t txcluiivelu entitled to the use for ef , republication of all neics ditpatchei V , credited Io it or not otncnctie creauea ? Mn this paper, and alto the local ncica " ' publitned therein. 4' ' All riaht of rcauhlication of special . r . .-'. . ' " ., Btspaienci Herein are alto rciervea. rhlUdtlphU. Wedneidsy, Mir M. 1920 A FOUR-YEAR PROGRAM FOR PHILADELPHIA Things on which the people expect the new administration to cuneeu- trate Ita attention i 'The Delaware river bridge. A' drydoch -big enough to accommo date the largest ships. Development of the rapid froiult ays. tern. A. convention nail, A ImlMIno- for the Free lAbrarj. An. Art .Museum. Enlargement o the water euppli. Homes to occommodofe tio popula tion. MITTEN ON BUS LINES TT IS not strange to find Mr. Mitten ty -v- acciariDg iu ouo """ - BbiHty of the F. K. x. to unancc serv Ire lmnrovcments nnd in the next If actively opposing the scheme for motor- Iij bus lines on Broad street, xuc troucy V ...... mnvMi fiitfnmnrirflllT to Tiro- muiiau; uu.. -.w - . . , c -tect 'Its own interests and the business on which it must depend :or essential rTBues. tin -i,a Mnnr nnd Council cannot P properly consider the feelings of the P. . T. In tnis instance, ucm-i iy vr. thm miilUtudea who have to ride in tk overcrowded trolleys is imperative. The l vi .... ta tn n illlommn. Rn E1- -. ti...Tu.nnl Tim nuhllc's case is the I'l .in..nf Anil n anlution for I Bora?of the difficulties of trolley riders Em may be found in maepenueni capuai invested in an efficient system ot motor bus lines to carry the north and south bound overflow on Broad street. It is for Mayor Moore and City Council to decide. THE GREAT FLING STATISTICS read at an Engineers' Clnb luncheon yesterday by Joseph H. Stcinmetz, the president. Indicated that in tho first two months of the present year New York city spent i?10,000,000 on the necessities of life and ?14,000,000 on the movies. This means nothing, of course, if you happen to be one of the millions who put the movies as high in the list of necessi ties as bread and butter. Engineers have found that the major part of tho country's steel output is going not into works of permanent im provement, but into motorcars. The answer to this is easy. The day when people walked to the movies is past. They prefer to go in motored state nowadays, as they used to go to the ooera. CROOKS DE LUXE THE most startling thing about some of the crimes of violence that have recently been perpetrated in and about this city Is the evidence of unusual in telligence and studied finesse that the modern crook brings to his daily work. Tbc yegg is no longer a shambling brute in rags. He flits about in a costly automobile. The thief who traDDed a diamond salesman at the Bellevuo-Strntford and got off with $10,000 worth of precious stones re vealed something very much like an artistic sense in his methods and his disguise. The prototype of that par ticular criminal, a man who found that crutches will fool almost anybody who wouldn't be taken In by other dis guises, actually limps nnd hobbles through one of G. K. Chesterton's weirdest tales. It stands to reason that if the newer type of bad man is developing an improved and highly subtle technique, the police will have to follow his example. Outlawry was a profession in some parts of Europe centuries ago, and if the Paris criminal Is unusually re sourceful he has to deal with police quite as clever. Tho police do a highly necessar work. But they are not specially trained. In this country there are schools In which you may take a course in anything from memory train ing and needlework to high finance and the business of empire. If yeggmen continue their easy way to riches, we may yet do the rational thing and es tablish a school for police. THE NEW FINE ARTS SCHOOL A HTONIFICANT sten was taken bv ixtlia hnnril nt trllstppH of tllp ITnl. 1 rerslty of Pennsylvania in the creation of a school of tho fine arts as an ad Jiiuctof the institution. For the present the new branch will bo confined to the KL-hool of architecture, unw included in tbc Towne Scicntiflc School, the department of music and the various indies In the arts now being given In R the coliego and the graduate schools. j. r- The Ignillcanco oi tnis move lies not . l Ju tBB IOCt inni a new nuu njipuriuui ' Luuti nf inatruction win ue aimed io 1 tbeieurrlculum of tho University, but foeaMse it Is a sign that the great in- fHtutlons of learning in our country are 'beflUlling to rcunzu mu iuuvo vuil-u itic .. & nlnii In nun tinhntnn tW sl- 1 StrVS BJUSt J"J "" ov.ii.imu ui ur- JllMUOUi 'If In. of course, necessary that cverv ' ;,' country develop its material resources ' first, not only because creative art has 7,f jopvr been and probably never will be iclftsupportlug, and therefore to exist 4 must bare.jjteip from more remunerative llr.e, IHUMtmi urvBiisn uaiou uiil blKblyv'i I.aAntkitaAr1l ..! '--I- ivtii-ittvmtij . n bl'i" cultivation. At the same time, the artistic development is the 6ne per manent feature of any civilization; the names of the great creative artistic talents of Grecco nro known to every schoolboy, where the names of the cap tains of Industry have been forgotten for centuries. Therefore it is of more than passing significance that the University of Penn sylvania has felt that the timo has corao to furnish tralulng along this highly important line. Its example Is sure to be followed by many of tho other great institutions of learning, with a very decided gain to tho general culture of the country and an added impulse to the artlsticnlly inclined. THE PASSING OF HOWELLS, DEAN OF AMERICAN LETTERS His Death Does Not Deprive the Country of Able Writers Who Will Succeed Him? WnEN1 a boy starts his career In a country newspaper office nnd ends it as the most distinguished American mau of letters he has accomplished something. ouvu wu inu uvkiuuiuk uuu iiic vuu of the career of 'William Dean Howclls, who died yesterday nt the age of eighty three years. When the National Insti tute of Arts and Letters was founded a few years ago he was one of tho few meu who every one admitted should be one of the 200 members, nnd when these 250 men elected fifty of their num ber to tho American Academy of Arts nnd Letters ho was by unanimous con sent made its president. This tribute paid by the men of his own profession was indorsed by tho public. Whatever else Mr. Ilowells was, he was typically American. His flrst book, after a little volume of youthful verse, nas a campaign life of Abraham Lin coln. He was rewarded for this work by appointment as consul to Venice, and while In Italy he produced two vol umes about Italian life. When he re turned to America ho wrote editorials for n year for tbo New York Natlou and then joined the staff of the At lantic Monthly in Boston. After he left Boston in 1S81 he became an editorial contributor to Harper's Magazine nnd remained on its staff, save for a short interval, until the time of his "Heath. Between 1S0O and 1020 he wrote more than seventy books on a wide variety of topics. There were novels, farces, books of travel, reminiscences, essays and poems. And everything that lie wrote was American, in the sense that it was clean nnd decent nnd writ ten with a sense of his responsibility as an entertainer or Instructor of the pub lic. There is hardly a phase of life which he did not touch upon in the sixty years of his active writing career. There is no better American story than "The Blsc of Silas Lapham," a book which is still read although it was written a generation ngo. It is so true a picture of the career of a suc cessful business man that the man who writes the history of the social develop ment of America will have to consult it as one of the original documents. One of the trite remarks about him twenty-five years ago was that he un derstood women better than they under stood themselves. Evidence of its truth Is found in almost every one of his novels. His lightness of touch Is demon strated in the delightful farces which have been acted by amateurs in all parts of the country. His books of travel are informing without being prig gish, and his essays reveal a full and tolerant mind at play with ideas. He has been called a realist and it used to be the fashion to sny that his stories began nowhere and ended no where; that they were mere sections of life without plot. Yet such criticism was superficial. He was trying to de CJ..1. . !. 1 I--! --J .1.- J pict life as It is lived. Therefore he shunned the sensational and the bizarre. He told his story n n straightforward manner, but with n definite knowledge of what he was doing. 'Ibc popularity of his novels with the discriminating proves that he succeeded. " His style was n constant delight, for It was simple and unaffected. He never tried to be smart, and one looks in vain in his books for phrases that aro merely clever. Yet they ore full of npt char acterization and arc distinguished by as discriminating and careful use of English as any other novels in the lan guage. nawthorne was still alive when Ilowells' began his literary career. Ho was a contemporary of a long line of nble writers from Mark Twain, who was a devoted friend, to the youngest novelist who is just beginning to bid for fame. Bret Hartc, S. 'Weir Mitchell, Charles Dudley Warner, Sarah Ornc Jcwett, Frank Stockton, Thomas Bailey Aldrich, Henry James, Jack London, Richard Harding Duvls, Frank Norris and a score of others pre ceded him to what he called "tho un discovered country." One is tempted to speculation about which of the young men now writing will in sixty years hold the place which he now vacates, n task as profitless, however, as it would have been for one to indulge in the same kind of specula tion after the death of Hawthorne in 1S04. AVe have out in West Chester in the person of Joseph Hcrgesheimer a suc cessful novelist with as definite a theory of fiction ns that which Ilowells in dorsed. But Hcrgesheimer lacks the broad human sympathy of Howclls. Ernest Poole, of New York, has writ ten three notable novels filled with the kind of appreciation of social problems which illuminates the novels of tho man who has Just died. Irvln S. Cobb has written short stories tho equal of any In the language, but as a novelist he Is not yet In tho Howclls class. Max well Struthers Burt has demonstrated a skill In the psychological tale which leads one to expect much from him, nnd A. Lawrence Dudley, of this city, whoso first novel, "Sprigglcs," discloses con siderable skill bb a spinner of tales. may develop into tho skilled interpreter of life. And no one can tell what tho future holds for F. Scott Fitzgerald, a Princeton grailuate only twenty-three years old, who has already written n novel and several short stories depleting contemporary youth In action with the skill which comes only from first-hand knowledge. If as ho grows older he can interpret life of more mature per sons as well he will deserve the kind of fame that has como to Ilowells. So tho list might bo extended. All of which indicates that American literature at this time is neither barren nor unpromising. Only those with their eyes closed to the facts will re gret the good old times, of American letters. 3re is more expert knowl edge and ,re. bralng.in the wrUin;,pf UievpmtiUH,aRr.trJftI of EVENING PUBLIC demanding good work than in tbc days when the New England school domi nated the country. Half a dozen novels that will live aro produced every year, besides tbc hnlf dozen "best sellers" that flourish like mushrooms for a few months and then disappear. And when a high-priced serious book like "The Education is Henry Adams" is demand ed by 20,000 buyers one is forced to re spect the present taste of tbc public. AN ECHO OF TRUMPETS fTlHE words and tone of the confiden- tlal address delivered by "President Wilson to tho officers of the Atlantic fleet in August, 1017, and mado publie yesterday, will carry the minds of many Americans back to the great and al most unbelievable days when a man, fired by a desire for human betterment and expressing with the clarity of genius purposes as noble ns any ever attempted in tho modern world, seemed to bo actually speaking what was in the heart of every plain man. The civilized peoples of tho world were actually united then. We in the United States, confronted by new dan gers, faced by the need for sacrifice nnd the certainty of loss and sorrow, ad vancing to new nnd strange responsi bilities, were of one mind. There was nothing mean or calculating in our thoughts. The eyes of the nation were clcnred and certainly we went far toward the heights. Obsessions that hold men's minds in the dust were cast aside. They were bravo days. Mr. Wilson's address to the naval men was a brave address. Looking backward with a sudden vivid memory of the vanished mood, it is almost necessary to wonder whether we nrc tho same people that wo were then. Mr. Bryan was safe In oblivion. The presidential campaign was almost three years away. The chronlclo of Europe's martyrdom and the spectacle of divine courngo revealed daily iu a thousand places had reminded America of the higher duties of civilization and the challenging meanings of its own ancient tradition. We were n free peo-plc-rfrec of demagogues and politicians, free of doubts, free of prejudices and fear. The appalling game of party maneuvering had not begun. When the President said that he was willing to sacrifice half the -navy to bring tho war to a quick and merciful end ho spoke to men who were ready to sacrifice themselves without question. The war was ended. And where nrc wo now? The victoryx cost a great deal and people who once regarded it as the most important thing In the world, as something more important than life, nrc content to throw it away. Much of what is fine nnd rare in the American character seems suddenly to have been obscured at the Instant when the strain ended. A force that held the people together was dissipated. The President himself lost contact with the multi tudes whose strength had been his. And life here and abroad was resumed as n Berics of antagonisms. v As the most dramatic reminder of the beliefs nnd hopes of 1017 there is the solitary man in the White Ilotixo. Somehow he lost control of the stupendous forces that ho tried to tamo and dfrect. There are times when the President talks like one who has looked too long and too eagerly at a dazzling light to see his way clearly. Whatever bitterness and palit for him nrc Involved In his growing isolation will be better understood In the future than it can be understood now. But It begins to appear that even the man who could speak for the spirit of America has experienced something of the change that has -ilen on the rest of the country. Certainly the chnllcnge to the Democratic party sounds little llko the address to the officers of the Atlantic fleet. The President who de sires only to have his own will nnd way with the war settlements is not the President who once was proud to do tho will of his countrymen. The growing energy of the attacks on Mr. Wilson, the active antagonism of men of all parties, must seen to him like a poor reward for efforts that almost cost him Lhis life. But tho Hoovers and tho Tafts now reveal a for better under standing of America than Mr. Wilson. For once Mr. Bryan is right. The President, broken in health, has been denied the information r essential to sound judgment and safe leadership. Yet the future will honor Mr. Wilson for his great intentions. A dispntch from San Juan, Porto Rico, bays tho steamship Northern Pa cific, with General Pershing aboard. is stuck in the mud. To balance this dpws item there should be another set ting forth that the Southern Pacific with Hi Johnson aboard is umilarly circumstanced. "Obregon reports the murder of fifteen ccneinls." Headline. This is regrettable, but the visible supply of .Mexican generals never seems to ic crease. It ought to be easy for Carranza to disguise himself. All he has to do is to shave. Nobody knows what is hidden behind his whiskers. "He desires to destroy nil if he runnot get all." so Mr. Toft of Mr. Wlli-on. .Mr. Taft has tho gift of terse characterization. Students of political conditions throughout the state declare that tho line-up looks ns though it were made with a jig-saw. When the country at large realizes that every forest fire is a national calamity forest fires may grow less fre quent. One can't learn everything at the circus. It takes politics to teach that a mule is as fond of peanuts as is an ele phant. Onl by gross negligence on the part of the revolutionists was Car ranza enabled to escape the net. "You never enn tell." Russia, the first country to drop out of tho war, is one of the last to quit fighting. t Brewery workers arc on strike in Hcrlin. Well, that's one kind of labor trouble we have got rid of. Every time the Presii cit speaks out in meeting the politicians get a new view of the third-term bogey. There is strong suspicion that the retirement of Villa was less a capitula tion than a dicker. If we could get sugar out of the coin wo raise we could afford to laugh at the profiteer. Somebody should have wired him: "Dear David, Don't Write." Happy hciman who bns a child to LEDGEPKILADELPHIA WEDNESDAY,- MAY ;12r-l920W RIVER EXCURSIONS Why Not Have the City Operate One? Delay at the atate Prlntery Odd Facts About the Food Department By GEORGE NOX McCAIN JAMES L. PENNYPACKElt, of the Christopher Sower Co., has, Jn con nection with our wonderful panoramic exhibit of Industry along tho Delaware, an idea which links in with tho new idea of advertising Philadelphia. The Mayor nnd Director Sproule, of the Department of Whnrtcs. Docks and Ferries, have had tho matter before them. ".My thought is." said Mr. Penny packer, "that it yould pay tho city, purely ns an advertisement, to place upon the Dclnwnre a comfortable steamer which should make two trips every day through the open season, morning nnd afternoon, at stated hours, along the rhcr. "It could start, say, from Arch street, running up beyond Richmond, there turning and running down perhaps to Chester, and,thenoo back to the starr ing paint. "The start nnd finish should be nt stated hours, so that visitors to the city could plan to make the trip knowing they could catch ccrtajn trains to At lantic City, New York or elsewhere. An excursion ticket might be sold at fifty cents or $1. "Accompanying each trip nn intelli gent guide with megaphone should direct attention to every point of In tel est along the route. "Attention to this attraction should be invited by suitable advertising at tho hotels, railway stations, public places and In tho daily newspapers. "I never visit New Orleans," said Sir. Pennypacker, "without taking what is known there ns the river trip. There are two dally nlong the twenty miles of riverfront. Philadelphia, with all Its historical associations and points of interest nnd wonderful industrial developments nloug the Delaware, pre sents to my mind a rare opportunity for such an enterprise." Mr. Pennypacker Is right. Why not see Philadelphia by water? FB. NEILSON, ot the Merchants' Shipbuilding Corporation, ntllar riman, tells me that the private orders on their books for the construction of ships will carry them for two years to come. The shins turned out nt Harriman alone, something llko forty, I believe, are carrying the Stars and Stripes on cwr.v ocian of the world. I he concern keens n record of the performance nnd whereabouts of everj vessel launched from Its ways. They arc in the Malacca straits and tho Java sea. the Black sea, the Indian ocean, the Mediterranean and Carib bean seas nnd on the cast coast of Afrlcn. Philadelphia nnd Harriman is Phila delphia is advertising the United States of America todiiy ns no other tit has ever done. She is making the world acquainted with the colors in our Hag. The pre-war saving that tho Amer ican tourist can find the flag of every natlou except that of the United States In foreign and out-of-the-way ports that ho visits is antiquated now. In fact, it's a "dead" one. Our Aug is on every sea. S MULL'S Legislative Hand Book for 1010 is just coming from the state printer-. It should have been out months ago. Herman P. Miller, Senate librarian, compiler of this most admirable histori cal, biographical and statistical work, is not, it should be undeistood, respon sible for this delay. In spite of the greatness of this task, which requires the most painstaking ac curacy, the manuscript goes out from Mr. Miller's office invariably on time. While in the past there have been re current nnd well-founded -complaints about tho procrastination of the state printer, In the present Instance there is very good reason, state officials in form me, for the delay that has marked the appearance of nearly every depart mental document for the last year. The present contract for the state's printing was mado at a time when the work could be done for much less than at present. Then there is the scarcitv of labor the difficulty of tho paper situation nnd nil the multitudinous drawbacks com mon to publishers everywhere, which have comuincu to embarrass the situa tlon. These conditions did not prevail in past years. Then delays were due largely to tho desire of tho contractor to make the most out of -his contract with the least help and greatest amount of "fat com position." SOME of the departments at Harris burg, under stress of these condi tions, have introduced the very excel lent idea of issuing summaries in pam phlet form 8f the reports for 1010 that nrc nwalting publication. Dr. Fred Rasmusscn, in a preface to one of these diminutlvo publications, inu report oi tJircctor oi roods 1 uust, says: "Owing to tho fact that the report of the Department of Agriculture for tin. enr 1010, containing the reports of the several oureaus ot tuo department, will not be ready for distribution for some time, the director of the bureau has wisely concluded to furnish the head of the department with the following pre liminary report, and in order that the Information it contains may have as speedy nnd wide circulation as possible, its publication ns a bulletin of the de partment is authorized." What Do You Knoiv? QUIZ 1. What Is mordant? 2. In which direction must a Moham medan mosque face and why? 3. What Is a monsoon? 4. What type of ahlp waH the famous American war vessel the Consti tution? B. Who was tho last klnpr of Poland? C. Does It require a higher or lower temperature for water to boll nt a high altitude than at sea level7 7. Who was Delacroix? 8. When did tho Holy Roman Empire cease to oxlst? 9. What Is osier? 10. What Is tonsure? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1 A nerlodlc sentence Is one so con structcd that the suspense Is held until tho end 2. Tho motto of Delglum Is "Dftu fait la force" tuod elves tne strength). 3. The word wyburltq Is derived from Sybarls, un ancient Greek city In suutnern iiuiy nuieu iur us luxury, A sybarite Is a luxurious and ef. femlnate nerson. 4. A sea elephant Is a very large seal with n large proboscis. C. Tho Heptuaglnt Is the Greek version of tne uiu -reaiaincni. C. Tho QrceU Church calendar la thir teen days behind tho Gregorian, in use in tho United States and most civilized Christian countries. 7. Tho word slgnor should bo pro nounced as though it were Bpelted "seenyor," with the accent on the Inst syllable. 8, Serlculturo is silk-worm breeding, the production of raw silk. 0. The three principal or Capltollne gods of Rome wrro Jupiter, Juno -, inn--VA in flmalt UJIU TM t IS B "MW Jired blue with ld it is um cobalt, -TVuen fK s r. 10 T- ri rf '' n- .vKtjibW r HOW DOES IT STRIKE YOU? By KELLAMY A FRENCH duchess of Clermont- il Touucrre is scolding us for not taking eating seriously enough. "The necessity for eating Bccms to have become for Americans," she says, "n sort of monotonous nnd obligatory annoyance, nnd they nre bending nil endeavors toward simplifying tho per formance." The result of lack of attention to eating is, she says, that our food is not good. An American takes less time for his whole luncheon, she declares, than a Frenchman would merely to scan the wine list. Perhaps it is the lack of the wine list that io the matter. It is hard to make n ceremonial of a meal that is washed down with cold water. . , Perhaps it is our Puritanism. That is the scapegoat for most of our sins against tho nrt of living. If we haven't much of a literature it's because of our Puritanism, the critics tell. If our chickens are scrawny, as the duchess says, we arc sure there is a Freudian explanation for it. Somo Puritanic repression In us Is observed by fowls In the barnyard and imitnted from us. Vous ne savez pas profitcr de la vie, the French say of us you don't know how to profit by life. Neither do our chickens, scrawny things, emerging always from cold storage. q q q T)ERHAPS it is our colonialism, an- t other of our faults. Go to London and experience the nnccstor of our cooking nnd be prop crlv abashed. Descended from such a stock, you can only wonder how our food Is ns good ns It is. Puritan, too. Prnhnblv some seventeenth century determination to mortify the flesh is probably back of it all. When an American boltR n club sandwich in six bites it Is probably be cause his ancestors sang psalms, wore queer hats and resolved never to make gods ot tlicir stomaciis. 1 I OUR literature is like our chickens, a little scrnwny in the neck. You realize this when ypu read nbout It In tho "American Literary Supple ment" of the London Nation. This supplement is not inspired by "n certain condescension in foreigners," once observed. The foreigners try to take us quite seriously. They throw open their pages to our own writers nnd critics to tell about our books and authors. And the result is that we look very much like a man bolting a club sand wich nnd calling it a meal. Once a boastful people, we are re EITH'S I EVELYN NESBIT & CO. In a rw Bong Revue "Creole Fashion Plate" riMMneator of Sonirs and Fmblnna 'ANNA CHANDLER, MME. RtALTO. & CO. MUll-N and FRANCIS, JIAPJlV IIOLMAN i CO.. Othsrs. VINTIt AND A.HCJT PTItEKTB Mats. Mon., Wed. & Bat, 3:1B. Egs., 8:15 POS1TIVELT LAST WEEK OF THE REVIVAL OF THE OLD-TIME MINSTRELS "Academy of music Thuwday. May 13,8 P.M. "Pussyfoot" Johnson Auspices Anti-Snloon Lcaguo a DANCING LESSONS fiC f A Teacher for Each Pupil $J CORT1SSOZ fl SCHOOL 1120 Ckestoot ' J(yj Must I1M MADAMS CECILI3 DE IIQRVATH. Pianists Assiet.il by. Miss Mildred Faas, Soprano rrloyyventnr, May H at HUB P. M. tljtib 12. i Bslletuj-Mratrord t ! .'! -WlF'. W. K,rn mwimrs EHMHTJ.WlCMmSaS uavJia WK COUNTING THEIR CHICKENS .1 V ' .' . rf ? .5 ' A Americans Too Much in a Hurry to Mahe Eating a Fine Art, Say a French Woman vealed as n mostf self-deprecatory peo ple, w c arc like country folk unex pectedly invited into fashionable urban society which tries to make us feel at home. q q j POETRY? An Irishman now patrl atcd in America writes that wo have four poets "whose name sounds a chal lenge." It appears that Whitman let us loose in poetry. It is as good as the red banana which tho French duchess found here nnd which Isn't American or U. S. Ameri can at nil. Literature generally? An American critic quotes with ap proval the remark that its typical qual ity Is that of "a refined essay in the Atlantic Monthly, by Emerson, so to spenk, out of Charles Lamb, tho sort of thing one might look to bo done by an advanced English curate." "The American writer," says an other," is the victim, ill or convales cent, of what Mr. Santayana has called the. 'genteel tradition.' " Into this tradition go Puritanism and Colonialism. "The literature of the country is In a state," writes another, "bordering on paralysis." Admitted into tho family of nations, we have tho terrible self-consciousness of a rather poor relation. We ought to go into Mr. Wilson's league to get over our international bash fulness. PHILADELPHIA-a FOREMOST THEATHES FORREST Last 4 Nights POPULAR MAT. TODAY Positively Last Week WORLD'S GREATEST SHOW I SPECIAL EXTRA MATINEE FRIDAY, MAY 14. AT 2:15 nnNEFix or The Salvation Army ZIEGFELD FOLLIES KNTIRn COMPANY AND PRODUCTION Courtesy F. Zlegfeld. Jr. & Forrest Theatre Prices Same as Wed. & Sat Mate. tl to 13 NEXT WEEK SI3AT3 TOMORROW New York's Big Sensation IRELAND A NATION PHOTOPLAY TAKEN ON IRISH SOIL nneclsl features. Including Urrnard Dsly and his Irish payers In "Tho Wlihlnj Well." .,, . , -Twice Dally, 2:15 and 8:15 Nights SBo to tl.BQ. Dally Mats. 2Bo to TSo R--. J 1 nt- A Ta Mats. Today J-JIUCIU " ' & Saturday bdats $1-50 at Pop. Mat. Today A. L. ERLANGER"18 pkesentinci - CHAUNCEY Olcott IN "MACUSHLA" Olcott Sings 4 New Songs NEXT week seats tomorrow LOU TELLEGEN Under His Own Manasement IN A NIIW 8-ACT rOMHDY "SPEAK OF-THE DEVIL" By AUGUSTUS THOMAS arriCK. Mats. Today & Sat. at 2:20 Popular Mat. Today, 25c to $1 THIT TAMOUSMUtilAU Bring the Kiddies! r 1TUNN1ER THAN A CIRCUS spirits Return? Tnu?i T- v' rid r-. .i t i ...t..i i i S?i I mm V : BIT. VHiAk I HCTW I ""'V"" J""1 """ ""-. i rr1 L'''"- lm x NTiVf WONDER SHOlVOFy I I . V L L IHE Dq - (- -- '-. i sj ,- i 1W '-tn The President's latest declaration concerning the treaty "without reserva tions will entirely lose its point unless the Republicans aro careless enough to nominate a man as irreconcilable as himself. i Anyhow, there will be a "moral victory" for all of the defeated candi dates. Open diplomacy seems to have been held up at the Mexican border. PHILADELPHIA THEATRICAL MANAGERS have always advocated clean adver tising, and have avoided misrepre sentation and deceiving the public It is therefore tho cause of a mis statement of facts by the promoters of a picture now showing in this city that we announce that MARYPICKFORDin POLLYANNA is now, and has for tho unst tbreo months, been booked TO APPEAR AT THE STRAND THEATRE' DURING THE WEEK OF MAY 81, 1920 And will also be seen at NINE OTHER THEATRES IN PHILADELPHIA during that weekto bo followed by the usual presentation at numer- ous other picture houses. MAYOR MOORB may have to Si CONSULT A OU1JA BOARD ' to ascertain HOW MUCH MONET the city WILL HAVB TO PAT out Jn MANDAMUSES this year BUT NOBODT has to ask OUIJA If IS THE BEST film that haa EVEH DEEN SEEN In this City. THE GREAT BIG famous METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE Is none too LARGE FOR THE CROWDS which ore CLAMORING TO SEE the Inimitable MARY PICKFORD in the ' BEST ACTING of .her YOUNG LIFE! ... Matlnoes. 2.30 2Co Evenings, 7 and 9 2Eo and GOo BOXES RESERVED at I10S Chestnut Street or Metropolitan Opera House Poplar 600 PHONES Park 860 40 Symphony Orchestra 40 EXCLUSIVE PRESENT " SHOWING OF POLLY ANNA IN PHILADELPHIA. Plectrum Symphony ORCHESTRA First concert, assisted by mem- MAY 13 AT 8:la WITHER. SPOON HALL Dors ot x-iiiiaueipnia urcneotra. Tickets on Sale. Wltherspoon Hall orpheum M-sara. "plST little women MAY IT "CHEAT1NO CHEATERS" Academy of Music, TussEvr., May 18, 8 15 BAHMAN PESTONJLWADIA Th0 Pro,p,unDr.ci.w.ri!S:,'Jr;eo'o,,h,'t " "LIFE AFTER ,tEATH" 3ats, BOo to tar.Hepp.'s. Ilia Chsst.'tno taj PEOPLESlir V "V"-' HfWW 'ffWm Market, If l Dl. IU. ."A-of&A1;;" p. m. IJXUI.I , CECI B. De MULE'S rilVOi CH1VT liTOU PAnAxiot'..'r-"AhTcrtAPT McTuna "WHY CHANGE YOUR WIFE?M, cast, iieaoecu iy, liiunAB MUHJIIAN, OLOnrA'SWANBON and IlEttC DAN1EL3 D A L A C V K i?U MArtKF.T BTnrirjT Ju 10 A. M...12. 2. 3M3,'Ol4S,)T:4BO:S0 P. M. ' MARSHALL NEILAN Prfucnls First of His Own Productions "THE RIVER'S END" Dy JAMB3 QLIVEP. CURWOOD ARCADIA CHESTNUT IEtX)W 10TH 10 A. M., 12,2, 3t4S,'0l4S, 7:48, 0:30 P. U. BERT LYTELL In Initial Presentation ot Metro's "THE RIGHT OF WAY" From Novel by Blr Olltxrt Parker V I C T O R I A " Market. Btreet Abov Ninth 0 A. M. to 11:18 p. A OOLDWYN FIRST SHOWING R1X BEACH'S NEW PRODUCTION "THE SILVER HORDE" UNUSUAL AND POWERFUL DRAMA f A P I T O T V 724 MARKET' 8TREET Ij 10 A. M.. 12, 2, 0:45, 6:45, 7:4B, 0:30 p. . EARLE WILLIAMS capt oWIFP R E, G E N T MAJIKET ST. Del. 17TII O lK A. M. to 11:15 P. M. D. W. GRIFFITH'S 'S'Ujatew QUESTION" MARKET STREET ,, AT JUNIPER1 11 A.M. to 11 P.M. CONTINUOUS VAUDEVILLE A Night in a Police Station "THE FINANCIERS"! Clark s V.rdl: Others CROSS KEYS 60TU AND MAiuatr "THE NIGHT VlERK' " BROADWAY & J.y.-jj. "SWEET SIXTEEN" gggg v.r.io,ny "Huckleberry Finn" ALLEGHENY fhankford av. M-Lf-t-ncliI Bel. ALLEGHENY FRITZI SCHEFF & ' Clara Kimball Young "F PHILADF.LPHLVS LEADINO THEATRES DIRECTION LEE as J. J. SHUBERT "A TRIUMPH" -pe. GRACE GEORGE in "The Ruined Lady" By Frances .Nordstrom "MAKES' YOU ROAR WITH LAUGHTER." nECOm THE PLAY IB DRIMMTNO OVER 'WITH BRIGHT, SNAPPY, DIALOGUE AND FUNNY SITUATIONS." INCjUUlER. "MISS GEORGE .IDEAL, AS THE PI QUANT. FASCINTTING ANN RAPIER LIKE PLAY OF EPIGRAMS LINES THAT FLASH AND SPARKLE." LEDGER. "A PETTICOATED BERNARD SHAW." NORTH AMERICAN. "MISS GEORGE IS NATURAL. DROLL AND DELICIOUS CLEVER. ENTERTAIN. INO AND AMUS1NO P LAY BRIOIIT LINES AND WITTY SAYINGS GLOWS AND SPARKLES." BULLETIN. "KEENLY WRITTEN AND PLAYED TO THE LAST TOUCH BY MISS GEORGE," EVENING LEDGER. AnrobM.R,T Evgs. at 8:20 D E L P HlFlrst $1 Mat. Tomor. LYRIC Bvoa- illMV ATo.i! 11.00 MAT. TODAY AT 8:15 FINAL MAT. flAT. LAST 4 'NIGHTS & IDEAL ENTERTAINMENT MAGIC MELODY The THE OPERETTA MAGNIFICENT .with CHARLES PURCELL Julia Dean. Tom McNaushton. Uertee Beaumonte. Emma Hale and 40 Datillnt Darlings BEG. MON. eEATfl TOUOn- MAIL ORDERS NOW OCXVER MOROSCO Presents WILLIAM COURTENAY, CIVILIAN CLOTHES WITH A TYPICAL MOROSCO CAST BAM SHURFRTVENINOS AT 815 8. vriVDEJS.1 FIRST MAT. TODAY JOHN HENRY MEARS Announces Ttw Avratir-ntant lttt ILf -!- flmt " THE CENTURY MIDNIGHT WHinL IS A NOVELTY A3 RARE AS A CHAM PAGNE COCKTAIL AND EVERY BITAS INVIGORATINO TO THE SEEKER AFTER PERPETUAL YOUTH. FEMALE PUL CHRITUDE BLOSSOMS FORTH IN TUB CENTURY MDNIGHT WHIRL. AND JUS TIFIES ALL THE OOOD TIUNGS THAT HAVE BEEN SAID ABOUT TUB MIL LIONAIRES' CHORUS." BULLETIN. THPTNI IT C,T OPERA I EvenlW V-nCOJlNVJl OI, jIOU8Ej ( AtSllB Pop. Mat. Today $& $1.00 OLIVER MOROSCO Presents, CHARLOTTE GREENWOOD In tha new mualcal camedy "Linger Longer Letty Tents at 19th St & Hunting Park Ave. CIRCUS NOW CIRCUS NOW nrrnnn IV1K) ... tDAC3MMa I LmCLJ CSOBSJEBUlKltS iffiiis mmsxs&m IMWiigSEIMEKn mmi BILSIP&M sl .vraeaiaiiOTGcsMiS -iytf Doors Open ut 1 and T P, M. 2OT EOCSMtf Performance IBcsIn at S and t 8 P. M. Ona .'Ticket' Admits to AU Children Under, 11 Years at MOT jwauooa rntn .,t Downtown Ticket Salo .for, ,"eBvoW NPW Beau s ana amuwiprt, E"-r" OPEN .AT ttlMBlSU XinvB. iRIh am wm g mmS35r tjtlhejij not ipmW!-lJforariUW laice'Wsaiwyie'etrqiw. ,wj -i", T"Kf ". ,.A '.u4. '"JU'O'". "Tl. !, ;?-V, Jf, ?'.' - 4JE - i J a ' '. f r . r-