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" 1.30 Vi gal 75 SHELLAC White, per gal. ...$3.00 Orange, per gal. . . 2.75 Linseed Oil 85 ; Pure Turpentine. . .95 B. FRANK SHINN 302 S. 52nd 21it and Seuth Mnent 8006 Bpru lD.0 Deliver! Everywhere OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT 612-614 Chestnut Street 900 Square Feet Frent Roem Geed Light Elevator Service Apply Mr. Dallam 60S Chestnut Street 'A w lifl Jd C5tMX r Juiii S. Wlliea. Sen, lie. jy - t -rrrT" I H rfll I 11 H bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbh 4PtLm ' aaa II ill It It Ibbbbbbbbbbbbb' 'ILLLK i II II I I II ILMiSE TW! rnvne - m mi am IBEST COAL f 4 WE SERVE YOU n?BSOllllTEi?PURE OFFICE SPACE 1 m HERE INVAliPEVlLLE Dorethy, Jarderr Haadlines at Kelth'sOpara Houis Nat FayerrtasV-Pthar Blllt Kfltlsg)MAfvaarfl 1ft enmfifttt mt.ai. 1 comedy and the two-er-raore-a-dny. jwetny Jarden decided the wit ready &ri.y.rtJd-PPra with eapif.nl G. O. But Mary Garden Bald "ny," and the. f?- '?! PP1 callln each ether ''Mary'' and "Det" and MIm Jnrden liter! herself Inte ytUdcvJIle with a let of new towns and a gpeclal song of her own which she'll, sing only "Thuhsdehs and 8ataMehg''nft she announced. And just, te show that possibly Mary Garden w2? yreng.Mlsa Jnrden "uproars", VCavallcrla Rustlcanna" nil by herself, being libretto, translation, score. Inter mission nml ell. ITtut althmivh Ml Garden may have been right In that Miss Jnrden'a voice Is net of Carolina White or Tetratlnnl timbre, still Miss Jnrden' pleased immensely in ''There's t Leng Leng Trail,'.' "Little Grey Heme" nnd "Remember the Rese." And she's reserving the special song ter Thulisdeh andTSatahdch. Rut Miss Jarden Is only one gem in a vaudeville bill that will delight the average variety fari. D. D. II. billed as vaudeville's biggest mystery proves te be a monelofist .who takes ISO of the eldest jokes extant and gets ISO of the , heartiest laughs of the evening. The Vmyste'ry" la why some ene didn't think te pick out jokes as old as D. D. H: did. Francis X. Denegan ami Amelia Al len nre.flB agile a pair of dancers ns have tied themselves into bow knots this season. But Denegan will try te sing. It must be" said for him that his "Mninmy", song is the funniest heard since Al Jolsen started the fad, and Denegan grits his teeth louder than even Ueergie Price. Rut Miss Allen can dance and is a contortionist of parts as well. . ' ' ' Marlen Murray .has a little playlet by Edwin Burke In which she pndcavers te show the fallacy of hate, and after uniting two .life-long enemies, herself falls a prey te .the green-eyed monster. It is n clever skit, brimming with geed lines, In which O. Carrell Clucas does work worthy of the legitimate stage. The Quxy Four harmonize vocally and with banjees and saxnplienc In the most approved jstz manner. Kate Eli Eli eor c. one of America's best women clowns, is back in her old bit of foolish ness, having the reliable Sam Williams as her foil. Marcclle Fallct, a French refugee, with her grcy-balrcd mother at the piano, plays the violin pleasingly. "Tip," a canine acrobat, opens the bill. Chestnut Street Opera Heuse There isn't much use putting "headllncrs" en a vaudeville bill that contains that "At Heme" act by Lulu McCenncll and Grant and Bunk Simpsen, jii spnc et the fact that it has been seen here be be be fere during this season, it scores just as big en a second hearing and the unique personality of Miss McCenneil and the homey, human, everyday at mosphere of the comedy make it accept able again. Helle Storey, .billed for some reason as "America's foremost coloratura so prano," repeats and again makes one wonder at the imagination or disregard for veracity of press agents and impre sarios. Rudlneff again does his smoke pictures and his bird imitations and the Rigolctte Rrethers, witn some clever new stuff nnd still, for some unaccount able reason, letting the Swanson Sisters lntcrfcre with their act, make their' second bow te Philadelphia. Sam White and Eva Puck have an excellent grotesque dancing ami singing act. which makes very ncccptablc tool teol toel ishness and mere foolishness net i se geed net se bad, but net se geed is furnished by Rebby 0!Nclll nd com pany in a singing, dancing and "nut net called "Four yucens mm ": Jeker," and Ueerge Maye, m company, in "the Bridal Sweet." which is just another melange designed te entertain and draw laughs. The show opens with one of the best acts en the Dili, V"B,r,c,s '"""" "'" company. In n well-designed and exc H &nr-ln art with a billiard room fe" a set and with a very clever and acrobatic girl. he does considerably mere thnn merely "feed" the princi pals. Glebe-"Ycs. My Dcnr." n hilarious muBleal production, led the week s bill. Other numbers en the lengthy program included "The Geld Diggers," a musl cal revuette; Blxby nnd Lamer, vocal selectiens1; Biasll and Allen, comedy and songs; Wright and Oayinen. In songs; Dclmere nnd Lee, aerialists. Burnum. in a specialty, nnd Lerey.nnd Hart, vocalists. Allegheny Frem the standpoint 'of real comedy. Creeden nml Davis arc the hit of the bill. Oris nail y marks their skit throughout nnd this, with geed slnglnB. puts it ever te big results. The Jee Heganny Troupe of comedy acrobats give thrills and spl s a-plenty Snd land solidly in I he li It column. Florence InccrseU nnd Jeseph Him kins appear in "Thcjhclk of Araby." Broadway "The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse" created the same sen sations here that it did when shown nt higher prices in the central section of the cltv. Rodelph Valentine and Alice Tcrrv have the leading roles. Several vaudeville nets helped make the pro pre gram'an enjoyable one. Cress Keys The Manjenn Troupe, clever equilibrists, were one of the best features of this week's bill. Other mi predated offerings included alter Fisher and company, in n 0r,I-',cl sketch: the Tellman Review; Tnyler and Francis, comedy skit; Princess China Foe Tev in a review of songs nnd the Exposition Four, expert vocal ists. William Penn Intrigues Incident te the World War nnd many of the dra matic features of the great struggle arc Interestingly interwoven In 'The lour Horsemen of the Apocalypse,' which In the photoplay fentnre. It held the in terest of n large audience. An excel !., vnniipville bill including several novel nctB Is offered in conjunction with the picture. Fays A springtime show overflowing ...i.i. ....( nml mini music is offered. Jehn Jess and company in an Irish charncter sketch ran away with in laugh honors. Grace, and Kdilie Parks unfold a quick romance In "Runglew Leve." Other geed nc s Include he Hervlce U-4, Burt Andrews nnd the Four Pearls. Nixon's Grand Ed Lee Wrethc nnd Owen Mnrtln hove a burlesque comedy act which they term "New." Ander Ander eon nnd Rurt pleased with their scenic comedy. The Celts brothers proved the biggest snot en the bill. Elly, n juve nile juggler, also scored. Anether big snot en the bill was filled by Pelly nnd Oss. Nixon Delly liny, syncopntlen ex nnnent wen headline honors. "The Awkward Am" proved very funn y. In i.Mitii fni-iipr ami Revs were seen an entertaining sketch. Ruddy, Helm and the Lockwood sisters had a unique offering. nckemn, aerlallst, also pleased. A feature photoplay was shown. Keyitone The clever illuHlen "Saw ing n Weman in Twe," offered bv Hor Her ace Gelden, thrilled nnd myatlned the audience. - Other, acts included the r Three Lorden., comedy and thrills; NEW ACTS A0XXjirThe. Qrin4 ppitef Sachn , vf :1ihlf fORRKBT- "TlD-Toe." Fred Blends iiffiSSS. White tfeaceck," by and with Olga- Petrerva. " . OAHRWK - "The O'Brien Olrl." ateram M. CehanmualcM, mmedy. WAiNrr'tty;epp'er Morpece musical .comedy, with Charlette areenweed. i Laurie, Ordway and eerapany, songs; Leveaberg listen, and Near, Ja a dancing revlew and Handera atra Mil lie, eccentrici. ' "THE CIRCLE" ENLISTS OLD FAVORITES' AID Jehn Drew and Mrs. Leslie Car- ter'Head4Cast In Sparkling Maugham Comedy (Si Lyrie During 'the course of the eve ning .which marked the'Openlng here of W. Somerset Maugham's play, "The Circle," ene of the characters was asked If tin were humorous or cynical. and he answered, "Neither; merely. truthful;" According te that definition. "The Circle'" musti be a "truthful play." Whether the author, really intended it as such, or whether he was only having that particular character "fib" a bit, is hardly worthy et discussion. Certainly, thirty years age, the period .when a cer tain notorious elopement between two characters of the play .took, place, "The Circle's" sentiments r.nd climax would have been considered profoundly shock ing. ' Right new, it's mere than likely that the majority of the average audi ence ceme pretty close te sharing "Lady Kltty's' tolerant, romantic interest in the rash act of two young people which exactly paralleled her .own youth. Thirty yeats Is thirty years 1 What ls,much mere pertinent nnd Im portant is the fact that "The Circle" marks the, high-water mark in con struction of this year's theatrical crop here, and introduces two very dear old friends in parts that it seems incredible te think were net fashioned for them. People have become accustomed te dramas with last acts that give the feel ing of a terrible let-down, that fluttcn out into Inconsequential ineptitude. "The Circle" docs Just the Opposite. There are three acts, and at the rise of the curtain en the third act every one says te himself, "This Is the cross road ; everything's been very interest ing and clever, but It all depends en this Inst act whether I would call this a really great play." And that last act, being far and away the best .of all, turns the tide. "The Circle" belongs definitely te the regular line of recent English drama, cleaving rather te the Plncro-cKque than' te the Galsworthy branch, When the' young chap from the Malay penin sula was telling the wife of his host of his love fcr liar and asking her te join him away out there, the ghosts of' a dozen Jenes or Plnere spick- nnd -span young gentlemen who had painted the beauties of ether corners of the glebe appeared, and when Lady Kitty tear fully and slmperingly recalled the joys of her unconventional honeymoon en the Adriatic, the Tanquernys and the Qucxes and their brethren laughed aloud. Rut that's net criticizing Mr. Mau gham. Like the smooth craftsmnn that he is, he set out te show the weak nesses of human nature and man's tend ency te revolve in n circle. He pre sented the first guilty couple, new old and gray, constantly bickering, un happy because of their beautiful memo ries nnd sordid present. Then he dis closed the younger couple, the young gentleman from Malay and the young wife, nnd allowed them te get n full nnd fair view of the wreck that the elder pair had made of their lives. Then, with -a final derisive bow te the audi ence, .Mr. Aiaughain wnisKed the younger folks off together, scornful of convention and example, leaving the elopers of thirty years age secretly much pleased. There Is no disrespect in putting Mr. Mnugham's piny before Mrs. Leslie Carter and Jehn Drew, who played the elder couple. They would probably be the first te admit the justice of it. Rut the fact remains that any weaker play would fade Inte Insignificance be side their art. Drew had less te de, but did that little with a mellow unci delicate sense of the niceties ef1 the character thnt has always endeared him. Mrs. Carter had one unfergetablc scene In the last net when she tried te advise the. younger woman. It was u flash of a great artiste. At till ether times, with restricted chances, she still made Lady Kitty always fascinating, always lifelike, a Reeky Sharpc grown old. painted, blenched and shrilly vi vacious. , ' Around these pardon the word elder folks, wheec characters seemed but biographies of thrmsdves (except, of course, that lnmentable elopement) there was n phalanx of such geed act ing ns is seldom crowded" In one play. Perhaps Mr. Drew and Mrs. Carter found comfort and pleasure In the thought that In the dusk of their drn mntlc days se premising n new gener ation was already springing up te the mnrk. Jehn Halllday, for example, ex cept for momentary lapse Inte forcing In the second act. wen striking nnd domineeringly Humorous ns the young lever; Ernest Lnwferd, in some ways the outstanding figure of the ploy, tin unending source of delight ns the gen tleman who sold he was "truthful, net humorous or cynical." Betty Llnley, as the young wife, rose te her Inter scenes with ability, and Rebert Rendel. except for a monotony of voice (which may have gene excellently with the monotony of his character), was capital. Se, morals quite aside, the nudlencc which remained after the final curtain and forced Mr. Drew1 te make a speech, must have agreed that Mr. Maugham had had his way1. Cynical (or truthful) he may have been, but, above nil, he was logical, terse nnd amusing. He wasn't trvlne te snnnrp mu- i.lreln merely following It around the length of the circumference te show that It was all nllkc. FARM AND GARDEN Buy Direct Frem. Manufacturer n Fer Quality, Service k ileautlful Lawn ami Harden Furniture unique, distinctive deilsni siitfillti inula aid -., .. ....-..... h. Single Pieces Kvery home ran afford your nelectten new at nur Kverythlne you need, Trellises Arher Entrance ggyyaftfej pnti I FREDERICK R. GERRY COMPANY 1835 Market Street, Philadelphia NEW ON'lDMWRENS. I Q t Nerma Talmadge Dees fine Act Ing In W.k Wry-Jen ' Paige In "Prodigal Judjr" Stanley There are Jeet-enough me-. meritary;, flashes of Mtaethjng really geed h "Leve's HedcmpMen,'" Ts'ertria Talmadgc's latest picture, te make, It a crying shame that the picture, at a whole,., is, ee hepetesa.a piece of teifce-' typed, machine-made screen gruei. And what makes ltall the mere as-, travatlng Is the splendid, acting con tributed by. a cast 'wtifch. actually de-4 serves the title, "all-star." Add te these points the fact that the camera man generally covered himself with .dis tinctien,, and the 'director, . Albert l'arkcr, did the best, ha oeuid te auu touch of artistry te the film, 'and you can readily' see that "Leve's Redemp tion" 1b one of these many "ItV pic tures that come te 'town se often. The setting (or most of It) Is, Ja maica, and the scenes ''were actually taken there. At the first, ' there are occasional flashes of Cenrad In the in' traductien of the dlssolute young. Eng lishman, sclen of a noble' family, and eVcn mere, in the figure of old' Captain Hennessey," who is leaving tl.e island, and .regrets, most of, all, the parting with "Ginger," his pretty young housekeeper, "child of a Spanish motherland a dimly remembered English nfViel. " father. "Ginger," with a continual desire te be of use te some one. decides te try te reform "Clifferd Standiah," the young Englishman with n typical . beach comber's beard and n perpetual ntme- spnerc et gin. Hlic succeeds se -wen that he turns ever a new leaf and1 mar ries her. Up te that point the film is far1y interesting, but when Standlsh's family from England arrive with the news thnt he has fallen heir te a for tune, when he takes his bride home te meet his folks, when they turn up their haughty noses at "Ginger" and try te convince her that it is her "place te. give him up why, then It becomes merely "ene of these things," treading n much trampled path, Insincere, piffling. One longs for at least one. of the characters te de one. single thing different from pattern. It becomes mere and mere apparent with every nlcturc hew really bine and slncece nn actress Nerma Talmadgc is, nnd hew wasted she is, tee, en, trifling, hackneyed stories. She has overcome the tendency of her earlier days te over act occasionally, and is new, probably the only actress en the "screen -about whom you never feel the lenst worry as te hew she will crirry a certain situa tion. And she Is Becoming mere at tractive every day. Harrison Ferd is an outstanding figure as the young Englishman. He managed te make him a vivid, real sort of person, even in the enrlier scenes, which parallel a long succession of "beach-comber" parts, back te Guy Rates Pest and beyond. Montagu Love is a great actor lest in an inconspicu ous role. II. Cooper Cliffc is splendid In another small role;, se is, Charles Browne as a monecled "silly ass" type. Stanten Ne SJntter what ether shortcomings a plmirc may have, it is something te Its credit te' produce such a compelling nnd altogether human charncter tudy as Mncyln Arbuckle gives In "The Prodigal Judge." This veteran of both stage and screen hns never seemed se convincingly real as he does In this part et the fine old South ern gentleman who. deserted by his wife, drifts from bad te worse, only, te be redeemed finally by the finding of his little son and the revenge upon the man who wen the wife from him. There arc ether outstanding studies of unusual characters In 'the cast, tee. Ernest Torrence'is little short of re markable in his impersonation of the slhlstcr but faithful Solemon Mnhaffy, who sticks te the Judge as a leech In prosperity but as a friend In adversity and finnlly gives up. his life for his friend for the sake of the little boy. Rebert Millnsch Is also exceptionally fine ns the gaunt nnd faithful "Uncle Reb" who first ndepts the boy and Geerge Rnncreft develops n new touch in n uiimll hit ns Cavendish, the owner nt n raft beat. The Vnughaii Kester novel from which the film is made is tee well known te make n relation of the plot necessary. Aside from this fine chnractcr work, there Is little te recommend the film. It overemphasizes the melodramatic points of the story nnd allows it te fall short of whet should novo been n notably fine production. Jean Paige Is starred but makes nothing outstanding of her role, nor de Enrl Fex, us Rruce Car Car rlngten, or Herace llraham, ns Charles Norten. The photepny Is up te stand ard and the scenes arc wcH set. Arcadia Demestic relations, treated much mere seriously, but In much the some eenernl way as in "Dangerous r .I.....1 ft ft.tn tllA tinni., t ' 'Pov VJUrVC illll'Hll. "H" IX-i uuo.e . 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IUPBRiATj"Te Four. Horsemen , ,ey the Apocalypse," Blasco Ibanez's a Jt.9.nlR,'a by Rex Ingram. ALHAMBRA'r3itt Around the Cor Cer ner, Kannle HurBt story, with JBirld Helmqulst , . GREAT NORtUBRN '"Flower of the North," with Henry B Walt littll, MARKET BTREET "Saturday .it'J&k". c'l B. De Mllle feature. COLONIAL "Foel'a Paradise." Cecil B. De Mllle feature, with Dorethy Dalten and Cenrad Nagel. RIVOLI "Ten Nights In a Bar room," plcturUatlen of old stage melodrama, with Kempten Oreen. BKLUONT AND LOOUHT "Foel's , Paradise," De Mllle feature, fca- turlng Dorethy Dalten. OO MSB Ijr "Foel's Paradise," De Mllle picture. ' CKDitR'-jnne Eyre," with , Mabel Ballln. . flrBlA'D"Foel's Paradise," Cecil B. De Mllle special feature, with Cenrad Nag-el. BIXTY-NtNTU BTREET "Ftfel'B Paradise." Cecil B. De Mllle fea ture, with Dorethy Dalten. LEADER "Peacock Alley," with Mae Murray. erty of Riches." taken from Lcrey Scott's story, "The Mether." The film shows two families, one rich and one peer, nnd parnllels the details of their early innrrled life, showing hew unhappy the first Is be cause of the greed ,for wealth and po sition, nnd hew hnppy the second, de spite their lack of means. The somewhat didactic charncter et the story Is, for the most part, saved by some excellent acting by acast that is almost all-star. .Louise Levely, Irene Rich and Lcatrlce .Tey form a trio of lending ladles hard te beat. The last named, especially, docs fine work. Richard Dlx and Jehn Rowers nre the two' husbands, nnd both realize their fullest opportunities. Victeria Charles Ray still is direct ing his own films, and they still' show It. "R. S. V. P.," his latest. Is an uneven comedy, In which the young star plays the role of an impecunious artist who has trouble trying te procure eve ning clothes. Harry Mjers plays the pnrt of his friend, nnd the two stage their society debut en n fifty-fifty basis, each con tributing half of the outfit. Seme very funny and some ridiculously impossible situations result. Rey Wagner wrote the story nnd Jenn Calhoun makes her debut as the star s lending lady. Regent "Little Eva Ascends," in which Gnrcth Hughes stars, is u case of n really out-of-the-ordinary Idea, possessing something of the whimsy of a Rnrrle or a Gilbert, allowed te go te seed in program film fashion. Geerge D. linker, the director, was evidently net se much nt fnult as was the adapters from a magazine story, It tells of a young chap whose mother heads ti barnstorming company and starts him plnving "Little Eva" In "Uncle Teiii'h Cnbln" nt the age of ten. He is still playing It at sixteen and fiercely resents the fact. The pathetically humorous efforts he makes te get away from his job form the plot. Capitel Anether of Katherine New lin Hurt's stories of out of. doers is found en the screen In "The Man Frem Lest River." which lias all the virility nnd meledrnmntlc intensity of "Snow blind" and "The Branding Iren." Heuse Peters Is well suited, te the leading male role, ami his dignity and reprcHslen of acting go it long way toward making the film the sneecs Jt is. Fritzl Brunette is the heroine nnd Allen Ferrest has a role. 0 utnttieti fares much lower FARES this summer via the Union Pacific Sys tem will in many cases be mere than 25 below these of last year. The war tax is abolished, and the cost of round trip tickets from this city te many western summer vacation re gions is only from 10 te 23 per cent mere than the regular one-way fare. Plan new te visit the wonderlands of the West via the Union Pacific. New descriptive booklets are ready. Write for these covering the regions you wish te visit. They're free, and give you a world of advance information which you will find valuable. Among resort regions reached by the Union Pacific System are the follewing: The Colerado Reckies Recky Mountain Nat'l (lutes) Park Yellowstone National raik Les Angeles, San Francisce, Yosemite fcitland, 1 acema and aealtle Puget Sound and Alaska Reduced fares te California and the Pacific Northwest become effective May 1 5th,- te Colerado, Utah and Yel lowstone, June 1st. All return limits, October 31st. UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM ,; l.i' T I UMUbl VIHMHfl 7mj ' !?Tr HEREIN "WSLLY 0'! Excellent Scenes of .Irleh-Arrier. lean Family Life5 Shew Star M Advantage AMIttTf ihn rerr Cliiderella-ish Rtery of Melly-O, the, washerwoman's. daughter, had stepped nt her marriage te the fabulously wealthy .doctor nnd left us with the natural assumption W her lWeil haenlly ever nftcr (which, of course, 1 only en assump tion), it might hnve passed as n fairly acceptable entertainment; But when it took a fresh breath at' the altar and Immediately plunged the characters Inte the most unbellevnble of melodramas, depleting the attempt of the jilted nd venturess nt revenge, it became silly and just plain balderdash. Mabel Normand almost redeemed the first part of the story. She Is ns naive nnd charming an individual as she ever was in the early days of the nickelodeon nnd, strangest of all, she doesn't seem te grew any elder. She is n very mischievous nnd , alluring daughter In "Melly. O" nnd an equally charming and captivating society girl nftcr her marriage. But even she could net re deem the latter part, where the villain traps her in a great dirigible nnd sails aloft with her nnd her adoring nnd wealthy husband pursues them in nnv airplane and climbs down n ladder nnd drops en the blimp nnd crawls into the cabin just In the nick of time and thrashes the villain ns the wireless set short circuits In a way that no regular wireless set ever did and scIb fire- te the blimp and he and she find n con venient parachute and drop te safely, and n wet and bedraggled, but none the less loving, fend cmbrncc for the final close-up. There nre some geed ehnracter bits In the story. Geerge Nichols is his de pendable self as Melly O's father, stern nnd hnrd nnd n believer In making his daughter stick te her class. Jack Mul hall Isn't quite satisfactory in the hcre'B part, but he does It fairly well, and Jacqueline Legan makes u pretty adventuress, though the scenario writer nnd director make her pnrt ridiculous. Lewell Sherman is the villain, but his name is emitted from the program. He is the same villain he was in "Way Down East" and n dozen ether things. Carl Stockdale docs an interesting bit ns a philosophical silhouette-cutter, and Eugenie Resserer shows her abil ity in several short flashes as the dis tracted mother of a supposedly dying infant. , CASINO'S SHOW GOOD Casine Vnrlcty nnd plenty of geed comedy are the .keynotes of this week's show. "Flashlights of VJ'2'2." In capacity of funmakers there arc RIchy (Shorty) McAllister und Harry Shan Shan eon, who receive nblc support from such favorites ns Lillian Lester, Lulu Moere, Olga Weeds, Glenn Eastman, James Slater nnd Jack Mundy. The new policy of n combination of pictures, vaudeville and burlesnuc is atrein In effect, and' the result is nn evening of excellent entertainment. j TROCADERO'S NEW SHOW Trocadero There arc many Interesting features en this week's program, with "The Rig Teurlttts" as the regular' burlesque show. In tiie cast of thisi melange of fun nnd music nre Raymond Payne, Jee Stanley, Lew Williams, i Zion National Park North Run el Grand Canyon Bryce Canyon, Cedar Breaks Idaho Mount. euntain and Lake Reierti Ranier and Gater Lake Nat'l Parks Fer time tablet, specific fare and booklets "Colerado's Moun tain Playgrounds," "Recky Mountain National Park," "Yellow stone National Park." "California Calls Yeu.'"The Pacific Northwest and Alaska" and "Utah and Idaho Outings," write te F, I.. Feakln. . Uenerai Agent Vnlen l'acifle Hy.tem S36 Commercial Trust Uldr. 18th and Market St.. Telephone Inctut 47S3 Philadelphia, Pa. M u imm hrai repertoire of 'Egyptian and Indian dances and Christie, the Philadelphia piano accordionist. f RAVE8TIE8 AT DU MONT'S ftWiit'a "Stocks and Shocks," In which fuA Is poked in .clever fashion at bucket-shop failures, with Charles Boy Bey den as chief coreedlsn, is the chief fea ture. Emmett Welch has twme new tttllads, which he sings with his ac customed skill, and the olio has sev eral attractive features. . Anether travesty, entitled, "3ve the Surface." hit at the foibles of painters. Jack Lyle presents his "Hnppy Moments" skit. KTICAMSniP ftOTICK BLACK DIAMOND LINES , REGULAR FREIGHT SERVICE TO ROTTERDAM 3 S "EASTERN SOLDIER" (U 3 S.B.) SS "WEST INSK1P" (U JS .S.B.) TO ANTWERP . t . a i.r .t3n?nfcf r, AtlrKt. flen SAILING APRIL SS "EDGEHILL" (U.S.S.B.) ..'.'. SAILING APRIL St Fer Rati and Particular Apply Geyelln & Company. Inc., phna. AB.nt, 108 Seuth Fourth Street, Philadelphia Lembard 6144 Main 7830 COAST TO COAST MARINE DISPATCH LINE TO LOS ANGELES HARBOR SAN FRANCISCO PORTLAND SEATTLE SS Henry S. Greve March 30th F fight Received Daily at Pier 40 Seuth ATLANTIC GULF & PACIFIC SS. CORP. Lembard 2360, 2361 139 S. 3d St. Keystone, Main 5977 KERR Philadelphia te YOKOHAMA, KOBE, CHEMULPO, SHANGHAI, HONG KONG and MANILA SS "TILTHORN" : -April 5 (via Panama Canal) HUDSON SHIPPING CO.,lnc, Agent 615 Lafayette BIdg., Philn. Lembard 5264-S . Main 8186 1 0 ROOSEVELT LINES0 Philadelphia te HAVRE and ANTWERP Dirtct WEST" MARCH 28 ss ss 'KEY GOLDEN GATE" HUDSON SHIPPING CO., Inc. Agent 615 Lafayette Lembard 5264-5 te ENGLAND la SIX DAYS PLYMOUTH HAVRE PARIS I'ARIS pr. 20Mny2t FRANCE ... .May 10 Miiy 31 NEW YORK HAVRE PARIS l.u l.errnlnr I'urU ChjcnKe France l.n Teuralns Herliamheau I I.a Smote . . Apr. 1 .Apr. f .Apr. 6 Mnr 11 June 1.1 Apr. IS Apr. 23 Miiy 3.1 June 20 Apr. 37 June 1 July 3 Mil 0 June 10 July 15 NEW YORK-VIGO sP.i)-HAVRE I.a BonrdennaU Apr. 15 K.MII.F. ('. DF.YKI.IN. ienrral Aemt 1333-37 Walnut St.. rhllndrlpliU Theut. Wnlnut 0331 KERR LINES Sailings Frem Philadelphia FOR HAMBURG SS "CHICKASAW" (U.S.S.B.) Sailing April 3 S S"MORRISTOWN"(U.S.S.B.) Sailing April 22 HUDSON SHIPPING CO. Inc., A sent LAFAYETTE BUILDING PHILADELPHIA, PA. Lembard 5264-5 Main 81C6 EXPORT Transportation Ce., Inc. Oriele Steamship Lines PHILADELPHIA te LONDON, HULL & LEITH SS "QUAKER CITY"... Apr. 6 S S "CAPULIN". Apr. 26 Fer Information and ratr. apply te HUDSON SHIPPING CO. Inc., Acsmtj LAFAYETTE BUILDING PHILADELPHIA, PA. Lembard 5264-5 Main 8166 MALLORY TRANSPORT LINES,.: REGULAR FREIGHT SERVICE Te BARCELONA, GENOA, MARSEILLES. NAPLES and VALENCIA SS "Luxtalile" (USSB), Apr. 10 (Genea and Naphi via New Yerk) Fer Rate and Particular Apply GEVELIH & CO., Ine. Philadelphia Agent 108 S. Fourth St.. PkiU. .embmrJ 6144 Main 7629. ;i'r';'j-? .-tt. y FLORIDA , m,MB'..-mm'& fAJluMfVIIJLE " . - jt l; -u " a -"tfc wmi (fl SataaaeW ZM - - un nan etna1 :' WmWKU ' HfHf""?JfS 18488 t&dte&&l&- uJ rrrfiM Mir. AntOHiebMf ear rW. Cles etf.t fertltfl nsrisui i Prtanrara Av . . SAILING MARCH it , SAILING APRIL 14 SAILING APRIL M LINES APRIL 22 BIdg., Pbila. Main 8166 l'New Yerk te EurepeN De Luxe Service TO PLYMOUTH. BOULOGNE. HAMBURG By New American Flag Steamers Resolute May 2, May 30, June 27 1 reliance may id, June is, July 11 Regular Service TO HAMBURG DIRECT Sailing, every Ihur.d.y. by the popu lar steamer. Mount Clay, Mount Car roll, Mount Clinten, Hanaa, Bayer. Wuerttemberg, with epeelal cabin arid Improved third elaae accommodation., UNITED AMERICAN LINES. lac 10 llr.adtray. N. Y.. or Leeal SltSB. .nip Ateme. f CUNARD AND ANCHOR UM .V. V. te Chcrbeurw mul .Southampton MAL'nF.TAMA Apr. i Apr. 5 May l MMITAMA pr. II May 3 May IS ItKltK.VCAKIA . May SO June SO July II N. v. te l'Jymeuth, Cherbnurc & ll.mbure CAIKIN'A . .. .Apr. 8 May 13 June IT I'ANNONIA . . . Apr. 18 . S'. V. te Queeiialiiwn nnd Liverpool Al.liAMA (new) ...Apr. I CABMANIA . ... Apr. 10 Mny 17 M"kTIIIA (new) . , Apr. 3(1 May 31 June SI I.ACOMA (new) . Miiy Mny 81 June 38 SAMAH1A (nnw) May 10 June 7 July 8 SHlllnif from Hu.tnii. N. y. te l.ondenilfrry and Olnnjevr COI.I'MlliA . . . . Mny 37 June 34 July It Al.liKlllA . . . June 14 July 15 A u. tS N' V tt Iinildiidcrry. Liverpool . Cllascew CAMFROXIA (new) Apr. II AI.IIF.1IIA . .. ,Ai.r. 30 VSHYIUA . May 3 July 0 Sept. tS e.Snlllmr from Heitnn, Cunnrd nml Anrher Struitehlp I.lnr. ra-kunter OOlrr, 13(111 Wnlnut street, rhlla. l'rrleht Offlrr. Ileur.e Hide.. I'hlla. Dixie Steamship Lines PHILADELPHIA te Bristel, Manchester U.S.S.B.SS "EASTERN PILOT" Expected te Sail March 20 U.S.S.B. SS "W00DMANSIE" Expected te Sail Early April AT CONFKKKNCF. KATES Harris. Magill & Ce., Inc. 425 Lafayette Illdp;., Philadelphia l.emlmnl 3120-1 Slain 7SS0 COMMERCIAL w STEAMSHIP LINES " PHILADELPHIA t FENIT, CORK, DUBLIN and BELFAST SS "BALSAM" Aprlj IS Moere and McCennack lac 444-46 Bourse BIdg., Phlla. .Lemb. 0583 Mala 1tf ! AMUWCA UMI eW- WKW VOKK TO aOTTeMOAM WKOBKIO aOTT rtytuetitb, ajeategsji ........ ,,Aas. 1 1 s ,,,.,,,, Aar. a VU rime!, BesKegi Nwrfls N. AsBstertVtaa i. 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