EVENING LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1915? 11 ti ! ! fl Uritger FCBUiQ LEDGER COMPANY CTKUS H. K. CURTIS, I'.nlDtxT. I M. LWHMtoo. Tic President John C. Martin. ary an4 Treaaurart rnlllp B. Collins, John B. urociora. EDITORIAL BOARDS frefia W. It Hiram. fTfealrman. t. M. WHALKT...., Ejecutlre Editor C MARTIN General I)ulnm Manager FfMlchol dally at rtsuo Lrrwia, Dulldlrur, lndeeendenc Square, Philadelphia. Cwriu ,,.,. Broad and Cheetnut Streets crtt., i-rf-Ufon uuuainir ........... .....1IU-A. Metropolitan Tower .... ,. M8 Pord Ilulldlnc . -400 Ulobo Democrat Rutldlns , , 1202 Trlnuno Ilullillnr ......... Waterloo Place, rail Mall, S. W. NEWS BUREAUS) H Hinim.... ...The Pott nulldlna1 It twt Dnug ..,...,.,. The Timn nulldlnc :um SKiaaio .... uo Krieancneiraeea nam Bcaun 2 Pall Mall Bait. 8. W. wait IttaiD S3 Hue ImmI 1 a rand SURSCRIPTION TERMS lkk Mprlw. niltt fWf f Tl mH nrftatftaM KUMk of Philadelphia, except where foretrn poetess rvatilred, Diilt omit, one month, twentr-flvecentej iht Oku, one rear, threw dollars. All nail eub- ertatlona payable In advance. ' Noruja subacrlbers wlthlnr addreea chanced muet lr aM aa well aa new addreea. nx. mm VALNirr KETSTONK. MAIN IM9 XT AiArtti all communication to Kltn(ng Ltiffer, fnrfestndenc Square, Philadelphia. at tB rHU.iDn.rnn ronrornci is icons CUII Mali, Minn THE AVERAdB NET PAID DAILY CIRCULA TION Or T1ID EVENINO LEDGER FOR AUaUBT WAS SS.AIB. mtAarBLFHU. MOTOAT. SEPTEMBER 27. IMS. tapptne U not an anchorite; it lovea to dis play Htelf among men. TRIPLE BLOW TO TRADE 1n,iN.A.xuxi win.is. is connaont mat mo O Democracy will discover thot It mado I. (rrievoua mlstako when It enacted the sea Bern's law and that it will amend It this Winter. The act haa not yet Bono Into effect, fcut it has already lost to a slnslo Seattlo firm a contract for $1,200,000 worth of lumber becauso more favorable conditions prevail In British Columbia than will prevail at Seattlo for the noxt year. The Domocrats are human and havo somo intelligence. They cannot porslst In a policy f evident folly. But tho seamen's law Is root the bnly blow delivered to American trade. Senator Weeks Includes the tariff law and the abandonment of tho open-door pol icy In China In his trlplo Indictment of tho Democratic Congress. Even thouch theso acts, should bo repealed at once It will tako ryaars for tho country to get Its trado whero n wouia navo neon Dut ror tneso blunders. GAS IS HOLDING ITS OWN '.ffJpiITHEN Thomas A. Edison announced In TYS( September, 1878, that ho could produce Miectrlclty for a largo number of lights by Using a dynamo there was a panic among holders of chares of gas companies In Lon don. They thought that gas was to bo mperseded by the new light. But they ttTuessed wrong, as the owners of an old do- f.,Ylce usually guess wrong when a new lnven , Hon In their lino Is made. Moro gas will ,k1 V used In tho year 1915 than In any other mc since Its general adoption as an lllu-MWiJn- the first half of tho last century. rtclty. Instead of displacing irns. has ftatrurred the gas producers to cheapening (their product and to Inventing moro eco ittomtca!, artistic and convenient methods of fusing It for lighting, and has led them to prfect apparatus for tho use of gas for ! producing heat and power. Thero ore prob jably moro houses in Philadelphia with fa iirititlea for both gas and electric light than Were lighted by gas alone In 1878. And no (up-to-date kitchen Is without a gas range iBr cooking and a gas heater for hot water. Gas has been generally used In the United States for less than 100 years. The first patent on Its manufacture was taken out In 1113, and tho' Inventors lighted some New England cotton mills by the new Illumlnant. 7t was not until 1817 that the practicability erf gas for general lighting was recognized, when Baltimore began to use It. Its uso for street lighting dates from 1834. when j Hew Tork set up some gas lamps. Philadel phia followed the example of New Tork In Chicago, which was then a small com- r;Munlty, had gas lamps In 1840, and Clncln- j.'emt, lighted Its public places with gas In 1M1, Electricity has not been any more suc- sajBsful In crowding gas from tho streets rh from the houses. The two forms of fhtlng are still competing for popular -vor. Tho observance of Gas Week, which begins today by the gas companies of tho nlted States, Is a movi) In the campaign i, noia ail tno territory now occuplod and "win mere. r RE IS THE NEXT ROCKEFELLER? 1IXTT years ago yesterday John D. Rocke feller aeoepted a Job as bookkeerjer. TTI ages amounted to 50 for the few days i than three months that ended on Jan. I. Where Is the J3.B0 a week bookkeener to. lay who fa planning to be the John D, teekefeHer of 1975 T Bookkeeper do not orlc for so little nowadays. Office boys get ,or than Rockefeller received. Where, then, tm omce boy who has decided that he will woom a great commercial giant and will rota all his time and all his energies to ,.ftat andT The opportunities are as great ww M they were 80 years ago. Mr. Rocke. Bar aay that they are more numerous and ; to promising. The youth who perceives v i apaertunlty and embraces It will get ., Aaa he may aa well be the one who . '.aatsaflT these lines as any one else. Vt ,. v SpiCER "ILLEGAL" STEEL TRUST Nj) rarmation or a new steel company 1m eomblnatlon of a trroun of tmi.. y-lj aarriranlw would be a natural out- tlM activity In the steel trad Jar the war. The demand for the the steel mills Is so great that almost any price they chooi Mm nations In need. Profit at- there fa a large amount king Investment. The new MM to he forming will be flh ordinary laws of eco in operation. Man m on ta'make Moy and they eta- all tlrere la to It qf ConTraa .to repeal the oco- l noi aucoeeftM. The eoa imblned arf competltppa, We by tho wfa man who have 0tl-trut laws that it fa aa km tynnmt toraUtr and oa(rary to . i & A. a. u. jw tai "t , Trym to dWsulv ih UnlUd Maim ttfrr 1 A Lt afikiJNP hi. " 'ffJaWP W 7V if'IN" J.r w3L,Nwr uelBl 4. r f 4 9M i a; y Steel Corporation becaiiso It Is made up of a lot of corporations that wcro onco bidding against ontt another for business. Their no tion Is justified on tho ground that tho cor poration has destroyed competition and that the country Is at Its mercy, notwithstanding tho ovldonce that Independent steel corpora tions are doing a successful business. The formation of a big rival steel trust makes the Government's complaint In Us suit" look ridiculous. But It Is too much to hopo that tho Attorney General will ask that tho suit be dismissed. lie Is moro likely to nttempt to prevent tho Independent steel companies from combining and to continue that policy of meddling with big business which tho llttlo politicians havo for years thought would win votes from tho unthink ing for their party. AT LAST. TN THE West tho Allies havo begun at Inst to fling forward their offensive. It Is time. Tlio pressure in tho East has becomo great, but tho resiliency of Russia Is beginning to nsscrt Itself. Formldablo move ments In tho West give a new power to tho Czar. Already, In tho Balkans, Bulgaria, Just ready to Join tho Central Powers, has hesi tated, and thero will bo no forco of half n million men thrown ngulnst thoso ancient mountains in an effort to navo Constanti nople so long as thero is real danger of tho allied troops bursting through tho German linos in Flanders. So, too, the Italian cam paign takes on a now fury. Tho cost of tho offcnslvo in tho West will bo terrible has been tcrrlblo In two days but every success won underwrites tho loan sought In America, and Is an additional guar antee of Its success. Slowly, but surely now, tho war Is moving to a crisis and tho enormous resources of tho Allies nro being brought to bear. Every where else tho forco of the German arms must bo lessened when real danger looms In the West, for there Is the flower of tho Allies' power, which can bo stopped by no second rato defense and will require of Germany nor ultimate strength. PENNSYLVANIANS LEAD THE VAN THE secret of the. prosperity of tho rest of tho country Is out nt last. Tho Burenu of tho Consus has discovered that 1,125,454 natives of Pennsylvania aro living In tho other States. There nro 54,900 of them In Now York, 12,000 of them In Washington, 11,000 In Los Angeles, 10,000 In Youngstown, 13,000 In Baltimore, 20,000 In Camden, and moro thousands In other cities. They havo taken Pennsylvania grit and Pennsylvania enterprise nnd distributed It throughout tho continent and havo made things hum abroad, while thoso who havo remained at homo havo kept this great Commonwealth at tho head of the procession of the sons of Penn who are Justifying the confidence of tho great Friend in tho future of tho Common wealth which ho founded. WAR WIDENS THE HORIZON THE war is widening the outlook of hun dreds of thousands. Evidence of this Is found In tho largo number of persons who aro seeking instruction In tho languages of Europe. English Is no longer enough, if they are to havo any Intercourse with tho out side world, oven though It has been suffi cient for tho ordinary European tourist. But tho United States must soon como Into much mora Intimate relations with all parts of the world than It has sustained In tho past. Europo is stricken, and wo must act as its physician In a thousand ways, both now and when the war ends. It needs what wo produce, and If American business men can speak the language of Franco and Ger many, Italy and Spain, as well as of Russia and Holland, they will be much better quali fied to play the part for which destiny has cast them in the great commercial drama of tho future. Tho alert business man will not confine his attention to Europe. Tho South Amer ican continent Is looking to us to take the placo of the Old World for tho next genera tion as tho source of capital for Its develop ment. A working knowledge of Spanish must be acquired by whoever expects to got Into Intimate relations with Argentina, Chill and Peru, and tho man who would do busi ness with Brazjl will find the way smoothed for him If ho enn speak and write Portuguese. It may be possible to court a maiden through an Interpreter, but this Is becauso thero Is a universal language understood of all maidens that finds 'its expression without words. Trade, however, cannot bo won by looks and sighs and hand pressure. The man who gets It must be able to talk busi ness in the vernacular and to talk It better than any competitor. Greeco doeB not regard a treaty as a mere scrap of paper. The Allies have decided that the Oermans aro not to have things all their own way, but they have been a long time letting the world know it. Captain von Papen explains that by "idiotic Yankees" ho meant the owners of a New York newspaper whose father was a Hungarian Jew, Not even royalty Is Immune from motor car accidents. The Kaiser and the Queen of tho Netherlands were thrown from their cars on the same day. i '. Perhaps It may bo good politics to call an extra session of the Senate to revise Its rules so that the ship purchase bill can be Jammed through, but tho men who think so will dis cover that they guessed wrong If they do It. The dolls' head Industry of Germany has a rival in a new plant established In this city, and before long the little girls of America are likely to find "Made in Philadelphia" in placo of "Made In Germany" on the back of (Ue necks of their doll babies. Colonel House has called on the President again, and while he was In Washington be went to the State Department also. And yet they want us to believe that his visit to all the warring countries of Europe In the summer was purely for his own pleasure. By all means ask the electors to vote on a cit,y loan of 2z,P90,000 at tho same time they choose the mea who will spend It. No better arjcttwaal far ejecting a Mayor who mi MmaMaaMl a Councils that fa not hes4 oeHild fc frmd than puttkog In Juxtajpoal tofMt tjtf poW y aaa ft "put w OUR ENJOYMENT OP DRESSING UP Wo'ro Frankest About It in Child hood, But tho Fondness Lasts Longer It 6nly Proves That tho World's a Stage By WARREN BARTON BLAKE WHO doesn't enjoy "dressing up"? Of course, we aro frankest about It In childhood. Tho smnll boy Joyfully sketches n black mustacho with burnt cork when ho plays soldier, and what little girl doesn't revel In putting on a long skirt, "doing" her hair and giving a tea party to all her lady frlonds, each In her mother's second-best short skirt? "Dressing up" Is not, however, cnslly out grown. Jean Jacques Rousseau woro an American costumo with fur trimmings that seems to havo been highly becoming (wo Judgo by tho old prints); Tolstoi, Rousseau's heir, used tho smock of tho Russian peasant. Balzac wroto his best novels In tho garb of a monk. Chateaubriand novcr wearied of clothes for clothes sako nor of exotic touches. Robert Louis Stevenson, who loathed Chateaubriand, doted on dinky llttlo caps and tight trousers and enjoyed making up for amateur theatricals. Making Faces in tho Mirror Plcrro LotI, Chateaubriand's literary grand son and Stovenson's rival travel writer, Is rumored to know something about powder and rougo pot; yot who would dony him these accessories, or tho Persian costume ho wears In his country houso at Rochefort If, in deed, ho likes Persia and paint? Latins aro born actors; let that bo tho excuso of every Lotl. Latins aro not so much nfrald as Anglo-Saxons nro of being a bit "different" or even a bit ludicrous. Lotl Is said to sleep In n bedroom modeled on tho chamber of a Breton peasant, with a checked cotton cov erlet nnd a pair of wooden shoes under the bed; nor do theso eccentricities impair tho flavor of his exqulslto proso. In Morocco. Lotl has delighted In Arab habiliments and a burnooso; In his book about that country ho avows his weakness for "tho fantasy of disguises." It Is a harmless Indulgence. If Mario Antolnctto and Louis XVI lost their heads, It was not becauso they played at milkmaid and watchmaker. This lovo of dressing up, which Is one of tho bits of child-play which theso so dif ferent men of genius havo carried, with them far beyond the ago of childhood (but not be yond Its sense of romantic wonder), is only one of many bits of ovldenco that all the world's a stage and all tho men and women fond of acting. Most of tho acting Is harm less. Somo of It Is vanity somo merely a kind of playful youthfulness of spirit. One of my dearest friends loves to make faces In tho mirror. He writes clover short stories (and sometimes gets them published!); ho has written wise editorials for a very academic newspaper onco edited by tho author of "Thanatopsls"; ho has a right to string qulto a sizable portion of tho alphabet after his name by way of Indicating all tho degrees awarded to him by an ancient uni versity; yet ho enjoys looking at himself in tho glass, arranging his features a llttlo othorwlso than nature ever Intended and bidding you guess who It Is ho Is Interpreting, Napoleon, or Theodore, or William Randolph Hearst. Probably ho could earn a living pos ing for the movies, my academic friend; cer tainly ho "gets" tho grimace of thoso heroes of romance, and no mistake. Ho enjoys It; who, for that matter, doosn't naturally en Joy the drama? For that Is what this mak ing faces Is tho art of drama at Its very simplest. So Is "dressing up." So is Mnrdl Gras. After all, acted drama Is a mere matter of dlaloguo plus disguises, Just as Action is descriptions plus (or minus) disguise. "Charlotte Bronte," Mr. Chesterton writes, "electrified the world by showing that an Infinitely older and moro elemental truth (than that convoyed In the novel of man ners) could bo convoyed by a novel In which no person, good or bad, had any manners at all. Her work represents the first great as sertion that the humdrum life of modern civilization Is a disguise as tawdry and de ceptive as tho costumo of a bal masque. She showed that abysses may exist Inside a governess and eternities Inside a manufac turer." A Dramatist, Not the Devil We aro told that thero aro only seven plots In literature or Is It eleven? It doesn't mat tor. Any one who reads the new fiction, any one who goes to the theatre, knows there are very few. But think how few plots there would be without dressing and undressing! Think how the absence of clothing, purify ing but at the same time- woefully simplify ing character, would reduce its literary varia tions to next to nothing at all! Instead of eleven plots, there would be only three or four. The book of Genesis makes the Ser pent Indirectly guilty of Imposing clothes upon our naturally virtuously naked an cestorsthat first family of Eden from whom the faithful trace their ultimate ascent. Ironic Anatole France, In his history of mod ern civilization that ho calls "Penguin Island," makes the devil directly responsible for giving women clothes to wear, I don't think It was tho devil. I think it was some dramatist somo one who guessed what fun it would bo to children of all ages to be perpetually dressing up in front of a long glass. TO THE POLITICIANS To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir The following letter Is addressed to the politicians of Pennsylvania: Gentlemen Wo address you at a time when we are conscious that you are especially busy In the discharge of your political duties. As women who would serve with you In the consideration and shaping of affairs controlled by the ballot, we publicly express our appre ciation of the political work our men have accomplished single-handed. We repudiate the statement being circulated by "anti-suffragists," who would excuse them selves In their wish to shirk their civic duties by advertising that "as women we do not want the strife, bitterness, falsification and publicity which accompany political campaigns. Whatever the outcome of the election of November 2 on the Issue of accepting or re jecting the largor field of service for women of Pennsylvania, we put ourselves on record as honoring the men who conduct these cam paigns for doing It according to their best conscience In the service of the public. MARaARET KOHL KELLT. Philadelphia, September Z5. This letter Is marked "Indorsed by the Equal FrunchUe Boclety of Philadelphia." Editor or the EvSMixa Ledger. EGYPTIAN SERENADE Stpg again the song you sung When we were together young When there were but you and I Unaerneath the summer sky. Mn tfce sent, and o'er aaa o'er, MMsaTli I kaaw taat aawenaofe W1U it the soag you uug was W9 w eaaatnar yauag. TV""" wiaa uwV "HEY, YOU GOTTER HANG ON A BIT LONGER; I MAY NEED THIS MYSELF!" CATCHING UP WITH THE MOVIES An Industry That Strikes the Mind With Wonder Even More by Its Progressiveness Than by Its Magnitude and Is Thus Like the Auto Business Shall the Church Lag Behind? By REV. DAVID THROUGHOUT my trip across tho con tinent, but especially In California, and notably In Los Angeles and San FranclBCO, two things most of all claimed my attention. This they did moro than tho fair at San Diego or the Panama-Pacific Exposition. They wcro the nutomobllo and tho movlng plcturo Industries. In theso two places, in peculiar ways, does one havo this thought fixed on both. It is small wonder, since tho moving picture business Is capitalized as highly today In America as tho steel trust, and the auto sales, In the past year alone, exceed the national debt of tho -United States. This has set mo thinking. Has tho Church anything Hko tho progressiveness of -these two Institutions? If not, why not? Is it because it has not tho same capital? Or Is It becauso It lacks the same faith In its own utility and tho samo confidence In Its own future? Would that, from either or both of these, the Church might learn a lesson and take courage 1 Transportation Is a mania of this age; tho nutomobllo is its modern agency. Is religion a less perma nent, a less abiding need? Education Is a fetish of tho age, while recreation Is another. Tho cinematograph is educational and recreational both. Is tho Church contont to be and to do loss? Why should it be so much less popular than aro tho moving pic ture places, which aro omnipresent and which every whero are crowded to the doors? From Cowpath to Auto Road I visited one day the busy offices of tho National Automobile Tourists' Association at San Francisco. There I learned that, over tho main three transcontinental routes, the National Parks Highway, tho Lincoln High way and the Santa Fo Trail, there has been an average of one party arriving every five minutes in, the day this summer at tho coast. Of these three modern roadways many por tions aro beginning to rival In skillful en gineering the French highways nnd in scento grandeur tho mountain passes of Switzer land. Added to those is the Pacific High way, which is a completo system of road ways north and south, connecting British Columbia with tho southern limit of Califor nia, a total distance of 2000 miles. Along this Camlno Real, the motorist guides his car over a road as perfect in its way as is the gently tempered climate, which makes tho trip a posslblo one at any time of the twelve month. Who haa built theso roads, and why? Many a Western city's Chamber of Com merce has Joined In memorializing tho na tional Government for tho building of better roads from ocean to ocean, and from Canada to Mexico, fairly gridlronlng the country. Their reasoning Is something like this: Cows make cowpaths from the pasture to tho yard, and ducks, and geese from the pond to their shelter at night. A savage is simply one who dwells in tho woods; no roads are known to savage barbarism. Even early civilization was content with a sufficient trail along which the horsemen rode. But with tho invention of the first crude-wheeled vehicle came tho necessity for something more. It was observed in ancient times that all roads led to Rome. That city was the centre of the civilization of its day; hence roads were the concomitant and the insig nia of the civilization of the Eternal City la its pristine glory. With tho further develop, ment of civilization came the railroad, with its steel tracks for freight and passenger cars, so that, to write a history of roads, from the cowpath and the trail to the trunk lino railroad, would be to write a history of civilization; tho two would go hand in hand, with equal steps, on every page of tho his tory of the race. Now something else has come. Tho auto mobile has brought into existence tho need for systems of smooth, hard highways. Nor Is this reasoning only national; it has inter national illustrations. Cities Shifted Over Night In southern California also is the centre of tho world's moving-picture Industry. Here aro nearly 60 studios, housing from two to 20 companies apiece. Millions of dollars are Invested In these film-producing plants, the annual payroll and the annual output totaling a hundred millions more, Southern California Is especially adapted tq this new est big business on account of its climate, sunny days and picturesque scenery. Among all these, in a class by Itself, fa Universal City, Just out of Los Angeles. It fa In. the fopthlUa of the Ban Fernando Valley, It fa the only city in 'the world built solely for jewtloa. picture production This maglfi piao earn be c!iogd la a tow day to oaasorm to aay aationaHtr taajaixad aa a at attUn In M. STEELE, D. D. succession, it can faithfully represent Athons, Rome, Paris, London and New York, or Hindu streets and Afghan villages, with all tho local color of tho land desired. Tho amazing advance. In all tho arts and sciences, In tho whole field, mechanical as well as sociological, since the last previous International exposition. Is shown at San Francisco chiefly nnd most effectively through tho medium of the cinematograph This is a mlraclo which previous expositions lacked; but It Is the most tolling device em ployed here to narrate and display tho growth nnd spread of civilization. It is the voice and the picture of tho modern speed ing world. Every building In the grounds holding any exhibits has a movlng-plcturo show of Its own, with thousands of feet of film. It is In this way that tho industries, manufactures, sciences and arts of the vari ous countries aro most strikingly presented. With tho assistance of these it is possible to give an almost exact portrayal of any coun try Involved; so that If one could dovote enough tlmo to thorough sightseeing in the whole exposition, one would become almost as well acquainted with far countries as if one had seen them. In view of these two things, I ask again: What of tho Church? Is it less confident of its own future, less willing to make com mitments of men and of money than tho au tomobile men aro? And Is it less alert, less ablo to feel the pulse of the present and less operative in producing tho new stand ards that aro yet to bo than managers of nickelodeons? One could wish tho Church had as much, faith in religion as manufac turers havo in transportation, and that it were as efrtcient and Industrious as are the players for innumerable Princess, Empress, Lyrlo and Gem, "movio" palaces In every hamlet In the land. LET "NATURE" DO IT Animals, Insects and Fish Work for an Illinois Fnrrrfer That "the world owes us a living" has often been heard, but it has remained for a Ver milion County farmer to take steps to colloct it John Graham Is the man who Is making Nature produce for him. Wild bees, wild ducks muskrats, foxes, skunks and black bass are aborlng for this "Naturo farmer," as he Is tiwn..,il th ne'Khborhood where he lives. TKeN,alUrel.farm'" a w,,d P,u apd wild crab npple orchard of 11 acres, lies 20 miles ?0.r., ot '. and u ls a part ot lie old Mann estate. It Is on the banks of the Northfor and Is an excellent place for the raising or i U1 foxes' ducks mu-at and bees. The black bass are native to the stream ?,! ih0 "rm." are 300 "Hunks, B0 stands ot wild bees, 100 foxes, 100 wild ducks, hundreds of muskrats and thousands of bas,. And what is strangest or all to the casual visitor, there Is no odor. The "Nature farmer" contends that aS'.1,1" beUef,to th0 "ntrary. skunks are among the most cleanly of animals and give off no offensive odor unless they are In danger They become domesticated on the "farms" and ore as docile as kittens. tntZ2at, ot th9 iarm ,s a winter house .for tnLskunks. and nearby are burrows for them. They feed on wild plums, crab apples and scraps of meat. Fish are eometlmes caSght for them. Adjoining the skunk pens are pens for th.8mfXV AriPl(" and v owls arePfed to them. Nature has provided bees for the "farm." Trees In which the bees were found wtre AMUSEMENTS B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE CHESTNUT & TWELFTH STREETS " EXCLUSIVE VAUDEVILLE ENGAGEMENT! DAVID BISPHAM BUUtWT AUBRtOJUt OPXRA.TW lUniTONn iiiuiuuiAii X suiuiuUMDING SHOW! 'Rtrrnfi tiiiih dado . MnH ?."WAN nOSB, MOWATTEBB ft TrsON.'Tlr.n men a jlle """ffS 5lV,iWCAN dancerb; o t u a n o. HENRY MILLER AND RUTH CHATTERTON "SS?"' DaddvLong Legs METROPOLITAN gggS OFBNS BATURDAT MAMMOTH NOVELTT PHOTOPLAY, OPMKX mj UPXaTAtTt NIXON'S W GRAND iftoH&S' , matinkb too A. Ui i a : aorc n- Trocadero T$fuJbj People Pafc White cgt?r' moved to the farm and the bees go right ahead providing for the farmer. Corn bread, roasting ears, black bass and many other articles from th.e "farm" recently appeared on tho table at a dinner given to a number of Danville men. "That ls proof posi tive," said Sir. Graham, "that Nature will pro vide, for us. If wo only take tho trouble to collect what has been offered." Indianapolis News. NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW The tariff affects every man, woman and child In the country Just as seriously and as definitely as do railroad rates, Nation's Busi ness. There aro times when a sdft answer may serve a useful purpose, but to rely on It at all times nnd In all circumstances for protection would be tho rankest sort of idiocy. Springfield Union. We cannot havo a cltlzon-soldlery without tno patriotism that allows workers time t rerve any more than we can have such n soldiery without the patriotism to serve. Buf falo Enquirer. From his visit to the Colorado mine fields John. D. Rockefeller, Jr., ls deriving at least a partial knowledge of labor conditions there. No reports of managers or special agents could over servo the same purpose. New York World. If Bulgarian entrance on tho Teutonic side brings both Rumania and Greece In on the allied side, tho great profit will be with the lea rowers, and Bulgaria will be confronted with as grave peril as In 1913, when she guessed wrong and paid tho cost. New York Tribune. Whether Professor Munstorbcrg likes our American culture or not, he must admit that it exists and must yield to us tbfc right to maintain It as our very own. Has he not found tho tub standing pretty firmly on Its own bottom during the past year,? Boston Transcript , Throughout the land there are millions of people whose stomachs would be better filled, whose wages would be higher, whose clothes would be newer and whose food would be moro nourishing If the politicians who for th Jaat decade have been ruling this country almost unto Its ruin could bo banished to some desert Island and left there to make their own living Instead of living, as they have been do ing, on the country. Manufacturers' Record. AMUSEMENTS metropolitan opera house GRAND OPERASiiSS Opening Performance TUESDAY EVO., NOV. 23 METROPOLITAN op!Smpany NEW YORK GIULIO OATTI-CASAZZA. General Manacer. Aleo nrt appearance In America (as an adjunct 01 the eeneon) the IMPERIAL BALLET RUSSE Direction of SERGE DE DIAGIULUW Subscriptions Now Received Seaaan aubacrlptlon comprises fifteen performancea (fourteen (rand opera and one ballet). Subscription 1 1QQ HVipcf Cf Open Dally Depar,m..,ttllUneSLbt.nA. M. FORREST No W Mat3 S'll TWICE DAILY -L U W Evgs. 8:15 D. W. GRIFFITH'S THE BIRTH OP A NATION 18,000 People .3000 Horsed GARRICK OTE TONIGHT HBASON A. II. WOODS Presents The Laughing Comedr (Sensation POTASH & PERLMUTTER Nlshts and Saturday Mat., BOo, 7Bo. 11.00, 11.60. Popular Price Wedneaday Mat. Beat Heata St. GLOBE ftm -Wfe, "The Winsome Widow x$fi "The Devil's Mate" NOTEPnrci!BE.?f.l?f?.,.10. .a, - TH-y,A3NUT dai- Edith Taliaferro and BAIILB BROWNE In Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm PRICES ,. . -. LYRIC Berinninrr Tonirrlif.f ,"r "Tt T". ANDKEA8 DIPPEI7 mUA T M i? Presents A Comla Ona !JVon,ks &"& .? . D!"t Krom New York K ViK "'... jl uAvriuY umuoHAiniavAiSf'HriVif !ABL, am BTOttB FOR AJU.-TQJVK.,V" '-V 'ru'Sv'f, KNICKERBOCKER THE WHITE T ii-lrt t Theatre Player Market ft fti Sister SLAVE PLAY -LlllU i KVKNINa PRICES-: MATS. Tuesday. Thuraday. K Mo. Ho. i . .r;". phi awi Beat Sta. Xa. P. M. nixxiw X "AjiVr U1U la Thura..FrI., Batv-Oir? Ai -A'MIU&JSJW TTTO mm. "--fJXt""" AUKiaT8Tr Stanley JOHN MAW)i0iii-y J,JiVS.MAQNii4 tt.r?; iu 4111 w,7"SV."w la liAZRl "- 'ATll, A k n a , i-k tESffiA! '" x. HUM. 4- JaSoajsasr ein) iaa AUsahaaEr Avaa. 3n:-iajSrfcafc JLOSt fc-l.5?. 1 HI 4! i )A pi fSkkiW