Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, December 06, 1915, Night Extra, Page 10, Image 10

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EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, DEgEMBEB 6, 1915;
10
9Eutnf tti) giffcJbper
POnLIG LEDGER COMPANY
cyrus it k cltitis, piiEN.
Cnle I.t-ii.lnirton,Vlcerr.iuInl; John C Martin,
fwretary and treasurers riilllp S Collins, John II.
wlllUms, Directors
EDITORIAL BOARDS
Cittn It K. CcnTis, Chairman.
n. WHALT.Y .Eie-ollve Editor
JOHN C MARTIN
...Central llunlnefta Manager
PuMlshed dallr . Pontic Lira tit nuliiUnc.
dren.!en Square, rhlladclphla.
LlMH CkitiuI. tlroad and Jstnut Streets
ATUKTlr nn.i Vrral'Vnlnn D'ltl Jinn
Nit Voic,..,ll,,,,,,,(.,IT0-Ai Metropolitan Tower
Drtioit , t 82(1 Font Ilulldlnr
RT. Loin, 409 Olone Democrat Ilulldtnir
Clttoino. ...... .... ,.,,.... 120.' Tribune llulldlng
news bureaus s
vjiinioTO.T itunKAU. ....... .inters iJuiiainu
noaiji'tf"tKD.,UI). .' ".".'.',". Tw'jS'rleh.'i'riiMa
ioino" nunru Mnrroni iion.. Ktranu
Pints Uuhiau 3- Hue Louis la Grand
AtrascnirrioN TEnsis
TIt carrier. Mx rents per week Iiy mall. postrald
eutsld of Philadelphia, except where foreign po.tBge
I reoulrd one month, twent'fU" cents; on year,
three dollara. All mall sub. crlptlon. payable. In
adrance.
Notiob Subucrlhem wishing address changed mut
(Ira oh as well ns new address.
DELt, JM WALNUT
KEYSTONE. MAtrf 3000
CT Aditrtm nil communication to .irntntf
I.'ilptr, Independence Rqvarc, rhttaalfhla.
BirtnKP at ins rmianrr rma roTonce as secono-
CLASS MAIL MATTII
THE AVERA-IE NET PAID DAILY CIRCULA
TION or Tin: evening lf:dc)1h
Fori ocronKit was ios.im.
niiLAUELrm . momi w, iieclmdlu 6, 191s.
Your ntcn canillc loics no brilliance when you
allow your neighbor to light his at Us Jlamc.
COMPETITION AND CHEAPER SHIPS
IT IS not of t,rcat Importnnco nt this tlmo
whether tho "bid" of tho League Island
Navy Yard for building a warship was only
nn cstlma'o or whether It was higher than
the bids of tho prlvnto shipbuilders, as tho
representative of a prlvato company charges.
What Is of Importnnco is tho development
of tho League Island yard until it can build
battleships ns well as they can bo built any
where. Thcro aro somo olliclals In Washing
ton who would llko to liavo all tho warships
built In Government yards; but that would
bo as great a mistake as having nil tho bat
tleships built In prlvato yards. It has usually
cost moro for tho Government to build a
man-of-wnr than the prlvato corporations
hnvo charged for constructing similar ves
sels; but If It wcro not posslblo far tho
Brooklyn Nnvy Yard to turn out a ship of
nny kind, It is likely that all warships would
cost moro than they do today.
So long ns tho Government can check off
bids by estimates from its own working ship
builders It will profit by tho competition be
tween the public and prlvato shipyards. No
better thing could happen to tho shipbuilding
Industry on tho Delawnro than tho establish
ment of a great rival plant nt League Island.
THE SHOOTERS
THE tiff between Shooters and Councils
has been blown away In tho wind of com
mon sense. Tho Shooters know that New
Year's Day just wouldn't bo right and llko
homo without them, and they aro going" to
play.
Just why the city turns out on the night
o December 31 and crowds nnd Jostles until
4t reaches a vantage point in tho neighbor
hood of City Hnll is n real municipal mys
tery. Tho thrill of seeing tho lights go out
and, coma on again Is not tho real secrot.
The secret is more likely to bo found In tho
human sympathy which binds together all
those who como under tho spell of Philadel
phia, which has a character and a disposi
tion of its own.
For tho samo reason tho city returns to
Broad street on the first day of tho year and
watches the mummers. It is a tradition
with us that they aro to bo bright and fan
tastic and wonderful. So tho city, whllo It
congratulates the Shooters on their good
sense, pats Itself on tho back a little for Its
good fortune.
PEACE OF MIND
NOBODi" Is quite suro when the "Do-your-Chnstmas-shopping-early"
slogan began
to bo popular. By this time wo nro so fed
up with It thnt It has censed to have any
effect whatever. Sometimes we pass It absent-mindedly
with nn adlrmatlvo nod. Some
times we resent Its urgency. Barely do wo
heed It.
If wa nro to do Christmas shopping nt
nil ai.d a wlso Providence sees to it that
Just nt this tlmo of year we are suffused
with a desire to buy and are comfortnblv
disposed financially tho chief reason for
buying early is that it will be dono when
'tis done. Tho willing and hard-worked men
and women who sell to us hava a claim on
our solicitude which wo seldom recognize,
at Chrtmmas or at any other time. We are
not, as a race, capable of hurrying ourselves
because of tho certainty that If wo do not a
wan, weary girl whom wa do not know may
- s drag herself homo at 11 at night nnd bo ex
pected bnck at work at 8 the next morning.
Wo admit it Is terrible, when told of It.
But we go on.
So Christmas shopping must bo put on a
selfish basts. You will never have peace of
wind until you have conquered your shop
ping list. You will not sleep o' nights until
Uncle Harry's speckled muffler is wrapped.
Counting today, there aro 17 days. Have you
thought of tho great-niece of the uncle's
ister-ln-law?
WHAT IS EXPECTED OP CONGRESS
THREE great questions are to be consid
ered by the Congress which meets In
Washington today. They are preparedness
fQr natlona) defense, tho raising of revenue
to meet the cost of the additional expense
xf the preparedness program, together with
the ordinary expenses of Government, and,
last, a plan for rehabilitating the merchant
marine by Government money,
Tho Democracy, however, Is not agreed on
any one of these questions. The men .well
grounded In political economy are opposed
to Jhe merchant shipbuilding program. There
are almost as many views on the best way
of increasing the revenues as there aro
Democrats Jn both branches of Congress,
and the opposition to an Increase In the
army and navy Is ao strong among the mem
bers of thq party In power that there Is no
hope of doing' anything without the OBslst
rHco of tho Republicans.
President Wilson succeeded In holding the
)t Congress together and In deriving his
ypograro through largely because ho had a
program uod because his party, newly
trusted ytiu responsibility, was too daied
by the upu customed power to 'reassert Its
Inherent determination tj 6a the wrong
tbln t tho wrong time.
If tM Democratic party leader la the new
Congress nro. poj .t Mr-liter's feeadt
within two months It will surprise every ono
familiar with their provlous careers. The
refusal of the Senato caucus to matte ft party
Issue of n clotures resolution and Its decision
to kill tho matter by puttlnpr It up to the
wholo Senate was patriotic and rrfatcsman
llko. Hut tho very reasons which Impelled
tho mucus to turn the plan down nro thoso
which will separate the majority Senators
Into flRlitlnp factions. Tho Senators with
positive convictions on national defense nnct
tho ways to rehabilitate tho merchant ma
rine refused to nRrco to surrender their
Judgment to tho orders of any caucus. Thoy
nro determined to bo freo to fight tho Presi
dent's program If they think best.
Whatever elso happens, tho country Is ex
pecting tho President to uso nil his power
.... - ..... ... .... .... ..... ,....,-
' to "cra,,n(50 Congress to ndopt nn lntolll
gtnt national defense program, even If ho
has to split his party by doing It. and to for
feit whatever chances he may have for re
election. And It expects Congress to pro
vldo enough revenue to meet the now ns
well ns the old expenses. Tho Kcptibltcnns
are likely to co-opcrnto on tho great na
tional and non-partisan work of prepared
ness. Hut when It comes to revenue legisla
tion, they will lot tho Detnocrnts contlnuo
their blundering policy and prove onco moro
their financial Inrlllrlency.
A GOOD HEC. INNING
T 11111.1- of tho live appointments to tho
Cabinet of tho Mayor-elect aro non-polltl-cal
In character. Consldnrlng tho result of
tho recent campaign, which was nbsolutoly nn
Organization victory, Mr. Smith must bo
commended for having so far Ignored political
workers and secured tho services of men
whoso chief recommendations aro their ability
to do things nnd do thorn well.
It Is, on the wholo, a better Cabinet than
might reasonably have been expected. There
Is, for Instance, assurance of expert direction
of port development, in which project millions
of tho public money will be expended nnd on
the success of which will depend tho futuro
prosperity of the city. So, too, In tho Depart
ment of Public Works there must be every
conlldenco In tho efficiency and good purpose
of Mr. Dalesman. In these two departments,
where political appointments would have been
a calamity, Mr. Smith has met tho situation
satisfactorily by tho appointment of cnpablo
men.
It Is clear, nevertheless, that tho Cabinet
would be strengthened greatly by the ad
dition of Mr. Taylor as Director of City
Transit. Ills appointment would nt once
end nny opposition to tho huge transit lonn.
It Is well known thnt Mr. Taylor is loth
to accept further hervlco. but tho Mayor
elect, In spite of previous announcements,
could do nothing bettor than tender him
the appointment and depend on public senti
ment to compel Its acceptance.
The Cabinet Is not by any means tho
strongest tho city has ever hnd, as Con
gressman Vans avers, but It Is certainly ono
of tho best Cabinets ever offered tho city
under Organization rule. There is much
cnuso for grntulation In that, tho moro so
because tho next four years will form ono
of tho most Important periods In tho de
velopment of tho city.
GOOD LUCK TO THE DREAMERS
THE Ford expedition is chimerical; In the
light of public knowledgo It oven borders
on stupidity. Yot sympathy with tho aims
of thi t whltb party of zealots Is well nigh
universal. If by some mlrnclo its dream
might bo translated into achievement thoso
who ridicule would bo first and most loynl
in shouting their hosnnnas. But tho miracles
now being performed nro tho miracles of
tho fight, tho prodigies of heroism which
have become dally occurences on a dozen
different fronts, the wonders of tho airmen,
tho surgeons, tho commissary and tho munition-providers
nt home.
It Is a double mlrnclo which is required
of tho Ford party, for Its object must bo
certainly not the achievement of peace only,
but tho achievement of that sort of peaco
which would freo Europe forever from tho
military heel. Any other kind of peaco
would bo a tragedy moro terrible than tho
conflict which rages.
To Europe, torn by battle and burden, Mr.
Ford Is likely to nppear more ns tho per
nicious meddler than as a prophet of peace.
If will bo fortunate, indeed, if his voyago
does not bring rldlculo down on his own
country. That heretoforo has been Mr.
Bryan's peculiar privilege.
But good luck to tho crusader, and may
he, his friends and nil tho newspaper men
get safely homo again!
ROOKS
THERE Is n classic story concerning two
members of tho merry-merry, ono of
whom was much perturbed. Sho didn't know
what to givo Flo for a birthday gift. Flow
ers weren't approptiato and sho couldn't
afford Jewelry, and sho was generally miser
able about It when tho other chorus-lady
suggested that Flo bo given a book.
"A book?" questioned tho would-bo giver.
"No. She's got one."
It's not a new story, but It comes to mind
when one sees that a distinguished clergy
man In St. Louis has made a list of six
books, the reading of which would make a
man educated. Thero Is Flammarlon on the
wonders of tho heavens, and a book on
Geology and Lecky and Spencer nnd Clarko
nnd Taylor on Primitive Culture and presto!
you are educated.
Somehow the prospect, distant though It
be to most of us, will not prove enchanting.
What are these things to us? Six books or
six hundred matter very llttlo Just now, and
a llttlo knowledgo of men and things matters
so very much. Certainly If we know all
about the subjects of these books wo would
know a great deal that Is useful and alto
gether true. But we would hardly know
enough to answer tho chorus-lady who
summed up the wholo philosophy of books
In her single phrase.
Put the "Red Cross Christmas stamps on
your etters.
How quiet things .have grown since he
sailed away I
The reason for Woodrow Wilson's success
Is now disclosed; lie was once a manuglng
editor.
With sugar 10 cents a pound, It will not be
nny easier for Colonel Roosevelt to get that
third cup of coffee.
It's a new Congress, but there are a lot
of old Republicans In It, not the least of
whom Is Uncle Joe.
The difference between the Lusltanla case
and the French spoliation claims la that
most of the latter have beep, settled.
The Ban Francisco Fair closed with a sur
plus, which la moro than some of those who
Visited Jt -had wha they got back hoaw.
j
Tom Daly's Column
Wl
WERE waiting nil last week the
lectrlcal Prosperity Week, you'll re
member for soma ono to call attention to
tho fact thnt it was only 33 years ago that
Chestnut street was first electrically Illumi
nated. Tho Brush Electric Light Company
turned on tho now glimmer nt midnight of
October 23, 1832, as a fitting Inauguration of
tho bicentennial of tho city's founding. It
was a matter of frequent comment on tho
Jtreot the next morning thnt it hnd been
posslblo to read a nowspapor nlmost nny
whero on Chestnut streot under tho now
light. Then, loo, thcro Is food for thought
nnd much moralizing In tho further recol
lection that only six years beforo that event
tho great Ccntennlnl Exposition In Fair
mount Park was nbsolutoly dark nftcr night
fall becauso of tho Impossibility of adequately
lighting tho buildings.
"Ilcforc the Doctor Comci"
Sir In a recent Issuo you ran a poem nbout
nn "IrMi Bird Chnrmor." I'm not suro that
tho gentleman could help mo. I think I need
a Swiss or Ocrm.nn bird charmer. You see,
wo can't nmke the cuckoo In our clock behave.
We think ho goes out nights. At any rate,
often In tho mornlngt ho lies about tho hour.
Can you suggest anything? Anxious.
Do you notlco hiccoughs between tho
"cuck" nnd tho "oo"? Wo must hnvo full
particulars beforo venturing a diagnosis.
The
"For-It-Was-Indeed-He" Club
XIII W. W. P.
ONCE upon n, time, gentle reader, thcro
was a youth with such fresh, rosy cheeks
that ho seemed in danger of never acquir
ing a mature look. When he entered tho
I'liivertlty of Penntylvnnla In tho curly '703
a follow freshman,
classically Inclined,
called our hero "Im
berbus Juvcnls." Our
hero w 1 n c o d, but
w h o n, with somo
pains, ho hnd looked
tho thing up In his
dictionary nnd learned
that It merely meant
"beardless youth," ho
proceeded to make tho
epithet n misnomer.
"Never m i n d," ho
thought to himself,
"I'll probably look
ancient enough somo
day." Ah! but llttlo
did ho think that ho
w u' ' would ono day say to
a leporter: "The reason I am resigning ns
.lustlco of tho Supremo Court Is becauso I
havo become uncomfortable by tho enforced
absences from my homo which tho duties
of tho court require. Then, too, I am still
young enough to feel interested In nffalrs
from which I havo been cut ndrlft by n
Judicial position." But that's Just what
William W. Porter for It was Indeed he
did say in the ye .r of grace 1003.
We Can't Mis in Religious Controversy
Dear Tom Against the zither? Well, you nro
full of surprises. I thought you wcro strong
for all harps; and speaking of musical Instru
ments, do you not think that a Pythagorean
lyro is superior to nn ocarina, tho musical sweet
potato? R. B. F.
Our Greek Sporting Department
A Htory l being told nt Merlon on ono of
Its prominent players we'll call him Niblick
who Is strong on obltuarica. This golfer called
a friend let's say Hunker on tho telephone
ono dny and Bunker, In a moment of forgct
fulncss, nslied him how he had played tho day
before. Niblick commenced with the first holo
nnd was Just leaving tho second tee when a
long-tllstanco tclephono message camo for
Hunker. Bunker took a chance. Ho put tho
receiver on his desk, went to another tele
phone, had a long conversation and when ho
camo back Niblick was Just holing a long putt
on the 17th green. Altcli H. Altch.
Wisdom in n Nut's Shell
Sir Lct'n tee this In your "rjareoylo of Giggles,"
It waa overheard at tho nrmory:
I'lrst Lieutenant WouM you bo willing to go to
war in c.ise of nied? Second Lieutenant Sure, fnr
tho chanLO of coming hack u colonel. l' L. Huh!
a nut reduced to a Kernel! It. I'. D.
ANNOUNCEMENT EXTRAORDINARY!!!
It gUf iih plraitiire to
ininoiinee to uur runldly
growing circle of render
thnt this column lin '
cured the right' ill thN
territory for the prmrntii
tlon In feemloccnalonal
herlul furin of
Hill's Manual of Social
and Business Forms
A Ciulde to Correct Writ
ing, Mum Im: how In i:t
ire Written 'thought
l'lalnly, llnplilly, Kle
gantly ami Correctly,
Although thU wonder
ful uorli uiu iiubllahed In
Chlrngo In 1H8S, It great
worth could not then
hate heeit utiprecluted iih
now nt are ture It will
lie. It hns n wide mi
lieu), emlirueing, u It
doe "Instruction nnd ex
ample In peninuutlilp,
riling for the prc,
proof-reading, f n m 1 1 y
retoriU, etiquette, tho
care of (he feet, parlia
mentary r tl 1 e m . hlcn-
n riling, bookkeeping, writing poetry, epistolary
correspondence, epitaphs, duties of secretaries, etc "
We ure pleased to present here n portrait of the
distinguished 1 author and hU autograph which lat
ter alone will kulllclently show his nualltlcatlon to
uddrrs til.
Och! Go 'Long Wid Yer Blarney!
Tom, old boy, do you know where Moy ?lell
waa? But, of course, you do. Perhaps you've
been there with UIU Teats. Well, mo bouchal.
tho very name makes my soul dance Inside of
this mortal coll, makes my spirit go up and
down like a churn-dash,
Moy Mell, then, was the central valley of Tlr-na-nogue,
tho land of the ever young All
beautiful flowers bloomed In that valley. There
was no cloud In the sky above, nor fell there
bail or rain or any snow. The most beautiful
birds sang Bongs so sweet that the angels bent
down out of heaven to listen. The summer
never ended there, nor did the shadows of night
blot out of sight the green growing things.
When my ancestors were kings and queens In
Ireland or knaves, I forget which long ages
ago Olsln. the son of Finn MacCool, married
Nlam, the daughter of the King of Tlr-na-nogue
and went to that blessed Island and lived there
for 300 years. He and Sirs. Olsln used to go
every day during their honeymoon (which
lasted a century) to Hoy Mell to see the para
dise flowers and hear the wonderful sweet songs
of the snow-white birds In the green trees.
I think King Arthur went to Moy Mell, too
but since he left Guinevere behind I am not
interested In his story,
And the long and short of all this U that Tom
Daly's column Is a new Moy Mell for me. I
escape there for 30 golden minutes every day
from the prosiness and the memorized wit In
which this world is being overwhelmed. More
power to your arm. M, C. Donovan.
Waterbury, Conn.
Sure! Put It Up to Ford-ham
We've been hoping 6ome contributor would
write la and say something like this: "Don't
you think some university might, with profit,
start a department of acting, to teach the
young idea how not to be a Jitney com
e41aar To which we were all ready to
sJKx a. hw4 as nhrrtV
V
4
o
i
JUSTICE HUGHES
A "SELF-MADE" MAN
At tho Age of Five lie Drew the
Straightest Line Between Two
Points, the Line of Hard Work,
and Has Followed It Since
THE secret of tho success of Charles
Evans Hughes Is Charles Evans Hughes
himself. No claim Is mado for this remark
that It Is In nnywiso subtle. It Is simply
ono of thoso obvious statements which seem
to be especially true
of certain particular
cases. In tho caso of
Justice Hughes, It
may bo extended to
Includo tho respect
nnd esteem In which
tho man Is held by
tho American public,
irrespective of politi
cal partisanship. His
own present aloof
ness from partisan
politics hardly ex
plains tho high re
gard In which ho Is
held by tho peonlo at
large. Something ""stick hlgiils.
deeper and moro vital, something cssenlally
n part of his lifelong character, la tho
reason. Justlco Hughes Is ono of the
most distinguished and most admired men
In America, not becauso ho has followed nnd
realized ambitions, but becauso ho has been
faithful to Ideals. Ideals and not ambitions
or circumstnnces havo mado him great.
Ho has nono of tho theatrical personal at
tributes which commonly nrouso enthusiasm
and keep It alive, yet resolutely tho Ameri
can public refuses to eliminate him from
tho list of presidential possibilities.
He, too, Is n schoolmaster, ns somo of us
havo nlmost forgotten a schoolmaster nnd n
scholar, a schoolmaster who has schooled
and mastered himself In a very literal sense.
Made His Own Conclusions
From childhood oven from babyhood he
was studious. He was not only studious, ho
wns also precocious Jn capacity nnd accom
plishment. Iiut ho was nover n prig; his col
lege mates never thought of him ns a
"grind"; he wns always enthusiastic for
things human and nllvo.
Ho learned to read when ho was sys years
old. At the age of C his father inspired him
to study local geology. Tho boy had read
all of Shakespeare by tho ago of 10, besides
many works of standard fiction. He had
become acquainted with every Inch of
Palestine, and had acquired a familiarity
with the Ulbla which ho developed year
after year as his mind grew. Few profes
slonal students of that book havo a moro
thorough knowledgo of it than Justlco
Hughes.
At the age of B ho was sent to school.
But his mind traveled so much faster than
that of his mates that the teacher could not
keep him occupied. At that early ago ho
appeared before his father ono day and pre
sented him with a document entitled
"Charles E. Hughes' Plan of Study." He had
marked off the day Into study periods,
specifying the subject he wished to pursue
in each, and on submitting tho schedule for
uyiuwui requested mat he bo allowed to
study at home. Here were Initiative, direct
ness, love of system, passion for results. The
request was granted and tho schedule
adopted with few alterations. His father, a
Baptist minister, and his mother, a woman
of excellent education and fine attainments,
were his teachers Until his tenth year. Be
sides the primary studies he pursued French
German, Greek, Latin and mathematics!
After four years In a public school he'
matriculated at Colgate at the age of u,
entering the sophomore class of Brown
when his father became pastor of a church
In Providence. At college he read omnlv
orously In all departments of literature and
philosophy, participated In outdoor sports
and youthful pranks, took honors in scholar
ship, was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and
received one of the Carpenter premiums an
nually awarded to the two men of the Benlor
class "who shall, In the Judgment of the
faculty, unite In the highest degree the three
most Important elements of success la life
ability, character and attainment." There
are the three words which are applicable to
very stage of the career of Charle3 Evans
I I
THE CURTAIN RISES
Hughes. Their truo meaning is found in tho
combination.
After graduation from tho Columbia Law
School ho passed tho best examination in
tho history of tiio Now York bar, with n
rating of 99"4, nnd entered tho ofllco of Wal
ter S. Carter, of whom ho afterward boenmo
tho partner and then tho son-in-law. For n
fow years ho withdrew from tho firm nnd
taught law In Cornell University. President
Schurmun, of Cornell, has snid of his lec
tures: "Hughes would lecture for thrco hours,
always without a note, cltlng'porhaps a hun
dred cases and quoting the opinion verbatim.
It is a matter of record, too, that his pupils
did not 'cut' his lectures. Nor should ono
miss tho human noto nmidst nil this labor.
Apart from his regular hours. Professor
Hughes gavo up his own time, his own recre
ation periods, to help tho less brilliant, to
'coach' tho less proficient among his pupils.
Students who marveled at his scholarship
wcro still ablo to profit by his friendship."
Whence tho Justice Relaxes
Reserved ho has been called all his life,
but "I nm no wooden Indlnn" ho has said
on occasion. "I hope," ho onco said, "that
if nn autopsy Is ever performed upon mo
you will find something besides sawdust nnd
useful information." Ho has few intimates,
but ho has a fow. Ho has a genuino ca
pacity for friendship, delights in story-tell
ing, In good books and good music. His
principal relaxations aro Dumas, Balzac,
golf, camping, European travel nnd moun
tain climbing. His greatest delight Is his
home.
Ills memory reminds ono of Jmcaulay's.
Ho can clto decisions verbatim without refer
ring to a book, and his fnculty of remem
bering figures Is marvelous. But natural
brilliancy of mind Is by no means tho secrot
of his intellectual attainments. Thorough
ness and hard work mado him ono of tho
most formldnblo trial lawyers of tho coun
try. For months nt n tlmo ho worked day
and night. In preparation for his law enses
ho studied not only law books, but books of
sociology, economics, statistics, mechanics.
In a caso concerning a player-piano patent ho
confounded tho experts by a knowledgo ns
detailed ns their own. Ho had moved nn In
strument into his home, dissected and recon
structed it and studied Its mechnnfsm till
ho knew nil nbout It. Two experts in tho
technical sldo of tho tugar business onco
appeared as witnesses In a caso In which
Mr. Hughes wns ono of tho attorneys. Ono
of them remarked afterward: "I will go back
and study more. I thought I know some
thing nbout tho sugnr business, but Mr.
Hughes asked mo questions I
couldn't answer." Tho other said: "Mr.
Hughes knows moro nbout the sugar busi
ness than I do." That is Mr. Hughes, the
lawyer studious, thorough, awaro that tho
way to results is hard work, nnd that, too,
is Justlco Hughes, of tho United States Su
premo Court.
HIS LIGHT IS HIDDEN
Obregon has called Villa a madman. Villa
Is not In a position to bring his epithets to
public attention. Washington Star.
AMUSEMENTS
ACADEMY OF MUSIC
PHILADELPHIA
ORCHESTRA
LEOPOLD STOKOWSKI. ConJurtn.
SYMPHONY ! Friday Aft, Dec. 10. at 3-00
CONCERTS ISat'day Evp., Dec. 11, at 815
Sololu: aSehjUta,. Plan.,,
Overture. "Figaro" ,,, m.n.
Symphony No. II tPatorale)...,.V. .. .BEPTimvpM
Seat. Now on SaiTlwreV Yuo chUm&ST
GLOBE Theatre ?S"T
U-UUUU VAVDL'YIL -Contl5Si,bTfi
A. M. tp 11 M. 10c. 13c" 3c
ROYAL RUSSIAN
BALALAIKA ORCHESTRA
With MADELINE HAHRISON. Fumou. Vunicu..
OTUElt UIU fHATUBB JLVTS
METROPOLITAN OPERA HOIIBB
METROPOLITAN OPERA CO.. NEW YORK
tomorrow Eva.7.45 LOHENGRIN
MMES. JIAPPOLD. MATZENAUER. MM. unr lrn
BHAUN. WEIL. BCHLEQEL. CONDUCTOR ; in
TUU BODANZKY (FIRST APPEARANCE) HEAT-J
110S CHESTNUT ST. -WALNUT IU, Tracb BT
STANLEY "Wi
Thurid-.y. Friday, Baturday.j-ruB UNKNOWN"
TROCADERO 10Ul An
AMUSEMENTS
SEE IT TONIGHT
IT'S THE GREATEST LAUGHING HIT
IN TOWN
7TH BIG WEEK
A FULL HOUSE
WITH THE SAME CAST THAT KEPT
NEW YORK LAUGHING ALL YEAR
500 Orchestra Seats at $1.50
500 Balcony Seats at $1.00
500 Family Circle Seats at 50c ,
Thursday Mat., Best Seats $1.00
AT THE ADELPHI;
t .
GARRICK NOW VI"
TWICE DAILY, 2:15 and 8:15
FOR LIMITED ENGAGEMENT
D. .V. QIlirFITII'S .Ma.Blvo Production
18,000
People
Symphony
Orchestra
of 30
THE
BIRTH
OF A
NATION
3(600
Horses
World's
Mightiest
Spectacle
B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE
CHESTNUT AND TWELFTH STREETS
MELODY! COMEDY! NOVELTY!
GEO. MacFARLANE
FAVORlTn .lU77:i0.l.V BMUTOXE
HILLY H VAN an.l
M-AL'MONT SISTEHS
W I L I. A It D
"Tho Slan Who Oroivs"
Dorothy Tnj.: McCO.VNELL (fc SIJIPSONI
Hallen 4. Fuller. Other Ills Feqturct.
T?rT? T?T?QrP LAST 2 Evga. at 8:13.
I'UKXVillbl WEEKS Mat. Wed. 4 BU
GABY DESLYS .
and HAHI.Y PILCKIt In
CHARI.KS DILLINGHAM'S
LATEfaT MUSICAL l'HODUCTIO.V
stop i T.nmn t.trtrn!
Joseph Santley, Frank Lalor. Harry Fox, DoyU
ui-con. reinii-H & E-unfemne, jusune jonnaiune. "
inn Mnrrlxoi). Marlon Harris, Hauallan Ocuttfc
Walter Will-. Chas. Tucker and 100 Slore.
10c 1214 M.nKETJ
10 A. M. to 11 P. V-
Marguerite Clark
In -bTlLL WATERS"
Friday and Saturday
PALACE
Comlnff, Thursday,
PAIII.IN'I. Tri.l.I..lClC in "11ELLA DO-SNA
u
THE STATE BOARD OF CENSOBS
lTni'A Hli-ir--.--..! the Last Sfene
The Only ltea.on Advanced Wan That
IT DID NOT SUIT THEM
it Haa a Ileautltul and Artlatlo Climax.
THK STANLEY COMPANY
"RPHAT. LAST 2 E.es. at 8:15.
J-SltUAD WEEKS Mats. Wed. 8t
Charlea I'rohman. KUw Erlaneer Present
j u o 1 IJ j
TP W T? n I M N J
I N
"OUTCAST"
The Vital. Throbbing. Human Play
liv 1IUI1EHT HENRY DAV1ES
60c to Sl.-O ut Wednesday Matinees.
BELMONT "WiSf
2 AND 8 P. tt
WHERE ENTIRE WEEKLY PROORAM Of
TRIANGLE PLAYS
Are Shown cit Each Performance
TODAY and UALANCH OP WEEK! .
RESSIE IIARRISCALE in 'Tha Golden CIMri '
WE11ER II FIELDS In 'The Rest ot EnemJ";
UOUHLASS PA1RUANKS In "Double TrouUJ j
PltKD MACE In "Janltor'a Wife's Temptallcs ,
ARCADIA S-
First Preentatla
ROBERT B. MANTELL
With GENEVIEVE HAMPER in (
"THE UNFAITHFUL WIFE''
Thurs.. Frl.. Sat. GAIL KANE "LABVHIPi"
T VPTP TONIGHT AT 8:15 SHARP
J-JJ-.V1.VJ Ponular II Marines W'
ni.. Qj-a cft ?- T.tiiHnii a K-. ll 4.
RALPH HERZ In the New Comedy WtthWw"
jtuuuuc-i j r nof ", ri
Adapted by Harrison Rhodes from Henry J-
Wilson's Famous Saturday Evening Post Bio..
.a sujLsuwa uit iikrei .
MT"Vr"rT Today I AMY LESSER) VICWKf
IMIAIJIN .ii.n roiiR: "THE REAL
VICTOR"
Tonight at T and 9. I J. ',' j, AJN oWUBINGHAai "
SYLVAN SIX; GERMAN WAR PICTURES p-.
r pTv nfHRxinglhe Furnace'
U K A JN JJ Tb Gardeners. Tho ,l
UroadMontgomery JShop. Harry Rose. Ths ?"
Today, ii-.n, T 4 Hi Dooth. Herbert's Dogs. s1..
M E T R 0 P 0 L I T A N &l
THE SENSATIONAL PHOTOPLAY
JTHEJBATTLE CRY OF PEACE
Knickerbocker '"""ZS&fftfBuf
"THE GAMBLERS" "&
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