W7? SSSSTvwwM $ & n- v EVENING LEDGER-PHIUABEDPHIA', TUTS SPAT. DECEMBER 7, 1915. 12 Egs7V5Pfl9" v-.Sf1&l 1, l9fcs- MB PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY crnus it. k. curtis, rttsiM.vt. Cnsrle It.Ludlnirton.VlceFrnldent! John C.Martin, Secretary and Treasurer; rhlllp S. Collins, John B. Williams, Directors, EDITORIAL EOAHD! CintJi II. K. ccbtis. Chairman. P IT. tynALRT... i... ......... ...nxccullT Editor JOHN C. MARTIN.,, General Business Manager Published dally at pcbmo Ledger Building, Independence Square, Philadelphia, Lxnorx Ckmthai.... . ...... Broad and Chestnut Streets Athntio Cm, .....,,. ..t.i...l'rr.'.tnlo riulldlni: w ToaK,.,,.,...,,.,...170-A, Metropolitan Tower DrraoiT, i torn jmiiainit ST. Lorn Ciitotoo, , 400 Globe Democrat Building ,..,,1202 Tribune Building NEWS BUREAUS! WlnniiroTOM Bdtxitr ..Mots Bulldlne Nsnr York Bcaiuo.,,, .The Timet Building Tim LIN Bureau, , , , CO' Frledrlchstrnse LonpoK Bureau,, ,..Mnrconl Houe, Btrand Paris Bureau, ,,,., . .32 Rue Louis le Grand SUBSCRIPTION TERM8 Br carrier, six cents per week. By mall, postpaid outside of Philadelphia, except where foreign postage Is required, one month, twenty-five cents! one year, three dollars. All mall subscriptions payable In advance. NoTtoE Subscribers wishing address chanted must give old as well as new address. SELL, J00O WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 3000 (ET Aidrtn nil communlcallons lo Evening Ledger, Independence Square, PMla&'lfhia. nieeed xt tub rmr.Aort.rniA rosTorrica as bbcond- CLASS MAIL MATTEL TUB AVEnAOE NET PAID DAILY CIRCULA- TION OP THE EVENING LEDGER FOR OCTOBEll WAS 102,183. PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1915. The men who mind thrir own btislnesi arc usuallu those with bushiest lo mind. THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE rpiIE President uses Pan-Americanism as -a stepping stone to bring him "to the particular matter that lies at tho very front of my whole thought as I address you today. I mean national defense." Tho Pan-Americanism which ho defines assumes a unity of purpose on tho part of tho nations of this hemisphere, on a foot ing of genuine equality, nnd a general ad herence to those principles which havo come to bo associated with republicanism as practiced In tho new world. These Amer ican nations must bo co-operating friends, not hostllo rivals. Thcro Is a breath of Idealism in this part of tho message, akin to that which permeated tho President's earlier announcements relative to Mexico, yet thero Is in It also tho seed of a pro gram which may bo of great value. The difficulty with tho President has been and Is his inability to distinguish between real republican government and organized ter rorism masquerading In republican garb. Tho President has grasped firmly tho idea that efficient preparation is as necessary In military as in industrial matters. "War has never been a mero matter of men and guns. It is a thing of disciplined might." As to tho method of preparation recom mended. It is proposed to havo a regular army of about 140,000 men and a. supple mentary militia of 400,000, raised in Incre ments of 133,000 a year. There is somo merit in tho plan, but In a matter of so vital Importance it is clear that full debate and discussion must bo prerequisites to tho adoption of any formal program. It may well bo doubted, for lnstanco. If tho plan is adequato In view of tho prodigality of mod ern warfaro both in men and munitions. Tho naval program, which would provide for 27 battleships of tho first line, built or building, by 1921, six battlo cruisers and a strong necond line, forms tho basis for real preparedness. It presupposes tho enlarge ment of Annapolis in order that sufficient .officers to tako care of the new fleets would bo ready. The President makes his merchant-marine-jjuchase scheme a constituent part of his preparedness program. He avers that tho marine has been ruined by "inexcusable neglect and indifference and hy a hopelessly blind and provincial policy of so-called eco nomic protection." Tho fact Is, of course, that thero has been no economic protection whatever, tho exact opposite being true. The reform of tho Government of the Phil ippines is again recommended. Reports from tho Islands Indicate that reform Is urgently needed, owing to tho demoralization which has followed Governor Harrison's tenure of office, but not tho kind of reform which tho President proposes. In order to avoid a probable deficit in June, 3fll7, of ,235,000,000 the President favors the retention of the emergency war taxes and also of the duty on sugar, which under the present law would be discontinued May 1. He Objects, very wisely, to mortgaging the Pan ama Canal to secure funds, and proposes, very unwisely, additional imposts on gasoline, automobiles, Internal explosion engines, bank checks, pig Iron and fabricated Iron and steel. If the majority follows this recommenda tion the return to power of the Republican party is Imminent, for these proposed taxes are actually levies against Industry and prog ress, devised to make the manufacturing States bear the moat of the burden. They are sectional In the first place, which ought to damn them, and they are utterly unjusti fied, in the second place. It Is against all precedent to multiply Internal taxes when the tariff Is so low as at present. The Democratic plan is not only to refuse even Incidental pro tection to Industry, but actually to Imperil its prosperity still further by extra taxes. A most satisfying part of the message is that in which Congress Is urged to "save the honor and self-respect of the nation" by nactlng laws to curb pseudo-Americans "who have poured the poison of disloyalty into the very arteries of our national life." It Is ln detd time to uproot this sort of Americanism and extirpate It. Congress should be quick te follow this suggestion and clothe the courts at once with full authority to deal with this new- species of snake, which has dared raise It head. The message. In spite of many faults, p$ ex emglmlf satisfactory In, that It takes, a stron; tatt,d for, the principle of defense and pre paredjww. Therein. U 1mii tli, XMim of the great majority of Americans. Thcro may bo differences as to tho mothod of prcpara tlon, but tho opposition to preparation Itself Is more vociferous than strong. A new era of Internationalism, with Its ac companying responsibilities, Is upon us. Wo must meet It and tako advantage of It, not being fearful of the great herltanco, but re joicing In It and determining In all respects to measure up to tho requirements as tho champion of democratic principles, freedom and Justice, and tho exponent of that sort of Industrial efficiency which is content to win Its victories In peace, far off from the thunder of cannon and tho groans of butchered men. MENACE OF l.KYAXISM IN 1896 William J. 13ryan split the Democ racy wldo open and under his guidance It wandered In Sahara for sixteen long and weary years. It reached an oasis only when tho Xchrnsknn was relegnted to the rear guard. Auguries of a new disruption at his hands multiply. Ho has Junketed from town to hamlet throughout the Union, preaching a dream and finding mnny to believe In It. Tlmo has exposed the other great fallacies for which he fought and he himself has prac tically repudiated them. Yet, despite his genius for being wrong, there Is a magnet ism about his solf-deluslnn thnt draws men to his enmp, at tho llame docs tho moth. Ho fur as tho activities- of this erratic statesman may affect the Democratic pary, It Is apparent that the greater his success the more fortunato for the nation. Jt would bo no great calamity to have the Democracy thrust again Into the outer darkness and tho Government returned Into the hands of prac tical men, who dream their dreams Indeed, but do not attempt to experiment with them at tho national expense. Hut the menaco of Hryanlsm becomes a real danger to tho country when It threatens to wreck tho pro gram of preparedness and leavo our shores exposed to tho vandalism of nny enemy thnt cares to preparo an expedition against us. That other phase of Hryanlsm, which would put a sheep's heart In tho lion's body, tho nrynnlsm thnt lauds tolerance of Insult, the non-protection of American citizens nnd glorifies a Jelly-fish attitude toward any braggart militarists that caro to murder our people, blow up our factories or Invade our sovereignty. Is not less dangerous. It Is apparent that tho Republican party must again save tho Union, Its prestige. Its honor, Its place among tho nations. Bryan Ism can kill any Democratic party measure for defense. It can emasculate a prepared ness program and make of It a mockery. On the Republican minority, therefore, since delay would be perilous, devolves the duty of rushing Into the conflict nnd rallying to tho causo of Americanism. Hryanlsm ns tho smasher of tho Democratic party Is one thing, but Hryanlsm ns a peril to the nation Is another. Once before it was met ond van quished by virile patriotism, and so now it must havo the sting taken out of It. Its loudness may ho endured provided It never becomes effective. BUSINESS AND WAR DEMAND IT SECRETARY McADOO'S call for an ap propriation of $2,4G5,000 for Improvements to the Delaware River should bo mado an Integral part of tho Administration's nntlonal defense program and bo considered apart from tho general bill for river and harbor Improvements. A thlrty-flvo-foot channel to the sea Is needed for merchant shipping, just ns tho Panama Canal Is needed to shorf.'i tho dis tance by water between tho two coasts of America for tho benefit of commerce. Hut if tho commercial reasons alone had been considered It Is doubtful If tho Panama Canal would have been built so soon. An attnek on the Atlantic coast would show how weak wo are here, with no way of as sembling tho battleships savo through tho open sea. Hut with the Delaware deepened and connected with Chesapeake Bay through tho existing canal It would bo possible for ships to pass from Philadelphia to Newport News by an Inland route, safe from attnclc, and If tho Delaware were connected with New York harbor by a similar military cannl warships could bo moved from one point to another along the coast without tho slightest danger. "When the demands of commerco nnd mili tary necessity will both be served by a great public work thpre should bo no more delay. "Whatever It docs with a rlvor and harbor bill Congress Is expected to vote trio money asked for tho Delaware River project. BOY SCOUTS AND LOYALTY THE schism In the leadership of thnt phe nomenal organization, the Roy Scouts of America, Is a deplorable thing. Without at tempting to pass Judgment on the merits of separato Issues between Ernest Thompson Seton and the present heads of the Boy Scouts, one's first response to tho news of a break Is a feeling of waste. Tho organization spread like one of those forest fires which it Is the duty of tho mem bers to prevent. There was something uni versally appealing In the outline of duties and privileges, in restored communion with outdoor life, In service and uniforms and in brotherhood with big men, and all this ap peal was furthered and fostered In the best of all possible spirits. Now, according to Mr. Seton, the Boy Scouts havo been thrown out of their normal course, and both broth erhood and nature are being desiccated or abandoned. If this be true, then loyalty to the Ideal of the Boy Scouts must prevail against loyalty to the mere shell of the organization. If it be not true, then Mr. Seton's attempt to form a rival organization will not be much appreciated by Americans. Possibly there has been exaggeration on both sides, and In that case the quicker the wound Is healed the better. The Boy Scouts are far too val uable to waste on the quarrels of their leaders. A gun Is not a proper argument for a man to use in a discussion with his wife. The Democrats are expert in applying the get-thin-qulck treatment to the Treasury surplus. The point of General Goethals' report seems to be that the banks of the canal will continue to slide into the water till they get through. "Whether Governor Whitman Is willing to run for the Presidency Is not so Important as whether the Republican party Is willing to let him. The Pennsylvania censors may he able to suppress the exhibition of the antics of the stars, but it Is beyond the power of the Brit ish censors to Interfere with the activities 1 of the comet, Tom Daly's Column A Little Kerry Song There's grand big girls that walks tho earth, And somo that's gono to glory Thnt have been praised beyond their worth To llvo In song and story. Oh I one may have tho classic face Thnt poets love to honor And still another wear tho graco Of Venus' self upon her; Some tall and stately queens may be And some bo big and merry Ochl take them all, but leave for mo Ono little girl from Kerry! Sure, Kerry Is a little place, And everything's In keeping Tho biggest heroes of tho place - In little graves are sleeping; And little cows give little crame lor little fairies take It And little girls think little shnme To steal a heart and break It. Och, hero's a little Kerry lad That would be, oh! so merry If but your little heart he had, Oh! little girl from Kerry! WE HOPE no wild-eyed Celt will nrlso with shlllelnh In hand to crack us over the sconce for singing our little song ns above, but you never can tell. The chief charm of nn Irishman Is your Inability to guess what he's going to do next. You will remember our reprinting several weeks ago three stanzas from tho Rev. .1. B. Dollnrd's "Song of tho LIttto Villages." Well, here comes Connl McCnnnn to say: "As far us t can see. there nrc few of the names spelt correctly, nnd they all nre evidently taken from Joyce's 'Nnmes of Irish Places.' Patrick Weston Joyce was not a Gaelic scholar, nnd what lie did In trying to translate names of plnees enme through people knowing pomc thlng of the language. He was of Welsh ex traction, his forcbcari coming from Wales, settling In fJalwny and since their territory has been known In Saxon ns 'Joyre Country. Oncllc Is dangerous language for any one undertaking to translate who has no knowledge of It. Yet this Is done, nnil by none more than tho Irish themselves, who sprak of Its great beauty, white the majority of liem apparently know very little of It, nnd this Is well Illustrated In the case of Mr. Dollntd and others who put their owln (sic) meaning on It. I could go Into this further, but It Is not my wish to trespass further upon your valuable space." Now stand back, men, and glvo them room! The reverend poet In Toronto Is a champion hurler! Impressionistic Dear Tom: I don't know Burton Donncl Hughes. That's the reason I am send ing you my Impression of him. I may he In accurate In my draw ing, but not In my Im pression. J. J. fcX ::?3i WE nro Just ns Impatient as you, gentle render, to dip Into Professor Thomas E. Hill's varied treasures, but wc must first let him speak his foreword. We regret that we cannot glvo it In toto, but these extracts will servo: Hill's Manual of Social and Business Forms riti:r.CK To enable tho Individual to write with case and to do tho right thing In the right place In many of the Importnnt positions In life, Is the object of this book. Tho result sought to be accomplished Is to combine both a knowledge of penmanship nnd Its application In the written forms which nre In most general use. Added to these are the chapters on eol. lection of debts, parliamentary rules, ctlquutto nnd other departments of action helpful In the gathering of news for the press. In use of capital letters, selection of visiting cards, notes of invitation, etc. Hy the lady, much will bo found In a Manual of this kind that will particularly serve her In writing her nodal forms and give her that dellcato and beautiful penmanship which pleases the eyes as does fine music the car. Tho mistress of the household will find hero the form of testi monial BUitnblo to bo given tho servnnt upon his or her departure to seek n situation else where. Tho mother will find tho written ex cuse to the teacher for tho non-attendnnce of her child at school; tho servant the form of letter when applying for a uituation; and the bashful, blutfhlng maiden, tho cautious, carefully worded letter that will nld her In giving ex pression to the hitherto closely guarded secrets of the heart. Tho sign painter has dally use for n reference book of this kind, nrranged and adapted, as it Is, to tho comprehension nnd wants of the knights of the pencil and brush. The artist in lettering on marble finds In this work a chapter presenting tombstone Inscriptions and epltnphs, giving the modern nnd best forms of wording by which to per petuate the memory of the departed. The grand nnd costly monument, designed to stand for a thousand years, to be gazed upon by multitudes and the record that it bears to be read by millions! How Important that In this con. splcuous place, in such enduring form, tho In scription, in grammar, capitalization and punctuation should bo given absolutely correct. This chapter will also assist the mourner who Is desirous of selecting an appropriate inscrip tion to mark the last resting place of the de parted. The Individual who would ap pear at ease In general society, be Belf-possessed and free from embarrassment, will appreciate the chapter on etiquette. More especially will this be valued because of Its beautiful and in structive Illustrations. jn short, the varied character of this work appeals alike to the wants of the old and young of all classes. Realizing this, the book Is launched on the sea of literature with the confident belief that It Is demanded and that it will accomplish its mlBion of usefulness. These extracts from Mr. Hill's preface should be sufficient for one instalment, but we cannot refrain from reprinting from page 90 this form of a letter to be used by landlords. Ah! how pleasant a world It would be If all landlords and real estate agents would try to be Webster Greens! UltGING PAYMENT OK KENT Columbus, O., March 11, 18 , Mr. D. P. Hoyt. Dear Sir: I have waited patiently for your convenience In the payment of rent for tho house you are at present occupying. An. bow ever, you have now been my tenant for four months, without meeting any or the payments, which were to be made monthly, J feel obllaed to remind you of the fact that there aro now 1 80 due to me. Trusting that you will give the subject your Immediate attention, I am. Yours Truly, Webater Green. Take Warning, Boys From the Plkevllle (Ky.) Young Mountaineer. A popular telephone exchange operator met with a very unusual accident at Clyffeside Park Sunday, The young ladyfriend with whom she formerly worked In the Huntington exchange, ran to meet her and in faminlne fashion the twq friends who were almost overjoyed each other kissed. In their Joy their lips met with con. slderable force and the Ironton lady suffered the loss of o tooth which was nocked loose dur ing the "Smack." "POPS CUT IN HALF SPECIAL CHRISTMAS PRICES." This sign In a pet-shop window would seem to Indicate real growth in humane feel ing. It's so much nicer to do that than to send the poor little things out to die .of dis temper. Perhaps this Christmas spirit will extend even to Easter and little chicks will then be pre-smothered before delivery to the J children. -'- N- "DIG DEEP, THE CENSOR OF THE DREAMING MIND Ghosts That Come in the Night and What Science Thinks' About Them. You Had Better Make Friends With Them By B. K. LITTLE SCIENCE believes In ghosts now. One of those days sclonco will go humbly and mark tho spot where Jonah parted company with the whale. It subscribes already to Joseph's dream. For a long tlmo science laughed at ghosts and dreams. Now it writes long and solemn books about them. Fruud, 1.A mnn, Mitlilnnn I nn H A nl n t, t ,l,n, MnV Wrnl n l.c- ,i.u3L u..w .-U..VV.,..-... v . science, believes In dreams. lies written a work nbout dreams said to bo ns monu mental ns the book by Darwin that set Adam two million years back Into history. Sclonco says thnt ghosts exist Inside our selves. They nre old Ideas, forgotten by the thinking mind, but hiding away in the brain nevertheless, and walking In our dreams. Somo wit onco said that tho only tlmo a husband was really suro of tho attention of his wife was when ho talked In his sleep. Now science, when you go to It for a hend ache, cure, asks, first thing, nbout your drenms. There's no Joko about It. Do you know that your dreams of Inst night may havo been manufactured out of an experlenco of your early childhood, that you fancied you had long ngo forgotten only you hadn't? Nothing is forgotten. Everything that hap pens to you Is stored nway in tho cellar of your mind. Tho mind scientists call It the subconscious. In reality It's the subcellar. What's more, every dream is tho expression of a wish. It may bo a beautiful wish. It may be somo wish that you're sorry you ever encouraged a wish that you nro ashamed to acknowledge to yourself in your waking hours. When Your Neighbor's House Burns One night you drenm thnt your neighbor's house Is afire, and you magnanimously rush In nnd savo him nnd his family from death. An absurd dream, you sny! What meaning can that havo, especially to a scientist? Yet it's to tho scientist nlono that such a farrago means anything at all. That dream means this. Your neighbor's hens havo probably been pursuing a research for grubs nnd seeds In your gnrden. You have probably had a discussion over this matter with your neighbor, without much satisfaction to yourself, Tho consequence Is that, though you'd rather not ndmlt It, you cordially dlsliko your neighbor. Not thnt you wish his death by starvation, or measles among his children, or anything llko that. You don't consciously nnd oponly wish him that. Secretly you do. So at night, when your guardian wakeful mind Is off tho Job, that subcellar of yours liberates that guilty thought. It steals up Into your weary think ing mind. And tho consequence Is n dream. Hut even so, thero Is a part of your think ing mind thnt never sleeps. Tho scientist call It the "censor." Your censor takes that secret wish of yours to murder your neigh bor and tactfully translates It Into a vision of his beautiful house burning down. And then because you secretly admire yourself, that secret thought also sneaks up and gets translated into a beautiful heroic effort to save your neighbor, In spite of his hens. It sounds absurd, but It's deadly true. If you have been worrying over business to such an extent that you can no longer sleep, or when you sleep you have dreadful night mares, the scientist will take you In hand and ask you, first of all, what your dreams are like. Probably you have some "hug." You think you are going to get killed by an electric car or a motortruck. You grow positively "dippy" with this nagging Idea. Or you get the old-fashioned nervous pros tration that they call by a fancy new name In these days. You go down hill like a sled. You wonder what nils you and you visit one of these psychotherapists to find out. The first thing he does is to puzzle and annoy you by asking you to recount to him a few of your latest and fanciest dreams. He may or he may not tell you why he does this. But the real reason Is that your dreams are a wide-open door into the Innermost secrets of your being. The scientist will read your dreams, piece them together, and spot unerringly the nagging idea or the secret wish that has been eating the life ou,t of you. It may be some wish that you have had since childhood. You thought you had forgotten It, but there It was all the time, eating away at your vitals. The only time It could score on you was In the night when you most of all wished to be let alone! Then It had you at Its mercy. Don't Be Afraid So the meaning hascome back to the dream. When a maiden dreams of a lover on Halloween, it Is not an Idle fancy. There may be about It something deeply touching. And tragically true. Perhaps, as a school girl, she took a fancy to a boy who grew up and married some one else. The maiden has persuaded herself that she has long ago forgotten Jthls deadly Insult to her worth an4 charm. Not sc That early love may Y' OLD RASCAL, YOU CAN AFFORD IT!" wHli. come back at any time, In tho night, nnd plnguo her with Its yearning. That Is her ghost. It Is Just ns real as tho girl her self. What does science sny of tho dream of Joseph in tho Rllile? Perhaps It does not subscribe to tho prophetic qunllty of tho dremn. Joseph simply had a grouch on tho Phnrnoh who hnd him In tow, and ho dreamed elaborately the Inner wish that was In him to see thnt Phnrnoh "got his." Which ho did. Joseph fulfilled his contract with his dream. And something wont wrong with tho liver of Phnrnoh. Honest confession Is good for every soul. Why don't you analyze your own dreams? You'll discover somo wish In yourself that you'd rather not have, and you'll bravely wood It out. And don't be afraid to dream. Do you know that If you didn't dream you'd never be nble to sleep nt nil? That sub- rnlln,' In V11. rl,l ,tn,ll,l Ipnn,. ,, n.i.nl.n I ' IIVU wm, outpourings of wild nnd many times ugly contents. The moment you dronned off In slumber up they'd come. And If they camo up In their truo guise you'd never bo able to tolerate them. So a wlso nature has equipped you with a censor ever on guard. Whtlo you sleep that censor watches tho portnl to your mind. It takes thoso stealthy wishes nnd Ideas that creep up from below and drosses them in a garb that is faint nnd soft nnd tolerable. You dream. In short. And because these Invading ideas nro wrapped up In the cotton batting of a dream, a harmless drenm, you arc able to sleep. It's only when your dreams got to be painful for long periods at n timo that you had better go to tho dentist and have them out. Everybody has his ghosts you, too. Tho tiling to do Is to mnke friends with them, nnd chnso the had ones nway. PENCILS IS PENCILS It was a prim young lady, fresh from tho malms of higher education, who recently ap peared at tho olllce of a prominent manufac turer of lead pencils, presented credentials ns a health department investigator. and announced her desire to study conditions In the factory with referenco to lead poisoning. Just as "pigs Is pigs," so to her lead was lead. Such llteral-mlndedness Is hardly to bo ex pected of tho average mortal, but If tho fnlr Investigator . had called to Inqulro ns to tho actual nature of the product mnde nnd Just why it had to share names with something equally common but totnlly dlffeient, the memory of her visit would have been less likely to have been perpetuated in the guiso of tho traditional factory Joke. Host persons nro aware that lead pencils nre not made of lead, but that tho so-called black lead In them is a full bi other to coal and to the nrlbtocratlc diamond and that It Is Identical with many other substances in common use, such ns tho blacking on tho kitchen range, aro additional facts not nearly so well known. llluck lead and plumbago nro popular terms for a form of puro carbon whose proper name, graphite from the Greek word meaning to write Is more necuratn nnd more appropriate. As a mineral from tho earth, it has been known nnd used since nbout tho middle of tho 16th I'entury, but for u matter of 200 years thereafter me conceptions or science with reference to Its true nature seem to have remained nbout on 1 nr with those of the fnlr visitor nt the pencil factory. New York Telegram. NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW It availed nothing to the legendary King Mi das thnt everything ho touched turned Into gold. He starved to death.-Clnclnnatl Enquirer. What remains of the spoils system In the na tional service, the National Civil Service Re form League reminds the public, Is built on tho phrase, "by and with the advice and consent of tho Senate." Kansas City Times. Our army also has been busy for years past In terminating intolerable conditions and In es tablishing humane. Just and equitable govern ments among dependent peoples. In Cuba the Philippines, Porto Itlco and in other places, this has been the great work of the army In the last few vears. It has been a constructive arm of tho Oovemment. Kansas City Star, AMUSEMENTS BELMONT fiSDTfViitvET AND 8 I llf WHEHE ENTIftn WEEKLY'pitOGItAJI OF TRIANGLE PLAYS Are Shawn at t'ach Perormance TODAY and IIALANCU OF WEEKt HESSIE HAItniSCALE in 'Tho Golden Claw" WEHEIt & FIELDS In "The He.t of ' Enemtes"! DOUGLASS FAIUBANKS In "Double Troubia"! FitEU MACE In "Janitor's Wife's Temptation.' GLOBE Theatre" VJ UVJJ-U VAUDEVILLE C MARKETAND JiTwm qo VAUDEVILLE-rnntinZ::.- ,, A f tn. 11 t If --.. ROYAL RUSSIAN BALALAIKA ORCHESTRA With MADELINE HAURISON. Famous Daniauic Ortim BIQ MATURE ACTS ACADEMY OF MUSIC Wednesday Afternoon, Dec. 15, at 3 PADEREWSKI Tickets at Heppe's, tl to J2.50. Boies. 112 to 18 , Direction. C. A. E1U, Symphony Hall, Boston U E T R O POLITAN O P E H A70 USB METROPOLITAN OPERA CO., NEW YORK tonkiht 7.45 LOHENGRIN MMES. BAFPOLD. MATZENAUEK. Mil. UKLU3. UUAUN. WEIL. SCHLEGEL CONDUCJOR. AR. TUB. BODANZKY tFlRST APPEARANCE). HEATS lioa CHESTNUT BT WALNUT UU, RACE 8T n p'Tm nrFixinS the Furnace" VJ XV A IN JJ I Th Gardener. Th ll(iut) Uroad 4 Montgomery I Shop. Harry Rose, The Sons Today 2 IS, T 4 Booth, Herbert's Dog;, picture TROCADERO MoauCT'" AMUSEMENTS CHESTNUT ST. H "" --1,41. -vJiuoiiiui oiUfaETS Continuous Performance NOON TILL 11 P. M. A GRIM REALITY OP WAR FIGHTING in PRANCE ONLY OFFICIAL PICTURES OJi liii, ALuiiu Au.niisa Management of Morris Gest LOANL'D JIY FBBhOU aOVVRNitEM TO TUB PUBLIO LEDOKR PRICES 25c, 50c I GARRICK NOW TWICE DAILY, 2:15 and 8:15 FOR LIMITED ENGAGEMENT D. W. GRIFFITH'S Massive Production 18,000 People Symphony Orchestra of 30 THE BIRTH OP A NATION Horses World's Mightiest Spectadf 1 Everybody Laughing AT , The Great Comedy Show AT B. F. Keith's Theatre it It'fOLK BILL OF HITS Gooreo MacFarlane: Billy II. Van & Beiumwl Slstera; Wlllanl; Dorothy Toye; McConntll i mmpeon; uuier uts reunites. -n-v-n-n-rnrim last 2 Evirs. at 8:15. rUJaxviliOX WEEKS MAT.TOMOBROII GABY DESLYS nnd HARRY PILCER In CHARLES DILLINGHAM'S LATEST .MUSICAL PRODUCTION STOP! LOOK! LISTEN! Joseph Santlcy. Frank Lalor. Harry Fox. Dwlill Dixon, Tempest & Sunshine, Justine Johnston?, re enco Morrison. Hawaiian Octette. Walter WW I Chas. Tucker and 100 More. ACADEMY OF MUSIC BURTON HOLMES Fri. '& Panama TPYrncif'n Sat. I'tf Pacific -XpOSlblj nuc, 70C, l, at neppe o, - i v TCYT1? A WRf) VVG.. DEC. 15 West Point and YELLOWSTONE TTrAT LAST .. ( n Q.1 ,'.iir.-u xfAT Trmunvi ,Veil(II9 fc ... . Charles Krohman, Klaw & Erianger PrsHPl i ELSIE FERGUSON in "OUTCAST" Tha Vital, Throbbing. Human Hay Hy IIUnCIlT HENRY DAVIKS tOc TO 1.60 AT MATINEE TOMORROW 10o 1214 MAIUMJ-J I P A T , A P,TT1 TvVovovifA Clarl In "STILL WATPf j Comliuj. Thursday, Friday ana JUVV,. TiniiiMi. ifnpnEnlCK In "I1ELLA DO.""- THE STATE BOARD OF CENS0E3 Have Shortened the Last ocen. The Only Reason Advanced Was TMt IT DID NOT SUIT THEM It Ha a Beautiful and Artistic Cltnux. THE STA.NLEV COMPANY T VRT-1 TONIGHT AT 8;IB SHARP .-l LlllvlL Popular 1 Matinee Tw"" J RALPH HERZ WSr; "RUGGLES OF RED GAP BEGINNING MONDAY NIGHT Seats Taur T rTTTC TlT A MM America's Foreoj XJV7UAJ llixmii Character " I HI Latest "THE BUBBLER Comedy Triumph J. 11-1 UU"" , ARCADIA fKSSl First rr""1" , HOBERT B. MANTELL With GENEVIEVE HAMPER In ..mTTT-, TivTnAimirariT 1XT1VV." ,.... u,l n TIAIT. KANWLABYRP2 ADELPHI-Seventh BJjr Wg Greatest Laughing Hit in ToW; "A PULL HOUSE" " MARKET ABOVB Of STANLEY "wfS Thursday, Friday, Saturday. llEJlgS NIXON ffi&SM Tonight at 7 and 9, ?iSANO A BU ovi.viv Htv- nrilMAN Will PICTURES. --- - i, . . . : :.- -T.r'S iH ooil NO PSItVORXANOS TODAY OHTONIOUlt "THE BATTLE CRY OP PEACfa T7-:lV,1,nv. THEATRE PLATSI XVlllwl UUIIVCl MARKET Vk 'THE GAMBLERS" 3 Dumont's ?u at'. Minstrel. 9th , HOLIDAY BUWZ'