imwjiimtu wwaw''wwtoMfaiii w,M)iiwiiMiiiiiii)iiiiiiWiii;wNiff ien" PUBLIC LEDGER COMrANY CinUS H. K. CURTIS, Pttsier.-cr. CTisrtes ft.LudInton,Vlcerrellent: John C.Martin, PftreUry and Treasurers Philip S. Collin, John D. WHHm, Directors? EDITORIAL BOARD t CtKCt II. K. Cctl8, Chairman. f. ft. WHALKT. ,..,...,...,. Executive. Editor JOHN O MARTIN Ocnerlluineii" Manager Published dally at rcBt.to Ltnorn I3ulldlr.(, Independence. Square, Philadelphia. Lztant Cintiul. ,. Broad and Chestnut StreM ATLANTIC Cut..,., , l'rri Union tlullillnR Kitr Yotk,. ...... ,t ...,170-A. Metropolitan Tower DKTOfllT.. ....,... . . . . . R2fl Knrrl HillMtnr ST. Locls, ....... 400 Blob Democrat Ilulldtn I viiioaoot, ,,.,,, l-'uu rrioune uuildinjr N! 'V3 liURE.U'S: whhinotok ricnRAi Rlgss nulldlns Niw Tome ncanal The Time Jlulldlnsc HeLi iloar.Aii t'.O rrlertrlchtrime Lokbon Ri'nr.iu Mnrconl Ilou Strand Pams BDBEin 32 Hue Louis le Grand SUBSCRIPTION TERMS By carrier l ifnt per week. Hy mail, pootrald outside of Philadelphia, etcept where foreign poMaue la required, one month. twenty-five cenH; one vear, thren dollars. All mall suusrrlptlons payat-le In advance Noticb Subscribers wlshlni; address "hanged must give old as well as new address. BELL. 300 WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN 1809 C7" Address nil eommtinrntforti to Evntno Ltdgtr, Independence Svmre, rllnd!lpMi. NTmiD at tii riiiunn.ritt roTorrtc is skcond. CLASS MAIL ViATTIK. THE AVERAGE NUT PAID DAILY CIRCULA TION OP THE EVENING LEDQEIl FOR NOVEMBER WAS 01,801, PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, DECEMBER 57, 1915. The guilty dodge tcicii you sloop to pick up stonr. PORK VEKSUS PATRIOTISM TT MAY !J J. tho pas be that Congress Ik po sordid that passage of tho national defense bills can bo prevented by rolling the port: barrel In their path. Claude Kltrhln and his asso ciates in opposing tho President's program ( have been in Washington long enough to know the temper of tho Congressmen. They know what can be done by an appropriation for a. public building or for Improving the rivers or harbors In breaking down opposi tion among tho members, and tho members have too often refused to support tho party program unless their associates would ngreo to make an appropriation for their districts for any one to bo Ignorant of tho way to move them. Now, at a time when every lawmaker should bo thinking nationally, If not Inter nationally, plans are ready to open the pork barrel and to make so great demands upon tho national resources for "Internal Improve ments" that it will bo found impossible to raise tho money needed to enlarge tho army and strengthen tho navy. It ought not to be possible for such a coarse and sordid program of bribery to find a slnglo advocate after It Is brought out Into the open. There may be districts which would re-elect a Congressman who went back homo and told his constituents that when tho world was at war and his country was in danger of being drawn Into tho conflict ho voted In favor of an appropriation for a now poatofllco In "your growing metropolis" In stead of squandering tho national revenues on more ships and moro soldiers. And thcro may bo Americans so narrow-minded and Bhort-slghtcd ns to applaud such a kind of patriotism. But It is doubtful. While publicity ought to defeat the pur poses of Mr. Kltchln and those working with him. It Is moro likely that these men will chuckle with delight nt tho discovery that their fiendish Ingenuity has been understood and appraised. VIENNA WILL FOLLOW BERLIN THE lack of excitement concerning our relations with Vienna Is attributable to this fact, namely, that wo aro asking merely the assumption by Austria of a program of conduct already accepted by her principal ally. It does not seem reasonable to assume that Austria will assert privileges on the high seas which Germany has already re nounced, on paper. If not In fact. Let It bo remembered, too, that In Vienna's reply to our first note thero Is an obvious Intent to excuse culpability on the ground of Ignorance of tho position t..ken by the United States In the several communications to Berlin, an Intent which intimates a pur pose on Austria's part not to defend the murderous acts committed by its submarine commander so much as to lay the ground work for a new policy similar to that an nounced by Its ally. It Is probable that there will bo no Interruption of diplomatic relations. AFTERMATH IT PASSES, does Christmas, In a rosy cloud and, what with the oncoming of New Year's Day, with Us resolutions, and post Christmas shopping to take advantage of bargains, and a wealth of other things, one doesn't naturally stop to look back at it. But It will well bear retrospect. There could be found In tho Christmas of 1915, among other blessed things, faint Indi cations of tho extension of the holiday. Ji various suburbs of tho city communltj Chrlstmases were celebrated, and more candles were visibly placed throughout the city to light the faltering steps of St. Nicholas. In Boston Christmas Eve la cele brated by the choirs of many churches straggling up and down Beacon Hill, with ancient torchlights, singing "Good King "Wenceslaus'' and "Nowell" and "Adesto Fjdeles." It is not too much to hope that when the Parkway Is finished it will be glorified by such an observance. As the celebration spreads from the church and the home to the community, so the spirit behind it may be extended beyond the mere time, of Christmas into the yer that follows. It need not be thinned and adulterated in order to go so far, Because the spirit of Christmas is one of the few human things which is not divided when shared, but doubled; nor does the flame which is its symbol burn low when it feeds, unscientifi cally but truthfully, on the milk of human kindness. THE END OF IT THE fun has all died out of the Ford peace expedition. The date set for Its Quixotic triumph saw Mr. Ford himself, broken in health ana unsatisfied of his great desire, leaving bis part, with a few pathetic words, unimaginably futile and moving. "Peace has been given publicity," he is reported as say ing, but ulas' the publicity of peace has been (lentil for many months in the clamor of afHU-ry ar-d the bitter (; of the starving. Mr S'ni d rc4 fooLsbiy but he dred atly II ts true that rr sire.l vluvegn ' Ju 4, aliaojt a ijiwtl'Xitag 'orfKUnce In ' t -t"Mr tf i-fpy fc-u . it r-i-i rr..iuing- " t;aA an r - rw wites ro atM? nee m ,.rt I wot kl baPMiulti. Jn. prosperity bt EVENING LEDGEK PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, DECEMBER crusade was the lit subject for tho smart Jibs and tho cutting word. In adversity It takes on. In spite of all Its bizarre nonsenso, some thing of the tragic. Certainly It Is to e hoped that tho remain ing members of tho Peaco Expedition will cither net with discretion or hurry home ward, as their leader has been compelled to do. And It Is equally to bo desired that tho work for peaco will not bo thrown back by this singularly Innusplclous tentative. Ono cannot storm the citadel of peace; but that Is ho reason why It should not be besieged with stout hearts and the vnlor of faith. HAS GEKMAXY SHOT HER BOLT? Tltttrcn great campaigns, eneh Intended to be dpelslve, the Kaiser nnd his allies have attempted In the first weeks of tho war Uioy drove their perfectly organized machine ruthlessly over tulned Belgium. Thero was, their ex perts' had reported, no forco In Europe nblo to resist them: nnd across their front stood only tho hurriedly collected levies, compara tively disorganized nnd ixjorly ofllccred, of French nnd British. They overran northern France, seizing 70 per cent, of Its manufac turing capacity. Thoy swept to tho very gates of Paris. Then Joffro somehow con jured up n thunderbolt, and nt the Marne ho hurled It ngnlnH tho Invaders. Thoy got no further. Thoy stumbled, they halted, thoy turned back: and from that day to this, In long months of desperate fighting, tholr ad vance lines have romnlnrd In the trenches to which they then retrcnted. Thoy struck for Pails nnd thoy lost. They side-stepped to ward Calais and agnln collapsed. Every month since has seen the power of tho Allies on the western front Increased. The French artillery has mot tho test. Campaign num ber one. tho great drive Into France, was a failure. Next enmo the project to destroy the main Russian army, whllo It was still weak In ar tillery, nnd bring tho Czar to his knees be fore help could come. It wns a great enter prise, bravely and efficiently undertaken. It saved Onllela and won Warsaw, but tho main objective wns never won. Tho Russian nrmy Ik still in the field, a moro capable army than It ever wns before, bettor equipped and better officered. Tho Russian Empire has had no more than Its little finger hurt. Its might crows day by day, and tho history of tho last year proves that Russia Is still Russia, a nation that rides to triumph on Its defeats, and is novcr so formidable as when Its armies have been driven back far Into the hinterland. Glorious as the Russian cam paign was for German arms, It was a failure, and none realizes this better than Germnn high command. Campaign number two was a failure. Next, with Constantinople starving for munitions, having by shrewd diplomacy won tho Bulgarian Czar and deluded the Allies Into failure to give proper assistance to their Balkan ally, tho Kaiser began his drlvo through Serbia, the most spectacular and dramatic of all bis enterprises. Within a few weeks ho virtually annihilated the Serb ian army, than which there was none moro capable or brave on earth. He won a routo to Constantinople, revlctualed the Turkish cannon and compelled tho practical aban donment of the Allies' Dardanelles campaign. But tho success of this enterprise was to bo moral rather than material. It was to induco among the Allies a willingness for peace. In that purpose It has failed completely; first, because tho possession of Constantinople means nothing In Itself to Germany, snvo as a base for operations; secondly, becauso tho lino from Berlin to Constantinople Is men aced at many points and tho guarding of It will require thousands of men. A campaign against Egypt nnd another to ward India by way of Bagdad would bo In vitations to defeat. Those far-flung forces would have to be supplied with munitions by Germany, tho demands on whoso fac tories are already enormous. Sho has won, therefore. In the Near East longer lines to defend, another exhaust pipe leading from tho reservoir of her resources. And none who knows tho history of Serblnn nrms doubts that she lost during the Serbian cam paign at least as many men as did the Serbians. Meantime, pressure from Italy strengthens and moro and more men aro required to de fend Austria on that front. Of tho maximum number of 8,000,000 men available for military service In Germany at least 4,000,000 havo been killed or Incapacitated. Yet thero are longer lines now to be defended than ever before. A vast Industrial nrmy Is required at home. Each new drive means new holes In the ranks which cannot bo refilled. What was the flower of the German army 18 months ago has practically ceased to exist. But tho armies of tho Allies, Inefficient to begin with, In spite of losses, have gradually flowered and give evidence of Increased power. So, apparently victorious everywhere on land, the German triumph Is now at Its zenith and must soon begin to set. And on the seas, where power so often has ulti mately decided wars, the German flag Is no where seen. Her sea-borno commerco has been utterly destroyed. She wages, It Is true, a sort of guerrilla warfare with submarines, ut they can do nothing decisive. Meantime 'he English fleets guard the ocean highways, over which flow to the Allies the product of all the world that is at peace. In finance the Allies are the stronger, In food and In mass of numbers. Monthly they decrease the disparity In supplies of muni tions. Daily they aro learning from the Germans themselves military efficiency. They have discovered, too, that the Germans can be held, that they are not invincible; and the war, at first a defensive one, has become a definite and set purpose on the part of the Allies to wipe out forever the whole system of militarism as developed by the Kaiser. The end is not yet, nor is it very near; but there is sound reasoning behind the refusal of the Allies to consider terms of peace. They believe, and so do some of the keenest neutral experts, that Germany has shot her bolt and by next autumn the whole charac ter of the war will have been changed, with the cause of the Allies decidedly in the as cendant. Wa want a big-enough, not the biggest, navy, The Christmas snow was a little late, but it got here Just the same. Revolution In China is not new. The whole country revolves once In every twenty-four hours. Lloyd-George for Prime Minister, they cry In London. He is a Minister now, and a prime good Minister, "The General Stall." says Mr. Garvin, edi tor of the Pall Mall Gazette, is the brain of an army '" It was not In Napoleon's time, and the only value of a, IVjuncH of War to Urant lay jn hi own proneness to ignore Its Tom Daly's Column Lines That Have Been Suggesting Them selves Each Morning Lately Between 8 nnd 9 o'clock We never thought that tec would act An iron-worker's joo, and vet ' When to this column's top we go Each morning to get busy, ll'c dare not vicio the space below, For fear o) groxolng dizzy. So, upon this morning after, we naturally rejoice to find here, convenient to our hnnd, tlil? long, safe nnd more or less ornate ladder provided by n thoughtful contrlb: Why (he Cruller? "Why Is the cruller miscalled a doughnut in Philadelphia?" B. W. C. demands to know. "Rather, I should Bay, why I? the doughnut that unmistakable and distinctive genus' of doughnut which surrounds a circular nlr spare miscalled a cruller? In half a dozen well known Philadelphia pastry emporiums I have been snlpplly Informed that a doughnut was not n doughnut, nny, that on the contrary, to wit, a doughnut wns a cruller. "Coming of New England stock my earliest memory datei back to tho doughnut with n holo In It. Not that I gainsay tho round, compaot, holeless doughnut. There havo long been such nnd still arc such In somo New England homes where the cullnnry arts have followed drab and unimaginative forms. Webster, I confess, did not mention tho holo In tho doughnut. Thero Is hasty supercilious brevity In his definition: a smali cake, Usually sweetened, often made with yeast and fried In deep fat. Nor do I find nny mention of tho hole In tho doughnut In tho Century Dictionary's amplified definition. "I will not take the positive stnnd that the doughnut, per se. muBt havo a hole In It. 1 havo documentary proof that my grcat-great-grandmother made them that way and so on down the generations. When I first came to sit nt breakfast with the grown folks the ap proved and traditional Now England doughnut was there. One of my earliest memories deals with the twirling of a doughnut on my thumb and of my deprivation of said doughnut for such unseemly conduct. Aunts, uncles, cousins I oc casionally visited did not deprlvo tho doughnut of Its mnnlfest right to surround an npcrturo of air space, no round nn air space as may bo con trived either by tho aid of a doughnut form punch or else by the simpler dovlco of twisting a strip of dough round tho thumb. "Havo you ever seen doughnuts strung on a cane nnd bartered to urchins for n penny each? I hnve. In Boston, In Providence, In linngor, Maine; yes, and even In the sordid precincts of Wall street, New York. Has nny one anywhere ever seen crullers strung on a cane? Never. "Coming to crullors, I find there need not be the slightest occasion for controversy or quibble. CIIULblUt Is Immediately derived from tho Old Dutch noun KRULLEH, one who curls. And there wan back of thnt the Middle Dutch verb KItt'LLKN to curl. Manifestly a cruller must bo curled or crulled. Thero Is that old lino I remember dimly, 'All day sho crulled tho crljp and crumbling cruller.' And yet your Philadel phia pastry purveyors will Insist that the snored holed and hallowed doughnut Is a cruller, and, vlco vorsn, that an uncquivocably crulled cruller Is a doughnut. "Why this bootless perversity In the cradle of tho nntlon?" What do you mako of this, gcntlo reader? What says Washington Irving In "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow"? This is It: "Such heaped-up platters of enkos of various and almost Indcscrlbnblo kinds, known only to experienced Dutch housewives! There wns tho doughty doughnut, tho tenderer oly koek, nnd the crisp and crumbling cruller, etc." "MIfs Delia keeper, than whom thero are no finer girls, has made her mark In Kecksburg. Her every smile Is a shining Jewel In her crown of personality. As a music teacher she is grnnd," says tho Kecksburg correspondent of the Mt. Pleasant (Pa.) Journal; and ns a cor respondent Is be not ditto? it$&3SRjPw Letters of Love 'rom "Hill's Manunl of Social und llUNlness FormH." Copy right, Thos. E. Illll, Chl enso, 18S2. V ALL letters, tho love letter should bo tho most carefully prepared. Among the written mls plves they aro the most thoroughly rend nnd re read, tho longest preserv ed, and the most likely to be regretted In nfter life Jlow to IIckIii a I.ore Correspondence Some gentlemen, being very favorably ImnreKseil with n lady at first sight, and having no Immediate opportunity for Introduc tion, make bold, after learning her name, to write her at once, seeking nn Inter, view, the form of which letter will be found hereafter. A gentleman In doing so, however, runs considerable risk of receiving a rebuff from the lady, though not always. It Is better to take a little more time, learn thor oughly who the lady Is, and obtain an Intro duction through a mutual acquaintance. The way Is now paved for the opening of n corres pondence, which may be done by a note Inviting her company to any entertainment supposed to be agreeable to her, or the further pleasure of her acquaintance by correspondence, as follows: Ixjve nt I'lrkt Sleht 0(1, St., June 1, IS, Dear Mla Ilawley: You will, I trut. torsive (his abrupt ana plainly spoken letter. Although I have been In your com pany but once, 1 cannot forbear writing to you. In riellance of all rules of etiquette. Affection la some, tlmex of alow growth, but sometimes It springs up In a moment. I left you last night with my heart no longer my own I cannot, of course, hope that I hate crcateJ any Interest In you. but will you do me the great fnor to allow ma to cultivate your acquaintance? Hoping that jou may regard me favorably, I shall await with much anxiety your reply. I remain. Yours devotedly, Ilenson Goodrich. Unfavorable Itrply 69-1 St., June 1, 18. Mr. Ooodrlrh: Your note was a surprise to me, considering that we hart never met until last evening and that then our conversation had been only on commonplace xubjects. Your conduct Ik Indeed quite strange. You will please be so kind as to oblige me by not repeating the request, allowing this note to close our correspondence. Murlon Ilawley. Paiorable Reply ., , i. oa St , June 1, 18 . Mr. Goodrich: Dear Sir Undoubtedly I ought to call you se verely to account for your declaration of love at flrst sight, but I really cannot And It In my heart to do so, as I must confetti that, after our brief interview last evening. I have thought much more of you than I should have been willing to have acknowledged had you not come to the confession first. Seriously speaking, we know but very little of each other, and yet we must be very careful not to exchange our hearts In the dark. I shall be happy to receive you here, us a friend, with a view to our further acquaintance. I remain, dear nlr, Marlon Ilawley. Feeling the twinges of Incipient grip It Is no great tratlafactlon to us to be told that It is the genuine Russian Influenza, We could do with a weak Imitation. Opening for Foreign Correspondents If you want The Young Mountaineer a year free of charge Bend us news from where ypu live. APDRESS W . A. & S. I SMITH Pikeville Ky. PikeUllt fKy.) Youhj ilountuinct. THE PRINTER The printer is a sober man; He never takes a 3up, And yet he Is an artisan Who likes to set 'em up. Cincinnati Enquirer. He also Is a kindly chap; The rag he will not chew. And if you should fall out with him He will make up with you. Afacon Telegraph. He's only Just a human man. And sometimes steps aside; But all the work the printer does We rind is Justified. llQutton PotL But when he's running true to typo Hqw he can swear, my eye! One droppe4 j,js, p-j-p-e pjp An4 it was p-1 pL V iVSr5 "kJ'P Mkm SOUNDING THE ATMOSPHERE What tho Government Is Doing in Explor ing tho Air Tho depths of tho Fca nnd tho secrets they hold have been explored by certain of the Got nrnment's scientists for generations, but It Is only In comparatively recent years that other of tho Government's scientific workers hnvo turned their attention upward nnd havo begun to sound, with kites and balloons, Instead of tho lend, tho almost limitless ocean of tho atmos phere. In order systematically to advance these explorations of tho nlr, which Is tho great Pan dora's box of tho weather, tho Weather Iln icnu Is Just now completing the Installation of elaborate kite and balloon handling equipment for upper nlr Investigations at its station near Omaha, Neb. The Government's upper nlr work was begun nt tho old Mount Weathor observatory In Vir ginia nearly ten years ago. Because, however, of the deslro to secure data on tho eastward moving storms in their enrly stnges, the Vir ginia stntlon has been abandoned nnd the work has been transferred to tho vicinity of Omnha, where the disturbances first becomo well de veloped nfter the disrupting Influence of tho Rockies nio left behind. The balloon work In tho West wns got under wny much In advance of tho klte-flylng activities since tho equipment of tho signal service at Fort Omaha for producing hydrogen gas for inflations lins been placed by tho Wnr Department at tho scrvico of tho Weather Bu reau. It has been necessary to Install n com pleto kite-handling plant, however, nnd this has been done on a forty-ncro farm secured for the purpose about twenty miles west of Omaha. The tract Is high, level and freo from timber. In the very centro of It has been erected a re volving reolhouso not unlike tho revolving room of nn astronomical observatory. This structure can bo turned, therefore, with tho wind, nnd tho reel so placed In best position to play out nnd wind In tho miles of fine piano wire which tho Government klto filers substitute for the small boy's cord. Electricity lias been called to tho assistance of tho Weather Bureau's experts, and will operate the reel since, by electrically driven mechanism, nny d-islred speed can easily and quickly be attained. To furnish the needed power for this purpose nnd for tho machinery of the well-equipped carpenter shop In which ;ho scores of kites will bo manufactured, tho Gov ernment Is Installing an electric generating plant driven by gnsollno motor, and It Is only the setting up of this machinery that Is lacking to bring the new plant to completion. When klto-fiylng operations are got under way they will not be confined, ns Is tho small boy's sport, to the blustery months of spring, but will extend through tho sensons year In and year out. Box kites will be used nnd they will be sent nloft In "tenuis" of from six to nine, n new klto being attached whenever tho weight of tho wire begins to drag. In the first kite are placed tho Instruments, tho carrying of which nloft Is the object of tho whole elaborate plan, and nit of the operations are carried on within It. Theso Instruments weigh between two nnd thrco pounds and by clockwork record on a revolving cylinder varia tions in nlr pressure, temperature, humidity and wind velocity. Such records, secured In the past, have been Invaluablo to the Weather Bu reau In various ways, and with the Improved facilities In a more Important area even more valuable results are looked for. While kites furnish nn easy and Inexpensive means for tho making of observations In the first few miles above the earth's surface, thoy cannot reach the really high altitudes. In ex ploiing tho highest point to which man has ever been on mountain peak or In aircraft, the scientists of the. Weather Bureau have made uso of what has the appearance of an over grown toy balloon of the sort dear to the hearts of children. The devices, called sounding bal loons, are mado of the purest 'thin rubber ob tainable, and when inflated with hydrogen gas are round and about a yard and a half in diam eter. When released with recording Instrument attached tho balloons shoot rapidly upward and AMUSEMENTS HOTEL WALTON Famed for Its ability to do big things In a big way, will hold a real old-fashioned celebration on NEW YEAR'S EVE CuUlne, service, orchestra and surroundings will combine to furnish an unusual setting for the evening's frolic. Dancing Souvenirs SECURE HESEKVATION'S WITHOUT DELAY l'HOM THE HEAD WAITEK HOTEL WALTON EUGENE G. MILLER, Manager METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE Boston Grand Opera Co. IN CONJUNCTION WITH Pavlowa Ballet Russe gveUfai Madama Butterfly TMl2fk' Martin, Chalmers. Followed by SNOWFLAKES mFSSSl Bjn.Mxat" L'Ecole en Crinoline. "New" VVPVESFEB Divertissement WITH PAVLOWA. POPULAR PRICES New Year's PAPTTA PPT Zenatello, Night XXlvjUI.Avjtil Teyie. Uaklanoff. Followed COPPELIA Pai,0aVnVn1 Seat sale today 110U Chestnut street Prices. It to t9. Phones, Walnut 4424. Race 67. W A T XTTTT1 Po- &lat- Tue Th" " YV XlJUlN U 1 lit. Matinee Saturday Eveoln at 8:13 HIT OF THE TOWN Andrew Mack "ZS&SP Best Seat 1 No lllxher Phone Walnut ZluO. PEOPLES THE GUILTY ONE TroeaderafPX" AZETA t 1915. rench surprising altitudes. The record, some thing more than 20 mllos nbovo sea lovel, wns made In tho summer of 1913 In southern Cali fornia. Tho limit of tho upward Journey Is virtually set by the quality of tho rubber, for the bnlloon gradually expands ns It rises, until nt Its high est point It Is sovernl yards In diameter, Tho upward drift and tho expansion go on until tho clastic limit of tho rubber Is reached, when tho balloon burats. Then a small parachute un folds and lowers tho Instrument with Its In teresting nnd valuable) record gently to tho earth. A tag requests tho finder to send tho Instrument to the Wenthcr Bureau officials, nnd In vlrtunlly overy caso the device promptly reaches tho men who sent It aloft. "Washington Btar. A CURSE ON WAR MAKERS Verily on overy man who In tlmo of peaco speaks or writes one word to foster bad spirit between nations, a curse should rest; he Is part and parcel of that malovolenco which nt last sets these great engines, fed by lumps of hu mnn conl, to crash along nnd pile up ngnlnst each other In splintered wreckngo. Only too well ho plays the game of those grim schemers to whoso account llo the dehumanlzatlou and despair of millions of their brother men. John Galsworthy, In Scrlbncr. IS HE SO EAGER FOR IT? AVlth sugar 10 cents a pound It will not bo nny cuslcr for Colonel Iloosovelt to got that third cup of coffee. Philadelphia Evtnina Ledger, He would gulp It down with salt In It nnd call It "bully." Ncu) York Evening Sun. BRYAN WANTS A CARTOON To the Editor of Evening Ledger- Sir I Incloso a cartoon which Is credited to the Evening LEDOBn. I nm wondering whether you would be willing to send mo the original or that cartoon for my collection, I havo milto a collection of original enrtoontf, nnd I shall be glad to have thlw one, nlthough my ndmlra tlon is called out by tho skill of the artist rather than by the truthfulness of the car toon. W. J. BRYAN. Villa Serena, Miami, Florida, for tho winter, December 13, 1015. Note. The cartoon to which Colonel Bryan rofcrs will ba remembered by Hve.vino Li: do En readers as ono which pictured the "Burr-ryan" under tho saddle of President Wilson's Demo cratic donkey. Editor of the Eve.ninq Ledger. AMUSEMENTS B. F. Keith's Theatre CHESTNUT AND TWELFTH STREETS 2 SHOWS DAILY 2 MAT., 2 P. M. NIGHT, 8 P. M. Happy New Year Jubilee SOCIETY'S EXCLUSIVE ENTERTAINER BEATRICE HERFORD IN ORIGINAL CHARACTERIZATIONS THE POPULAR AirERICAN PRIMADONNA MABEL BERRA CHOICEST VOCAL SELECTIONS A PLAY OP SENSATIONS AND SURPRISES "THE PASSION PLAY OP WASHINGTON SQUARE" BANCROFT & BROSKE INTERNATIONAL STARS OP SONOS MR. & MRS. GORDON WILDE MARVELOUS SHADOWOHAI'HISTS HOEY & LEE HOLMES & BUCHANAN KERVILLE FAMILY MYRL & DELMAR 3 SHOWS NEW YEAR'S DAY AT 1, 4ll3 AND 8 P. M. SPECIAL RED TICKETS GOOD FOK islfi PERFORMANCE ONLY ACADEMY OF MUSIC " ' PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA LEOPOLD STOKOWSKl, Conductor Symphony Fri. Afternoon, Dec. 31, at 3:00 Concerts Saturday Evj., Jan, 1, at 8:15 SoloUt: Nlcholan Douty, Tenor PROGRAM Overture, "Oberon" WEDER "Adelaide" UEBTHOVEN Symphony No. 1. In IJ flat SCHUMANN Variation ot an original theme STRURE ' Standchen STRAUSS ' Llebeilled from "Die Wolkuere" WAGNER Carnival de ParU" SVENDSE.V . R.., Vnw nn Sale at HenDa'fl. 1110 f?hnutnttr 1 ACADEMY OP MUSIC BURTON HOLMES WEDNESDAY DEC, 29 PANAMA-PACIFIC EXPO S ITI 0 N 60c. TSe, fl, at Heppe'a. 23c at Academy LYRIC LAST WEEK! LAST POPULAR tl MATINEE WEDNESDAY 'SXMSSf1 LOUIS MANN 'SoSSSSS "THE BUBBLE" SEATS NOW FOR ALL PERFORMANCES BROAD STREET" THEATRE fL ESDAY DECEMBER 26TH, AT 2 P M. Le Gendre de Monsieur Poirier In Krtnch by tbe Company or Benefit (tfThe Lafayette Pynd 27, ."AH-H-HT' I , A 1 AMUSEMENTS CHESTNUT STREET opera Continuous Performance, Noon Till 11 P. M. D'ANNUNZIO'S GREAT CHARACTER CREATION "MARVELOUS MACISTE" THE GIANT OF "CABIRIA" An Amazing and Modern Melodramatic Comedy A GASP AND GRIN IN EVERY SCENE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA PRICES 10c 15c 25c THE STANLEY MARKET ABOVE 10TH STREET CONTINUOUS. 11 A. M, TO 11 P. M. ALL THIS WEEK GERALDINE F A R R A R IN FIRST PRESENTATION OI" "-TEMPTATION" REVEALS SECRETS OF GRAND OPERA Stanley Symphony Orchestra and Sololits Extra Midnight Performance NEW YEAR'S EVE Next Week MARY PICKFORCjln THE FOUNDLINO GAR rTceT" TONIGHT AT 8:15 Matinees Wednesday and Saturday at 2ilB COHAN & HARRIS Present Dramatic Sensation of the Century 0 N TRIAL ropular Price Matlnea Wednesday, Uest Seats II W ADELPHI TONIGHT Finsr Tinn .i.vr st.ioc NEW PATRIOTIC AMERICAN COMEDV THELA'NDOFFREE "Not Pro-German; Not Pro-Ally NevvVaVa'eMa-t SJSil ' i BROAD Tonight 8:15 $Tts WILLIAM GILLETTErp last times SECRET SERVICE In HI Fumous Success RaturdJr S'ext Week 'Sherlock Holmes " Only Mat,jiufw FORREST NOW mTweK'aV CHARLES DILLINIIHAM Presents WATCH YOUR STEP VERNOn1caSTLEFRANK TINNEV Brlce A. King; Harry Kelly 100 Others rT HDT? Theatre "S, J GLOBE YWWWiFSg 1 ' . - In SKS?. COLLEGE DAYSVa OTHER POPULAR VAUDEVIl LIANS Special Midnight Show Nt""2 CHESTNUT Wlfw'fS m ARCADIA SKW Syd Chaplin in a Submarine Pirate THURSDAY. FKJDAY AND SATURDAY William S. Hart in "BETWEEN MEN Bfl " 10O1SH MARKET-20C PALACE LOu'TBli&N in "THE UNkfJXi, Thursday, Friday & Saturday Keystone Co"1"' Syd Chaplin In "A Submarine llte Extra Midnight Performance New JVear . met iTo polTt Vn op e b a ho us a METROPOLITAN OPERA CO., NMV TO- m -v rw i i Mines. Destlnn, "JTotU. TOSCAa..r;s SEATS 1109 CHESTNUT ST Walnut 3L R" Knickerbocker T,lffife "The Old Homestead" BOntw MATINEE DAILY THIS WEEK AMERICAN amdtfBllv ABV1NB STOCK In ' HELP, WACTffi, i Hi m