faa iiwj&ttM.M, -,, . , ... f. . .... , ,. , .t, ...t,. . . .. -s.. it f .,....., ,.,,,...... . . , im t ntimm U)) , .. r B - . x I,, j - -, ,,-- - . --- -rii I, ,ft..i r..(L).j,iV. i. -r " ' ' ' -" '" T r" " "' "" ' " " '" '-' . - B9HI PLETHORA OP NEW PLAYS AND MUSICAL COMEDIES DURING THE WEEK OF CHRIST3MIA& r ! Wty I Go" to tke Picture Sliow By One Who Knows V t 1 Art, Travel, History, Romance, Science, Comedy, All for TSlo More Than the Tariff on a Good Cigar" The Metro's Press Agent Waxes Dithyrambic By ARTHUR JAME3 rpHBItB are n great many rensons why 1 X fro to the rrtollon-plbluro hhort. To "begin with, I can nit nt enno In a comfortable seat ana sce before my eyes tho whole great world pnss In review. I can sco His Tilrk at hi niosaue,' with his arms stretched toward Mecca',' tha explorer battling gAtntt tho mrRlit df lea And uno-v, the Arab on the burtllrtr Hands of tho Sahata tho mlghly trees of California, Die hlnck skinned natives: of tho tropics gntherlng coconuutn and fruits, tho beasts of over jungle and forest nnd plain, tho fish of nit tho Waters nf tho world, tho marvel of nature, tho wonders ot 'savagery nnd clvitltatiun. I Bo to tho motlon-plcturo show becnuso, tin a common man, I can learn morn of fsclenco than from tho reading of count )M books, or by month of tritvol, or from courses ot lectures delivered by whispered Baranta whoso technicalities conftiso rather than inform. I bo to the motlon-plcturo nlipw becnusn It repeats for mo tho Rrcnt eventn In history. I can Hvo In tho tlmcn When tho cruclnt scenon woro enacted and escape centuries of commonplacei. I can sco Wntylort totter to Ita fall, I can bo ono 'With tho kings of Ksypt, nnd vntch tho btilldlnB of the Pyramids. 1 can march with Caesar and his Itoninn hosts, nnd bo a. spoctntor with the throng nt tho Circus Mdxlmus, I can follow tho Ikm-henrtcd ltlchard against tho Snracons: I can sco Alexander In his greatness, Nnpoloon In his pctnp arid In his oxllo. I can bo nt Hunker Hill nnd nt Mrtntla Hay,-nt Tort Arthur and at Portsmouth, nnd with the mooter frngmcntn of tho world's events I can construct a. living history that will bo with Ino forover, I go to tho motlon-plcturo show because It brings to mo from ovory land nnd ovary people In tho world tho things that are trcmondousty Interesting; tho vital things that maks for progress, the plcturcsaim, tho bizarre, tha unlmio( tho strange, the benutlful. so that I enn nnjdy tho ripened fruits of energy, onthualnHin, ability, wealth and art. I go to tho motlon-plcturo show because I can sco tlj master dramas ot nil time dono bettor than their million! dreamed, r can sco tho great fictions brought to Ufa nnd onaoted rather than told. I can ex perience tho tremendous nnd nppenllng griefs, mourning with tho stricken nn'il sor rowing with tho bereaved to my soul better ment. I go to tho motlon-plcturo show because I can Inugh at tho comodlcs old and now, tho hurly-burly and tho gracious, tho slap stick nnd tho subtle, until I nm refreshed and mado nnow and better for It. I go to tho motlon-plcturo show becnuso t Is a ercnt magician whosa wand makes How Popular Is Opera? F CHAMBER MUSIC is tho I1 nent American composer thought, opera certainly is its roast beef. Talk all you like of "bastard art" ; inveigh against the unreality of wio-s and costumes, tachment of absolute music most people like opera bettor than the recondite forms of expression. Now comes the question, with special bearing on Philadel phia: How much do people like opera, and why? Is it just a question df Caruso in any old thing, of an expensive novelty, of Hammorsteinian scenery? In another phrase, does the old, re liable, standard-gauge repertory question for personal reasons, but delphia Graml Opera Company's somewhat more concrete utter ance of tho query. Whether its venture at tho Academy a ven ture begun last week is 'going to succeed financiallyi is really a matter of some moment. Its success, or failure, ought to establish, once for all, tho fate of any future attempt to give, people "Lucia," "II Trovatorc" and "Pagliacci" nt $2 instead of $5 prices. Meanwhile, there is at least no roason for artistic discouragement on tho part of the backers. For while opera abroad is primarily a popular-priced enter tainment, it must be remembered that Philadelphia is notoriously conservative in accepting any "new propositibn" and "fed up" on tho article vended with such prodigality by Oscar, and afterward by the now severed Gemini, Campanini and Dippel. Some famine must follow tho feast. Thero are three factors that promise well for Mr. Rosenbach : He has (sweet thought 1) a central location. He has a markedly creditable roster of professional, trained artists, in addition to his laudably efficient and partially amateur chorus. And ho has, I hopo, a certain amount of local pride among Phila delphians to count on. Should that prido suffer a fall through pro-holiday activity, casual neglect or ignorance, it will be a strong, a very strong, indictment of the alleged' love of music here. For the orchids of art cannot thrive unless the common soil is Watered, And no art is larger than tho lowest step in its evo lution. It takes a "Cavalleria" to illumine a "Rosencavalier." B. D. HrcilflllisMHwEP 1 ' 93IkII9I1SMIMP ' vMk H v ' vjHmHf if ; , -C'IhB If MiK I mmis BBR FORTE At Imtt, ttJat is te title of Mrs. Gsne ltvtgm'9 jkwteh, la which ha ""Wrw I J res ma Into llslnir facts, nnd facts Into splendid fancies ( becnuso, while groater than tho spoken drama, It Is not nt war with It j whllo mightier than tho written story, It does not encroach upon Its dominions. I go to the mMlon-pleturo show because It Is the greatest Work of man, great as nn educator, as an Influence to belter things; ha an entertainment beyond com parison, as n wonderland of truth and rtctjnn, of tragedy nhd mirth, nn nll-encom pnsslng. International avenue wherein nil peoples of all tongues may walk aldo by tldo nnd understand. I go to tho motion-picture show because It constantly grown better In Its nrt, finer In Its grasp ot Human Mings, gronior in Its appeal to the heart nnd mind, mightier In the splendor of lln themes nnd loftier In its Ideals; becnuso It comprises tho sum total of human achievement and brings It nil where I can reach out nnd fool and know It, I go to the motlon-plcturo show because It given mo science history, drama nnd comedy; because It brings mo drowns ana frtcls, nnd brings thorn to mo nllvo nn I sit comfortably In n scat that coat no more than" tho tariff on n good cigar. HERE'S AN ACTOR THAT WASN'T "BORN" Frank Craven, who plays tho leading rolo of Jlmmlo Shannon In David Uolnscn's comedy, "Seven Chances," which comes to tho fiarrlck. Theatre Christmas Day, Is positive that ho wasn't ono of thoso '"born uulnrs.' It was not his fault, howover, for ho came within thrco years of being one. At thli small nno ho mado IiIh first ntngo appear nnro with tho llostbn Thdatro Company In "Tho Silver King' appearing In tho old Sans Soucl Clardcfs In l'rovldonce. After this engagement, Craven quit the stage to go to school. "I would havo liked school protty wcll'lf It hadn't been for tho mnthomntlcs." Cravon iiuld tho other day. "I novcr could get a flguro Into my bend and I loft school for good ami nil when I was fourteen." When a Ilttlti chap Craven lived In Nod ding. Mass., Just outslila of Uoston, and ho used to mind n sawmill, which wns next door. Ho fed tha saw. for llko most kids, tho machinery fascinated him. Ho used to fool about tho placo all day Sunday as well as aftor school on tho other days. At another tlmo young Crnvcn worked In a. tnck factory. Ho known all about the "cold veal" of melody, ns an emi as contrasted with tho pure de hold in 191G? I don't put the merely as an echo of tho Phila structure of a tnck of the thrco tiny pieces that go to mako it up, head and all, A mall clerkship in, a lloston renl estate and Insurance office was Ms jtext Job. At that t .no his father was playing In a stock company in Ualtlmora and he Joined him. "Thoy were putting on The Sliver King. and my father said If I liked I could havu tho part of an old man In It. which I too gladly. Having been 'carried ou' not exactly, of course, for I walked on myself and played Ned Denver In the same piece at the tender age of mroe, nniurany ren aa if I knew the play from beginning to end. "I wasn't exactly stogo manager In Hal. tlmore, but J hung around Uie theatre all the tlmp, and I was always ready to help the stage manager out. Whep, they pro duced 'Blue Jeans' I was the only one who know how to manage the sawmill scene, I had fed tha sawmill back home and the tack business was an advantage to me In helping around tho stage. I was the handy man beoauie I was alwaya on tho job." Craven Is pot only nn actor on the stage, but on the street aa welL That is. he studies humanity and makes use of what he finds In real life In the .mako-belleve world be hind the footlights, 'One needs to be abcervant In this busi ness," he says "I romember that way back at schools one of tho exercises think of wan tha only one I used to shine in was when, q lot ot us children were mkrshalod past a window full ot a. let of things and afterward required to write what we saw. If 6ho had bton all like that I'd have ktusH U eat. "Anyway, J have kep the xerdse up. When I ea a man coming up tha street who, for some reason or othftr, attracts rax fttUBtion. J Study him and. sea what It 1J that has inula ma look at hlca. If lt'a his , Mtyxe mat. remaps ifa the way Im earrtwi hi cane. The ohaaees are that thero a tutaethiug aWut the way he is I IrWHIiil ttte Color Of hia clothe, (hat (. I $' I A Foretaste iff i Tj'Kbj&W Cyr EPISODE IV CAST OF CIIAItACTUHH rerl Dnro I';1"' 'hlte (Nilonul Unrti v. l. nrnuuii .Mnjnr ifreni Iterthn Dunn T. tJ Artiimn ,lhn'loro J rlbim . ...Mirlo Wnn .. ltulpll KolUrd Silent Monaco (Not A now tmrlo will In publlhed In thl niwupopisr cn week Head It here, then ico to tha motion picture thentru nhowlns "Pearl of thn Army" nml eo how tho director rnrrled out tha Inetructlona In this scenario In tho photnnlty.) Hulitltlc renrl Uoro nnd her fnlthful chauf feur. Toko, hnvn dlacoered thnt 11 certain myiterloua mini, T, o. Adaina, liolda tho atulali Uefenaa plana of tho Panama Canal, Aceno 1 Iicatlon on hlllaldn aa per prevlnua enlaodo, I'nrily tcn dlaphritirm on foreground or Adnnia rending plana. Oontlnuo foreground to atiow Pearl nnd Tolto frazlnir nt him from be hind ruck. 11111 net Pearl und Toko leap upon the unauapectlna Adama. Pearl aelzlnjr tho plana. nut Aiiama recovers tncm. in a turioua nam Toko deal) him u Jujutau Mow. Adama (alia un ronncloua. Pearl and Toku aearch thrnUEll Adama'a rlothi'M In vain fur plana Mov to edno of declivity nnd out of picture to hunt Impor. Ilrenl eornea Into plrturs nnd dlacneera Adama, who recovers (onaclounneaa. They both exit In opposite direction. Hieno i Tcitlon. bottom of cliff. Toko nnd Pearl hunting for pinna Pearl sugireals that Toko look In 1)01 h little, dlatnnce awny. lln nods and leaves hunllmr. Pearl contlnuea aearchlns. but slvea up In despair, ticcno 3 Illllslda location na per 1, Around the rncka, In a. dlllerent direction from thai taken by dither Toku or Pearl, enmes tho Silent Menace. I moves to apot where Adama fell nnd from under rock brings forth plans, thrusts them Into his pocket and cults. ( Hubtltle Two hours later Adama volunteers for service In the eniclniurtng; corps. Scono I Outaldu lieudauartern ut roncentra- tlon cump. tuloncl Darn nn erandn. Toko conies up with Pearl nnd tells her father ex. clteuiy ol nor aaventura. pee tutr. Daro tella Pearl and -tees Adams approach nd Toko to hldo In iinuia aa Adama tiaura Adama cornea up nnd appllea for places IJuro makes appointment wlih htm. Adama exlta. Toko cornea out and Liro tens nim io tonow Auams. toku ixiis Hubtltle llavlmt lost the packet nnd lock aho was ordered by the Hllent Menaro to bear to tho border. . lUrtha lloim returns to her Wash ington hotel. Hceno B Lobby of hotol In WarrhlnKton. llertha comes up to hotel clerk's desk, Clerk' r:reets hrr. llertha Hnds locket tontalnlns; (rent's picture nnd promlsa at marrlni-n la still In ssfa. Clerk lets her havo It, although she has lost receipt, Bubtltle -With nrent once more In her power, llertha, norm returna that nlaht to the con centration camp to tlnd that tha only accom modations nre.ln nn emergency hoapttnl tont, Hcene II Inside, tent. This ten! niled with, cots for wreck victims, llertha cdmea In nml Is kUen cot by huraa. llertha starts to ratlrsj hcene 7 Outside of wreck victims' tent. Moonlight effect. Show foreground ot Silent tmxMiumm&is Just a suggestion of tha fairy-tale woncjers yhl?h ttte Famous Players studio has put into which corae3 to jfee jtan!ey Christmas week. 7 t of Footligfht Feasts Tho hollicd holidays arc here, A torch of joyous dolor? Why "foor"? At this tUno of year " Tha Crooning Board insists on Cheer; t Paulino's digestion's out of gear, " Paul flaunts a pulsing molar. , Theatric tables, too, ara spread With riches gastronomic. Whilo greedy auditors aro sped A from house to house, aglow, instead . Of dark and shrouded as tho dead. Their feasts aro grave and comic. Upon tha Broad's once-silent boards Tha Pcnnsy Dutch aro mixin', A simple fnllt, unused to Fords, Who habttAto tho Stale in hordes. The star a lady of crisp words "Proffered by S. F. Nixon." Tho spire of jest, the wino of tvit, Tha Forrest's dinner-menu. Cohandsomcly tha dishes flit From course to course, and not a bit Tha management admits that it Will bore, annoy or pain you. In Wordsworth's vein, the Garrick now Extends its chances seven. Unruffled tho Shubertian brow; Their impresario will "allow" With no apologetic bow: "Tho Lyric? Simply Heaven!" Young Siegfried, crowned with courage, Within the opera portal. Ituy Bias returns to local lands, Ana Cheerful Chaunccy bursts the bands Of time, whilo Sarah countermands Life's orders strange immortal! i Ah, yes, tho holidays aro here, Arid you and all the neighbors Consume the fowl, and sip tha brer " Of things theatrical Dear, dcarl Remember one who has no cheer: Tha critic with his labors. wPearl of the A By GUY W. McCONNELL Scenario by ' GEORGE BRACKETT SEITZ Author of "The Iron Claw," "The Shlcldln Shadow," etc. PRODUCED BY PATHE Monaco kneeling beside tent. With a raior he L!f 1 ut .cjnvss. Full set Silent Menace crawls through hois Into tent. Scene S Inside tent aa per 0, llertha llonn askep. "Nurao nodding nt table. Hllent Monara cornea Into picture. Crawla oer to llerlha'a cot, reachea for locket faatened on to chain about her neck and tuga aantly. llertha llonn nwakea and the Hllent Menaco slips out of hols In tent, llertha nuiiled, sots out front of tent. hcene 0 Outside, tent. Other tents In Blcturs. llertha cornea out looking anxiously about to nnd her disturber. Silent Menace suddenly ap pears at her side, srapplea with her In an at tempt to wrench cnuln from about her neck, llertha crlea for help, Hllent Menace nnatchee chain nnd drop it as a squad ot guards and 2'n "f ,Vulno running on. Nurso romes out. Silent Menace Ilees llertha tells them of in rldnnt. All except nurse, so on to hunt Silent Menace. Pearl comes up, nurae tells her of theft. Pearl hunts about nnd discovers locket. She la oxamlnlna It nnd turns to find Adsms at her side, Adams demands locket, but llertha comes back and claims. It. llrnt nlv) cornea Into picture and says It Is his. Pearl perplexed, slowly turns away and, moves into tent. Tho rsst follow, dlanutlniT violently, Scene 111 Inslda tent as tier 0. Pearl, llertha, Adams, nurso nnd aoldlers come In. Stand under arc lamp. Show foreground of tent pole. Iwh hands nro seen manipulating ropes, plainly preparing to tumble tent down. Pull not foreground of llertha, llrent nml Adams attll dlaputlng. Darn comes In. stops and stares nt locket held by Pearl, recognltlna It as Psj one .given to Payne, Ho demands It. Pearl wonderlnaly reachea out her hand to clva locket to her father ns tha tent begins to collapse Hcene 11 Outside tent, , Tent falls. Show foreground of several of the party atrurgltnir In the, folds ot the tent. Pull set Peopls struggling In, tent which, has been' set ablaxo by u fallen lamp. ' Scene 1J Tent ablnie. Other tenia catch (Ire. Camp fire department arrives, lleglns to carry out Injurod, Colonel Dare and the others are pulled out nf th, tent In whlrh they aro en meshed, Show foreground of Dare, llrent. Adams, Pearl and others In picture. Dare holds out hta hand for locket. Pearl epeaks. Spoken title "It la son", Homo one anatched It when the tent fell." They all saze at each other suspiciously. Subtitle Possessing the Canal defenso plans and llertha llnnn's locket, the Hllont Menace summons the Foreign Alllanca to a conference In Washlnaton Rrarm 1: "1 Hlttlnff -Hitting room In private suits In hntAl. b'nr Foreign Alliance gathered around table Silent Menace addressing them, bis back toward uuMtciiie, HERE'S THE KIDDIES' MERRY CHRISTMAS nr !i stands 1 1 ssssssftssfl Mir m m I ijf.irfSkM - I rmy J?,PJ".? I,,.'T"! ' hae made nrraneements to n.ii.? "fedula now b.nj completed by the fhV V1-' .'reparedntss. Committee, meeting In Ji?n rnLl. rtSjnV. Wu" 'or m hera till f re exus. nt ihnli': nnlahes speaking and in?.nnn? 1ir-(0utj'l,1e rnllroirt station In Wash-rn..'-.,ano,,r foreground , of Pearl emen-lns from station, (lets into taxi nnd drlvea away, S,c.c.n .,B OutsM hotel.) Hllent Menaco -SKt.iPut aecomiianled by ona companion. Ihey enter luxurious Ilmouslno and ilrlia away. ,Heen IB (Street corner.) Pearl'a tail comes whlsxlnir through toward side street. Silent Menace's limousine, cornea around aldo street. Hath icsrs stop, barely imrtlnir collision Pearl cu ches climpao of Silent Menace, nnd tells tail Jlrher to follow his car. Taxi follows after limousine. Hcene IT tOutslde doorof Senate Building. Two Senate watchmen on xuard.) Silent Monaco's car drives up. Silent Menace gets out, moves with companion to Seoato guards. Displays a puss and both are adraittod. Penrl's taxi drives up, Penrl arts out, runs up to guards, but, hajlng no paoa. they refuse to allow her to enter. She argues with them, Hubtltlo Tho National Preparedness Com mittee. ' Scene 18 (Committee room In Senate Dulld Ink) national Preparedness Committee discuss Inr plnns. On desk before chairman la achedule aougnt by Hllent Menace. Chairman plcka It up and reads Committee greatly Impressed and la amaxed nt some of the expoaurea made. Chairman flnlahee reading. Indlcatea mrellnc la oor. The committee, with tho exception of chairman, rite and exit. As chairman site alone reading report, door opena and Hllent Menace with leveled revolver, and his companion s'ep In Sceno ID (Outside Senate ilulldlnr as per 17.) Pearl arguing with guurds desperately. Hlio makes a sudden rush and runs Into Senute Dulldlnir. ) Sceno .20 (Committee room aa per IS.) Silent Menaco hands revolver to companion, who keeps chairman, covered, hllent Monaco plcka up plana und starts for. door. Chairman leaps to his feet, but Is struck down with revolver. He rails back unconscious. Silent Menace and companion exit hurriedly. Hceno 21 tCorrldor outsldo commltteo room.) Silent Menace and companion coming out of doorway. Aa thoy do ao Pearl, followed by iniards. c-.ms around corner, rushes to Silent Menace ond seties him. The two cuanls. nt slaht of masked men, rush to her uld. Terrllto right ensues. Silent Menses's companion Is struck down by guards, but Silent Menace l.n.K.ui down Pearl und nets Poirl follonr. tjcen" SV-'Tower room lns'd Hcnnte Itulld Ins.) eilenl Monaco comes rushing up, followed lil- Pearl. Tncy struggle. at tho window. Silent Menace pushes Pearl through window. She slides down sloping root tu ralnxutter, wliera she manages to, catch herself. Hllont Menace turns and hastily exits. Scene ".'3 (Italngutter nnd roof.) Pearl, by aid of a lightning rod ana telephone wires, man ages to climb back. Crawls In through win dow as guards comt up and tell her Silent Menace has vanished Pads Into foreground of the Hllent Menace. Dlsiohe into largo question mark. "Snow mite," Sarah of thei Golden Voice Tells of TJ 'A . ' -KT ramoufl actress s Jtcmoirs When Pfte piicitcrecl the Wounded Ad in 1916 By SARAH "Tora Bernhardt fio turntd htr tneofre ovtr to tha auJnoi-Hte to tae o cl AcwpKal." The cobttt In 1U repeat tha tcordj tent over n lilt. Forty-fovr yean ago, when "Tho DMno 8amh" tea only ttcentv-four vertrs of hpt and htA aehttvtd her firit suocees at IAD Orleon, tho ettabttshed a hotpUal in that theatre, tn uhteh the herttlf terved, at nurtt to the Mounded French toUtlert dut Ino tho tteio of Parle in the Franco-Vru. ttan tear. Her oxen account of thete day a the pivtt In her "ilemolrt" U m o dramatic incident. I CANNOT rcnll those, terrible) dnrs with out tho deepest emotion. It vbb no longer tho country In diinper thnt kept my nehe strunc up, hut tho nufTerlnga ot all her children, Thero woro nil those who woro flxhllnf;, those who wero brought in to ua wounded or dying;, the noblo women of the people who stood for hours nnd hours In tho queue to not the necessary dole ot bread, mctU nnd milk for their poor little onen at home. Oh, thoso poor women I I could eee them from the theatre windows preealnc; up clonn to enoh other, blue with cold and etnmplnn; their feet on the ground to keep them from freexlns;. for that winter wns the most cruel ope wo had had for twenty years. Oh, tho suffering1 they must have endured, thoso heart-broken mothers, those sisters and fiancees, in their terriblo drend I How excusnblo their rebellion seems dur ing the Communo, nnd oven their blood thirsty mndness! Kvery night we' uod to henr tho dltmal cry of 'Ambulanca I Ambulation I' underneath the windows of the Odeon. Wo went down to meet the pitiful procession, nnd ono, two or sometimes three convey ances would bo thero full ot our poor wounded soldiers. There would bo ten or twolve rows of thctn, lying or sitting upon (From 'Memories of My I.tfo." by Sarah Hernhardt D. Applcton & Co., New York.) EXTRA! CHARACTER JUST RUNS AWAY FROM AUTHOR Every dramntlst nnd writer of fiction tins had tho experience of Inventing a char acter that refuses to keep within bounds, that Insists upon dovoloplng itself out of nil proportion to the other characters, nnd tlmt haa no regard for tho plot ns original ly mapped out by the creator of tho novel or play. Such characters when dtccoverod are worthy of tho nttontlon of the writer, since they are apt to he far moro vltnl. more human and moro original than any of tho othoro of tho nuthor's Invention. In deed, the very fact that they do Insist upon running away Is proof posltlvo of their nrtlstlc Importance. In tha drama It has frequently happened that n minor char acter, even nftcr tho rehearsaln of tho play began, has Insisted upon developing Itself Into n lending role. Such was the rase with tho character of Baron Chevrlal In History Awak;e at Last" PHILADELPHIA has now seen all but ono of the great films' inspired by the success of "The Birth of a Nation." Only tha Clune-Crisn "Ramona" remains. We have seen Dixon's "The .Fall of a Nation," Ince's ' "Civilization," the Brenon-Fox "A'i Daughter of the Gods," and now Gnfiith's-"Intolerance," which came to the Chestnut Street Opera House last night and whicK" was reviewed in these columns at the time of its New York pro duction. ' I Griffith's work stands supreme. It displays almost every1 virtue of that genius of the screen. Critics may quarrel with its fourfold stories told in. rapid alternation. But they cannot find there the violent bathos of Dixon, the ethico-religious senti mentality of Ihce, the confusion lesser men achieve a certain distinction by tho divinely accidental virtues of the film. Only Griffith fs complete master of himself and his art. It is ihis mastery which gives "Intolerance" the value as av historical document which the others haven't got. They all pretend to picture some distinctive age, but it is only "Intolerance' that, grasps historical reality. Its attack on intolerance with a small' "i" may not carry complete conviction, but its visions of Babylon, Judea and Paris under the Medici unmistakably do. The rich ness of their reality is superb. It demonstrates beyond all ques tion the great and significant power of the screen as a recon structor and humanizer of history. Textbooks and tomes have never succeeded in making us . 19 - j.i 3 1 si. e l film f-rtwian oeneve in me evuryuuy iiuinitiuty oi miuuiur uku. i4u ouvwi. makes tho past live again. Our problems as concreto as our own. nnce" in all its magnificance and 'the actual existence of its people dead fable no moro. "A Parisian Romance," and In fiction tho cases ot tho same sort according to tho confessions of various authors havo bton quite too numerous to mention. The most recent Instance of a character that ran away la that of Juliet Miller In Marian do Forest's comedy, "Erstwhile Susan." which comedy Is founded upon Helen U. Martin's novel entitled. vBarna. betta." Mrs. Martin drew the character originally from n woman who was em ployed In her household frt Pennsylvania. No sooner had tha authoress Introduced the character Into her novel than it begaM to grow In importance Quito beyond the limits that ho had Intended, and she confesses that It was only with the greatest effort that she compelled Juliet to remain in any thing like n, secondary place. When Misa do Forett undertook the dramatlxatlpn of the book jib did not know of Mra. Martin's dimoultles with tho Insubordinate charac. ter, but no sooner had she begun her task than Julia asserted, herself, and gradually through the many writings and rewrltlngs that Miss da Forest made of the play, Juliet MUler rose to the position of tha dominating" character ot the story The play then began the customary rounds of managers' otlices and was finally read by Mrs. Flake. Tho in- uomuama ana amouiuus wuuci umueiuuiefy 1 utpiursD 1119 me4-V9V wi lua uvirccu, turn proceeded to run away with her as she had already done, to a degree, vitth the novelist nd dramatist. "Olvo Jultot a, free rein," said Mrs. Fjske to Miss de Forest, "and develop her accord ing to her merits and I shall be very happy to personify her on the stage." With these Instructions in -mind. Miss da forest set to work again upon tha play, ' spending mucq or we tuna in in company of Mrs. Hake, and the character of Juliet grew and grew and grew. The growth was perfectly legitimate because of the fact that the character in Itsajf was fundamentally ao absolutely human. Given such a char acter, especially one possessed of unoom mon qualities, tho developoituit Is as natural M the development of a living human biting. Juliet Miller, largely self-made, is certainly one ot the moot ral characters to be fetwd la rrit drmiatia lltsruturc Hospital - Tkeatrel T' 1 T! j-ziscioee .Experiences in I870l BERNHARDT the straw. TOllh .. . . , ! sergeant who nceompnnled the reX.0' !J S..SnL'!.S oMhTuSoM r.uum mini uuucuiiy d lifted ia, tfc"MfJl row litter on which he. wai toiJ WiS'MLi4 to the hospital. " " m Oh. nrhitf hmiwiiI ... ... me when on lifting the patltnt-ii w5V covered that It was geuing feiw.'A heavy, nnd when bending over YtM Hi ', I '!' that there wS.'j'Srfl breath. The sergeant would then rir. ,?1 order to take him bach, and Uu VtJSI WA man was put back In his Pisco MdlLl wounded mnn lifted out Th6 otwH" men would then more back rKeSMftl order not to profane the deal Oh! iVl grief t wa wen tha sergcAnt sW I TdJI to take ono or two moro In"' mvt "Very well, I. win take two woum any. nna then I wondered wh.Vi 1 should put them. We hMtortM,? own beds, and in thla y lho Est ?5,!J woro saved. .,,,, 3 wmh,.i.tho lnJu.8,J--' h Inramy of inrf Will the much-dreamerlf i J"i "nu when wars aro no lonr tu..-5.i!r r.10 ; ssrt.L. -ru',ra factor? Will 'tho" XT "A ' there Will be a cosmopolitan coundTr, l tho wise man of every country liiVT.,T.:!I! his nation! nnd where the rights of hum.. "S Ity will bo discussed and VetedTfol ...i.njr men nun na 1 u0 r0 n...- think as I do, nnd yet nothuig is"" - -'"" "iiions ot, pans oontlnutl 1 Ono night ho brothers from tha rSS 'i Chrtfttdnno came to ask us for conveyance. and help. In order to collect the dead I'l tuo v.nn.iuion i-micaii, 1 lei Utu hy rjT two conveyances, and I went with them is ' J tho batllofleld. Oh. what a horrible ri! J1 nioinunwK-n it was uxo n BCtn frea Dahtol It was an Icj- cold night and . could scnrccly get along, Flnilly, br tha A "'" " "' ui";o uuu lanterns WO SIT that wo -had arrived. Wo had to nwri slowly, as at every step wo trod nw,i iv.y dying or t'..o dead. Wo Dassed nlenr .! muring "Ambulancol Amhulancer Vfirai wo ncn.ru n groan wo turnea our BUPs In Uh)1 direction whencA 1c nmn. Ah th n ... I found this way I Ho was ha'f lyinj down, his body supported by a heap of tha Am'X: I rnlaed my lantern to look nt his face, sMl l found thnt his car nnd part of hit ja?' jjrjl nna neon mown on. ureal ciots of 0I004 conciliated by tho cold hung from his lower ; jaw. i 10011 a wisp or ntraw, (lipped It la my flask, drew up a few drops of brand nnd blow them Into tho poor fellow's meets JS iiolwcon ma teem, x repeated this three er rour times, a uttio life then came back t hlni and wo took him nway In one ot Ihl vehicles. Dnyltght grndually began to appesr, ft' misty dull dawn. Tho lantern had burnni out, but wo could now . dlttlngutih etch ' other, Thare wcro about pne hundred per Uono thero: Sisters of Charity, military , nnd civil men, nurses, tho brothers frca tho Ccole Chretlenne. other prlttU and aj few Indies, who, llko myself, had cma; themselves up heart and eouI to the service of tho wounded. and boredom of Brenon. Thest forebears become real, their Seo tho Babylon of "Intoler- humanity and you feel at last and its glories, History is a ' K. -M y 1 . 2T T& 1 1 1 --' r "FENNA. DUTCH" Thus GWyas Williams, s Fiske in "Erstwhile Sow. comj-H-Jy -wkkh ike brtogi V Broaa 0dtiBi3 alttwaw b.rii: igi'M mm