s Y. M C- JL Entertainment Co . Season of 1914-15 SEASON TICKETS SUOO Tuesday, December 8, NEAPOLITAN ORCH EST iGY Monday, January 11, MARGARET STAHL Tuesday, February 2, Dr L. B. WICKERSHAM Monday, February 22, Dr. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM Thursday, March 4, METROPOLITAN GRAND QUARTET HER PERSONALITY FASCINATES HEARERS i THE right to the title of the great est woman reader of plays on the Lyceum platform has been fairly won by Margaret Stahl ini a free field without favor. Her name carries with it the promise of an even ing of rare enjoyment, wherever the Lyceum is known. Her splendid per sonality fascinates her hearers, and the charm of an elemental woman hood that Is bigger than all art, and tetter than all acting, overwhelms them. Her art extends no less to the EVERY MEMBER A REAL ARTIST ks fl iif iwfffFjffT THE METROPOLITAN GRAND QUARTET. MARGARET STAHL. presentation of her work than in its selection, her repertoire being chosen with discriminating taste, plays which have a universal appeal, and whose lesson Is an uplifting one, being chos en. The number of return engage ments which she has won in recent years on some of the most discrim inating courses of the country is an indication that she is growing in fame and favor and her art is deepening and widening. Her appearance here in the future insures an artistic treat. ! MAKES DRY SGIENTIFL C T3l ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM. THE MAN who can make the dry ff.cts of science palatable, and who can so present these great vital truths, which are pregnant with hope for the coming generations, as to give them lodgment in the brains and hearts of the people is doing the world a mighty service. Such a ser vice is being rendered by Albert Ed ward Wiggam, whose lectures on scientific subjects are among the most noteworthy contributions of the American Lyceum to the well being of our people. He will give one o! them here this season. These lec tures are the culmination of ten years of earnest labor and intricate re ORCHESTRA FROM SUNNY ITALY MAKES 816 HIT IN LYCEUM oerring even. > - Susie's grandmother had been scold ing her. Susie felt indignant, but had been taught never to "answer back." However, she got even. Taking her kitten In her arms, she thus solilo quized: "Kitty, I wish one of us was dead this minute. Not you. kitty nor me, kitty, but one of us three in this room." —Exchange. Different. Seedy Chap (stopping pedestrian)— Pardon me, sir. but you look very much like a man I know. Pedestrian—lndeed! Well, you look like a man I don't wart to know. Cood u.iy!—Boston Transcript. TRUTH. Truth is so estimable a quality that is will not permit of any tam pering. Like a minor, to breathe upon it with cold falsehood only makes it reflect a dim image of its purity. An untruthful man is a man always to be feared. Woman's Weapons. A number of married men were re cently dining together at their club. The question was asked, "What trait in your wife do you consider the most expensive one?" The answers were as numerous as the men in the party. With one it was vanity, another re ligion or charity or love of dress. The last man to whom the question was put answered oracularly, "Her tears." Our First Sawmill. It is said that the first sawmill in the United States was at Jamestown, from which sawed boards were ex ported in June, 1007. A water power sawmill was in use in 1625 near the present site of Richmond. THE PATRIOT search. They embody the latest dls coveries of science in the great fields of heredity and eugenics. Mr. Wig gam is considered by biologists as tbe spokesman of the eugenic movement in this country, and his articles on the subject have been syndicated and given country-wide circulation. Wig gam was a great humorous lecturei before his researches had carried hiir. to the point where he felt qualike' to speak on the scientific subject with which hie later work has bee Identified, and his addresses an spicy and witty to a marked degree being intensely interesting, instruc tive and entertaining. THE NEAPOLITAN ORCHESTRA. Rather Too Light. The landlady who had not a reputa tion for overfeeding her boarders asked her solitary boarder as he looked dole fully at his supper, "Shall I light the gas?" The boarder gazed at the scanty meal and replied. "Well, no. it Isn't neces sary; the supper Is light enough!"— London Telegraph. Two Puzzles. Mrs. Bowns —How do you expect me to buy things for you to eat if you ! don't give me any money? Mr. Bowns —And how do you expect me to earn money f