V .L.LL1J £V.LU,-tiIU .N 1)AI.1.LJI n Theatrical .WHITNEY THEATRE. Coming Attractions. Oct. 13-14--Edison Talking Pictures. Oct. 15-Within the Law. Oct. 16-17-18-The District Leader. Nov. 17-The Firefly. MAJESTIC THEATRE. Kinemacolor Pictures. Matinee Daily--3:00. Every Evening-7:00 to 10:00. Complete change of program daily. EVERYBODY WRITES PLAYS The Author of "Within the Law" Claims that the American Dramatist is Pampered by the American Man- ager. Bayard Veiller, the author of the smashing melodramatic success, "Within the Law," which will be seen at the Whitney theatre on Wednesday, October 15, declares that the report of a statistician that some 15,000 men and women in the United States are try- ing to write plays, is probably true. "Not more than eight of them are suc- ceeding, though," says Mr. Veiller. That's why it isn't safe for a man who has once had a success to walk down Broadway with a package under his arm. Some manager is sure to flutter froman office building, and throw him down, and try -to take it away from him. The managers are getting des- perate." George Tyler of the Liebler Com- pany holds that the American manager refuses to foster the American drama-: tist. "Foster us?" said Mr. Veiller. "We're fostered breathless. Every time we look up, some manager is try- ing to pamper us. The man who can write plays can have all the success he wants. I've known of manager paying for rot, just because it had a germ of an idea. I had been given $1,000 advance royalties before I had even written a scenario. Three weeks after "Within the Law" came across, I had been offered $45,000 in advance money. And there's no pull needed to sell a play. George Tyler himself bought. on a Thursday a play I had sent to the brokers on a Wednesday. And neither Tyler nor the brokers knew who had written it." Veiller says the youngsters have had all the success this year. The elder play- wrights have written the failures. "Whoever heard of Jimmy Montgom- ery before he put over 'Ready Money?'- I had written one play before 'Within the Law.' That was the 'Primrose Path,' and it was awful. Who knew of Alice Bradley before she wrote 'The Governor's Lady,' or of Eleanor Gates before 'The Poor Little Rich Girl?' Fred Hutton's first success was 'Years of Discretion,' Harvey O'Higgins was a short story writer until he and Har- riet Ford wrote 'The Argyle Case,' and John Emerson and Robert Baker were unknown until 'The Conspiracy' land- ed. These are the dramatic successes of the year." Veiller doesn't like the English ac- tor, who, so the author insists, "makes tea in his dressing room and splits nickles, A scene from the great New York success, "Within the Law.. THE DISTRICT LEADER Leah Mower, Soubrette with "The District Leader," Discusses Stage Smiles. "It's not the men but the women who like to be smiled at the best," pro- nounces Leah Mower, soubrette with "The District Leader," which comes to the Whitney theatre for three nights beginning Thursday, October 16. There's an old by-word concerning the optical flattery to which stern men must succumb when attending a musi- cal comedy, When a stage manager at rehearsals commands "Smile, girls" it is assumed that the dental drill is out of consideration for the tired busi- ness man, who dotes on rows of pleas- ant feminine faces, all directed to- wards the box he occupies. Smiling, of course, is the required cast of countenance in musical pro- ductions, but don't imagine that all the effort of the facial muscles is just so that the male auditors may go away pleased. Women are the ones who care most for pleasant smiles from the members of their .sex who are cavort- ing in tinsel on the stage. Our smiles put them in the best of humor. I can't exactly tell why it's so but it's a fact. A leading woman should never be 'uplpish,' but should beam down on the main floor and up at the balcony with her Sunday smile as much as possible. Occasionally she should give a hint that she recognizes one of her women friends in the audience. This makes things 'homey,' and creates a feeling of fellowship between the wo- man of the stage and the women in the plush seats, which is easily dis- cernable at the matinee, at which wo- men and girls predominate." WITHIN THE LAW Theodore Roosevelt Endorses Bayard Veller's Sensational Play. Bayard Veiller, author of "Within the Law," the great melodramatic hit which ran for an entire year at the Eltinge theatre, New York City, re- cently received the- following enthu- siastice endorsement of his play from Colonel Theodore Rosevelt: My dear M!r. Veiller: When I was Police Commissioner you were a police reporter, and there are not a few of the incidents in your play which suggest to me the original. happenings that both you and I know. As a good citizen I wish to thank you for your play. Those who criticise it as exalting anti-social practices with- in the law by members of the under- world seem to me utterly to fail to understand the lesson you are teach- ing. This lesson is not that these anti- social practices within the law by the underworld are right, but that the anti-social practices within the law by the upperworld are altogether wrong. You are putting the practices of the two sets of wrongdoers exactly where they belong, that is, on the same moral level. There is no more important lesson to teach our respect- able people today, the people of wealth and of social and intellectual promi- nence, than this lesson which your play teaches. I am not a sentimenta- list. You knew me when I was Police Commissioner and you know me now. I am thoroughly awake to the need of punishing criminals no less than of reforming them, for I am concerned even more with, the welfare of society as a whole than with the welfare of the individual wrongdoer. Moreover, I abhor wrongdoing in the underworld as in the upperworld-precisely as I condemn any anti-social practices in a labor union-precisely as much as similar practices in a corporation. But I wish to insist that the obverse of the matter is also true. We cannot clean the underworld if we connive at or approve in the upperworld practices as fundamentally wrong as those which we punish when committed by the people whom the law actually does condemn. We must never lose our insistence upon individual responsibil- ity and the need of individual high character; and yet we must remember ever more anZ more vividly that each must be in a very real sense his broth- er's keeper and his sister's keeper. There is always something fundament- ally-wrong if wages go down and divi- dends go up; and the man who pays shop-girls a wage on which they can- not live in decency and honestly is committing a wrong against society for which no activity along charitable or similar lines in any way atones. Sincerely yours, (Signed) Theodore Roosevelt. EDISON'S TALKING MOTION PICTURES One of the Most Extraordinary Inven- tions of the Age will be Shown at the Whitney This Week. In the wonderful talking motion pictures which come to the Whitney theatre, Monday and Tuesday, Thomas A. Edison has given to the world one of the most extraordinary inventions of the age. In comparison, the com- mion or garden variety of the familiar moving picture appears ancient and inadequate. Besides being soothing to the eye, the Edison process of talking motion pictures almost causes the figures to step from the sheet, and shake hands with the audience. Anyone who would have predicted a few years ago that it would be possible to exhibit talking motion pictures in the leading theatres of New York City, and secure crowded houses' at $1.50 scale of prices, would have been look- ed upon as a dreamer. Yet this. pre- diction has come true at last to the amazement of the theatrical world. The Edison talking pictures were pre- sented at the fashionable Palace theatre in New York, and created such a sensation that the newspapers and men of science were lavish in their praises. At the Whitney this week an extensive program will be shown, in- cluding a complete minstrel perform- ance, first part and olio, several com- edy playlets, a nursery rhyme, and a fairy playlet. Only one performance will be given at the matinees and one at night during the engagement. KINEMACOLOR SCIENCE. A couple of decades ago the claim that moving pictures could reproduce nature with more fidelity than the hu- man eye, would have been voted here- sy; but with the growth of our know- ledge of optical phenomena there has disappeared from our midst the man who fondly believed the human eye in- fallible. We know it today for what it is, a wonderful instrument, but gul- lible to an amazing degree. And after all we would not wish that it should be otherwise. Half our pleasures in life are derived from deceiving our- selves-personally, or by proxy-and were our eyes not susceptible to boundless deception we should be robbed of such acquisitions as the beautiful autochrome picture, the half- tone photographs of our daily papers, the kinematograph and,-Kinemacolor the amazing invention which is shown daily at the Majestic theatre. One of the few plays to run all sum- mer in both New York aird London was the phenomenal success "Within the Law," which comes to the Whitney This is the crook with the maxim sile ncer in "Within the Law" which cor to the Whitney, Wednesday, October 15. "The Merchant of Venice," Edison's talking pictures,