Evening Star Newspaper, January 11, 1927, Page 6

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D O, AY, JANUARY 11, 1927. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON |"LA BOHEME" ADMIRABLY SUNG JEWISH COUNCI! | BY WASHINGTON OPERA STARS NEETS SUNDAY {Temple Sisterhoods Convene! In Cleveland When Union ‘ Congregations Gather. ‘ The ouard Washington Albion, ull genc Special Dispatch to The Star CLEVELAND, Ohlo, January 11— | ot (8 b o e That the outstanding problem of | s Jewlsh life in America is the task of | i rematning Jewish will be emphasized | yoo g0 B0 when delegates from all parts of the |sented in the boxes United States meet h Sunday 2 Boheme" is the thirtieth bienn of fsented an ond opera wa G is council al Unfon of American Hebrew Congre tions. Simultaneousiy with ence, the National Federation of Temp'e Sisterhoods will hokl its seventh biennial assembly, and the| Natlonal Federation oi Brotherhoods its second biennial con vention. It is expected that nearly 1,500 men and women. comprising rabbis and lay leaders of the Jewish religious life of every important city in the United will attend the [ D/ sessions to | £ dn the Glecus: | SIaEe foher b slons and to plan a amniof Far- | 80 £ 1Y et reaching educutional sty Swial | S0 e R ot will stimulate the religious intevest | [1Tows himself into of all the Jews of this country Nl e The convention programs will be j fAEHaTE HHE X divided into two parts. One includes | JiF, BP0 the business se B oriithe Milived | 25, S CELY. Se T convening organizations, at which re- [y (8 S SOATE 4 ports on the achievements of the last | go PP I8 SUEH two years will be received and plans {ngi dominate th adopted for future work. Of primary | ¢ s iness to be con . cial status of the nin this work 1 ma who { Royal Opera and O f the ca country, Bucl i this confer an operatic « an 1ppla the Mr. th Albion curtain he and s in rges plause toward his « e rather th: | Geor {in this performan; jevent in the opera { ington, | sidered is the fin Union of Americ w Con; A tions, which six months ago wus com- pelled by lack of funds to curtail by $100,000 its $600,000 budget for the | current year and now faces & serious financial crisis. Perpetuation of Judaism. The other phase of the prog will be a_conference on the per tion of Judaism in which del to all three sessions will be invit There will be three conference on the perpetuation of Judaism and men and women Who occupy prominent positions in the ligious and social service ficid speak. The convention will open on Sun day morning with meetings of the | joc 8t P executive boards of the union, the| gt = sisterhoods and brotherhouds, at the | oo Fe i convention headquarters in Hotel | o q H0 Cleveland. Religious services will also | oyt 0 De held at both of the Reform Temples | of Cleveland and special facilities pro-| vided for the delegates who desire to attend the convention. The executive board merbe: also be tendercd luncheons at the Hotel Cleveland. The first joint con-| ¢ho vention gathering will be a religlous | caree service held at Tifereth Israel Temple : East 105th street at Ansel bi David Philipson_of Cincinnati Rabbi Solomon B. Freehof of Chi will deliver addresses. Rabbis Abba Hillel Silver and Bar of Cleveland will con- duct the services. Rubbi Henry Ber- kowitz of Kansas City will offer the in- vocation and Rabhi Julian Morgen- stern of Cincinnati, the benediction. Business Sessions Monday. The business sessions of the thirtieth | 11 e, He, too, council of the union, the seventh bi-fy comely hero and a ennial convention of the Nationall" T{\ Tuantoft Federation of Temple Sisterhoods and | ¢gpe : the second council of the National Fed- | way guite eration of Temple Brotherhoods Will | pia of M open on Monday morning. and at| each of the meetings the respective presidents will deliver messages and the reports of national standing com-| 1o Son!™ mittees will be considered. { Tn the afternoon the union will hold ! Rele of Col four sectional meetings. Mr. Adolph | Another singer 1 8. Ochs will preside over the meeting | opera ranks, of the convention which Is to discuss | of the de the needs of Hebrew Union College | role of Colline well, and will report on the prosress of the | only $5,000,000 endowment fund c iign | in_op was launched at the bi- | with iss Maxwell of | stands ton the singers remost. b the | aptly fits t thetic | firm, clear - | jor S The ot M and in the “Add | exquisite pianissimo. 4 part about Mimi's re she really cannot after either big aria | obvious cli if plauds to show it | did Iast night suny in o 1 well and rd to remark in Mimi did | Georgesco seemed imind this voung sin {but with “this one will should go far Lappas, ve role of Ru He won man 30| singing of e le to lose non to add more to the & that only in_ the firs | solo work did he s { his ds proves | trained in the art {his fortissimo notes reel, acti tlourish and | and singing especial { with Mimi in the ease He inade the local con and Juliet” and sang a grin.” His dictior those mentioned abo 4| his Italian easily ur of | gave the and means of augmenting the income of the union will be consider at the meeting of the "boar finance, over which David A. Brown | of elegy— will preside. The council will continue | jeyly, hi through Wednesday | dlearly DRIVE AGAINST “ART” MAGAZINES IS PLANNED | Baltimore Federation of Churches; arewell, rich *in produc to Open Fight Against Dozen Risque Publications. 11.—The | of Churches drive on por- ! 0ld here | Special Dispatch to T BALTIMORE. Janu Baltimore Federation vesterday launched c magazine; 3 i Doat, masentive of the federation, will con Mayor J son and Police sioner Gaithe No estimate the total circalation of the dozen or so 1 that type sold here. retary | r with | Commis- | be obtained of | in Baltimore | nes of could SHIPPING NEWS Arrivals at_and Sailings From New York. AT ARRIVALS NEW YORK Ballin—Han UL Angonia—Soutiumpton and Cher Paris—Havre Colombo—utnos Asturius—soutt Vaubat bantas EXPECTED ARRIV Aconcagua- LS AT D Valparaiso Teegina Seyihia OUTGOING NTEAMERS. SAILING Port au I o, Cristobal Crigtobal 3 openlinge i Edison—Pir Siboney —Ha SAILING Harding Cherbou bo00 1 ana 17:00 A'M it La,_ Bourdonnaix deaux . Providence—Fuiic bobo—Lis bello_and M Noon Production "{Jn&er Applauded by Fashionable Audience ' ——Chorus Work Is Praised. ble modestly handling ldish type of voung | heroine of this story | notes were duet ax phase of her work was excellent and | Dorcthy of them { Mimi in the first duet rang out cl looked the part of now a veteran ha of the Washington satisfacto in e Sung Well, appeared a few tin mous. patheti and with totul lack Che Assoriated Hress with the local news in @The Zoening Stas. CARRINGTON SUIT Georgesco's Baron LOVE NOTE BARED Millionaire, Answering Wife’s | Von Hindenburg Names Charges, Says She Struck and Swore at Him. i | 1d- | pletely natural pre- | umph of veal art verformance of | ; The Musetta w me" last n at ! fact, the consisten uditorium the membership of the er cast was 1996-7 | a subject to be 1y commended, | Miss Low acted he y thoroughly was wall repre- | nns 0% 4LL it bl and orchestre tr Song” was much one of th inuch so that and ti ton -d the off their poise was a second of in the orchestra before Mr. motione for the repet of the music and they n ot the obably due or o Miss melodious ko + equally a o, Opera ral director, o January 11 ward New York millionaire pub and former campaign manager Théodore Roosevelt, who filed a el divorce suit nst M tho | Anna Walsh Carrington, yesterday to| filed an to the amended and and plemental crossbill of his wife rco wrington denied all of Mrs, Car ! rington’s allezations and ed they | were married June 9, instead of Au zust 9, 1920, as her bill stated He denied that M ington had he @ true, chaste and declared that h iated Press ry 11.—A Bourgeols | ts to the by Dr. den AGO, rington. lishe ont il the ational be sought amed by T to succeed including the eir season Ll his wife, answer o instructed to form a government on n the event both these ident von Hindenbu ke the ultimate decision. The resignation of the M nment was_presented a few ago after a defeat in the Reic res N | Dr. Curtius, calle in by the Ll v‘q'l';-:lvl}u\' \\Jfi: and us .:},,(,m Sestend ey BFOtirG NEA RS 4o el s L o] | EeSpls /s pesty whic Tole | vt hi B gkl mann, the forelsn minis ia S b i | Pariiamentary circle Dt il T peeE IR \fTection she | ministry, it will be merely a | brother Campbell, who h oston o | tional one, with the object of { by Bdvmre C. Comgton s boge. | ne wbeut the dlsolution o0, charg alienation of '{,.\ e Reichstag and new elections. flection i | to conductor of the the Philharmonic pital of his home Rumar This s debut in Ame onductor, and e from the audi 4 joined the prineci there Pre as | conducted ind dutiful wif had not m er the Tvan Stesch | in the comic and - M. jord, and in t ul ap-{of Aleindoro, Musetta's “butte S upon man.”" He has the R ian K & oany 1 | mbining drollery and music an ovation. | affectively Mr. Georgesco > work whole Chec gestures with in- | reme, expressive. | effects thoroughly | $ ept alert to every o the lar Dr. er, is believe mo: from Chechanovsky with the company nd is one of this ye nd obviously diy | the Metropolitan Opera v“ !Hw ‘m“ h;\'.~!||.|l | the role of Schaunard L T e e e singers. Mr. | Buehler were in smaller roles of the I\:«(,,”] There is little che work in Puc- is a historical | Cini’s “La Boheme. The chorus of annals of Wash. | the local singers. howeve o to advantage, giving life g anovshy Praised. lis who has previously additions to | roster with and of a letter & sived by N mpbell Carvington” wa news bill o | Darlin You see I think of you | and plan your welfare and happiness. if you do leave me alone to rot by Iu.w~;)‘ for months at a time, but 1 think you still love me and are true to | jme. otherwise my plans would be just | antas | opposite to what they arve,” it said. | to the second act and -1 "1 would give any A mensely to the effectiven S Imuve Vou T Y GNA L o | 44 and hold you atmosphere in third act. el veq) tight. 1 am terribly hungry for dentally, all the settings were VeIV |y . ang i seems | ou have been good, but that for the early morning | yITL SIEL I secs lik At Jou of Wintry drearness used in the third | 4 R e L of Wint : e inge in some way to see me music written | act was good. The c¢os-| when [ get back, or you sutisfied | consumptive, | tumes, too completely i to g0 on without seeing me? All my | | tradition and colorful. Be | love and a million kisses.” Gl tor, stage manager. deserves . HITS PARIS DIVORCES. » | tion for the har this Those Granted Americans ced to have ngton f ¢ included in | - | the SHOW DECLINE IN by Big Advance in Numbe: Traffic Violations. Special Dispateh Star BALTIMORE, January 11. | murders occurred in Baltimor vear, compared with 54 in 19 1ghter from 149 in 19; lice Commissioner nual report Makes Hit. Marg Maxwell | ith for characte 1 work. S oprano | he the “an e of phuse thet used by tri ed for nearly h Sunday closing | from 39 in 19 were lic of the production. Those in the -1 Allen, V ehorus were: Nina | Amberg, Mary Apple, after the orina 1, Veta Boone, Alice Bren i the audience ap- |non, Florenc 1dy, Swanee Crofton ppreciation, as it | Klizabeth Dick Mary Dowd, Maude | applause kills the | 12 3 final phrase that | Pheb ch case with the | erine Hine Miss Maxwell | trude Kuufma sang the part, | Lang. Edith one patroiwas | Emma Moxlex leaving the Audi- | Muse talic beautifully.” M ona o constantly 1 Royal, ger of her temp onkop, Patrici exception ever Tyler, Nettie Van _Doren. | cofin Wadleich, Helen Walton. iy, Emily Watts, nce Yocum, Paul | J. Beckert, G Beuchler, Hel sung Greek tenor, | Ble 1 Jose Coromi dolfo most admir- | Joseph Di Me ond Esche v admirers in his | Willis k. (arl Horn < tenor role in| Howell, Richard Hubbard, J. M He seemed | Kaufman, Bdwin Ludwig. Ramanc ast night, but | Mascetti, John O’Erien, Arthur Par-| number. The fact [sons, J. F 3 t, David Ra i:]v-ll] t few notes of his | Bdwurd Rous, [stc Simon, ! cem indistinct in | Solem, Wilfred Smith, -Adolph Turner. | that he is well| The orchestra achieved some excel | Jf the singer, and |lent effects in the presentation of || in the wooing of | this beautiful score under the skillful | B L Vet fear | hands of the Rumantan conductor. | Lraier and ra e Woat sy enomn attee iopor: Qoo will Ki¥e | day. He was found almost froz Luella Melius. SASRORIIL the Chicago ¢ been much e is the f get arrests +Dis- grace.” U. S. Minister Declares. 1 NEW YORK, January 11 (®). uth-fatter w warning by . Henry S jher- | Coffin_against Prosbyterian min Ssie fyemarrying of div. Derson 31*-\!]&:"“:‘1’.-, bytery of New York today or( o I"”Y ‘:_l restal nent of ¢ church's s juth i the next issue of its handbook for doday. {ministers. Schiup, Divore sullivan, | papis , bu dis a total before. declined from 1, rin Hutchison, ret L Louise Lucie Murr MckEachran Riley. kthel Kathlee in into with Frances | Josephine Dorothy granted nd Rome wer as a grace of the Unfted s ' He re that the Presbyterian Church i ment, Maryland National L act h its sister |der command of Maj. Elmer hes to refrain from remarrying |shower, this city, will leave tom divorced adherents, Dr, offin | for Annapolis to take part in eclared that if the “brethren did not | augurati of {observe the law ¢ church in this | Riteh it would I sary to bring | cases betore vresbytery.” . Noted Horse Trainer Dies. MARION, Ind., January 11 (@), Wilcox, 80, veter horse to Americans described by in Dr. | Special Disvateh to The Star FPREDERICK, Md., January “ | A provisional huttalion of th her operatic ch, |t Herbert | o t Goods Repaired Tcphams, Inc. 80 L Street Northeast Franklin 4856 No Charge for Hauling cted convincingly. Opera, in Co. the ng with his usual stage presence 1y well in the duet third act, **Mimi, talked ason and the present i specially, has been engaged (o sing | e title role, and a famous tenor is to | ng opposite Miss Melius. The » inder of the c is to be announced at an early date. HoF. REVIVES OLD LAW. reviously WANGE Iy his operatic debut | it in answer {o the report wpany in “Romeo | recently published by the Daily Mail nin “Lohen- | of London that the Sophia Mosqu 1, like that of |one of the world’s most famous ve, was admirable, | churches, might be converted into ¢ wderstandable. He | dance hall, the Turkish Government little song | has applied the old law prohibiting Old Coat"—excel- | cabarets in the proximity to mosque: tones ringing | churches or Government buildings, of “man- he police closed 300 such cabarets on, seeming com-|in Constantinoble yesterd: Every banking service youneed — Savings, Checking, Loans, Time De- posits—is ready for you here. Ready for you, because this is the Bank where every service is ;;lanned and conducted espe- cially for the Govt. Employee. s « complete, We'fl help you most; rr}:ayywe helpful bank prove it? DEPARTMENTAL BANK “The Bank for Departmental People” 1714 PA. AVE. N.W Govt. Worke Your Bank new to local , formerly | g the Nilssen has not Mr. January Clearance of All NOW 9 526‘25 33.75 - 41.25 45" 487 56.25 63.75 90 67.50 Yai . Iere 335 4 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 This Sale INCLUDES 4-Pe. Sport 2-Pe. Golf SUITS All Light, Medium & Heavy-weight Overcoats All Camel’s Hair Overcoats Dress Clothes - Excepted WHEN CHARLES DICKENS WAS A REPORTER WHEN CHARLEs DICKENS was a reporter on the London Morning Chronicle, the task of a newspaper- man was an arduous one. Often they were called upon to travel great distances by coach, transcrib- ing their notes as they jogged over the roads. ‘TopAY NEWs REPORTING is a high- ly developed profession. Speed and accuracy are the fundamentals of its efficiency. In The Associated Press these two factors have been devel- oped to the superlative degree. Read the timely dispatches of 100 . . 75% S PY MEN'S WEAR | Sidney West SWESNE 14th & G Streets N.W. lo—Kingston. ( and Saita Mari ort . Vietoria——Bermiuda Franconia—West Indies cruise 11:00 AM. 10:00 AMC Nous of |MURDERS IN BALTIMORE | URTIUS SUCCEEDS MARY IN GERMANY Him Chancellor, With Orders to Pick Bourgeois Cabinet. cabinet arties Dem Jul t 18 von " Chancellor ling in this, the chancellor-desig- small Nationalist plans | g will | rX gov- weeks chstag. Presi- member of ‘the | unexpecte ! another in as definite sequence as t Strese leade: e that ing a trans bring- | the | 1926 | Increase of 2,500 in Arrests Caused r of Thirty re last Man. educed ount- ts. increased t more of . compared with 41 per cent 021 in ation H 58 per Will Attend Inauguration. 15t Regi rd, un- Mun L0rrow the in- Gov. 'RUNKS and Leather i Suits & Overcoats < | Including Stein-Bloch ' REDUCED 259, < | | | is difficult | mystery FREDERICK. MD., BEGINS SURVEY OF WATERSHED AMUSEMENTS | S 2 | Reforestation of Municipality’s [tion to an occasion which left many| po.4 i Mountains Studied to theaters: wondering | Preserve Water Supply. new and simpler form of | atan SHUBERT BELASCO—“Lady Alone.” | A very straightforward example |constant of modern playwriting was disclosed | Whether ] at the Shubert Belasco Theater under | drama had been invented to replace the title “Lady Alone.” 1t 18 from | (he cumbersome complications a the pen of Laetitia McDonald, in |€Pisrammatic dialocue hitherto re private life Mrs. Wallace Irwin, [UPOD PHILANDER JOH The star of the production is s 2 a Alice Brady, who acauits h \'el(} NATIONAL— Affairs. finely in an interesting character| Nearly three hours atisfaction in study which, tho striking in type, | terspersed few nervous ¢ of analysis in terms of sake of the proprieties at t human probability. The of “Le Maire's throughout the performance | National Th len a security and distinction | for th which holds attention even when | the story appears to grow a trifle shallow. Tt is one plays of the There is no January 11 timber tract, the city as a o Maire’s shed, was irpose. of v reforesta. ordinary acting hout 5,000 acres tin Mountains, municipal wuter Spring a large burned at the is responsible i | supply | par ov i | L source £ e Durir beauty from the rising 1 to the fall of the unheroic re is a burst of life anc | pep that keeps the most letha v | of [ inclined wide awake until the s is | 1 heavy timby BURIED IN FROSTBURG. 1 to The Sta: TBURG, Md., Janu Mrs, Martha Parker, 63 s vife of James N. Parker, Rrentw Md., was of the son clean-cut picture undying devotion; no loyalty to ideal; no sacrifice prompted by noble cause or by deep affection The character picture most promi-| from ear to ear; “Jingly nes.” a | nently relied upon is that of a woman | vision of grace and feminine glory who never marries, and who has a|with a Te e series of suitors, from the youthful|it q g to the us bounder to the advanced middie-ape | number. wenly Bodies sentimentalist. | other to command the There is no striking situation or|mi ameo Shop” an ex climax. Events follow one | quisite bit of faney—and s inst - any mwore of then letters of the alphabet. | might be cited as evidence that all | Cocktails and cigarcttes, freely em- | the art of the Nation is not bottled up | com ployed toindicate defiance of old con- | in the great Eastern metropolis tr ventionalities, rather overburden the | One of the outstanding surprises is| that Ru atmosphere, and the financial neces. | the impressive number, “Minstrel | from Ch sitles of the lady, who flirts with a | Days,” a tribute to the blackface min-| 15 make the ftar prosperous marital prospect e the | Strelsy of old, which introduced a note lou plot procedure a mercenary aspect, | OF pat! and which interferes with the pathc il As for a method of exit from a laby-| alligan of heart complications, Lady | p.giates Alone degides upon_suicide | throughout sensible decision in view of the | new and laughable version of “Dan- | that wedlock with any of her adorers| garous Dan McGrew.” n “PreWaor would have thrown the play abruptly | Seoteh” incident that seerm to| out of key by reducing it to farce. | urouse much merriment among the | o "I:m et divn praterial for & initiated. and Sophie Tucker in sophit @ stinct tuckerisms, if you know what While the denouement iz not meant, that seemed to find thei lowed to drift into comedy, the elabo-| every shot. In f rate precautions to eff: finger prints | succession fami us temptations to linger | prise of the midnight hour, in| " There is a “Danse Acrobatique” that the earlier evening has| Olive F which many prelude to a rattling » are gir! dancers drama, wit ham- | Twins mering at the doc -ques- | their_own, and there tioning the entire surviving cast of | tina Raseh Girls, aft characters. many mght feel they « Lionel Four solid did not participate as a V. festly sopality in the proceedings. He would | in det have lent distinction. But the cast|Affair: ayed excellently without him, nota-| Lester Allen is all v in the casex of Joseph Kilgour| wishers and admirers, | and Austin Fairman would expect of him An audience assembled in honor of | Halligan is close behind him in the the author, under the auspices of the | funmaking. It aply impossible | Kentueky . lent social distine- to single out all who in beauty, son most rade” is Fell F rin | 97 The B “ loveline ¥ s 1 wHO The bo raryll— 3 od, by two She was and Miss lents con- entertainment. has_brought New York and rev th 120 to show feel s | down v : wil S Aep SAVINGS s with rinth m him and Lester e ht. It includes a | | ntil and New CENTRAL 15 p.m. for deposits Account Inga Bank 10 1ith St G NW Open N is . of the hope offered oniy a re the Cardell | CLAFLIN 922 14th St. Puneniie Franklin Square that his and William SEMI-ANNUAL “Presenting the Big (Jothing Savings of ach Season! TS % To Every Saks Suit and Overcoat, Deep Reductions Now Apply! 28—33—38 *43—°48 Prices Which Inveolve Tremendous Savings! \ SAKS clothing reductions, when they do come, are notable enough to make themselves remembered for a long time. And now they are here—the half-yearly, all-inclusive, drastic price revisions that embrace the entire Saks stocks of Suits and Overcoats UT the reductions themselves, large as they are, are important only because they apply to clothing of such superlative type. Whatever the name Saks has come to mean in quality, it means with full foree in this event—for every suit is a Saks Suit and every Overcoat is a Saks Overcoat. 'O us, this sounds like Opportunity! Third Floor Saks~ PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE AT SEVENTH Note: Li reduce also our very costliest Suits and Overcoats. Reductions from their regular prices are propor- tionately large. “THE only exception to the reduc- tions in our entire stock is the Saks “Cri- terion” Sack Suit standard- priced at $50. T e T Il

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