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CERAM we ~~, _ ad THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1909, WES DVORCE Mantel! Will Revive Shakespeare's GOOD TINES FOR SUTADELUSIN, cen? Zn” we Splendicl Trappings’ PeNTY W RUSH Hammerstein to Give Opera Comique To Prevent Musical Indigestiow. Homust be oe Uo inore and more night. Verat’ frat pees Historical Drama to Be seen | lhc ae a | : attract (n. themaalves ui work sai | nentea here on Feb 4 i, with Bata | AE he F | 4 ¥ | xpects It to Prove a Correes |i vidual anger. counts nowades In{ Scalchl and Maurel In the cat. It Ram, ex eek for the “irst | . ps oe bringing money Into tie t fice vou} not been sung here for twelve SAYS HR Ci Time in Y Mimi tive of Grand Opera—The shout know as welt is tin’’| Spectal xcenery and costumes for thet . Ime in Years—Mimi Agu- } 3 ith tha duced me to produce so many | Coming production have been made by, | glia to Play “Zaza” in | fe | Works He Will Present to novelties that hay eased artists of La Scala, Scotti will be aie.’ —.— la to Play “Zaza” in Italian ~~ 3 | Ae eae John, and in th l ———— . He Moe a der 5 je cast will be Henr Jai (el ; fj | Be Sprightly and Clean—| fix Ha ree Deatinn, Frances Alda, Maria . sictan Hastene : is — ; James’s Comedy, | iy Trace Mhat Eacl 7 : ' make a move wit Caiipanari 4 Physician Hastens to St. Louis, ie y eet edy, | lax Figures Show That Each] Tarks of tures for His Arte | re ae Ta A Campanarl and Groce, Tosountil Gums : Where Woman Was sengaged, i Be Newcomer Adds $1,500 ; { Eaars for Himeatt. (ables pee ancl "| “Sfanon,"" on Monday, with Geraldipe = | fy een } AUS) isis and Fears for Himself, 4 Found Wandering Given for Charity. Beers tL | The Boston Situation |Tarrar, Curl Joern and fcottt; ‘the > | | andering, A | to Assessed Values. a situation In Boston to-day Barterod Bride” on Wednesday, with | . ne | | Wis entredted to give ¢ there aki, for the first time, as 5b . | (it, BY SYLVEST AWLING close of my New Y season.) Traviata’? on Thureday, i Sf APIO ee arirey arena OBERT MANTEL | | RA Zh ML right! if you want me Tit | quali, Caruso and Amatst ba BELIEVES MIND IS UPSET aRT MANTELU wilt begin: an| Tmmigrante are the goodluck omens | 66 HY am 1 putting on opera If 1 xo 1 shail take my entlre| Isolde" on Priday, with Oll = S t agement at the New Amster-| otlNaworerie comlque as well as grand jcompany, tt will cost me $100,000, Are! stad, Loulse Homer and Bu La 2 ee dam ‘Theatre on Monday evening, " ew ti ‘ vat opera at the Manhattan An. Boston rents LA it aie atehlee) and hae Genres on ? with a production of Sh eaure's hen allens flow in by the hundred |), lise ext wouBOn? Bi Ml fl ey will gunt=latternoon, with Geraldine Farrée. an os has not been preseited here for ma pANdIng usliess prosperity. When the | public wants it, and Lam a pioneer” | [ue 2 am not a rich /ance of “Tannhauser’ on Tu = Outcome of His Legal Years, and {t will therefore come as 2 - ; ' | Oscar Hammersteln, as he sald thts, tate wens, nd Twill ing for the benedt of the German Se t¥ | hovelty to the new generation of thea tile turny the ogher way dt meana hard | ied in chat curlously inqratieting Way [thf ra on an tnwilling people, | Poriiowitach, the Ression planiet, Sacrifice. | tre-goers. The version of “King John" DOROTHY eae Hae cpaeneNeey , of lilt that somehow does nol reme vate i i {x not sumliclent evidence Of] wilt be the star of the Sunday foncert used by Mr. Mantell has been arrang Such has deen New York's history— | tmpression that behind {t ts an Inserutas | /oston s Cesine hall cancel) to-morrow evening. He will play Vieihe Gieerers ne roca | LEO TY Uy aware Grog arese [Dy prtnat dere Herts Bilal Cece ean, | , Dr. Augustin H, Goelet left his of-| Brady, and it is said that the text h HE, ut they ride in ou the Waves of pros: | We were chutting yesterday afternoon are: toner ay bieneer. vill conduct. flee at No, 203) Broadway, early to- been cut only where It has been ce soli POE Oe he We Tete AR oe aoe ei Uerapas ous aN Nanda The somait eet aad Mr, aramerstetn with Nes haere sary to meet the requir Gaiet and they do not go out until depression yom of the Temple of Music In Weat/#ometines:’ said Mr. Hammerstein, wit Reopens y cearmee ait fer Bt. Louls, to take care of his wite, ements of the is near, Just ay rats desert the sinking |‘Mhirty-fourth atreet, which the Impre-|{MAt varios smite axuin. | “Now. there! FOR [NAUGURATION MAY ty : who was found on the streets of St. | Louls ill, yesterday, and sent to the| City Hospital there. After Mra, Goelet | Was sent to the hospital It was learned | @hat she had entered sult for divorce @gainst her husband in Missourl, on the | ground of “cruelty and mistreatment.” The news despatches contained the firet news of this divorce action, so Dr, Goelet said before leaving for St. Lanis iRobert Stepens, of Orange. an officer of ‘the Lehigh Valley Railroad, Mrs. Goe- | jlet's father, went to St. Louls with the Physician, Mr, Goelet is about sixty years old. | ‘Hie wife ie only a little over thirty. | ‘Whey were married about twelve years | ‘ago, under circumstances that at-| ‘tracted considerable public attention. | jOf late Mrs, Goelet has spent little time in New York with her husband \Bhe was here during the Christmas! holidays, after an extensive trip through the South. Since then she has been in the Southweat Deny Estrangement. But her husband and his friends un- Merstood that her desire for travel and constant change wae responsible for | her wanderings, and say that they had | not the slightest idea she was estranged ‘from him. In 1997 Mrs, Goelet was the wife of | Aétian L. Henry, a wealthy stable | owner, of No, 24 West One Hundred and Eighth street She was then ex- ceedingly beautiful. After a year and @ half of happy married life she be- ‘came ill and went for treatment to Dr, (Goelet. He was obliged to operate upon | her, She went to the surgeon's office | 60 much that her ausband became un- ‘easy. Mrs. Henry said she had an in- curable malady and it was impossible for her to undertake dome: duties, | and went to live with her mother, Soon after that she informed her hus- band that Dr. Goelet said she had a chance for restoration for health if she | went a y to live in the country, Then she asked Mr. Henry to let her Reta divorce from him. He acquiesced, “Within a week after the granting of | her divorce on my evidence,” sald Mr, Henry to a reporter for The Evening | World this morning, “I learned that \Dr, Goelet’s attendance upon her had been so assiduous that It had caused| thim to forsake his other practice and go to the town where she was gup- |posed to be taking the rest cure. Then Z realized what had happened to me.” First Wife Still Living, | Im the mean time Dr. Goelet's mar- riage to his first wife had been an- jpulled, He had married thia first wife ‘a ecore of years before, after she had obtained a divorce from her husband, Yohn Graves, in Chicago. At the time pot the annulment Dr. Goelet told the newspapers that the action of Mrs. 'Graves-Goelet was that of a highminded jamd consclentious woman who found that her divorce from Mr. Graves w. not valid because of faulty service ot the papers on Mr, Graves. | Mrs, Graves-Goelet, on the other hand, | came forward with the statement that Dr. Goelet's lawyers had found the | flaw in her early divorce and tad forced her to get the annulment by threatening to cut off all of Dr. Goe- let's financial support from her. When she obtaltied the Wanelent, Dr. Goe- jet made her an allowance. ‘§ Ifine in reat ce. She {s still vr, Goelet sald before his de for Louls that he could HOt andere \tand how Mrs. Goelet cume to be sent {to @ public hospital, as sho hag many friends with means in St. Louis, This fact, taken with the news of her Sepp lication to Ridivoree, convinced him ust be sufferin, temporary aberration § from some . Goelet is distantly related 'Goelets, prominent in the Fea a \@nanctal affairs of New York. He and the Jate Ogden Goelet had the same @reat-grandfather, In 14, Dr. Goelet ‘came before the public on account of ;the sult of the heirs of one of his patients, Christopher — Lally, 10 jgbarsed that, nother physician, the ‘8 death under an h nA ca uned Lally loperation by over administering chloro dorm against the patient's willy ehlers ‘The sult was dismissed on the re | the death was caused wht round patient was under ether, and that the patient had not prohibited the use of ether on himself. Dr, Goelet is also the inventor of a Process for —_resuscitatin, er S01 shocked by electricity, similar if that used on drowning persons, including the administration of oxygen. Se Measure Them by the Golden Rule, They Do by Others as Others Do by Them. - World Adveriisements, During the last 5 week-days The World printed 13,465 sep- arate want-filling advertisements 6,188 more than the Herald or ANY OTHER New York Newspaper. What Sunday World advertise- ments do for you next week depends entirely upon what you do with them to-morrow. boy BR ae | ray Hill Theatre, modern atage. It {= announced that the Play will be staged with special atten- tion to the splendor of the pageants. Marle Booth Russell will play Lady Con- stance, George Turner, Ethelbert Hales, Charles Keene, Edward Lewers, Will- jam Bowen, F. Dallas Cairns, James | Brophy, Guy Lindsley, Lilllan Kings. | bury, Josephine McCallum, Letla Frost, | Edith Campbell and Lorraine Frost will be other members of the cast, see Mim! Aguglia, with the other Sicilian players seen at the Broadway Theatre earlier In the season, will give matinee performances of ‘Zaza’ in Italian at the Criterion Theatre on Monday, Tues day, Thursday and Friday afternoons. eee “'Disengaged,” a three-act comedy bd; Henry James, will be acted at the Hud-| son Theatre on Thursday afternoon for the benefit of the St. Andrew Convales- cent Hospital. The atory concerns a matchmaking moth filrtatious young | wife, a Jealous husband, a Philandering | young diplomat, a modern Bayard, a shallow-pated young girl, a well-mean- ing blunderer and a quick-witted young widow. The scenes are lald in an Eng: | lsh country house and a London draw: | ing room. The cast will include Selene Johnson, Louise Closser Hale, Frank Gilmore, Lumsden Hare, Renee Wood: | fon, J. R. Cranford and Dorothy Don- nelly, oe “Brewster's Millions,” with Edward | Abeles and others of the original be pany, will begin an engagement at the! Academy of Music on Monday night. | William Faversham comes to the West | End Theatre with "The World and His | Wife.” | “The Man of the Hour" remains at the Grand Opera-House for another week, Mildred Holland, at the Yorkville Thea- tre, will appear in a now play by Mate thew Barry called “The Provider.” George M. Cohan's “Fifty Miles From Boston" will be the attraction at the Metropolis Theatre, The Crackerjacks will be at the Mur- “The Girls of the Moulin Rouge" will be seen at the Olymple, ad he Fads and Follies Extravaganza Company will be the attraction at Hur- "ig & Seamon's, New circus acts will be offered at the Hippodrome, Sliver slipper jewel cushions will be given as souvenirs to women at the Broadway Theatre on Monday evening in celebration of the (00th performance of “A Stubborn Cinderella.” VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS, James J, Jeffries, the undefeated champion heavywelght fighter, will pose at the Lincoln Square ‘Uheatre and also show how he works in a gymnasjum. Others on the bill will be Lucy Weston, Maude Odell, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Lucas in characters from Dickens. At Hammerstein's will be Eva Tan- guay, Morgan Wallace in “Trimmed,” Princess Rajah, Willa Holt Wakeneld,| World and Kingston, Mr. and M Mark Murphy in "The Coal Strike, Bert Kalmer and Jessie Brown, Cook LLL CCRITERTON, te POBE RT’ ASKING TORN WeEw AMSTERDAM) AGUGLIA SVAN TE kd NATIVE FILIPINO BAND TO PLAY AT HIPPODROME. The Phi which tray to Washints tation, to be Constabula nifles fro! nt t his sent ry Band, m Manila Taft's invle {naugura- HARBOR DEFENES FORTS AD UE ‘Peculiar Law on Which Indict: | | ments Against The World | Are Based, | “An act to protect the harbor de- fenses and fortifications constructed or used by the United States from ma-| ‘iiclous Injury” ts the title of the law on which are based the indictments found by the New York Federal Grand | Jury against The World and its man-| | aging editor, Mr. Van Hamm, for the} alleged Hbelling of Theodore Roosevelt, William H, Taft, Charels P, Taft, | Douglas Robinson and William Nelson Cromwell. This law {s found in chapter 676 of | the Laws of 1898, which appears Jn the Consolidated Statutes under the head- ing Malicious y to Harbor De- fenses cr Fortif ” Section 2 of this law {6 the one un- der which the indictments will be sup- posedly prosecited, J+ reqds: “That when any offense 18 ¢ minttted | in any place jurisdiction rowhich has been retained by the United States or ceded to it by a State, or which has been purchased with the consent of a State, for the erection of ja fort, magazine, arsenal or dock-yard or other needful building or structure, the punishment for which offense {s | not provided by any law of the United | States, the person committing such of- jfense shall, upon conviction in a cir- cult or district court of the United States, be llable to and recaive the same punishment as the laws of tha State in which such place fs situated provide for the like offense when com- tion, will give concerts at the Hippo-| mitted within the jurisdiction of such a Rea i ‘ve. State, and the sald courts are vested drome to-mor: fternoon and €V@-/horehy with Jurisdiction for such pur- ning, Th X native mU-!| pose, and no subsequent repeal of any sicians in lon, under the such Jaw shell affect any such prosecus conductors ' tion. The p —— one hune POISONED PARING HIS NAILS. fey and Cap my. The ude comp: and Rubinstein, Gustay Ma’ of the to-be-reorganized Orchestra next & will lea ‘who fs to take charge Philharmonic | ~— ad the or- ganization as it stands at the concerts to be given in Carnegie Hall on March | Land Apri Knapp's Band, which went ington for the ration First Regir ac row n Gengens Will be the soluists, to Wash- with the oncert at ight tenor, has and Stevens and the Wroe Tri the Oratorio ‘The Colonial will have May Irwin in am of Geron- “Mrs, Peckhain's Carouso,” Marle Dale |tiows' on Jiand in Bach's “Pas. ton, an Engleh impersonator; “A Nixht} sion” on 5. He js to give a recital {n a Houseboat,” Charles Kenna, Midge-|{n Mendelssohn Hall next Thursday ly and Carlisle, the Willy Pantzer| afternoon, and will return to London in troupe of acrobats, the Bootblack Quar-| time t at Queen's Hall on tet, and others, The Alhambra’s bill will include An- nette Kellerman, “‘the diving Venus;'' Karno's Comedians In "Slums of Lon- don,” Ed, F, Reynard, Harry Gilfoll, “The Patriot,"” an_ operetta, with Helena Frederick; the Doherty Sisters, and Pres: Eldtiage. At Keith Proctor’s Fifth Avenue Theatre Circumstantial Evidence” will together with Jack Wilson, ice comedian; the Golden troupe of Russian dancers and acrobats, T) Planophiends and the Seven Hoboes, among others at the One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street Theatre will be Blanche Ring, Leo Ditrichstein, Dan Burke and his Schoolgirls, the Bison City Four, the Brittons and Linden Becvwith, who calls herself ‘The Girl in the Golden Frame. Laurence Irving, son of the late Sir Henry, will appear with his wife, Manel Hackney, at the American Music Hall in "Tha King and the Vagabond.’ The bill will also include Joo Welch, Mayme Gehrue, Ina Claire, Campbell and Bar- ber, Willie Hale, and Kelly and Adams. Among the attractions at Huber’s Mu- seum will be Joe Walcott, the colored fighter; Princess Verot-a in her Oriental dances, and the Cliffords. BROOKLYN AMUSEMENTS. “Her Maley f romanttc, comedy, will be given at Payton's Theatr “Morin , Noon and Night” will be the attraction at the Empire, ————- FOR EDUCATION OF MOTHERS. E Academy to Teach Sanitary Methods i of herring Children, A meeting of the committee of the Infants’ Sclence Academy was held at the home of Mrs. Arthur Dodge, No. 125 East Thirty-ninth street, yesterday Afternoon, The committee consists of six women, appointed at the last meet- Ing of the association, held and organ- ized last week at the home of Miss Florence Guernsey, The academy was founded for the purpose of imparting to mothers and to those about to be- come mothers, in fact, to all women in United intrusted with the care of children, the best and most sanitary methods of rearing them, It ls firmly aaserted by the members of this club that the enormous Infant mortality is largely due to the ignor- ance of mothers, eee] STer so) Be Tpeee sow a |permes nent academy buildin, Mrs. A. M. Palmer, president of the member, also Rainy Day Clu Miss Florence Guernsey, Dr. Agnes Muller, Myre, Arthur for & conc rl 4.1 wha comes to Ame: Prof. Samuel A. Baldwin wil ster of rica with 1 give ore ae recitals in the Great Hall of the ity College to-morrow a: afternoons, —_—>—__——_ BLAZE ENDS AUTO TRI id Wednesday No tickets are required, P; $9,000 MACHINE 3URNED, Gasoline Ignited by a Spark, Occu pants of Car Go Ho by Trolley, “A $9,000 automobile, o by J, Eldler, a broker, West Sixty-first str One Hundred and > Fort Washin ave and was com destroyed. dd a caugh tleth $ engine, and in a few was ablaze. Policeman E: of Hundred and sxecond st ‘it elarm, and from a n the fi ama and his two friends by street cars me nd driven it fire at treet and this morning Besides Mir. Eid wero two other occupants ot which was being driven ina sout direction up the grade of Port W gion avenue, at One Hun Ninctleth street. ‘he fuel in th tank, it {s sup- | posed. was ignited by a spark from the minutes the car the West One ceot sta- while the venus 1 the embers, got home WIFE SAW GIRL ATTACKED. treating Thelr Prote; Caused Arrest of Husband for Mis. Charged with having attacked four- teen-year-old Mathilde Koenig, who Uves with a sister at No, 2% East One Hundred and Thirteenth street, Joseph Rafrano, th WH East street, wal to-day held by ™ Steinert, in the Harlem Court fn bail for examination, Tae police were frano and the girl by Jeannette, who avers tha taken the girl in three brought to arrest Ratrano's wite, ty-two years old, of No, Hundred and Eighth fagistrate 500 Ra. they had ago, not and many! knowing she had run away from hoz j th El May | joyle and Uhrich | Paring his fingernails with a pocket knife, David Merritt, of No. 210 Wales avenue, Jersey City, cut one of the fin- gers on his lett hand, Blood-poisoning set In, and now the doctors say his arm will have to be amputated. 'JOSEPH S, SCHWAB IS FIERY ORATOR OF THE TAXPAYERS. |they have to be ship. linmigranis are streaming through El- | ls I¥land again, and that is one strong | {ndicaiton of returning prosperity. More than 9,00 of them arrived this week, On ‘Tuesday alone four steam- ships came with over 6,00 steerage pase sengers. Tle North German Lloyd ine has sold 9,0 tickets to {mmigrants tor Immediate use, and agepts of other Mnes say that an immense tounigration has started, The spring rush was fore- | cast in ening World early last | winter. Each Worth $1,500 to Realty, More than 20 per cent, of the imml- grants seek tomes in Greater New York. Thelr arrival In itself means no small addition to certain lnes of bual- ness, for they must be fed and lov To real estate the {mmigrant more direct prosperity than peulee Industry. President Purdy of the Tax Bogrd sald in his last report: "On the average, the Increase in the value bring | to any Jot New York land amounts to $1,200, jand in taxable real estate to $1.00), for | jevery baby born," By this, Commissioner meant} that realty was enhanced that much by every addition to New York's. popu- | lation. An ablesbodied immigrant la} of more economle value than @ new: born baby and there ts no doubt among Teal estate men that every new im: migrant resident adda at least $1,300 to the assessed value of realty, Immigrants effect this entiancement Jn @ multitude of ways. Not only do ‘ed and housed—for al of which they must pay, thus adding to the volu of such business—bul they must wear i nd gonsume | other commodities, r business | at qnee—either ay laborers or as buyers and ‘sellers—thus adding to the general Industry, Real estate In particular when immigration is he Immigrants overflow thelr old districts and force! neighboring residents to move into less crowded sections. This, vy congestion, raises rents in the old centres and also jin places where the overttow seeks new jhomes, In fact, the immigrant move: ment exerts a continual pressure of ex- pansion upon both residential and busl- ness districts, All Eager to Buy Land, Immigrants, too, are eager to become Jand owners, In most forelgn countries the poorer classeq are deprived of oppor- tunities for owning land. It is not ao in New York, As soon as they begin to save they begin to look for real estate. They buy In localities where they have become familiar with values and many seek suburban properties. Their buying contributes important forces to all prenohed of the market. eal estate operators say the renewed flood of immigration Indicates that ther | market will show @ curnulative prosper- ity during next few years, Flat. house districts are affected in particular because they feel directly the rapid changes {n population pressure. Sub- urban home sections are next to benefit by, It because they get the overflow of older residents from newly coi olty neighborhoods, Ticonessied Two Million In Elght Years, New: York lost nearly 0,000 net of tts immigrant population in 1oyf-t00s eats result of the business depression which caused a homeward flight of, ginne Since 190) over 2,0,000 have made hannas in New York State, and nearly. 1s0o0 have fattied In the inatrppolitan district Immigration reports show that per cont. of those Who giv thelr destinas tion’ as New York State mettle arcu the gruater olty. ‘The State got 134583 | inure year ending June a. 18tt 1: fn 1902, 235,779 In 183, 280,018 tn 1904, 288 968 fh, 1906 in 190%, 364,544 In 1907, 2i1,- 3 in 196, —_——_——. HALE WANTS SOME FROST. WASHINGTON, March 6,—Senator Hale, chairman of the Committee on Naval Affaire, chairman of the Repub- Mean caucus and acting chairman of the Committee on Appropriations, has had an exiremely busy session and left last night for his home in Maine with the expectation of being absent until the convening of the extra seesion on March 15. “T have been pretty closely confined,” geld the Senator before starting, “and T feel the need of a litle fresh alr, Some People go South at this season of the {8 prosperous | Meyerbeer will 883! biggest hits of my next season, me that ho fa ‘soften! year, but I like the frost and Ice and wate 8 go where I can get plenty of He !s a crominent officer in several association. of property owners, Before coming to New York ten years ago, he was an Illinois State Senator, fathering |the Bankers’ Liability Act, Days of Grace Bill and other needed financial measur To Cure Constipation at Home Stop druggists. Throw away your C, C, Pills, Cascara, Calomel, Aloes, Advertised Nostrum or Epsom Salts, There is a new way of getting at constipation, Ask your druggist for Dilaxin. Take one dose only, You will note first a sense of having been completely cleaned out. This {!s followed by « feeling of lightness aad vigor quite unknown to cathartic users. After a little while you will notice you don’t need to take Dilaxin as frequently as at first, Eventually you wou't need to take dowels and keep them cl for a Nittle while and you bring them back to taba way, Dacia, puree coay Handling Flour Question- Right sarlo dedicated to the public on Dec. 3 108, All the directors were present, he loves to say, in hie own person, The t telephone at lis elbow was constantly ringing, but he denied himself to all save | ono of those who called him and with that one held only a brief conversation in German, me to-morrow morn- Ing after 10 o'clock” was his invariable answer. An Antidote and a Stimulant “Opera comique,” Mr, Hammerste(n | continued, “is at once an antidote and a stimulant to grand opera, An wnor let of solid foods ts not good for stomach, A too constant hearing of the superb, lofty, Inspired but heavy ope of the great composers, of whieh T common with all musle lovers, am fond, may induce musical indigestion. 1 shall provide the public, therefore, with a corrective in the shape of the lighter, dajntler and effervescent operas that are no less the creations of genive Devotees of Verdi and Wagner and be refreshed by these incursions into Offenbach and Auber and will enjoy their idols all the mor for the change Especially Qualified to Give It. “7 am a modest man, but I think I am especially qualified to produce opera comique. You may recall that It was I who gave the last exhibition of {t in New York some five or six years ago, The opera company In: New Orleans, which was presenting both kinds of opera, had a bad season and disbanded I engaged the opera comique half and gave a successful season of four weeks at my Victoria Theatre. Laya, who 1s one of the artists to be In my new coin- pany, made a hit then “My opera comique company Is to be separate and distinct from my grand opera company, with {ts own principal singers, chorus, orchestra and con- ductor, It will be dignified opera comique that I shall give, shorn of all horseplay and vulgarity. My produc- tiona will be bright, sprightly and sparkling, but absolutely clean,” Educational Opera Plans. At this paint came the telephone inter- ruption previously mentioned, When the chat was resumed Mr, Hammersteln continued: “T shall have many surprises for next season both as to singers and new works, but I prefer to withhold the de- tails until after my trip abroad, I have already announced my Educa Opera season, at popitiar prices, besin- ning on Aug. 20 and lasting until Nov. 1. For this also I have engaged, or shall engage, a separate company of singers, a separate orchestra and & separate chorus, My Philadelphia leader, Sturani, whose skill you must have admired in his conducting of “Troyatore' last Mon- day night, will be the conductor, When the regular opera season begins in the middle of November this company will make a tour of the larger towns of the vest Strauss Softening Elektra, “‘Rlektra’ promises to be one of He tig creating a profound sensation in Europe wherever it {s produced, and every opera-house wants It, Strauss writes to —that Is the best translation Into English of his German expression that I can make--the parts of Elektra and Clytemnestra, they are such a strajn upon the singers. “Except for such sensational compo- sitions as ‘Salome’ and ‘Elektra,’ the publio has to be educated to love new works, The first time or two that I put on ‘Thais’ my galleries showed rows of empty seats; now they are ally filled, My ‘Princesse D'Auberge' next Wednes- day night possibly may have the same experience; but it Is a delightful opera and {s bound to become popula: The Fate of Florid Operas, “What {# to become of the old florid opens you ask? That is a question that is troubling the director of every {mportant opera-house in the world. Other times other manners seems to moe the answer. With the gradual disap- pearance from the mage of the masters and mistre: f bel canto our atte the You do not want common flours You do want fonal | that compliment me by | footsteps me the following In my They try to lure away from tists that [ discover, Advances been made to Zenatello, Gerville- , Valles and Glanoll-Gallett!, and Mr. Andrews, of my box-office, distressing, Tam in a cold fear Will be making ad- vdn't that be dread- | sweg r EMMY DESTINN TRIUMPHS | IN “MADAMA BUTTERFLY.” | Fimmy Destinn'n Cio-Clo-San InP: elni's Mada Butterfly” ts one of the moving Impersonations tpon the Ry the beauty and Jart of her singing and by the eloquence hos of her acting she Htts the most \simple, loving, trusting little Japanese girl Into a commanding place among the heroines o€ romance, Her personal tri- umph last night at the Metropolitan Opera-House—crowded as if Caruso were singing—was unmistakable and thor- oughly deserved Grasst again mado a fairly good sing- Ing Pinkerton, ‘but please, Dear Sir, dress him in a different suit of clothes ja the final thr years-after scene! The U, 8. Navy Heutenant may have been a cad, but his rich and unromantic American wife could have forced him at least to patronize a fashionadle tallor, Scott! made Sharpless, the American Consul, the only man of heart and de- ceney in the op Rita Fornia's Suzukl was impressive and Retss, Teecht, Muhl- mann, Paterna and Begn! were satis- factory in smaller parts, Toscanini conducted ¥ Invigorating intensity. ZENATELLO AND LABIA SCORE IN VERDI'S “OTELLO.” | Verdl's “Otello” was repeated at the Manhattan Opera-House last night to the avident enjoyment of a large audl- Q Zenatello'# flery {mpersonation of the Moor contrasted well with the win- some Desdemona portrayed by Labla, rf o a# lago also gained earnest oval, |"PRINCESSE D'AUBERGE” AT THE MANHATTAN, Mr, Hammerstein is to present another novelty at the Manhattan Opera House next Wednesday evening—Jan Blockx's | | Samma “Princesse D'Auberge (The Princess of the ern! It Is In three acts and four scenes. The French libretto is by Gustave Lagye from the Flemish of Nestor de Tiere. It was produced at the National Opera House, Antwerp, In 1808, and {3 a very popular work in Bel- gium and Holland. Like New York, London and Paris have not yet heard tt, In the cast will Labia, Gerviile- Keache, Zeppilll, V 8, Gillb Du- tra and Crabbe, Campanint conduat- The opera will be repeated at thi Ly matinee, |" "Rigoletto on Monday evening, with Tetrazzini, Constantino and Renaud; “Thais” on Friday, with Mary Garden, on Saturday night with complete the week's bills, amson and Delilah" in concert form wil: take the place of the usual miscul- laneous concert to-morrow night, with Geryille-Reache and Dalmores in tne leading parts, and Campanint leading the fili chorus and orchestra of the house, \“FALSTAFF" TO BE REVIVED AT THE METROPOLITAN, “Falstaff” {s to be revived at the Met. ropolitan Opera-House next Saturday Is Your Health Worth 10? ‘That's what it costs to get a—week’s treatment—of CASCA! . They do more for you than any medicine on Earth, Sickness generally shows and starts first in the Bowels sud Liver; CASCARETS cure these ills, It's 00 iyi try—why nat start to. aight and have help in the morning? CASCARRTS 100 a box for B week's 9 treatment, all dru seller Et the fwvds “iff boats moalic lome" | GOLD MEDAL FLOUR Well-Order it - that's all. WASHBURN- CROSBY Co.—— Speaker Cannon Willing to Lema i His Ald to Ohange Date, WASHINGTON, March 6, — Speeken4 Cannon has declared in favor changing the date of inauguration from? March 4 to May 1, and added that ag! one Representative in Congress’ he } would lend his ald in an effort to bring } un about, ' "I witnessed the dreadful ther conditions that prevailed in 18h whew | four or five hundred people caught thetr recall the Harrie conte he eb i son Inauguration, with the chilling rainstorm, and the snow ane te gale that made life miserable at Cleve. yanals pecond ipa ‘uration, change of date is made it might be fixed later than April, for even, rain would cause great discomfort much sickness, and I should think May 1 would provide more certains | of falr weather,’ i —_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_————— LIFE OF A PIMPLE Complexions Are Cleared and Pimples 1 Disappear Overnight Without | Trouble. ‘The dispensers of poslam, a new skip tay | covery, aak that notice be given that no one 1s urged to purchase it without first States | | {ng an experimental package. Those whe! have tried it will Ind that the fifty-cena box on sale at Hegeman’s, Riker’s, Kalish's, Kinsman's, Jungmann’s and all drug stores | {s sufficient to cure the worst cases of eczema, where the surface affected ie not toe large, The Itching ceases on first ‘appligas / tlon, Tt will also cure acne, tetter, blotokes, scaly scalp, bives, barber's and every other form of itch, including itching test, Being, flesh-colored and containing no grease, ther Presence of poslam on exposed surfaces, such as the face and hands, ts not perceptible, Water and soap cannot be used tn connese tlon with it, as these irritate and prolong’ skin troubles, sometimes even causing them, As to the etperimental package of peslam, it can be had free of charge by mall of the” Emergency Laboratories, 32 Weet, ‘Twentye | fifth Street, New York. It alone te euffie clent to clear the complexion overnight an@ to rid the face of pimples in twenty-toug hours. Rewer OL eney 0} 1 a, THE CITY OF N DEPARTMENT OF af MEN’ MAIN OFFICE, MANHATTAN, ar ty Rl NOTICE 18 NOR Mane A a ka called “The Anni ed Valuation of Real of the Boroughs of ¥ ttan, sn oe an Set saris Brooklyn, Queeng. jing the City of New pubis" tnapection, On the seco! of January, yl remain oben to 8 nsluding the dee ay. of March, 1000, Burin the ‘time that ublic thi rape rein, ceaite, See mi On, OF e0) n'be aggrieved by. the apscveed. velua ; real qi personal estate to have the same Feeted, In th ottlce er the Baer artiment of aes Spee FY . No, 81 Chambers Street, Hall ae ths Boi of Th i atthe De arttent value pal Bullatae, See Borough of ‘Brooklyn, ettien, rants wuntetpaT Belting oem ane, at th ff « t Bal Hi inh of tha ‘Department ne Departmnent leaker (ng. no” Department, Hecke ; enue and eitth Streets Lene dalgha the Borough of Righmong. gf hee Department,” Borol righton, Bet: ‘Appliations tor the veduetlen of real Assessments must be ter: ig and gl be upon blanks furnished by the Dy ‘Appileations for thy correction of the fonal aasessmen| 101 ts of col tl , baie im he main office lanhattal ‘Application in relation to the if 1 Ging? f ation. 0 nal eatale, mupt rinse the person asa eavand in case of @ noneres Ing on busi ne City of New” it the office rtmen| PIE EOG Ke gies ED tween eure of 10 A. MM. cept on Saturday, when all « made pice Bean 1" GHARLEa S Meto ' Son gab f conn HALE Nona DENTISTRY, TEETH. If you have three or four teeth @ will insert a full set without a plate, 1 do this with absolute satisfactioa, Examination of your teeth free. => Bridge Work, Per Tooth, $5.08 TEETH $7—$10—&—$18 GUILSHAN |. BE. Cor, 125th St. and Sth Ava., Entrance 271 W. 128th St. FOR SALE, ’ tem of homefurnishing Ie a ollowing customers may call for > n oaso Duncomb av W Prange, 2 Grove st., Mt. Vi The Continental Furniture and. Ho} Distributing Co., Inc. 87 B. 10th st. N Ye FLATS & APARTMENTS TO Ley Brooklyn, 2 MONTHS FREE, 4 roome and bath, 62% 037-047 Rockaway av., Brooklyn, HELP WANTEO—MALE. DRUGGIST JUNIOR Young Pees sdhou Nh Vewulol ke RV man be hustler; chance for tut! WhoRMAN @ 00, eee __Upen Sunday. 6 WANTED Boy 14 or 18 years old te to country Address Ly Naht work, box 754, World,