The evening world. Newspaper, January 7, 1911, Page 6

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NP. ae Z PELLET OF GOLD TO SAVE THE LIFE Strange Affliction of Jersey | ne eee j City Politician Yielding to Unusual Treatment. Robert Davis, Ch Col sey City, and veteran De et of Hudaon County, N cally {ll in his home, No sed day an fireet, Ho ix being nu night by his bride, and are holding fr wns stricken last Wednesday atter his third marriage Many of the telegrams © Mr, Davis on his marria Annie Toppin last Tuesday uur spectatiat w wedding had not an Evening World reporter called to day. Mr. Davis's children by his two former marriages and several grand- enfldren were In the house, Dr. 8. B. Pollak and Dr. Georg King of Jersey City have been in at) Mann!’ what follows is in tendance on Mr, Davis for several] tig qo weeks, and they called into consulta ‘ 18 “ Re ‘A Stranger! See!" that consciousness is momentarily Murphy of Chic Fralick of No. tion Dr, John t and Mr. William Fast Sixtieth street, It was decided the sense of which you are aw tha, an operation was not necessary and Dr. Fralick said Mr. Davis's chances were fairly good. Use of the Gold Pellet. Mr. Davis is improving under one o' the most modern treatments known to! «yow if that is true of you, whose pro- medica) scence, and thus described by | feasion it i# to write critically about|and delighted me by the Dr. Pollak cord being made fast to the patient’ sleeping robe: The next morning Dr. Einhorn threads a tiny rubber ball on the silken cord, and this is taken Into} \) the system to further dilate the open ing. Says He'll Re Out Soon. Mrs, Davis, a handsome woman with white hair, said her husband spent @ restful night. Phere ia many a good fight In me Mr. Davis said, “ Grove v4 SREN'T you ¢ pcting too much of my Initial effort to sing | W Wagner in English?" said Litian Nordica as we were chatting et in jer apartment at the Gotham ent consultations. He] . 9 © day | Cert at Carnegie Hall last Thursday afternoon. She had presented, with ngratulating | Walter Damrosc, the greater part of the first act of “Die Walku to Mise » atti wnopened and the decorations for the en removed cee How many words do you think you actually hear in the German ‘Mr. Davis is suffering from a ben!gn | the principle apply to the mass of music | heard me practise it in English stricture of the pylorus, the opening! jovers who have time to meek only the | through which the food passes to the | enjoyment and edification of the moment intestines. To dilate this opening Dr. | without bothering about analy Einhorn once @ week has been aiving deduction. apes the patient a small gold ball about the ty tise of a .2%2 calibre bullet, fastened to Sorry She Had No Libretto, read the translations of the songs I strong silk cord, the other end of the fey out and kicking before many days | Meltzer demurred a bit, and for lack contains a crown THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1911 ner’s Music.Dramas in English in Concert | Form With Another. May Hire a Theatre and Give “Die Walkure”’ and “Tris-| tan und Isolde” Compiete With All American Singers. BY SYLVESTER RAWLIN Hote! the day after her con the assistance of Barron Berthold, tenor, and the Symphony Orchestra, under * Including the Spring Song, both artists singing in the vernacular, “You admit,” she continued, “that you could distinguish two or three words out of five that I version to which you have been listening so many years? Not more, if as many “It Is lack of familiarity that makes the difference. You are accns- e|}tomed to the German text. When you catch the w rds, ‘Ein fremder! your consciousness and you no longer listen for tual words, But when, for the first time {n your own tongue, you disturbed and you strive to catch each syllable of what follows, forgetting for a moment e. ‘In frostigen Winter's frist’ falls | strangely upon the ear as ‘And fasting through winter's frost,’ even though | | the sound is not so very different. And what confusion when you hear ‘Im| Bach erblickt’ ich mein elgen Bild’ proclaimed as “A brooklet mirrored my f | face one morn.’ i an atmosphere of music, have amazed new appre- ikure’ as they have All over the country where I give concerts I notice the unmistakable heartfelt ap- Preciation of songs In English and the which my audiences music and singers, how much more does | clation of ‘Die W and “1 made one mistake yesterday for|#ing in foreign tongues. In England which I am sorry,” Mme. Nordica con-|@udiences pay for these translations, tinued. “I had bad printed an English| and that shows the eagerness of music| version of the text—an admirable trans-| lovers in our mother country for songs | lation made for me by our mutual friend | in the vernacular ; Meltaer—which I ha@ intended to Concert Stage Difficulti circulate with the programmes. ‘That! “Have you, who know your Wagner, would have helped tremendously. Un-| reflected upon the difference between an fortunately because of iiness I was un-| operatic and a concert portocmance ut able to commit Mr. Meltzer's version to | one of the masters music dramas Just | ito make some changes in the words for |eye helps the ear! If an artist sings, } the ac om accom: are passed. Politics is pretty lively here | of time I used a mixture of Mr. Melt- panies the words and the sense of hear- just now, and it hurts me to have to |zer's words, many of my own and others may in the house, Thix Senatorial fight) of an old translation. Then I withheld fa mighty Interesting—our Governor sisted aie “akpaks L, Taree nade. tin hands Of Gad nat | (re Lrintee Mize in Justice co Mr. Melt- | HeFthold and raise all this rumpus, which isn't good for the Democratic party, You Just say that Bob Davis'll be out pretty soon The third Mra, Davis is a sinter 0! Police Captain Toppin of Jersey City, | been most advantageous. Wanton tay and has been @ friend of Mr, Davis and| “Don't underestimate the value of | joated out over the wall of sound and his family for many years. The wed ding was solemnized in the residence by special dispensation of the Catholic Bishop of the Newark diocese. oe NON-MAGNETIC SHIP IN BRAZILIAN MUTINY. Ubrettos with them, This is not only| Here the writer interposed with earlier had dropped in for a professtonal Joseph G. White, one of the crew of a trite yon ~ epee My ho? ha cate cere oF) true In Paris but tn Munich and even [PCMark about the distinction that Mme which left Greenpoint, L, 1., June 2 last | St the musical holy of holies, Bayreuth. for @ voyage around the world to correct Janeiro. He tells a thrilling etory of the exper!- ence of Capt. Frederic McMurray and to scream low over her riggti De: pending wolely on her canvas, the Carn Wie was powerless to get out of the | *wera in the caat, the sense of the way, but a British cruiser lying offshore | story even, to say nothing of the ac-| country of ours with no opera in the put @ line aboard and towed the non- | tual words spoke ing is helped, On the every impression convey: ‘oncert stage | 1 to the lis- teper must be by voice alone, Behind Mr. at Carnegie Hall was | | Her but it was a pity! could have read the lish version |orous proclamations flooding us. In an | stick to 1t word for word, it would have | BCC" below us, hidden from view of the wiience, and our voices would have | been suppl -|ibrettos. It may be, as you say, thatl tion eee the attention of an audience should be ‘ome, now, don't you th devoted absolutely to the music while! perimest with Wagner in Bn: fa performance is under way; but the | beginniug, was a success? i do! And previous understanding which comes I shall make a second one soon with, from @ knowledge of the text is really perhaps, Brunnhilde or Isolde for my necessary. It is the custom al characte Europe for opera-goers to carry thelr Why She Chose Sieglinde. ented by appropriate a ex: ‘dica had given to both these charac- ters by her lofty Impersonations of There und the aegis of Frau Costma How It Would Be In Germany. tempt at Wagner in English, a part be: with which you ‘And that suggests a repetition of my suave and music-dramas in any Lega and am ever ready to champion, heart German town, with accredited German) ang gout, Think of it! Ninety millions | magnetic ship away from her position | hended without a previous study of the) said that we lacked the singers, but of peril. Aug White says ne Commegie wae the ret American ship that had been seen | 7 fn the harbor of Para, Brazil, in twelve | ‘!¥® tongue in oper yeare, with the exception of ‘a man-of. Ubretto? Believe m must familiarize ourselves with our ni "And we. shall, | {° leading opera houses all over Bue rope. Even in our own Metropolitan and soon, because we crave for it, and | War and two yachts and that many |it will be @ beautiful thing when it Is|tioularly friendly to native singera, we Visitors asked what country the fi accomplished, Why, here in my own| have Geraldine Farrar, a household, my own people, who live In| Riccardo Mardin, Ilncklen Wire ‘Ninety Millions of People Should Not Be Denied Opera in English, Says Lillian Nordica OF “BOB” DAVIS sntends to Follow Her First Attempt at Presenting Wag-| |memory, and at the last minute I wished | think for a minute how on the stage the | i spoon and others filling, when they are ‘nd you'll ace | Dure flexibility in singing to which Mr. |for tnstance, ‘Take this casket, which | permitted, leading parts. | May Hire a Theatre for “Tristan “You know something of my profes: | ‘Whatever I have achieved has not been along a primrose path. wasn't all plain sailing in ‘There were hard knocks of that, but the very first requisite of a singer is to sing the notes written for It 1s not @ ques- tion of getting very near to a particular ch it absolutely, and if the the compos gional caree: the very second librettist has not furnished @ properly | singable word or syllable it will have to o{ded altogether. There- the translator and the singer must collaborate. | “When I was asked to sing Isolde tn If my audience | Mr. Damrosch's orchest days. ra, with ite #on- Qndured: before T began, even though I did not {Pera house the orchestra would have | Wye’ be slurred or a’ But it seems to me I have always been a pioneer, and, t always continue to by ‘ What would you s hiring a theatre to give complete per- | formances of ‘Die Walkure' in und Isolde’ in English? 1 should want Louise Ho: and Riccardo Martin and Hinckley for my casts, and they (this with a most] . whimsical over tract to the Metropolitan Opera House. tinued, “I did not promise until I had thoroughly, even then I said 1 would not consent !¢ the rehearsals di prtunately they did, y that I succeeded de before Paris opera- 1 fOr al pack ta, When the writer was leaving he saw a lovely picture which he asked. Paris Isolde. much easier,’* id he, “for you, Mme. Nordica, to go to the Metropolitan And it Is reproduced with this article, Opera House for —— |“HAENSEL UND GRETEL” them and the high place they ha your ‘Tristan’ and your ‘Die Watkure’ the tmagnetic variations on navigation | herself the devoted Wagnerites follow | and would continue to hold for aes and have all your supporting singers at | charts, 1s back in New York, having |th® music dramas with eyes on |oporatic history, adding, “But why did hand Jeft the non-magnetic vessel at Rio | librettos. you choose Sieglinde for your first at: DRAWS ANOTHER BIG HOUSE. | tance und Gretel,” | operas, at a special matinee performance | at the Metropolitan Opera House yes- terday crowded the auditortum Even standing room was at a|fiall next Tuesday afternoon at 3 premium, and when the Witch was cast | o'clock, His programme will begin with Into her own oven to burn only the children (of whom there were | will b a-plenty in the audience) that laughed | and applauded uproariously. ten's Inimitable Gretel and Marie Matt- feld's fine Haensel ever, if that were possible, ‘of fohn's third, the § Phat I cannot explain, ‘You might as well ask me why [ am ave not been jntj, ROt singing at the Metropolitan Opera ; mately associated?’ : Hous the crew of the Carnegie during the |@uestion, ‘Weren't you expecting ‘00] “Recause of the lyric beauty of her at the Metropolitan Opera House, why mutiny of the eailors on the Brazilian | much of my Initial effort to sing Wag-| music,” she replied. “It is battleships. The vessel was lying at |n she replied. why Mme, Eames |« not singing | Riccardo Martin, with his lovely votce, in English? Do you think for a! plastic and adaptable, IJ was not think- !% not singing oftener at the Metropolt- anchor in the harbor of Rio between the | minute that at @ first presentation of | 16 of myself, but of the cause of opera tan Opera How warstips and the city when shells began | one of Wagner's ‘The answer must be tn English, for which I am enlisted sought elsewhere.” The First Requisite of a Singe: Hefore Dr, Baruch arrived, Mme, Nor- of English-speaking people in this great dica had given the writer a delightful half an hour by going over the whole could be compre-| vernacular! Once it might have been first act of “Die Walkure, course in half voice) in both the German ngilsh texts and contrasting them, | our doors, Americans are singing tn She made the point that a successful should,be not only a lingulet ek the collab- better than and a second | Under the auspices of the American of Albert Reisa's Witch evokes |Gulid of Organists, free organ Frecitals | from the writer the unqualified praise | will be given next week, on Monday, at which he was loth to bestow at Reiss's /4.10 P. M., at St. Paul's Chapel, Colum- Gorita | pia University, by William J. Kraft, and whils on Wednesda) Florence Wickham tt could not, We| that reproach can no longer be lald at | and first appearance humor as Peter, etnging beautifully. destroyed the tilusion of Gertrude by | keeping her face that of a Marguerite , Wither: and Tam not belittling the Importance or @ Jullot instead of that of a middle Opera House, which does not seem par- oration of a singer. “It's all very well for you critics," she said, “to find fault with our diction, aged, careworn woman, TAlita snettine | and Anna Caso were the Sandman and | the Dewman, and Herts conducted with | the sympathy he always bestows upon | this composition of Humperdine | Following the opera came the “Legend | of Azylade,” an Oriental batlet by Anna | Paviowa and Mikall Mordkin and thetr excellent company that was presented | superbly and won great applau: In the evening “Trovatore” was sung again, with Marie Rappold as Leonora, Iouise Homer as Azucena, Slezak as |Manrico and Amato as the Count, Po | deaty conducting, in a good, all-around performance that pleased a large au- dience. The short ballet divertissement by Anna Paviowa and Mikail Mordkin that followed was thoroughly enjoyed. BRAHMS' FOURTH SYMPHONY | BY DAMROSCH’S ORCHESTRA. hy the Symphony Soctety’s Orchestra, under Walter Damrosch, at the New ‘Theatre yesterday afternoon in a man-| ner most creditable and to the manifest | size, Mme. Yolande Mero was the solo- Jand dash, and that is about all the omposition calls for The other num- ers were Dvorak's “in Spinning Room” and Straw “Be Embraced, |On! Ye Millions." BUSONI'S FIRST RECITAL ON MONDAY AFTERNOON. | Ferruccio Busoni, one of the really |at Carnegie Hall on Monday afternoon) at 3.90 o'clock, His pregramme will tn- clude the four ballads of Chopin ani \the “Don Juan’ fantasie, the two ends and six studies of Lisat. A delay in the shipment from abroad of the orchestral parts for the Busont rchestra and mate [concerto for plano, ¢ jchorus will prevent the first perform Jance of that work in Ameiica at Chi- cago with the Theodore Thomas Or- lehestra on Jan. 1% as originally planned. ‘There is a probability now that the premlere of this choral con- Serto will be given In New York with |a symphony orchestsa some time before spring, when Busoni himself will inter- pret the plano part. In response to in- tent demands Busoni s consented to give one recital in Mendelssohn | Hall for the promotion of that musical l intimacy necessary to render propeciy |the presentation of the compositions hich he will play. Johanna Gadski will make her firs: | appearance in New York this season as the soloist at the all-Wagner concert the Philharmonic Society at Carnes! H esday evening. She has been «tving successful recitals on Pacific Coast and in the Middie Wes: and making several appearances wit e Chicago Opera Company. Her en- agement With the Metropolitan Opera Company will begin in February. At Philharmonic concert she will sing group of songs and the Liebestod from “Tristan und Isolde.” The rest of Mr Matier's programme will consist of the “Faust” overture, the “Flying Dut man” over and the prelude to Melsteringer.” At the Brooklyn Acad- omy of Music to-morrow afternoon Mr. Mahler will repeat the all-Freach pro- pramme, with Edmond Clement as so- joist, that he gave at Car je Mall this week. “1, the distinguished Alessandro Ttallan ter gecond subse Symphony Soctety, Ar ductor, which will take place at Car- negle Hall to-morrow afternoon at o'clock. He will sing the “Una furt lagrima’ from Donizetti's “L' EL jd’Amore” and the “Che Gelida Manina” from Puccini's "La Bohem For the Amertean feature, which is oan established part of Mr. Volpe's plan, tie companion tone-poems after Shakepear “Hamlet” and “Ophelia,” by MacDowel which were composed in Paris in the winter of 18%, will be presented. They jare regarded as the first of the com \poser’s works of distinguished impor- ‘The symphony will be Mendels- oteh, In A minor, Reinhold von Warlich, the Russian lieder singer, will make his first ap- pearance this season in Mendelssohn nann's “Liederkrets.” One sect'c given over entirely to early | English songs, another to Scotch and | English dallas, and still another to rman ballads, which will include four compositions by Loewe, | Sehui at 3.80 P.M. at Trinity Chureh, by Robert I, Winterbottom, Mme, LaSalle-Rabinoff will make her | Ainerican debut to-night as Gilda in Stainy Pimetene Versat! < ey {a infinite happiness, inf. | lve, Me secretly wedded wife, A cur. | like an angel of go nite peace in the kiss Lydie d’Au- mont gives to Gaston de Stain- Ville—the first her vestal lips have give to any man. She has tasted hitherto only the delights of power; now slr feels that if Gaston wills, she wiil deer Joy to obey “To-morrow 1 abdicate,’ she say with a strange Httle sik lmit joyous, “To-morrow 1 shall ow @ master, M. le Comte de Stainv! Minister of the Exche ofr iwwht with the priceless ow suur love. Ob, Guston, my vusband! be a Kind master to your slay sie gives up so much for your sak It is in the days of Louis the Well- Beloved, in France. The is Ka Mamie, la Marquise de Pompadour stl but a little way Jeanne Poissyn—is not yet wholly laure to adulation and fulsome flattery half tearful, | ice, | Louis, Peer of England vehold your slave, Lydie, bought thie | The preferment Gaston has thought! y my haved frat fa Bathurst—Mrs. Peter Bathurst-—writes her name there, It all happens because Virginia dawns est on a lonely palace at Versatiles, where Irene de to another apartment of the ame and Vir Salnt Romane awalts him—hts earlier tain falls upon these two, double doors | yoy 1. | sirinking apart, wide-eyed, grief- clone, but fate laugh at precautions, |jaden, while his prodigal dead father's |J. Watt & Co.). | Within the hour that saw her woman’s| goods and chattels are being sold aw | greatent bilsw Lydie d’Aumont ts wit i: |) [ness to her first lover's perfidy, With- | 1 |in the mo stung to woman's flere- | appear Ppears in the auctioneer’s hands, and w "| st pride, she has proclatmed her wationess’s bande ara, and trothat to Lord Eglinton, the English attadhe, Within another space | canneur ie Marquis dKglinton ie in.|%0URw heart in the act and begins a| ed ax Comptroller-General romance which endures—untit the Rist] Finunce, Chevaler of the Order of St, | Girl appears, a long time later, a of Franc John Bennett grows up in Mrs, Van st's book, He becomes witness to things, including Peter Bathurst's " to win by his false vows he has lost mgt the dine y of gis dout * Hohl the treasure which ik Yet he Is to cafole the im fe ¥ does not help the young c i once more before the story | man's passion, It does not plead the es in ter Involving the & ease of Misy Cynthia Forevthe, who faith of toward Charles Ed- might have caught John Bennett had he Ward Stuart, the Pretender gland, experiences an earlier rebound 1s And once more he is to be thwarted and ‘Phere is another man in the story who ne by & proud has loved Virginia, nd that is Nicholas 9 | umnbiiated=thie t n u threw down, 4 Ve at Jat with her own hus Prynne, “After y 4) A story with many excitements, in-| he to he 4s ]deed, with many brillant pictures 0! Hut after she has been coms | ail a veritable heaven of angelic Versailles court Ife, with much Mutter, pelled to counsel restraint to her later siniles; her eyes blue aa dark-toned | of and fash of swords hoyvin wonar “John Haipeer wake Bane) myosotls, her brow pure, tier grace un neit.” she cries, “Why did you grow up? | touched. Yet it is true that the Pom: | deha Bennett Grows Up to Love) Why didn't you stay a little boy? Now padour loses her smile for a mome nt, the Wo an Whe Loved that you have grown up, 1 don't know | when h gaze falls on Mile, d’' Aumont ARIE VAN VO! tella p | Whet is going to happen to ue both.” i daughter of the Prime Minister M wa n which y Pa m aK he POEat 4 ae i} France, 1 it ls true as well that t Juhin ennett, first falls 41 wy BOR RORY HEE peace and happiness of Lydie's frat | the w portsman and athlete is Kiss are to! it sharply all too short, bis heart open to a woman ne Modern Othello and of It is & court of smiles and beauty, but enough to be his mot also of intrigues, Jewlousies and hat into which one esters through t pages of “Petticoat Rule.” (George I Doran Company, New York), the Ba oness west romance, With Lydie’s Kisses #till warm on his cause It is first love-oecause it is re! lips, Guston de Stainville pastons | Hl heart is entirely virgin and entire! vewutiful Ht That Fatled, 6, enough to have charmed him down to HARLOTE o| the last of his dim, old days ( Desdemona, She 1s merely the 4. ‘ois way the first woman comes to eautiful and all that, r+ him, and It is nothing but the same of the American Consul at Fes, Never- old story over again, Interesting be- | theless, she has fer Othello, who calls himeelf Bubammel, who has followed ly | her from Burope and who telle the y of his life In the garden of her It is that storied retreat which fure nishes the title for Roy Norton's romance “The Garden of Fate” (W. The tale of Buham. | mel concerns a prince of the land, “The Catching and reading aright the boy's| Hasan, who first sples upon and thon i ag his father's famous prize gun Killa the Jewel of his heart, his Jealousy th having been aroused by the} plotter for the; has occurred is all Aniale | iah, Yard & Co.), and her name means|~ Bathurst rescues the weapon, presenta| shrewd device: 1K the ownership of the it herself to him, wins the throvbing| throne, y to |the syndicate of which he is the head. ‘Trying to get this paper, Rowan is led to manslaughter, Ruby Sinclair to rec jlea« plotting, Steve Hefferom to unlaw Rowan secures is marriage—a fusion and outery an aged Berber nurse bearing the young prince, ; (of tender years: ok oes on has oscaped, refugee grown to sianhood | the deed and The reat ot “The Garden of Fate’? Is | price Deane agrees willingly engagement to Lady Olive, having been broken al- | of love and insurrection. i r of ejected by Charlotte and her | Lord Nunneley, He goes to the front as a Pre- it seema to be a nus barely stated Kaid Clarke, " story of difficult and disagreeable peos| a amall b | and lover of the Consul's daughter, Dick Whitney, his turn of English officer MMi the aid of Capt. TP Rene ae cavaleyman, DOVER SOL. Ber up| Clarke's, wister, Margar ‘of somewhere is the Gladstone bag con- nothing but a mistaken way of meet- Ing the Sinclair tasue. tten a viv poverty and seription of the decisive battle between He writes no Ton | i by is @ oln t ment and a monotonous life. ase of midi Het- And Winifred, | typewriter, Iden Web" uid Make Stirling Deane Pay, shows herself capable finally finest love and womaniiness. is of London. R make Stirling Deane pay, Ruby Sinclair means to make | Stirling Deane pay, Steve Hefterom means to make Stir- ling Deane pay. when Richard Sine! | Dr. Jebb Fall Untoved Wife of the jo the Byes o MARSHAL, Is nol content with one ite," It sounds reasonable, the Pasha proceeds Two seems to have been to beaten, and Hefferom {ts in jail as a| argue, a conceivable extraval been} the Imperial Majesty who is the Pa| Monday Morning Wonders, blackmaller, and Basil Rowan hy pardoned #o that he may die out off dishah has insisted upon an addition to prison, and when Winifred Rowan has| the Pasha’s train. So there 1s, besides stood at last by her brother’s grave, she, too, turns to Stirling Deane and names her price. Such is the way * (Little, Brown & Co,), by Anthony Partridge. over @ bit brings from purports to a Little Anna old mine, Nabir Hanim, that helpless and beauti- | ful Miruma whom Fehmt has accepted, perforce, but whose veil he has ne raised. Miruma is the heroine of Rupert Hughes's story “The Gift-Wife" (Mof- @ Sun and the Moon. Her hands, ex- cept for the henna stains, are a Joy to the American beholder, and as for her yes, they are past coherent description, | Hiven in the midst of other worries Dr, David Jebb is driven to think of those | dreamy depths, with aberration, Dr, Jebb does not belong. He has appened into the province of the dishah by no Intention. Somewhe on the way from Germany to sea he as been overtaken by his dreadful, in- | rmittent thirst, A perlod of oblivion has ensued from witch he has awak- | ened in Tu Somewhere, he knows, reaved gif] whorn he was convoying to her people In the States; taining the pape which were to estab- Rowan is made! lish both the reputation and the patents f the small girl's father, He must find the miss and the ‘bag. He must trac his own wanderings somehow throu the double life that always goes with Gnd graceful his dipsomanta, But meanwhile bere 1s Miruma, Dr. Jebb is a surgeon, He finds work the ready to his skilful hands tn Turkey For one thing, he saves marvellously jthe Mfe of the Pasha's first wife, For ja part of his price he demands freed »m for the gift-wife. Then away on his | final mission for little Cynthia and the | a, | Papers Well, he finds both, but there ts stilt | Miruma, who helps i Sunday World Wants Work UP AND DOWN PICTURE LANE BY HENRY TYRRELL. HE Salmagundt Club, No. Twelfth street, has a very indl- American artist of and Hollandish Austrian extraction which may be on the presentation of a these days of Brahms's fourth symphony was played exhibitions one rather expects the un- striking measure adventurous . It ts here in nd entrancing quality. Mr, Karfunkle ', Ist; secondly, a poet of str Jenjoyment of an audience of moderate not morbid subttet ist in the Liszt plano concerto in A| curious in trying f major, which she played with brilliance! the large decorative pice himself satis+ commissioned in the obviously and yet to be conventional 1 he is doing something con tle Girl and fter “Head of an Old Man. most distinguished brush work when | The most suavely examples of Italian animated by feeling that could possibly imagined, is the portrait of Mrs. Vanderlip and little “Brother, idealized landscape, or rather Such painting a Karfunkle the right to In- a great living pianists, will give a recital) f° 4 slonistic background, well give Mr. noted in the large Ma one of a series of de dren's nursery ations for a cht a of normally | Central Park meadows, under gre and a sunny sky, expressed tn mosaic and Gobelin the landscape access That 1s to sa like the afore- ry fabric or mosal peparate blocks or epots, said strands of tap The result ts that ture contains or more live, sparkling tints, yet they all by cro; lead up to harmonize in the general vailing green, or whatever the dominan tone may be painter's brush, does 11 is an aninated, shimmer Inch of the p! he | man call “rubato.” close touch e work, and he li is much the sam point-ists" have been do- open-air landscap Monet and the ought and the light in which Altogether this unpre art-lovera an opportunity to be phies that eventually ma: uptown Clarke galleries Just off Fifth nue, Is impendin collection of Seixas, whose appetizing ern French, Duteh, n paintings Spanish and r the} that about the finest things In the lot, niniature-like beau- satisfactory with's life-size | | perannum, | In Mexico during nial last summer that engagement. The Department of Music of Col organ recital jt fternoon at 410 o'clock, which is op tickets are required. |to the public, distinguished is to make another short | Damrosch and the Symphony The Catholic Oratorio Society, Selma , directress, will sing “St cis of Assis! work of the Hall on March the Russian sald to be too iil to leave Russia. . David Mannes will give | a recital before the student stitute of Mu RADWAY'S COLDS = COUGHS ply Radway's Ready Relief to the thr est until the surface smarts and re Kadway's Villy in mich doses aa will freely moro or 4 sudden cold take of Tadway's Villa and a teagpoonful of Radway's Relief, with a teaspor ier of hot water. perspiration will by he cold will be gone, | Ask for RADWAY’S and be sure you get what you ask for. Sickly Smile See LE LN) Teen ‘put on that jae aaa obresentatieg, coin aaah, ar re at one to ded, ., 7 tele! good gent Fig smile That CAS. | ae CARETS will give you—as | a sens from the cure tion—or a ~ pesca it—you' itil and their blond lady friend, by Casa+ nova y Ketorach. ILLARD METCALE'S landseapes W —the Berkshire Hills in spring, summer and autumn—make a place of enchantment of the Montross Gallery, No. 5%) Fifth avenue. Oh, for an abandoned farm! a sloping pasture with three or r cows in it! or a tumbledown ci by the banks of the Connecticut River! where one cowld loat and invite the soul—Wwe would gladly leave home for such a place, or places, a# soon as the frost gets out of the ground, At leas t is the way Met- if makes a city person fee! in the Presence of lis pastorals and poems in Js alone and matchless among iving American landseapists, and yet is art Is so straightforward and ap- parently simple that laymen are uncon- scious of it in their enjoyment of the sheer beauty of the pictures, while ar- tiets marvel at the technical mastery that thus conceals art and combines idea! beauty with humble realinm. The Go.den Carnival” shows the hilt bathed in the purpiing splendor of ear! wutumn, The “May Festival” wreatheg them in pink apple blossoms. "Springs tide’ {8 exquisitely tender, and “Oetor er Moi oriap with frosty cheer fa elght of the sixteen pictures there re browsing cattle-we love to pick hem out in lights and distances, and they are this artist uling variety of de> h s with ze ears of the portrait buat Metecalt, Aitken, which ts eta n the Montross ante-room, must hot mo. on accoun usiastic things that visitors are F any Chinese antiquarian connoi ur Is still short of peachblow or apple-green porcelain, carved Jades or | snuff botties, or legendary rugs that it | Would seem a sacrilege to step upog, he nay learn something to hie advant in at the Fifth Avenue avenue and where Mr. Harte rse the almon: n assented by Mr, Fujita, things are put on public Satu to be sold oh clday and Saturday afte Auction y: Th nouns o URATOR W ( nounces t of the AMPF an. the print depart- Public Library has arranged one morg exhibl- tion In gallery of the ola Lenox Libra ea h avenue, one of “Paris in Paris has ve al a strong eteher, and there wa 1 the Hbrary's portte in those of the Avery whieh to ¢ tion for the in plenty fos, particularly collection, from SAVINGS BANKS. EXCELSIOR SAVINGS BANK rue tual sidered” interest By fredited Ww de Positors entitled therety under t bylaws, “o $3,000) pas iat On'tea' anier of 0,"io1t 0 or before Jan. 10 TSEST NE con 62 AVE I R V SAVINGS INSTITUTION 115 Champ: | Near tth Avo. E | The Trustees have de monte eu any, OE Y, vated Station, 8 di idend for the ing Deo. dat, M0, at the rateet FOUR PER CENT. mall sums from #1 to $ ‘o-under the by-laws, payable on and after Monday, January 16th, EDI. Deposits made on or vetore Jan. 10th will draw interest from Jan. Ist, H, KE. TENEM, U GEOKGE B, Ut ‘elu Sor, i anu 9 Tate ony - Cuan 2 aaa? 115th DIVIDEND STE) L 910. INTEREST, FOR Tae aac Yet RD to DRC, BL, 110, at the rate of Four Per Cent. Per Annum |e craied ie recuse | es ag ita Se LEAR oD NR to ie T YABLE MONIY DEPORMEIY onser before” Janea3 will draw ii NAT BF J 1 } eal _FDWARM SHERER aeeretary rename entitled ther | ‘NeW YORK, SAVINGS” BANK St. venue. Sy 2st! Mttdtsceet SS, her ‘FOUR PERCENT per snouw ov all sums trom $5 to iit sums trom $5, to $3,000 entitled ECS "BRE?" ER aa LY, JAMES L. WAN akehiB VLD Mt MEETINGS. THERE Wid. of the unto Matic, tthe fort finion Th nations for officers for. the. oataing: en tie A F'ot Lu aul Mee Alflicr, organiser’ wit sth b ANNUAL M. Brondva “Bul ttice of the 6 oudwayy New York, ou Tuesday, Jan. My Wit. we dtd, Me WAL HOSKINS secret rx cad Company” will he held HELP enraane DRALUNTOMAN, capsve Of Oeagung ing Out in detail Umcusine and orupeet, automotities, “Nordyke & Marmion Ca. olin ind. Waased, BUM OU, 3, AMMD-sanle Domed une wmarried men between the ages of 15 and iS; be Unitia Staton of good cha sek state ees and Fulton fet Bratt, OR 4 Jersey City, N. DIAMONDS, jewelry phoue, aecet

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