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THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, APRI L 1, 1911, WHITE TENANTS QUSTED 10 MAKE WAY FOR NEGROE iantiasifpecnase | Colored Church Serves Dis- possess Notices on 220 Fam- Mes in 20 Flat Houses, TAXPAYERS PLAN WAR. Police Guard 135th Street as Moving In and Out of Apart- ments Begins. Moving vane dotted One Hundred and ‘Thirty-Afth street, between Lenox and Seventh avenues to-day; household effects were piled high on the sidewalk, waiting to be taken from or oarried fate the row of twer apartment- houses on the north side of the street and six policemen were posted in str tegio positions, prepared for the first outbreak of trouble between the negroes who were taking possession and the whites who had been ousted to make reom for the colored invasion, which had finally been accomplished in epite ef the protests of members of the Har lem Taxpayers’ Association, who feared the effect on adjacent real estate. Zwo hundred and twenty white families were served with disposer Retices by Natl & Taylor, real estate operators, acting ns agents for the trustess of St. Philip's Protestant Epis- copa! Church, @ colored congregation, which acquired the property last De- cember, The order of sale was con- figmed last Monday. ee Harlem Taxpayer Association, ef which John G. Tayror t# president, thee been opposing the deal at every step, dut it is now at a loss to know what to do next. A meeting will be held soon, at which #0 drastic a step as renting up all the apartment-houses of the diock and subletting them to white tenants will be discussed. At the offices of Nall & Parker, % West One Hundred and Twenty- etrest, one of the firm said to-day: “ will have no objection to admitting (Boed white tenants if we can get them.” ‘When the sale was confinned, Bishop to keep the negroes off One Hundred ‘Thirty-fifth etreet. Bishop Gr # reported, replied that he was pow do anything, as the property been acquired in a regular way and the deal confirmed by the court. Iie ad- the association that if It wished flung Properties with negro families It ‘act independently of the chureh. 1 iving in the fate hoping that the association be able to o something. The West One Hundred and Thirty- fifth street property was acquired by church when it moved from W ost irtieth street, where i: owned a of tmproved property. Tits prop: was traded to Shaft & Silverman, ating as the Chase Realty Company at @ Valuation of $400,000 for property at No, 18 West One Hundred and Thirtye fourth street, whore the church ts now and the West One Hundred and rty-fifth street property. This latter property ie valued at $20,000, a Can't Breath Ca Lease, ‘The Appellate Term of the Supreme Court deciled yesterday that the United States Motor Cab Company must con- tinue to pay rent to the Abbaye, a res- tawrant in Thirty-ninth street, for tt» taxicab stand. The cab company main- taimed that as the all-night license held by the Abbaye had been revoked by Mayor Gaynor and the proffable bus!- ness which !t obtained from early morning fares had been cut off, its lease came to an end. é ty oper= es .m Marie Mattfeld’s Legion of Relatives Includes Several Husbands, AllAlive | Versatile Contralto of the Metropolitan Opera Company Discourses Gayly About Her Host of Sweethearte, but Won’t Tell Which of the Tenors Kisses the | Be LVESTER RAWLING. “D LIGHTED! You shall ask me about my relatives,” Gali Marie Mattfeld, the versatile contralto of the Metropoll- tan Opera House, when the writer appronched her for a talk for pub- ation. “They are so numerous that |T can scarcely count them,” she went on. For ers I even dis | BY SY stance: Of fathers and moth- have @ plenty, and there te not ® mother-in-law among them to arb the peace, I have been mare ried very often, and my dear husbands &re every ono of them alive, thank God! And I also have @ great many children and grandchildren, of whom I am tremendously proud. Now, listen: Bome of my fathers— Emit! Mscher, Van Rooy, Whitehill and Soomer—call themselves by one name, Wotan, and they all think that J, thelr daughter Blegrune, am somewhat stunt. ed in growth. Then I have a father, Peter, also called Gorlts, who makes me very unhappy, because he some- times, as Peter, drinks too much, He claims that I am a boy and that my name ts Haengel. As for Emile Fischer, when he was Rooco and in good humor, he called me Marzelline and wanted me to marry Fidelio (Kiafeky). “Most remarkable to relate, I 4i4 not have as many mothers as fathers and hot one of them a@ step-mother. There were Weed and Kashowska and now here 1s Wickham; each one has pressed me to her bosom and called me her darling Haensel boy. A Host of Sweethearts. Now let me tell you of my sweet- hearts and admirers, There were two Marcels—Amato and Scott! whom I, the gay Musette, loved dearly. How could It be otherwise with their spark- ling black eyes? And when I, as all- inquisitive Eleae do, asked Baron Ber- thold his name, how surprised I was to find it Lohengrin, As Eva I could not resist Alvary, for ho wae the hand- est Walter I ever laid eyes on, ven Caruso courted me as Martha and pressed his lps to the last rose of summer that I gave him, But, do you know, I doubt now the sincerity of all those ‘red devils,’ who flattered me, Martha Schwertlein, by their attens tions-@lancon, Didur, Rothier, Leo Rains—though at the time I believed they cared. Albert Heiss, my smallest admirer, as David? reatly loved me, his Magdalena, even when the master singers ridiculed him and, tn the first scene, I always gave him sweets, be- cause his fort weetheart—Schumann+ Heink—had done Mkewlse and he was sul tly clever to mention it. s0/ much for my admirers, those I did not} marry. | Husbands A-Plenty. “Now for my husbands. Each ona, young and old, and each equally at. tractive, allowed me to cast him aside without a word of objection. As Mar- cellina, in ‘Figaro,’ I celebrated my wedding. In ‘The Bartered Bride’ many tall n rivalled one another for the honor of having me (Kathinka) for wife, Robert Blass took matters some- what coolly, but With on was so in earnest that he always calls me ‘Wifey.’ Billy Jackrabbitt, the half-breed, tn "The Girl of the Golden West,’ wooed me (Wowkle) and won my love. Minnte (Destinn) was dreadfully shocked when she found we had never been married And #0 to please her we went to church, ‘ MATT = FELD Omi sworn S7vD10, But ae the hard-working stable maid in the ‘Koenigskinder’ no one wants me because Wickham, the Inn Keeper'a daughter, treats me shamefully and knocks the teeth out of my mouth. “Welt I had to part from all those good husbands to become the poor Widow Browe m Cear und Zimmer. man.’ Her Children Her Pride. “To come to my greatest pride—my Ghildren, The youngest {# but six months old and oh, so good! He never even moves in his cradie, I always say, ‘Ugh! ugh!’ to him and when Minnie asks after him, I say ‘Ugh, ugh’ and wmear the rest of the cream cake on hte wooden mouth, “My next youngest child {s also a I!t- tle boy, his name is Jebbel, and I, his | mother, Lene Armuth, have much trou- ble in bringing Jebbel (Sparkes) uf. ‘There is another son, Turiddu, of when I was very proud until he broke my“ieart, and how many kisses he gave hig mamma, Lucta, when he was leay- ing, No wonder all the contraltos envy | me this role, “You would like to know which of my Turlddu sons can kes the best, Caruso, Jadiowker, Grass! or Martin? 1 will not 83, for @ Mother must «ive to each child an equal place in her heart, “I cannot forgive Mascagni for hat Gretel is Bella Adten, and I, her eome- time brether Haensel, am known ae— Marie Mattfold.’ JOSEF HOFMANN PLAYS WITH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA. Josef Hofmann was the soloist of the Bymphony Society's concert at the New ‘Theatre yesterday afternoon in the Ru- binatein plano concerto in D minor. His playing was as exquisite as it Was daz- sling, the individual notes flowing under his hands in a peliucia, liquid quality of eurpassing beauty. His whole inter- pretation breathed poetry and sentiment without any loss of masterfulness. was recalled many times by a delighted audience, which included the gifted lad, Leo Ornatein, who himself may hope some day, if he fulfills his present prom- fae, to take rank with the great artists of the piano, Walter Damrosoh's programme began with the firet and third movements of Wagner's symphony in C major, writ- ten when he was only nineteen, followed by the Good Friday Spell from "“Par- sifal,” composed when the master had reached the zenith of his powers. At the end came Beethoven's first eym- Phony in C major. Mr. Damrosch, in one of his char- acteristically happy spescies, pointed out that the early Wagner work | there were slight suggestions only of the greatness of which he was po: gexsed, while Beethoven'a composit | pointed surely to the Titan that he was to become. ‘The orchestra played ex- ceedingly weil. morrow afternoon and will end the society's regular season. A week from to-morrow afternoon, however, the Or- ;chestra Pension Fund concert will be given. Johanna Gadekt “has graciously consented to sing and the will consist of ‘cheerful the masters, ranging from Bach to Strauss,” the announcement reads, I8ADORA DUNCAN SPEAKS AT FAREWELL APPEARANCE. Teadora Duncan, the dancer, who made her farewell appearance at Car- negte Hall last night, eseisted by Walter Damroech and his Symphony Orches- tra, held the lange and fashionable au- dience after the end of her programme by @ graceful speech. Miss Duncan's programme included | scenes from “Dphigente in Aulis,” | dances from “Armid three waltzes by Brahma, ube’ and Sohubert's taire.” “Marche Mil- FREMSTAD AND MARTIN | EXCELLENT IN “TOSCA,” “Tosca” got a splendid performance at the Metropolitan Opera House last night before a large audience. Olive Fremstad in the title part is more effec- “There ts a daughter of whom I am indeed proud—Destinn. She has developed into a model of « girl, my Marte in The) tive with her every appearance, She Bartered Bride.’ She would not be sold| {3 the best Tosca since Tern! to one she did not love, but married | Mary Garden to the writer a few week: Hane (Jorn), the man of her choice, and| 80. Riccardo, Martin ea Mario, also ‘i ows constantly, nd to- ToT have also @ son-in-law of whom| toiner they did some beautiful singing I can be proud. But she aleo married | Sorin ey ee oeti's Scarpla, has long my son, Caruao, called Loewe in ‘Ger-| ivan a masterpiece of impersonation. mania,’ and changes from a@ loving! The whole cast was competent and daughter into a most desirable daughter-| ‘Toscanini! conducted with his accus- in-law. But nobody would believe how tomed fervor. good-hearted I am, #0 T must tell you.| Afterward there was a ballet diver. I have adopted three different daugh- tissement by Anna Pavlowa, Mitkail ters, Hidalgo, Lipkowska and Sem-|Mordkin and their corps of Russian brich, and they all turned out to be dancers in which former triumphs were somnambuliets, But Bone! awakened | repeated. them ali with his high C, and finally; MARY GARDEN TO BE HEARD asked me if I would accept him as a Pears IN CONCERT WITH SAMMARCO. i Mary Garden will give her first and Her Brothers and Sisters, only concert In New York on Monday “How many brothers and sisters have afternoon at Carnegie Hall, She will 1? It would be a diffloult task to name! have the assistance of Sammarco, tho Philade operatic appearance of the season in the evening in “Natoma.” A ten weeks’ concert tour that will take her through to California follows, the fi being at Washington, where she w sing on Tuesday afternoon, Miss Gar- den’s songs on Monday will be by Verdi. Debussy, Rogers, Arthur Rosen- you Jo! tops" thet »! Ho—yo-to~ creatures can be c @uch a volume of sound? mountains seem to shake. ‘Th are my Brunnhtide sisters, Kia Fremstadt, LA Lehman, Gadski, > dica and Weldt. Others that are a little ison at over the mountain from afar, ‘Ho-~ o—to | 1 ng made of the kissing so diMoult a matter, for Turlddu can never give me his undivided attention, One eye must alwaya be on the conductor, one-two- three—un altro bacclo (another kiss), one-two-three (un altro bacclo, mamma), and the kiss comes exactly after three. When Toscanini, who is so very par- cular about the music, is im the con- @uctor’s chair they often forget the klasing altogether, Such opportunities are not found every day, “Aw the old Hedwize in ‘Germania,’ more refined and speak in a lower voice we my Waltraute sisters—Schumann- Heink and Homer, Some of my young: er elsters—Sparkes, Homer, Alten—p: fer awiinming to any other’ amusement. Every time we happen to meet in that beautiful country b fering on the river Rhine they Insist on spending the en- tire time in the water, stein, Wollman, Brockway, Bemberg and Massenet. Sammarco will sing the proloy from “Pagiacct."" Kitty Cheatham announces her an- nual Easter matin at the Lyceum Theatre for Monday afternoon, April 17, at 8 o'clock, This will be her last public appearance in New York before ‘Phere 4# still another, the youngest of| sailing to fulfll engagements in London all, who treats me as if 1 were a stupid | and = Paris. Miss Cheatham's pro- boy, but when she teases me too much | gramme will inoulde fifteen new songs I show her that I ‘wear the trousers’ by | and tales, aome of which have come to wiving her a spank that can be heard | her from various parts of the country, for instance, 1 am only gently embraced by my son (Caruso), in the last seat of the top gallery,|and were inspired by an interview Well I can't help tt! We make it up| which appeared recently in a maga: afterward, and that dear little sister in which she stated that she never re- The programme will be repeated to- | ‘The Beautiful Blue Dan- | raid} them all. Elght of my sistera are pe-|celebrated baritone; Tibaldi, the vio- | cullar characters, halt goddess, half|linist, and Howard Brockway, pianist. human. And instead of addressing me! Immediately after the concert Miss politely, ‘Good morning, witl| Garden will take a special train for a, Where she makes her last | t stop | her, This statement has brought to her over forty musical and compositions, literary Charlotte Lund, an American soprano a8 sung abroad with much suc- cess and who disclosed ner lovely voice at a New York concert some weeks ago, Will give a song recital at Men- deissohn fall next Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Her programme will begin ‘with the Batti-Batti’ song from “Don Giovann! d end with @ scene and aria from “Faust.” Her other selec- tions will include songs by Hue, D'Hardelot, rdant, Haydn, Grieg, | Brahms, Massenet, Richard Strauss, Debussy, Ethelbert Nevin, and William J. Guard, the popular press representa- tive of the Metropolitan Opern House, The University Festival Chorus of Columbla University will give jts first concert in Carnegie Hall next Tuesday evening. The Brooklyn Oratorio So- well the chorus to four hundred, under the direction of Walter Henry Hall, The two of Haydn's “Creation,” and Men- delssohn's da Sion.” The soloists will be Alma Gluck, Daniel Beddoe and Hervert Witherspoon. Under the auspices of the American Gutld of Organigts there will be given free organ recitals next week lows: On Tues New York Avenue M. E. Brooklyn, by Carl G. Schmidt; on Thursday at 4:45 P.M. at the Church of the Ascension, by Richard Henry Warren, and on Friday at 4P. M. at the | : in Church, Brookiyn, by John Tiyatt Brewer, | _dosef Hofmann will give his farewell | Plano recital at Carnegie Hall next Sat- urday afternoon. His programme will | Include the Beethoven sonate, op. 101, group by Schumann, containing the sonate in F sharp minor, and a group of Chopin selections, After the recital he will go to his country home in Aiken, S. C., for a rest before his de- parture for Europe on May 2 Tetrazzini will make her farewell ap- pearance at the Hippodrome to-mor- row night, assisted by Barron Berthold, ithe German tenor; Andre Benoist, |Blantat; | Walter Oesterreicher, flutist, jand Nahan Franko's orchestra. Among | her selection: nival of Mignon” polacca and the shedow dance from “‘Dinorah. | ‘The Phitharmontec Society wfil clone its season with @ popular concer: in Car negie Hall to-morrow aftesnoo: symphony will be Tschatkowsky’ thetique.” The young pianist, Leo Orn- stein, will be heard in Rubinstein’s con- certo No. 4in D minor, The rest of the programme will be all Wagner, ending with, the “Katsermarsoh.”* Mr. Gatti- Casazze announces the an- nual gala performance by the Metro- politian Opera Company for the Emer- gency Fund for next Thursday after- noon. The programme will include solos, duets and acts from different operas, in which the entire company will take part. Prof. Samuel A. Baldwin will give his veual free organ recitals at the City College on to-morrow and Wednesday afternoons at 4 o'clock. UP AND DOWN PICTURE LANE 1 By Henry Tyrrell rr RTHUR HOBPBER, at the Louls | Katz galleries, No. \ Seventy-fourth street, with reluctant feet where the brook and river meet, ‘That {s to 'eay, he hesitates between the good old | sreenish-gray style of the “Barnstable Marshes,” which got him into the Acad- emy, and the new-fangled frivolity of | bright blue impressionism, which !s get- ting #o many of the independents out. It 18 Hoeber’s innermost conviction that this impressionistic bug 1s the boll weevil of art—and yet one must keep up with the changing fashions. So, after a self-struggle, he goes out and paints ‘Joel's Hill" red, puts a shimmer on “The Dunes" and doe: sorts of chromatio stunts. The odd present writing, are 14 to 2 on the im- presstonist. HE EXTHNSIVE DE SPIRIDON | collection-furniture, textile, ob- fete dart and paintings—ts the Fifth Avenue Art Gal- No, 46 Fifth avenue, but Mr, Silo fs handing them down f ‘The auction sales are on every afternoon stands NOVELS OF THE DAY TOLD IN A NUTSHELL + BARBARA OF THE SNOWS, Che Vaty Maid Whe awvay Man to Wing ABRY IRVING GREENE'S story, “Barbera of the Snows” (Moffat, Yard & Oo.) does not begin Brestlly. ‘There are hot words at the chi. Wil- to the lumber camp. fugitive work® out about one ma; the author, A a in wile wan frosts, fights Her which one man, who ts Stoddard, has 4 terrible midnight fight with Barbare em Boddard rises unsteadily to con- | before pursuing | flames. fremt William Grayto: A mon later Graytord, who lias raised his cane! aa Mf to strike, tails to © Bhooa oozing from the wound forehead, where a heavy mat hag struck, flung Ly Stoddard’s It fe soon over, One man 1s dead the other is a fusitive. And w fight of Stoddard, who leaves him @ quarter of 4 million dollars ‘the evil repute of a once famou athlete Kone wrong, the story shil the great forests of the American nort Tre presumptive murderer drops } last mame and is known only as Woe 08. He finds work in a remote lowing | er, a compa o Barbara Find- camp. And he finds a! lay, the daughier of éer girl who has the fa! the northern races w hair and unfat eouthern beauty son with the q woman of the cities as t Utthe woods store de suggties. Later, as neither can guess on thet fret encounter, they are to & through perils * gether, of forest fre and other things, and, of oo are the destined lovers of Mr they ene air hard labor of the woods, Stod meée over again, The old ma ‘fie muscles is me than restored drops the drink en him date Mle of the city ther am only that fearsome : » of to the clubroom floor with fet face w ed by @ streak o red. with a “we news of the outside world comes|imakers in plenty, and ladies industrious THE WIFE DECIDES. She Takes the Road Thr and Comes Out Wro SHERWOOD to hear t ps of n who 19 ve the wife he love, a rich young York, and the especially after boy to whom the father fon denied to the moth- fruitful of misunderstand- writes stories and in rs. ¢ develops presently with or tor Ste thind point. © Nora acquires a resi- at Reno, She mar 3 to have her e With ber, while the boy is father. She believes that sto be hers, ¢! Wanda Hoyt has her Hterary mother and how to love her. Nor ean 1 the position of McAilis- wr, Meanwhile, about 4 mystery develops of 1 the glamour added by divor omes, stays ¥ >} at last bappi »| The vanity of never known does not know ae ta Druce himself Viications ar tn Sldy v ton's story, "The Wife Decides’ (Dillingham), @ novel of misunderstand- ing. After the Reno episode it ts a tale f of Santa Barbara and San Franc Among the book people are mischief ‘ posed to be dead lives ett and | in other folks’ busine: The clearest thing in all the chapters ie that Nora decides It is not at all clear that she should have married anybody, MAN WITH THE BLA4OK CORD. Marder, Mystery mat Detective Attend Him. A at dreadful work tn Inzeredort. Mystery followa mystery. Ther " s the story @ gigantic figure bounding away tn terri! strides, woes. k ts culminate tn the disap. pearance of Leopold Erlach, a wealthy Aged of PPARENTLY there is @ monvter are murder, robbery, assault, and al. ing huge, shapeless footprints as hi old bachelor, who vanishes by night |from his bedroom in the * n House,” leaving his doors locked on the tnaide. ‘The constadles called from Ltesing can make nothing of the matter, It ts not until Joseph Muller comes into the cas from nearby Vienna—a special detective commissioned by the missing man's nephew, Ideut, Paul Erlach—that rey begin in Augusta Groner's The Man With the Black Cord,” (Duitiel uno Aephew will get tie fortune at 1 & Co.) Lieut, Erlach le's hely, If the old man ts a is hil 4 the and can marry Nellie von Feldern, Ig the mystery remains unsolved the young Man must walt thirty years for his in- heritance, Yet it is not {na way wholly heartless that Paul goes to meet the tna As for Joseph Muller, he ds a detective jyi @ species rare in fiction, tHe is mid le-axed, mild, readily moved to aym- |Pathy, and his emotions affect frequen | s face and his ma No sphinx-like Hawkshaw he, yet keen of miad and eye, ¢ lisguise and |r with pistol tric lantern, In addition, he haa money of his own and him. Diegutsed a Robert Hartmann, in- takes cases because they interest ave | terested in brickmaling. Qluller comes to Inzeredort. He |s @ plump and Pleasing visitor, forming friendships wsckly, wights, unknown to jis friends, he oe jneees in wen tn barge Le at the now empty House” Yor bis sasietent he employs the erring een of Eriech's for- mer housekeeper, @ boy whom a lesser sleuth would have marked suspect Over the Hriech bedstead Muller Giscovers the clue missed by other searchera—a piece of horse-hair lariat such aa figured in each preceding Inzer dorf mystery, Point by point he pick up his case, going as far as Russia for ‘@he ie the most beautiful woman 3 have ever known,” Jan tells bis mother \eter, epeaking of Ghetla. ‘I heave fallen im tove with her—and I intend to meke her my wife.” And se she re celves this glad confidence of her old- est born Margaret Vedder ts presented to those who remember her tn the book of twenty-five years ago @ woman now fifty years old, wistful, attractive, careful still of how she appears to her ohildren and her friends True Jove has interruptions and vex- it 3e6, Oe, Jations in the pages that follow the Lal A PR ; ‘ row dies and Ahere ts a long period of story in detall to the man he knows ‘to be guilty, blows his potice whistle ana | Mourning to conduct the great commerce Jan, who has left the navy busi- 1» the epilogue makes firm friend " } ° ness left to him by his grandfather, [emp with the madman he has caused) eng in hentth and makes @ tour of the New World for his Thero is also a period when a way restoration. ra SHEILA VEDDER. young brother of Shella appears as a figure menacing to happiness, Yet, on Her Beauty Inspires Love at Sight | the F ietaie affection’s course {s not rough. $n (he Hans 06 30m Jan thas thought of many ‘eautiful NH moment the eyes of Lieut. Jan Vedder are lifted to the swans on thelr annual flight northward things to say when the time comes for his declaration. As the moment ar- rives, under a night's eoft radiance, he O from Lerwick, The next moment, the| can only ery: “Oh, Sheila! T love you, eer aur fan 8 All to the | dear! I love you!" But tt appears to Laie Sires ie : be enough. ce of the loveliest woma e@ scen, So a romance begine which |has quaint Shetland for its ecene and jin which favored readers of “Jan Ved- der's Wife’ will renew old acquaintances while making fregh ones, Re 4s new story ts called “Shella Vod- they ever JOYCE OF THE NORTH WoODs. from the Mai Weds to Iter with One She Loves, der," and it hag just been published | ¢¢ OOR ttle girl!" says Drew, his (Dodd, Mead & Co.) on the eightieth eyes misty end wis frail form bitnday OF 108 @uchor, Amelia MN. Bare, @ivering, “How doe ane Its hero ts the son of that Jan of ene | looker" [earlier book. Ita heroine ts the daugh- | "As handsome as—well, @ queen would | ter of Col. Magnus Jarrow, a veteran of! give her back teeth to took like Joyce,’ | Fast Indian service, When the two | answer me “I never seen the a roduced by the Colonel, an old |Itkes, IHead k as straight as a |friend of the elder Vedder, Jan bows | pine sapling, ¢ ining and ‘halr ike Lig handsome head and holds Sheila's | mist with sunlight tn !t.” white hand for a fleeting second. And after the tangle of glances the young It would appear, such being the con- ditions, that there need be little worry leutenant realizes that bis heart i@ Bo, about Joyce in St, Ange As @ matter | of fact and én certal: @ good deal. For this girl-wife and Teaved mother has, the burial of her baby, left dend’s home, gone straight to where John Gaston has lived alone, remained there ever since, in the face of conventions which can reach even to a decayed lumber camp. It is true that Jude Lauzoon ts a brute to whom Joyce never should been married; that he has dragged ie steadily down ever since her eading| that he has abused her rd ow; that on the night of thelr parting he has smashed in big wrath Jal the iittle trifles, pictures and wh nots that were her pitiful dome: idols, But, after all, | said the wedding words. And who ts to believe that Gaston, an outs: with @ past unknown to St. Ange, has taken the gi fal charge, holding her sa ter at his hearth. side? ‘The town remembers only a might when a delegation, going to investigate | the tate told by th nken Judé, has ween Joyce in Gaston's doorway, Gas- ton's arm about her, and has heard the atter forma the Comatock's story, h Woods" (Doub! Tho tale involves the | |awakening of Joyce, uy through her discovery of Gaston's real name and history and partly through the coming | to St. Ange of the other woman who might have made the man's life @ dif- ferent thing, But more important yet, laa affecting the destiny of Joyee and the outcome of the story, there ts the | What ts done substance of Harrie J‘Joyce of thn N |day. Page & Co.). |sudden revelation to Gaston of his own heart, Just at the moment when passion is fercely threatening the barriers he has set up for the girl wife's safety It would be easy to have such a story end in tragedy, Mrs, Comstock chooses a happier way. As for Jude Lauzoon, no harm can be done in teHing right here that he treedes to death. ciety and other allied organizations will | words to be ming are parts one and | 108 West) e minister has | fused to look at any song thet was sent | this week, until and including Saturday, | Cha: Every one may not be buying silk Mous soul rugs or a Frans Hals “Portrait of & Nobleman,” but there are antique | ormolu, Cupid's heads on marble bases, and portraits attributed to a pupn of the daughter of Tintoretto, for all. NLESS you are ready to receive l J the artistic jolt of, your young Iife don't go to Mr, Stleglits's Pho Secession gallery, No, 2 Fifth avenue, where post-impressionism {s exposed in & collection of early and recent draw- ings and wa of Parte And yet, on second thought, we should not take the responsibility of advising any earnest truthseeker to ftay away, as the announcements de clare that “this ts the first opportu- nity given to the American public to gee some of Picasso's work,” and from the flerce notices the show is getting we fear \t may be the last. ‘There is »> catalogue—it wouldn't help Much, anyw But ere is Hterature by Marius de 7 as, explaining what the Picasso kind of art ts not. “As tt is not Picasso's purpose,” enya Marius, “to pereptuate on the canvas an aspect of external nature, by which to Produce an aftistic impresion, but to represent with the brush the Impreasion he ‘has direetiy received from nature, | eynthesized by his fantasy, he does not put on, the canvas the remembrance of | @ past #ensation, but dexerives a present Tn h |#ensation. * * © foal manifestation tead of the phy seeks in form t Psychle one, and on account of his pe- cullar t nent his paychical mant festations inspire iin wi et ensations.” Now wiil you be But we are fun of these Pes would be too easy, That The obvious though Aificult rse is to study this Parts- fanized Spaniard seriously, a wet the occult message he vey, For when an artist who ca and paint with the consummately bea tiful mastery of a Millet or a Degaw and Picasso unquestionably can, as may see in the exquisite fu drawing of @ peasaht w at the entrance to the gallery, Moorish head in color withi euch an artist deliberately throws cif this traditional technique as a worn- out garment and ex} martyrdom of ses himself to the misunderstanding and HE Anderson Art Galler! Present leading a double it Forty-sixth street and on with the Madison avenue and Fortieth ve on view preparatory to sale eek the paintings and of the late Francis 1 York City. distinguished portrait omtive work, { ohn La Farge, in ity Church, Ro: as well as in Bartholomew's, this olty, is well known, He was also @ collector of works of art, and among the pictures to be disposed of at Anderson's are {mpor- throp of Ne Lathrop was painter, and his sociation with ase ins in tant examples of Gainsborough, Richard Ww Delacroix, Corot, Toussea: Daublgny, Dupre, Diaz, Besnard, Cour- bet. T ‘Twachtman and La Farg HE CURRENT OFFERING tn the exhibition gailery of tographic Company, Madison avenue, 1s a small group of figure studies, inter one-time pupl! of DAUGHTER Vegetable Compound Baltimore, Md.—‘I send you here. with the picture of fmy fifteen year old Tn daughter Alice, iy jwas restored to hy Wnealth by Lydia E. | i (C |Pinkham’s Vegeta- | . ‘ble gompound. 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