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2n8 BVeENiNe Wun, KING GEORGE MAKESFIRST. ~ STOPININDIA With Queen Mary He Lands ‘at “Bombay and Is Given ‘Great Welcome by Natives. DRIVES THROUGH CITY. Will Remain Until Next Wed- nesday and Then Go on ta }». Delhi for the Durbar. { WOMBAY, India, Dec. 2—The first @tege of the Durba? tour was completed yteeday when King George and Queen | Mary landed here, the first crowned | British sovereigns to set foot on Indian {#0 The Medina, on which the royal party arrived, and her crulser esoort were gally bedecked, and the guns of thi warships joined with the land battefie: nA thunderous salute as tho monsroba ‘atépped ashore. ©Phelr Majesties were met at the Yanding by Sir G. Sydenham Clarke, Governor of Hombay, Chief Justice Sir :Baall Scott, Major-Gen. J. C. Swann, in command of he Bombay troops, and ® host of naval, military, civil and native dignitaries, al! gorgeous in state uniforms. ‘KING, AND QUEEN WELCOMED * RIDE THROUGH CITY. Following an .eddreas of weicome, a atate procession was formed for o drive through the city. Bombay has never been much of a sedition centre, nd there was little cause for anxiety lor the safety of the monarchs, but nothing was left undone to impress the inhabitants amd overawe possible agi- tators, Guards of honor were every- where, and the streets and sea-front were lined with thousands of British fénd Indian soldiers. The King-Emperor and .the Qucen- °fimpresa, as they are officially described Auring their stay in India, were escorted “by: detachments of the Gevernor's body: @uerd and British and Indian cavalry. ‘The toute to Government House was through the fort and native ctty, and the ehrtll cheers of school children, care- funy riled and massed at strategic aastly made up for any lack of enthusiasm by the adult population. Dut Eng- amid the weird babel of tongue: lish, Urdu, Mahrath!, Gufjurett, Stndnt, Kanarese and a score more, the cry of “ghab-enshah Namdar, Galamat, Maha- (‘Leng five Emperor ‘George, Jong live the great King of *), was heard frequently enough to set George and his consort bowing pelt Saitama: “Kin, ang emiling. WILL REMAIN IN BOMBAY UNTIL WEDNESDAY. King Geor fat fantry lining the roads, ‘The King and Queen will remain here until Wednesday, when they will pro- ceed to Delhi for the actual Durbar ceremony. In the mean time they will visit the Bombay exposition, hold re- investitures and at- ‘Views, receptions, Yénd state dinner: will attend divin dral in full state. Bombay is wonderfully decorated for ‘Their Majesties’ stay and thousands of gollars have been spent for fireworks ‘and for illuminating the city at night. . ns {BOAT DOES 40 MILES HOUR. jew Motor Speeder Makes Fast Clip at Atlantio City. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Dec. 2a wed boat bullt for Gen. Coleman Du- ont of Wilmington, D pel of Ventnor, doy forty miles an hour the course of he Ventnor Motor Boat Club to-day n its try-out. Apel will try again for better record, —_—————+- De YOU know what a “Two-Gun Man” is? man they pick out to annoy or play tricks on, ry beet cowboy story written in the 4. i ‘you like @ story where something {s hap- ening all the time—something exciting and un \¢ A Saturday Soliloquy A greater number of op- portunities were individ- ually advertised in last | Sunday's World than in | any other Sunday news- | paper in the United States, ‘The Sunday World hasa | circulation in New York | City greater than the Sun- | fay Herald, Sunday ‘Times, Sunday Sun, Sunday Tri | une @nd_ Sunday Press | | ADDED TOGETHER, - Ien't that the variety of | ads. you ought to read? Isn't that the circulation your advertisement ought | to have To-Morrow? | ‘a special bodyguard, 100 Wigamtic gunners of the Royal Marino ‘Artilery, made a big impression on *the they marched to Govern- ‘ment House to begin thelr duties in real earnest, and in their blue uniforms and white helmets they formed a queer con- trast to the dusky soldiers of the Bom- ay Grenadiers and Mahratta Light In- » by Adolf ped a speed of HAT’S A “TWO-GUN MAN?” Out West they know. And he isn’t the sort Oge especial Two-Gun Man is the hero of st THE TWO-GUN MAN’ is the name of thie reat romance, It is by Charles Alden Seltzer. “THE TWO-GUN MAN" will begin serial pub- ication in next Monday's EVENING WORLD, ember that date—Monday, Dec. 4—for rt of w treat you ought not to 4." THE TWO-GUN MAN” In The Putnam Griswold, New Basso at the Metropoli- tan, Makes a Plea to Philanthropist Million- aires to Establish Both —Would Do the First Himeelf if He Had the Money, He Saye. A Crying Shame That Young Men and Women Should Be Driven Abroad to Study--Train- ing at Home Need Not Take More Than Two Years—Some American Singers of Note. By Sylvester Rawling. a fa the great voice Producing country of tho world. Only Austria, to- day, is turning out singers of any- thing Ike equal quality, and not nearly in such quantity,” said Put- nam Griswold, the American basso, who has been singing abroad for some years and who made a suc- cessful Metropolitan Opera House debut as Hagan in “Goetterdaem- merung” last week. The writer had called upon him at his apartment in the Majestic to ask his opinion of Felice Lyne, the little American so- prano, who seems to have swept op- eratic-going Londoners off their feet at Mr. Hammerstein's Kingsway Opera House and made the music reviewers declare that ebe is the superior of Tetrazzini and of Patt!. @o not know Miss Lyne,” Mr. her sing, but I no reason to question | the judgment of Londoners in the ma‘ ter. They have heard, as New Yorke Poy GRISWOLD. SO MISHIUN STYDIDG, have heard, the greatest singers in the orld, and the English critics usually @re sound mypsicians, learned men, and conservative Writers. Miss Lyne's tri- umph is only one fllustration of my point. American singers are making their way abroad as successfully as they are at home, often in the face of ereat prejudices nd jealousies. In fact, an American singer oan make his way in Europe only by reason of @ good voice. Inferior native artists may be tolerated and acclaimed, but an American int loper? Never! The same is true of American business men seeking fortune abroad, Every obstacle is placed in the way of their success. I say this as ® fact, although personally I must be, and am, grateful for many kindnesses 4nd courtesies and exhibitions of help- fulness from Individual foreigners of various nationalities, , SUCCESS OF AMGRICAN SINGERS NUE TO NATIVE INTELLIGENCE. “Do I think the climate responsible for the superiority of the American cessful singers come from all over the country, from Maine to Texas and from New York to Callfornta, and within these boundaries the climate 1s a varied ae that of all Europe, No! It ts to the native Intelligence that inevitably seeks the best way and the shortest way to accomplish anything. The for- elgner who comes lere quickly absorbs the Idea, Take, for instance, the Italian teacher with whom I am studying to been long In America, but 1 could not, make progress with him nearly as! quickly in Italy as here. He admits that the American atmosphere has atim- ulated him to new and more direct methods “We are weak in the line of tenors, you say, Well, I don't kn Riccardo Martin !y singing gost successt at the Metropolitan. George Hamlin and Ellison Van Hoose are making good Maclennan {s famous on the con: of Hurope for his lovely voice, Iomen ber that young New Yorker, Lamber | Murphy, whom you he t Metropolitan in ‘Lobetan day. Hasn't he a beau voice? him sing. What'a chance for some- body to put. him !n the proper way of training and make of him, perhaps, an American Caruso! CRYING NEED FOR A NATIONAL CONSERVATCRY, ere our rich philanthropists Griswold said, “and I have not he: rq | about that they do not establish one? |There is honor and glory and national |@ppreciation for the n jwho will found one. [young men and women students driven to Europe to study singing? It Would be much easier for them and bet- ter for them if they could lessons at home. The temp frivoling and idling and dissipating tn foreign countries is gr Instances of failur worse among American students abroad | humerous enough to convince me that there is another side to the charge against the rapacity and false pretenses and promises of foreign teachit's. singing in America, many of ti in Europe, quacks and chariatans; but is opel the Metropolitan Opera House, the first in the world to-day, with its unsur- opera in the language to wh composed, which Mr. Gatti se continuing with even more brilliant re. not unmindful of the fi voice? Well, hardly, because our suc-| r perfect my Itallan diction, He has not | Germans, for instance. with Mr, Dippel's company, and Francis | {a poet and a musician or, Without any natural faults, {t seems to | me. I don't know him, I only heard “Our crying need in America is a National Conservatory of ‘Mudie, Wht ‘America Producing the Best Voices and Singers in the World;*: LOUISE. BOMER Aovronr shore thinking or the mi fon for I have seen leading to want and “With no fear of being thosght tm- modest I say unhesitatingly that if I Dossessed severa! millions of dollars [ Would undertake the enterprise myself. It woula need a big endowment. 1) 000 @ year and he should be supported by a very able board of directors. The big lary 18 necessary because otherwise | no first class man would accept the po- sition, The head of the institut must be able to refuse to teach p vately or to yleld to any temptations that might distract him from his main Purpose, head of it should be paid at least “There are thousands of teachers of m, a8 there must be, there are, first-class teachers, upright and able Americans, willing to perform a_mission—men of the calibre of Franz Emerich of Berlin, or of Hans Gregor of Vienna. If one, perchance, could not be found, which | is impossible to believe, tmport one. IH will soon become an American of Amer- feans, more keen and devoted, perhaps, than {f native born, With ‘Amor: methods the course of study could be accomplished in two years instead of four or five years, as !s demanded abroad. A CHANCE FOR RICH MEN TO START OPERA IN ENGLISH “Another thing we need in America in English, The directors of passed record of giving nes yy every hit was sults than his predecessors, are sear Ukely to abandon thelr splendid dition. Why then do not some other rich men combine to give first-class grand opera fh the vernacular? I am productions in English that Col. Savage presents You may remember that I sang in oH English ‘Parsifal.’ But I sean that the} opera shall be presented with the seme | degree of sumptuousness that 1s the le at the Metropolitan, English is as singable as any lan- Unfortunately few of our native ‘# make themselves understood tn the vernacular, It 1s the #ame tn Eng- land. One of the most important func- tions of the National Conservatory will be to teach 4 fon, Am ‘ans must be trained to sing English, as they ar educated to sing Italian, or . oF German, of which most of them know nothing when they first go abroad to | study. “With operas presented tn the native tongue, and with the stimulus of the | National Conservatory, we shal! rapidly become a truly musical people, like the 6 words un- das Aerstond, scores will in Berlin, or in Muni r- | man city which presents grand opera, the persons who attend will know th raditions and demand the highest ¢ cellence. Nothing need necessarily be lost of musical effect because of transla All that {a necossary ts for the transi, to forget to be iteral, He must the latter he must seek the ¢ of a musictan to_ preserve 1 musteal accents. Berl 7 !n a performance of 'D in German, of rou ry ag re vastly improved by the translation MR. GRISWOLD'S CAREER AND SOME AMERICAN SINGERS, Te 1, necessary to talk Well, then, briefly, I am a ¢ he refused to take me, but he w, three years, Tame Ing! one MAH bALUHUMVAY, DEVEMBER 2, MARGUERITE/ MARIS KA ALDRICH Why should our be When I needed help gave It to me gen- arn their Bouhy In Paris and later with Emerich have sung abroad ilowing are the nam famous American r. Griswold and the era Company, Olive Frematad, Marie a Gluck, Bernice de Pas- . Kita Fornla, Anna _Telen Mano Riccardo Martin, ert Witherspoon, With the Philadetpnia-Cntcago Opera Mabel Reigelman ‘iilson van anes Clare ence Whitebit ‘and Henrf 1 formerly with either the Hladelphia-Chicago such as Lillian alth Symphony Soole will give the 2 1 Alliance to-morrow evening. | 2¥8" to-day in the Childr Nubert's unfinished symphony will be | Brooklyn, Isaac was in court on @ Gardner Lamson, a recital | age hureday | “That's the trouble,” responded the rt Glea Club of Jersey City, | “You ean nover be too big to learn, chenek conductor, will give its | com ; auditorium of the tone, "What's the trouble Tuesday | “Look at my Up, What ohance have 1 Jersey City High School Phitharmonte EAMES: ms to be} —— FC BANGS will give @ cone , Brooklyn, to — | morrow afternoon ne symphony at the| | Marguerite syiv 4, David Bisph urday afternoon. singers promi- In the afternoon there will be free organ recitals at the City Rimsky = Korsakoff's ulte ‘Scheherazade’ {pal number, rlewold offhand r eadled 3 Ayth W {noone at 4 o'clock recital at the Harris T) day afternoon ident of Amherst 8 on Mon-| sttntater Rega Frances Alda, wife of Gattl-Casazza oe ae it te See jof the Metropolitan Opera Hous, |prima donna this season of the Montreal | / at Stutt- (Opera Company, will give a recital at! Rutt | DOSE eon ET rnetay (rouraoons |Maclennan and Bart jini Maud Pay and Ma Leon Rains and | Drenden, and George Mead ella Kraft, at rand | Maurice F will givelter th » Lyceum on Briday |} rig) | wrederick Wemp | a recital at Carne cdpaisauanelie AGAIN anetent and modern, in French, German _AT THe METROPOLITAN n Quartet, assisted by Pao! " a concert at ‘Thursday evening, Andreeff and the Russian Bala- give another of ing concerts at the Hippos | t night was he Orchestra will | Cooper’ Union next #0 » Belasco Hermann vadiowker, Reiss and the Ung the geese and the + | assisted by a quartet of Russian singers the song of » on Monday afternoon give tts Humperdinck's The Tucsday tlon of Mra, | . TSCHAIKOWSKY AND WAGNER,IN RIVAL BY MEHOHY PROGRAMMES violintat, | L ital in Carnegie Lyceum | Shake well and take @ teaspoonful every Jay afternoon, Augusta Cottlow, Lilla Ormond, |p Evan Williams, | will be the artists. Pianist, Carnegie Hall Boston Symphony Early of the Boston vill ive @ recital fire | by the use of this medicine r the benefit of the German Polt- usicale and tea w e street, ° ad a} of some other artic nnetta Wakefleld, Arthur a) of some other arti negie Hall to-morrow at- scloints being "Rowe 0} among the artists announced, Frank Darekowaki and wife and his ralto, and K was | name of the Leach Chemi lof Cineinnati, Ohio, which is” your f myself? ‘At to night's | torntan, I thought 1 had @ yoice ana went to London to study with Randegger, at the Royal College of Mumc. At first, pore quaded and he was my master for grateful to the parttcular-—who William ©, Carl will give a free organ Monday evening in 2 Church tn honor of 4 by the emoke and ran inte the Policeman Greenpoint station wet the halfclad and the reserve houses immedia: will be the feature, Dr, Howard Duffield as pastor, en Farlow, the Canadian violin- i be the soloist Boston Symphony conc Arthur Whiting, harpsichord, a1 4 in Carnegie | by Constance Edson, violin; Hall next Thursday evening and Sat-| Barrere, fluie, and Paul Kefer, viola ao C cromtinted | jas to who will be named Deputy State Te TVs MARY GARDEN © DAVIS @RICKaMAYER TO-YEAR-OLD BOY, IXFEET TALL IN Pulaski Says Mustache Takes Him Out of Toddler’s Class, ALB satis but Court Rejects Plea. | gamba, witt give a recital in Rumford Hall on Monday afternoon. Isaac Pulaski 1s only fifteen years old but he {# six feet tall and weighs 160 pounds, He towered way above Justice charge of truancy m de by his mother, u're a pretty big boy for your wuld Judge Ryan, | youth, “I'm too big to go to school," nted the Court, in a st fatherly got sitting in with all une toddlers, and | with @ mustach>." lustache? Where?" asked the Judge. ook close and you will se it ne Court looked but could not see, wive| “I fail to find any traces of what you College |muggest. Your excuse is not sutfoient | after- r staying awa m schovl, You are | need to the Brooklyn ‘Truant \ Bohool."" will give al —=—____ Daughter We: | COPENHAGEN, Miss Carm: wan, daughter of Dr, ‘an, United States Minia- was married to-day to Ga- briel Ambrose O'Ketlly of the Philip- pines, formerly of the United States Army and a well known polo playe: | Gures Golds, Conghs and Catarrh son at Carnegle Mix together in a large bottle a half pint of whiskey, two ounces of glycerine and half an ounce of virgin oil of pi four hours. Your cold, how er severe, will disap: pear in less than a day, Chronic catarrh will yield promptly to this simple treat- ment. Rheumatism, leuchorrhoea and inflammation of the urinary passages find permanent cure, and the misery of » streot | backache and grippe is spgedily relieved The ingredients may be secured at any drug store, but the utmost care should | be taken to provide against substitution The only the pure virgin oil of pine | guarantee of purity and freshness. the ogee , FOUND AND REWARDS. iieahiiag on Pda wait The are | oop ave, conall iy id not get above the firet floor of ar | ietel “ta Hoten, (MURPHY IS BACK National Conservatory of Music and Opera in English Now Needed |minor place. Others spoken of for the teed land as head of the Fire Pre ROLE OF TRUANT ‘8 Court, | who had told the judge she couldn't do a | an American bart. | thing with “the little truant." years has been vinging in opera in Germany, will give indicating the place for | Denmark, Dee, 2— | Simple Home Remedy That Aots Like Magic » of similar pame for, is sold in basement, | sealed half-ounce packages bearing the 1 Company, | 9 AND NEW SHER GAN PARCEL OBS —ee Harburger Expected to Replace All Republicans With.-7 Tammany Men. 2, Charles F. Murphy returned from the South and will be at his ‘on Monday at Tammany Hall. With Bie return speculation became active tm the Wigwam as to who among the faithful are to get the jobs in the Sheriff's 6 fice. There is also considerable gossip Comptroller when Sheriff-elect Jullu® | Harburger, who holds the job, assume hin new duties on Jan, 1. Republicans are In possession ot fe berths in the Sheriff's office, but it alrendy been decreed that they give way to the Tammany men, Tt is stateg that Senator Chrletogher D. Sullivan can have the place of Under Sheriff at $5,000 a yoar if he desires. Hie term as Sengtor lasts another year end it Is said that he would not coneider te fob are John Gilchrist, Under sheriff re, “Tom” Foley's regime; Michael rulse, Tammany leader of the Potts teenth Assembly District, and Andrew, Kelly, Tammany leader of the Thingg+ fourth Assembly District, in the Brom, One of the best places in the Sherit@s office for # lawyer is counsel to @ae Sheriff at a salary of $6,000. Jamemd@. Hoey, who served several terms an@n Assemblyman, is spoken of for the Bar sition, If he does not get that one Aw ventien Bureau. He introduced the bill creating — the bureau, There are etghteen available jobs the Shoriff'n office, fifteen of: which Deputy Aueriffa at $2,000 © yer. oO the place of warden of I Bireet Jel at's salary of $3,000, Hour” Thomas Rock is now Dut he in Republican and will have to go. it State Co: -aptroller Sonmer also nasa few plums to bestow, for he ts ay bounce all the Republicans in his He will hove the naming of six Inhem {tance Tax Appraisers, each of whol receives a ralary of $4,000 a year, the present Inheritance are four Republican district r wadete will have to look for new jobs, many district leaders are scheduled appointment to the places held be publicans, en DEAD BABIES HER REVENGE. of Bodies in Hotel May Be Werk of Di sed Employee.’ it Spite work by a discharged employee of the Waldorf-Astoria is believed by Coroners Holzhauser and Feinberg 40 be the solution of the mystery surroung> ing the finding of two dead infants i that hotel during the last fow weeks. The frst infant found in the la dry of the hotel, Oct, 18. The baby been strangled with a towel and ph In @ basket full of sotled linen. Yi afternoon, the body of a new-born infant was found on a skylight of the second floor court roof. The body wae wrapped in a Turkish towel. fe Roth coroners made a searching Sr vestigation and came to the conclusion to-day that some discharged mployee had brought the bodies to there in re’ | “DOCTORS OF THE | i MASSES” cS \$is what one writer has termed: |} proprietary medicines. . 12 Good, honest proprietary medicines like Lydia E. Pinks ham's Vegetable Compo succeed, and the homes of thé masses are blessed by them, while those which are worthlés Thirty years of success in ‘cut |S ing female ills is the record © Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, Lopoes SOCIETIES, MEET! ~ SOCIETY oF TAMMANY. “4 alotners:| You are aoe, wees reguiat. tee {freay ‘Wigwam on MONDAY mei meets NOTTS. ait an hour after the the, an, Grepy By order of the Grant ANS aren, nha tts Se of Snows, 12th Mer Diinery eat Ts agt tedevendence DIAMONDS ‘ON CREDI AMON ween