The evening world. Newspaper, December 12, 1914, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE EVENING -WOR es Mary Fuller and Her Pretty Aides oat ALL MOVES VOTE T0 Gi DEC. 28 MATINEE RECEBTS TOTHE PENNY LUNGH FUND Executive Noord, aiso wan enthnsias- te on the subject and made the fol- lowing statement “I do net know of any cause that appeals 0 atrongly to the motion Ploturo extibiter ap thin one of pro- viding children with wholesome lunches in public aehools. “The movie tlicatre.ia primarily the Ghildrens’ theatre, and I cannot speak too strongly of The Bvening World's excellent plan to make thin posible. 1 am Wed Me action was taken by| our association, and am confident that with the co-operation that te assured @moag the members that our theatres om that one Gay will net 6 fine werth- Ticket Sale to Aid Lunch Fund -_->.—- 800 or More Picture Theatres Plan Big Contribution for Children. | SPECIAL PROGRAMMES. ' | a Donation Boxes at Doors for Those Who Wish to Give More Than Admission Price. while return for thie werth-while en- COMMITTEE NAMED To \AR-| By Sophie Irene Loeb. RANGE PLAN FOR ALL HOUSES. * Poliowing are receipts to date of {Tee Rvening World Children's Lapoh Feed: whe aed the a i a for the by <a ure howses throughout 1A be shown on that date to be iractive to child "isa = morning. er ‘wilt be accompanied by Mise William Holl . Poo Rédemary Thebdy, Frances Nelson, aire, No. 1998 Fulton Dorotiy Priiiips and Violet Merner- Lt nid + ‘ ‘afid if they can be spared from 387 venue, | pi now heing made. Arline Hise Far, eee A Mp fo. |B vias Marie’ Weilrman will also 1 Myrtle Avenue, Rrvok!; C,| be In/the party. Whitten, "Goldenrod Theatre, ‘Coltege | Stltus. Blern, manager of the Imp Point, L. 3. ’ atualo, which 1s part-of: the Universa) MAARITY KETTLES GET {tte sete ater ned ‘th other WICKELS 1M WALL STREET Girls open the sale that he decided to acoompany, (bem. @ party will-reach The World Hard Times in Financial. District Make Contributions Smaller Than on East Side. time arquad 10 o'clock and theh tho ot the witts will be sent | te way office and Miss Wall Strest shies at the Salvation | Gy, Army Christmas kettles” this year, Fai aldo. may appear there in the oon. more red ! i White Fehr, wife of the ft the ‘Board, who i i Hl There is an easterly and a westerly LD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER RESIDENTS PLAN FT UPON NEN BS LNE ROUTES Opponents of Model Courses Laid Out by City to Be Heard Dec, 18. The Franchise Committees of the 290 P. M., when it is understood there will be strenuous objections trom residents and property owners on eome of the thoroughfares mapyed In thelr applications for route privi- the competing companies cover am area extending from the Battery to Dyckman Street, with north and south parallel routes and connecting the east and west drives of Cen- roads of the park, have been pro- ‘The southern terminal of the “model” routes is at Union Square. Avenue, north to Thirty-ninth and Fortieth Streets, east to Park Ave- nue, around the Grand Contral Sta- tion, up Park Avenue to One Hundred and Twenty-ffth Street and west to Square up Broadway to Columbus by alternative routes, without alternative, the route is north on Broadway, St. Nicholas Avenue to One Hundred and Ninety- fourth Street and Broadway at Fort Bt. Paul, +112; New jundredth Street. Beyond One Hundredth Street, | 1 12, 1914. | tories went away with bappy antict- pations of new gowns and automo- | bilew again in commission. The foot- | ball crushes around Teeading and Coppers thinned out, and at the end of the first hour there remained three | or four hundred active working brokers on the floor, trading some for customers but most on their own ac- count. The ticker recled out the Snancial | story of the day. It reported the first transaction as 100 shates of Pitts. burgh Coal stock sold at 16 3-8, which 16 closing price real leadors t—-Reading, that greatest | of apectiative iesugs, ahd Lehigh Val- ley, followed by the Coppers—Amal- share days of the past. ‘The bidding for twenty, fifty and hundred share lots gave way to play- ing with five hundred and thousand share blocks that wore tossed back and forth like footballs. ? A certain few railway stocks were the favorites, among them Reading, St. Paul, Atchison and Lehigh Val- ley had exceptional rises. Even id, respectable Pennsylvania, the ki investment securities, started upward from persistent buying in small quan- tities and gained nearly four points. This influence extended through most of the list and forty-six stocks showed gains over the Seri price of the morning, St. Paul leading with five pointe to its credit. As for com- parison with July 30 prices, nearly every one of the securities traded in anes better than the old quota- t Some of the notable gains over that last disastrous day wee ig Borg oF » 3; Lehig' ven, 2%; Pennsylvania, 2%, and Reading, 8. Even that ex- ploded -oubbdie, Island, whose ‘watered atook seems to ha' ished In the explosion, 1p prices almost doubling its quotations lest July, but this meant only 1% for the common and 3 for the prefs So happy were the way prices went up that they began| ish da to talk about the return to the floor 3 ath of that old favorite, U. 8. Steel, that has unfo i 1@ Committee at- Street and Ser Avenue, north on the latter to Fifty- had an rtunate war slum) It was Inst quoted on July 30 at 50 SPE ‘a Carnival at the 1817 Bedi waventh Btreet, to Eighth Avenue, to Fifty-ninth Street, joining the other went side routes, To-day’s outside price was crosstown routes are suggested. The: and the brokers aaid there Women's Clubs, wh ot the sCo-operative quests o World's and her company of Ny ar at to-day's - ty perctssion. ‘7. Be, aro Thirty-first Street, Thirty-six! Thirty-sevonth Street, Thirty- reet, Fortieth Street, Forty- sixth Street and Forty-se Street.t The crosstown routes suggested in Central Park are from East dixty- fifth to West Sixty-sixth Street, Park Avenue to 3 ninth Street was no reason why it should not be admMted next week with that figure as the minimum. ' ts of Interstate Com- pers proc! t the country the long S.A HEART AT \ A OWARITY “BAZAAR Seheol Lunch Fuad Witterstainer ° Meets Mis Brum- . Miél-at Austrian Booth, That Is‘ Really Cupid's. What, Dasaar for charity with- out @ Cupid Booth? The head of the. bureau of the Charity the deventy-Grat Regiment : meeking to-day for a story when the aforesaid slong, sclzed « booth and CO-OPERATION COMMITTEE. MAB. WILLIAM GRANT BROWN ef the Federation of Women's and ef the Reseue Heme fer Girla - 188 NCE GUERNGEY, President of the Moderation of SMe OEBERT SARTWRIONT. Gheirean of bay Pha: ve. Gafety femen’ lube a Euocutive Board Gatery, Geolnty. ~ WIGS CLARE KLEICER, : MRO. MARTIN VOOEL. MAG, WILLIAM &. ZINSTEIN, President ef the Widewsd Mothers’ Pound Association and Emanuel Sicterheed. yi it was that he brought to- p hip uaual “by accident” jas «Kate =Brumme! and farateiner, a contractor of »N. J. The contractor an- EUGENE GEARY DEAD. engagement last night.) 5... age oh weno Geary, the Irish poet, whose HN returned two weeks) iting v * familiar to, Kvening , where she had been} World readers, died at Harlem Hospital ir wits DP Anetrien family |iast night. He was born at Kilderny, ehe was travelling. Am-|County Cork, fifty-two years ago, ick had them Teleased, ry was one of the Inst of the old- fime lyricists of the ‘Tom Moore " a Yeresietiotes Atte Yrish ‘inlect poste, was . feature hich re for eral yoars a ‘ihe ‘Brenl ‘World’ mawauihe pases, vt all fun, Ae sonti- it and the mingling ity thon which are the heritage of ite past the Ameri seum of Natura) History, and west to Seventy-ninth Street and Riverside Drive, Another crosses from Park Avenue on Ninety-sizth Gtrest to West End Avenue. nue and St. Nicholas Avenue at St. Nicholas Avenue. There is a triangular from way ané One Hi jundred and extends Avenue, Convent Ave- be Road and One Hunfred -wecond Street, terminating Broad’ lundred and Fifty-seventh Street, extending Hi ity-first In the Wien Quotations, 10 to 13. 20 “i changes compared with July = sae! pS ese Ee Sarcanees: = san8e3i RPS ids Sige rcacenteny 2: - . 4) ry ie aig ‘**Die Walkuere’’ With Matzenauer As By Syloester Rawling. 4“ Brunnhilde|* IE WALKUERE” got its first sung to-night for the bened@t which has not been LJ York for a quarter of be revived at the eee House at next Satu It has been exhaustively rebeareed for i inder the direction of Mr, Toseaai and Mr. Gatti-Casazza be; rig it achieve success. The week are, Monday, “Der Regen Kavalier", Weanestay, “Tristan and Isolde"; Thursday, “Tosca,” and Frie day, “ “Alaa” ee presentation of the season! italian Hospital. at the Metropolitan Opera House last night before a substantial while the house was not crowded, subscription seats were filled, in the galleries and behind the rail there as been heard. While Mr. Gattl- Casassa bas demonstrated through many seasons his worth as Genoral Manager, bis cast o° characters was not the bappleat. Why, for instance, should Johanna ) the best of Brunnphildes at the present time that we In New York know, be Sieglinde, and Margarete Matsenauer, whose beautiful contralto voice is heartily appreciated, be Wotan's favorite daughter? Wagner's Brunnkilde mu- sic was written for a singer whose voice ls '» lete satisfaction. jacques Urius'’s diogmund held much of the old German faults of ‘ag caged some new faults of acting. It is & pity, because he has voloe and presence. Cari Braun was {i as Wotan, better in voice, perhaps, than he has been heard in the part here. Basil Ruysdael was a satistac- tory Hund! and Margarete Ober ‘ing was an admirable She is an artist who never aula to aatiaty an- ticipation. The sisters of Brunnhilde, constituting the Vi choir, were Lenora Sparkes, isabeth Sobu. mann, Rite Forni Marie Mattfeld, Lil Curtis and Florence Mulford. That ingenious yo » Loomis Taylor, ov: did the effect of upon Hun fags wut and white the re on tl -| hearth was much more realistic than that to which we have been accus- tomed, it failed to light up sufficiently the hilt of the sword and it died out too suddenly. J ‘The honora of the performance were won by Mr. Herts, who led with fine fervor and achieved eplendid orches- tral effects. The first of ten Friday afternoon “Moments Musicales ayeo Danses Modernes et Classiques” was given at the Waldorf-Astoria yesterday be- fore an audience of considerable size, which found almost as much attrac- tion in the famous opera singers in the boxes as in the performance. The patrons include Caruso, Frances Ak Lucresia Bori, Emmy Destinn and pretty nearly the roster of the rincipal singers at the Metropolitan pera House, of whom % Emmy Destinn and Lucrezia Bori, at least, were present. The entertain- ment was divided into music, classic and society dances by professionals, {and general dancing. Lucy Gates, who captivated the Rubinstein Club ao her splendid col- eratura singing on Tueaday night, won new triumph by her repetition of he ‘bell song. frou me. Kai ri from “La! and a Russian folk songs, obarmed everybody. Vera Barstow, violinist, played well a Sarasate Span- nce, and Guyla Boxhorn con- ducted a Iondon Society Orchestra. Fernando Tanara was the accom- panist at the piano. Then there were interpretative dances by Thomas Allen Rector and Rena Manning that won favor, and, the floor of the grend ball- room cleared, general dancing, Prof. Samuel A. Baldwin will give hie four hundredth free public organ recital at the College of the City of New York to-morrow. afternoon at 4 | o'clock. He will give another free on Wed: @t the same recital our. ; Soloman Ruden, eleven years old, will give a violin recital at Berkeley Theatre to-morrow to raise funds to continue muzsioal educa- tion... He will be assisted (by Otillie Schillig, soprano, and Lawsempe Good- man, take place to-morrow Straus Auditorium is of the Alliance. Maximilian Pilser, Nathan- jel Finkelstein, Jacob Altschuler and Modest, r tet and Leo Levy will be the pianist. ‘he admatesion fee ts only ten cents, of the widows and orphans of the war. Marte will bie or- European ging and Nahan Franko chestre will teke part, Louts Siegel will give a violin re- cital on Tuesday orening at Aeolian Hall, assisted we John Warner, vian- iat. It will be the first appearance of this American violinist in New York. ‘Under the direction of Dr, William C. Carl, ‘the popular series of free organ recitals will be resumed on Monday evening in the Old First ai reaniat of Prrmouth cent Milligan, o: a out Chu: Brooklyn, will play. ‘Weber's “Euryanthe,” an opera —_—_———_—— audience, By that i meant that,| [ode* Bit Amore be] Tre Re,” will be the soloist with the concerts: ‘noon. were gathered many enthusiastic il include Rimsk: '- Koraakomt's Wagnerites. The performance was| “Scheherazade,” . F her the beat nor the worst that| “Till Eulenspiegel’ and LAsst's Edovardo Ferrari-Fontaam Whe it at the Met! jitan Opera season in “L', Philharmonic Society at its next Thursda: i ichard garian rhapsody, Olive Fremstad, whose absence the Metropolitan Opera House = pany this season is deeply by a host of admirers, will cital at Carnegio Hall on afternoon. Her recent tri soloist with the Symphony entre, is sure to be duplicated at her .re- cital, the demands upon the box office indicate. 14-YEAR-OLD GIRL A FORTUNE TELLER Miss Is Trapped by Daugh ter of Woman De- tective. ive @ re- ‘ednesday as Little Charged with fortune telling, Dian. Adams, a fourteen-year-old ‘Syriar beauty of No. 161 Nevins Stroet, Brooklyn, was held by Justice Wilkir for a further hearing in the Children’s Court to-day. The warrant for th arrest of the girl, who advertises un: der the name of “Mary Gipsy,” wa sworn out by Miss Margaret Goodwin, a daughter of Detective Isabella Good win, Miss Goodwin said that she calle: at the house this morning and askey to have her fortune told. The fifth girl, who was dressed in cerise silk with green trimmings, and wore + triple necklace of gilt coins and near. pearls, assured Miss Goodwin that blond young man about whoin she in quired was untrue to her, that shc was soon to receive & present and he life had been full of trouble, Tho little girl could speak barely enough English to make her «proph- ecles clear and semed unable to un- deratand English in court. He parents will be sumomned to thr next hearing. NEW YORK COTTON MARKET Market seenet quiet and steady. Im- rovement in sentiment wus in ret 10 better Liverpool market. Furthe. advances occurred toward the clone, which was around the best figures fo: the day. oj dpen. 7 Ju Oct. for dry, thin and falling dene ad it > and economically. Samples Free by Fin the night he won | bards. . Garis Has drone time te thie sarssdton | Continued from Firet Page.) i ‘Ting to Misx Hrummel,| the editorial sta jew Yor! seaagt ones taade tor| SARE TiaMkhe? et eieerees, them around freely,|journal. ee before it died away there began the te armory was packed aight entertainment of the Liederkrans. MORE DAYLIGHT. cries of “quarter,” “a half,” “five eighths” and weving of arms and motioning with fingers, which con- | 2 stitute the sign language of brokers whea @ in of noise je too great to ke their voices heard. For fifteen minutes the floor was a CHICAGO WHEAT , MARKS Priday's waht, = oa WAR nos AS AR se BE STR cOmN Net AND CORN T. Si meer ‘lose Oem. He. Loe a Hy Yb ei, BK oD; | bediam, with pushing, surging crowds vy ae ne ae i wet bits 1 pean favorite posts, bidding, offer- 4 ing, buying, eelling, while back and forth to telephones ran the traders, Leadere.| reporting transactions to home offices A testimonial banquet will, be ten- | and receiving in retura fresh orders. |dered at the Hotel Aster on Monday| EXCITEMENT SOON DIED OFF ON THE FLOOR. iste 88... - B53 Seepende Import Duty on Wheat. “MBLBOURNE, Aystralia, Dec. 12, via Lendon.—Owing to the shortage of Ai lop ' pervect the lon was a saad mest a ation: wide Gylight a} the ment of the opening died away. members who went merely to look on . eway, The indies in the gab

Other pages from this issue: