The evening world. Newspaper, January 18, 1921, Page 19

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PETE Mary Garden on “Success, ’ “Men” and “Women” Her Views on All Pronounced HARDINGZ, DUDS3 BY - NEAL R..O°HAR Statistics Di-closed Since Harding Knocked His Tati, Pop-eyed Shows That He Has Every Sartorial Ef¥ He fect Except a Smoking Jacket and a Fireman Hak = Can You ees ‘Tt ! | atetke., By Maurice Ketten As First Woman to Be Made General Director of a Grand Opera Company Her Management Will Be Watched With Keen Interest in New York and Chicago. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Copsright, 1921, by the Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Bvening World.) ij ARY GARDEN, the singing actress, the world-famous Tosca, Thais, i } Salome and Monna Vanna, has just assumed @ role probably never before held by a woman in the history of grand opera, She has been @ppointed general director of the Chicago Opera Association, New York, as well | i 0 ©6Chicago, and women everywhere, will watch with | \ keon interest Miss ; Garden's creation of | this new parm Her Copyright, 1v21, by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York Brening W. rid) is difficult being a hero to your valet, but Harding Is one great [ to his tallor, Tossing an order for twenty-six suits is Grade A heroism ./) when the rest of the country ia wearing last year’s patches on <a 1918 pants. It now looks like Harding will give us the best dressoat’ administration since John Drew retired on half pay in full dress, : H { { | 2 stecess in it will de- Six overcoats shows Warren takes no chances on the White ed pend not at all on janitor being a Democratic hold-over. Moth Balls Preferred went ‘act ” ' her vocal qualities, points since he ordered his tallor full speed shead. By March 5th Harding dar ‘mot even on her his- will have more cutters busy than the Revenue Department and more, HOW COULD | pressmen working on his duds than he has on his Marion Star. 7 oaths Not THAT DIDN'T YOu It back to normalcy means two dozen outfits of clothes, then T Sennett's beaity cat 8 in 8 hy wi e coming ad KNOW HER? ; | KNOW OF SEE HER ink ana tion, inet path Gone) in Vet Jetueacalin simplicity of o 4 women, her sym- FAce 2 2, and the Adams idea of economy. We mean Adam, the first man, = pathetic relations Ee: s FEATHERS | adams, the second President. 8M ' with New York and 4 Chicago audiences, her forcefulness and tect, the quality ony) her drains. \ H1 DING iT 2 When Harding jumps into office he'll bave more cast-off clothing thea 2# s Wilson had cast-off Cabinet officers, It will take two divisions of 4h@ Salvation Army to drag his old duds away, When our Prexy-elect 66M in for style he says It with fashion plates, wat ‘The box score of his fancy stuff shows two full dress suits, two dit jackets and more silk hats than all Ziegfeld’s chorus men wear. | case Warren sits side of a Texas Congressman during the pefru course he has an extra dress sult in reserve, Rigorous training in polfffes 0°" taught him you can’t make one dress sult go five nights a week when egum and Congressmen are being served at the same table. It looks like Harding has overplayed in the matter of overcoats. A guy that eats In the Senate restaurant may need six overcoats to pull throwsieg ‘ yone winter, but our next Prexy should remember he won't hang his ulgigg os | P| yn the old familiar wall any more, Unless a Democrat holds the | Mouse checking privilege six coats will be too much, LEGS Six extra paira of pants may mean the new Chief Execk is fond of 5 = vecksiiding or they may only indicate he intends to take care of r | WoNDER. aaah ONLY] furnace nimseit and mow down the White House jawn, You nevery + WHO SHE IS < a i tell about extra pants, Political sharps in Washington are still debating ‘ei8) 3 2). ONE OF OUR. on that extra half dozen. ‘The conservative faction asserts they are being i FRIENDS WHO made to increase the facilities for pocket vetoes, The radical element say Warren will need ‘em from sitting too much on the fence. Is Nor Some snappy statistics have been disclosed since Harding knocked Bow-LEGGeD his tailor pop-eyed. They show that our Prexy-to-be has every 4 effect except a smoking jacket and a fireman's hat. He has the col tweed outfit for bouncing Democratic Postmasters and the requisite wool mufflers for use on Ambassadors, Peary had more clothes than Harding has, but he didn't have so changes. That's where a stylish Prexy has it on ‘em all. On account this being a real democracy and always subject to change, our Chi Executive Is entitled to morning, afternoon, evening and night clot! When he isn't switching collar buttons and suspenders, Harding will running our mighty Nation, But get that—-when he fsn’t! However, the Nation rejoices with Warren. He will go into the high office owing no debts except a tailor’s bill. And the Nation sympathi with Coolidge. Our blond Vice-Prexy had a home at $32 a month, let's see him Lia a frock coat at that price, TAE, JARB FAMILY pales 1901, Fei the Prom Pubiisbing a eae wi ec York nggeable Wort.) ‘ce HE boss wants me to go to hurt my feelings.”* The Evening World to-day prints some of “Our Mary's” utterances on such topics a3 success, men, women, New York, Chicago and American-made opera. In this brief and necessarily incomplete summary of her interesting philosophy of life there may be found more than one indication of the course she will pursue as Grand Mistress of grand opera: “Girls do not seem to know that a =57 Thin Ganon: —ood for no woman must have sense and brains to Tee ee Pitow latensoly succeed as a singer, just as she must beautiful lighid notes in her throat, Grn? have brains for and nothin: else. She Rives nothing save wha re pro’ complete. JON SUCCESS. < business ior ony Coomlly ae fas no power, of Sr other high place in thourht or creations Ufe. We need brains on the stage; ural accident they are the sine qua non, “Women don’t interest me at all wie But I love to look at them, at their To succeed ts to labor, to study. ciothes, their airs their beauties to struggle and to yearn. To succeed never make a bosom friend of requires that fixity of mind and heart woman. I have nover really had a 7 which shall love the success and Its confklante. = T myvelf do not inspire the confidence 6f women. fruits more than all else in the world. “One of the worst disappointments To succeed 18 to go straight and true 4°11) onorattc life came to me in A . She was a nat- Pia aes Csorrian, nh cas the ag Fito ale NeW ore Seat Paced “OUNG woman writes to me as Fah bU Cab.) BO, why don't you do it’ ee to the goal, unswerving as an arrow, Tedions toa Gndelages: New York, and it ad tab elietd of follows: T know what one person wil, anuwy & smoker at his club to- 5, "Hurt your feelings.” replied x ‘ eee jere we “4 ac ., one Me @ friend of " c a r “Why, haven't said @ wi te q “If the man or woman sets out to JON Newyork? al ni seensSheeal 1 ait a cripple, twenty-nne rt rete a bank Proaien in ato night," remarked Mr. Jar. except to ask you If you'd mi chase the star of success and fame ° Awan dynamic years old and ecarcely evor go out church which I attended who goes “Ho's been cross as two sticks, and went to a smoker to-night a A a Cb ais maAN unless I go to church once in a pra yin, " I was surprised that he should get boa" " he or she will have no time to do any with nis splendis organization, trying esti Aen ates eouiate praying the most ur e ny me 4 es Fiave Jf, ata wo. eachane ee i < a great while, an hat is the subjec y € goes down to busi ‘ood natured all of a sudden and a % » i% frittering or playing, The woman to give this great new country the | want to aak you to writé on. Ness the next day and cheats poor BY [BY BDITH JOHNSON] JOHN SON fie, be you mind my going?” rather Bava | said 13 ba onaia | people out of their money. He is one never mind!” asked Mrs. Jarr, must give up home life, children, d0- new and wonderful life of eis s mestic happiness, true marriage, 80- erm gchoola of gh the ‘mind Please ask the young people of of the ‘pillars of the church.” He Fnatal t No. 59 sume the fictitions relationship Why should < object?’ replied "This was aclincher. Mra. dart hadn' clety, laziness and the pleasures of allowed to fail. I a And he was this day why they do not go to will go on to tell me about another SCALIGNE dv O. OF Geraldine Boyer. My own pride WAS Mra, Jurr, said anything of the kind, but she A lowed to fall. I am speaking of church. You must have noticed your- elder another “pillar” of the okene FACE TO FACE WITH TRAGEDY. keen crough, but my Impulse to pro- — specause dbject to everything looked it and infered it. But Mi St ape a ee « humble and placid contentment. If Oscar Hammerstein. Personally, 1 e' church, who does this, that ¢ c N silence, Hugh and I drove to tho tect Marjorie was overwhelming. arr thought it best not to sa: theso things mean much to her she ¢hall never be able ta forgive New Stl Miss Loeb, that the majority of Ciyohiy, mao nem this that or thi ein ee cate might. During the trip Hugh had not qo I want to do. It seems that a mar- V "Wwe T asked you and you aida had better adhere to them and let York ror that, «Some day, when the the young people have time for every- explain how hyp peopl Le, As & windy DIED much us looked at me. His gaze waa ried man can't comb hia halk these seem cheerful ‘About it," mumbled fame go hang.” ; alty it will never be able thing and every pleasure, but when are and give that ¢ rea and the gale was blowing. the the road mtead, He days without asking permission." Jarr finally. “I don't’ want to go “Men are always interesting. They ie o “hp Sealefaot It ae Bares then it comes time to go to church, they for not going to dead Jeaves in Hittle swirls around PM bi i we uen ted and . “What difference does It make how the blooming old smoker, and it simply oannot help it It takes men WIE is now Ming o Wt in the ar either too tired or have a date. | jerhape some of you who sad thi et corners. i apres ted Ad a, combs his hair—it he is getting ¥% an a8 os TH cal the ont UD to keep a woman really amused. ake the greatest opera house “Tell them if you wish, of this of you will point to the f that my determination to er aey walked 5 to the window where \ald?” agked Mra. Jarr, go." oF Quer Alas! most of the that America holds, T went to the lotter and of me, a cripple who cun- a preacher gues wrome sometimes melcdraris) “£06 10) TS Beds IRE told sa nun that we ‘This was a sure point with Mr. " “on, pleas, don't conelder me,” { ON MEN. } poorthing» believe revival of “Thais’ at this great house. mot go to church more than two or Perhaps some of you will tell how » 1 wits not going to love © cousins of Miss Geraldine Boyer, far, but he ignored It Pied Mrs. Jarr. “I may be far f d that if she was not too iil to seo “Sure, a married man has to ask well, but that ls no reason you aboabll & % it is the women lieve Tam free to sum up my im- three times a yedr and yet would some constant churchgder has done I was amazed at my a re atone Bali Wane le che ion; It was a great triumph for give anything for the health and you a great wrong. own composure, Hero I was, dry- is We would like to go to ber room, permission,” he went on, “Talk of ytay home.” who are amusing them, That is on etrength to go regularly. Tell them But what has this or any of this trea and outwardly calm, driving TH® Qn nodded and smiled and let “Then I won't go, tf are now of the most absorbing facts relative “Only the great stars are employed, how I ait and hear the church bells got to do with your going to chureh? °* “Pier 7 3 y us pass through the wicket. J led fooling well,” faitered tf SAT to men—thelr enormous powers of the recognized artists, whose success ring and just long to go, while they Suppose for a moment many “church With Hugh to see 4 woman whose (he way to room No. 207 on the seoond realty don’t want to go, I told self-deception. has been created elsewhere, But it whom God has blessed with strength members" are not as you would have name had been linked with his. floor, Hugh following me. isn't abolished for wives. ‘They have hows that the children were sick and. “Men are not half so deep and cal- takes brains to discover and develop cannot find time to go, but instead them and are hypocritica 1 thought of Mildred Benson and door stood ajar. Hesttatingly to drudge all day in the home, and 7 qidn’t think I could go. So he woos culating av women, ‘Their views are artists, ‘The American singer cannot of going turn thelr steps toward You don’t have to do what the bad at hor courage in 1 puwhed it open. On the bed lay a then can go nowhere, but husbands be gurprined if 1 don't show up.” wider, their generosities quicker and go to the Metropolitan and make a moving pictures or dance halts. churchgoer does, The prime ques- aking up the affair between Nich- Y°U"S girl “apparently not over can: “Then don't be cross and blame simpler, and their trustfulness almost reputatic “Ask them to stop and think of me ton to ask one's solf i saa Habasa aed “soar Pace. twenty. Her skim had the creamy "Oh, the women have it ¢Asy ine,” wid Mrs, Jarr. Ea ii 1 love Chicago. The people are, And many others like me who can- church to giv Now this terrible surrow had come solic sald Mr. yarn “some poor" “tyame you, be Crom?” repented xen beauty of a Gorn re rey, tee 0 Dut lo 0. Ow yor 1 Ww 00f bright aubt suy has to work and worry for them, en are not to be ju by the not «poited. In Chicago an American Ht 89 Hut long to. It know you cun | Well, 1 y AURIS wie t muae: to see eee eee and all thoy do is to mak Jarr. “Not me! I'M stay home number of dollars they p! or the TR Tae. Jet ea e that will touch some, 11 I not been a good Pte seed sar uml keop you company just objective power they manage to w ee Os . and I will be ao laid every tribut Ott: oa ; ‘ like | used to when we were comms chane ul to you." The ietter speaks for itself. It is a plea worthy of every consideration— #UsKVsti) in tife, The measure of a man is the $ON CHICAGO ; he size of his contribution of beauty and Vasrive mochanore a wife may for his own pl hin bows, ‘That any time the altar ¢ utter dev And after his evening meal he took a and wisdom to his immediate gy ioK) y York, faithfulne , putiens the newspapers and lay on tl ~ irate in ones AUER tS alba oe fits tree. Dt only by young people but by | Tbave pay chur h and tendernean? Han I nat wuftered pod at the ope Blah nod nd ti fell asleep. “it Be “The chief weakness of man is his |" Bea ccs eee: Py thought that ur fo something Bumiltation for hiv sake when he was 1H “It you wanted to go out to- night actly the way he used tg do when he " 2 conceited om, its independent and optimistic Why not go to church? ueht that ur D wOMOLHINE 1g Had 1 » ug, y was courting her, but Jarr was conceit. When a man is conc UE Le aURAtaad ean Wine Oat he doora are open wide in every better. No one ta church, no in sreat Apanels) ae ontetes you need not come home and pick a Wak § . ft is a frightful thing, No woman's Mnner and aby aap our chu Why not go? What is there Matter where or 4 list hot eurtained him sc sho was, Quarrel with me a une,” ald aoe a iar vanity can hold a candle. ry man for what is fine in Che new urt and against it? tentively without getting at Shad oftly a few months before Hugh Mra. Jarr widly n sure I'd rather © dear,” she said, as she. va y ca * ty and weakness, If the new life. The people have quall- Just as this cripple says, you who 0M good thought with which Me eclan han ahs ead ne to her have you go anywhere you want to SON" 2 Am him, 9 really has his pe ae Fone eee nearer tek and potentialities not to be ng home. [rai BR eta a hae to help Ko nd Tusk no questions, than to tther etay home with hls write 4 the woman learns to put hei ound in the East, Bverything ts @ It for + ele, it Is thorc ! me nay." have you come home and quarrel and [0 > ‘ice $ * 0 { had done for him. ; of him tg slay home end Ree amar on it she has hit, She has discov- fresher and more spontaneous, more A worth wiile tu go to ¢ 2 rove along, 1 waked myaolf my eoling TL was m hourht—even o. he o eo Of ge Ok ba Aq * wah vrry fo « yfoundly sorr 4 A n ered his Achilles's heel. full ob lite end hone, Everybody Fishes; thouht—even the chanee of ~could 1 really be awake, or was 1 {0° for the | unty ry car, ‘Tho streets as we drove through emapany.” i ‘outs them were a blur ied to speculate about what was « on in Hugh's mind. There are Aen sin the life of a man, I suspected, a en he longs to be just a qule man, land to Me. Without tes, without socal limites in a dream? | looked at Hugh, sit- ting grimly at Une wheel. No, it was not a dream, but a cruel, agunizin reality During my girthood, 1 tad re a woman who had found ber hu “To me, woman's place is alw Rar “Have you over Everybody Happy Who kno Pehind the man, as inspirer, a8 re- {ON AMERICAN. thought of the thoughts me inforcer as comrade, She is the Isis $ MADE OPERA. difficulties that Hi a good way to fur- 3 As ft point Ler hew many more pat the wume time That’s Where All. the Pennies VER 11,000,000 pennies were ein. beliind the voll “wannnnnnnnmannnd confront an nish sport for a town and $ ON WOMEN $ and the power be- American who Would compose a na- at the same time gather $ *’ hind the throne. opera? Where shall he $ revenue for the treasury. Den mat ked it up and ject? Do you think that Tv oe! © y r ¢ Was Hugh the subject of “There are two kinds sof womel 3 ison, Tex, received several lots * the nu ed, (eg deta ida ip ie 18 a gigantic corner in P Raaai ba s ALION to Ko tu ¢ ; ty } ther’ < ring SUSE MO RGle collected last year in One 4 influence over men, hits Atle hisee 1 of tdack bass and sunfish from f 4 a one } n of a huge ste 5 t something that everybody wera n Mt Nhe h paper mite boxes, power, has feline strength, subjective trust, the founding of a yast mon- the Government during the past wit word sor youd, And euc t q 1 betes ot tlie iit nent Bia eerie might, This woman has in all times opoly in oil, u panic in Wall Street, $ few years, with which the two agrea that th the uim of hnaband had * 1 expluined ou , iven {4 Hime to Ginches square FOF the ruled the world and drank the cream are i yet these and like top- - f the are chureh—to promote ad been inconyprehens#t ome 1 yut “ip und interest in Miss Home Missionary Society of of life, This woman is a doer, a high ies are the para mubjects of ¢ Streams of the wa ware Suppose then that you don't agree thought I unde As Hugh Rover. ‘Phe nurse suid that her How many other apparently happlly @ arounodist Episcopal Chureh. believer. dully thought and conversation, $ stocked. The City Fathers then M1 thut you see and hear in the took ® corner the car di Pit patel elt gd de iiuriied womens 1 eaked rent; Eat athudiet Bolecone) Chet: eam “The other kind of woman Is a Americans have been t ssued permits at $$ a year, or ureh least while you lurched, T was thrown tivainst Nis At present there was nothing we 10 pase through similar ordeaia? And Qtotalled $119, won plaything, either of men gr of her overcoming the forces of cente a day, to loca! anglers ure it ry will urge shoulder, Tnstinotiv { re | f ° ow did they deal with them? Would @place with 08; Western nm whims and fancies, She does in getting rich aulckly to develop mie smu alti! t vee y 10 VIN ref + from him ry ulked tort vapitay T MANY wer us aimilar att seoond with $6,502, Northern nothing but distwct man he has sor romance really great en alle! admaiel c-tlzons 1 oT de. 1.0 stH 1 had deft i ond how A 1 fox w tude und cuuingtaances that no vital power. I always (link, of human sions and tragedies, $ fhe and the treasury was th. while : { 1 was golna Iw Hsleiehitie wad allt saining now thia kind of woman, wh 1 think of Where shall your composer look for filled The cr ipvola aright. You who go cvorything posnit r flux h very care gather ‘(To Be Continued To-morrow.) the colorature—the empty coloratura his atmowphere?" _ Cannnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnonnty girongpumbed, Why not so lo church? sandal, At the Lospital, 1 would as- tenderly belped me to get into the ccugecidhe 20a bap tp Wh @oadientn, tomd rn dishimanads oY

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