The evening world. Newspaper, December 31, 1921, Page 9

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)

+ i { “~ ae abana nat Stk clad taeeedasieio eee ee 7 — cre THE bata hah WORLD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31, |SIX OCEAN LINERS QUSTED TEACHER IN THE REALM OF MUSIC_) “Orrpesrite STORM, E Gilbert, | Van Hoogstraten, Ely Nes in pri Pp. essional life. will be tle planu soloist assenger List teat Vera 1 tcellist, Alfred | Six steamships left N Vath ta By Frankl H. Warren: ie Ee ite eee TAs | Hutopean ports iz-day expecting to “PEACE DOLLAR” OUT ON TUESDAY | ICE ADAMS BootH TARKINGTON THE STORY of * GIRL. WHO LOVED- ex? LOST Dis21-TMe BELL. SYNDICATE SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. 8 eanploree of Lamb & co 1921 Pre eseint ribution ‘Tue: iL was sald (o-day Coinage is being | i“ 2 serious {Hines Lene le ty embark upon a 4 Adaias, for many sears ‘nas retarded {ness venir of his ow wo Years SOuins Dut bly companions nthe other hor winst fntimate friend. CHAPTER Tu, tin top struck by the rays of several othe: 2 design of t UI tell you who. » dollar since 1878, twenty-five The coinage inw they were Just h nage inws 4 get rid of you I'm goin’ back to that Henry Hadley, associate conduct give recitals; the Philadelphia Or- | yun into a hurricane wh nowy f the Philharmonic Orchestra, took | hestra, with lena Gerhardt as svlo- | messagos reported blowing this erate iene " Pees See will appear in Carne ail; | 3 a -Gakah oh Wevetound Miss Everitt, Assistant Princi.! us tum on the conductor's platform | Ricamaninothe pianist: wil wage ror | ins oft tt Newtuundlond, F yesterday n in Carnegie Mall. | the fit of the Babies’ Dairy Asso- | Three vess GL to ative pal, Was Dismissed on ’ ng an American, {ciation at the Waldort in the afters | afternoon were delayed by lovnt ia oh in. stralghtforc!Q0on. Wednesday evening — Jost vO asahtst.esaaratrruntessa LUC) Charges of Insane Woman, | ong aay A Hichaniz, Cuban pianist, will be heard OU EA AG Ot nM mm Isinesslike man-|in ‘Town Hall, Thursday hus tes ton, had the largest first pas ee ft lo which the orches is ad-| York Syinpliony in the afternoon nger list of any December Rv . aes nivably responsive. My. Hadley bad} the Boston Orchestra in the evening | yoy being on it. Aqune them Away n 1898: tio license aya | UMD Testonsive, (At Hadley tind] iY ceenegic, with Viadinir Rosine | om belt on jaon leuctien or Atesitan Aceves, canal’ ay Wat cinemas Hae th ene: | Afichie Roosevelt, Mr. and Mrs, Wa ‘ Vpoitertumiog programme that had 0] tine in Aeolian, Friday is devoted (ter Damrosch, H, Wiekham Steed ¢ Assistant Principal in Publie Sehool [it something fur everybody. eg |ty Dorutiiy FOX, soprano, at the Na |tie London ‘mes and Gipsy Pat No. u 2 (Street, aaa ng With the overture to Regniouk’s | UOnal Theatre; Jose ress, “cellist, | 5; a t 420 Bees ates iy Aeolian Hall, and the New York | Smith. latly Decies, who came over voked by the Board o: Bducation en| nae lay produced At Semphiony Orchestra in Carnegie, | last mgnth after the funeral af her} oo | ein 18M, that made the com-| Saturday the Boston Symphony pltys| mother, Mrs, George J. Gould, was the charge that she had written love! poser famous, Mr. Hadley fidlowed it{ in Carnegie: Pablo Casals, ‘cellist, re- | Dna Rte. WOuK fer letters to H. M. Farrell, a teacher in] with Glazounoff's infrequently heard |{UMns to Aeolian Hall, and the phil. | 2 . , a ite geiioe ; Heth epmphene, cmmupecat ih etee. 1] ittMonie Orchestra gives another of | Southampton ublic Selioul in Chrystie} feeb sy t pe oubearal | * it i urday evening cone Ger-! Other vessels to sail were the Poe Bea is short, melodious and pleasant to Rusett! also gives a sung Te-| pounce. bound for Da nea Hop chuiarieds tent een i ar een tomac, boumd for Danzig: La 14 Yesterday, twenty-three years later be valine, Havre: Celtic, Liverpool, and ‘| stirring final movement, chara i Edouard datos {the Cameroma, Liverpo wenty the present Boatd of Kducation rein. tistically Russian, that sprints «lon. will be given for the firm, tine [other ships sailed for South Amer. | stated her, saying she had been un-[ata ten-second guilt. If the listenus ew York at the Metropolitan; /¢an ports. ' justly treated. unconsciously reacted to this move- | Opera next Thursday evening, Albert} Lieut. Gen. Bari of Cavan. anilitary ment it Was probably alue to the fa-| Wolff will conduct the opera he | adviser of the British delegates at thy Charles B. Hubbell was Presieat| mitiar, home-grown — . syncopated | § is by Joseph Urban, who also | 1 Conference, Who is returnin.: to 6f the board that dismissed ber, ang | {29!4m of the predominating phrase. | designed the costumes, The cast will) Unzland to hecome Chief of Stat of " JIUis a “ringer” for last season's pop- |v: Mylio, Beniamino Gigli; the King Iritish Army, was also on- John Jasper was Superintendent of | ular song “Manmy.” ot Ys. Leon Rothier: Mar 1, Rosa on the Olympic. +H ¥ Then came a new picce, “hudian| Ponselle: Kozenn, Frances Alia: led (he stand taker by enen SCHOO) I: telex: suite for orchestra,” by | Prince of Karnac, Giuseppe Danse; gates in thein demands for more Miss Everitt ved at No. 831 Pack | Menry P. Gilbert, who does his com-| St. Corentin, Vaolo Ananiany Jobel | tounage and a three-nation allan Avenue With her mother, Farrell, an BOsiag ii classié Cambridge, Muss, | Milly Picco.” Otler operas next weok D aiiteoctiadion Nava eiderly man, lived wit is wife ne oe Githert, having made i studs of) will be: “E fal.” Monday afternoon, | a. ciutd be one of tue worst Things genuine ton and se Inc v-|with Mme n music, has di siole for international peace in that it No, 114 East 83d Street. The families) cred that the larger portion of it is| Whitehill, Didur, Blass and ¢ Baer ona: tiie founaken th bea were friendly. Niragre and valueless as music. son; “L'Amore dei Tre Re," Mond sould Ryn BREACH SOR . 7 ig | Phevetore, classifying his piece as a evening, with Miss Hor, und Marti. One day an excited woman gave} white man's impressions of the In- nelli, Danise and Mardones: — Kuperintendent Jasper two letters. |dian's moods, he nly takes cer- Wednesday evening, with Mme. |HOLLAND TO GET es of rary “Lohengrin” on Friday even with Mmes. Jeritza and Matzenauer, YAP CABLE RIGHTS), thought |and Messrs, Sembach and Whitehill; | iterily,” Saturday mat: | One appeared to be from M re) PER chycimically piquant pliva {indian songs as "nubs" for develo; ed to DEAT ment. Or, so he states. V “My Dear} we discovered more phrase repetition “Madama Bu tha rell and purp ature, it bega itt to FF | | Glaked the was 4 my development, Dhere are Hix ines, with Mme. Farrar, and Messrs. | Cyelaund and Italy Also Make Reser- Seas on sections to the suite: a Prelude, In- | Martinelli and Scot Cavalleria | Saree “i Mg, hos,” and tha Vocation, Song of the Wolf, Camp | Rusticana” and ‘Pagliicei™ for the ns for Privileges in mT ther was net j Dance, Nocturne and Snake Dance. | benefit. of the Italian Hospital on he Future gnodl but Stra | We liked the V Song, developed Saturday night COE OES ted it ly om a ‘Totem song, that had our old —— se : 4 ditwas a reply from ber | fem) WASHINGTON, De 1 (Asso nd Lupo realistically yowling on husband {tie distant plains: the Camp Dance, PIELS PLEAD BEER {ated Perss).—An arrangement where- Huth Miss Everitt and Farrell were | merry and bright, with the traditional |by ‘The Netherlands as well as the vor, and the Snake Dance a sure-| HELPS U, S. HEALTH | valled before the board, She was dis- missed and he was rets nite US| five hit in its vigorous tempo and ned. Shel the etiective use of the Indian drum, brought sult and at the tria! it camefrattle and tam-tam. While there are AAS Yap was agreed to to-day by the| out that Mrs, Farrell hud boon in- [Splashes of Te anete rhe cee hoates ment Law Imperils Whole heads of delegations of the five ae sane some time before she called en] played it with fine spirit and gusto. People. Ir provides for allotment of | BOS: Supt. Jasper, and she was sent to] Mr. Gilbert appeared to acknowledge P th Yap-Guam cable to the United Bellevue Hospital soon afterward.|the applause. In proper regalia he} ATsument on the upplication of States, the Yap-Shanghai cable to and the Yap-Menado cable to Both Farrell and Miss Everitt denied | MSMt Pass as a bona fide Chief Heap| Viel Brothers for a temporayy in- Big Musician. 0 “ede Miticrals) she had written the letter ascribed Borodi fascinating sketch, “On Bunch to cent n Wedete) uiicns to her, tnd Farrell said his alleged an-|the Steppes of Central Asia,” and a |!rem interfering with the manu Great. Britain and Maly accepted | swer was really a string of extracts} Liszt polonaise, arranged for orches-|ture of beer tor medicinal purposes}; yo. arrangement with reservations, ie i heen tra, completed the programme. began before Federal Judge Edwin] the former indicating Uhat British in- from “Timothy Titeomb," which he Re eee nee rane pie fares iad copied when reading the book, a In the evening in Aeolian Hall a] “Winiam N. K. Olcott, counsel forlture to have certain rights on the was a habit with him, new pianistio combination, Leginska| Piel Brothers, attacked the Wiilis-|island and Italy claiming an interest The Appellate Division of the! 2d, Ornstein, Ethel and Leo, gave a] Camphill bill as uncoastitutioaal’ on|in one of the three existing cables fa ej recital for two pianos, which, though |the grounds that it is “destructive| that touch the Island. some dele- 1e- Supreme Court, however, decided it|or different makes, got along together |of the personal liberty of physicians| wastes believe Lhat ax Yap is a former | /® ould not review the action of tha|in # highly harmonious manner when|to prescribe and of patients to be!German possession, partition of the | board. ciucidating Mozart and Schubert. In |treated tn such manner as physicians | pablo rights there would be a sub-|nr . o | Mr. Ornstein’s newest sonata, opus 89, | m deem best.” ject in which all the former enemic | Which was getting ita first treatment | Afridavits of thirty-three pliysi-|G¢ Germany might be interested fin the > alue of beer and other BROKER'S MESSENGER | malt liquors were submitted. HUNGARY TAKES OVER jin public, It was another matter. The| cians who attested their be rival insruments fairly hurled dis- | Medicina: BURGENLAND TO-MORROW Jsenant cpithets at one another, spat in the Constitution to give Congress authority to interfere with the Na- tion's healt!) by imposing restric- Plebiscite Area t ered by) \.<imo Ornstein knows how to plan. Troops To-! ay. Mr. Ornstein has been doing this very Accident Canses Wild bx 21 (Associated Press). [RINE for aoe ine ae a Aig| tions on the legitimate practice of iu Downtown Bulle Plebiseite District of [88 that he makes progress. His a . aot fresh sonata does not seem to vary| Medicine. | When the report of a revolver shot be formally handed} uch from his “Wild Man's Dance"| Judge Carvin instructed both sides s heard in the corridor of No. wer to Hungary on Sunday by the} days, There is nothing new in it, and |to submit briefs Dea etortiyeatona HaeniOvilee Allied Military Commision. Hungarian]although there must be some system Ses et -scnreearoaes Broadway shortly b el endarmes re-entered the territory yes-|to his music scheme, we gave up try- | WILL QUIT SWEARING, hundreds of persons immediately terday and troops are expected to-day,|ing to locate it, As an encore to the thought of a hold-up. Several girl Sen ee ae eae cata a a [sonata the two artista planed ancxher | SO QUITS SCHOOL BOARD saat iplebisclt “favored Hungarian{OTstein | fantasy, “The Clown's — count | pipviscita: favors ungerian! Dance,” that the composer wrote sovercignty. ‘The pleblacite was held in| with the same pen, It too, was hrand x on Newark Mody, Temp-| settlement of a dispute over the terms|new, The reeitalists were happier in Says Dean Sommer. if the treaty of Trianon, which awarded [tie classic numbers, albeit the jun tra. Austria nothing startling in th arrangements tor |@2Ce- announced that she} yfp. yfartinelli being still under the reaults. weather » tenor role in to-night’s performance of “La Forza del Des- RESIGNATIONS IN SWANN'S tino” will be sung by Manuel Salazar, | FICE. who appears for the first time with clerks employed in the building screamtd and excitement ran high. lughteen-year-old 722 Bust 1 Ser It developed that Fdward Parker, of N re ommer, Dean of the New ever, obse no referer would d aring. In order to keep this| Ralph Remson, of No. 47 MucDon» Rh e haa tendered his reatgnation| Street. Both vreemployed by Say ‘o, brokers. Parker ber of the Newark Toard qf| Levinson and Ce. piueand deliat worth of negotiable bonds with F son as guard ion to-day." istant District Attorneys James| the Metropolitan “I had the n Remson and Parker hail Smith and Frederick J. Sulliva ea Junder consideration for some time emerged from the elevator anded seri h 4 Next week's music, outside of opera, | = vanded thelr resignations this moro-| starts in to-morrow afternoon with | Morrow W »¢ to District Attorney Swann, who|the Philharmonic and New York 3ym s serving his last day in the office. | phony Orchestras playing in Carnegie of profanity Assistant District Attorney John T.; and Aeolian Halls. The Phiihurmonic In the Board of EF Dooling resigned several days ago.|W.ll present a Wagner programme, |the future is to be judged by t Smith was conspicuous for his frequent {284 the Symphony Society, conducted | wit: pe a standing temptation to a lashes with the police officials, ea- {DY Albert Coates, will pl y wo Bem |breach of this resolution, I have de- pecially for gambling raids that he ledjrycle by John Gerard Williams, and |t€rmined to evold the temptation,” ind floor. Parker was atten }by an ambulance surgeon and taken | Remson OS AG MOSCOW. ~Dr. —— NT MARTYR TO DUTY Dee. 29 (Associnted Press) inald Farrar, representative 4 “over the heads’ of the police authori-|Respighi's arrangement of Rossini's| The resignation Is the culmination o: c dlet bate tac tes. ballet suite, “La Boutique Fantaaque.” | (nt betweer, the, Gillen und “antl typhus. contracted ro The Society of the Friends of Music. |ttrm aid not expire until Ja t to the Samara ond GETS ROCKEFELLER wiuasoy, | With Bronisiaw Huberman as violin ibuite districts with, Dr a a Bo ——— Commissioner of th soloist, and with Artur Bodanzky| epqnaep wAntiva ARREST. 1 ‘i MONTREAL, Dec, 31.—MeGia Univer- Wied Russian Rellot mmixaion conducting. will appear in Town Hall, sity Aas received $1,000,000 promised|and in the evening, at the Hippo.| WATERBURY, Conn., Dec, 31.—In-! eee some time ago by the Rockefeller Foun-|drome, Richard Strauss will potas spector Matthew Balanda of the De- CLERK ACCIDENTALLY dation. The gift is part of $3,000,000;the Philharmonic Orchestra in his|tectlve Bureau was stabbed by John MHOT. ‘oted to four Canadian medical schoois,| farewell concert. There is also the|Griskey, an alleged white siaver| Samuel Weinste!n, twenty-four prohibit any change more often thag n that period except by special » dviveway entra ter, we musn’t go in there.” s the matter?" ve this awful don't care w hat und over= moke myself to death, wo leave it” he} Sit stil) WME lock her.’ done, he offer which | said, ‘aller's nose 319,000,000. eoine “U. S. OF INDIA,” PLEA BY MOSLEM handed {t to 2 this with your laughed con- They scurried through the she began to laugh airily, and » to the impussi oe WIth your own litle sister? You could d Governmen AHMEDABAD, jan Indian Republic to be called the United States of India, to be allied by guer was swiftly and they came into a marole-floored dozen sleeked ‘n lounged, walling for their ladies, “The glace and went quickly | uplifted and smiling; here to-day Walter de- (con ETESt OF FOX NEW: | PLANS PLAYGROUND ON $2,775,000 LEGACY Jacobs, Left Fortune by Brother, Will Use It for Mothers and Children. ' » Morris Jacobs, a retired real estate operator living at 29 Cooper Street, 1 tora, has just como into @ fortune of $2,775,000, Mr. Jacobs de- clares he will use his fortune to build L public park in Astoria for the use fof the mothers and children of that section, The money ls a legacy of his broth- er, Dr. Albert Jacobs, court physician fur many years to the Holland Gov- ernment, whose fortune was built up fro} Tho story of Albert Jacobs is the ry of the prodigal son who did return rn in Ttaly ‘of a German father and on Italian moter he was ems nged from his family soon after had tifished his medical course im 1 German university. He left home to Indulge the desire for adventure that had caused the trouble with his family. The last chapter of his ros mantic life was written when ho died in Holland) and bequeathed his fortune to his brother Morris, the sturdy, industrious brother who had come to the United States and built up a fortune of lis own in real es- tite de Mr. ° to this country forty-one years ago because, as he suid, of dissatisfaction with German rule) He went into the real estate New York. When rents ine it is said Mr, Jacobs re= aise the rental of his houses — were occupied by poor business began ty fused 1 Lee working brows with a fine handkerehiet, was greatt” he said.’ “Let's go they*re " oT out afd SIL in the corrido ot some comfortabje chairs out there “Ww. she returned, He chided her with a waggish forednger. “You think If you go out there you'll leader of the Non-c ) Was preset, ation move: to hang around fixin’ ta} that dressin® pment could mitted that such ¢ hot be maintained by p and ‘looked J him and k mechanical States and Japan are to be] thar Mohani propos animedans they went down the hall to a corri- -|dor opening upon three great rooma|, At home she Md another for aes “ given cable rights on the Island of | Mc Brewers Begin Fight With Argu-|S've" cable rights on the Islan j dus p end of the corridor ——EE_— JTWICK ESTATE PAYS $8,371,567 IN TAXES Accounting Filed Who Seek Ju: musicians sat r turned toward these, Mildred came in from the heavily attende bouquet of viclets laced with he big purple thing ped in cloth of old, with silke “That's Jazz bunch—thr Judicial approval ef (he 1,726,609 estate y of the former Stand- who died at her home, wecounting in rit also desire in the fu- | testw Ol magnate No. 809 Fifth A looked at them « wo P stuldrod the Marmers’ hand tw one | 1 ong- tated Voek and another of he Tong-t us she could, passing then on to her ttnndard Ol) Somebody il fasUdlousness. Her correctness was of the tiner sort, | and had no atr of the executors statement antiphonal glissandos and waged just rae othing r ——- aN a kcyooard wartare’ae aenaraie Olcott declared there was nothing SHOT BY OWN GUARD | u dividend of 150 hetng studt Hostwick’s death in income and an even ampler ene diay bi rough the rooms, drums! Frank?” Alice took his arm, Sith eS NEW TYPE TEAR BOMBS FOR THE N. Y. POLICE rich, simple rt of it, and Mildred’s second danc murmuring lwo After Firat as the music begins the nex 5 had been accidentally shot in| part Law School is going to] the right arm when an automatic pis: | potier ear with u resolution to] tol fell out of a holster carried by |v. mucy of Alice's entiiusiastie whinper ely onward to Mis palates within a radius of y to Its vietim. 1ome No charge was made again bs hom charg lane Ses | HOLLAND ASSIGNS LOAN TO GUARANTY TRUST CO sallow youth wa It's wonderful! mystery ts, where neler t over his sh . you always $10,000,000 fuss about lostallment He swung he 4 closing space “You know a lot about wh. Government The globular think there's no other place ty dance himself from Te man had In this town except these froz $10,000,000 Jean vou, ye ’ Trust Com- By the way, These are Dalhousie University, Hall. \regular Sunday concert at the Metro-|wanted tn Hartford and New York,| Clerk. was shot in the right side while . , Hall jolitan Opera House. eee ee pieced hi i orting mail in Post Office sub station x; MoGIIl University, Montreal; Tor- Monday brings Jascha Heifetz, vio- | Griskey ber ° Presid — arrest. £2. 2688 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn, to- orta, University and the University of yinist, to Carnegie Hall; George Smith, ith, | Merely mince, ine etective's hi er Benitt, another clerkeiv- 3 Wavhington A . Ball e Boston pianist, to Town Hail, and ‘will recover. Lt the chooting was aceldentaly it was announced |8%% Mildred for a dance before the Frank Dow! this part of the Why must 17 such that the actual average to be paid will work « 7 per cent, the . in the second pis: a chance of some one else ask you for the next dance, and 30 you have to give it to me” fow absurd!” ‘Then, #fter a look about her she added graciously, “Yow tif you want It cut!” he exclaimed, mechanical. ly, “Now let's get out of here—out of this room, anyhow.’ “Why? What's the matter with"—— “My mother,” Mr. Dowling explained. She keeps motioning me to come and see after Bila, and I'm simply not ge- any to do It, you sue! e liughed. “I don’t believe it's so much that,” she suid. “Your mether hates me." A frown appeared upon his rounded brow. “No; it's like this: Ella isn’t too popt you know, and mother thinks 1 ought to lock after her, you S00 thinks I ought to dance a con have the ne whole lot with her nd stir up other follows to di hoher. And iben sbout me, you see, it she had her way 1 wouldn't get to dance with nybody at all except girls like isfile and Henvietta Lamb, But © of it is—about girls tke ec—by the time 1 get Bila mene re iway every last. one then, and where do I come in? A Jded, he Htability un damaged. 1 see » that's why N I to.” he protested. “€ rathee dance with you than I do with [those gicls. 1 told mother I would one “Did it take all your courage, He looked cure try rewdly, “Now » tease me,” he said. 1 don't would rather danee with you! In the first place, you're * perfectly beautiful dancer, you nm the second, T like people always cordial to every= eo the way you are. you.” she sald, thought- mean it” insisted. band again, Shall t it out?” she sug- ve Td like to go our / | after all—it's pretty Dowling condu 1 her toe f eusy-chairs within a secluding ve of toxtres, and when they to thos retreat they found Mile Palmer leparting, "under t we favored gentleman lirty. As these two walled Away Mildred was evidently fo make their progrees even r, for her upward glances to 1 companion's face were of ntle, almost blushing deferemes, How queer!" Alice murmured. “What's queer?" Dowling inquired as they sat d “Who ws man?" Why, it's Arthur | Rudge” ‘What ‘arth r Russell? Bever heard of him." ; Mr Sowling was puzzled. ay |that’s funny!” Goly the logs ei were tating’ aati an well you knew aides artainly T do,” Allee tn- s2 Tuseday's ‘nteresting instalment, corr! warm in her willing slow viet wise When they stopped he paddied bia) od? pibiieeane } ' ‘

Other pages from this issue: