The evening world. Newspaper, January 21, 1922, Page 3

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Pope with Americans. 1920, when wt Holiness Tecelved: 2 REVEALED IN Always Early Riser. The daily vegimen of Renedict XV has been described by an Malian jour- nalist ax follow fhe Holy Mather makes use of every minute of the day. He_rives at six o'clock and reads the Muss. At eight o'clock, after a simple brexk- fast, he reads the newspapers very carefully, At nine his mail is deliy ered and he and his secretaries ex amine it, At eleven he receives pri then holds a public vate callers and reception. At noon he with a glass of choice beer or deaux. This is followed by a sivsta conferences with his secretaries, a walk in the gardens. At three he re- turns to work, receives reports and attends to diplomatic affairs. At six in receives callers and at eight he has a light supper, after which he returns to his work, and his light is often burning long after Rome |» asleep.” FULL TITLE OF BENEDICT XV. IMPRESSIVE. The full title of Benedict XV, was: “His Holiness the Pope, Bishop: ot Rome and Vica of Jesus Christ Successor of St. Pete Prince of the; Kposties; Supreme Pontift of Universal Church, Patriarch of the West, Primate of Italy, Archbishop and Metropolitan of the Roman Pro- vince, Sovereign of the Temporal) Dominions of the Holy Roman Catho Ne Church.” ' HOSTILE TO “MODERNISM” IN RELIGION. Before his election Benedict XV. was credited with hostility to “'mod- ernism” in religion, and it was said that a primary reason for his earlier appointment as Archbishop of Bologna was made with the object of com- batting ‘old heresies in new gar- ments.’’ He kept a keen watch on social customs and was one of those who denounced the tango when it wi the favorite dance in this country and} Burope. EXPRESSES HIS FONDNESS FOR AMERICA. Soon after his election to the Papacy, Benedict XV. at a reception of laymen expressed his fondness for America and his aamiration for the genius of the American people, which, he said, was comparable only to their religious zeal, “T am glad," he declared, “that my first Apostolic benediction abroud will be forwarded to America, where the American Cardinals will impart it di- rectly to the people." HAD INTIMATE KNOWLEDGE OF WORLD AFFAIRS. One of the qualities that helped Benedict XV. greatly in his adminis- tration of the world-wide affairs of the church was his intimate know- has luncheon, he the} ledge of lands and peoples far away. He had a minute knowledge of American ecclesiastical geography, kept constantly in touch with the network of parochial schools in this country, and watched the growth of New York City with almost as keen ‘an interest as might be expected of ® municipal official SMASHED SLATES OF WOULD- BE POPE MAKERS. When Cardinal della Chiesa was elevated to the Papacy, the event was heralded as another ‘smashing of the slates of the would-be Pope- makers," and a new demonstration of the Sacred College's mastery over its ewn affairs, For the Cardinal had sen ‘discovered’ by Rampolla, whom the House of Hapsburg once saw fit to reject. The electors, however, were credited with a higher motive than that of retaliation, for they were con- yinced that the new Pope would cofn- bine the spiritual ideals of Pius X. with the learning and diplomatic dis- cretion of Leo XIII He was trained under the constant care of Rampolla, who helped him to diiy int affaira of the Init This strip of pictures was made from the first motion pictyre of Pope Benedict received in America and the first ever made of the It was taken in the Vatican Gardens, Aug. 29, 60 Knights of Columbus. CHARACTER OF BENEDICT XV. ANECDOTES OF | HIS LIFE AND DAILY REGIME Pontiff Determined From Boyhood to Be Priest, Busy Every Hour of Day and America’s Warm Friend. church, Pius X WENT THROUGH ALL LETTERS HIMSELF. Pope's system of volurainous scribed not M He made a handling his correspondence wus de- long ago by his brother, archese Giovanni della Chiesa “My brother goes through all letters himself,’* he said, ‘and marks annotations for the instruction of his secretaries. He has seven yellow leather pouches before him, and the letter®, according to their classifica- tion, ure placed in one or another of these pouches. One is for letters call- ing for immediate reply. Another is for letters of an intimate character, to be seen only by the Pope and his confidential secretary. When the answers have been written they are all submitted to the Pope for revi- + sion.”” | WANTED TO BE A PRIEST EVEN IN HIS BOYHOOD. When Giacomo della Chiesa was thirteen years old he told his father he wanted to be a priest. The old Marauis had hoped to make him a lawyer, but did not oppose the boy's wishes at the time. He merely sald: “There is plenty of time to think ibout that. Keep on with your stud- ies and when you have been gradu- ated we will speak of this again.” The boy waited until he was twen- ty-one, then went again to his father Jand sald: am a lawyer now, and | ask you atify my old desire,’’ Four years later he was ordained. COOMBS IN WILL LEAVES HIS ESTATE TONEAR RELATIVES Brooklyn Bank President Gives $8,000 to “My Friend and Butler.” , The will of William J. Coombs, former Representative, and President of the South Brooklyn Savings Inst!- tution, disposing of an estate ofabout $200,000, was filed with Surrogate Wingate to-day. Mr. Coombs lived at No. 63 South Portland Avenue, and died Jan. 12 last. Napoleon Hungerford, described as “my friend and butler,” receives $8,- 000; Mra. Mary C. Fox, of No. 63% South Portland Avenue, receives $63,000 and the use of an automobile and chauffeur; William H, Coombs, a son, of Wakefield, L. 1, $60,000; and the four children of Mr. Coombe's de- ceased brother, Jerome W. Coombs, Margaret, Virginia, Joseph and Jeromew, recetve $10,000 each. Bequests of $15,000 each are made to Palmer A. Paddock, a nephew, and Josephine Paddock, a niece, of No. 161 Emerson Place, and of $10,000 each to Caroline Patterson, a niece, and Frank Ormasbee and Henry J. Ormabee, nephews, all of Syracuse, N. Y. John A. Paddock, Summit, N. J., @ nephew, of receives $6,500. The residue of the estate is divided into! five parts, of which Mr. Coombs's children receive one part, and the children of Jerome W. Coombs the balance. The will was executed Feb- ruary 11, 1921, and the People's Trust Company was made executor. ——___ GIVES MILLIONS FOR MATERNITY. | BADEN-BADEN, Germany, Jan, 21.— Herman Stelcken, American dealer, has given $50,000 to the Mater- Institute here. The money was to-day erted into 11,000,000 marks, 1 This was the fi cardinal by | the} cottes | THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 21, 1922, These delegates, representing e very State in the Union, received Holy Communion from the hands of the Pope, who also gave them the Apostolic Blessing. rst occasion on PREMIER PRAISES WORK OF PARLEY IN WASHINGTON Lloyd George Says Genoa Task Is to End Constant Wars | and Rumors of Wars. | LONDON, Jan (Associated Press).—An appeal to the nations to | establish a real peace by which in- ternational confidence and world trade might be restored was made by} Prime Minister Lloyd George in a lengthy speech before the National | Liberal Conference here to-day. He lauded the achievements of the Wus!- ington Conference, declaring it 1 played an especially notable part in restoring the understanding between Great Britain And the United States and said the task of the coming | | Genes Economic Conference would be “end the constant wars and eth of wars.’ |, Mr. Lloyd George said he looked 10 the Genoa gathering to restore pen in the East, and he pleaded for a re duction in the cost of armament. “Nations must be prepared to take risks for peace,” he declared, He dealt at some length with the | Irish settlement, pointing out dim- culties which must still be met before | the Irish Free State can be completely set up. “But that good sense which the Irish people have demonstrated so clearly in recent discussions,” he added, “will enable them to triumph over all these difficulties and to de- velop a prosperous and contented | |Ireland, which will take high rank |among the free nations constituting |the British Empire.’ |. The Prime Minister said he was a believer in the League of Nations, “and I wish some of its friends would not run it as if it were a aort of |little party show,” he added. With reference to German repara- tions, Mr. Lloyd George declare “Tam one of those who think Ger- many ought not to be let off from payment, but Germany is suffering from exhaustion, like other. nations, and delay |s Inevitable, The sooner, however, a settlement 1s reached the better.” “The less governments interfere with trade the better for trade and) |the better for the governments," Mr. | Lloyd George declared. ‘There is | hut one urgent programme—Peace on earth, good will amongst men."* The Premier said the Washington | Conference had been a notable success | and that Great Britain owed a debt of gratitude to Mr. Balfour, the head | lof the British delegation. | The Prime Minister affirmed his he- | Nef that the Washington Conference | had done more than anything else to/ restore a good understanding between | Great Pritain and America and went into a discussion of the benefits of international conferences. “All who are anxious for peace and who have the courage to tread the path belleve in face-to-face discun- sion,’ he added ' | Men who thought they coulds cleanse Europe of its ills in two or three years, he said, were elther ig- norant of the real conditions or were misleading the public. “what has happened in France,” he continued, “shows how warily we must tread among so many bristling suspicions, There is only one way to reach the goal—by insisting upon bringing the nations to the test of freason and not of force.” He denied that the {dea of a gen- eral election was started by the Liberal Coalltionists in order to get rid of the reform of the House of Lords, adding: ‘The Liberal Coalt- tlonists are just as much pledged as any other Liberals to reform the Lords.” | The Premier said it was essential to recede the burden of the tax- payers to the lowest possible figures consistent with national security and) efficiency, | —_——__—— FVEN STEAL WI\e "ROM CHURCH RECTORY, NORRISTOWN, Pa,, Jan, 21,—Thieves broke into the rectory of St. Mary's | Jewels and hold her {som, They declare that such extrav- | blesdl Polish Catholic Church at Conshohocken land stole a number of bottles of the mental wine and a fur overcoat | | belonging to the rector, Father Oxtmpi- ski, Entrance was effected by "Jimmy- tng) # cellar window, which the Pope had received any lay representation from the entire reception that His Holiness asked duce American welfare work into Motion Picture of Pope Benedict Giving Apostolic Benediction to the Knights of Columbus; First Film of His Holiness Ever Mita ts Vatican Authorities for Public ee United States, and it was at this the Knights of Columbus to intro- Italy, under his supervision. The Dictures were made at the request of Secretary Kennedy of “MOST EXTRAVAGANT WOMAN,” | MRS. SMITH WILKINSON, NOT MOVED BY KIDNAPPERS’ THREAT \May Come He re in Spite of Warning Letters From This City—Defends Expenditures— Americans Rush South From London. (Special Correspondence of The Eve- ning World.) LONDON, Jan. 11.—Mrs, Smith Wilkinson, who has been called the most extravagant woman in Europe, because she has a wardrobe and jewels that would stock a good-sized store, has, In a letter she has written to the London papers, answered her critics. She says her answer applies to eritidisms she has received from New York as well as Europe and other parts odf the globe, for at pres< ent her correspondence averages more than 200 letters a day. The Prince of Wales, who is always spoken of as the most popular citizen | (of Great Britain, has a mail of only about 100 letters or notes a day. Bol- shevists, in scathing denunciation of her dress expenditures, have written | |Mrs, Smith Wilkinson warning her against her intended visit to New York. They have threatened to kid- nap her and her much advertised for a large ran- agance is out of order in this day of unemployment Replying to her critics, Mrs, Smith Wilkinaon denies that she is a “dress manaic.” clusion,” she says, “that by spending | my money judiciously in my own way, 1 am doing infinitely more good than if I hoarded it. Every penny I spend I take the greatest care to place in a direction in which 1 know | it will give the most employment o the greatest possible number of people. Some of my sowns take months to make, and their chief features are the most beautiful hand- work which necessitates the employ- ment of numerous workers. This is a time when people who can afford it should spend and help business. Such people do more good than the misers or the conservative elements of a | communit In spite of the threatening letters | from America, Mrs, Smith Wilkinson , says she hopes to visit New York in the near future. Members of literary and soctal ctr- cles of London are disappointed by the abandonment of Lord Ribbles- dale's plans to Publish hi smemoirs. As Lord Ribblesdale has always held a high place in the English court, and is often spoken of as the ‘Lord Ches- terfield” of English Soctety, London looked forward with a keen interest to his proposed book of English social life, For more than a year Lord Rib- lale has been living out of Lon- don, suffering from a nervous break- down. When he recovers his health he has said he will take up his liter- ary work again, Lady Ribblesdale, the former Mrs. John Jacob Astor, who has been nursing her husband, has suffered a slight illness and this wee kleft for Switzerland for a month's stay. She was accompanied by her daughter, Alice, now one of the most attractive young women in English society, The name of Marlborough, #0 long associated with fashnonable London life, le scarcely ever heard of in this connection to-day. The Duke of Marl- borough and fis bride, who was the former Gladys Deacon of Boston, sel- dom visit London, preferring to reside at Blenheim Palace, near Oxford, while the former Duchess of Maribor- ough, nee Consuelo Vanderbilt, is Passing the winter on the Riviera. With her husband, Jaques Balean, the former Duchess of Marlborough, who Played such an important part in English soctety, arrived at thoir Villa | Scogiietto, St. Jean, last week, from Paris, The new home they are build- ing on the Riviera will represent one | of the finest villas in this fashionable section. Mrs. J. J. Brown of New York, has enlivened the’ rather dull season in London by several dinner parties she has been iiving at the Ritz, At p» dinner her guests included “{ have come to the con-| among others, theDuke and Duchess of Chateau Thierry and the Duke Dimitri. , Mrs. Brown will pro- long her London visit till July, when she will go to Newport to open her cottage for the season. | ‘There has been « big exodus of so- ciety people to Monte Carlo within the past week, and many Americans ying in London hotels, have de- nerted them for the sunshine of the Southern resort. Mrs, Charles Bar- ney of Washington, who last week in- Gon to listen to some of the music for the opera she has composed, left the Ritz yesterday for Monte Carlo. If Lady Cooper, who has an- nounced her intention of standing as @ candidate for a seat in Parliament at the next election, is successful | England will then have three women | representatives in the House, This announcement is giving considc;able satisfaction to the English women | who worked so hard for poli jeauality, On a recent visit of Miss Jane Addams here en route tioma !trom Vienna, where she attended « big conference of women from many | countries, she remarked on tl ex- traordinary fact that in the English- speaking countries where women had | put forth the greatest effort to votain the vote, showed the smallest 1epre- sentation of women in public office “Germany,” she said, “had a greet number of women in their Parliament, and so did Austria, It is an interesting in fact,"" said Miss Addams, “thet 1913 when I was in Vienna, it jthen, according to law, a penalty |a woman to even belong to a poltic organization. Times have change y imuch since then.” ;, In the countries, hard hit by the war, Miss Adduma said, the women were showing an apptitude for public life, and were. making a strong place for themselves i nthe poltical life of their respective countries. | Only two weeks ago, Mme. Spee | Socialist, was elected to the Bi |Parllament. She ts the first woman P. of that country especialy those iM. A new note in fashionable gowns | for spring wil Ibe known as the ‘“‘tem- |peramentaidres s,'" according to a well know nfashion artist here. For instance, a Sphinx hat enveloping the | hair trimmed with jet, wil Iprovide an alr of mystery to the wearer, pressed by the wearer of gowns heavily trimmed with jet and steel with breastplates of jewels of large size. Uneurlet ostrich plumes, with which many Paris hatsa re now being trimmed, will give a touch of melancholy to the wearer, so that each day a woman may dress accord- ing to her mood and temper. pA A ll et CHURCH TO VOTE ON NUGENT eration Aske 250 ©: te Oppose Prosecuto: n Easex County will be asked to-mor- row to adopt a resolution drawn by the Newark Federation ot Churches op- posing the confirmation of the nomina on of James R. Nugent to be County | Prosecutor, The churches were inateucted to r turn the vote, which will be sent to the Senate Monday night when Nugent's name will be presented for confirma- tion. The resolution characteris: Nngent’s nomination as an impud defiance of the righteous sentiment of the county. ‘TAX! DRIVER HAD A REVOLVER this morning by Patrolman Wittenberg of he Fifth Street Station, who had | noticed the cab standing for a long time in front of No. 60 First Stree He had a revolver. He said he hai picked up two men at Elghth Street and Second Avenue and driven them to the First Street address, where he had been waiting for his pay, which he did not get. He will be charged with viola- tion of the Sullivan Inw Grand | vited 9 number of Americans in Lon- | while | hard and defiant moods may be ex- | Jack Belsky, nineteen, No, 1085 Du- | ont Avenue, the Bronx, « (aaicab driver, was arrested in his cab early ‘SOMETHING GOING TOHAPPEN SUNDAY GREAT NECK WAITS Hint Is That Vigilantes Have Planned Surprise Party for Politicians, Word got around Great Neck, mittee in the community's midst and that “something was going to happen Sunday night.’ Meetings at the homes of various substantial citizens have been held for several weeks and |commuters and local business been conscious for some that they were being ‘felt out as to ‘their attitude toward men of power- ful political influence in North Hemp- stead in both parties men have Malcolm ©, Rorty, who is an of- ficial of the Bell Telephone Com- pan; Bruce Bielaski, former chief of | the United States Secret Service; William R. Conklin, who practices! law in New Yor, and J. C. Andrews, | of a large New York contracting firm, have been mentioned as ac- | quainted with the programme of the Vifilantes. None of them to-day | would go further than to admit that | there was to be a meeting to-morow jnight inthe vicinity of the railroad station which would be of interest to “all who feel that wireless politl- clans can order public officials to \ignore the suggestions and demani |of responsible taxpayers.” The suburban development of Great cal influences have changed but ttle and, according to the residents in the areas which have grown in population most swiftly in the last fifteen years, are inclined to cling to the old boun- dary lines to preserve their power | It is known that when a redistrict- ing of the schools to meet modern conditions was approved recently by |Dr. J. C. Cooley, State Superinten- dent of Education, the trustetes of the Great Neck district turned it down. Ameeting of the advocates of the change was called and !t was expected that the officials of the town and op- ponents of the change would atten Dr. Cooley was present. The enthus fasm the two hundred or more tax- |Ppayers who attended was unmistak- able but fatled of effect an any one in jofficial authority because none was present. The guess of those who learned that @ call has been sent to 300 taxpayers to be present at the Station Plaza at '7 o'clock Sunday night with automo biles and prepared to go (and take others who have no automobiles( @ destination or destinations in North or gramme, and why, and to serve notice \by force if necessary that a hearing | OR public questions must be had when asked. |CONFERENCE 0 OF IRISH | RACE BEGINS IN PARIS ries and xpected, Delegates trom Every State in t. PARIS, Jan, 21 (Associated Press) Sons and daughters of Ireland and thelr descendants from rhers of the globe began arriving in Paris th morning to take part in the wor jeonference of the tace, nol begin here to-day 16 Coun “. The organizers of the which ynference, for | arrangements have been in several months, expect dele- be present from fifteen difter- countries and from nearly every | State fn the United States, Politics and religion are barred from the programme, any the organiacrs, the object being to promote the economic intereats of the Irish Freo State and interest in Iriah art throughout the world | L, that there was a Vigilance Com- | time | Neck has caused the distribution of | its population to take entirely dif- ferent directions from those antict- pated years ago, when the present water and school and Election Dis- tricts were laid out, before the Long| Island Railroad was built through from Flushing. The dominant politi- at a et SG SE HE ARS HP OR AP eS A Se - (C) INTERNATIONAL NEWS 3 the New York Knights of Columbus, the appearance of a motion pie ture photographer causing much comment from Vatican official Pope Benedict showed much interest in the making of the film. Av” ‘WOMANENOS LIFE WOULD DISCARD = WITH HEROIN, CHUM COUNTY COURTS AS: emcegtiae gee Victim, Reported to Have Been|Bar Association Urges General. Deported From Canada, Sessions Take in Whole a Takes Drug on Train. City. Bi One woman passenger was dead and| Supreme Court Justice Rusealba another, her companton, critically IH, |when the Montreal Express reached | the Grand Central at 7.80 o'clock this | morning. Both are said to have taken heroin, ; ‘The one who died was Miss Dorothy | Wardell, twenty-one, formerly of Montreal. ‘The other was Mrs. Doris Vembrooke, twenty-four, formerly of Jersey City, She was questioned by | Patrolman Patrick Coyne and tnen taken to Bellevue Hospital, “She told me," said Coyne, Benedict discussed the ethics of the ‘Bench at to-day’s meeting. He req ferred to the debt which the venchyy owned the bar for the help recelved.4 from attorneys. He stated a judge» who browbeat or humiliated a lawyer im public only lowered himseif in the” esteem and reapect &f those who wil- nessed the incident. A judge in the opinion of Justice Benedict should not engage in politics to the extent of making a speech from a platform, or writing for partisan “that | interest in affairs as a citizen. Judges, they had both taken heroin, and a|he said, are not chosen by reason of 1 vial of what looks Iike heroin was | desire to place politicians on the bench found in Mise Wardell’a hat, Mra, but byt in onder that justice may be REIS impartially wdministe ; Pembrook told me that Miss Wardell "Tidge receiving a living wane’ had been deported from Canada by| should not engage In the practice of the Government but did not op|law and should not engage in any, She did say, however, | business enterprise of any kind, Jus- , tice Benedict asserted, ax their entire what charge i UB): Lee a been A880-|time should be devoted to the dis! elated with bi charge of their duties. He said ne'® * “Mrs, Pembrook said her husband's | recently had called attention to a flagwert name was Clarence Brown, but she|rant violation of this kind and on- | trasted it with the action of William | Howard ‘Taft, who when he went upor did not say why she was using an- other name, Both women had been| tne bench gave up writing. ceed stopping at the Windsor Hotel in ———-_— vet Montreal until the alleged deporta-|TOQ WELD 6,000,000 3% tion of Miss Wardell, who waited last night at Rouses Point, N. ¥, and] FARMERS INTO UNIT, hoarded the same train as Mrs. Pem- | brook." : F The Pullman porter started | Vast Co-operative Marketing Plan through the sleerer ut Harmon, N, | > i ~ Y., to rouse the passengers. He could | Suggesied as Outcome of not waken Miss Wardell at all, and | Economic Parley. Mrs, Pembrook was very sick. D : re | Gillespie of the station emergency | WASHINGTON, Jan. 21—Out of hospital was waiting when the train arrived. He pronounced Miss War- dell dead. the Agricultural Conference meeting here next week may emerge the framework for the most powerful po- NOT “HOODWINKED" [ir Soren, IN RENT CASES |:9-»perative marketing plan, “now practised to a limited degree in the Middie West. Agricultural leaders plan to weld the 6,000,000 farmers of the country into a vast co-opera- a, Justice Writes Lockwood That Court Takes City’s Tax Assess- a : tive unit. ment as Guide to Fix Value. One agricultural leader said to- The statement of Samuel Unter- | day: . myer to the Lockwood Committes| “Under the co-operative marketing, system, the farmers will work to yesterday that Justices of the Muni-| atner, ‘This concentration of powei™® cipal Courts had been hoodwinked | will free agriculture from the dominas« by landlords who used the method] tion of the middle men, banking any. of wash sales gelling their houses | other lke interests. It will\make the farmer Independent economically and ~ politically irresistible." A powerful pressure will be brought to bear for passage of the bills CA in co-operatives legal standing. One is | the Capper measure before the Senat: and the other is the Volstead bill be fore the House, which would exemMge the co-operatives from the operation back and forth to get increases in rent of tenants, brought forth a pro- test to-day from the Justices of the Seventh District Municipal Court. Justice Davies wrote Chairman Lockwood on behalf of the hom Judges of that court as follows “T know you will feel relieved when Hempstead ‘which will be made! ! tell you that the home Judges of the | of the Anti-Trust Law. These meas- know," is that the aggrieved taxpay- | Seventh District Court always take! ures are on the programnse of the ers are about to take thetr meeting | the city's tax assessment as their) agricultural blocs in Cong e More than 266 Protestant Churches to the opposition in a way to find out (guar se tid the walne of wie ra oe who ts blocking the progressive pro- erty In rent cases, and these Juc on : have heretofore not been hoodwinked |“JOHNNY BULLDOG” toon by any wash transactions of profitver ing landlords. “That many thousands of cases have not been noticed for trial in |court is due to the landlords know! |edge that this city’s tax value ix so used." GANG HEAD CONVICTED rato Faces Maximum Seatesce™” of 25 Years for Robbery. Silvestro Murato, alla Johnny” Marino head of the notorious “Johniis”* Bulldog gang in Harlem, was fowndes guilty to-day by @ jury before County Judge Taylor in Brooklyn of robbery in the first degree and grand larceny & jin the second degree. The maxiny possible sentence on this verdict woul tt be twenty-five years in Sing Sing, | On July 12 last Murato with tonal | other masked men held up four men in | the plant of the Essential Chemica! | Works at No. 69 Cook Street, Brooklyn, |and robbed them of cash and jewelry: “ — |PAVLOWA'S LEGS GET | EMPORIA GOING AGAIN | William Allen Wht ae Home Tews | Agitated Over Ra Hi {PORIA, Jan. 32.. Jlowing Ue |controversy caused by members < the company in the opera “Carmen |smoking cigarettes on the stage, Em- porla, the home of William Allen| to the value of $2,600, Philip Aromandig®, White, has been stirred by Pavlowa|0f No. 408 East 125th Strect, Manhaltaualt and her ballet nd John Miller, ee Paviowa's performance was branded || Whiter” Lewis. No. S20) oe aes sa leg show in a letter to an Em-/| mitted their guilt. Aromandi was #&Ne* porta newspaper. The ‘‘pros'’ say It/to ging Sing for twelve yeare amid i art, but the ‘‘ferninsters’ maintain Miller for fifteen years. The police; # “tema in toi and that Paviowa/ said Murato was the “pathfinder” for should cover hers. the th i ~ aot hal ISCRMIGALLY LL, BAL EVIL REMEDY: re purposes, although he shauld taken ab print of the film was sent to the Vatican by Supreme Knight Flaherty. <{ and | the exhibition of it was greatly enjoyed by the Pope. + noik = —— nea Se ‘2 pe

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