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sian balladist, gave a Second hearing of her interpretative aft, offering Rus- sian, French, Italian, Jewish, Rou- manian and English numbers, with dramatic and vocal trimmings. True toBform, her delighted audience did not hesitate ‘to call for its favorite bits. An Overflow of Concerts _ Attracts Thousands to iil Recital Halls). ‘@ . By Frank H, Warren. 2 wish 1 could fold up like a tele- soape,”’ observed Alice, somewhere her journey through Wonderland. think I could if I only knew how to begin.” Had Alice wandered into Musicland yesterday she might have wished for some magic method of transportation that would have enabli her to be in five places at once. probably can be done if one only _ knew how to begin: “Oh, critics, bg ed to us,” “And sa! Upon the music beach.” John McCormack was in fine volce for his concert in the Hippodrome. A florid number, Lotti’s “Pur dicesti,”” showed the tenor's art in a field of song he-does not frequently dally In, The customary group of Irish folk], songs found many backers, and a “first time” English number, “The Three Trees,” by H} O. Osgood, gave further proof of this graceful composer's ver- satility, ¢ Roga Reisa, soprano, of the Chicago Opera Company; forsook the Hippo- drome, her former concert stamping along ond you heard ‘We caii't do niore with more than four beauty al olor it once had. Perlffips the soprano’s indulgence in all man- ner of singing has had Its effect. Still, using greter excitement than a onth of regular concerts produces. ‘The Russian idol again announced his set Intl ced His Wife. selections by numbers, his audience] her recital was most enjoyable. Her] pcwered roadster in which was riding ea influenced 6 locating them in text books that, this| voice was excellently managed and ber} 14, faenionably gowned young wo Carle Carlton, the theatrical prod! year, were provided gratis by Mana-| quieter methods satisfied the car and] Cas taven tothe East sist Street {md Pat Séterset, Enslish musi ger Hurok, a sensible move. Neither|the taste, Her husband, Giacomo| Poi. station, One of the young |My actor, almost collided to-day ih the music nor the song's mood, ap-|Rimini, baritone, contributed solo} voy telephoned to Mungovan's|® corridor of the Law Division Building pafently, troubles Mr. Chaliapin. He] numbers and-tried to be of assistance |), ctinor saying, “The Roberts sisters} on Ellis Island, whither both went to interprets the numbers as Wise in duets. are with Joseph” and requesting inm answer questions in the charges against with a strong leaning toward the dra~ to come to the station house so Josep) | Somerset Which, if proved, may result very! . 1 of which} ,The first program in a series of} -? %) deg b § . ; ne he i Hgyscorel vee Minlature Musicales was presented by | CUld be released on ball. an hia) Geo eeee ay Se An Uae hié hearers approved. Man Bosler, soprano, and Herbert |, Patrolmen Lombardo and ‘Gorton. | atin. ‘The charges are ntide by Carl- Miss * sega both of wh ere In civilian cloth rae ~ Meanwhile there were big doings at} Dittler, violinist, in the Punch and aad Siig, petit ae odie see aia ton und deal With Somerset's relations the Hippodrome, where Sousa and his|Judy Theatre. Miss Besler, better rec-] nite jast night and were driving | With Mrs. Carlton, otherwise Edith Day, band gave a long entertainment. To-Jognized as “Miss Bobby,” sang such] 0° ine Queens Boulevard nos, | the musical comedy star now appearing day ts the bandmaster's sixty-elghth}charactristic ae ae feasted Wducest Hilla what, Ae “kutorapulie, [in “Orange Siawbhens:? <Bamerset iaoeh birthday, so due recognition was made] "Cautionary Tales," bits she does @X- | ain by a man, in which two women | $1,000 bail. of tt last evening. The Atlantic Fleot, | tremely a oe Se ant were riding, sideswiped their machine | ‘Testimony aa? to the char was apparently, ‘was anchored in ae mainly ha jemreny etrangemen’ The patrolmen said they called upon| heard in secret by Special Agent}e Sirent; alah Sta Gils Sergent be alior lgs the driver to stop, but Instead the} -rhontas J. Conry of the Law Division in 44th; Camp Fire Girls had their “ Wer paar’ a4 8 aw tents pitched somewhere; the Hippo-] Emma Calve, once the idol of many] 1) ae hs bes sanating Somerset was not so jaunty to-day as trome was gayly decorated with flags| who were in the audience, officiated as| fi" Ttomobile In which he and Lom, | When the first hearing wes held two und uniformed officers and the 7th|soloist at the Symphony Séciety’s con- | 0145 were riding, gave chase. week: He was the@irst to be plac egiment Band and Trumpet Co: rt in Aeolian Hall. Mme. Calve'®) “4 a anced as high as 35 miles anjon the jas on hand to help swell the meas- | ingenuous mannerisms, ow taralliar. Hous, according Anche Parte urien; the akivdnvtellowed imi E march, § tana ped mone a Ce A e- |g symp! ‘ ate eeathoghh Bighth vard. When near Grand Avenue, Pa ecision by the immigration offic sentation activities were other emby aOR) De wedlahct nay | trolman Gorton said, the automobile lishments. Symphony, 4 new Wet antes ert ih which the mam and two women| Cariton sald to reporters to-de. — % by Alfen, and Laidow's “From the lyere riding was forced to slow down| Somerset seemed to have some unu Im the afternoon Isa Kremer, Rus-] Apocalyp' and the patrolmen managed *o conv| influence over h forces and dated from Feb. 4, 1901, when the Puccini work was first sung The name B: Maurel on the recital list for next -week reminds one Searpia, the lamented Gilibert as the] chorus, that incubator of other artists |} -Saoristan, Bars as Spoletta, and] who have stnce increased in vocal {| ivianini, who ts still with the Met-] stature. Composed mainly of young ] politan, as Sciarrone: music students, every Manhattan chore Succeeding Toscas in Mr. Scotti’s} usite naturally aspired to an operatic Seareer are Mmes. Eames, Cavalieri,| crown. Alice Gentle was one of the Farrar, Fremstad, Destinn, Exvina,| band; so w 21 Althouse. These Muzio, Jeritza, Easton, Gentle and} were the nights of opera for the fun r Glacchotti, the last three members of] of it, according to Miss Maurez. On the Scotti one occasion when ‘'Aida’' was being Urged to state which fon deserved first honors, Mr having toiled as an impresario vine- rd, observed a discreet silence, He 4 say, however, that the thrilling rst act entrance of Mme. Ternina, breathing jealousy from every, pore, has not since been equalled. sung simultaneously at the Manhattan and the Metropolitan, and when it be- came known that the Manhattan audi- ence was the larger. Hammerstein, his principals and chorus and, it may be, the stage hands, joinea hands in u dance ring of triumph about the stage Arthur Bodansky, conductor at the Metropolitan, has yet to see a fout- ball game, and he has been advised that ff he ts to make a good Ameri- can citizen an analysis and under- standing of this popular sport is a legitimate rt of his American training. With Mr. Bodanzky the de- sire to study the intricacies of the pigskin’s doings is keen enough, but he suggests that some other day than Saturday be assigned for tac spectacle. % urdays,"" remarks Mr. Bodanzky, “I play football wit my orchestra. The band and I kick off at 10 o’clock and the contest lasts until late in the afternoon, I we umpire, referee, linesman and what- ever other officials thege are, I alse keep the score, you get me—an American joke, I do the training an coaching for both sides and the kick Ing, If t all muffed notes ‘Mme. Sigrid Onegin, the new Metro- politan mezzo-soprano, by her sing- ing last Tuesday with the Philadel- phia Orchestra, aroused the prgspect of a real treat when she makes her opera debut as Amneris in ‘‘Aida’’ on Nov. 22. The newcomer was born in Stockholm, removing to Paris at the age of twelve. She studied in Ger- many and Italy, making her debut’ in the former country in 1912, She has appeared in the most important ropean opera houses, including a Scala, Paris, Madrid, Stockholm and in Czecho-Slovakia, Swit: Jand and Germany. Her repertcire Ybraces such roles as Carmen, I lah, Amneris, Orpheo, sandra, Kundry, Brangeene in “Tristan und Isolde’ and Fricka, Erda and Val- Further, she & concert HEN THY WORK ' crowdeth on thee to the proximity of thine ears and thy hour at lunch is shorn to minutes, keep thouin thy desk the health- giving date which nour- isheth thee greatly and maintaineth thy vigor.” ~The Wise Man of the Bate medary ‘Dates 10¢ PERSONAL PACKAGE, THROUGH QUEENS, ARREST “OFFICER” Charge Irish Fy, Captain Ran Into Their Following the across the Queensboro Bridge to Sec-] a Avenue and 57th Street, Mungovan, tflirty-one, a salesman, of No, 87 Grotom#Sérect, abreast of it, to which I have given detailed stucy is played Saturday nights around a - the law, Patrolmen Gorton and Lom bardo allege they told the man In the automobile he was under arrest. They identified him as Munxovan. Gorton and Lombardo said chat Mungovan again “stepped on the gas" and sped away. The patrolmen said they again started after him. Along the Queens Boulevard, the patrolmen said, the chase continued to the Queensboro Bridge and ther across that span to Second Avenue Mungovan, the patrolman said, turned south at this point and Gorton, speed ing his automobile, says he managed to force the other automobile tofard the curb, He and Lombardo then placed Mungovan under arrest. Mungovan denied any knowledge of his automobile sideswiping any other machine. He denied that he had even known he was being chased by the patrolmen, He said he formerly ‘erve State Army Machine. ® an automobile Queens Boulevard chase sand Captain In the Free State Army He was dressed In a blue uniform Sam Browne belt and blue cap. He aid the automobile he was driv was Not owhed by him, but had been Josep" Forest Hills ‘Than give a line to ench gfound, for the Century Theatre, tak-] 1, 1., who sald he was a Captain in] loaned to him “by a friend." ng her audience along with her. The} tn, ree State Army in Ireland, was The two women were not placed \The sensation, 1¢ not the most] Century 1s a much better place for ad exvily toidaysto'? Pacrotition pander curceaty artistic, event of yesterday was the re-|her. She does not have to use such} atrested ear @ to-day by v 4 appearance of the Russian basso,|Volume.as the Hippodrome calls for,|l'rancis Lombardo.and Joseph Gorton PR Keodor Chaliapin. Crowds fairiy|and most fortuntely, for the high] or Traffic A on a charge-of disordeiy | “SORRY FOR HER,” SAYS stormed Cérnegic Hall in the évening,| voice yasterday seemed to lack. h?| oonauct and violation of the M fox CARLTON OF EDITH DAY Theatri Vehicle Law Mungovan, who was driving a bigh when they were toy ay with her arainee Idren. pr at the Metropolitan. On that evening| that the soul of Oscar Hammerstein|table with what you call them—TVoidest woman in Dutchees Gouney tc the cast included Mme. Ternina 08] goes marching on. Miss Maurel was | chips? vote. ‘Tosca, Cremonini as Mario, iti as}a member of Oscar's Manhattan ‘Py: theway, "said Jupiter, tting on Olympus and sae someAmbtosia on.asoda cracker, | see that the mortals have chang- ed the name of this to- LIEDERKRANZ CHEESE __ "he cheese that makes the meal The Monroe Cheese Monroe N.Y. You can know all about your milk supply if you get Borden's Grade A’. Let us tell you what makes it pure and wholesome. BORDENS § Farm Products Co, Inc. ” Franklin 1423 { In the Canadian Army and was now 1 Man Cinigts Rat Somer- ght Is tn good health and ac- |. j | | Shouting that they were officers’oi “am sorry for her,” he sai New Notes in the Music Scale — | WOMAN IN 100TH YEAR nen is APRS ing of the music. 'y system of of- ai BY FRANK H. WAPREN, \ fense inclydes runs by the violins, WILL VOTE FOR SMITH cellos back, slants through oboes, 2 .d : . Following the official announcement| singer and she will be heard here in}play, the criss cross as used Not a et a ea apa ee Scotti had been assigned |*ecital featuring songs by American] modern ply, “The Dead New H@mburg, who has -Just enterod that Antonio Scotti ha ae composers, in whose work she is leep- | example, and the delayed pass, which| her 100th year, going to the polls to to open the approaching opera sea3oM) |. interested. Age? Deponent knc I got on a hint from the box office. | morrow to vote for former Gov. Al in “Tosca,” “the famed Tony, who 1s]eth not, but art_recognizes no .] Spread formations and the famous] smith and the Democratle ticket, but now regarded by his colleagucs o8!Mme, Onegin already likes America, | Stokowsky shift -I leave for @}| she is trying to tell her five “girls” how an “institution” rather than aga mere] particularly its crowds and their hap- Philadelphia team. My defense, If). vote baritone, was urged to get out his[py, satsified appearance, and she is|there 1s need Of one, is lack of time) ny ¥ iste : serap books and reckon up the various] fot modest in handling the English] for practice leader's traditional] 7 y lait “ber pe ee Toscas by whom, as Baron Scarpia,|janguage, its slang only bothering her,| Plea. My goal?) A smooth-runnins porn forty ine to: stats oe ae he had been made to take the final] for first husvand, a Russian Baron,| Machine that will get the crowds eur ued RN 4) et ed pede count. Mr. Scotti's researches cov-|Lyoht Onegin, died of wounds re-|by the union time limit. Stil, 1 4 ered engagements with the Metropoli- 1 ih the war. She is now mar-|should like to see a good football tan, Covent Garden and his own operal ried to Dr. Fritz Penzoldt of Munich, | ®4° The one American pastime celebrated her birthday is missing, vital part of your diet | a THR EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, Does Your Appetite ek Sanam ian NOVEMBER 6) 1922, ee uROLITICAL. Suns luis, Points From the Recoril” FIRST Alfred E. Smith stands for the restoration of the | ower of the City over its contracts and fran- chise agreements with public utility corpora- tions. Governor Miller took this control away from al the cities in the State, including New York | ‘ity. Alfred E. Smith stands for the rehabilitation of the Labor Department: : a—Workmen’s Compen- sation Bureau, b—Bureau of Women in Industry, with the firm belief that the millions of men and women and children em- ployed in manufacturin are entitled to the full protection of the laws en- acted for health, safety and welfare. F Governor Miller weakened all of these statutes by denying to this. Department sufficient i be aa on to make the provision of the law ective. Alfred E. Smith stands for the restoration of di- rect primaries so that the. enrolled members of a political party may have it in their power to make their own nominations for public offices. Governor Miller destroyed the Direct Primary and in the Campaign refused to discuss it, Alfred E. Smith vetoed the infamous Lusk bills, establishing a private spy ; system over the teachers in our public schools and SUGAR FEV rs oa WAI ware ben io eMoeOLNE FERS y To Make Dainty Desserts Stull Daintier Serve Per-fet-to Sugar Wafers with ices and custards, preserved fruits and compotes, with gelatins and whipped cream desserts. Per-fet-to is an added touch of daint- ness and sweetness. Sunshine Olover Leaves are sugar wafers, square in shape. Joose-Wites Biscuit (QMPany Branches in Over 100 © SECOND similar ® ee Ret On Stee Se pine penis si A itn ipa oo THIRD Need Coaxing? FOURTH The bracing edge of autumn winds should make you hungry. But if your appetite 1s a bit es hore see, co eae requirin eee supervision : “Pride th? the Pare over and the licensing of $ Tomato Catsup’’gives private schools. His mem- é to cold weather foods. orandum of veto of these i) bills was widely quoted as ; Millions of Bottles Sold Annually outlining a fundamental . ; in Grocery and Delicatessen Stores democratic principle that { in th ne white, admitted of no discussion. Governor Miller signed the Lusk bills and was afraid to discuss the questions involved. hole wheat To tell if a faa wheat cereal FIFTH Alfred E. Smith made gen- i Auge most per quae | erous appropriations for fect food. on a plate. the care and maintenance of the unfortunate wards of the State in our hos- * pitals. Governor Miller drove out of office one com- The Yellow is the germ of the wheat, Itis rich in ee ne tection rea liow, commissioner who had served the State for The brown is The white is thirty-five years because they appeared before the outer the wheat cen- | . the Senate and truthfully stated that the Containin g ter containing appropriations allowed by the Governor were proteins & carbohydrates, not sufficient for the ordinary needs of the | vitamins, but no vitamins, patients in the hos; } All three are in Ralston, the whole wheat cereal with the fine flavor, | * Vote for ALFRED E. SMITH and the ENTIRE DEMOCRATIC TICKET Indeyendent Citizens’ Committee for the Democratic State ' sas 4 e