The evening world. Newspaper, December 11, 1922, Page 16

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THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1922. : OPEN TO SUSPH » the Birminghaar “This eandi hing to him, Me on. hustles for a public office that pays meravaity | eaotha soar T have my aonkea” Iotihdetedudoiabnatd ya money mean ants,to #erve t! ripe sie CENTRAL Or;, R Hing Chairs, ston tack’ nowy, olling AIS, rays, Back Rows FRANCES WHITE donc hee mt. New y be telling the truth, but n who ths been holding 0 a year job tm private life to Make Sunday a The bees the other actors in the Me tragic comedy are clearly represented Perfect Day. in the music, but there is so mudh of it that w ut the ballet picture it es repet s. A condensed & Winter Garden | TAR VAUDEY POLLOF VETERANS) 2 rant. wares. & Anti-Bonus League Chairman Asks Fordney to ,Aban- don Re-Introduction. Chairman Fordney of the Ways and Means Committee is asked to abandon his avowed intention of again Intro- @ucitik .ie Ronus Bill in Congress tn @ letter sent to him by Eéward Allen, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the ex-Service Men's Anti-Bonus League, Inc, of No. 19 West 41th Street. Mr. Allen an ounces that the league is about to conduct an impartial poll to determin the position of the ex-service men themselves on the bonus fssne “The Ex-Service Men's Anti-Bonus League,” says the letter, “desires to Inform you that if the proposed meas- ure carries any provision to pay vble bodied ex-service men a bonus, or any fo-called ‘adjusted compensation,” or any other form of gift, gratulty er Pension, it will meet with most vigor- ous opposition from this organization and its members throughout the na- tion. “We respectfully ask you to refrain from introducing any bill carryinc gratulties of any nature for the able bodied ex-service mau," tho letter further says. “In considering our request we earnestly urge you to tak careful note of the following perti nent facts: “1, There are over 4,009,000 ox-ser- vice men in the United States. At this ‘writing only a few more then 709,000 are members of the American Legion, with an immense shrinkage in sight, largely due to the legion’s stand on the bonus, when does for next year fall due on the first of January. “2. Although repeated efforts have been made by posts and members of the American Legion to get Its lead ers to take an individual poll of its members as to their stand an the question of a> bonus for the able- bodied ex-service man, all such ef- forts have been frowned upon and not even given official consideration. “3. Over 100 posts of the American Legion throuzhout the nation have gone on record an being opposed to a cash bonus for the able-hodied ex- vice man. “Although the Ex-Service Men's Anti-Ronus League has not yet estab. lished divisional organizations in all States of the Union, it nevertheless has sounded the sentiment of ex- serwtee men throughout the nation on the bonus issue and we can state with the utmost assurance that it Is not true that a mafority of the able bodied veterans want a bonus. In fact we are convinced that quite the reverse is true; that not under any circumstance would a majority of the veterans of the World War seck or expect from the Government any kind of @ bonus or compensation. They value their service to their country y= far too high to cheapen it and them selves by seeking a money reward for acts and sérvices that are not of the kind that can be measured tn terms of dollars and cents. "You will find, we believe, that four out of every five veterans who actual ly fought and suffered in the mud filled trenches of France are in hearty accord with the principle to which this league is dedciated—that to serve one’s country in time of war is a privilege as well as a duty and that to seek a material reward therefor is @ violation of the fundamental ic of Americaff citizenship and an repugnant to tho spirit of true pa triotism."* After referring to the proposed pol! the letter continues: “In the meantime, pending the re- sult of our work, we urge upon you the great necessity of immediate leg- islation providing in the most liberal way for generous care and compen: Theme and Ten Variations on © Sabbath Air might be‘an appropriate title for yesterday's music that com- prised eleven events, of varying qual- ity and attracting audiences of vary- ing proportions, John McCormack's recital at the Hippodrome probably was nearest the heart of the public in that it was’ the tenor’s final eppear- ance here until mext October, The Immense assemblage sitting patiently through the Handel songs; a Stranss number, sung in distinct German, but a bit foreign to the thnor's style: Rachmaninoff’s tender “Cease Thy Singing; — Paladihie’s exquisite “Psyche,” and exquisitely tnter- preted, and Bax's somewhat ineffec- tive “Christmas Carol,” suddenly be came galvanized into a McCormact. following when the group of I Folk Songs was reached. W the singer's voice did not appear te have {ts usutl smoothness in the middle register, we have sel- dom heard him use ft more artistically. Beautiful phrasing, # fine command of sentiment and pathos and a glorious exhibition of the singing instinct fairly dazzled one Mr. McCormack can make an ordinary couplet gripping. That old favorite, “The Snowy Br . had t tear In each stanza. T were nu- merous encores, including “The Tum- bled Down Shack in Athlone,” all ap proved of by the audience, that in cluded Mary Garden and family. ‘There was a fifteen-minnte demonstration of recalls following the program, a fine farewell. Mr, McCormack may have his European admirers, but, along next fall, one may fancy lin hum- ming to himself: Oh, | want to go bac To nee Wagner an Sure, too long tt tm from them 1 rokin; 1 would string voral pei Oil ie state: where: the girte Ride the waves at the old Hippotrome. Walter Damrosch at the Symphony Society concert offered Frieda Hem pel, soprano, as soloist, and a compo- sition new to America, by an Amer ean, the ballet-pantomime, ‘Lady Dragon Fly,” of Blair Fairchild. Mr. Fairchild, since 1903, has been living and studying in Paris, where this bal- let was performed in 1921 with some wuecess. The plot has to do with the distressing effects wrought upon the insect and reptile world by the co- quetry of the vamp, Lady Dragoo Fly. William Brady,and “The World We Live In” take notice. The toad, hee, beetle, snail, lizard, all admire the Lady to no purpose, for the but- terfly wins her fickle heart. While this whimsical story is told in a fan- cifu) und qgreeable music setting, tt on might prove more effective. ¢ Soctety in Ca>- Franck D min Strauss “Death art Transfiguration” poem and, with Hu- berman as soloist, the Tschaikowsky D major violin concerto. The open- ing movement of this Mr. Huberman interpreted with the proper vigor and feeling. The I Th. ficld of dance was not over looked. in the afternoon at the Broad hurst Theatre the Ruth Doing Dan- cers presented a program filustrating Mins Doing's tem of Rhythmics, as a method to develop freedom of ex- pression in the individual. for this purpose music of Gluck, Brahms, Schumann, Ravel, Debussy, Borodine and Moszkowski was drawn upon. The other exponent was Grace Christie at the National Theatre, back from a tong stay in Europe. We saw only the group, Episode with Benda Maske—comprising Tyagini Devi at her ritual, Fable of Mr. Frog, The Peacock and The Stmpleton. The first one mennt little to us, but in the others Miss Christie, by her ies and bedy movements, showed murked feeling for the grotesque. The audience was enthusiastic. Marguerite Namara, soprano, as- sisted by John Barelay, baritone, and Vecser’s Orchestra, gave a recital in the Princess Theatre before a small audience. As we had occasion to say last week this soprano began some years ago with fine prospects upon which she has failed to realize. Her voice is good in quality but there is little warmth in it and Hittle color. She mistheats big arlas through want of style and breath support, She was more effective last evening singing with piano, which gave her real sup port, than with the orchestra. Mischa Elman was heard in another ital in the Hippodrome in the violin rec! evening, his talented sister Liza El- man again proving an able assistant interpreter fn the Beethoven Kreutzer Sonata. Then there was the usual Metro- politan Opera concert, well patronized because of the extensive array of singers Involved in offering an act of “Lh of “Lucia di Lam- mermoor” and “Faust.” All the ar ists appeared as previously an- nounced except Mr. Bada, who has been indisposed for some days, We suggest that, as a sure cure, he read The World and use, as a vocal ex- ercise the sentence, “Every day, in every way, I am getting Bada and Bada." This was, for us, the end of a per- fect music day. Of the remaining concerts deponent knoweth not. been building shoes. fit the foot, and indirectly building the body and health of the wearer. The success of anything built depends upon its foundation. The Coward Shoe has for its foundation Nature’s own law of growth, What could be better? Coward Shoes are no more expensive than the ordinary shoe —but what a difference. To give an idea as to our apo FREE James S. Coward _ ée Builder For 50 years James S. 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