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HALPERT PAINTINGS POT ON EXHIBITION His New Works Show That He Has Lost None of His Tower. EXCELLENT STILL LIPES Clark, Nichols, Olinsky, Tott-hn- st and Others Also Dis- play Their Art The new paintings by Samuel Halpcrt In tho Daniel Galleries show that he has lost nothing of tho power that brought In the ranks jilm an honorable place of American painters when his talent vis first disclosed a few years ago. but It also shows that ho has been doing UtUa In tho way of experiment. Btrong natures ure usually on the rampant In tho effort to draw the many secrets of Ufa Into their net and In the fury for mero living are Indifferent whether their discoveries of to-d- conflict with their findings of the past or not When all their discoveries aro hsltorians gunerally And a sequent In their work and can fit each piece Into Its clearly marked place In the artists' evolution. Not so, though, with Halpert. Thero la no Indication la the new pictures that a year has elapsed since his last exhibition In the same galleries. They are as good as hut tint different. Halpcrt Is essentially a still live rainier and one of tho best we have or have had. He Is stronger than Chaso ever was In his use of design, In his values and In color dynamics, but ho Is not as strong as Chase was In texture. Like Chaso he Is also afraid of the flgure. Chase dld'a few good portraits In which he threw aside his enthusiasm for still U'e. but as a rule when he did a studio Interior with figures th people had the substance of tissue paper and it was the dexterity In rendorlng the polish of the floor or the shine of brass pot that won him praise. Halpert shows some Interiors In the present ex- hibition that are excellent Indeed, but the flgure of a woman that appears In one of them hardly has a living quality. The Favor Ho Subject. The favorite subject among the still llfes Is an arrangement of objects upon a table by a window with a glimpse of outdoors contrasting with tho Interloi of the room. The artist plays variations upon this theme Incessantly and always with a certain amount of ease and some- times with great success. \The Plant\ Is one of these, designed Impeccably and very sure In values. The bouquet of flowers and the \Chinese God\ are also successes. Among the landscapes tho most pleas-- i H?i.rt land 'Mm. Marshall Russell, who started for New York, entertained there , cape .are marked by he rugged Bin- - 'J; fr tb. Campbell corlty of one who dlsdalns the comen- - steward anfl M d MrtHalTOM wwte tlonally pretty. Madison Square and the N,choU , cntertalned. f 11 ITU 1) UU11UM1& r wo iVH-- 4 ject, and one that has been vigorously tand'ed. The sunlight that beats down .over the skyscrapers Into that well has been vigorously handled, but the \spot' ting\ of the buses and cabs upon the street has been atended to In an obvious Krimer. Since Whistler's day an In- difference to tho \spotting\ of people an4 teams upon roadways has been considered bad form. The following painters, Eliot Clark, Hobart NlchoU, Ivan Q. Olonsky, Ed- ward H. Totthast. Henry B. Snell and JLAMIED. HXTON LEBTOIU.E. On Thursday. Oc- tober It, at Cmbrl. France. Jeanne Leitollle, daughter of Madame Comallls Uitollle, to Fredsrlofc Exton, son of the late Frederick and Mrs. Elton. DIED. BUIIT. On Saturday, November t, In the seventT-nlnt- h year of hli age. George Hamilton Durt. beloved father ct Georxe Frederick Burt. Funeral services will ba held at bis late reeldence, 140 West U9th aTet, on Tjesday morning at 10 o'clock. Inter- ment private. CENMAN. At Elizabeth. N. J., Nevomber I, 191J, Edward Jamea Denman, hua-lan- d of Mary Elizabeth Denman, aged S years. Tuner.il service at bla lata residence), 106 Itahvray avenue. Elizabeth, N. J., Tuesday evening, November 11, 8 o'clock. U1ETEIUCII. Sarah Hill, beloved wife of Claries F. Dleterlch. suddenly, at Sad-ll- Hospital, Pourhkeepsle, N. Y. Services private at convenience of family. KELLEY. On November , Hl. at Lenox Hill Hospital. David J. Keller, beloved husband of Annie E. Keller. Interment private. Kindly omit flowers. Denver, Col., papera pleas copy. ?ECK. At Plalnfleld. N, J on Saturday, November I, 1119, Capt. Samuel C Peck, husband of A. Annie Uoyt Feok. In his eighty-sevent- h year. services at hi late residence, (01 West Front treet, Flalnneld. N. J., on Tua-ds- November 11. at J: JO P. M. hlLET. On the 7th of November, 1919, at 1 P. M., Howard A., beloved husband ot Gertrude Riley (nee Connelly) and sin of Elisabeth and the lata John K'ley. Funeral on Monday at 8.30 o'clock from his late resident, fiezO Lincoln Drive, Philadelphia. Solemn requiem mas , u the Church of tb Mother of n. Chestnut avenue. Chestnut Hill, at 10 o'clock. Interment private, Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. ROGERS. Richard A. F., on November 7. byint In state \THE FUNERAL CHURCH\ (Campbell Bldr.). Broad-wi- r and BUty-ilit- h street. SCARBOROUGH. John Vanburen. at hi residence at Cincinnati, Ohio, Novem- ber 7. 1919. v funeral from his lata res'denoa. 1142 Madison road. Monday, November 10, at I P. M. Burial private. SCIIWEINFURTH. Charles F husband of Anna Mitchell Schwelnfurth, Satur- day, November 9. Services Cleveland, Ohio, Monday. No- vember 10, and at hla late rerldenc at Auburn. N. Y Tueday. November 11. Kindly omit flower. TTETI At New York Hospital, New Tork. Walter Edward Weyl, on November 9, In hi forty-seven- year. Funeral private. UNDERTAKERS. once in our Flowers fcrall SfiB?,!SM\. L?Mtnh. lnM.. . V. .1 ( I . I . . I . I ivguw mo uidciuuii uny uiiuiiuuii 11 dogmatize or to form a cult Thoy have banded together for this exhibition be- cause they hold one another In mutual respect like the members of the now American Painters. Sculptors. Gravers Society,, further up the avenue, and uupo 10 snow ore weir latest woms m a sympathetic atmosphere. This they do achieve, since their per formancos appear to be singularly on tho love no slang Intended. All of tho group save Mr. Volkcrt belong to tho ounger set of academicians, and paint with the conformity to rule that much admired at tho Academy. There Is no attempt anywhere to go against I ho traditions that were established a couple of generations ago by tho much martyrized members of the uarblzon group; and since most of those artists are practically painting over blazed trails tholr works lack the galvanla touch that explorers needs must have. Much of Obvious Falls. But there Is nlwava a huee section of the public That never thirsts to mount tho heights with great spirits, that never cares for stormy poetry nor Indeed for moods of any kind. To these the new X.VXtXt Is much nature. Any one wno nas seen Bunsnino recognizes at once that tho sun shines upon the cows In Mr. Volkert's paint- ing, although he may not have any particular sympathy for tho cows oa cows. The crisp outlines that aro presented to the oye on somo kinds of foggy dayn have been neatly recorded In Mr. Snell's \Gcry Weather,\ and his \Twilight\ with a yellow glare upon, water la also agreeable. Mr. Nichols's \Drying Sails\ la a clever study of an obviously picturesque subject and Mr. Clark's landscapes have sparkling color. Mr Olinsky and Mr. Potthast are both as dull as possible, though from different .causes Mr. Ollnsky'a style la too sweet; fr PfttthaRt'H tint Mwpat pnnuirh. English portraits now adorn .the IJhrlch Galleries and, of course, anions them are to bo found specimens by Sir Joshua Reynolds, Sir Henry Itae burn and Sir Thomas Lawrence. These artists usually dominate any exhibition of English portraits, although the astonishing news on the cables that a llomney has Just sold at auction In London for 8270,000 may cause on extra amount of attention to .bo lavished upon lomney's sketch of Lady Hamilton In ho present exhibition. Lawrence's portrait of Mrs. Cart-wrlg- ht Is unusual for him and all the Interest in the painting lies In the ron-lerl- of the pretty lady's faco. dux-- 1 rously done. Sir William Beechey's 'J Kid Chesterfield\ Is a solid piece of nn&tructlon with lively qualities and Rcburn's \Rev. James Lindsay\ Is tho readier to tho life. Two portraits by lames Northcote, Haztltt's friend, are ncluded, as well as a Hoppncr and an bbott PARTIES AT WHITE Several Coldhlats Entertain Gnesta at the Casino. Bptchl Dttpatc to Tub Sox. Whitb Sulphur Springs. W. Va.. Nov. 9. Several luncheon parties were Pln ..,, nt- - nrt Ernest R. Connett has arrived from New Tork to Join Mrs. Connett. Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Birth are here from Brooklyn. Major George Oakley Totten, Jr.. of Washington ta at tho nvAAnKulA ra Unnli.i Tan.k UtAHAnn uivsuuiwi, .iito. .itjf wa0 utotcuo and Mrs. Dewey Cooke of Savannah, Ga., also have arrived at the Greenbrier. Mr. and Mrs. Melville MaoNlchols and Mr. and Mrs. J tA. Conwav are hero from Washington. Cora Coun- tess of Strafford started last night for New York. Miss Virginia Hargraves Wood, who - spent a month here, has gone to her country place at Ivy, Va. Among those motoring here from Hot Springs for the day were Mr. and Mrs. Wlll'am W. Johnson of East Orange, N. J., Mrs. John B. Bird and Miss Rhoades of Wilmington and Mr. and Mrs. James B. Jackson of Elk-to- n, Md. Miss Mary Frederick of Earlehurst at Sweet Springs motored hero for tho day. She will start shortly for Wash- ington. Mrs. W. J. McCoy of Cadllac nnd Miss Lillian Moore of Saginaw, Mich., are at the Greenbrier. MANY VISIT HOT SPRINGS. New Torkera Among Recent Ar- rival at Virginia Tteaori. Sp4eUl Vtrpatck to Tnx Sex. Hot Speingb, Va.. Nov. 9. Mr. and Mrs. Cortland W. Handy. Mr. and Mrs. Francis G. Landon, Mr! and Mra Theo- dore 8. Watson, Mrs. Stephen Suydam Whitney, Stephen Whitney, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Brldgeford, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Flint Eton H. Hooker and Edgar J. Williams arrived here y from New York. Mr. and Mrs. John Hampton Barnes have arrived from Philadelphia; Mrs. Thomas Motley and Warren Motley are at the Homestead from Boston, and Mr. and Mrs. Olive P. Jaffaray came to-d- from Minneapolis to remain until November 21. John H. McCullough and Earl Dodge started nt ror New lork. Mrs. Frederick Pearson also has gone to New IVIA IMMD.l.E, .11. u nAO l.IU Homestead. BAPTIST PASTOR IN NEW ITElD The ner. J. II. Randall Joins Others In tho Community Church. The Rev. John Herman Randall, pas- tor of the Mount Morris Baptist Church, announced yesterday morning hs had re- signed to become associated with Dr. John Haynes Holmes and the Rev. Har vey D. Brown In the Community Church. in resigning,\ he said, \I renounce all label, of every kind, which, in an like this, are only misleading, if not al together false.\ The Community Church Is non-the- logical and Hotel Exposition Opens To-da- y. The fourth National Hotel Men's Ex- position opens this afternoon In Grand Central Palace. Innkeepers from every section of the country will attend. Three luncheons, two formal dinners and 'a number of buffet suppers and teas are on the schedule. Three floors of the Palace have been filled with ex- hibits. Resorts will advertise In stern. optlcon and motion picture displays, Bonifaces from France. Behrlum nri A FUKERAL ARRANGEMENT placed he there for all wee. hands, means atten I'nnrrr.l nrjIirHLotit, .pl.itlj tion to every detail, no matter now seem- ingly unimportant The Superior \CAMPBELL SERVICE\ Is the result of years of experience combined with the FrPcr selec- tion of materials at the right pr ce. Cttll\Co1umbu$ 8200\ Any Day or Night FRANK E. GATS I PB ELL FUNERAL CHURCJv (NOW SICVARIANI Brosdwav at66\St. 23-Str- eet at 8 Ave. Oetsskjin.Artl'llr SULPHUR. U.S'DKHTAhr.ltS. FILMS SIDE ISSUE IN MOVIE PALACES RoVUCS mid Mnstcal ProdUC- - tions tho Whole Thing Along White Way. LINGERIE IN BROADWAY \Scarlet Days,\ a Griffith Mas- terpiece in tho Rlvoli, Is Notable Exception. Vniinurtnt. thn tnA nf the nw Runitol. the Broadway motion picture palaces seem tending toward revues and elab- - orate musical productions, so that .ono Is astonished to find oneself suddonly confronted durlnir the nrosrarr.me with 2 m?t,0n p,CtUr- - W.1J\6 In XW, tasBe revue lhio .iotjh wiui mo .Jj tho grand theme, the Rlvoli preeonts scenes from the first act of \Faust sticking, like tho Strand In Its operatlo snapshot of last week, to the moro classic etyln of entertainment rathor than Indulging In tho frills, frivolities and Jeuno (lllcs that muko suburban hicks think New York a groat town. Moss's Broadway, however, goes fur- ther and Introduces for an Indeflnlte run .1 walking assortment of lingerie the \Parisian Fashion Frolic,\ described an having \everything French from glrla to gowns,\ and having so much of every- thing along that line that \A Regular Qlrl,\ tho feature plcturo In which Elslo Tanls makes her return to the scroen after two years, seoms very Irregular. After all this landslide toward the realms of variety offerings, ono might almost expect somo day at a cinema house to encountor a medicine show. \Scarlet Days,\ chief 111m In the Itlvoll, however, stands out amid the rush of music by reason of being a pro-dutl- by D. W. Griffith, manufactured out of sunshine and Imagination with all of Mr. Qrimth's masterly mixing of the usual gelatine ingredients of ro- mance. It Is a story of California In 49, when men's thoughts were of gold but not golden. Uarthelmeis Richard Barthclme3s, the young star of the picture, plays tho part of Don Atvaroz, a Spanish \bandit king\ and therefore handsome and dashing, a suro shot with the pistol and an even surer marksman with the women a char- acter Uiat Is said actually to have lived In thoBa glorious days when motion pic- ture scenarios wero lived and not acted. Alvarez chivalrously rescues Rotit Nel, a dance hall woman, from a mob of miners who are Infuriated because she has caused the death of one of their favorite dancers In a tight which arose through the favorite's attempt to steal Rosie Nell's savings from her \honest graft\ .dlvorci learns that these savings have been hoarded because Nell has a daughter being properly brought up In an Eastern boarding school and .Veil's Is to leave her crimson career, join her daughter , and have her fling at respectability. When the daughter arrives In the mining camp. Innocent and unacquainted with her mother's reputation. Alvarei prevails on tho mlrera t0 ieavo ti,em aone aB(j even . ... .... - . t totter htr cnimiiKe iaiui m nor momer, but afibr a few days a mob Is gathered by the dance hall proprietor, who wants tho daughter as only a dance hall pro prietor could want her. They attack the cabin where she la staying with her mother and Alvarce in a stirring fight defends her, aided by her young lovei' you didn't Imagine Alt-are- s was In love with her, did you? But their struggle Is hopeless and In order to have the sheriff save them from the mob the young Spaniard has to surrender to that ofllcer, whom he has been look like a tenderfoot. However, everything comes out all right through the Intervention of the bandit's Mexican sweetheart, so no woman patron will havo to cry herself to sleep after seeing the picture. Rise Above the Story. Mr. Griffith Is handicapped by his storV, as usual, but that only gives htm a chance to rise above It and make the story look foolish by his wizardry. This Is one of his finest productions, being well knit and Blncere nnd ono of the few examples on the screen of the scarlet days In the West that don't make a sane man see red. Mr. Barthel. does a smooth piece of work that stamps him as a real \comer able to register his poll's effectively with or wtl mi a cigarette. At the Strand Katherlne MacDonald displays her loveliness to advantage In \The Thunderbolt,\ being more fortunate than most visions of the pictures In that she has talents massed behind her pul- chritude. Somewhat after the fashion of her previous offering, \The Woman Thou Gavest Me,\ tho heroine Is forced Into a loveless marriage to save her father, who has fallen Into the power of a bitter enemy by going through several Illegal transactions without a smart lawyer. But Is the downhearted? Not And lg ine heroine? We'll say she ain't Sne works ner way tnrough t0 a clean . . . . . i a a a I and Thomas Me.ghan and the precious ! ability to have the rteht man lovo her eventually. It's a good picturego take tho wlfo nnd the motner-ln-la- nnd show them what a loveless homo Is really like. A Chester scenic, a comedy, an analysis of motion, solos by Alys Mlchot nnd Malcolm McEochern and dippings lro \La Bohcme\ by the orchestra offer ii change of scene from the feature. In tho Rlalto Bryant Washburn la 4droItly amuwng In \It Pys to Adver- tise,\ converted by Elmer Harris from the stage play about the young man who lto?Ta&. turo In the Capitol la \The Girl from Outside,\ In which Rex Beach pictures tho thrilling experiences of an orphan girl In the power of crooks In the Klon- dike, with mountains and red blood all around her. CORNELL MEN RAISING FUND. Mnatcnl CInb to Visit New Tork In Drive W'lndnp Jnnnary 3. Ithaca, Nov. 9. Undergraduates are \\ \B \\\ ;;,,\\,,v''' tin nw minr riinn nr 'rrn mivamrv. Xi:r,rt..7..r t7. .hjertlve. The slogan adopted, which has been carried about In serenades at Turtle nt Farm. An. unusually largo number auto - mobile parties went to Karrt ; Hotel, AVhlto IMalns, X. Y.. yesterday. Among tho arrivals thero wero Mlfls D. THE SUN, MONDAY, rac'BROADWAYTOSEE Has Largest Number of Stu- dents at University. Special btipotcS to Tui Be. PalNOBTO.v, N. J., Nov. D. Forty-thre- e States and ten foreign countries are represented In the undergraduate body of Princeton University this year, according to flguros given out to-d- by John Drier Hluben, president of Prince- ton University. New York State, with 339 representa- tives, leads tho Statos of tho country In tho number of Btudonts. New Jersey la second with 340, and Pennsylvania Is third vlth 337. The enrolment by States and foreign countries follows: Alabama, 4; Arizona, 1 : Arkansas, 7 ; California, 17 ; Colorado, 13; Connecticut, 17; Delaware, 13; Dis- trict of Colombia, 35 ; Florida, 9 ; Georgia, 8; Illinois, 19; Indiana, 9; Kansas, 1; Kentucky. 19: Louisiana. 9: Matno, z; ' land. 6;U3:M,c t; Missouri, 28; Montana. 2: Nebreskx 6 ; New Hampshire, 8 ; New Jersey, 840 ; New York m. Norlh Carouna, 4; . .u . all . r.i.ii.nm. \ Penney vania7l Tnhode . ',and g . south Carolina. 0 : Tennessee. jo j Texas, 83; Utah. 2; Vermont, 1; Virginia, ; Washington, a; west vir glnla, 8 ; Wisconsin, 6 ; Canada, 3 ; China, T ; Egypt, 1 ; England, S ; Japan, I ; Persia, 1 ; Phlllpplno Islands, 1 ; Sweden, 1; Switzerland, 1; Syria, 1. Princeton's total undergraduate en- rolment, according to statistics Just com- piled' by the registrar's office, Is 1,084. Of this number 372 aro members of tho senior class, 356 are Juniors, 416 are sophomores, nnd 426 freshmen. There nro 116 qualifying men who Lave transferred their credits to Prince- ton from other colleges and who will have qualified at the end of the first Urm provided their work has been sat- isfactory to become full fledged mom-lie- is of tho class they aro now tenta- tively with. FRIENDS OF MUSIC IN FIRST CONCERT Bodnnzky nnd Metropolitan Chorus Participate in Am- bitious Programme. If Alessnndro Bond, once upon tx time tenor for Oscar Hammersteln, had not fallen a victim to a cold there would have bflen eight concerts yesterday. A new scries began at the Manhattan Opera House, the Symphony Society re- peated In Aeolian Hall its Thursday pro- gramme, except the symphony, which was yesterday Beethoven's second ; John McCormack, Sophie Braalau. Greta Tor-pad- le and Katherlne Wyte gave recitals and the once private and exclusive Friends of Music, Indefatigable explorers of byways, emerged Into \full publicity (tickets fold at the door) with their first concert at tho Music far from tho madding opera was performed thero under the direction of Artur Bodanxky with a chorus from the Metropolitan Opera House and musicians from the New Symphony Orchestra. The programme consisted of Beethoven's \Prometheus\ overture, played on Thurs day by tho Boston Orchestra, four songs for women's voices, two norns aim ni. opus 17, .Brahms, and tho same master's \Ave Maria,\ for women's voices and nhtra Momrt'B noturno for four tma orchestras, and Schubert's setting nt tv, inrontv. third Psalm The nottumo for four orchestras by Mozart Is not a formidable work, as Its description Implies. It undoubtedly was composed In 1777 some time between February nnd July, and each of tho four orchestras consists of two violins, viola, bass and two horns. No Berlioz In this. The plan of the composition Is founded on\ the echo effect It fact Mozart him- self wrote on the score the word \echoes.\ What happen? The first \orchestra\ announces a phrase, the considerable part of It. second repeats a the third only the last part and the fourth merely the final notes. It Is a species of musical ploosantry quite ancient In Instrumental music Michael Haydn was a of the trick. Did Mozart learn something from himself? If you wouM revel in such speculations, conducted with Pwjound nnd learning, sclentinc method Iterary touch, read - W.A. Mozart sa Vie Muslcale et son Oeuvro de 1 Enfonce a la Plelne Maturlte\ by T de Wyzewa Brahms8 wntten valuable material to Concerts of the kind empted b- - ttese industrious Friends of Music His Ave Maria\ Is not unknown to fame, iijj ionga for three female voices, horns and harp are especially Interesting because In them Brahms uses tone color more One was composed to than Is his habit translation of tho song n German Come Away. Death\ from \Twelfth Night\ nnd another on Osslans tin- - Muchncurloslty should be aroused In polite circles by these scholarly dely-in- Into the hidden mines of which lie so far away from the realms 1..MAlt-- 1 otlll M ILHt If 1 L. tCil\i t\ one of the \Ay. Maria,\ ana aeepiy kii buihv-..- .. - -- - - 'aroused even rnotlon. It J; so was me uivii'b tlon, daintily performed with little or- chestras scattered all over one end of the ballroom. . Sophie Braslau's programme at carr negle Hall In tho afternoon was ono of pleasant Interest. It comprised tho customary group of old airs, some folk songs and some Hebrew lyrics. In the folk and Jewish music Miss Braslau was at her best while her recital as a whole displayed those features of tonal variety nnd dramatic feeling familiar to admirers of her singing. She Is ono oi the most Interesting of song recital ar- tists and Is heard to better ndvantage on the concert platform than on the operatlo stnge. Greta Torrtadie, soprano, often heard here before, sang In the afternoon In the Princess Theatre. Among her num- bers were two \revolutionary\ melodies arranged by Samuel Endlcott Kramer's \The Faltering dusk, nve songs by Ornsteln. two by Reginald Barlow and others by Walter Golde and Fritz 'Krelsler. The appealing charm ine held the attention of . ner audience. The limitations of ner voice ana mt A ,1,. ns.n.h trnn.iailnnn nnd J\!\ v naminiAv. Coenrsad Bos ea\'e Tceomplrnenu for the tnXAmerlca.\ Mr. .Morris played Beethoven'a \Ruins ot Athens\ march and Doyn'n \American Humoresquo.\ I John McC'ormack gave a recital In tho J evening In the Hippodrome. Tho audi- - South America are expected to be pres., ono would endow a professorial charr In f?f2!j\ Efted evident of th ent and about everything; that a mod- -. perpetuity the campaigners rose to the \m\;t .n'ved irss Tor- ero hotel should have and produce win ,m d,.ti,.,i amount u an m\.!\ av!P& to Hour, THE I. In ambition making audience students ............ .v- - ..- - , s nger In h s UBuai artistic manner. ''\ZTm3' In the afternoon at the Manhattan H.000 Keep a Prof, and Hla 0pera 0UM waj given the first In a Fnml'y for One Million Years I Help of concerU , whlcn oniy j. Perpetuate inm. I can artists are to bo heard. The solo- - The musical clubs will devote the pro- - , Florence Hlnkle. soprano, eds of the Christmas vacation toar to ReInaW Werrenrath. barytone, and Ed-th- e . fluid, winding up with o drive In d MorrU planlat. Mss Hlnkle w York city January 3. The sixty ht( tne nudIenee w,h nor vocai skill fraternities havo put out house com- -' ,,e Mr Werrenraath 'commanded to boost the campaign. prova f0-- r hIs sjngmg of Grieg sons (In \' ! CnlprVn lfvmn VnmiAiiInn nnrl ITn rrv \A Motor Geilnej- - of Gcdncy master IHrden, Mr. and Mrs. George r. Jllller torlum and Etago were crowueu wan of New Yorlr, Mr. and Mrs. t. A. enthusiasts. As usual Mr. McCormacI: frpoakman of WilmMngtin, Hel., and Jlr. bang them rouio Hnmlel for their nyn Mra (I. 1. 'rnmcitng ot urooklyn, good before i:itiuK llmm llhto. Iniitl C. a, Troup of Rlcisswood, jf. J. jcan lyrics and lrbl foil; soajjs. I NOVEMBER 10, 1919. IX 1TD fl(T fiAMUnVc,lt''mPlate1; Quoted ono manager as llMlT 1 1 1 aylng that armistice twice vvx uviimu x lMt year( whch waa qulte enough. '; , 2. Mayor's ofllce, City, Hal, call at .10:55 A. It., knew nothing concerning W . Awiirs \Fall any clvl celebrations next Tuesday, re- injury CMUgO .Urni ln(julrer t0 the Boar(i,0 Alder-- Tido to Launch New Lin- - i n A volcedi ,,anony. coin Play. YET. MINSTKELS COMING riii jiuijj inuiiiitfAu uiiu ji.vui11 Celebrate 45 th Anniversary on Wednesday. Cape Cod foks are to be Introduced to tho stage here. cor?dled by Joseph' C. Lincoln, who set them up to such a good time In magazines and books. Henry W. Savage has accepted a com- edy of that region from Mr. Lincoln an.l Is holding It for a full tide In theatre-do- when it will got under way on Broadway with a title In tow. About twenty minstrel veterans, headed by Fred Wilson, 92 years old, tho oldest minstrel on two legs, havt accepted Invitations to cluster abouK tho minstrel llrst part ot \tteno Alex- ander,\ at tho Forty-fourt- h Street The ntre at the matinee on Wednesday, when Mclntyro and Heath will eclebruta their forty-fift- h nnnlvereary as part- ners without tiring of each ither's Jokes. Other preparations for the Veunion aro going forward, such as the dinner nfter-war- d at the N. V. A. clubhouse, and Adjutant Greneker states that tho soup course Is In perfect running order. E. F. Albco, the guest of honor, has written to llio blackfaco stars a congratulatory letter, harking back to the days when they wero the llrst team booked b It. F. Keith In Boston at a salary of $200 a week, which Bet tho American rnd world's records for those times. Company on World Tonr. \Civilian Clothes,\ \Nightie Night.\ \Up In Mabel's Room\ and \The Woman in Room 13\ are plays which will be used by a globe trotting dra- matic company to reveal to the rest of tho world, particularly Asia, the condi- tion of American civilization and bed- rooms. Tho company, sailing Immedi- ately from San Francisco for China. Japan and India, will keep away from Broadway for two years. It will bo headed by Warda Howard, who han been part of the stock. of Eastern stock companies and also, as leading' woman for Henry B. Walthall, has been acr oesory after tha fact with him In movies. Otis Skinner, safely pacVed away In his company, has gone to Buffalo. w,here ho will ascend In the scale In \Tho Rise of Peter Barban,\ the new comedy which Mrs. Skinner and Jules Eckort Goodman reduced to paper with Mr. Skinner's comfort In view. Three's n Crowd,\1 a comedy by Earl Derr niggers and Christopher Morley, which Is John Cort's first attempt of the season to forget tho musical comedy game, will ho taken out nnd thoroughly aired nt Stamford ht Phoebe Foster will receive; The seat sale nt tho Theatre Parlslen for the opening performances of \Main Gauche\ a comedy, and \Chonchette.\ n comedy with music, has begun. In preparation for the first night on Tues-dn- y, November IS, when New Yorkers will have an opportunity to laugh In French. , Mmc. Sylva In Movie. Mme. Marguerite Sylva, prima donna, has arrived in Santa Barbara to keep nn appointment with u motion picture camera. Besides a series of dramas de- manding a steady supply of emotion, Mmc. Sylva will strike the screen dumb with a new version of \Carmen tho most photographed opera In the world, which she first put on the screen In Seville, amidst the surroundings and cigarette smoke native to the work. Notice la hereby served on tho whole army that Elslo Jnnls and-h- er company will strafe caro with a \bomb proof revue\ In Baltimore and every- one present will be allowed to snicker right out In ranks. A professional matinee of \Palmy Days' the Augustus Thomas play at the Playhouse, In which Arthur Hop- kins Is starring Wilton Lackayo's whis- kers, will enab'.o the rest of the trade playing here now to see how the other half lives this Tuesday afternoon. Bessie McCoy Davis Is wearing a new gown In the last act of the \Green- wich Village Follies\ at tho Nora Bayes Theatre, entirely on her own respon- sibility. Ruby Norton of \fiotmng uui lyovo. the Theatre, ball of Eugene a decorations presented to her by Lieut C. Parsons of Laiayette and found difficulty In keeping her balance when sho danced but she wouldn t take 'cm off. Her earrings were the Medalllo Mllltalre and tho Cross of a Knight ot the Order of Leopold: her necklace Included the Croix da Guerre with eight palms ; her shoulders had tho green and yellow fouragerre of a French citation : her brooch was the silver stork of the Gueneymer squadron, but her com plexion was her own. Play In Rehearsal. William has casting for Bruce Reynolds's play, \Lifting the and the will be cast Into rehearsals this week. The first of the Jane Manner drama readings to be given at the on Tuesday afternoons at 8 o'clock will take place with Paul Horvleu's The Trail of Torch,\ with which tho New York has never U1 lit up. Broadway Is up In arms over armis- tice Elizabeth Hlnes of \Seo-Saw- \ at the George M. Cohan The- atre will give an armUtlce eve party In honor of Guy Robertson, her dancing partner, and Walter and Theodore Bellinger, Jerry Walsh, Fred Ryker and Wesley Totten, with whom she Binga tho \Join tho Navy\ number and who left the navy not so long ago. John Charles Thnmn.q. Wtlda Bennett and tho other principals of \Apple Blossoms\ at the I GIODO Will giVC ail tHIiom.u ya.bj morrow night for Stanley Wood, manager tho operetta, who helped stage manage the with the Twenty-seven- th Division. Yet despite this evi- dence Cornelia Lathrop. word fnr \Nlchtla Night\ at the Princess The atre, Is still uncertain whether armistice 'day Is a holiday, and sends the \nUTTON'S PERSONAL GREETING CARDS irftttlff merit. Ueslias for Chrlsim Mil Nrw Year mi rtrth ATtnis oPfSt.TlibMaiCkurtk DIAMONDS We BuyDlamondsand Diamond Jewelry Estates, Individuals and Dank. JOSEPH WOODWORTH WEEKS Diamond Dealer tt Cash Ilujer 5th 1W S MAIDEN LANE Cort 939 pnir report of her researches on the. Advertlslng'ngcncy called at 10:45; tinAATOrrmil rhnt nn fmjMil mfttlnees were 'mous lady who Insisted she was neither tho Board of Aldermen nor Cortland 6770. Inconclusive. 4. 11:03 A. M., Central operator \ScusoltpleaBo.\ 6. 11:10 A. M .Board of Aldermen; had not voted upon proposal to legalize tho holiday. No meeting announced fur mat purpose, 6. 11 :16 A. M., large department storu, ' executive olllcos didn't know what next Tuesday meant In Its life. \Peacu Peace of what?\ 7. 11:20 A. II., Stock Exchange. Had no holdings In prospective holiday, but office boy on phone had hopes. OBITUARY. Hit. SAMUEL D. CIIILDS. Funeral services will be held for Dr. Samuel Balash Chllds, a well known Brooklyn physician, who died on Saturday. Ie was 70 years old .nnd had been for forty-fiv- e years a physi- cian In the service of the ,Falth Home for Incurables at 54C Park place, Brook- lyn. Dr. Chllds estimated that during his connection with tho Faith Homo he hnd made 15,750 visits to It He was a graduate of the Medical College of University of New York and had prac- tised medicine In Brooklyn for fifty years. Ho suffered a stroke of paralysis eight years ago. He a member of tho Kings County Medical Society and the Central Congregational Church.- - He lived at 498 Classon avenue and Is sur- vivor! hv his wife. Mrs. Harriet IC CI1IM3; a son, Dr. Albert Chlld.i atjjj a uaugnicr, WILLIAM W. OOLNIL William W. Colne, 56 years old, and Alderman-elec- t from the Forty-sixt- h Aide-man- ic district, Brooklyn, died yes tordnv In his home. 11 Irving place, ot heart failure. He Is survived by his father, Charles Colne. He was graduated from Georgetown University nnd was elected to tho As sembly In 1905. Afterward he became Interested in the business of foreign and domestic patents. Just prior to the re- cent election In which he waB a candi- date, he fell 111 with pneumonia, but re- covered In time to tako part In his cam- paign. During the campaign he con- tracted heart failure. Ho was elected on the Republican ticket. will be held In 352 Green avenue, Brooklyn, on Wednesday night He will be ' eta Thurs- day. VIItaiNIA SALINAS OAIIRANZA. Mexico Citt, Nov. 9. Virginia wife of Venustlano Car- - ranza, Presldejjt of Mexico, died this, afternoon in gueretaro. Senora Carranza had been ill for four months, and nil hope for her recovers' was abandoned several days ago. 3IRS. AMANDA V. II. EDWARDS. Mrs. Amanda V. D. Edwards, mother qf Senator Clarence Case of Som-crvlll- e, N. J., nnd tho Rev. Clifford P. Case of Poughkeepsle, N. Y., Is dead at her home at Somenille after a long Illness. Y. W. 0. A. HAS NEW QUARTERS Harlem Ilrnnch Plan Drive to Aid Unemployed Girl. Tho Y. W. C A. branch In Harlem has moved Into a new administration building, built at n cost of $500,000. at Lenox avenuo nnd 124th street One of the chief activities to be pushed there will be the question of employ- ment for women and girls. The asso- ciation has taken over the management of the staff of the United States Em- ployment which had been lo- cated thero, and Is seeking especially positions for middle aged women, un- trained, who constitute about 37 pet cent of the applicants. It Is estimated that the minimum living wage for a woman working In this city Is $14.82 a week, and offers of positions below that figure will not bo filed. A room registry department Is also to be conducted In an effort to help solve the housing problem of the work- ing girl. Mra. lleeckmnn In Newport. Newport, Nov. 9. Mrs. Beeckman, wife of Gov. Beeckman, spent the week end here. Mrs. C. M. Butt has returned v'-.- r. Vnrlr Mra Wllllftm OmRVA- - end guest here. the musical comedy at Lyric Mr has gone t0 providence for the win-wo- re at a recent a heavy load ter Mrs g. Reynal was week Edwin tne Xevr Caryl completed Mask,\ company Waldorf tho stage been day. stage of war manager follow. i.ii..Bf from tho was Funeral services buried State Bureau, THE BAUER CHEMICAL Street York WALTER WEYL DIES IN HOSPITAL HERE Government Economist Had Been III Two Weeks. Walter Edward Weyl, an economist, frequently engaged In Government sur- veys, died yesterday In New York Hns-plt- al following an Illness ot two weeks with Intestinal trouble. He- - was re- garded as an authority on labor ques- tions, and was the author of a largo number of .books nnd pamphlets dealing with the economic sldo of the problem. From 1914 to 1916 he was an associate editor of tho Neut Republic. Mr. Weyl was born In Philadelphia March 11, 1873, tno son of Nathan and Mmllle Stern Weyl. He was graduated from the University of Pennsylvania In 1892,\ and continued In work In his chosen profession. For thro years ho studied abroad, specializing In political economy nt Halle, Berlin and Paris. His services were drafted by the United States Department of fo. Investigations In Europe In 1898, In Mexico In 1901 and In Porto Rico. The Information ho gathered was embodied in reports which had an' important bear- ing on the situation nt that time. Dur- ing this period, from 1899 to 1900, ho was also retained as a statistical expert cn Interstato commerce by the United StatC3 Bureau of Statistics. Jlr. Weyl's writings Included the pub- - llcatlon of a work on passenger tralllf of railroads. In 1901; \The New Democ- racy,\ In 1912, and \American World Policies.\ In '1317. During his connec We hear that \John the old-cloth- es man\ is having a hard time to get hand me-down- that where it was.possible before the war to get four or five suits from the average family, he's lucky now if he gets one or two. All of which say's much for the practical side of the \extravagant American\! Once, his \rogerspeets\ outwore his patience! Now he's patiently wear- ing them out! (The writer's two year old tweed jollied up so well in the hands of the cleaners that even his family thought it was new!) Notwithstanding, our stores just hum with the de mand for fine clothing. Must be that- - old friends ire spreading the gospel of unending money wisely. Many thanks. Rogers Peet Company Broadway Broadway tt 13th St. \Four at 34th St Convenient Broadway Cornera\ Fifth Ave. at Warren atist St \and then with just a few weeks more af Sanatogen\ the road to health at last! And yet how ON you are to be up and going. But it ia now, when the system is trying to rebuild it store of energy, that you will be most grateful for the reconstructive help of Sanatogen. Sanatogcn, you must know, is a natural food tonic, combining purest albumen with organic phosphorus thus conveying to the wasted system the vital elements to build up blood and tissues and it is so remarkably easy of digestion that the most delicate young and old can take it, with nothing but beneficial effects. the anoetito. assists digestion, and ai a phrsidsa In \Tho Practitioner,\ a leading medical journal, says, \It teems to possess a wonderful effect in increasing the nutritive value of other food material.'1 When we tell you that Sapatogen is used by the medical . profession all over the world as an aid to convalescence and u an upbnilder of strength and vitality, that more than 21,000 physicians have written letters commending it, you will under-un- d that our confidence in recommending it to you is fina and sincere. Won't you give Sanatogen the opportunity to help bring back you or lomeone Uiat is near ana acsr tealth and strength? Sanatogen is sold by good drnggUti everywhere, in sites from $1.00 up. Grand Prif ti Dm International Conon ef Utdmnt, Undtn, tilS Write for interesting boohltt to CO, Ine. 115 West 18th New City Labor tion with tho Department of Labor he , was the author of many of the olllclal t bulletins. Ho was a member of tho American Economic Association, the American Academy of Political and Social Sclonce and a number of similar organization. His resldenco was. at Woodstock, N Y. Ho leaves his wife, who was Jllse Bertha Poolq, and threo brothcrsTn of whom, Julius, lives In Philadelphia. WILL ENTERTAIN WALES. Pllffrlma Will Hnro Prince n durst November 111. J, Tho Pilgrims Society, of which Chnun-ce- y M. Depow Is president, will entertain tho Prince of Wales at a fnrowoll and godspeed dinner, at tho Waldorf-Astori- a, on Friday night, November 21, on the eve of his departure for England. The dinner takes the place of the one which was to have been given by the; Prince on tho battleship Renown that evening. mmmmm mm mwaaA This (Monday) Afternoon nt 2)30, continuing Tuesday 1 Wednesday, Thursday and rndaj at the same hour nnd Tomorrow (Tuesday) Evening at 8 o'clock The Notable Private Collection of. Antique Treasures formed by the late Mrs. F. H. Bosworth ALSO to nr. soi.i) o WEDNESDAY EVENING AT 8 A Collection of Valuable Paintings of tho Foreign and American Schools The Property of Several Estate and Private Collectors -- AND- SATURDAY AFTERNOON, of This Week at 2:30 Tho Antique & Artistic Property of the Amateurs Edwin I sham & George Devoll ON FREE VIEW 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. and continuing until tin date ot tale The Sales WJ11 Bo Comlucted by MR. THOMAS i:. KirtllT ml lilt a\fltann Mr. Otto llrrnet oiul Mr. II. II. Patl'e. AM EK I CAN ART ASSOCIATION, Managers, 3. A and 0 East 33il St.. Mailtson Sq. South. The \tremendous\ novels BLASC0 ! BAN El \greatest of modern nbveliil ,\ avaze the reader ly their ii ttme vital ty and the splendid poiver of his narrations. The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse Mare Nostrum (Our Sea) The Shadow of the Cathedral Blood and Sand La Bodega At all Ilookstores. SI.90 cadi, postage extra, E. P. DUTTON & CO. New York ASK FOR and GET HorEicfc's Tho Original malted milk For Infanta and Invalids Aveid Imitation utl Snbttituta a y