1
Bridal Party Of Miss Gray Entertained Her Marriage to Cameron O'Day Macplicr8oia Will Take Flaco Saturday; Dinner for Miss Emmet . Sale to Aid Hers p it a ! Society and Staate Unite to Make St. Valentine Ball for Charity a Success Uiss .Tennnette Chappell.who will at- tend Mis9 Laur« Blossom Gray at her; marriage on Saturday to Cameron O'Pav Macphorson, cave a luncheon «esterd» at the Kitz-Cariton for the bride and bridesmaids. After the lunch- eon Miaa Chappell took her quests to <ee "Irene," at the Vanderbilt. In the ùnrt y were Miss Gray'a cousin. Miss Katharine Langdon Hi!!, of Boston; Vr Macpherson's cousin. Miss Gene* "ovo" Stone, Mrs. John O'Day, Miss Catherine Noyes, Misa Elsie Morrill .;n<i Miss Victorine Kellogp. " \jjss Gray's parents, Mr. and Mr?. Oiia D. Gray« w<" continue the enter¬ taining for the bridal party this eve¬ ning, when they will give a theater rsrty. followed by a supper and dance ir, the crystal room of the Ritz-Carlton. They will take their guests to see Otis Skinner at the Criterion. Mr. and Mrs. Gray bave taken a suite at the St. Re</is ior two weeks. Another future bride. Miss Elizabeth V. Emmet, was entertained last eve- ning by her mother. Mrs. C. Temple Emmet, who gave a dinner for her ;it -he Colony Club. Miss Emmet's en¬ gagement to Edwin D. U. Morgan jr. .,vas recently announced. No date has been set for the wedding. Under the a ispices of Mrs. Frederic Neilson, Mis. Charles James Welsh, Mrs.'ion-y Waters Taft and others, an auctit-n a. was held yesterday for! the benel I of the New Foundling Hos- pital, at its home, 175 East Sixty- eighth Stre«t. The sal-e will be con¬ tinued to-day. Mr. and Mrs. William Í'. Guthrie gave a dinner last evening at their home, 28 Park Avenue. In the Brick Presbyterian Church, Fifth Avenue and Thirty-seventh Street, Miss Barbara M. Shedd, daughter of Mr. nnd Mrs. John M. Shedd, will be mar¬ ried this aftern «on to Thomas Chan¬ dler Wayland' The ceremony will be followed by a reception at the Cosmo¬ politan Club. The ¡natron of honor will bel Countess Salm-Hoogstraeten and desmaids will be Mist Annette Davis, Miss Sarah Sturgis, Miss Sylvia Holt. Miss Priscilla Husterl ar.u Miss '.'..... et Geer. Elton S. Wayland will serve his brother as best man, and the bride's brother, W. G. Thayer Shedd; Jame? \V. iTusted jr., Shipley Thomas n [sham will be the ushers. Another wedding to-day will be that of <~ Dorothy vassar Baker, daugh¬ ter > :'.: 5. E. Vassar Baker, of Ballston Spa, N'. V., to John W. Stafford, of this crty. The wedding will take place in pel of St. Bartholomew's Church and will be followed by a reception at the Plaza. Robert K. Stafford will be hi? brother's bes; man, and bis ushers will lie Mortimer Cobb, Harold Schall, Philip Kaufmann and Vladimir Behr. Mr. Stafford is the son, by a form, r marriage, of Mrs. J. Stafford Murthey, of 330 Pajrk Avenue. His bride is a grai of the founder Vassar V' md Mrs. Hamilton Carhartt ¡cave Palm Beach, where they have i ittage at the Everglades Club. On ti ir way Xorth they will spend a month at their plantation in South Carolina. They plan to sail for Eurepe early ir, May and will spend the sum- ill there. wing the fancy of the moment, t and the stage will unite or: ly evening to make the St. Val- ne far y dress ball, for the benefit of the American Free Milk and Relief for Italy, the great success this splendid y deserves, Th> dance will be hi '.,>, at the Hotel Vanderbilt, where the ds of the society v.ill make merry in .:.!¦ Delia P.obbia room. The chorus from the Midnight Frolic will present of tie popular numbers now be¬ ing riven at the Xew Amsterdam Roof Theater. Miss Elsie Jar.is promises to .'.! papt, present and future to all who will cross her oalm with silver, for the benefit of the war sufferers of Italy. Train loads of sufferers from are beii £ taken to hospitable Italy and sharing the generosity of coi : h it rs to the fund. Some 40,000 Austrian children are being taken «'are f i-; rtalv, Boxes at $100 and tickets acn may be had at the Hotel rb it a::'.! also at the Plaza. Mrs. '" ¦'am Drako is president of the rganization. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Alsop, of Avon, Conn., will spend the week-end in tow:i with Mrs. Alsop'8 mother, Mrs. Douglas P.' bin! in, at the latter'a home, :;'i:. y-third Street. Lucy 1 Ulrich, who since her from t: e Orient has bren visit- br >tl r-in-law and sister. Mr. Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, has re- to her home at Warwick, R. 1. Mi Nelson Vanderbilt has pone to " City with her daughter, Miss athleen Vanderbilt. They have re- it .i from their recent attacks of grippe. George VV. Vanderbilt and her ex, Miss Cornelia Vanderilt, who «pent most of the winter in town, have arrived at Mimi, Fla., where they will occupy the Pancoast cottage for the mainder of the month. Mrs. William Harbour, of 11 West Fifty-third Street, will give a dinner and theater party Saturday evening for 'i Celen A. Carrero, daughter of Mis. L. Sidney Carrere, of I'd" East ty-third Street, and Frederick K. is children*» day. Bring the children in. All kiads ol valentines in our card room. Open Lincoln's Birthday. .681 FIFTH AVE., near ¿Uli St. f *H- .-. - -i She is now at Palm Beach, and is one of the most, active members of the winter colony. She is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Phipps. Bnrbour, Mrs. Bnrhour's son. Miss Carrere and Mr. Bnrbour aro to be married on Tuesday in St. James's Church. Tlvo ¡Victor Corps of America will give it bridge at the general staff head¬ quarters, 98 Park Avenue. Wednesday next to assist the ambulance fund. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hayes Morgan crave a box party at the Lexington Theater last night. Mr. Morgan is High Commissioner of the United States to Belgium. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Gardner, of East Orange, N. J., announce tho engagement of their daughter, Miss Dorothy Gardner, to i. Bardsley lion- wood, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford M. Hopwood, of New York. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Stevenson and Mrs. John R. Fell have come to the city for a few days from Westbury, Long Island, and ave at the Hotel St. Regis. Henry T. Sloane lias returned to Palm Beach from a fishing trip. Ho will be joined in a few days by his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.- George 1). Yfidener, oi" Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Widener, of Philadelphia, will go to Palm Beach in a few days to spend the remainder of the season there. Mr. and Mrs. Jorge Andre have left Palm Beach on a two weeks' fishing trip. Miss Margaret Ruhe Bride of H. C. Weltzien Reception in St. Regis Follows Ceremony in St. James's Church Miss Margaret Ruhe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Francis II. Rahe, of 225 West lOSth Strei/, was married last evening to Henry Charles Weltzien, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Weltzien, of Flat- bush. The wedding look place in St. James's Church, Madison Avenue and Seventy-third Street. Following the ceremony, which was performed by th'e pastor, the Rev. Julius D. Remensnyder, there was a reception at the St. Regis. That was followed by supper and dancing. Miss Caroline Cant was the maid of honor, and the bride's other attendants were Mrs. John Anger, Mrs. Brock Dear, Miss Helene Beckerman and Miss Isabel Lee. The flower girl was Miss Marie Fensterer. The best man was John Anger. The ushers were Henry Riese, Arthur Graes, Elliott Downs and Francis 11. Ruhe jr. After their honeymoon in tho South Mr. Weltzien and his bride will live in this city. Cold Storage Egg Price Drops 10 Cents a Dozen Market Commissioner Edwin J. O'Malley reported yesterday a further drop of 10 cents a dozen in cold storage eggs, a 2-cent drop in butter a pound, and a drop of 1 cent in domestic cheese. He said that this di .-, will be reflected in the retail trade in a day or two. M (rehauts in Denmark, according to C mmissioner O'Malley, have given him assurance that they will ship un¬ limited quantities of potatoes, cab- bago and butter to New York to sell '. ere greatly under prevailing prices. Two shiploads each of 4,000 tons of potatoes and cabbage will arrive next week. All will be kept in the New York market. Commissioner O'Malley declared that the influx of foreign products will put on the market large quantities of potatoes, butter and cabbage being held in storage in the East, and should force the general market downward. The Denmark potatoes, he said, should retail for $5 a bag, and the cabbage 7 cents a pound, as against the present price of-about 14 cents. Amherst Dinner on Saturday The faculty, musical ciubs and the entire senior class of Amherst College have been inivted to attend the dinner of the Amhorst Alumni Association of New York, to be held Saturday night in tho Hotel Commodore. One of the speakers at the dinner will be Frederick H. (¡illeit, Speaker of the House of Representatives, whe was graduated from Amherst with the Class of 1874. William C. Breed, pres¬ ident of the association, will preside. Collin Armstrong, chairman of the dinner committee, has appointed an assistant from each class of the alumni to cooperate with him in an effort to exceed last year's attendance at the dinner, which was more than 800. Thi innovation, started last year of serv¬ ing dinner to the women in the boxes will be continued at this gathering. 'Loyalty Week" Feb. 22 to 28 ALBANY, Feb. 11..Governor Smith, in a proclamation to-day, designated the week of February 22 as "Loyalty Week" and urged all public officials churches, schools and the press to co¬ operate in an effort "to combat th« effect of insidious and destructivo prop aganda." . . Food Profits Nobody's Business, Dr. Day Says Will' IVol île Used to Corrupt Any Public Official, Is His Reply to O'Malley Replying-to the question raised by Edwin J. O'Malley, Commissioner Markets, as to what Dr. Jonathan Day, special deputy for the sale of navy foodstuffs, was doing with the profits accruing from this sale, Dr. Day said yesterday that "It is nobody's business what I am doing with these profits and I if there are any ' profits they belong to me." In raising the question, Mr, O'Malley said Dr. Day "ought to have made .$150,000, at least." "1 do not know yet whether there will be any considerable surplus after expenses had been deducted," said » r. Day, "but Mr. O'Malley need not worry himself about it, because I do not in¬ tend to give any of it to him. I can assure him that any surplus will not be used to corrupt any public official." In reply to the charge of David Hirshfield, Commissioner of Accounts, that the signatures on a petition ask- ing the city to pay for the services o,' volunteers who helped Dr Day in the salr> of army foodstuffs, when the latter were under his charge, were not authentic. Dr. Day said he knows nothing about these signatures and is not taking any part in the circulation of the petition. "One such petition was brought to me," said Dr. Day, "and I signed it. I can vouch for the genuineness of my signature." Going On To-day DAY American Museum of Natural History; art-' mission free. Metropolitan Museum of Art; admission free. American Museum of Safoty; admission free. \';in Cortlandt Park Museum; admission 25 cents. Tho. Aquarium; admission free, Zoological Park; admission 26 cents. Address by Mrs. Jackson Fleming on "For¬ eign Altars In Relation t.> tho United Aoollan Hall, l- a. m. Klnmenl of the Athonia Club, Wal¬ dorf-Astoria, 2 p. i:.. Meeting of the Daughters of the Empire State, Waldorf-Astoria, 2 p. m. Luncheon 61 the Euterpe Club. Waldorf Asl 01 la, ll a. m. Convention of the Qossard Company, Hotel' McAlpin, ¡i a. in. Convention of the Association of House Painters and Decorators, Hotel Astor, 9 n. m. Meeting of the Society of Cas Lighting, Hotel Astor. 1 p. m. Luncheon and dance of the Vocational Teachers' Counpil of Long Island, Hotel Aster. p. in. Meeting of Commission on Interchurch Federation, Hotel Pennsylvania, all «lay. NIGHT Daneo or t lio Professional Photographers' Club, Hotel Commodore. Dinner of the Church Social Unions of New York. Hotel Pennsylvania, 7 p. m. Dance of tho Gamel Club, Hotel Pennsyl¬ vania, 8 p. m. Dinner of the Pottery. Class and Brass Salesmen, Hotel Astor, 7 p. in. Dir; eei- of tho Union Liberty State Hank, Hotel McAlpln, 7 p. ni. Dinner of the Carrier Engineering Com¬ pany, Hotel McAlpin, 6 : ¡SO p. m. Meeting of the Church of Silent Demand, Hotel .McAlpin, S p. in. Dinner of the Men and Women of Indiana in New York, Hotel McAlpln, 7 p. m. Daneo of tile Washington Heights Post, American Legion, 22d Regiment Armory, Disth Street and Broadway. Lincoln dinner of the National Republican club, Waldorf-Astoria, 7 p. m. Dance of tho Phi Delta Fraternity, Wal¬ dorf-Astoria, 8 p. in. Meeting City Employees' Local, American Federation of Labor, .112 Court Street, Brooklyn. Greenwich Village Carnival, Hotel Astor, 10 p. m. BOARD OF EDUCATION LECTURES MANHATTAN "Abraham Lincoln." By Dr. 3. 15. Price; Washington Irving- High School, Irving Place and Sixteenth Street. "Everywhere AVilli Lincoln." By Dr. Henry li. Rose; Public School 52, Broad¬ way and Academy treet, In wood. Illus¬ trated/ .Lin,ola and the AVar That Ended Slav ery." By Garrott P. Servias, Public School C.ï, Hester and Essex streets. Il¬ lustrated. "Lincoln.*' By Professor J. G. Carter Troop; Public School 115, 177lh Street, m ar Audubon Avenue. "Lincoln and Other Poems." Bv Edwin Markham; Public School 165, 225 West 108th Street. "Sulphur Trluxlde." By William L. Esta- brooke; Labor Temple, Fourteenth SI reel and Second Avenue. Illustrated. "Liii'.oln. the Man for His Age." By Dr. William 15. Grlftrs; Y. W. H. A, 31 West 110th Street. Illustrated. .¡."The Railroad Question." By Professor Nelson !'. .Miad; public; forum at Evan- i der child« High School, Tilth Street and Field Place, Tho Bronx. "Lincoln." General George B. Loud; Mor¬ ris High, Boston Road and 166th Street, "Lincoln." Bv .ludga James C. Jenkins, Public School -Hi. Tho Bronx. t9Ctli I Street, near Briggs Avenue. Noted Dutch Conductor for New Orchestra Musicians9 Society Signs Willem Mengelberg, of Amsterdam, to Assint Ar- tur Bodanzky With Baton To Come Over Next Year Distinguished European hi Considered Notable Ad¬ dition to City's Music Willem Mongclborg, the noted Dutch conductor, Tor many years in command of the Concertgobouw-Orchostra, of Amsterdam, Holland, has been ob¬ tained for the major portion of the sea¬ son of 1920-'2t to cooperate with Artur Bodanzky as director of the. Now Sym¬ phony Orchestra, Inc., of the Musicians' New Orchestra Society. This information was contained in a statement issued yesterday by S. E. MacMillen, manager of the orchestra. The announcement follows: "On behalf of the board of directors of the New Symphony Orchestra, Inc., of the Musicians' New Orchestra So¬ ciety, I wish to annaunce that an agree¬ ment, has just been reached by cable by the terms of which Willem Mengel¬ berg, conductor of the Ooncertgebouw- Orehestra, of Amsterdam. Holland, will come to America for several months, beginning January 1. 1921. He will join forces with Artur Bodnzky, our con¬ ductor, in leading the orchestra through an augmented season, which will con¬ clude with a proposed spring festival of international scope, at which the world's greatest artists will be called upon to aid Mr. Bodanzky and Mr. Mongclberg. Will Enhance City's Reputation "The directors feel that the presence in New York next season at the head of the orchestra of two of the greatest conductors in the world will establish New York as fho musical ni'cca of eon- certgoers, as it is now of onera. This situation has been made possible by the close association existing with the Met¬ ropolitan Ojiera Company. "Mengelberg has been one of Europe's premier conductors for al¬ most a quarter of a century jind has been sought after in every great musical center on the continent. He w.-is born at Utrecht, Holland, in 1871, and was educated at the Conserva¬ tory there, intending at first to be¬ come a pianist. Ho was persuaded, however, to accent the position of municipal director of music at Lucerne, Switzerland, a post which he assumed in his twentieth year. His achievements there attracted such wide attention that he was offered the conductorship of the Concertgebouw- Orchestra in Amsterdam in 1895. HÍ3 success there immediately brought him into international prominence as a conductor of exceptional power and authority, and since then he has ap¬ pealed frequently as 'guest' conductor in all the European capitals. He has directed many of the concerts of the London Philharmonic. Mr. Budanzky's Record Recalled. "The musical activities of Mr. Bodanzky in America are. well known. As a leading conductor at the Metro¬ politan Opera House and as the di¬ rector of the New Symphony Orsces- tra, Inc., he has achieved a position rarely, if ever, attained by a con¬ ductor in so short n time. His first engagement as conductor was in 1900 at Budweiss, Bohemia, when he was twenty-three years old. In 1901 he went to Petrograd as an operatic con¬ ductor, and two years later he con- ducted the first performance of 'Los Chauves-Soures' in Paris. The next three, years he directed the Royal Opera at Praag and conducted the Philharmonic concerts there. There¬ after he conducted in Milan, Rome, .Moscow, Brussels, Cologne, Vienna, Munich and Mannheim, and in 1911 led the first performance of 'Parsifal' in England. "His most conspicuous contribution to music since coming to America centers around his staging of the opera 'Olieron' the score and orches¬ tral parts of which he reëdited, Dut his greatest triumph was scored in the spring of 1919 as conductor of the New Symphony Orchestra in two concerts." Columbia-to Welcome Alumni Back To-day Lincoln Celebration Will Be Observe«! With Social and Athletic Events Lincoln's Birthday will be observée; at Columbia to-day with the usual elab orate Alumni Day program of socia and athletic events, arranged for th» thousands of graduates and former stu dents who will flock back to the uni vcrsity for the annual reunion. Inter collegiate athletics, receptions anc meetings constitute the program, whier will begin in the early afternoon an( continue until midnight. President Nicholas Murray Butle will deliver the address of welcome the alumni at formal exercises in th« gymnasium at 3 o'clock. Preceding this in St. Paul's Chapel at 12:45 o'clock, i memorial tablet to the late Georg' L. Rjves, until his death chairman o the board of trustees, will be unveiled President Butler delivering the addres of acceptance. Athletic events will complete th afternoon program and will include wrestling meet with Brown and fencin; metches with the University of Penn sylvania. There will also be "stunts by the undergraduates and mass boxin Exhibition of Photograph* OF NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS BY E. S. CURTIS Feb. 11 to 22, Inc. WHITNEY STUDIO CLUB ' 147 West Fourth Street Open Daily 10 A. M. to 10 P. M. Sundays 3 to 10 P. M. ADMISSION FREE THE NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH 46S West 23d Street, New York City Phone Ciglsea 1386 Problems of Law Reform in America Public discontent with the law is no new phenomenon in Ameritan life. But Lawyers' discontent IS a new phenomenon. So are the proposait* to reform It coming from the highest legal experts all over the country. A knowledge of the tondit ions that malte reform necessary, of the factors that are making the reform Inevitable and automatic, of the aocial and legal principles upon which effective reform must bo based, are essential to a proper understanding of American life and the issues that confront it. The New School lor Social Ke«eareli offers a courso In the Problems of law Reform In America, It will be given by, among others, the following experts: Roicoe Pound, Dean Harvard Lai» School; Charles A. Beard, Director, the Bureau of Municipal Research; Joseph P. Chamberlain, Director, Legislative Drafting Bureau; Felix Frankfurter, Professor of Lav, Harvard Lai» School; Reginald Heber Smith, Author of "Justice and the Poor." The course will meet Friday evenings, 8 to 10. First lecture by Dean Roscoe Pound, Friday, February 13th. _ Fee for the course $20,00. Single lectures, $2.00. »ïo« rfJht d,r"oU¿n of Physí«! «duca- t on departmcnt.ofñcers. TÍ.« 1913 foot- ti "iP,WI ' b«Pr7«nted to the ¿em-. iinrfr th R8¿ !aU S f00***11 B^«d who made the best scholastic record win 5- t0 8,,8£.* ,»«.?««"» and tea will bo given in Earl Hull in honor of 1n H-lumru, followed at 0s45 by dinner in the Commons and a meeting of the Alumni Föderation at 7:80 iruthc auxil¬ iary gymnasium. Officers and directors «ill VleiCt?ih.The Pr°R«-am will end with a basketball game between Colum- b a and the University of Pennsylvania >n the gymnasium at. 8:30. Mme. Gauthier Presents New Form of Concert Vocal Chamber Music Recital One of Season's Moat Sig¬ nificant Events Unusual features combined to make Mme. Eva Gauthier's recital of vocal chamber music at Aeolian Halt yester¬ day aftornoon one of the most sig¬ nificant events in the present season. 'The presentation of this form of con¬ cert was in itself an important inno¬ vation, for in discarding the conven¬ tional piano accompaniment Ravel and his associates in the modern French school of composition hav0 found fascinating combinations of unusual musical instruments with the voice Several of the songs were settings ol poems by Byron, Shelley. Mallarmé and Oscar Wilde. Two of the composers Winter Watts and Samuel Gardner were present at the performance. Mme. Gauthier is a pioneer in the work of introducing new music. Slit was wise in her choice of four felt songs, arranged by Beethoven, Might I but My Patrick Love," "Sallj in Our Ally," "My Faithful Jonnnv' and "Bonnie Laddie, Highland Laddie,' with piano, violin and 'cello accomoani ment, which opened the concert. Pavel'; "Soupir," with an accompaniment o: two flutes, two clnrinets, piano an« string quartet, was extraordinarily ef fective. So was "Lahore," by Mauric« Delage. Chausson's "Chanson Per petuelle," for voice, piano and strinj quartet, was exquisitely sung, but as ¡ setting of a narrative Attorino Re sphigi, an Italian pupil of Rimsky Korsakoff, whose "Fountains of Rome' was given by the Philharmonic Or chestra last year, showed even mon skill and imagination in his treatmen of Shelley's "Sunset." Mr. Shildkret, the conductor, an« every member of tho small orchestri contributed materially to the cntir< success of the undertaking. .,-..--- Harold Vanderbilt Buys Villa Site at Palm Bead (iets Ocean Front Tract Midhva; Between Breakers Hotel and Stotesbury Home Special Dispatch to The. Tribune. PALM BEACH, Fla.. Feb* 1L- Harol Vanderbilt is to become a member o the permanent villa colony, it was nr nounced to-day, when he purchase from the Adams estate an ocean fror, tract just south of the tract bought b Jules Rache last season. It is midwa' between the Breakers Hotel and th new home of Mr- and Mrs. Edward '1 Stotesbury. Mr Vanderbilt made th purchase becaitfa Louis Kauffman hn bought Afterglow cottage, on the lak front, which Mr. Vanderbilt has bel under lease the. last, two years. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hudson Mark of New York, gave a tea to a larg company this afternoon on their bous« boat Cocopomelo in the Poincian Basin- Among their guests were M and Mrs.' Clarence Busch, who ha\ sold their place in Miami and are the Poinciana Hotel: John Rutherfor Mrs- Irving H. Chase, Mr. and Mr William Van Iderstein and Daniel 1 Frohman, who arrived at the Poinciar yesterday with Miss Caryl Frohma his daughter- Mr. Frohman, who president of the Actors' Fund, will tai personal charge of an entertainmei in Cocoanut Grove the night of Fe! ruary 27, as a benefit for the fun Theatrical people of note will coi tribute their services and the ente tainment is exnected to outshine an; thing of this sort hitherto attempt« here. Mrs. James R. Branch has arriv« from New York and is visiting Colon and Mrs. J. E- Dana at the Elwell co tage in Royal Palmway. Mr. and Mrs- Frederic A. Price, Chicago, are house guests of Mr- at Mrs. Charles S. Brackett, at their vtll Arrivals to-day at the Poinciat Hotel include Mr. and Mrs- Geori, Boldt jr., and Mr. and Mrs. Jose] Paterno, of New York- Jules S. Bache, of New York, a rived last night and has an apartme in Sunset Avenue- In the same apai ment Justice Peter T. Barlow, of N< York, has been contined by illness f some weeks and is not improving fast as he was expected to. "Carmen" Is Sung Again; Miss Farrar in Leading Ro "Carmen" was sung acain at t Metropolitan Opera House last nigl Miss Farrar in the leading role, i peating what has come to be one her most satisfactory operatic imp«: sonations. For the rest the honors the evening went chiefly to Mr. Mt tinelli, as Done Jose, nnd Marie Su delius for her excellent singing a acting in tho part of Micaela. --.- "".Faust" Matinee February 2.' "Faust" will be given at the Met) politan Opera House as a Washingt . Birthday matinee on Monday aft noon, February 23, with Mmes. Farr Delaunois and Berat, and Messrs. Mj tinelli, Rothier, Werrenrath (his fi ' appearance this season with the co > pany) and Ananian. Mr. Wolff v f conduct_ The Stage Door Arthur Hopkins will present John Drew in "The Cat-Bird," a comedy by Rupert Hughe», at Maxine Elliott'a Theater on Monday night. In support of Mr,. Drew arc Janet Bc«chcr, Ruth Flndlay, Paulino Arrr.itnge, Arthur Barry and Sydney Mason. "Tho Cat- Bird" brings Mr. Drew back to tho stage after an absence of two years. Maxino Elliott, in "Trimmed in Scar¬ let," will terminate her Now York en¬ gagement Saturday night. Emily Stevens, in Philip Moeller's new comedy, "Sophie," based on the life of Sophie Arnould, a famous eigh¬ teenth century Parisian prima donna, will open her New York season on Mon¬ day evening, March 1, at the Greenwich Village Theater, following Naneo O'Neill, who is to move uptown. 0. P. HcgKie will be opposite Miss Stevens, and her company will inclut!« Oswald Yorkc, Sidney Toler, Hubert Wilke, Jean Newcomb, Claire Mersereau, John Webster and Adolph Link. The Shubcrts havo accepted for im¬ mediate production "Not So Long Ago," by Arthur Richraan. Rehearsals began Monday. Rachel Crothers will be seen in her own play, "He and She," at the Little Theater to-night. Adele Devereaux, Oriental dancer, has been added to the cast of "The Passing Show of 1919," at the Winter Garden. George Broadhurst has decided to elminate the responso to curtain calls between acts in all his productions, as in h¡3 opinion curtain calls between acts disturb the illusion that the dramatist has tried to preserve by in¬ terrupting the action of the play and bringing the players out of their char¬ acters. The season of the repertory company established at the Theatre Parisien has come to a close, and Monday the company will open at Montreal. Rob- ert Casadesus, art director and one of the principal players, announces his intention to remain in the United States and adopt the English language for stage purposes- The performances of next Monday Tuesday and Wednesday evenings ol "The Girl in the Limousine" at the Brooklyn Majestic are for the benefit of the Williamsburg Hospital. Nance O'Neill, playing "The Passior Flower" at the Greenwich Village. The¬ ater, has been invited to witness the Yiddish version of "The Lily" at the Irving- Place Theater. In the origina! Belasco production of this play Miss O'Neill played the leading rôle. Langdon McCormick, author of "The Storm," has built a testing plant at Mountain Lakes, N. J., where he wili prove his stage inventions. H. Cooper Cliffe, who was the ori.«;- inal Nobotly in "Everywoman," and whe is appearing with Laurette Taylor ir "One Night in Rome," has been se- lecteil for a principal part in "Half an Hour," Dorothy Dalton's picture with Famous Players-Lasky. Salisbury Field, author of many shor stories and several plays, among then "Wedding Bells," has joined the liter ary staff of Cecil B. Do Mille, and ii now at work at the West Coast studit of the Famous Players. Several prominent screen actor3 wil help Marcus Loew open a new theate 11 in London, Ont., Monday night. Ii the party will be Doraldina, Virginii ! Pearson, Sheldon Lewis, June Caprice '.Jane and Katherine Lee, June Elvidge Dolores Cassinelli, Herbert Rawlinson Mae Murray atuf Anne Luther. "The Copperhead," starring Lione Barrymore, has proved so popular f picture that it is to run for a seconc week. It moves from the Rivoli to the Rialto Theater on Sunday. The show ing of "All of a Sudden Peggy," featur ing Marguerite Clarke, will be post poned for a week at the Rialto. Elsie Ferguson will make her re appearance on the stage here at thi [ Morosco Theater on Monday evening ¡February 23, in "Sacred -end Profan« i Love," by Arnold Bennett. David Be lasco owns the American rights to thi Bennett play and it is by an arrange ; ment that he has made with Alf Hay man, of Charles Frohman Inc. tha M Miss Ferguson's appearance in it i: ' made possible. "For the Defense" wil > cióse at the Morosco on Saturday, Feb ruary 21. Arthur Hopkins has set Monda; J night, March 1, for the first appearanci ' of John Barymore in "Richard III' ' at the Plymouth Theater. "The Jest' will close on February 21 and the Ply mouth will be dark for a week befor« the%Shakespearean production. M Otis Skinner will make his last ap ": pearance in "Pietro" at the Criteriot Theater on Saturday night, February 1 21, when the play will end its run. Johi D. Williams will present Lionel Barry more in "The Letter of the Law," ¡ translation of "The Red Robe," by Eu gene Brieux, at the Criterion, begin i ning with a Washington's Birthda; matinée on February 23. Winona Shannon, sister of Effi' t Shannon, has been engaged by Olive Morosco ta understudy her sister ii 1 the rôle of Mrs. Qjyrin in "Mamma's Ai fair," at the Fulton Theater. v/sss/////////s//f/////s//////s///mtr////s//s///s/s//ss/ss/////. 'S/?/S/s/////,//ss/ssssss,..sys........ EXHIBITIONS & SALES AT THE ANDERSON GALLERIES PARK AVENUE fc 59T-H STREET, NEW YORK EXHIBITION OlrbN LINCGLNTS BIRTHDAY 10-5 P.M7 AN ASTONISHING y FASCINATINC EXHIBITION OF CHINESE FURNITURE AND EMBROIDERIES AND OTHER ORIENTAL ART OBJECTS COLLECTED BY OTTO FUKUSHIMA <jj No such collection of Chinese Furniture has ever been offered for sale in America. It will be a revelation to American collectors. <i To be sold Friday and Saturday Afternoons, February 13 and 14, at 2.30 at The Anderson Galleries, Park Avenue and 59th Street, New York. SALES CONDUCTED BY MR. FREDERICK A. CHAPMAN '/// >////////////'/ V'////y/////////////////////y//////////^////////////////////^//////////////j//////r///////y//////. Uniontown Man Takes Big Sailfish at Miami Cup for Heaviest Catch at Florida With Light Tackle Won by Kentuckian MIAMI, Fla., Feb. 11..Guy Gilmore, of Uniontown, Pn. is credited with the second largest sailfish caught this sea¬ son. It measured »even feet nine inches and weighed ninety pounds. In tho party were Hurst Core and Leo L. Heyn, owner of the Summit Hotel, of I niontown. The battle with tho sail- fish lasted forty minutes. W. G. Duncan, of Greenville, Ky., wins the cup of the Anglers' Club of Miami for catching the largest sail- fish on light tackle, one seven feet eight inches long and weighing Beven- ty-five pounds. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Lindsley, of Spokane, Wash., are on the yacht Audria. Mr. Lindsley caught the largest shark of the season, meas¬ uring nine feet. John Chapman, owner of the Equinox Mountain Spring Hotel, White Moun¬ tains, is at the Plaza, with his wife and family. F. Byron Khun, of Paris, is in with his yacht, the Navajo, from New York, awaiting the arrival of the Princess di Waldick. Mr. Kuhn will exhibit his own paintings of the French Riviera at the Royal Palm this month. At the Royal Palm Simeon Ford, the Bill Nye of the Hotel Men's Associa- tion, guest of Wilson P. Foss on the yecht Lovina, registered from New York. Mr. and Mrs. John F. Flacher, of Providence; James P. Orr, a di- rector of the Cincinnati .Reds, and Richard K. Leblond, a stockholder of tne club, are cruising here in the yacht Regina. Mr. Orr caught a sailfish seven feet six inches long and weighing sev- enty-three pounds, with light tackle. Mr. Leblond caught one seven feet four inehes long, weighing fifty-six pounds. Taft Is Urged to Head Cincinnati University - Should Be Asked to Take Place at Own Terms, Gradu¬ ate Says Special Dispatch to The Tribune CINCINNATI, Feb. 11..If a move¬ ment started to-day has tho desired ending, William Howard Taft, former President of the ^United States, will return to his home city as president of the University of Cincinnati to suc- coed Dr. Charles W. Dabney, who has resigned. Acting on the suggestion of gradu- ates, Judge Robert Marx, of the Superior Court, announced to-day he would write to the university trustees and urge that Mr. Taft be offered the post. ; "With Mr. Taft as president of the institution the University of Cin¬ cinnati would win immediately the national recognition it deserves," said Mr. Marx. "The new president should be an administrator as well as educa- tor. Mr. Taft combines the qualities of both." "The question of salary should not be allowed to interfere with the proposal to invite Mr. Taft to be- come president of the university," said Judge Arthur Spiegel, also a graduate of the university. "The present salary is $10,000 a year," said Mr. Spiegel. Mr. Taft should be asked to take the place at his own terms." ¡State Guard Completes ¡ Plans for Aero Unit Plans for the establishment of an aero unit to be incorporated in the New York National Guard Division al- ready have been completed, and the unit will be organized immediately after authorization from the War De¬ partment has been received. Lieuten- ant Colonel McLeer. adjutant at head- quarters of the division, said yester- day authorization had been received for the. formation of a tank corps, but no official communication had been re- ceived from Washington regarding the aerial unit. Final authorization will depend upon the enactment, by Congress of the bills now before it for the reorganization of the army. It was learned yesterday the War Department plans call for standard units with each of the Na¬ tional Guard organizations in each of ; the states, based upon the regular army plans. The training system in the National Guard units will be based upon the standard system of the regular army. The National Guard units will have the same type machines and other equip- ment as the United States Air Service. Wherever possible the militia units will be composed of one observation ! squadron, one balloon company, one ; photographic section and one military ¡ intelligence branch. Chicago Teachers Get Raise CHICAGO, Feb. 11..Teachers in the ' Chicago elementary schools to-day obtained a salary increase of $450 a ' year and high school teachers an in- ' crease of $400, under a decision by the Board of Education. The increases are retroactive to January t>. The board also shortened the pjro- motional period required to reach the maximum pay from twelve years to nine in the elementary schools and from seventeen to te^ in the high schools. Chicagoalis Please. { In Trio of Brief Operas by Puccini Carlo Galefti an Imposing* Tragic Figure in "II Ta¬ barro"; Versatility Shown in Other One-ActOfferingt» No doubt in the spirit of challenge, Puccini's three one-act opera?, "IÍ Tabarro," "Suor Angelica" and "Gianni- Schicchi" which were brought out at the Metropolitan Opera House last season, were given by the Chicago Opera Company last evening at, the Lexington Theater. The music of the three works has long sine» been discussed at length. There might be a temptation to compare the per¬ formances by the rival houses, but since comparisons are odious let the interpretations of the visiting artists stand on their merits. Unquestionably tho most stirring of the tnree, by reason of the ardent spirit displayed by all concerned, and by th«j high order of characterization» given by the three principals, Mr. Galeffi, Miss Gall and Mr. Johnson, was the Grand Guignol thriller, "11 Tabar¬ ro " Carlo Galeffi, formerly a bary¬ tone of the Boston Opera Company, who appeared with much success aa Jack Ranee, the saturnine Sheriff of Puccini's "Girl of the Golden West," was remarkably fine as Michèle, the bargeman, who throws open his cloak, revealing to his horrified wife the mur¬ dered body of her lover. From the beginning Mr. Galeffi was a tragic figure, forcefully suggesting with gloomy mien and restless search¬ ing eyes the impending tragedy. Hi» robust voice fitted the character ex¬ cellently, and his appeal to Georgetta, was touching in its despairing tender¬ ness. As the erring girl, Mrs. Gall, too, has seldom been heard and seen to better advantage. Mr. Johson's Luigi was a worthy companion por¬ trait. In appearance he was tho apache to the life, and in will and action suggested the man's amorous impatience and fiery passion. Mr. Marinuzzi's spirited reading of tha score and the vivid portrayal of minor j roles by other members of the com¬ pany, with the fine work of the prin¬ cipals, made the performance wholly thrilling. Miss Raisa was tho nun of the second opera who suffered so cruelly for a little sin. She sang and acted with much intensity. Otherwise her per- formance was not remarkable. In the title rôle of "Gianni Schicchi" Mr. Galeffi had an opportunity to show I his versatility in a wholly, different character. Mr. Johnson, Miss Sharlow and Miss Herbert were among his as- sociates- -.- Rare Books Bring $138,411 Highest Priée of $3,500 Paid for Titian Drawings The sale of English, French and American literature from several large libraries which was completed last night at the Anderson Galleries brought a total of $138,411.55. The largest purchase was a book of the original drawings of Venetian dresses by Titian, which was sold to the Rosenbach Company for $3,500. George D. Smith, the book collector, made several large purchases, among which was George Washington's auto- graph copy of "McFinga.," an epic poem on the Revolutionary War, for which he paid $1,800. Mr. Smith also purchased a lirst edition of the works*" - of Thackeray for $2,500 and the ori¿T inal autograph manuscript of Sir WaT 1er Scott's "The Betrothed, for $1,600. The original autograph manuscript of Sir Walter Scott's poem "The Lord of the. Isles" was sold to Gabriel Wells for $2,100. SALE TO-DAY G t Lincoln's Birthday and following daya at 2:00 n. m. Florentine Arts The Collection of Q. Gailozzi and L. Calvan, Inc. To Take Place on the Preraiae» I 581-583 Madison Av. (by reason of thu expiration of lease) Antique Italian and Spanish Furniture and other decorative j effects, together .with Choice Embroidered Linens; jj also three complete rooms of the Directoire, Louis XV. and J Louis XVI. Periods, formerly owned by Mrs. H. N. SLATER of Boston and New York The special Attention ot ¡ Architects and Decorators is I directed to the beautiful I Mosaic and Marble Mantels and Wall Fountains. ¡ The Sale Will Bo Conducted by Mr. AUGUSTUS W. CLARKE «¦ _ DREICER&Co LJrierxtaL 1 earls* ofíke^Jinesé /usírs ana z¿ualifi/ FIFTH AVENUE at FORTY-SIXTH / ¦QnÁ 'WggH > Employees that Stick Breaking in new employees costs money. You cannot afford to bother with quitters. Tribune readers are intelligent. They know what they want, and when you offer it, they are yours, and they will stick. Show your openings to them ! . Call trie "Good Morning Girl".Beekman 3000.and give her your advertisement. She'll bill you later.

BridalParty Noted Dutch The Door ManTakes Of Miss Gray Big ...BridalParty OfMissGray Entertained Her Marriage to Cameron O'Day Macplicr8oia Will Take Flaco Saturday; Dinner for Miss

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Page 1: BridalParty Noted Dutch The Door ManTakes Of Miss Gray Big ...BridalParty OfMissGray Entertained Her Marriage to Cameron O'Day Macplicr8oia Will Take Flaco Saturday; Dinner for Miss

Bridal PartyOf Miss GrayEntertained

Her Marriage to CameronO'Day Macplicr8oia WillTake Flaco Saturday;Dinner for Miss Emmet

.

Sale to Aid Hers p it a !

Society and Staate Unite to

Make St. Valentine Ballfor Charity a Success

Uiss .Tennnette Chappell.who will at-

tend Mis9 Laur« Blossom Gray at her;marriage on Saturday to CameronO'Pav Macphorson, cave a luncheon«esterd» at the Kitz-Cariton for the

bride and bridesmaids. After the lunch-eon Miaa Chappell took her quests to<ee "Irene," at the Vanderbilt. In theùnrt y were Miss Gray'a cousin. MissKatharine Langdon Hi!!, of Boston;Vr Macpherson's cousin. Miss Gene*"ovo" Stone, Mrs. John O'Day, Miss

Catherine Noyes, Misa Elsie Morrill.;n<i Miss Victorine Kellogp."

\jjss Gray's parents, Mr. and Mr?.Oiia D. Gray« w<" continue the enter¬taining for the bridal party this eve¬

ning, when they will give a theaterrsrty. followed by a supper and danceir, the crystal room of the Ritz-Carlton.They will take their guests to see OtisSkinner at the Criterion. Mr. and Mrs.Gray bave taken a suite at the St.Re</is ior two weeks.

Another future bride. Miss ElizabethV. Emmet, was entertained last eve-

ning by her mother. Mrs. C. TempleEmmet, who gave a dinner for her ;it

-he Colony Club. Miss Emmet's en¬

gagement to Edwin D. U. Morgan jr..,vas recently announced. No date hasbeen set for the wedding.Under the a ispices of Mrs. Frederic

Neilson, Mis. Charles James Welsh,Mrs.'ion-y Waters Taft and others, an

auctit-n a. was held yesterday for!the benel I of the New Foundling Hos-pital, at its home, 175 East Sixty-eighth Stre«t. The sal-e will be con¬tinued to-day.

Mr. and Mrs. William Í'. Guthrie gavea dinner last evening at their home, 28Park Avenue.

In the Brick Presbyterian Church,Fifth Avenue and Thirty-seventh Street,Miss Barbara M. Shedd, daughter of Mr.nnd Mrs. John M. Shedd, will be mar¬ried this aftern «on to Thomas Chan¬dler Wayland' The ceremony will befollowed by a reception at the Cosmo¬politan Club. The ¡natron of honor willbel Countess Salm-Hoogstraeten and

desmaids will be Mist AnnetteDavis, Miss Sarah Sturgis, Miss SylviaHolt. Miss Priscilla Husterl ar.u Miss'.'..... et Geer. Elton S. Wayland willserve his brother as best man, and thebride's brother, W. G. Thayer Shedd;Jame? \V. iTusted jr., Shipley Thomas

n [sham will be the ushers.

Another wedding to-day will be thatof <~ Dorothy vassar Baker, daugh¬ter > :'.: 5. E. Vassar Baker, of BallstonSpa, N'. V., to John W. Stafford, of thiscrty. The wedding will take place in

pel of St. Bartholomew's Churchand will be followed by a reception atthe Plaza. Robert K. Stafford will behi? brother's bes; man, and bis usherswill lie Mortimer Cobb, Harold Schall,Philip Kaufmann and Vladimir Behr.Mr. Stafford is the son, by a form, r

marriage, of Mrs. J. Stafford Murthey,of 330 Pajrk Avenue. His bride is a

grai of the founder oí Vassar

V' md Mrs. Hamilton Carhartt ¡cavePalm Beach, where they have

i ittage at the Everglades Club.On ti ir way Xorth they will spend a

month at their plantation in SouthCarolina. They plan to sail for Eurepeearly ir, May and will spend the sum-ill there.

wing the fancy of the moment,t and the stage will unite or:

ly evening to make the St. Val-ne far y dress ball, for the benefit

of the American Free Milk and Relieffor Italy, the great success this splendid

y deserves, Th> dance will behi '.,>, at the Hotel Vanderbilt, where the

ds of the society v.ill make merryin .:.!¦ Delia P.obbia room. The chorusfrom the Midnight Frolic will present

of tie popular numbers now be¬ing riven at the Xew Amsterdam RoofTheater. Miss Elsie Jar.is promises to.'.! papt, present and future to allwho will cross her oalm with silver,for the benefit of the war sufferers ofItaly. Train loads of sufferers from

are beii £ taken to hospitableItaly and sharing the generosity ofcoi : h it rs to the fund. Some 40,000Austrian children are being taken «'aref i-; rtalv, Boxes at $100 and tickets

acn may be had at the Hotelrb it a::'.! also at the Plaza. Mrs.'" ¦'am Drako is president of the

rganization.Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Alsop, of

Avon, Conn., will spend the week-endin tow:i with Mrs. Alsop'8 mother, Mrs.Douglas P.' bin! in, at the latter'a home,'¦ :;'i:. y-third Street.

Lucy 1 Ulrich, who since herfrom t: e Orient has bren visit-br >tl r-in-law and sister. Mr.

Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, has re-to her home at Warwick, R. 1.

Mi Nelson Vanderbilt has pone to" City with her daughter, Miss

athleen Vanderbilt. They have re-it .i from their recent attacks of

grippe.George VV. Vanderbilt and her

ex, Miss Cornelia Vanderilt, who«pent most of the winter in town, havearrived at Mimi, Fla., where they willoccupy the Pancoast cottage for themainder of the month.

Mrs. William Harbour, of 11 WestFifty-third Street, will give a dinnerand theater party Saturday evening for'i Celen A. Carrero, daughter ofMis. L. Sidney Carrere, of I'd" East

ty-third Street, and Frederick K.

is children*» day. Bring the childrenin. All kiads ol valentines in our

card room. Open Lincoln's Birthday.

.681 FIFTH AVE., near ¿Uli St.

f

*H- .-. - -i

She is now at Palm Beach, and is one of the most, active members of thewinter colony. She is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Phipps.

Bnrbour, Mrs. Bnrhour's son. MissCarrere and Mr. Bnrbour aro to bemarried on Tuesday in St. James'sChurch.

Tlvo ¡Victor Corps of America willgive it bridge at the general staff head¬quarters, 98 Park Avenue. Wednesdaynext to assist the ambulance fund.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hayes Morgancrave a box party at the LexingtonTheater last night. Mr. Morgan is HighCommissioner of the United States toBelgium.Mr. and Mrs. William J. Gardner,

of East Orange, N. J., announce thoengagement of their daughter, MissDorothy Gardner, to i. Bardsley lion-wood, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford M.Hopwood, of New York.

Mr. and Mrs. Philip Stevenson andMrs. John R. Fell have come to thecity for a few days from Westbury,Long Island, and ave at the Hotel St.Regis.Henry T. Sloane lias returned to

Palm Beach from a fishing trip. Howill be joined in a few days by hisson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.-George 1). Yfidener, oi" Philadelphia.Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Widener, of

Philadelphia, will go to Palm Beach ina few days to spend the remainder ofthe season there.

Mr. and Mrs. Jorge Andre have leftPalm Beach on a two weeks' fishingtrip.

Miss Margaret RuheBride of H. C. Weltzien

Reception in St. Regis FollowsCeremony in St. James's

ChurchMiss Margaret Ruhe, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Francis II. Rahe, of 225 WestlOSth Strei/, was married last eveningto Henry Charles Weltzien, son of Mr.and Mrs. Charles Weltzien, of Flat-bush. The wedding look place in St.James's Church, Madison Avenue andSeventy-third Street. Following theceremony, which was performed by th'epastor, the Rev. Julius D. Remensnyder,there was a reception at the St. Regis.That was followed by supper anddancing. Miss Caroline Cant was themaid of honor, and the bride's otherattendants were Mrs. John Anger, Mrs.Brock Dear, Miss Helene Beckermanand Miss Isabel Lee. The flower girlwas Miss Marie Fensterer.The best man was John Anger. The

ushers were Henry Riese, Arthur Graes,Elliott Downs and Francis 11. Ruhejr. After their honeymoon in tho SouthMr. Weltzien and his bride will livein this city.

Cold Storage Egg PriceDrops 10 Cents a DozenMarket Commissioner Edwin J.

O'Malley reported yesterday a furtherdrop of 10 cents a dozen in coldstorage eggs, a 2-cent drop in buttera pound, and a drop of 1 cent indomestic cheese. He said that thisdi .-, will be reflected in the retailtrade in a day or two.M (rehauts in Denmark, according to

C mmissioner O'Malley, have givenhim assurance that they will ship un¬limited quantities of potatoes, cab-bago and butter to New York to sell'. ere greatly under prevailing prices.Two shiploads each of 4,000 tons ofpotatoes and cabbage will arrive nextweek. All will be kept in the NewYork market.Commissioner O'Malley declared that

the influx of foreign products will puton the market large quantities ofpotatoes, butter and cabbage beingheld in storage in the East, and shouldforce the general market downward.The Denmark potatoes, he said, shouldretail for $5 a bag, and the cabbage7 cents a pound, as against the presentprice of-about 14 cents.

Amherst Dinner on SaturdayThe faculty, musical ciubs and the

entire senior class of Amherst Collegehave been inivted to attend the dinnerof the Amhorst Alumni Association ofNew York, to be held Saturday nightin tho Hotel Commodore.One of the speakers at the dinner

will be Frederick H. (¡illeit, Speakerof the House of Representatives, whewas graduated from Amherst with theClass of 1874. William C. Breed, pres¬ident of the association, will preside.

Collin Armstrong, chairman of thedinner committee, has appointed anassistant from each class of the alumnito cooperate with him in an effort toexceed last year's attendance at thedinner, which was more than 800. Thiinnovation, started last year of serv¬

ing dinner to the women in the boxeswill be continued at this gathering.

'Loyalty Week" Feb. 22 to 28ALBANY, Feb. 11..Governor Smith,

in a proclamation to-day, designatedthe week of February 22 as "LoyaltyWeek" and urged all public officialschurches, schools and the press to co¬

operate in an effort "to combat th«effect of insidious and destructivo propaganda." . .

Food Profits Nobody'sBusiness, Dr. Day Says

Will' IVol île Used to CorruptAny Public Official, Is His

Reply to O'MalleyReplying-to the question raised by

Edwin J. O'Malley, Commissioner oíMarkets, as to what Dr. Jonathan Day,special deputy for the sale of navyfoodstuffs, was doing with the profitsaccruing from this sale, Dr. Day saidyesterday that "It is nobody's businesswhat I am doing with these profits and

I if there are any'

profits they belongto me." In raising the question, Mr,O'Malley said Dr. Day "ought to havemade .$150,000, at least."

"1 do not know yet whether therewill be any considerable surplus afterexpenses had been deducted," said » r.Day, "but Mr. O'Malley need not worryhimself about it, because I do not in¬tend to give any of it to him. I canassure him that any surplus will notbe used to corrupt any public official."

In reply to the charge of DavidHirshfield, Commissioner of Accounts,that the signatures on a petition ask-ing the city to pay for the services o,'volunteers who helped Dr Day in thesalr> of army foodstuffs, when thelatter were under his charge, were notauthentic. Dr. Day said he knowsnothing about these signatures and isnot taking any part in the circulationof the petition. "One such petitionwas brought to me," said Dr. Day,"and I signed it. I can vouch forthe genuineness of my signature."

Going On To-dayDAY

American Museum of Natural History; art-'mission free.

Metropolitan Museum of Art; admissionfree.

American Museum of Safoty; admissionfree.

\';in Cortlandt Park Museum; admission25 cents.

Tho. Aquarium; admission free,Zoological Park; admission 26 cents.Address by Mrs. Jackson Fleming on "For¬

eign Altars In Relation t.> tho United.¦ Aoollan Hall, l- a. m.Klnmenl of the Athonia Club, Wal¬

dorf-Astoria, 2 p. i:..

Meeting of the Daughters of the EmpireState, Waldorf-Astoria, 2 p. m.

Luncheon 61 the Euterpe Club. WaldorfAsl 01 la, ll a. m.

Convention of the Qossard Company, Hotel'McAlpin, ¡i a. in.

Convention of the Association of HousePainters and Decorators, Hotel Astor, 9n. m.

Meeting of the Society of Cas Lighting,Hotel Astor. 1 p. m.

Luncheon and dance of the VocationalTeachers' Counpil of Long Island, HotelAster. p. in.

Meeting of Commission on InterchurchFederation, Hotel Pennsylvania, all «lay.

NIGHTDaneo or t lio Professional Photographers'

Club, Hotel Commodore.Dinner of the Church Social Unions ofNew York. Hotel Pennsylvania, 7 p. m.

Dance of tho Gamel Club, Hotel Pennsyl¬vania, 8 p. m.

Dinner of the Pottery. Class and BrassSalesmen, Hotel Astor, 7 p. in.

Dir; eei- of tho Union Liberty State Hank,Hotel McAlpln, 7 p. ni.

Dinner of the Carrier Engineering Com¬pany, Hotel McAlpin, 6 : ¡SO p. m.

Meeting of the Church of Silent Demand,Hotel .McAlpin, S p. in.

Dinner of the Men and Women of Indianain New York, Hotel McAlpln, 7 p. m.

Daneo of tile Washington Heights Post,American Legion, 22d Regiment Armory,Disth Street and Broadway.

Lincoln dinner of the National Republicanclub, Waldorf-Astoria, 7 p. m.

Dance of tho Phi Delta Fraternity, Wal¬dorf-Astoria, 8 p. in.

Meeting City Employees' Local, AmericanFederation of Labor, .112 Court Street,Brooklyn.

Greenwich Village Carnival, Hotel Astor,10 p. m.

BOARD OF EDUCATION LECTURESMANHATTAN

"Abraham Lincoln." By Dr. 3. 15. Price;Washington Irving- High School, IrvingPlace and Sixteenth Street.

"Everywhere AVilli Lincoln." By Dr.Henry li. Rose; Public School 52, Broad¬way and Academy treet, In wood. Illus¬trated/

.Lin,ola and the AVar That Ended Slavery." By Garrott P. Servias, PublicSchool C.ï, Hester and Essex streets. Il¬lustrated.

"Lincoln.*' By Professor J. G. CarterTroop; Public School 115, 177lh Street,m ar Audubon Avenue.

"Lincoln and Other Poems." Bv EdwinMarkham; Public School 165, 225 West108th Street.

"Sulphur Trluxlde." By William L. Esta-brooke; Labor Temple, FourteenthSI reel and Second Avenue. Illustrated.

"Liii'.oln. the Man for His Age." By Dr.William 15. Grlftrs; Y. W. H. A, 31West 110th Street. Illustrated.

.¡."The Railroad Question." By ProfessorNelson !'. .Miad; public; forum at Evan-

i der child« High School, Tilth Street andField Place, Tho Bronx.

"Lincoln." General George B. Loud; Mor¬ris High, Boston Road and 166th Street,

"Lincoln." Bv .ludga James C. Jenkins,Public School -Hi. Tho Bronx. t9Ctli

I Street, near Briggs Avenue.

Noted DutchConductor forNew Orchestra

Musicians9 Society SignsWillem Mengelberg, ofAmsterdam, to Assint Ar-tur Bodanzky With Baton

To Come Over Next YearDistinguished European hi

Considered Notable Ad¬dition to City's Music

Willem Mongclborg, the noted Dutchconductor, Tor many years in commandof the Concertgobouw-Orchostra, ofAmsterdam, Holland, has been ob¬tained for the major portion of the sea¬son of 1920-'2t to cooperate with ArturBodanzky as director of the. Now Sym¬phony Orchestra, Inc., of the Musicians'New Orchestra Society.

This information was contained in astatement issued yesterday by S. E.MacMillen, manager of the orchestra.The announcement follows:"On behalf of the board of directors

of the New Symphony Orchestra, Inc.,of the Musicians' New Orchestra So¬ciety, I wish to annaunce that an agree¬ment, has just been reached by cableby the terms of which Willem Mengel¬berg, conductor of the Ooncertgebouw-Orehestra, of Amsterdam. Holland, willcome to America for several months,beginning January 1. 1921. He will joinforces with Artur Bodnzky, our con¬ductor, in leading the orchestra throughan augmented season, which will con¬clude with a proposed spring festivalof international scope, at which theworld's greatest artists will be calledupon to aid Mr. Bodanzky and Mr.Mongclberg.

Will Enhance City's Reputation"The directors feel that the presencein New York next season at the head

of the orchestra of two of the greatestconductors in the world will establishNew York as fho musical ni'cca of eon-certgoers, as it is now of onera. Thissituation has been made possible by theclose association existing with the Met¬ropolitan Ojiera Company."Mengelberg has been one of

Europe's premier conductors for al¬most a quarter of a century jind hasbeen sought after in every greatmusical center on the continent. Hew.-is born at Utrecht, Holland, in1871, and was educated at the Conserva¬tory there, intending at first to be¬come a pianist. Ho was persuaded,however, to accent the position ofmunicipal director of music atLucerne, Switzerland, a post which heassumed in his twentieth year. Hisachievements there attracted suchwide attention that he was offered theconductorship of the Concertgebouw-Orchestra in Amsterdam in 1895. HÍ3success there immediately brought himinto international prominence as aconductor of exceptional power andauthority, and since then he has ap¬pealed frequently as 'guest' conductorin all the European capitals. He hasdirected many of the concerts of theLondon Philharmonic.

Mr. Budanzky's Record Recalled."The musical activities of Mr.

Bodanzky in America are. well known.As a leading conductor at the Metro¬politan Opera House and as the di¬rector of the New Symphony Orsces-tra, Inc., he has achieved a positionrarely, if ever, attained by a con¬ductor in so short n time. His firstengagement as conductor was in 1900at Budweiss, Bohemia, when he wastwenty-three years old. In 1901 hewent to Petrograd as an operatic con¬ductor, and two years later he con-ducted the first performance of 'LosChauves-Soures' in Paris. The nextthree, years he directed the RoyalOpera at Praag and conducted thePhilharmonic concerts there. There¬after he conducted in Milan, Rome,.Moscow, Brussels, Cologne, Vienna,Munich and Mannheim, and in 1911led the first performance of 'Parsifal'in England."His most conspicuous contribution

to music since coming to Americacenters around his staging of theopera 'Olieron' the score and orches¬tral parts of which he reëdited, Duthis greatest triumph was scored inthe spring of 1919 as conductor ofthe New Symphony Orchestra in twoconcerts."

Columbia-to WelcomeAlumni Back To-day

Lincoln Celebration Will BeObserve«! With Social and

Athletic EventsLincoln's Birthday will be observée;

at Columbia to-day with the usual elaborate Alumni Day program of sociaand athletic events, arranged for th»thousands of graduates and former students who will flock back to the univcrsity for the annual reunion. Intercollegiate athletics, receptions ancmeetings constitute the program, whierwill begin in the early afternoon an(continue until midnight.

President Nicholas Murray Butlewill deliver the address of welcome t«the alumni at formal exercises in th«gymnasium at 3 o'clock. Preceding thisin St. Paul's Chapel at 12:45 o'clock, imemorial tablet to the late Georg'L. Rjves, until his death chairman othe board of trustees, will be unveiledPresident Butler delivering the addresof acceptance.

Athletic events will complete thafternoon program and will includewrestling meet with Brown and fencin;metches with the University of Pennsylvania. There will also be "stuntsby the undergraduates and mass boxin

Exhibition of Photograph*OF

NORTH AMERICAN INDIANSBY

E. S. CURTISFeb. 11 to 22, Inc.

WHITNEY STUDIO CLUB' 147 West Fourth Street

Open Daily 10 A. M. to 10 P. M.Sundays 3 to 10 P. M.ADMISSION FREE

THE NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH46S West 23d Street, New York City

Phone Ciglsea 1386Problems of Law Reform in America

Public discontent with the law is no new phenomenon in Ameritan life. ButLawyers' discontent IS a new phenomenon. So are the proposait* to reform Itcoming from the highest legal experts all over the country. A knowledge of thetondit ions that malte reform necessary, of the factors that are making the reformInevitable and automatic, of the aocial and legal principles upon which effectivereform must bo based, are essential to a proper understanding of American lifeand the issues that confront it.

The New School lor Social Ke«eareli offers a courso In the Problems of lawReform In America, It will be given by, among others, the following experts:

Roicoe Pound, Dean Harvard Lai» School; Charles A. Beard, Director, theBureau of Municipal Research; Joseph P. Chamberlain, Director, LegislativeDrafting Bureau; Felix Frankfurter, Professor of Lav, Harvard Lai» School;Reginald Heber Smith, Author of "Justice and the Poor."

The course will meet Friday evenings, 8 to 10.First lecture by Dean Roscoe Pound, Friday, February 13th._

Fee for the course $20,00. Single lectures, $2.00.

»ïo« rfJht d,r"oU¿n of Physí«! «duca-t on departmcnt.ofñcers. TÍ.« 1913 foot-ti "iP,WI ' b«Pr7«nted to the ¿em-.iinrfr th R8¿ !aU S f00***11 B^«d whomade the best scholastic recordwin h« 5- t0 8,,8£.* ,»«.?««"» and teawill bo given in Earl Hull in honor of1n H-lumru, followed at 0s45 by dinnerin the Commons and a meeting of theAlumni Föderation at 7:80 iruthc auxil¬iary gymnasium. Officers and directors«ill VleiCt?ih.The Pr°R«-am will endwith a basketball game between Colum-b a and the University of Pennsylvania>n the gymnasium at. 8:30.

Mme. Gauthier PresentsNew Form of Concert

Vocal Chamber Music RecitalOne of Season's Moat Sig¬nificant EventsUnusual features combined to makeMme. Eva Gauthier's recital of vocal

chamber music at Aeolian Halt yester¬day aftornoon one of the most sig¬nificant events in the present season.'The presentation of this form of con¬cert was in itself an important inno¬vation, for in discarding the conven¬tional piano accompaniment Ravel andhis associates in the modern Frenchschool of composition hav0 foundfascinating combinations of unusualmusical instruments with the voiceSeveral of the songs were settings olpoems by Byron, Shelley. Mallarmé andOscar Wilde. Two of the composersWinter Watts and Samuel Gardnerwere present at the performance.Mme. Gauthier is a pioneer in thework of introducing new music. Slitwas wise in her choice of four feltsongs, arranged by Beethoven, "ÜMight I but My Patrick Love," "Salljin Our Ally," "My Faithful Jonnnv'and "Bonnie Laddie, Highland Laddie,'with piano, violin and 'cello accomoaniment, which opened the concert. Pavel';"Soupir," with an accompaniment o:two flutes, two clnrinets, piano an«string quartet, was extraordinarily effective. So was "Lahore," by Mauric«Delage. Chausson's "Chanson Perpetuelle," for voice, piano and strinjquartet, was exquisitely sung, but as ¡setting of a narrative Attorino Resphigi, an Italian pupil of RimskyKorsakoff, whose "Fountains of Rome'was given by the Philharmonic Orchestra last year, showed even monskill and imagination in his treatmenof Shelley's "Sunset."

Mr. Shildkret, the conductor, an«every member of tho small orchestricontributed materially to the cntir<success of the undertaking.

.,-..---

Harold Vanderbilt BuysVilla Site at Palm Bead

(iets Ocean Front Tract Midhva;Between Breakers Hotel and

Stotesbury HomeSpecial Dispatch to The. Tribune.

PALM BEACH, Fla.. Feb* 1L- HarolVanderbilt is to become a member othe permanent villa colony, it was nrnounced to-day, when he purchasefrom the Adams estate an ocean fror,tract just south of the tract bought bJules Rache last season. It is midwa'between the Breakers Hotel and thnew home of Mr- and Mrs. Edward '1Stotesbury. Mr Vanderbilt made thpurchase becaitfa Louis Kauffman hnbought Afterglow cottage, on the lakfront, which Mr. Vanderbilt has belunder lease the. last, two years.

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hudson Markof New York, gave a tea to a largcompany this afternoon on their bous«boat Cocopomelo in the PoincianBasin- Among their guests were Mand Mrs.' Clarence Busch, who ha\sold their place in Miami and arethe Poinciana Hotel: John RutherforMrs- Irving H. Chase, Mr. and MrWilliam Van Iderstein and Daniel 1Frohman, who arrived at the Poinciaryesterday with Miss Caryl Frohmahis daughter- Mr. Frohman, whopresident of the Actors' Fund, will taipersonal charge of an entertainmeiin Cocoanut Grove the night of Fe!ruary 27, as a benefit for the funTheatrical people of note will coitribute their services and the entetainment is exnected to outshine an;thing of this sort hitherto attempt«here.

Mrs. James R. Branch has arriv«

from New York and is visiting Colonand Mrs. J. E- Dana at the Elwell co

tage in Royal Palmway.Mr. and Mrs- Frederic A. Price,

Chicago, are house guests of Mr- at

Mrs. Charles S. Brackett, at their vtllArrivals to-day at the Poinciat

Hotel include Mr. and Mrs- Geori,Boldt jr., and Mr. and Mrs. Jose]Paterno, of New York-Jules S. Bache, of New York, a

rived last night and has an apartmein Sunset Avenue- In the same apaiment Justice Peter T. Barlow, of N<York, has been contined by illness fsome weeks and is not improvingfast as he was expected to.

"Carmen" Is Sung Again;Miss Farrar in Leading Ro

"Carmen" was sung acain at tMetropolitan Opera House last niglMiss Farrar in the leading role, i

peating what has come to be oneher most satisfactory operatic imp«:sonations. For the rest the honorsthe evening went chiefly to Mr. Mttinelli, as Done Jose, nnd Marie Sudelius for her excellent singing a

acting in tho part of Micaela.--.-

"".Faust" Matinee February 2.'"Faust" will be given at the Met)

politan Opera House as a Washingt. Birthday matinee on Monday aft

noon, February 23, with Mmes. FarrDelaunois and Berat, and Messrs. Mjtinelli, Rothier, Werrenrath (his fi

'

appearance this season with the co> pany) and Ananian. Mr. Wolff v

f conduct_

The Stage DoorArthur Hopkins will present John

Drew in "The Cat-Bird," a comedy byRupert Hughe», at Maxine Elliott'aTheater on Monday night. In supportof Mr,. Drew arc Janet Bc«chcr, RuthFlndlay, Paulino Arrr.itnge, ArthurBarry and Sydney Mason. "Tho Cat-Bird" brings Mr. Drew back to thostage after an absence of two years.Maxino Elliott, in "Trimmed in Scar¬let," will terminate her Now York en¬

gagement Saturday night.

Emily Stevens, in Philip Moeller'snew comedy, "Sophie," based on thelife of Sophie Arnould, a famous eigh¬teenth century Parisian prima donna,will open her New York season on Mon¬day evening, March 1, at the GreenwichVillage Theater, following NaneoO'Neill, who is to move uptown. 0. P.HcgKie will be opposite Miss Stevens,and her company will inclut!« OswaldYorkc, Sidney Toler, Hubert Wilke,Jean Newcomb, Claire Mersereau, JohnWebster and Adolph Link.

The Shubcrts havo accepted for im¬mediate production "Not So Long Ago,"by Arthur Richraan. Rehearsals beganMonday.

Rachel Crothers will be seen in herown play, "He and She," at the LittleTheater to-night.Adele Devereaux, Oriental dancer, has

been added to the cast of "The PassingShow of 1919," at the Winter Garden.

George Broadhurst has decided toelminate the responso to curtain callsbetween acts in all his productions, asin h¡3 opinion curtain calls betweenacts disturb the illusion that thedramatist has tried to preserve by in¬terrupting the action of the play andbringing the players out of their char¬acters.

The season of the repertory companyestablished at the Theatre Parisienhas come to a close, and Monday thecompany will open at Montreal. Rob-ert Casadesus, art director and one ofthe principal players, announces hisintention to remain in the UnitedStates and adopt the English languagefor stage purposes-

The performances of next MondayTuesday and Wednesday evenings ol"The Girl in the Limousine" at theBrooklyn Majestic are for the benefitof the Williamsburg Hospital.Nance O'Neill, playing "The Passior

Flower" at the Greenwich Village. The¬ater, has been invited to witness theYiddish version of "The Lily" at theIrving- Place Theater. In the origina!Belasco production of this play MissO'Neill played the leading rôle.

Langdon McCormick, author of "TheStorm," has built a testing plant atMountain Lakes, N. J., where he wiliprove his stage inventions.

H. Cooper Cliffe, who was the ori.«;-inal Nobotly in "Everywoman," and wheis appearing with Laurette Taylor ir"One Night in Rome," has been se-lecteil for a principal part in "Halfan Hour," Dorothy Dalton's picturewith Famous Players-Lasky.

Salisbury Field, author of many shorstories and several plays, among then"Wedding Bells," has joined the literary staff of Cecil B. Do Mille, and iinow at work at the West Coast studitof the Famous Players.

Several prominent screen actor3 wilhelp Marcus Loew open a new theate

11 in London, Ont., Monday night. Iithe party will be Doraldina, Virginii

! Pearson, Sheldon Lewis, June Caprice'.Jane and Katherine Lee, June ElvidgeDolores Cassinelli, Herbert RawlinsonMae Murray atuf Anne Luther.

"The Copperhead," starring LioneBarrymore, has proved so popular f

picture that it is to run for a seconcweek. It moves from the Rivoli to theRialto Theater on Sunday. The showing of "All of a Sudden Peggy," featuring Marguerite Clarke, will be postponed for a week at the Rialto.

Elsie Ferguson will make her re

appearance on the stage here at thi[ Morosco Theater on Monday evening¡February 23, in "Sacred -end Profan«i Love," by Arnold Bennett. David Be

lasco owns the American rights to thiBennett play and it is by an arrange

; ment that he has made with Alf Hayman, of Charles Frohman Inc. tha

M Miss Ferguson's appearance in it i:' made possible. "For the Defense" wil> cióse at the Morosco on Saturday, Feb

ruary 21.

Arthur Hopkins has set Monda;J night, March 1, for the first appearanci' of John Barymore in "Richard III'' at the Plymouth Theater. "The Jest'

will close on February 21 and the Plymouth will be dark for a week befor«the%Shakespearean production.

M Otis Skinner will make his last ap":

pearance in "Pietro" at the CriteriotTheater on Saturday night, February1 21, when the play will end its run. JohiD. Williams will present Lionel Barrymore in "The Letter of the Law," ¡

translation of "The Red Robe," by Eugene Brieux, at the Criterion, begin

i ning with a Washington's Birthda;matinée on February 23.

Winona Shannon, sister of Effi't Shannon, has been engaged by Olive

Morosco ta understudy her sister ii1 the rôle of Mrs. Qjyrin in "Mamma's Ai

fair," at the Fulton Theater.

v/sss/////////s//f/////s//////s///mtr////s//s///s/s//ss/ss/////. 'S/?/S/s/////,//ss/ssssss,..sys........

EXHIBITIONS & SALES AT THEANDERSON GALLERIES

PARK AVENUE fc 59T-H STREET, NEWYORKEXHIBITION OlrbN LINCGLNTS BIRTHDAY 10-5 P.M7

AN ASTONISHINGy FASCINATINC EXHIBITION OF

CHINESE FURNITUREAND EMBROIDERIES

AND OTHER ORIENTAL ART OBJECTSCOLLECTED BY

OTTO FUKUSHIMA<jj No such collection of Chinese Furniture has ever beenoffered for sale in America. It will be a revelation toAmerican collectors.<i To be sold Friday and Saturday Afternoons, February 13and 14, at 2.30 at The Anderson Galleries, Park Avenueand 59th Street, New York.

SALES CONDUCTED BY MR. FREDERICK A. CHAPMAN'/// >////////////'/ V'////y/////////////////////y//////////^////////////////////^//////////////j//////r///////y//////.

Uniontown Man TakesBig Sailfish at Miami

Cup for Heaviest Catch atFlorida With Light Tackle

Won by KentuckianMIAMI, Fla., Feb. 11..Guy Gilmore,

of Uniontown, Pn. is credited with thesecond largest sailfish caught this sea¬son. It measured »even feet nine inchesand weighed ninety pounds. In thoparty were Hurst Core and Leo L.Heyn, owner of the Summit Hotel, ofI niontown. The battle with tho sail-fish lasted forty minutes.W. G. Duncan, of Greenville, Ky.,wins the cup of the Anglers' Club of

Miami for catching the largest sail-fish on light tackle, one seven feeteight inches long and weighing Beven-ty-five pounds. Mr. and Mrs. E. A.Lindsley, of Spokane, Wash., are onthe yacht Audria. Mr. Lindsley caughtthe largest shark of the season, meas¬uring nine feet.John Chapman, owner of the EquinoxMountain Spring Hotel, White Moun¬

tains, is at the Plaza, with his wifeand family. F. Byron Khun, of Paris,is in with his yacht, the Navajo,from New York, awaiting the arrivalof the Princess di Waldick. Mr. Kuhnwill exhibit his own paintings of theFrench Riviera at the Royal Palm thismonth.At the Royal Palm Simeon Ford, the

Bill Nye of the Hotel Men's Associa-tion, guest of Wilson P. Foss on theyecht Lovina, registered from NewYork. Mr. and Mrs. John F. Flacher,of Providence; James P. Orr, a di-rector of the Cincinnati .Reds, andRichard K. Leblond, a stockholder oftne club, are cruising here in the yachtRegina. Mr. Orr caught a sailfish sevenfeet six inches long and weighing sev-enty-three pounds, with light tackle.Mr. Leblond caught one seven feet fourinehes long, weighing fifty-six pounds.

Taft Is Urged to HeadCincinnati University-

Should Be Asked to Take Placeat Own Terms, Gradu¬

ate SaysSpecial Dispatch to The Tribune

CINCINNATI, Feb. 11..If a move¬ment started to-day has tho desiredending, William Howard Taft, formerPresident of the ^United States, willreturn to his home city as presidentof the University of Cincinnati to suc-coed Dr. Charles W. Dabney, who hasresigned.Acting on the suggestion of gradu-

ates, Judge Robert Marx, of theSuperior Court, announced to-day hewould write to the university trusteesand urge that Mr. Taft be offered thepost.

; "With Mr. Taft as president of theinstitution the University of Cin¬cinnati would win immediately thenational recognition it deserves," saidMr. Marx. "The new president shouldbe an administrator as well as educa-tor. Mr. Taft combines the qualitiesof both.""The question of salary should

not be allowed to interfere withthe proposal to invite Mr. Taft to be-come president of the university,"said Judge Arthur Spiegel, also agraduate of the university."The present salary is $10,000 a

year," said Mr. Spiegel. Mr. Taft shouldbe asked to take the place at his ownterms."

¡State Guard Completes¡ Plans for Aero Unit

Plans for the establishment of anaero unit to be incorporated in theNew York National Guard Division al-ready have been completed, and theunit will be organized immediatelyafter authorization from the War De¬partment has been received. Lieuten-ant Colonel McLeer. adjutant at head-quarters of the division, said yester-day authorization had been received forthe. formation of a tank corps, but noofficial communication had been re-ceived from Washington regarding theaerial unit.Final authorization will depend upon

the enactment, by Congress of the billsnow before it for the reorganizationof the army. It was learned yesterdaythe War Department plans call forstandard units with each of the Na¬tional Guard organizations in each of

; the states, based upon the regulararmy plans.The training system in the National

Guard units will be based upon thestandard system of the regular army.The National Guard units will have thesame type machines and other equip-ment as the United States Air Service.Wherever possible the militia unitswill be composed of one observation

! squadron, one balloon company, one

; photographic section and one military¡ intelligence branch.

Chicago Teachers Get RaiseCHICAGO, Feb. 11..Teachers in the

' Chicago elementary schools to-dayobtained a salary increase of $450 a

'year and high school teachers an in-

'crease of $400, under a decision bythe Board of Education. The increasesare retroactive to January t>.

The board also shortened the pjro-motional period required to reach themaximum pay from twelve years tonine in the elementary schools andfrom seventeen to te^ in the highschools.

Chicagoalis Please. {In Trio of BriefOperas by Puccini

Carlo Galefti an Imposing*Tragic Figure in "II Ta¬barro"; Versatility Shownin OtherOne-ActOfferingt»

No doubt in the spirit of challenge,Puccini's three one-act opera?, "IÍTabarro," "Suor Angelica" and"Gianni- Schicchi" which were

brought out at the Metropolitan OperaHouse last season, were given by theChicago Opera Company last eveningat, the Lexington Theater. The musicof the three works has long sine»been discussed at length. There mightbe a temptation to compare the per¬formances by the rival houses, butsince comparisons are odious let theinterpretations of the visiting artistsstand on their merits.

Unquestionably tho most stirring ofthe tnree, by reason of the ardentspirit displayed by all concerned, andby th«j high order of characterization»given by the three principals, Mr.Galeffi, Miss Gall and Mr. Johnson, wasthe Grand Guignol thriller, "11 Tabar¬ro " Carlo Galeffi, formerly a bary¬tone of the Boston Opera Company,who appeared with much success aaJack Ranee, the saturnine Sheriff ofPuccini's "Girl of the Golden West,"was remarkably fine as Michèle, thebargeman, who throws open his cloak,revealing to his horrified wife the mur¬dered body of her lover.From the beginning Mr. Galeffi was

a tragic figure, forcefully suggestingwith gloomy mien and restless search¬ing eyes the impending tragedy. Hi»robust voice fitted the character ex¬cellently, and his appeal to Georgetta,was touching in its despairing tender¬ness. As the erring girl, Mrs. Gall,too, has seldom been heard and seento better advantage. Mr. Johson'sLuigi was a worthy companion por¬trait. In appearance he was thoapache to the life, and in will andaction suggested the man's amorousimpatience and fiery passion. Mr.Marinuzzi's spirited reading of thascore and the vivid portrayal of minor

j roles by other members of the com¬pany, with the fine work of the prin¬cipals, made the performance whollythrilling.

Miss Raisa was tho nun of the secondopera who suffered so cruelly for alittle sin. She sang and acted withmuch intensity. Otherwise her per-formance was not remarkable.

In the title rôle of "Gianni Schicchi"Mr. Galeffi had an opportunity to showI his versatility in a wholly, differentcharacter. Mr. Johnson, Miss Sharlowand Miss Herbert were among his as-sociates--.-

Rare Books Bring $138,411Highest Priée of $3,500 Paid

for Titian DrawingsThe sale of English, French and

American literature from several largelibraries which was completed lastnight at the Anderson Galleriesbrought a total of $138,411.55.The largest purchase was a book of

the original drawings of Venetiandresses by Titian, which was sold tothe Rosenbach Company for $3,500.George D. Smith, the book collector,made several large purchases, amongwhich was George Washington's auto-graph copy of "McFinga.," an epicpoem on the Revolutionary War, forwhich he paid $1,800. Mr. Smith alsopurchased a lirst edition of the works*" -

of Thackeray for $2,500 and the ori¿Tinal autograph manuscript of Sir WaT1er Scott's "The Betrothed, for $1,600.The original autograph manuscript ofSir Walter Scott's poem "The Lordof the. Isles" was sold to Gabriel Wellsfor $2,100.

SALE TO-DAYGtLincoln's Birthday

and following daya at 2:00 n. m.

Florentine ArtsThe Collection of

Q. Gailozzi and L. Calvan, Inc.To Take Place on the Preraiae»

I 581-583 Madison Av.(by reason of thu expiration of lease)Antique Italian and SpanishFurniture and other decorative jeffects, together .withChoice Embroidered Linens;

jj also three complete rooms ofthe Directoire, Louis XV. and

J Louis XVI. Periods, formerlyowned by

Mrs. H. N. SLATERof Boston and New York

The special Attention ot¡ Architects and Decorators isI directed to the beautifulI Mosaic and Marble Mantels

and Wall Fountains.¡ The Sale Will Bo Conducted by

Mr. AUGUSTUS W. CLARKE«¦ _

DREICER&Co

LJrierxtaL 1earls*ofíke^Jinesé /usírs ana z¿ualifi/

FIFTH AVENUE at FORTY-SIXTH

/¦QnÁ'WggH >

Employees that Stick

Breaking in new employees costs money. Youcannot afford to bother with quitters.Tribune readers are intelligent. They knowwhat they want, and when you offer it, they are

yours, and they will stick.

Show your openings to them ! . Call trie "GoodMorning Girl".Beekman 3000.and give heryour advertisement. She'll bill you later.