1
Stage Notables Pav Tribute to Goodwin At Funeral Services Ceremony Conducted by the Lambs; De Wolf Hopper Delivers Brief Eulogy ; Burial in Roxbury, Maes. Theatrical folk, the men and women who had associated with him through hi* long career on the stage, paid trib¬ ut«» yesterday to the memory of Nat C. Crbodwin. comedian, who died Friday, at servie«- i ti the Campbell Funeral Church, under the r.uspices of the Lambs Club. The mourners' pew at the service tvas occupied by Miss Georgia Gardner, ¦who was to have been Mr. Goodwin's wife; the .".¿tor's nge«l oii-rro house- HIGHLY IMPORTANT UNRESTRICTED SALES WSÄSt^Sar* $M¡E¡ KfW ÏÛ8K.C1TÏ ON FREE VIEW BEGINNING TO-MORROW and continuing until the date of sale The Very Important Collection of Ancieni: Arms, Weapons and Armor Formed bj the Connoisseur Mr. Theodore Offerman To which has been added a num¬ ber of fine specimsrs from several other important private collections. THK « HOI.K TO BE SOLD the Afternoons of Friday and Saturday or This Week Feb'ry 7th and 8th, at 2:30 ©Clock ... Illustrated Catalogue with Prefatory Noie bv Pniieswir Bashfor«! Dean Will Be Stailrtl' to Applicants »11 Receipt of On» Hollar. -ALSO- ON FREE VIEW BEGINNING TO-MORROW A Collection of Old and Modern Paintings «Of Extraordinary Importance To be Sold b* direction of Executors anil Tröster» »f several KatateH ami fur amount a nunilier of Private «»«hit»,. OLD MASTERS Morillo.Van Dyck (?>).Dirk Hals.Van Ravenstyn.Jan Steen.Van «le Velde.De Va* Coello Campi Mierevelt .. Van Go Ten.Bosch.Bol.Pulzone Bronzino. Jastiens.Van Gelder.Va=i Loo .Torque. Nattier. EARLY ENGLISH ARTISTS Reynolds Raeburn . Beechy Cotes . Dupont.Cotmnn.Lely.Lawrence More- laad.Wheatley. MODERN FOREIGN MASTERS Corot (2).Daubigny.Diàz -Van Marcke (3).Courbet Harpi^nies (2).Boudin .Monticcl'i (7).Israels Kever (2).De Bock (4).Maris, W. . Henner . Vibert. Bonfuerean.Thaulow (2V.Bosboom.Gri- soa.Jacquet.Dendr Sadler .- Verboeckho- T«a (3). AMERICAN ARTISTS lar.eis.Wy.nt.Homer Martin Blakelock .Blasbneld (2).Moran, T..Daingerheld. Bogst.Wigs-ins.Bo<*ert.Eaton Rebn. . Sburtleff.Chase (2).Ridseway Knight (2). THE COMBINE» COLLECTIONS TO BE SOI i' On Monday and Tcesday Evenings, February 10th and 11th IN THE GRAND BALL ROOM OF THE PLAZA Fifth Ave., ."»»til to 59th >t. (Admission by card, to be had free, of the Manager», .a l!lu»tratfil Catalogue Maileil on Re- t-eipt of One ¡lollar. To-morrow (Monday) Afternoon at 2:30 o'Clock Concluding Session of The Rufus £. Moore Collection ON FREE ViEW TO-MORROW UNTIL DATE OF SALE Illustrated Books and Caricatures An Extensive and Notable Collection of ORIGINAL ISSUES OF THE WORKS OF THE THREE CRUIK- SHANKS, ROWLANDSON, GILL- RAY AND OTHER ARTISTS, Krem the Private Librar*? of J. BARTON TOWNSEND, Esq., of Philadelphia TO BE Mil ¡» BV OJKI'KK OF Till; OW'NKK Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs¬ day of This Week, At 3 and 8:15 o'Clock P. M. ON FREE VIEW Beginning Saturday, Feb'ry 8, The Important Collection Torrneil by the l-uf<- James Franklin Bell Major-General, U. S. A. Thii collection includes Rare North American Indian baskets and blan¬ kets, Philippine arms and weapons, «hand-woven fabric«, including the but little known death blankets, and other curious objects of per¬ sonal and historical interest col¬ lected by Major-General Bel) while in the Far West and the Philippine islands. TO KB MMUD H\ OltOF.K OW THK WIOOW OK MA.JOK-4.K.VKK.U. MC1.L On Friday, February 14th vi tut. AMERICAN ART GALLERIES at 2:30 o'clock P. M .». » staloatne lr. \>i*it*r»i\un, «-»-il»» of «Wrti trill l<* m-tll»-* to iiaitll. um» .n K#. til* HhIv* «ti; Be t l.-l<}l|-te,i i,y n$i. 111«».! \- "... HlltllY ;»Mi M* ieAmni <>; «he t^MSKJCAM ARI rSSSOClATtON fVi.-ii agers, 5a i *»<. <, JKa«t ¿fttj ¦.. «i,,. HvutU. keeper, nnd two women friends. The ] Rev. Dr. Nathan Seaglo. pastor of St. ¦Stephen'««! Church, conducted the per- vice and the eulogy- was pronounced by DeWolf Hopper, a lifelong fri?nd of Mr. Goodwin. Virtually every man nnd woman of prominent in the theat- rlcal world was present. The funeral oration was brief. Sev¬ eral times Mr. Hopper paused, over¬ come with emotion. He said: "Nat, I come her«? to voice my love and sorrow. What a wealth of signifi¬ cance is conjured up by that name! What talents you possessed! Nat, you would go so far out of your way to do something for me or any friend. Often you were swayed by ovil influence, but eo many times more by the good and the pure. You occupied a pinnacl«e of success. For a tirria you weakened from the series of blows rained upon you, but you rallied and came back. Your whole life was such a wealth of nobility. The remembrance of your comedy, your pathos, your altruism will live with us forever. We are grateful to you for the lesson you have taught us." The Lambs Club Quartet ^ang dur¬ ing the service. Mr. Goodwin's body, will be taken to Roxbury, Mass., the home of his aged parents, for burial. Miss Cat-drier will accompany it. The following persons were present: Ceorgia Cordon. Theodore Babcock. who played many years with Mr. Good¬ win; J. Appleton. who for tycn'y-four years was his manager; Jack Hazard, Joe Weber. Lillian May Crawford. Adolf Link. John Leffler. Charles de Witt. John Shine. Mr. and Mqs. Will- iam Collier. Malcolm Bradley, Edward Robbins, D. P. Steele. William Elliott, Colonel Shober, Reed Albce, Frederick Courtney, Joseph W. Frankel, Mrs. Charles Rose, Phil Riley, Herbert Brennon, Daniel Frohman, Charles Dillingham, John Golden, W. H. Thomp- son, Edward Cullen, Miss M. Cullen, ¡ H. B. Monroe, Pauline Hall and J. W. Marsh. j Matthew CjOrbett, Rosalind Coughlan, Mr. and Mrs] Fred A. Goodwin, John J. McGraw, of «he New York Giants; Mrs. J. V. Melville, A! and Fred Dix, Laura Hurt. R. 'I*. Shaw, Fred Ward. R. 11. Burnside, Major W. McCutcheon, Mrs. A. Bradley, Paul Lard, Katherine Flynh, Frank Hatch, George M. Cohen, Colonel William Sheppard, Charles Scott, R. J. Callahan, King Baugot. William Frank. Henry Chesterfield, C. V. Foote, W. Johnson Quinn, Thomas Gorman, representing the New York Press Club; W. J. Kelly. A. C. Arno'ld. Miss H. Brown, Helen Clarke. R. N. Hackler, Henrv Gingler, Mrs. Shelly Hull and Mrs. William Hull. Joseph I Humphrey. Mrs. Seeley, representing; Frank Evans; Mrs. A. ('. Arnold. Francis Ford, Charles Graham. Edward Owinga Towne, Ben Hendrieks. Mrs. J. W. Williams, Edgar Selwyn, William Grover. Misses M. and J. Spencer and others. William Baylis, Exchange Member for Years, Dies Princeton Graduate of 1868! Was Well Known in Finan- . eial Circles William Baylis, senior member of the firm of Baylis & Co.. 15 Wall Street, for many years a member of the New York Stock Fxchange. died yesterday at his home. 11 East Sixty- sixth Street, after an illness of five months. He was seventy-one years old. j Mr. Baylis was born in Brooklyn. the son of Abraham Burtis and De- borah MacDr.nald Baylis, and came of! an old Long Island family. His father | vras a member of the «Stock Exchange from 1841 to 1883, and was president of that organization in 1862. He at- tended the Brooklyn Polytechnic In- stitute and was graduated from Prince¬ ton in 1868. After leaving college he entered the banking house of his .' father, and upon the death of the lat- ter formed the firm of Baylis & Co. with his brother, A. B. Baylis, con- tinuing at the hea<5 of that ihm until« the unie of his death. He was also a; director of the Canton Company, of] Baltimore, and a trustee of the gratu- ity fund- of the New York Stock Ex- change. ' ¡ Mr. Baylis was a member of the Union, University, Metropolitan and Princeton clubs and of the St. Nicholas Society, and was a vestryman of St. Matthew's Protestant Episcopal Chinch, of Bedford. Westehester County. , : He leaves a wife, Mrs. Adelaide' Brooks Baylis; a son. William Baylis, jr.. and a, daughter. Miss Adelaide B. Baylis. Funeral services will be held in «St. Thomas' Protestant Episcopal Church, Fifth Avenue and Fifty-third Street, Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock. WALLACE H. ROWE Wallace H. Rowe, president of the Pittsburg Steel Company, died yester¬ day in Pittsburgh after an illness of more than a year. He had been a fac¬ tor in the steel industry since 1886, when he went to Pittsburgh from St. Louis, where he had been associated with the wire manufacturing interests of John W. Gates & Co. Mr. Rowe was identified with a number of wire manufacturing mergers, including that of the American Steel and Wire Co., and when that organization was absorbed by the United States «Steel Corporation he disposed of his inter¬ ests and organized the Pittsburgh Steel Company. EBENEZER C. HAY. Ebenezer C. Hay, one of the oldest of American ironmasters, died Friday at his homo in Newark, N. J. He was eighty-two years old. Mr. Hay was the son of James B. Hay, who came to this country from Scotland in 1830 and .tarted in the foundry business in a small way in Newark. Sbenezer suc¬ ceeded his father in business, and at the time <>f bis death was the head of the Hay Foundry an«l Iron Works, a director of the Union National Bank of Newark and interested in many important financial enterprises. He- leaves two sons. TIRKM.BODIKH.AUTO« pick a. riareain out «,f our Immense stock ! of «slightly Seiled fs<st Makes. A Banner Sal«! Every Make, All Sizes Al«o Thousands of New, First Quality and Factory Blemished Tires and Tubes <.r: whlcfa yon 08,11 "ffect A SAVING OF **Z2%% to 50% A Hpl^riilki Opportunity to Htock Up. AUTO BODIES OF ALL TYPES Wlnt.r or 8«inuii<*r <*t ÍAiwttnl VrU-in. Elegant New Jobs at l/2 Value All Hlnti'lanl Milk«-«. A I no Home UMd Mo«ll««». Mnk« Voor Old Car Modorn; Corfiplst« «job, \t ron AT ATTKAOTIV« I'itiri-.s ¡/..moi. »,«.¦¦«! lo«.* <;!-...¦», V.iiHy Vu'/niinln ¦\inmtlKi, Aui(.r,i..l,¡lf« T7ad«d Jantiorl Automobile Co« In "<) »-i*»»n- > »loi lite, 1763 Broadway, near 57th St. llo<ly flcp't. "BltlC Mkii- " ;>I7 W. »fill» Ht. / l.l.n in <>¦ '> ¦¦'./ .I./«/«« Francis La Bau, Traffic Aid on N. Y. Central, Dies Had Been Active in Regulating War Freight in Iltis City Francis La Bau, traffic assistant to -Regional Director A. H. Smith, one of the most active executives in the mar,- agement of the railroads of the East- crn region during the last, year, died yesterday morning at his home ir. Tnrrytown. He was fifty-nine years old. Mr. La Hau was born in Roh way, N'. J., and was eduated at. the Nazareth School, a Moravian institution at Naz¬ areth, Penn. He began his railroad career with the Pennsylvania Railroad in Philadelphia, but remained with that rout] only a, few years, going to the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad, with which system he re- mained continuously for thirty-six years. Mr. La Bau was recognized as one of the foremost traffic men in the coun¬ try, and in August, 1917, ivas made- traffic manager of the New York Cen¬ tral system. In June, 191S, Regional Director Smith placed him in charge of all traffic matters for the Eastern ter¬ ritory, and in that capacity he was largely responsible for the vast work of the Freight Traffic Committee of the North Atlantic Ports, which body, through enforcement of the permit ays- , tern, regulated the heavy war traffic and cleared up the dangerous congestion wtych threatened to block the flow of supplies to our army and the Allies. Overwork in the discharge of those duties made such inroads upon Mr. La Bau's strength that six weeks ago he went to Florida for a vacation. He re¬ turned to his home about a week ngo, apparently much improved in health. He leaves a wife, Mrs. Julia Stanley La Ban, and one daughter. Funeral services will be held Tues- day morning at 11 o'clock in the First' Dutch Reformed Church of Tarrytown. Interment, will be at Rahway, N. J. . ¦'- HARRY W. BRIGHAM Harry Whiting Brigham, an automo- bile construction expert prominent in Brooklyn athletic circles, died of pneu- monia Thursday at. Camp McClellan, Alabama. He was twenty-eight years old. Mr. Brigham was born in Brooklyn and received his education in the pub- lie schools of that borough, in the Pawling Preparatory School and the University of Virginia. He made a îeputation as a runner in his school ! and college days and broke a number of amateur records. j When the United States entered the war Mr. Brigham endeayored to en- list, but was rejected because of a j bronchial trouble. Later he was *c- oepted find was assigned to the 9th Field Artillery, going first to Camp Gordon, Ga., and later to Camp Mc- Clellan, Ala. Prior to his enlistment j he was connected with the Coll-Strat- ton Company, of this city, as a con- struction expert. Mr. Brigham leaves a wife, Mrs. ! Elizabeth Prentiss Brigham, and his j parents, Air. and Mrs. Henry M. Brig¬ ham, of 332 Jefferson Avenue, Brook- tyn. Funeral services will be held Monday at. Spencerport, X. Y., the home of his parents. CHARLES HECKMAN Charles . Heckman, an importer and merchant tailor, at one time prominent as'art amateur actor in Brooklyn, died Friday of pneumonia at his home in j Bay Twenty-fifth Street, Bensonhurst. He was sixty-seven years old. Mr. Heckman was born in Kenne- bunkport, Me., and had lived in Brook¬ lyn since ho was a young man. For more than thirty years he had been in business at 570 Fifth Avenue, Manhat- fan. In 1830 he became a member of the Amaranth Society, and for the next ten years appeared in most of the pro¬ duction s of Brooklyn's leading trna- leur dramatic organizations. He leaves! a wife, Mrs. Ellen Beckham Heckman. two daughter-- and one son. Funeral services will be condusted a* the residence at 8:30 o'clock this eve- ning. Interment will be in Yantir Cemetery, Norwich-, Conn. MRS. CAROLINE T. LINCOLN Mrs. Caroline Tyler Li^oln, widow of the late Dr. Rufus P. Lincoln, died yesterday morning at her home in Plainfield, X. J., of pneumonia. Mrs. Lincoln was born in Pittslield, Mass., February 15, 1844, the daughter cf the Kev. Wellington Hart Tyler and Caro- line E. Carpenter. Her father foi many years was president of the Pitts- field Institute, a seminary for young ladies. She iva« married in 1869 to Dr. Rufus P. Lincoln, a specialist in throat and lung diseases, and their home was at 22 West; Thirtv-first Street in this city until the time of his death, in !900. Mrs. Lincoln leaves a daughter, Mrs. Frederick Schauff 1er, of Pelham Manor, N. Y., and a sister, Miss Anna Tyler. FUNERAL OF J. E. OWENS Fyneral sen-ices for Joseph Eugene Owens, prominent Brooklyn lawyer and clubman, who died suddenly Wednes¬ day night, were held yesterday at St. Francis Xavlor's Church, Carroll Street and Sixth Avenue, Brooklyn. Inter¬ ment was in Calvary Cemetery. The funeral sermt-n was delivered by Bishop Charles E. McDonnell, a personal friend of Mr. Owens. Mun- signor D. J. Hlckey was celebrant of the mass, with the Rev. J. J. Kennedy as deacon and the Rev. J. Leo Williams as subedeacon. A number of promi¬ nent Roman Catholic clergy-men were in attendance. The honorary pall- bearers were Surrogate Herbert T. ! Kctcham, David Porter, E. T. McGuire, Frank Bailey, James P. Judge and i Henry Mott. FUNERAL OF SHUNZO TAKAKI. Funeral services for Shunzo Takaki, of the silk importing house of Mitsui & Co., who died at St. Luke's Hospital Wednesday, were held yesterday at St. Thomas Church, Fifth Avenue and Fifty-third Street. The services were j conducted by the R»v. Ernest M. Stires, [ rector of the church, and many Japa- nese prominent in official life were present. Mr. Takaki was a member of the Nippon, Railroad, Aldine and Uni¬ versity clubs and the Japan Society. He leaves a wife and four children. » Miss Nancy Richards is Bride of Robert Crane ïliss Nancy Richards, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Richards, was married to Robert Crane, son of Mr. and Mrs. Munroe Crane, of Dover Plains, N. Y. yesterday afternoon at her home, 398 Park Avenue. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Dr. William P. Merrill. The bride, wirb was given away by her father, was attended by Miss Harriet Richards, a sister, as maid e-f honor; Miss Isabel Jamison, of Pittsburgh; Miss Mildred McNeill, of Brooklyn; Miss Charlotte Boote and Miss Olive Burns, of East Orange. John N. Stone, of Springfield, Mass., served as best man, and the ushers wore Brenton Pomeroy, of Greenwich, Conn.; Philip B. firewater, of Flush¬ ing, Long Island; Clifford Mcrrifield, of New York; Beach Barrett, of Bloom- field, N. J., nnd Donald Crane, of Dî-ver Plains, N. Y. Mi«« Kitty Vondermuhle sçrvitd as flowr «rlrl and George Vondermuhle as page. 'Most Beautiful N. Y. Woman'' Flees From Artists' Praises The most beautiful women in New York City flashed into sight for an instant on Friday night. Four famous artists, genii of the niágaine cover, found her witbb unerring judgment among a crowd of thousands. They showered upon her all the praises which are beauty's due. They moved to place her on a pedestal of honor whore she should dole, out delight. They declared her the only and right- ful lineal descen'dJÜrVof Aphrodite. And then they discovered that she whom they had taken for Venus was' i«nlv Cinderella after all. For Miss Edyth Hyde, after a fright- onpd acceptance of the irolden apple coveted by all feminine New York and a hurried wispering of her name to the awe-ttricken judges, wrapped herself durriedly in a while cloak, jumped in :«. taxi and disappeared. Didn't Lose a Slipper Who is she? What is she ? No¬ body seems to know. Her slippers were on tight, she did not drop the. apple nor leave the tinest clue behind. If it had not ffeen for the .camera, which caught her a~s she was wonder- ingly inspecting the Gift, of Gods, no one would have known what face it wafs that launched four blase New York artists on such a sea of praise, But she, true to old tradition, had overlooked this modern appurtenance of Prince Charming and so the day was saved. Here she is for all to look at. and her name is Mrs, Edith Hyde Rob- bins, of 220 West Seventieth Street. Though: her beauty has been re¬ vealed, she is a most mysterious per- son, this Cinderella. It was variously whispered abrnt the ballroom the night i.'fiitthtrd from ycn'.rrda'j's lair edition* Art Furnishings of Home of Mrs. Jennie G. Bradley Brin«; Total of $44,316 The sale of furnishings, ¦embellish¬ ment..-; and paintings from the residence of Mrs. Jennie C. Bradley was con-, eluded yesterday, and brought a total of §44,316 for theNtwp sessions. Mr. Higbee was a keen bidder when the paintings were sold. He purchased "Sunset Landscape," by George Inness, for $8,000 (top price of the sale); "The Raiders," by Schreyer, for $6,000; "Meeting of the Black Waters," by Wyant, Tor $5,000; "Holland Land¬ scape," by Homer Martin, for $3,500, and a landscape with cattle, by Troyon, for the same price. "Approaching Storm." by Daingertield, was obtained by Mr. Reimann for $1,825, and a land¬ scape with cattle brought $525. Mr. Higbee also purchased a landscape by H. W. Ranger for $875. "Indian Encampment," by Ralph Blakelock, went to the Rev. Mr. Lucas for the low sum of $475, and Mr. Man¬ ning secured "The Honeymoon," by E. F. Couse, for $400. A Louis XVI carved and gilt wood reception suite brought $2,000. The sale was conducted by Rob- ert C. Graham, auctioneer. At the fifth session of the sale of the Rufus E. Moore collection, conducted at the American Art Galleries, the high- est price of the afternoon, $750, was ¡paid by Parish Watson for a turquoi.se blue bottle i Cbien-lungi. W. W. Sea¬ man, agent, paid $700 for a celadon jardiniere, $410 for a yellowy jar Kang- hSi) and $220 for a cafe-ati-lait crackle jar of the same period. Misa R. II, Lorenz, agent, purchased two mirror black vases, for $420 and $400, rcspec- tively, and a dense celadon jardiniere ¡(Ming) wont to H. I. Riker for $475. The total for yesterday's session was $11,438, making a total to date of $82.- 493. CLIFFORD J. HARRIS Clifford J. Harris, for many years an inspector in the Custom House, New York City, died of heart disease yes- terday in the United Hospital, at Port Chester, N. Y. He was sixty-five years old. He was born in Brooklyn, and had lived in Port Chester for twentv-six years. He leaves a sister, Mrs. Richard Whiting, who is living in France, and an adopted daughter, Mrs. Louise Ç. Franke, of Port Chester, GEORGE KEES George Kees, for mnny years, a prom¬ inent coal dealer in Brooklyn, died Frl day at the home of his «on, Michael Kofi*. 20!' DCVOO Street, in that bn; she apéared that she was a lady of leisure, an actress, an- artist's model,! that she came originally from Mont-: clair, X. J. But none of these things could b'e verified, and at Miss Hyde's orne, where ihe fled to get her beauty! sleep, the bell of the small apartment janglecl agnir. and again, but the door failed open, and tho beauty kep', herself safe beyond the threshold. And She's Quite Young Miss Hyde, it was said yesterday morning by those revellers who could be found after the all-night affair, has lovely brown hair with red tints. She is neither tall nor short, nor stout nor thin. lier eyes are blue, and she has ionj;;. curling eyelashes. And she is unite young.oh, just about twenty- two or so. It must not be supposed, however, that Miss Hyde's title for first hon- ors went unchallenged. Some of the most beautiful women of the stage and the artistic sets came to compete for the golden apple. When Miss Hyde, in a glittering! ''Queen of the Harem" costume, with a shining ornament atop her fore head and rows of jewels and bears swinging about her lithe form, appeared she out- shond them all. A gorgeously gowned page was ordered to bring the Queen of Beauty fruits in profusion. The Apple followed, borne aloft on a green jade pedestal by a slave. It was mod- estly received by the choice of ¡jrhe judges, and she murmured: "Oh, there' are lots of better looking girls here than I am." Then she seized her cloak and fled. At the Hotel des Artistes, Where the pageant, of beauty was held, defeated beauties hung drooped after Miss Hyde lied. The artist-judges were Ponrhyn Stanlaws, Harrison Fisher. Howard (.'handle!' «àhïisty and E, X. Anderson. ough. He was seventy years old. Mr. Kees was born in Germany, but had lived in this country for more than fifty years. He leaves two sons and two daughters. Funeral services will be held to-morrow morning at St. Nicholas Church, Olive and Devoe Streets, of which he was long a mem¬ ber. Interment will be in St. John's Cemetery. >1i*s McNair Engaged To Reginald Hutchinson Mr. and Mrs. William McNair, of 5 j, Elast Seventy-ninth Street, have an- nounced the engagement.of their daugh¬ ter. Miss Vera McNair, to Reginald L. Hutchinson, son of Daniel Lovett Hutchinson, of Philadelphia. .The en- gagement was announced at a luncheon which Mrs. McNair «ave yesterday at , her home for her daughter. Miss Mc- Nair was introduced to society last sea- son. She is a nince of Howard, Irving and George T. Brokaw and a grand¬ daughter of the late Isaac Brokaw. Mr. Hutchinson recently was mus¬ tered out of service, after serving as an ensign in the naval aviation force. He graduated from Yale in 1918 He. is.a member of the Racquet Club and makes iiis home in this city. The wedding probably will take place in Easter week. Rcprirtied from iieiterdau'n lale editions Opera French Novelty Successfully Produced by Chicago Com¬ pany at Lexington By H. E. Krehbiel Circumstances forbid that we should inquire as curiously as we might be disposed to do into the opera "Le Chemineau,"' which received its first performance in New York from the Chi¬ cago Opera Company at the Lexington Theatre last night. There is interest¬ ing enough matter in the work to oc-"* cupy serious attention, but little time, and we are not quite sure that all the minutes which might be conscripted vould yield adequate results. We could not hear all of the opwra, but only enough to gain a few general impressions the record cf which may suffice to convey as much of an idea-of what the work is like as the time- harassed reader of a daily newspaper '¦a likely to want in such a case. Were the work one of profound interest, artistically more careful and delibér¬ ate, consideration might be a duly. "Le Chemineau" was new to the audience as an opera. As a drama it was doubtless familiar to many of those who saw and heard it in its changed form last night. Jean Riche- pin wrote it for the theatre, and it was produced a decade or more« ago as an English play in London by Sir Herbert Tree under the title "Ragged Robin," and Otis Skinner Drought it forward in New York as "The Harvester." As a play, we make no doubt, it was more interesting than it was last night, or is likely ever to be as an opera; for its story is slight and when clogged, as it necessarily is by music, its dialogue, its dramatic value and Hs significance become attenuate when spread over four acts. Music of an extremely high order would be neces¬ sary to atone for the loss of poetical thought and possible symbolism, and such music M. Leroux has not given it, though his tonal investiture has enough charm to challenge respect, if not admiration. The action of the Metropolitan com¬ pany in launching "La Reine Fiam- mette," by tlTe same composer, after keeping it on the stocks for ten years naturally provoked comparison, which, to judge by the comment heard in the lobbies, was greatly to the disad¬ vantage of tli£ opera performed at the Broadway house; but here again we are not in a position to venture an opinion. It is enough that "Le Chemineau," by reason of its book, its score and par¬ ticularly by its performances, more than justified its production. It would have done that had so obvious and direct a challenge been offered in the production at this singular juncture of ."La Reine Fiammette." Why MM. Richepin and Leroux should have undertaken to celebrate Le Chemineau, who is called only by that name, we cannot quite conceive. He is a roadster, a tramp, obviously of a romantic and poetic disposition, but if he possesses any of the attributes of Locke's beloved vagabond it is diffi¬ cult to disco;.n them. He delights in nature and tne work of harvesters, but, like a walking delegate, he does no work himself, but talks about the work of others. He seduces a peasant girl and abandons her simply to follow the call of the road. After twenty years' absence from the scene of the play he returns to find that the woman whom he deserted has married an honest and confiding old man. He helps the pair out of trouble and promotes the marriage of a good- for-nothinjj'son whom the husband con¬ siders his own child. The old man, dying in ignorance, begs him to con¬ tinue his geodness to the woman who had been his mistress by marrying her; but this he refuses to do. The lure of the road calls him out again, and he deserts the woman a «¿ceond time, while the sounds of carols and the bells calling to Christmas mass mingle with the words of the simple- minded peasant. An effective com- The Four Horsemen of / 'AVvliKr,,T,^tÄM?RIES 0F TIIE MEN ANI> WOMEN OF THIS ¿IMA v*If'^'Xr GENERATION ARE DEAD, THIS BOOK WILL W'Mvír ^r-»-*^ ALIVE A RHÏHTEOUS INDIGNATION ÍÍÑÍ* r* Acr-I*LI,.RE,MNANT 0F BARBARISM WHICH POSED linmnwrA Î fir £EPSTLE OF CULTURE. . . HE WHO mÍÍ-ht nvr^ítX^ ÍWÍ5HTFWL EVILS OF THE RULE OF MIGH1 OVER RIGHT, SHOULD RfcAD THIS BOOK.". .Temple Scott. By VICENTE BLASCO IBANEZ .hilhnr of "The Shatlow of the Cathetlrttl." "& E. P. DUTTON & CO., "^0 *""**MM,***M'M»M»««MMMIi^«»_-______._. ¦¦¦!¦! II I .nun m mi mingling of dramatic material, this, es¬ pecially for operatic treatment, but it scarcely evokes the sympathy which a diamatie hero ought to excite to justify a play of evr;n pastoral low life. Queerly enough at this juncture of; --the world's affair's, the story awakened memories of an earlier opera, in which the call of the road led to- the forget- fulness of duty and love and the do-: sertioh of wife and child. Sixteen years ago Mr. Paderewski, now a puissant figure in the political affairs of the world,- brought out his "Manru" at the Metropolitan Opera House. But the hero of the present Polish Prime Minister'» opera was impelled by the urge infused in the black blood of the, gypsy by the tradition of ages. M. « Richepin s tramp has no racial pro- pensity to explain his conduct. However, "Le Chemineau" has a ! story which can be told in music, which has voices for its appeals to nature and tones for characteristic illumina¬ tion. And this music M. Leroux has k found for it in large measure. His score is fluent, like the scores of Mas¬ senet, not turgid like those of Février, with which we have lately made a re- sumed acquaintance. His melodies float on the orchestral flood; they are its surface, not its undercurrent. There is much apt characterisation and rapidity of flow sufficient to en¬ able the actors to achieve dramatic ef¬ fects, as they did so triumphantly in the second act last night that the calls before the curtain Were many and genuinely enthusiastic. The triumphs ( real triumphs of sing¬ ing and acting they were-not of the Garden variety) were quite evenly shared by Mesdames Yvonne Gall. Myrna Sharlow and Maria Claessens and Messrs. Maguenat. Baklanoff and Dua, and we are sorry that we have not time to point out some of the ex¬ cellences of the performances of each of them and of the conducting of M. Hasselmans. . Cfrlo Hacl.eft Wins Triumph At Hif- Metropolitan Debut By Grenville Vernon - "The Barber of Seville" was sung at the Metropolitan Opera House last night, for the first time this season. With one exception the cast was one which has Bung the old opera many times before. Giuseppe De Luca was the Figaro, and both vocally and his- triónically was as admirable as ever. Mme. Frieda Hempel was the Rosina, which on the histrionic side is a part for whicn nature never intended her. «She knows how to sing the music, but her high tones were wofully deficient and the coloratura passages went for little. Perhaps she was afflicted with a cold. Pompilio Malatesta played Dr. Bartolo with all the unction and ab¬ surd seriousness of a true Italian buffo, and José Mardones, while not exhausting the comic possibilities of Basilio, ,sang the music superbly. But the real triumph of the evening was won by a new singer, the Almaviva. Carlo Hackett is a young Bostonian who before he went to Europe had sung only in concert. He returns to us a light tenor such as New York has not heard certainly since Bonci. while, many would go much further back than that to name his equal. Mr. Hackett is a young man of a pleasing presence and fine dramatic instincts, and his Al- Spring Apparel pijiet'ía!l> ^li-K'cned lor STOÜT WOMEN Ilmbodytn-r newe.sî style líeos and providing for stout women tbe sanie smart styles iriat nioFt shops offer only for the -«lender woman. Sizes up to [>ti bufci, ready-to-wear. \ comprehensiva showing of latest modas In Coats, Dolmans, Suits Gowns, Blouses Skirts Sab «f Spring Slits Marie of Gabardine. Wool Perga, I.igrht anil Dark Vi*- ore aux, t'oatn lined with Peau dy «àvgne. Latest models. $39 75 fqpo^ruont 21-23 West36^ft IMawVorh III maviva is aristocratic in bearing and in charm. His voice is light but it is firm in* texture, entirely without the bleating quality usually the sign of a tenorc cli grazia, and of ample carrying power. His use of his voice is superb. His skill in florid embroidery, his power of spinning out a tone to a silken thread, his delicacy in phrasing, his mastery of tone color, all proclaimed him a true master of bel canto. In a day of slipshod singing this young American comes to us like a precious gift from a bygone age. The audience at once recognized his abilities, and the applause after his two airs in the first act was of the kind usually given only to Caruso. All in all, it was an admin-ble per¬ formance of the old work- -and ho-.v the music lasts! When sung as Mr. Hackett, Mr. Do Luca and Mr. Mar- dones sang it, with the orchestra play- inp; with the spontaneity and the lightness it showed under Signer Papi's baton, it is as fresh as if il had been written the day before yes¬ terday. Perhaps, after all, Rossini li¬ the music of the future! BROOKLYN ADVERTISEMENTS BROOKLYN ADVERTISEMENTS BROOKLYN'S BEST JÎ.YOW.V t pia.no house. ONE PRICE.NO COMMISSIONS. Constructive Value Tt is not reasonable to suppose that people generally know anything about value in the actual construction of a Piano. They may k no \v w hen the tone pleases or when the case design suits their taste. But that-the Piano is i correctly con¬ structed to give music of permanent, art value and worth the money paid for it, is something le;'* almost entirely to concern selling. CHAULES A. STERLING, Who founded the Sterling oust- ncfs in 1S60, the phenomenal sue- « ".s of which i$ a lasting mortii- r.ient to his sturdy New England cataracter. faith in the salesmen or the There are safeguards, however, which protect the purchaser of either a high or low priced instrument. They are the established value of the piano and the known reputable character of the maker or seller. TERLING Pianos have values as established as Government bonds, and have been tested by years service in thou¬ sands of homes. * The big or little amount you feel justified in spend¬ ing for an' instrument should in no way alter the honest value your money purchases. Our small priced instruments honestly give vou the same relative value that the larger priced ones give. Your dollar buys a full dollar's worth with the guarantees, the service and the backing the same company. / You pay one price and this price is the same to every one. no extras of any kind and no commis¬ sion of any kind allowed to any one. «nothing hid¬ den and nothing to hide. It will cost you nothing nor obligate j'QU in any way to visit the best known Piano' House Brooklyn. If not convenient to call at once, let us mail you some interesting Piano Literature free. 1116 Sterling Piano Ca- STERLING**BUILDING 518-520 Fulton St., Cor. Hanover Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. -""""" ¦¦¦'"*.'; Tai-fHwi,. 5600 Mitin conuect» «*ll l>«i>i*rtti.«. ut» .'_:

New York Tribune.(New York, NY) 1919-02-02 [p 10]. · 2017-12-14 · Frank Evans; Mrs. A. ('. Arnold. Francis Ford, Charles Graham. Edward Owinga Towne, Ben Hendrieks. Mrs. J. W

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Page 1: New York Tribune.(New York, NY) 1919-02-02 [p 10]. · 2017-12-14 · Frank Evans; Mrs. A. ('. Arnold. Francis Ford, Charles Graham. Edward Owinga Towne, Ben Hendrieks. Mrs. J. W

Stage Notables PavTribute to GoodwinAt Funeral Services

Ceremony Conducted by theLambs; De Wolf HopperDelivers Brief Eulogy ;Burial in Roxbury, Maes.

Theatrical folk, the men and women

who had associated with him throughhi* long career on the stage, paid trib¬ut«» yesterday to the memory of Nat C.Crbodwin. comedian, who died Friday,at servie«- i ti the Campbell FuneralChurch, under the r.uspices of theLambs Club.The mourners' pew at the service

tvas occupied by Miss Georgia Gardner,¦who was to have been Mr. Goodwin'swife; the .".¿tor's nge«l oii-rro house-

HIGHLY IMPORTANTUNRESTRICTED SALES

WSÄSt^Sar* $M¡E¡ KfW ÏÛ8K.C1TÏ

ON FREE VIEWBEGINNING TO-MORROWand continuing until the

date of saleTheVery Important Collection

of

Ancieni: Arms,Weapons and Armor

Formed bj the Connoisseur

Mr. Theodore OffermanTo which has been added a num¬

ber of fine specimsrs from severalother important private collections.

THK « HOI.K TO BE SOLD

0» the Afternoons of Friday andSaturday or This Week

Feb'ry 7th and 8th, at 2:30 ©Clock... Illustrated Catalogue with Prefatory

Noie bv Pniieswir Bashfor«! Dean Will BeStailrtl' to Applicants »11 Receipt of On»Hollar.

-ALSO-ON FREE VIEW

BEGINNING TO-MORROWA Collection ofOld and Modern

Paintings«Of Extraordinary Importance

To be Sold b* direction of Executors anilTröster» »f several KatateH ami fur amount

oí a nunilier of Private «»«hit»,.

OLD MASTERSMorillo.Van Dyck (?>).Dirk Hals.VanRavenstyn.Jan Steen.Van «le Velde.DeVa* Coello Campi Mierevelt .. VanGoTen.Bosch.Bol.Pulzone Bronzino.Jastiens.Van Gelder.Va=i Loo .Torque.Nattier.EARLY ENGLISH ARTISTS

Reynolds Raeburn . Beechy Cotes .Dupont.Cotmnn.Lely.Lawrence More-laad.Wheatley.MODERN FOREIGN MASTERS

Corot (2).Daubigny.Diàz -Van Marcke(3).Courbet Harpi^nies (2).Boudin.Monticcl'i (7).Israels Kever (2).DeBock (4).Maris, W. . Henner . Vibert.Bonfuerean.Thaulow (2V.Bosboom.Gri-soa.Jacquet.Dendr Sadler .- Verboeckho-T«a (3).

AMERICAN ARTISTSlar.eis.Wy.nt.Homer Martin Blakelock.Blasbneld (2).Moran, T..Daingerheld.Bogst.Wigs-ins.Bo<*ert.Eaton Rebn. .

Sburtleff.Chase (2).Ridseway Knight (2).THE COMBINE» COLLECTIONS

TO BE SOI i'

On Monday and Tcesday Evenings,February 10th and 11th

IN THE GRAND BALLROOM OF THE PLAZA

Fifth Ave., ."»»til to 59th >t.

(Admission by card, to be had free, of theManager»,

.a l!lu»tratfil Catalogue Maileil on Re-t-eipt of One ¡lollar.

To-morrow (Monday) Afternoonat 2:30 o'Clock

Concluding Session of TheRufus £. Moore Collection

ON FREE ViEW TO-MORROWUNTIL DATE OF SALE

Illustrated Booksand Caricatures

An Extensive and NotableCollection of

ORIGINAL ISSUES OF THEWORKS OF THE THREE CRUIK-SHANKS, ROWLANDSON, GILL-RAY AND OTHER ARTISTS,

Krem the Private Librar*? of

J. BARTON TOWNSEND, Esq.,of PhiladelphiaTO BE Mil ¡»

BV OJKI'KK OF Till; OW'NKK

0« Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs¬day of This Week,

At 3 and 8:15 o'Clock P. M.

ON FREE VIEWBeginning Saturday, Feb'ry 8,The Important Collection

Torrneil by the l-uf<-

James Franklin BellMajor-General, U. S. A.

Thii collection includes Rare NorthAmerican Indian baskets and blan¬kets, Philippine arms and weapons,«hand-woven fabric«, including thebut little known death blankets,and other curious objects of per¬sonal and historical interest col¬lected by Major-General Bel) whilein the Far West and the Philippineislands.

TO KB MMUD H\ OltOF.K OW THKWIOOW OK MA.JOK-4.K.VKK.U. MC1.L

On Friday, February 14thvi tut.

AMERICAN ART GALLERIESat 2:30 o'clock P. M

.». » staloatne lr. \>i*it*r»i\un, «-»-il»» of«Wrti trill l<* m-tll»-* to iiaitll. um» .n K#.

til* HhIv* «ti; Be t l.-l<}l|-te,i i,yn$i. 111«».! \- "... HlltllY;»Mi M* ieAmni <>; «he

t^MSKJCAM ARI rSSSOClATtONfVi.-ii agers,

5a i *»<. <, JKa«t ¿fttj ¦.. «i,,. HvutU.

keeper, nnd two women friends. The ]Rev. Dr. Nathan Seaglo. pastor of St.¦Stephen'««! Church, conducted the per-vice and the eulogy- was pronounced byDeWolf Hopper, a lifelong fri?nd ofMr. Goodwin. Virtually every mannnd woman of prominent in the theat-rlcal world was present.The funeral oration was brief. Sev¬

eral times Mr. Hopper paused, over¬come with emotion. He said:

"Nat, I come her«? to voice my loveand sorrow. What a wealth of signifi¬cance is conjured up by that name!What talents you possessed! Nat, youwould go so far out of your way to dosomething for me or any friend. Oftenyou were swayed by ovil influence, buteo many times more by the good andthe pure. You occupied a pinnacl«e ofsuccess. For a tirria you weakenedfrom the series of blows rained uponyou, but you rallied and came back.Your whole life was such a wealth ofnobility. The remembrance of yourcomedy, your pathos, your altruismwill live with us forever. We aregrateful to you for the lesson youhave taught us."The Lambs Club Quartet ^ang dur¬

ing the service. Mr. Goodwin's body,will be taken to Roxbury, Mass., thehome of his aged parents, for burial.Miss Cat-drier will accompany it. Thefollowing persons were present:Ceorgia Cordon. Theodore Babcock.

who played many years with Mr. Good¬win; J. Appleton. who for tycn'y-fouryears was his manager; Jack Hazard,Joe Weber. Lillian May Crawford.Adolf Link. John Leffler. Charles deWitt. John Shine. Mr. and Mqs. Will-iam Collier. Malcolm Bradley, EdwardRobbins, D. P. Steele. William Elliott,Colonel Shober, Reed Albce, FrederickCourtney, Joseph W. Frankel, Mrs.Charles Rose, Phil Riley, HerbertBrennon, Daniel Frohman, CharlesDillingham, John Golden, W. H. Thomp-son, Edward Cullen, Miss M. Cullen, ¡H. B. Monroe, Pauline Hall and J. W.Marsh. jMatthew CjOrbett, Rosalind Coughlan,Mr. and Mrs] Fred A. Goodwin, John J.McGraw, of «he New York Giants; Mrs.J. V. Melville, A! and Fred Dix, LauraHurt. R. 'I*. Shaw, Fred Ward. R.11. Burnside, Major W. McCutcheon,Mrs. A. Bradley, Paul Lard, KatherineFlynh, Frank Hatch, George M. Cohen,Colonel William Sheppard, CharlesScott, R. J. Callahan, King Baugot.William Frank. Henry Chesterfield, C.V. Foote, W. Johnson Quinn, ThomasGorman, representing the New YorkPress Club; W. J. Kelly. A. C. Arno'ld.Miss H. Brown, Helen Clarke. R. N.Hackler, Henrv Gingler, Mrs. ShellyHull and Mrs. William Hull. Joseph IHumphrey. Mrs. Seeley, representing;Frank Evans; Mrs. A. ('. Arnold.Francis Ford, Charles Graham. EdwardOwinga Towne, Ben Hendrieks. Mrs.J. W. Williams, Edgar Selwyn, WilliamGrover. Misses M. and J. Spencer andothers.

William Baylis, ExchangeMember for Years, Dies

Princeton Graduate of 1868!Was Well Known in Finan- .

eial CirclesWilliam Baylis, senior member of

the firm of Baylis & Co.. 15 WallStreet, for many years a member ofthe New York Stock Fxchange. diedyesterday at his home. 11 East Sixty-sixth Street, after an illness of fivemonths. He was seventy-one yearsold. jMr. Baylis was born in Brooklyn.the son of Abraham Burtis and De-borah MacDr.nald Baylis, and came of!an old Long Island family. His father |vras a member of the «Stock Exchangefrom 1841 to 1883, and was presidentof that organization in 1862. He at-tended the Brooklyn Polytechnic In-stitute and was graduated from Prince¬ton in 1868. After leaving college heentered the banking house of his .'father, and upon the death of the lat-ter formed the firm of Baylis & Co.with his brother, A. B. Baylis, con-tinuing at the hea<5 of that ihm until«the unie of his death. He was also a;director of the Canton Company, of]Baltimore, and a trustee of the gratu-ity fund- of the New York Stock Ex-change. '¡Mr. Baylis was a member of theUnion, University, Metropolitan andPrinceton clubs and of the St. NicholasSociety, and was a vestryman of St.Matthew's Protestant EpiscopalChinch, of Bedford. WestehesterCounty. , :He leaves a wife, Mrs. Adelaide'Brooks Baylis; a son. William Baylis,jr.. and a, daughter. Miss Adelaide B.Baylis.Funeral services will be held in «St.

Thomas' Protestant Episcopal Church,Fifth Avenue and Fifty-third Street,Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock.

WALLACE H. ROWEWallace H. Rowe, president of the

Pittsburg Steel Company, died yester¬day in Pittsburgh after an illness ofmore than a year. He had been a fac¬tor in the steel industry since 1886,when he went to Pittsburgh from St.Louis, where he had been associatedwith the wire manufacturing interestsof John W. Gates & Co. Mr.Rowe was identified with a number ofwire manufacturing mergers, includingthat of the American Steel and WireCo., and when that organization wasabsorbed by the United States «SteelCorporation he disposed of his inter¬ests and organized the PittsburghSteel Company.

EBENEZER C. HAY.Ebenezer C. Hay, one of the oldest

of American ironmasters, died Fridayat his homo in Newark, N. J. He waseighty-two years old. Mr. Hay was theson of James B. Hay, who came to thiscountry from Scotland in 1830 and.tarted in the foundry business in asmall way in Newark. Sbenezer suc¬ceeded his father in business, and atthe time <>f bis death was the head ofthe Hay Foundry an«l Iron Works, adirector of the Union National Bankof Newark and interested in manyimportant financial enterprises. He-leaves two sons.

TIRKM.BODIKH.AUTO«

pick a. riareain out «,f our Immense stock! of «slightly Seiled fs<st Makes.

A Banner Sal«! Every Make,All Sizes

Al«o

Thousands of New, First Qualityand Factory Blemished Tires

and Tubes<.r: whlcfa yon 08,11 "ffect

A SAVING OF **Z2%% to 50%A Hpl^riilki Opportunity to Htock Up.

AUTO BODIES OF ALL TYPESWlnt.r or 8«inuii<*r <*t ÍAiwttnl VrU-in.

Elegant New Jobs at l/2 ValueAll Hlnti'lanl Milk«-«. A Ino Home UMd Mo«ll««».Mnk« Voor Old Car Modorn; Corfiplst« «job,

\t ron AT ATTKAOTIV« I'itiri-.s¡/..moi. »,«.¦¦«! lo«.* <;!-...¦», V.iiHy Vu'/niinln

¦\inmtlKi, Aui(.r,i..l,¡lf« T7ad«dJantiorl Automobile Co«

In "<) »-i*»»n- > »loi lite,1763 Broadway, near 57th St.llo<ly flcp't. "BltlC Mkii- " ;>I7 W. »fill» Ht.

/ l.l.n in <>¦ '> ¦¦'./ .I./«/««

Francis La Bau, TrafficAid on N. Y. Central, Dies

Had Been Active in RegulatingWar Freight in Iltis

CityFrancis La Bau, traffic assistant to

-Regional Director A. H. Smith, one ofthe most active executives in the mar,-

agement of the railroads of the East-crn region during the last, year, diedyesterday morning at his home ir.Tnrrytown. He was fifty-nine yearsold.Mr. La Hau was born in Rohway, N'.

J., and was eduated at. the NazarethSchool, a Moravian institution at Naz¬areth, Penn. He began his railroadcareer with the Pennsylvania Railroadin Philadelphia, but remained with thatrout] only a, few years, going to theNew York Central and Hudson RiverRailroad, with which system he re-

mained continuously for thirty-sixyears.

Mr. La Bau was recognized as oneof the foremost traffic men in the coun¬try, and in August, 1917, ivas made-traffic manager of the New York Cen¬tral system. In June, 191S, RegionalDirector Smith placed him in charge ofall traffic matters for the Eastern ter¬ritory, and in that capacity he waslargely responsible for the vast workof the Freight Traffic Committee of theNorth Atlantic Ports, which body,through enforcement of the permit ays- ,tern, regulated the heavy war traffic andcleared up the dangerous congestionwtych threatened to block the flow ofsupplies to our army and the Allies.Overwork in the discharge of those

duties made such inroads upon Mr. LaBau's strength that six weeks ago hewent to Florida for a vacation. He re¬turned to his home about a week ngo,apparently much improved in health.He leaves a wife, Mrs. Julia Stanley LaBan, and one daughter.Funeral services will be held Tues-

day morning at 11 o'clock in the First'Dutch Reformed Church of Tarrytown.Interment, will be at Rahway, N. J.

. ¦'-

HARRY W. BRIGHAMHarry Whiting Brigham, an automo-

bile construction expert prominent inBrooklyn athletic circles, died of pneu-monia Thursday at. Camp McClellan,Alabama. He was twenty-eight yearsold.Mr. Brigham was born in Brooklynand received his education in the pub-lie schools of that borough, in the

Pawling Preparatory School and theUniversity of Virginia. He made aîeputation as a runner in his school !and college days and broke a numberof amateur records. jWhen the United States entered thewar Mr. Brigham endeayored to en-list, but was rejected because of a jbronchial trouble. Later he was *c-oepted find was assigned to the 9thField Artillery, going first to CampGordon, Ga., and later to Camp Mc-Clellan, Ala. Prior to his enlistment jhe was connected with the Coll-Strat-ton Company, of this city, as a con-struction expert.

Mr. Brigham leaves a wife, Mrs. !Elizabeth Prentiss Brigham, and his jparents, Air. and Mrs. Henry M. Brig¬ham, of 332 Jefferson Avenue, Brook-tyn. Funeral services will be heldMonday at. Spencerport, X. Y., thehome of his parents.

CHARLES HECKMANCharles . Heckman, an importer andmerchant tailor, at one time prominentas'art amateur actor in Brooklyn, diedFriday of pneumonia at his home in jBay Twenty-fifth Street, Bensonhurst.He was sixty-seven years old.Mr. Heckman was born in Kenne-bunkport, Me., and had lived in Brook¬lyn since ho was a young man. For

more than thirty years he had been inbusiness at 570 Fifth Avenue, Manhat-fan. In 1830 he became a member ofthe Amaranth Society, and for the nextten years appeared in most of the pro¬duction s of Brooklyn's leading trna-leur dramatic organizations. He leaves!a wife, Mrs. Ellen Beckham Heckman.two daughter-- and one son.Funeral services will be condusted a*the residence at 8:30 o'clock this eve-ning. Interment will be in YantirCemetery, Norwich-, Conn.

MRS. CAROLINE T. LINCOLNMrs. Caroline Tyler Li^oln, widowof the late Dr. Rufus P. Lincoln, diedyesterday morning at her home inPlainfield, X. J., of pneumonia. Mrs.Lincoln was born in Pittslield, Mass.,February 15, 1844, the daughter cf theKev. Wellington Hart Tyler and Caro-line E. Carpenter. Her father foi

many years was president of the Pitts-field Institute, a seminary for youngladies. She iva« married in 1869 toDr. Rufus P. Lincoln, a specialist inthroat and lung diseases, and theirhome was at 22 West; Thirtv-firstStreet in this city until the time ofhis death, in !900.Mrs. Lincoln leaves a daughter, Mrs.Frederick Schauff1er, of Pelham Manor,N. Y., and a sister, Miss Anna Tyler.FUNERAL OF J. E. OWENS

Fyneral sen-ices for Joseph EugeneOwens, prominent Brooklyn lawyer andclubman, who died suddenly Wednes¬day night, were held yesterday at St.Francis Xavlor's Church, Carroll Streetand Sixth Avenue, Brooklyn. Inter¬ment was in Calvary Cemetery.The funeral sermt-n was deliveredby Bishop Charles E. McDonnell, apersonal friend of Mr. Owens. Mun-signor D. J. Hlckey was celebrant ofthe mass, with the Rev. J. J. Kennedyas deacon and the Rev. J. Leo Williamsas subedeacon. A number of promi¬nent Roman Catholic clergy-men werein attendance. The honorary pall-bearers were Surrogate Herbert T.! Kctcham, David Porter, E. T. McGuire,Frank Bailey, James P. Judge andi Henry Mott.

FUNERAL OF SHUNZO TAKAKI.Funeral services for Shunzo Takaki,of the silk importing house of Mitsui& Co., who died at St. Luke's HospitalWednesday, were held yesterday at St.Thomas Church, Fifth Avenue andFifty-third Street. The services werej conducted by the R»v. Ernest M. Stires,[ rector of the church, and many Japa-nese prominent in official life were

present. Mr. Takaki was a member ofthe Nippon, Railroad, Aldine and Uni¬versity clubs and the Japan Society.He leaves a wife and four children.

»

Miss Nancy Richards isBride of Robert Crane

ïliss Nancy Richards, daughter ofMr. and Mrs. George Richards, wasmarried to Robert Crane, son of Mr.and Mrs. Munroe Crane, of Dover Plains,N. Y. yesterday afternoon at her home,398 Park Avenue. The ceremony wasperformed by the Rev. Dr. William P.Merrill. The bride, wirb was givenaway by her father, was attended byMiss Harriet Richards, a sister, as maide-f honor; Miss Isabel Jamison, ofPittsburgh; Miss Mildred McNeill, ofBrooklyn; Miss Charlotte Boote andMiss Olive Burns, of East Orange.John N. Stone, of Springfield, Mass.,served as best man, and the usherswore Brenton Pomeroy, of Greenwich,Conn.; Philip B. firewater, of Flush¬ing, Long Island; Clifford Mcrrifield,of New York; Beach Barrett, of Bloom-field, N. J., nnd Donald Crane, ofDî-ver Plains, N. Y.

Mi«« Kitty Vondermuhle sçrvitd asflowr «rlrl and George Vondermuhle aspage.

'MostBeautifulN. Y. Woman''Flees From Artists' Praises

The most beautiful women in NewYork City flashed into sight for an

instant on Friday night. Four famousartists, genii of the niágaine cover,found her witbb unerring judgmentamong a crowd of thousands. Theyshowered upon her all the praiseswhich are beauty's due. They movedto place her on a pedestal of honorwhore she should dole, out delight.They declared her the only and right-ful lineal descen'dJÜrVof Aphrodite.And then they discovered that she

whom they had taken for Venus was'i«nlv Cinderella after all.For Miss Edyth Hyde, after a fright-

onpd acceptance of the irolden applecoveted by all feminine New York anda hurried wispering of her name to theawe-ttricken judges, wrapped herselfdurriedly in a while cloak, jumped in:«. taxi and disappeared.

Didn't Lose a SlipperWho is she? What is she ? No¬

body seems to know. Her slipperswere on tight, she did not drop the.apple nor leave the tinest clue behind.If it had not ffeen for the .camera,which caught her a~s she was wonder-ingly inspecting the Gift, of Gods, no

one would have known what face itwafs that launched four blase NewYork artists on such a sea of praise,But she, true to old tradition, hadoverlooked this modern appurtenanceof Prince Charming and so the day was

saved. Here she is for all to look at.and her name is Mrs, Edith Hyde Rob-bins, of 220 West Seventieth Street.

Though: her beauty has been re¬vealed, she is a most mysterious per-son, this Cinderella. It was variouslywhispered abrnt the ballroom the night

i.'fiitthtrd from ycn'.rrda'j's lair edition*

Art

Furnishings of Home of Mrs.Jennie G. Bradley Brin«;

Total of $44,316

The sale of furnishings, ¦embellish¬ment..-; and paintings from the residenceof Mrs. Jennie C. Bradley was con-,eluded yesterday, and brought a totalof §44,316 for theNtwp sessions. Mr.Higbee was a keen bidder when thepaintings were sold. He purchased"Sunset Landscape," by George Inness,for $8,000 (top price of the sale); "TheRaiders," by Schreyer, for $6,000;"Meeting of the Black Waters," byWyant, Tor $5,000; "Holland Land¬scape," by Homer Martin, for $3,500,and a landscape with cattle, by Troyon,for the same price. "ApproachingStorm." by Daingertield, was obtainedby Mr. Reimann for $1,825, and a land¬scape with cattle brought $525. Mr.Higbee also purchased a landscape byH. W. Ranger for $875."Indian Encampment," by Ralph

Blakelock, went to the Rev. Mr. Lucasfor the low sum of $475, and Mr. Man¬ning secured "The Honeymoon," by E.F. Couse, for $400. A Louis XVI carvedand gilt wood reception suite brought$2,000. The sale was conducted by Rob-ert C. Graham, auctioneer.

At the fifth session of the sale of theRufus E. Moore collection, conductedat the American Art Galleries, the high-est price of the afternoon, $750, was

¡paid by Parish Watson for a turquoi.seblue bottle i Cbien-lungi. W. W. Sea¬man, agent, paid $700 for a celadonjardiniere, $410 for a yellowy jar Kang-hSi) and $220 for a cafe-ati-lait cracklejar of the same period. Misa R. II,Lorenz, agent, purchased two mirrorblack vases, for $420 and $400, rcspec-tively, and a dense celadon jardiniere¡(Ming) wont to H. I. Riker for $475.The total for yesterday's session was$11,438, making a total to date of $82.-493.

CLIFFORD J. HARRISClifford J. Harris, for many years an

inspector in the Custom House, NewYork City, died of heart disease yes-terday in the United Hospital, at PortChester, N. Y. He was sixty-five yearsold. He was born in Brooklyn, and hadlived in Port Chester for twentv-sixyears. He leaves a sister, Mrs. RichardWhiting, who is living in France, andan adopted daughter, Mrs. Louise Ç.Franke, of Port Chester,

GEORGE KEESGeorge Kees, for mnny years, a prom¬

inent coal dealer in Brooklyn, died Frlday at the home of his «on, MichaelKofi*. 20!' DCVOO Street, in that bn;

she apéared that she was a lady ofleisure, an actress, an- artist's model,!that she came originally from Mont-:clair, X. J. But none of these thingscould b'e verified, and at Miss Hyde'sorne, where ihe fled to get her beauty!

sleep, the bell of the small apartmentjanglecl agnir. and again, but the doorfailed ià open, and tho beauty kep',herself safe beyond the threshold.

And She's Quite YoungMiss Hyde, it was said yesterday

morning by those revellers who couldbe found after the all-night affair, haslovely brown hair with red tints. Sheis neither tall nor short, nor stout northin. lier eyes are blue, and she hasionj;;. curling eyelashes. And she isunite young.oh, just about twenty-two or so.

It must not be supposed, however,that Miss Hyde's title for first hon-ors went unchallenged. Some of themost beautiful women of the stage andthe artistic sets came to compete forthe golden apple.When Miss Hyde, in a glittering!

''Queen of the Harem" costume, with a

shining ornament atop her fore headand rows of jewels and bears swingingabout her lithe form, appeared she out-shond them all. A gorgeously gownedpage was ordered to bring the Queenof Beauty fruits in profusion. TheApple followed, borne aloft on a greenjade pedestal by a slave. It was mod-estly received by the choice of ¡jrhejudges, and she murmured: "Oh, there'are lots of better looking girls herethan I am." Then she seized her cloakand fled.At the Hotel des Artistes, Where the

pageant, of beauty was held, defeatedbeauties hung drooped after Miss Hydelied. The artist-judges were PonrhynStanlaws, Harrison Fisher. Howard(.'handle!' «àhïisty and E, X. Anderson.

ough. He was seventy years old. Mr.Kees was born in Germany, but hadlived in this country for more thanfifty years. He leaves two sons andtwo daughters. Funeral services willbe held to-morrow morning at St.Nicholas Church, Olive and DevoeStreets, of which he was long a mem¬ber. Interment will be in St. John'sCemetery.

>1i*s McNair EngagedTo Reginald Hutchinson

Mr. and Mrs. William McNair, of 5j, Elast Seventy-ninth Street, have an-

nounced the engagement.of their daugh¬ter. Miss Vera McNair, to Reginald L.Hutchinson, son of Daniel LovettHutchinson, of Philadelphia. .The en-

gagement was announced at a luncheonwhich Mrs. McNair «ave yesterday at

, her home for her daughter. Miss Mc-Nair was introduced to society last sea-son. She is a nince of Howard, Irvingand George T. Brokaw and a grand¬daughter of the late Isaac Brokaw.

Mr. Hutchinson recently was mus¬tered out of service, after serving as anensign in the naval aviation force. Hegraduated from Yale in 1918 He. is.amember of the Racquet Club and makesiiis home in this city.The wedding probably will take placein Easter week.

Rcprirtied from iieiterdau'n lale editions

OperaFrench Novelty SuccessfullyProduced by Chicago Com¬

pany at Lexington

By H. E. KrehbielCircumstances forbid that we should

inquire as curiously as we might bedisposed to do into the opera "LeChemineau,"' which received its firstperformance in New York from the Chi¬cago Opera Company at the LexingtonTheatre last night. There is interest¬ing enough matter in the work to oc-"*cupy serious attention, but little time,and we are not quite sure that all theminutes which might be conscriptedvould yield adequate results.We could not hear all of the opwra,

but only enough to gain a few generalimpressions the record cf which maysuffice to convey as much of an idea-ofwhat the work is like as the time-harassed reader of a daily newspaper'¦a likely to want in such a case. Werethe work one of profound interest,artistically more careful and delibér¬ate, consideration might be a duly."Le Chemineau" was new to the

audience as an opera. As a drama itwas doubtless familiar to many ofthose who saw and heard it in itschanged form last night. Jean Riche-pin wrote it for the theatre, and it was

produced a decade or more« ago as an

English play in London by Sir HerbertTree under the title "Ragged Robin,"and Otis Skinner Drought it forwardin New York as "The Harvester."As a play, we make no doubt, it

was more interesting than it was lastnight, or is likely ever to be as anopera; for its story is slight and whenclogged, as it necessarily is by music,its dialogue, its dramatic value and Hssignificance become attenuate whenspread over four acts. Music of anextremely high order would be neces¬sary to atone for the loss of poeticalthought and possible symbolism, andsuch music M. Leroux has not given it,though his tonal investiture hasenough charm to challenge respect, ifnot admiration.The action of the Metropolitan com¬

pany in launching "La Reine Fiam-mette," by tlTe same composer, afterkeeping it on the stocks for ten yearsnaturally provoked comparison, which,to judge by the comment heard inthe lobbies, was greatly to the disad¬vantage of tli£ opera performed at theBroadway house; but here again we arenot in a position to venture an opinion.It is enough that "Le Chemineau," byreason of its book, its score and par¬ticularly by its performances, morethan justified its production. It wouldhave done that had so obvious anddirect a challenge been offered in theproduction at this singular juncture of."La Reine Fiammette."Why MM. Richepin and Lerouxshould have undertaken to celebrateLe Chemineau, who is called only bythat name, we cannot quite conceive.He is a roadster, a tramp, obviously of

a romantic and poetic disposition, butif he possesses any of the attributesof Locke's beloved vagabond it is diffi¬cult to disco;.n them. He delights innature and tne work of harvesters, but,like a walking delegate, he does nowork himself, but talks about the workof others. He seduces a peasant girland abandons her simply to follow thecall of the road.

After twenty years' absence from thescene of the play he returns to findthat the woman whom he deserted hasmarried an honest and confiding oldman. He helps the pair out of troubleand promotes the marriage of a good-for-nothinjj'son whom the husband con¬siders his own child. The old man,dying in ignorance, begs him to con¬tinue his geodness to the woman whohad been his mistress by marrying her;but this he refuses to do.The lure of the road calls him out

again, and he deserts the woman a«¿ceond time, while the sounds of carolsand the bells calling to Christmas massmingle with the words of the simple-minded peasant. An effective com-

The FourHorsemen of

/

'AVvliKr,,T,^tÄM?RIES 0F TIIE MEN ANI> WOMEN OF THIS¿IMA v*If'^'Xr GENERATION ARE DEAD, THIS BOOK WILLW'Mvír ^r-»-*^ ALIVE A RHÏHTEOUS INDIGNATIONÍÍÑÍ* r* Acr-I*LI,.RE,MNANT 0F BARBARISM WHICH POSEDlinmnwrA Î fir £EPSTLE OF CULTURE. . . HE WHOmÍÍ-ht nvr^ítX^ ÍWÍ5HTFWL EVILS OF THE RULE OFMIGH1 OVER RIGHT, SHOULD RfcAD THIS BOOK."..Temple Scott.

By VICENTE BLASCO IBANEZ.hilhnr of "The Shatlow of the Cathetlrttl."

"& E. P. DUTTON & CO., "^0*""**MM,***M'M»M»««MMMIi^«»_-______._.

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mingling of dramatic material, this, es¬pecially for operatic treatment, but itscarcely evokes the sympathy which adiamatie hero ought to excite tojustify a play of evr;n pastoral low life.

Queerly enough at this juncture of;--the world's affair's, the story awakenedmemories of an earlier opera, in whichthe call of the road led to- the forget-fulness of duty and love and the do-:sertioh of wife and child. Sixteenyears ago Mr. Paderewski, now apuissant figure in the political affairs ofthe world,- brought out his "Manru" atthe Metropolitan Opera House. Butthe hero of the present Polish PrimeMinister'» opera was impelled by theurge infused in the black blood of the,gypsy by the tradition of ages. M. «

Richepin s tramp has no racial pro-pensity to explain his conduct.However, "Le Chemineau" has a !

story which can be told in music, whichhas voices for its appeals to natureand tones for characteristic illumina¬tion. And this music M. Leroux has

k found for it in large measure. Hisscore is fluent, like the scores of Mas¬senet, not turgid like those of Février,with which we have lately made a re-sumed acquaintance. His melodiesfloat on the orchestral flood; they areits surface, not its undercurrent.There is much apt characterisation

and rapidity of flow sufficient to en¬able the actors to achieve dramatic ef¬fects, as they did so triumphantly inthe second act last night that the callsbefore the curtain Were many andgenuinely enthusiastic.The triumphs ( real triumphs of sing¬ing and acting they were-not of the

Garden variety) were quite evenlyshared by Mesdames Yvonne Gall.Myrna Sharlow and Maria Claessensand Messrs. Maguenat. Baklanoff andDua, and we are sorry that we havenot time to point out some of the ex¬cellences of the performances of eachof them and of the conducting of M.Hasselmans. .

Cfrlo Hacl.eft Wins TriumphAt Hif- Metropolitan Debut

By Grenville Vernon -

"The Barber of Seville" was sung atthe Metropolitan Opera House lastnight, for the first time this season.With one exception the cast was onewhich has Bung the old opera manytimes before. Giuseppe De Luca wasthe Figaro, and both vocally and his-triónically was as admirable as ever.Mme. Frieda Hempel was the Rosina,which on the histrionic side is a partfor whicn nature never intended her.«She knows how to sing the music, buther high tones were wofully deficientand the coloratura passages went forlittle. Perhaps she was afflicted witha cold. Pompilio Malatesta played Dr.Bartolo with all the unction and ab¬surd seriousness of a true Italianbuffo, and José Mardones, while notexhausting the comic possibilities ofBasilio, ,sang the music superbly. Butthe real triumph of the evening waswon by a new singer, the Almaviva.

Carlo Hackett is a young Bostonianwho before he went to Europe hadsung only in concert. He returns tous a light tenor such as New York hasnot heard certainly since Bonci. while,many would go much further back thanthat to name his equal. Mr. Hackettis a young man of a pleasing presenceand fine dramatic instincts, and his Al-

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maviva is aristocratic in bearing and incharm. His voice is light but it isfirm in* texture, entirely without thebleating quality usually the sign of atenorc cli grazia, and of ample carryingpower.

His use of his voice is superb. Hisskill in florid embroidery, his powerof spinning out a tone to a silkenthread, his delicacy in phrasing, hismastery of tone color, all proclaimedhim a true master of bel canto. In aday of slipshod singing this youngAmerican comes to us like a preciousgift from a bygone age.The audience at once recognized his

abilities, and the applause after histwo airs in the first act was of thekind usually given only to Caruso.

All in all, it was an admin-ble per¬formance of the old work- -and ho-.vthe music lasts! When sung as Mr.Hackett, Mr. Do Luca and Mr. Mar-dones sang it, with the orchestra play-inp; with the spontaneity and thelightness it showed under SignerPapi's baton, it is as fresh as if ilhad been written the day before yes¬terday. Perhaps, after all, Rossini li¬the music of the future!

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