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Hi?es Notifies Coal Boards to Quit April 1 Federal Administrator Is? sues Formal Orders Re? moving Federal Restric? tions Upon Distribution ?L-f Wage Parley Urged Here Were Under Way to Have Committee of Operators and Miners Meet Monday WASHINGTON, March 24.?Formal withdrawal of all restrictions on coal distribution was made to-night by Director General of Railroads Hines, who, as Fuel Administrator, notified regional and district coal distribution committees they would cease to func? tion on April 1. This action was pur? suant to the order of the President. Suggestion that the Joint scale com? mittee of operators and miners of the central competitive bituminous coal field meet Monday in New York to draft a new wage agreement was mad? in a te?egram sent to-day by John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Work? ers of America, to Thomas T. firew? ater, chairman of the operators' scale committee. The operators and miners were asked by President Wilson yesterday to con? vene the joint wage conference as soon as possible, so that the- uncertainty as to the fuel supply might be ended. At the same time the President said he expected the majority report of the coal commission, recommending an av? erage wage increase of 27 per cent, would be accepted as binding on both the operators and miners. ST. LOUIS, March 24.?Thomas T. Brewster, chairman of the coal oper? ators' scale committee in the central competitive field, to-day announced he had notified John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, that the operators' scale committee would meet the miners' committee here next Thurs? day to discuss the majority report of the coal commission. Mr. Brewster said the operators' com? mittee would meet here Monday to con? sider the report. INDIANAPOLIS, March 24.?Warren F, Smith, sales agent for the Power Coal Company at Terre Haute, Ind., was arrested here to-day by a deputy United States marshal on a capias chargin^fc-onspiracy. He is one of the 12? coal operators and miners indicted by a special Federal grand jury for alleged conspiracy to enhance the price of necessities and commit offense ?gainst the United States government. Bond of $10,000 was provided. Forty-two of the fifty-five Indiana men indicted either have been arrested or have surrendered themselves. No difficulty in having all the Indiana j defendants in Indianapolis for arraign- I ment on May 4 id anticipated by Fed? eral officials. Five hundred printed copies of the indictment will be ready for distribu? tion to lawyers and to Federal officials in Illinois, Ohio and Pennsylvania, where the other indicted miners and operators reside, some time this week, it was said. Miners to Continue Work Pending Negotiations Owners U"ill Agree to Increase Decided Upon at Conference, Retroactive Until April 1 There will be no suspension of work in the hard coal regions on April 1 pending negotiations between the oper? ators and mine workers for u new wage agreement. The owners notified the coal diggers at a conference of the sub-committee of the anthracite operators and mine workers last night that they would agree to make any wage increase de? cided upon in the negotiations retro? active to April 1. The present agree? ment between the miners and owners expires on March 31. The question of wages and working conditions will be taken up by the con? ference at the Union League Club this morning, at 10 o'clock. ? 18,050 City Employees in Chicago to Get Raises Increase? Add $4,000,000 to Budget; Bankruptcy Feared by October 1 Svicial D?-paieh to Ths Tribune Chicago, March 24.?Salary increases for 18,050 city employees were assured to-day, when, after a struggle that be? gan Monday, the council adopted an order adding $4,000,000 to the annual budget, bringing the total expenditures provided for in 1920 to $36,250,000. The resolution calling for the over appropriation was adopted despite pro teats that it was illegal. The city was warned of a possible state of bank? ruptcy by October 1. when it would either have to pay its employees in script redeemable at 75 per cent of its face value or admit its helplessness and plead with the banks for relief. The appropriation will be divided three ways, $2.200,000 to increase sal? aries of city employees, 10 per cent more or less, as the committee de? cides; $1,000,000 to be used to retain civil service employees who were ?loomed to discharge, and the remain? ing $800,000 to be added to the funds for cleaning the streets and alleys. The Finance Committee met with five of the city's largest bankers later. It n understood the financiers promised to advance the money if a legal method ?for doing so can be evolved. ? . i - Travis Warns Public to Pay IncomeTax Promptly Delay Involves Increased Inter est Charged, Says State Comptroller New York residents who are deferring the payment of their state income tax were warned yesterday by Comptroller Travis that the longer the delay tho greater the amount of interest charged to them. "No doubt,' 'he said, "thousands who saw military or naval service or worked for a government controlled corpora? tion during 1919, are holding up their returns until the law is amended grant? ing them full exemptions* Many oth? ers, however, would have money in their jockets if they sat down and sent in the return immediately." Actual receipts so far are $23,000,000. Cotdon&Dilworth ? Real ? ObanceMasmaiade Wooden Shoes May Solve Footwear Problem Here i - Dutch Manufacturers to Send Envoys to This City to Convince People of Folly of Paying Excessive Prices To Be Shod in Leather?Big Sale Expected There is a movement afoot to return New York to the days of Peter Stuyve sant and the founder of the Astor fortunes. Times when there were pub? lic stocks on Bowling Green, and schnapps was the popular tippleriong, long bofore the advent of Anderson, the majority of the population of New Amsterdam went abroad about its daily affairs clad in shoes of solid wood. Yesterday a cablegram from The Hague announced the sailing of Dutch shoe manufacturers for New York, with the object of persuading the American people to return to the footwear of their ancestors. With leather shoes zooming buoy? antly on the retail market at anywhere between $20 and $50, the scheme will have a certain attraction for frantic fathers confronted with the necessity for covering'the pedal extremities of more or less numerous offspring. Par? ents who stand aghast at the demoniac ability of all small boys and girls to | kick the toes out of their footwear in record time may be expected to wel? come the innovation with loud and jubilant cries of gladness. Once little Willie is safely shod in a pair of white oak brocans, it will be only necessary to store the family axe Ford Campaign Inquiry Favored by Governor Sleeper Says Investigation Will Be Conducted if Govern? ment Is Snicere LANSING, Mich., Ma-ch 24.?Until the United States Supremo Court passes on the verdict of the jury in the Newberry elections conspiracy trial at Grand Rapids, none of the seventeen men found guilty of criminal con? spiracy will be asked to rclinguish any public office they hold, Governor Albert A. Sleeper said in an interview here to-ckiy. * | The Governor said he believed the campaign of Henry Ford, Senator Newberry's Democratic opponent in the 1918 election, should not be investi? gated. ? j "Senator Newberry. Richard i II. Fletcher, S?tate Labor Commissioner, and myself have been attacked by the press in and out of the state since the trial closed," said the Governor.. "L has been suggested that Newberry and Fletcher resign, I seo no cause for this until the Supreme Court makes known its findings. "If I make any requests at present, one will be that the government con duct just as active an investigation into the campaign conducted by Henry Ford as by Senator Newberry. If the government is sincere in its investiga? tion, it should not stop with investi? gating the campaign of the winner but also should probe the campaign of the loser." Open Shop Demanded as \ True American Standard! Union? Leading Nation to Social Crisis, Says President of Manufacturer?-. Special Dispatch to The Tribune PITTSBURGH, March 24- "The only; true Ame?'i^5ih standard is the open ' shop, with-equal opportunity for all." Stephen C. Mason, president of the National Association of Manufacturers,! made this statement this afternoon at ? a luncheonv?f the association in the j William l'en? Hotel. "I believe- every good citizen will agree with me," he declared, "when I ; say the time has arrived when organ ized labor had better take stock of its j policies and practices from a thor- j oughly American standpoint. The Amer- ! ican people are no longer going to ac- i cept lip service from those organiza? tions in our midst which are leading! the nation to .the brink of the most i serious economic and social crisis in I our history. Oft repeated declarations of Americanism and patriotism, and ; frequent disclaimers of Bolshevistic beliefs are not sufficient to conceal their constant efforts to stimulate un? sound and dangerous industrial the? ories. "Congress can and should do much | toward restoring business confidence j by facilitating the return of the United States to constitutional gov? ernment, and the removal of all gov? ernment shackles on private business not permitted by the Constitution and not within the primary scope of gov- ; eminent in times of peace." Chicago Boards Fix Rents Arbitration Headquarters for ! Adjusting ?Committees Opened Special Dibpatch to The Tribune CHICAGO. March 2?L?Headquarters for live arbitration boards for the set? tlement of disputes between tenants and landlords will bo oponed in differ? ent, sections-of the city this weak. This announcement was made to-day after a joint meeting of representatives of the Cook County Real Etate Board and the Chicago Tenants' Protective League, who started the movement and formed the central committee. i Oshornc Finishes Week's Service on Prison Woodpile PORTSMOUTH, N. H., March 24. Lieutenant Commander Thomas Mott \ Osborne to-day finished a week of serv- ? ice in the dungaree garb of the naval | prison here, of which he was com- i mandant until recently. He spent most! of his time of voluntary imprisonment, ? he said, on the woodpile. Commander 1 Osborne announced that he soon would ! return to confinement. U> spend an- j other week among the prisoners be? fore he is discharged from the service at his request. ? in the safety deposit vault along with the family reserves of coal (six ounces) and sugar (threo lumps) to defy him and the concrete sidewalks to do their combined durndest. There will be protests from the off? spring, of course. Not only are wooden shoes a handicap to the business of sprinting from the cop on the corner, ! but the prospect of being spanked with | a birdseye maple bedroom slipper holds ! terrors which make the average pad ! dling seem an innocuous, pallid affair. Once the scheme reaches Grand Rap ? ids, other innovations may be expected, i and the future holds some perplexities 1 when the daughter of tho house weeps i copiously because her Louis Quinze dancing pumps are hopelessly out of ? date in a season when the prevailing I mode calls for hand carving of the pe j riod of the brothers Adam. New York wholesalers, safely en | trenched behind the knowledge that | the habit of New York is to have what it thinks it wants, and hang the price, give the idea the merry razz. "Can you imagino Fifth Avenue at I noon hour with everybody wearing I wooden shoes?" one scornful purveyor | of kangaroo kids demanded, whilo an ; other one expressed the view that ; Greenwich Village might fall for it, 1 but Broadway -never! Youth, 23, Weds Former Brooklyn Teacher, 53 War Veteran Was Once Pupil of Bride, Who Disappeared Two Years Ago Mrs. A. G. Babcock, of 1679 East Twenty-first Street, Brooklyn, said yesterday that she had received a no? tice of the marriage of her brother, P.ussell L. Richman, twenty-three years old, to Mrs. Mary Heffernan, fifty-three ; years old, who used to be his teacher in j Public School 139, Cortclyou Road and East Thirteenth Street, Brooklyn. Mrs. Heffernan disappeared in April,] 1918, after the death of her husband, who was a city surveyor. A bottle labeled carbolic acid was found in her room, and her friends believed that she had committed suicide. Mrs. Bab? cock knew, however, that the missing teacher was in Warren, Ohio, for herj brother corresponded with her there. The young man enlisted and was sent! to France. On his return he got work j in Warren and it was there that he] was married, March 1. | Divorce Reform Bill Wins In House of Lords Test - , LONDON, March 24.?The House of Lords, by a vote of 93 to 45, to-day passed the second reading of a bill in? troduced by Baron Buckmaster, propos ing important divorce reforms. | The bill, Which is based on the ma- | jority report of a royal commission, ex- j tends the grounds for divorce to cover, | among other reasons, three years' de- I sertion, habitua! drunkenness and cases ? where a sentence of death has been com? muted to life sentence. After a powerful and impassioned speech by Baron Birkenhead, the Lord Chancellor, who supported the measure on behalf of the government, the sec- j ond reading was carried despite the op- j position of the Episcopal bench, the ? Catholic peers un dthe High Anglican | Church peers. ' The bill has not yet appeared in the \ House of Commons, but is said to be al- j most certain of being carried when it ; gets there. -a Fly, Don't Talk, Says Page Declares Public Must Be Shown J What Aviation Can Do Frederick Handle;.* Page, the noted i British airplane designer and manufac- I turer, at a special luncheon given in his honor at the American Flying Club yesterday declared that commercial aviation never would be. a success until flying was done instead of talking. "You must establish a living propa? ganda of flying," he said. "What the people need is to see machines actually in the air flying. They need to be shown, not told, that aviation is safe. Let us get machines in the air, fly them and show that passengers and expensive freight can be carried safely and profit? ably." It was announced yesterday that the date of the second annual aviators' ball had been changed from April 17 to April 24. It will be held in the Ritz Carlton. SeaplaiiesJNearing Florida Flight to Charleston Made in 9 Hours and 20 Minutes The two naval seaplanes which left ! Rockaway Naval Air Station Tuesday on a flight to Pensacola, Fla., reached j Charleston, S. C, safely and spent the night there, according to a' telegram received yesterday. The flight down i was marked by one incident, when air- i plane No. 3010 was compelled to alight on the ocean off Cape May. The land ing was made in a heavy sea, but the machine was able to get off again after minor repairs. T?e planes left Charleston yesterday on the last leg of their flight. The flight to Charleston was accomplished in nine hours and twenty minutes. Drive for Nurse Fund Lags Only 3700,000 of $1,000,000 Needed Is Subscribed Only $700.000 has been raised of the ? $1,000.000 needed to sond tho cam? paign for funds to extend the work of the Visiting Nurses' Service over the top. .Mrs. Linzec Blagden, vice-chair? man of the campaign committee, yes? terday appealed to tho people of the city to make up the deficiency. More appeals for aid are coming'in than the nurses can answer with their present equipment. HB jjfl_? Bf ?_^x_ i A*^_ s-f^^ Mitk?*ra HB_____B N. Y. Restaurateurs Plan Economies to Meet New Expense Reconstruction o f Busi? nesses Declared Necessary Due to AfVer-Prohibition Affairs; to Unite Forces New York's big restaurant men de? cided on drastic steps yesterday to meet an after-war and after-prohibi? tion condition, which, in the opinion of members of the Society of Restau? rateurs, makes necessary reconstruc? tive activities as farreaching as those in other lines of American business. August Janssen, the society's nowly elected president, at a meeting of the membership on the third floor of his caf?, 34 West Thirtieth Street, an? nounced a program which embraces the following points in the society's plan: Creation of a bureau of markets, a bureau of purchases and a bureau of price quotations, to be incorporated in a centralized office representing every restaurant in the organization. Simplified bookkeeping and account? ing, for the purpose of effecting economies in every phase of the restau? rant business. Establishment of legislative bureaus here, at Albany and at Washington to work in behalf of the society and to counteract detrimental or unfair legis? lation. Creation of nn insurance department for the protection of the restauratenrs, many of whom, Mr. Janssen declared, are improperly insured. Pooling of all advertising interests. Concerted and cooperative action in times of food shortage and in labor troubles. Hitherto, Mr. Janssen said, restaurant proprietors have been prone to dis? regard the economic laws under which their businesses are conducted. "Five years of steadily mounting labor, con? struction and food costs, coupled now with high taxes and prohibition, have made the restaurant men reaTize that they must organize and cooperate as never beforo," he declnred. We are taking up this work with a view to placing the restaurant business on a plane as efficient as that of other busi? nesses. Many restaurants have been forced out of business by prohibtion. "The cost of restaurant help has risen 160 or 170 per cent since the war began. In addition the cost of food has gone sky-high. But the restaurants are charging only from 15 to 25 per cent more to-day than they charged five or six years ago." William Healy, proprietor of Healy's Restaurant, FortyTsecond Street and Broadway, said: "If the restaurant owner had been as careful in matters of economies and; cooperation with his fellow-restaura? teurs tan years a??o as he is compelled * to be to-day," Mr. Healy said, "he; would be rich." Among those in attendance at the; meeting were J. J. Lussier, Andre D. Bustanoby, J. Wagner, Louis C. Mou-! quin jr., Theodore Kemm, John J. Cava-: nagh, Enrico Gailito und C. L, Zueca, j -??-?? - Colgate & Co. Accused i Under Anti-Trust Law Fifty-six Counts in Indictment Charging Violations by Re? sale Price Fixing An indictment containing fifty-six ? counts, charging violation of the Sher? man anti-trust law, was returned by a Federal grand jury in Trenton, N< J., yesterday against Colgate & Co., of Jersey City, N. J., manufacturers of toilet preparations. The indictment claims the company illegally fixed re- ; sale prices of its products to whole? salers and jobbers. The company was indicted in 1918 : for fixing resale prices, but because i of a technicality a demurrer to the indictment was sustained on the ground j it did not charge that the company : made any price fixing agreements. The grand jury's action yesterday ? quotes alleged correspondence between i the company and its selling agents and ; dealers in its products. Colgate & Co., in a statement given ! out after the indictment was issued, denied price fixing agreements were made with dealers. Too Late to Stop Wedding | So Mother-in-Law, Delayed by j Train, Blesses Newlyweds Special Dispatch to The, Tribune POUGHKEEPS1E, N. Y., March 24.- i Anna Cari?t, a junior at Vassar Col? lege, was married here yesterday to | Arthur Wollwood, of this ploco. When she returned to hor room for her suit? case to set, out for a honeymoon in the Bermudas she found her mother, Mrs. C. A. Carlat, waiting for her. Mrs. Carlat had come all the way from Kansas City to forbid the wed? ding, but her train was an hour late. She was prevailed upon to kiss her daughter and her son-in-law, who de? parted according to thcfr original plans, but with a parental blessing. ? ? ? - Board Without Power In Longshore Strike National Commission Chairman Sees Only Hope of Settle? ment in Rate Raise William Z. Ripley, chairman of the National Adjustment Commission, in a statement issued yesterday declared that the commission had no authority to end the longshoremen's strike, which has tied up more than ninety vessels engaged in the constwise trade. He made this statement in compli? ance with the request of tho Depart? ment of Labort which has received nu? merous complaints from Southern ship? pers and farmers that hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of fruits and vegetables aro in danger of spoil? ing as a result of the strike. Dr. Ripley says the only solution of the problem is the allowance of an increase in freight rates by the Interstate Commerce Com? mission. Following the walk-out of 750 long? shoremen from the piers of the United Fruit Company 600 strikebreakers were employed yesterday on Piers 15 and 16, East River, and Pier 9, North Riven T. V. O'Connor, president of the Interna? tional Longshoremen's Association, is expected to return to-day from Buffalo, where he has been visiting a sick son. Ohio Cities Make Big Gains Dayton's Population Increases 37,253 and Warren 144.1% WASHINGTON, March 24.?Popula? tion statistics for 1920 announced to? day by the Census Bureau included: Dayton, Ohio, 153,830, an increase of 37,253, or 31.1 per cent over 1910. Parkcrsburg, W. Va., 20,039, increase 2,197, or 12.3 per cent. Middletown, N. Y., 18,420, increase 3,107, or 20.3 per cent. Warren, Ohio, 27,050, increase 15, 969, or 144.1 per cent. Trenton, Mo., (.,951, increase 1,295, or 22.9 per cent. Junction City, Kan., 7,516, increase 1,918, or 34.3 wer cent. Kewanee, 111., 16,026, increase 6,719, or 72.2 per cent. Anniston, Ala., 15,709, increase 2,915, or 22.8 per cent. ! -? New Yorkers Win Crosses From The Tribune'? Washington Bureau WASHINGTON, March 24. New Yorkers awarded Distinguished Service Crosses to-day for extraordinary hero? ism in action with the American forces in France included Private Robert Bascom, 127th Infantry, living in Union Square, and private John Bridgford, deceased, who lived at 364 West 121st Street, New York City, and Corporal Frank P. Murphy, of East lrvington-on Hudson. IMPORTANT UNRESTRICTED SALE AT THE MAMONiq?t?EIMH Vmffl NEW YDW. aTf FREE VIEW 9 A. M. TO 6 P. M., Continuing Until Date of Sale Afternoons of March 29 and 30, at 2:30 o'clock Mr. Charles Bellows* Collection of Anglo-American Pottery (Many Specimens of which are referred to in Dr. Barber's authoritative work.) Early American Glassware, Lowestoft, Books on Pottery, New York Views and Auto? graphs of Eminent Persons. ???Illustrated catalogim mulled on receipt i of 75 cent?. The Male will be. coniliKlcfl liy 31K. THOMAS V.. KIRBY ntul til?, .'iHftistiint*, Mr. Otto Bernct ftid Mr. II. H, Park?, AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION Managers. ?, 4 ami ? East 23d St., Miulixori Sq. South. MADISON SQUARE GARDEN ?IUHN.RIULEY Unparalleled Combin ahon of the Vorld'sr. 2 Foremost Amusement institutions _^ underfill Always?Surpassin?ly Vondorful Tnis Year! *<'n*n>**r\ararm^ ?_?-?_?_?_??-_?_-??_? at 2.l5anc* 9.15 The One Unp\va I .<__<-_ Superlative _.nterfcain mont of the Yffsr* anci or the universel! ADMISSION TO EVERYTHING Irmludlng Seats 50o. to $3.0 (WAB. TAX IM'[.ri>KI>>. Children under 12 roduced iirii-rs lo all matinees, i-xo?|ji Saturday, lu ?I. 10 seuls and over BRANCH TICKET OFFICES (NO ADYAiN'CB IN PRICES) Glmbcl Bros., R. H. Macy 4. Co. __?_!?_-_ ff ON SALE TODAY, March 25th and on March 20th and 27th, at 2:30 P. M. COMSTOCK COLLECTION OF CERAMICS, GLASSWARE and SAMPLERS Including Staffordshire, Old English Tea Pots and Pitch? ers; Lustre ware; Staffordshire and Whieldon Statuettes; English and Bohemian Glassware and Early American Samplers. All removed for sale from Mr. Comstock's country residence. At the CLARKE GALLERIES, 5 West 44th Street, New York MR. AUGUSTUS W. CLARKE CONDUCTING THE SALE MRuo R R A Y ' ROMAN GARDENS S 42ND STREET, JUST WEST OF B'WAY. PHONE BRYANT 4535 Regardless of Prohibition we are still doing an excellent business?Good food and good service tell ihe story. ?{g? LUNCHEON $1.00 SERVICE A LA CARTE ALL HOURS Music and Dancing on the Famous Revolving Floor M. H. Cox, Vice Pr?s, and Gen'l Mgr. Students Take Jobs of ChicagoPostal Clerks 200 University Boys Man Ma? chines in Postoffico on Short Notice Special Dispatch to The Tribuns CHICAGO, March 24.-Mail in and out of Chicago is reviving highly in tellectualized attention these day?. It is being sorted and ?tamped by embryo doctora of science, arts, literature, law and philosophy. Two hundred University of Chicago students have manned the sorting ma? chines, stamp canceling chutes and sorting platform left vacant by the wholesale resignation of postal clerks. For their labor the students receive 60 cents an hour. ... Rushed by the overwhelming amount of mail which has b?en passing through the postoffice since the express drivers' strike was ?called, the officials sought everywhere for aid. They could not find it until they went to the uni? versity, where the vacation between quarters had just begun, and the stu? dents were willing and able to work. ? e New York Promoter Held Arrested With 3 Boston Brokers for Violating Stock Law BOSTON, March 24.?Four stock pro? moters and brokers were arrested to? day on a charge of violating the laws regarding advertising of stock issues. Those arrested were Louis C. Van Riper, of New York, who has figured in the promotion of certain silver stocks; W. R. * Fitzgerald, Everett C. Tarr and Daniel Samuels, brokers. Samuels is a member of the firm of Love & Co. They are accused of having failed to lile at the State House, as required by law, statements regarding the stock issues of a silver company which they exploited. METROPOLITAN S TUESDAY EVQ., April 6, 8.15 SECOND APPEARANCE OF With ? TuU Symphony Orchestra of 75. Edward Kalck, Conductor, ISADORA DUNCAN DANCERS TICKETS, $1, $1.50, $3 & ?r*. NOW AT METROPOLITAN BOX OFFICE. HIPPODROME S?SfiSgfE *PR'4 * I.A8T JOINT RECITAL EUGENE M38CHA YSAYE & ELMAN Hale Opens Mondas-. Mar. 20. Scat? $1 to ?2.50. Mall Orders Now tu Hippodrom? MET RTr^li?T AN ?VK I [ Today Sp'l Mat. at 2 <$? to Mi).Last Time, j Zaza. Farrar. Howard. Kgimer; Crlml. Ainalo. ( I Bada, Malaie?:!* Cond., Moranzonl._ _j Tonight at 8:13. Marta. Barrlontos, Perlnl; Ca? ruso, Lto Luca. Malat6sta, Cond., Hodauzky. Fri. at 8. Last Time. Blue Bird. Ess'.on. Gordon, Dolaunols, Ellis. Perlnl; Rothler, Chalmers. Wolff. Sat. at i. j.ast T\me. Carmen. Farrar, Romain*, Galll; Martlnelll, Whitehlll, Rot hier. Cond.. Wolff. Sat., 8:15 ($1 to $3.50). Manon Lescaut. Muilo. Marsh, Crlml. Scottl, riecurola, Hada. Cond., l'apl. Sun. Kviv Concert, 50c'. to $2 Spald'.ng, Violinist; Morgana, Sop.: Amato. liar. Orcli. Cond.. llagtnnui. Next Mon., 8.15. Last Time. RlBOlettO. Barrien? tes, lir?slau; [?zato, lio I.u:*a. Murdunes. Moranzonl, Wod. at 8. Manon. Farrar. (?alii; Hackett, Whitehlll, Chalmers, Segur?la, ?'end.. Wolff. Thurs. S ri?. Oneoln. Muslo, Porinl, Howard, Ing? rain; Martinelll, tie [.lira, Dldur. Cond.? Hodauzky, C.OOD FRI D'A V, Apr. 2. PARSIFA? SPECIAL MAT. at I. rMR:5U rtlj ; East on; Hsrrold, Wliltehill. Kothter, Dldur Cond., Hodanzky. Bents Now on Salii. " HAlLDMAN PIANO USED. CONCERTS JOSEF STRANSKV.Conductor CARNEGIE KALI. To-night at ?:30 & To-in'w (Frl.) Aft., 2:30 'soloist. K R E I S L E R Next Siiniliiji Afternoon at :!. RFA)l EST VROORA MM E Tchaikovsky-Wagner I'KLIX F. LEIFBLS, Mjrr. Corm-ple Hull, TO-MORROW EVC. at ?:30 People's Liberty Chorus L. GAMILIERI, Conductor ?o-?Members New Symphony Orchestra -60 of the Musicians' New Orchestra Society <-~ MME. YVONNE GALL Courtesy Pathe Frerea Phonograph Co. Tickets, Box Office, iiOc, Too. $i.ou, $1.50. Boxes, $15.00 and $18.00. FLY WITH ME 19"0 Columbia Varsity Show Evenings of March 34th to 37th, HOTEL ASTOR Matinee Saturday, March _'71h. Tickets 01] suie at lloU'l Astor. DANCING You Never Saw Such Girls! Seats TODAY 9 A.M.at WotST FUI?. CONCJCRT ?V?.JOHN Hippodrome,EasterSyndayNight Apr 4th. at 8:15. Tickets, $1, Si.an, $?_?, J2.5Q SEATS FOB FARRAR in "ZAZA" TODAY OP V R A ' Scats All Parts of Housg r -. IV /_ | Subjcrlption? Boujht. Sold TICKETS! of ?xchan9ed for -e_*-n phone _I1fioMaco',8, Ticket Office ORB-Jl-l-T ***0*'1 Normandie Hotel, B'y. 3S St. abol?ais ham,, to-night at ??is VER KERK Soprano Mgt. I.omK'ii Cliarlton. Mason & llamlin Piano, Aeol'.in Hull, To-mor'w (Fri.) Kvg. ni 8:13 SECOND PIANO KKCITAI.- A.MS FULEIHAN Mgt. Daniel Mayer. SU-inway Piano. Afollan Hall, THIS AFTERNOON ut J. VERNON ARCHIBALD BARITONE. (Mason & Hamlin Piano.) ?'?lV?-V*' ^rf? Church, j Organ Recital I 5th Ave. and 58th St. ivii._nnn I THURSDAY, MAK. S3, LYNNWOOD 4:30 p.m. Adin. Free. FARNAM. koadwaY ?% *m THOUSANDS TURNED AWAY ^ W FRISCILIADEAN'JJ:'| CAPITOL en?wton -j? o_-K_"_ML?TTA?r?. BOOTH TARKIHOTBWfOHEDY ??CAmct-YlWOIlY ?OESTM-? "The Pu ? en nt of a TIkiiisuikI DelljhtK." ?3un-H_rald. ?PODROHE II AMT PRICES. Seat? on sale tar 8 WMki. I0U/MBIA. B'way * 47th 81. Iwlo? D?Uj| Bra?. ! ?AV* ??rit? ?MIOM * CO. l?tl:?l America'? For*?mo?t Theatre? and Hit*. WINTER GARDEN Stf-S? tSo'? ?PA?ING.JHOW DVV I fi MttlntM Wed. and Saturday. -SO rEoDlTRICHSTEIN MAX?NE ELUOTT'sH?fe Matin.? ^t?_, & sTsZ^aZ* rmrSINANAMF' >{gw_R?;v__le?l Ceeamsb. In "THE POBPLE MASK." 39TH ST. n,KA ...._ near B'wav. r>?a. 1:40. ?Matinee? Wed, and Hat.. 1:40. Charlea Chirr* and Francia. Larriawr? In the (amnufcetnadsr weo. anu i>?~? ?,.v. SCANDAL comedy saz _*a _s%3 MY LADY FRIENDS America's Greatest ("ometjy. CENTRAI Th"u- <T ???*-?'?*. ?miM. Wkl-J I nNL MaU. Wed. & Saturday, 2 ?0. 8'm BERNARD * Irene B0RD0NI in AS YOU WERE 48TH ST. 2?S ?*? ft ? ?j ^ STORM fi* \ Bl V BROA DHUR8T, IV. 44 St. Eva. S ?30. JA-_? COWL In "Smllln* Throash." Matlneo? TO-DAY & flat?. 2:30. HARRIS. W. 4.rl St. LAST 8 WEEKS "WEDDING DELLS" MARGARET _. WALLACE LAWRENCE *na EDDINGER Evs. 8:30. .Mats. Wed. & Sat., 2:30. SELWYN. W. 42?! 8t. Eva. ??80. DONALD I PEGGY I RALPH BRIAN I WOOD I MORGAN in THE MUSICAL HIT "BUDDIES" Mats, Wed. & ?Sat., 2:30. |44THST.?_?&^XA-S ! I 1? Ci!\l\ lD "L0OK TO^ HERp Musi, ai (.ornedj- Tria?* American Singers Opera Ct, : in Hubert ?V Sulllran'i ?Coraje rjpera raj I RUPW60R? "xhe ^aav^^^S ! PARK Kifc, SS? <?$& ! PBINCESS^??? NEXT HOrtfe" JOSEPH JKLAW Jntrodaaa? To-ij, rANDWBIlT48B, SlUM fantam 8:10. I ^^^^^^1 Curtain 2 30. | r-Thc Musical Comedy Hit ill! With Adele Rowland "foJINMIE TflilRV ' A KKW COMEDY By NORMAN S. BOSK ai I ?:I)1TH EtjJi Nora Baves " v '&??$&. r,EAP YEAR MATINEE \V**DXE9DAY " ll ' ; '?" '?- *' ->.?* {: ONLY VICrtJR HERBERT SHOW IN TOWN "MY GOLDEN GIR?" i_ADBII*-f 35th Si, nr Bway.'MaU. To-day UAnnturV Gr'ley IS... >:%..?? ,.0 .<*?- ?__.. 2:30 THE THBATRE GUILD Announce? "JANE CLE?G" By St. John Errlne. Author of "Istin Farsutea." fpeetal Matinees at tha f* a n D I A u MEDEA^?* Tlin?*??'"Ra-ii an, ut<r-</bMr?A. Woo____ TO-MORIiOW AT 2:30 ^ narrick T'lecitrs, C5 West 85tA ?St. For the reception of the "MEDEA" Maurice Bro-cno wishes to ex lireiis his ujiprr-cuitlon to New Vorli-?and especially to th? iuai and B-neroua critica of t he TIMES, the TRIBFNE, the POST, the TELE GRAM, the SI N-N. V. HERALD, the TELEGRAPH, the GLOBE, th? NEWS and the CALL. \V,_;t I Vnii* 42l]' WeM ?f Broadway. E??*- 8 15. L I nlU Last Matlneo Saturday, ?.15 Shan>. WALTER I MkJ HAMPDEN lit "HAMLET" I_ "Greatest Living Hamlet."? Thcatre .Vaud-I?' ?A: ?Barney Bernard^V?' App?j R FULTON THE BIGI MAMMA'S of ll'v IKtri it Sat ,S .in. PLAYHOUSE Ma?,8 the ^onDcrf ul ^l)ing E't_ t-m. _ ? * fat.. 1:3t. THE BIGREST COMEDY HIT IN TOWN OH VLB UOROSCO Presenta Ill-Star Cart: Eitle Shannaa, Robert Edam, Katherine Kael red. Amelia l.inehatn, (ieoija I ,i tiuere, ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Id,-i *?t. Leon, By Rarhel Baitonjtutler Little Blllj. ITI.TOX THEA. TO-DAY _? TOM'lVat. SPECIAL MATS. * Saturday Morn., 10:S?, MABBL TALIAFERRO In THE PIPER ? for two yters The rut .' HAST ?? WEST Of Asror - Alarmera weat c/ Sat. St Ers. 8 ID. unlaj. Jli, at Box Offct. M0R0SC0 S? ^...^d^rit -.?? A SENSATIONAL TRICMPIII El Q I F ?m AllNOLD BENNETT'S L d ' *? New Play. SACRED and ^^^^^Iprofane LOVE pLITTLF. THEATRE4i^w. / Era. 8:20. Mat?. Weil. &-Sat. 2 20. ' M ?;iJ.\K C. O'NEILL'S OUEAT DHAMA JJBEY0ND TH? HORBZjM l_.__.wUh RICHARD BENN?TTV PLYMOUTH r a w Thuraday Mat. Tick. . _? . _._????. John BarrymGre in Richard III *>_. Performance stars s 10 nid enda at ?1 M LONGACRE? B" f?n. ?H. _^^^ and Sit-, ist F. Ray r,-i__s'.oc_ A Morris Gr-t Praamt L.ADAM-B.EVA "Thorau,?rily amusing, capitally aettd."?TrlbU-i CENTURY S ? ?NEXT MATINEE SAT., 50e lo UM F. Ray Comatoch un,) Morris ?joei preaam .?H: APHRODITE COMPANY CF 300 FEOMJS-S SCK?rt?. CU1IDCQT Tlieafre, '4th st.. W. of B'way. OnUD-II I Krs. RalO. Mt-S. Wed. & Sat.. 2:30. A. II. WOODS Presents REPUBLIC HI Ml West 42d St E-snins? l:? -Mttliaet's Wed. and Sat.. 2.1?. fciil*_p1.*it,Biii']'l*l;?i BELM0NT ?nth, i; '.f ii-v. Itrv.4?>. Evs S :f0. Mais. To-day ?.ICE01EIL i_nHK PASSION FLOWER i ELTINGE S P'v Rfi ! ? A Sat.. ! S?. Byedaesday and Sat.. 2 20. MUSICAL COMEDY EXQUISITE LITTLE WHOPPER W!,th VIVIENNE SEGAL FLORENCE M00RE ^/flfllJJiJ N E W YORK' & LEADING THEATRES AND SICCE88II FMPIRF w ',ay *"r' 40"1 St- ^?""'"BS *;80. Matinee* Wed. and Sat. at NEW AMSTERDAM^IfoAfll E T H E L B A R R Y M 0 R E **?* j ?** * ^????> SoLi?iw? Wii! POSITIVELY Appear TO-NIGHT in DECLASSEE rWi*Ad*3ah 220i .... fffi IOTD 0F fHE UW. C LA ROSE. ROUGE.), Monsieur Beaucaire The Messaoor.Tarking?.on M?'.'dic Gem. ?O/ AMSTERDAM P-O-D' A^ 8?"" .\\ri hey, m --_ MI?NiCHT FROIK PUNCH and JUDY Ma?'W'Asat '-"So: ?TO-MORROW NIGHT A:I0. "S?FLSS^ FRBD JACKSON'S NEW. DRAMA "THE HOLE EN THE W?LL" with MARTHA IIEDMAN. ?lohn ilallida.v, Vernon Steel?*. Weal 4?'h RI Kren'n? i grao Msts. TO-DAT and Sat., 2:20. MATINEE TO-?AV AT 2:*>0. - ?n ?THES0N. ^^^^^^^^ DAUGHTER" Bv G2?rB?_?0*rJ,nroUBh_**& David Balasco, LYCEUitf Mars' To-day * Saturfw. I* MATIN BE TO-UW \T i:t?. .... ?AVID BKLASCO preMUta NA CLAIRE - THE GOLD jBU ?M DIGGERS" iiS3r?s t hi ABSOLUTS OPftMATlC ' COHAN & HARRIS K???S?j? drV BELASCO MATIN LENORE ULRlC - ? ~r - ??-.-^ ?_ <* HA?TtttPi6CC m PtAy COMATBUCTI? iBy i.ITA .VUIMANJ ti BL En l?* Wed. & Bat, 3 B Cap* loJ Como!} Kniekerbocker "CLARENCE" Wast 44lh St. Kra. S.SO. Mats. ! Wed. Aria t.. 2 2(]^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^_,_ ?Bent Light Comedy Ever Written bv i Am?.rl...L.i"_,teyWu0d Br0UDi TH?une an American. HEN?YMILLEW.^I^XS Jvs.8:30 Mata. TO-DAY & Saturday. 2^ BLANCHE BATES V3B8 SPECIAL MAf" ?aVter MON..'APrT\ i BREEKWICH VILLAGE ? * 7'V'?*? a ??; ? POPULAR MAMN^^?i^Y-10 !n l'hllliy Moell EMILY STEVENS T." SOPHIE s^V "1.1k? an Improper story whi>?ered beb?as! ? Valencinnns? (an."?Time?. Liberty Thea.. W. 42 St. Evgs. 8*20. I-atest Munirai Comedy Joy Hide, THE NIGHT BOAT By Ann" Ca Id well. JEROME KERN'S BEST TUNER. MATS. WED. 4 SATURDAY. 2:2?. SHAVINGS ting s at i M. ...-, < ?law. ?"?"? * "**? >T>n Dr i/? A wv oter'S I BRAHAM LIA'COLN re - Moi>rs wad * 3*r lM%'^mr 'Like Going on a Summer Vacation."?World Best Seats at Box Office Kejular PrU? GLOBE^AppleBlossowl" Kretsler?Jarobl?I.? Bar?n Opeiett* ~ ' wirb John ifiarl? Thomas, Wilda Bennett, Star Caat. Po?. Mat?. WeS- ? **** ?IOMN L. OOI.HEN jrsenls GAiETf. U f ORO. B>?,-..?;!;1 st . ?'.?*? I* V. 'COHAN %uZ'vfeZ ??o su".". ?_* KAM H. HARKIS presents j "( Rp?f ^-m WILLiAM KM O??* Collier.^ - ??ir? a Sor??:, : Muir To-??i l.KttNAR?. ti-^THE HOTTENTOT." 'Usa_ STANDARD. B'way_*M -s: Mut. To-d? ROLY-BOLY EYES Next Week: JAME* K. M**>?"?ii "THE RISE OF SI I.AS LAMIA? JVfl! I ! WALLACE REID |I*VA*I ?in K.ML.SK JIV lK'KT." -W3y.49th?t RIVOLI ORCHESTRA Next Week-JOHN RARRYMORE "L?>R* JKKYLL and MR. II*. I>E. Ill Trt DOROTHY <?1?H In ' ? AI 111 :"MAHV KLU:X COMES TO 1111k I V ?TOWN." Chart.? Chapilu. ? Tlmci Square i RIA LTO ORCHESTRA CVfelfelfV' W. Griffith's 9 *BRf* Ma^V^oicVSr^ ' Ptt.r.Keittr? i foa.SAyn.gr*irr1**!? A LAC E . I? .v.?.??* B'-a, A 47 8.. W* S?S ??? Mais. Da lr ?-?. I and Th- .1' -~-??-,r HiucBcinciAU STAR BU IVERSluE j ,o_nio act*? B>af_and M 8t I Cu?tala ? ?jjliJ^ rtJ Hr. MARSHAL ???????Ur^ 01 irr ?isiiiiA-rS