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The St. Louis Star and Times from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 28

Location:
St. Louis, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
28
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

JL ST.LQUIS STAR-TIMES THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 3, 1835. TWENTY-EIGHT ST.LDUIS STAR-TIMES ece-iory tC.ing station at 4TM De'jcar. c4 arrtilert 12 MG. ere-f earn T. HU wnrr aa bulMer.

0f I MILK PRODUCERS iwat, i C. E. rrrei rvrr k' Queens of Bridge Once More W. Mnnert. 8 B.

ne 7 r'nr at CITY DEMOCRATS SPENT $29,578 ON ELECTION DAY turner THREATEN STRIKE TO PROTEST BILL association to aid the Board of Directors in shaping the organization's policies for the coming year. BUILDING PERMITS BRICK. Marr KeiJr. oner. 4M leticj'an: KtAr.

tuiiier. SM Leir losr each fet. tvb. fo jr.Sa::oc ecrrp tuct Pears heat, at 444J-4T-J1-5J Cather-c piacc. to-ai S14f0 Standard Oil Co.

lrS erer ar4 archiicr. J14 Xcrtft H.cr.rf., CosU Co. e4J Oii'-Xiet an OraUin V.o TAaterau; alter I ozy lecesiext I 2co. tra.th. ecer.

S4u Se.S Cra-tf R. V. Sasmael. ac4 arrived. JJ4i "rCaa.BEd: lexettiert.

2T4 fet. tior lesoea: sen wj rwf fceat. at JP-1I Keotb. cm. uberii Cf eT.

rvai a- Ce, fcai.fer. ir.i C.ive. T. Marta. Ertiiseera.

arefcert. Aicbaa-aacr B.c Ccxx.a i P09 at KH Rjter-i tr.tf 0. TA eacer Wr Nor! Zrace Arecic Coan. Co bicz ird TV. HVE.

Vare rar.rr acj ttZZ I 1 i 0 fK) Meeting at St. Jacob, 111., Votes to Withhold Action Pending Enforcement Move. By a Staff Correspondent ST. JACOB. ILL, Dec.

3. Threats Item Biggest Listed in Report Showing Total Campaign Costs of $65,810. Campaign expenses of $65.810 32 were listed by the Democratic City of a milk strike by farmers supply Central Committee in a report on file today in Recorder of Deeds John aTaTaraTaap P. English's office. Contributions to taled 73,494.66.

leaving the commit tee with a balance of $7,634.34. ing St. Louis as a protest against passage of the proposed standard milk ordinance were heard at a meeting here of the advisory group of the Sanitary Milk Producers Association. The association has 10.000 farmer members within a 100-mile radius of St. Louis.

The farmers decided to take no Largest item in the disbursement division was the "election day ex pense, amounting to $29,573 79. The report shows $1,110 was spent for action on proposals to witnr.o.a the speakers' bureau. Among con milk from St. Louis until the meth i od of enforcement of the proposed ordinance becomes manifest. E.

W. Tiedeman of St. Louts, president of the association, advised the farmers: "Don't have a battle over "AFTER A SLASHING SET-TO on the ice, I bead straight for Camels," says Phil LaBatte, hockey star. "I smoke Camels as much as I want ith meals and afterward for'dige-tion's sake for that cheery 'lift. Camels don't affect my condition.

And they never get on my nerves." Enjoy Camels yoursel Camels encourage a sense of well-being. Tbcy set you right! The national champion women's team of four that successfully defended its title yesterday at the Tenth Annual National Championship Tournament of the American Bridge League at Chicago. They arc. left to right: Helen White, Los Angeles; Florence Stratford. Cleveland; Mrs.

L. G. Quigley, Chicago, and Mrs. R. B.

Fuller, New York. (Acme Photo.) the passage of the ordinance but over unfair methods in enforcement if they develop then you'll get somewhere. -Wait until there Is evidence that the enforcement Is unfair. "If our members are barred from fort to expedite the matter. The mayor said the case will be argued in Washington on January 4.

tributors listed were the following: Tax Collector William P. Baumann. $1,200: Sheriff Thomas R. Maddn. 1 399; Licene Collector Fred A.

Reniric. $148. President William L. Maon of the Board of Aldermen. T688: Circuit Clerk Sam Priest.

Recorder of Deeds John P. English. $800; Prosecuting Attorney James P. Finneqan. Assessor Ralph Coale, $1 879: Joffph J.

Meire. park commtioner and treasurer of the Democranc Cuv Committee. $4. SOT: Director Edard E. Wall of the Department of Public UUiitie.

$10,755: President Baiter Brown of the Board of Public Servire. $2 211: Director George Chad-fer of the Department of Public Safe'v. 11.939: Jo-eph DarM. director of public welfare. $5 734: Frank J.

McDevitt, director. $5,605 Mayor Dickmann was lisfd as contributing $2 078. Circuit now In office contribute') $100 each to the campaign. Justices of he neace gave amounts ranging from $30 to $100 Candidates for local, state and national n'fices donated amounts verving from $100. given bv Fdward MrCulien.

Judge of the 8t. Louis Court of Appeals, to S800. donated by Michael J. S'-ott. Ward.

William Flvnn. Thomas J. Rowe David J. Murphy and Judge Joeph D.rkmann. The contribution of Judge Dickmann was returned following his death.

the St. Louis market unfairly, then I say stop every drop of the next morning." LILY PONS SINGS IN VAST REACHES OF CONVENTION HALL One delegate proposed withhold notion that local self government is essential to the preservation of government by the people. And I am strongly impressed with the dearth of argument for or sgainst the present trend," Caulfie'd said. "We should not rr by placing on the present administration the entire responsbility which bids fair ultimately to destroy the states. This thing has been coming on us for a long time." 1 Mlrd-otk vrcm r-We loUro- U1? ameL And VaW.

ing of milk from the St. Louts market for one week as a protest against the proposed ordinance. Tiedemen explained that it might Camels a v. Camdi. be a year before the proposed ordinance Is enforced, and the meeting then decided to take no action on the strike suggestion.

MAYOR RETURNS FEELING The meeting was called to obtain COSTLIER TOBACCOS the advice of the local units of the COACH C0NZELMAN TO WED MISS ANNA F0RRESTAL SOON James G. Conzelman. head football coach at Washington University for the past five years, will soon marry Miss Anna Forrestal of 3633 Cook avenue, he revealea today. said no definite date had been set for the marriage, which will be his third, but that it had been planned for Saturday. He has known Miss Forrestal since his college days.

The gray-haired grid coach divorced his second wife. Mrs. Lillian Adele Conzelman. last October 7. on grounds of desertion.

His first wtf was Peggy Udell. Milwaukee beauty and former Ziegfeld Follies girl. These marriages have been annulled by the Catholic Church, Conzelman said. REASSURED ON MEMORIAL m. wi JM Confidence that the proposed Jefferson National Expansion Memorial CAULFIELD CITES DANGER IN RISE OF FEDERAL POWER A dispassionate appraisal of trends toward centralization of government was urged last night by former Gov.

Henry S. Caulfield in an address to the John Marshall Republican Club on the riverfront will be started "just as soon as the courts render a final opinion" against the opponents of the project was expressed by Mayor Dickmann yesterday on his return at the Forest Park Hotel. from Washington, where he con- "I am strongly imbued with the tacted federal authorities in an ef- A STROMBERG-CARLSON AND SCIENTIFIC SERVICE SCI WEIG-EBIGEL CORPORATION 4929 DELMAR FO. 1005 Voice Lacks Bigness and Bright-ness Needed Against Orchestral Background. BY REED IIYNDS.

Lily Pons, diminutive coloratura soprano of the Metropolitan Opera, the radio, and the screen, sang in the vast reaches of convention hall in the Municipal Auditorium last night. She was heard by perhaps 7,500 persons, who made up a brilliant assemblage. This must of necessity be a minority report, no more complete than were war bulletins from one sector of the western front. It covers the situation as observed, and heard, from a seat on the aisle some 30 feet from the stage, right center. At various times during the evening, sorties were made to outlying camps, and the reports received in this way tended in general to confirm Impressions noted at the observation base.

However, the report remains a limited one. Miss Pons stood alone radiant in brocaded white satin trimmed in a fur which appeared to be sable, with an orchid-decorated muff to match her gown pressed between orchestra players and the conductor podium. She seemed a tiny figure on the wide stage, which carried not only the sixty-piece orchestra, but a section of the audience, composed in part at least of those who have acted as choristers In Guy Goiter-mans operatic productions. Slender Thread of Voice. Standing there like an outcast facing the wilderness.

Miss Pons threw herself into song, the orchestraand its self-effacing director. Gennaro Papi giving her some measure of encouragement. The slender thread of her coloratura voire was picked up by a microphone and thrust into space. It was heard throughout the hall, although a distant camp reported there were spots where the amplifiers rattled. It was a voice of poor quality, as heard from ten yards smooth-textured and warm only In the middle range: lacking brilliance at crucial points in coloratura acrobatics.

It was directed and controlled with musicianly feeling, but was neither big enough nor bright cnoueh to stand up against an orchestral background and an audience several light-years away. The program was in the nature of an operatic carnival one that comes every year, so that one the same barkers, vendors and clowns. It was made up. in other words, of old favorites. It was almost, if not quite, devoid of any work which high artistic standards might allow as a masterpiece.

Like Old-Time Top" Conceit. That it thus resembled an old-time pop" conrert was not against it. for the audience knew beforehand what it was to hgar. Be- TAH DARO RED CBOOT IWl PS01ID ILIIS5TIEN 'iii i RADIO FOR TWO MINUTES Wr HEN von do you uon't hclieve it's radio mji.LiiiLji imw tywnii'M I i -a Wis I rift Sip-. I i liccau'c you'll lirar reproduction, for the irs-t time in jour experience, free from cabinet resonance.

L'ver since, tlie firt speaker was installed inside a cabinet, var has existed between the tones from the front of the speaker which you should hrar and the tones from the rear of the speaker which you shouldn't bear. With Stromberg-Carlson's fullv patented Acoustical Itbvrinth you bear onlv the tones tw onbt to bear. The unwanted lone arc silently spirited away, not left to run riot in the limited confines of a resonant cabinet. fiadio marches on. To realize bow Labyrinth Iiadio.

It is car-startling evidence that: "TJicre is Xothing Finer than a Stromberg-Carhon" STKOMBERG-CARI O.V TFl.FrHO.NE ae with the hiohesf possible winter milea I ides, the greatest of the composers have been singularly lax in writing for coloraturas. They've held, rather consistently, that the pi-lano with the toes is no particular I musical accomplishment: that I there's a difference between exhibi-! tionism and Included were Dell'Acqua "Vir.a- r.elia"; the less fancy -Rose of Faure. as well as his uniquely simple and effective "Apres un Reve." and Benedict's "La Canir.era." The arias includ-i ed Je Suis Titania." from Thomas i the "Bell Song" from Drlites "Lakme." ar.d th waltz sons from Gounod's "Mireille." Or.e criticism which fca been voiced in connection with Miss Pons on other occasions, that she is often off pitch, was not valid last r.icht. jShe sar.c in tune, except for a few J1FG. ROCHESTER, N.Y.

list i 0. 1 FIVE Nf.E. vith the; rxrl si vr Acoustical Laby rinth. alnut finifh cabi net. Trice a S247-50 I.IEYRINTII RADIO Tlie lone, inlmg jape-vay of the Aroutnal I by.

rinth take the plare of the liual boT-liLe ratify in the cabinet li i-H is the aoiirre of the exapgerateit boom in low tone. It (iiri oil deeper bas note. ith a new fidelity and inrreae the volume capacity ami ai-uraoy ol the loud ajx-aker. Shovtn io No. H3-L Radio.

13 OH TRIP I A F. Horixontl Table Modrl. lln Walnut bni-li. l'rioc. When Standard Red Crown set your motor purring with the first kick of the starter last winter, you probably thought that this great gasoline couldn't be improved.

But it has been! For the new Standard Red Crown for winter starts an engine in good condition in one second at zero. Last year, you'll recall, Standard Red Crown gave 35 faster warm-up at zero. Today it gives even speedier warm-up, and quickly gets you under way without costly choking. Refining genius has produced one more big, important quality STANDARD RED CROWN delivers the highest mileage possible under winter driving conditions. i slips, only one of hich nn he "Bell Song" was of consequence, In two of the shorter songs she read the words from notes.

Her ihich tones were produced with an almost terrifying sense of strain. Miss Pons' presence was so at-i tractive that the audier.ee liked her immediately, thoueh it did not de-j mand fn encore at any time during the recital. Salsoas The Orchestral Prorram. The orchestral numbers, with Papi conducting, were like Miss A.NY OF T1IESE DEALERS "WILL DEMONSTRATE THE ACOUSTICAL LABYRINTH CLAYTON AlBltS RADIO CO. Merasea CAban.

1311 is x. SEME Pons' numbers in beins well known. Verdi's overture to "The Sicilian Vespers' was of unquestionable i worth, and was well played: Wa-I ner's prelude to "Die Melsterslng- er" was of similar worth, but plaved without spirit. Scipione Guidi was eloquent in the violin solo in Saint-Saens' prelude to "Le Deluge." and Laurent Torno's precision and grace I playing T.ute obbligatos were stnk-I inelv evident. The concert began just before 9 o'clock.

The intermission was a 'long one. Following It, with Miss on the stage, a number of photographs were taken while the 'audience waited "six or eight seconds." The concert as eiven to help meet a deficit cf the St. Louis Opera Co. IMPORTANT: RED CROWN starts an engine so quickly that it should be teamed with a light winter grade of motor oil so that all moving parts will be actively, instantly lubricated. The best bet is Standard's famous 20-W.

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Ckarie KJW TODAY STANDARD RED CROWN FOR WINTER IS READY FOR YOU AT STANDARD OIL DEALERS! Graybar Electric Company, Distributors 1220 Spruce St. Louis, Mo..

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About The St. Louis Star and Times Archive

Pages Available:
268,005
Years Available:
1895-1950