Show Voice V oice With a Smile Wins and Holds Love Lovere LoveI re 1 L I II II II I 1 I I i ik I k 1 I I 0 mt I c a eem I k I S SI I S. S Sofia Charlebois and F Fortune Gallo GalIo I I Opera Singers Win Success Success' I II land and nd Happiness Through I Work Together I 5 By HORTENSE SAUNDERS N NEA EA Service Writer I NEW YORK Oct 30 The The voice with the smile wins Put that down as ag a golden maxim and a first aid to matrimony as aswell aswell s' s well as m mere re propaganda on the part of the telephone company I The success of ot the voice and smile combination Is demonstrated In the romance of Sofia Charlebois the opera singer and Fortune Gallo manager ot of the San Carlo Opera I S company Sofia Charlebois was wa formerly a aSan aSan I San Francisco giri girl who had studied music and had operatic ambitions Signor Signer Gallo was a bandmaster with dreams of branching out Into grand opera ORGANIZES COMPANY ire organ organized ed his Initial operatic company in San Francisco and he heI Issued a call for local talent Many any I came an and l few ev were chosen after I the usual procedure at such times Among the last to try tryout out her voice I was Sofia Charlebois i She could sing and she she could I smile She did both exceedingly l well according to Signor Gallo Her I voice won her an engagement with I I the opera company and her smile won an engagement ring from the I manager before the season was I over This occurred In 1911 quite some sometime sometime some sometime time ago but butI I have hav Signor Gallos Gallo's word for tor it that the voice and smile combination still holds him Of course after our marriage which occurred at the end of ot the first season my wite kept on with her career he told me She has sung In my company ever since We have traveled all over the country and Europe together and nd have had all al the ups and downs of ot good and bad seasons seasonS' We Vie both are supposed supposed supposed sup sup- posed to be temperamental and I 1 suppose we are But our temperaments temperaments temperaments tempera tempera- ments and our careers have never Jeopardized our happiness but have rather contributed to itI itI itI it I am sure my wife wite would not notI h have ve been happy had h her r marriage meant the sacrifice of or her career as asa asa asa I a sil And she very gratifyingly assures me tue that her career without would have been most In In- In complete f in As i for me i she h f is so bound up in my plans and my successes successes suc suc- I that I 1 cannot imagine what life would have held for me without her So you can classify u us as two happily married persons who be believe believe be- be lieve bieve that careers and marriage mix perfectly The musical career of ot Sofia Charlebois is that of ot an ambitious American girl who had advantages studied and made 1 but it is not quite so colorful or typical of ot what this country of offers tel's as that of or Fortune Gallo He lie arrived at Ellis Island steerage steerage steerage steer steer- age from Italy with 11 cents In his pocket a few clothes done up in a large la-ge kerchief let and nd no English words in hi his hia vocabulary Incidentally be has a very nice smile smite himself and I 1 suppose it was his genial Latin LaUn manner and his ability to land on his feet after any sort of ot a tumble that expedited his journ Journey y from clerk at a a. week to opera magnate and boosted his original capital of ot 11 11 cents Into a avery avery avery very substantial bank banI account ac He has been a gas c collector politician politician poli poll secretary to a traveling band advance agent for road companies com corn stranded stranded and solvent has organized hI his own bands brought Duse and to this country and for sixteen years has managed and l kept ept on the tho road the San Carlos los i Opera company the only operatic I enterprise In this country that has ever made money S His achievements achIevements- as well as his romance spell success I F Family mily Is Foundation Of Civilization CHICAGO Oct t. 31 Civilization depends more upon the family than the Individual Without the family fam family ily society cannot l last st st. Home Is a sacred acred haven which cannot exist without marr marrIageS marriage age These statements statements' were ma made e by Rev W. W J. J r Mc McNamee me of or St St. patrickS Patrick's Patricks Patricks Patrick's pat Pat Pat- ricks rick's church in discussing the he idea advocated in Glen B. B Winship s sI I I book bool which suggests natural restraints to tal take e the place of the legal bonds of matrimony matrimony matri matri- mony and a tax of ot 50 60 per cent of t tI the Incomes of the men to support I the women and children I Marriage laws a are e not manmade manmade man man- I made said Rev Mr 1 McNamee They were made by Christ and sanctified by the church Any suggested suggested sug sug- theory to tal take take- e the place of or marriage can be recognized as nothing nothing nothing noth noth- ing else by free l love ve Mr WInship's Idea is the old story which caters simply imply t to pasI passion passion pas pas- sion slon and a nation governed by passion passion passion pas pas- I sion can do nothing but lapse into barbarism The whole system I of sex rela relations ns could never prevail In in any civilized nation There are too many really moral and high minded people in the world for that Abolition of marriage would have havea a serious effect upon the children I born of or such a union as Mr Winship Winship Winship Win- Win ship suggests What would become ot of the mother love which is orie one of f the most sacred instincts in the world The Idea is not only Impracticable but Immoral It It would without doubt make Interesting Interesting interesting Inter inter- esting reading for a certain class of ot people but would have a serious effect upon the minds of ot the young and upon weak minded people They would not be able to see the fallacy of its Little Cook Book BookFor BookFor BookFor For Kitchenettes A A cookbook designed especially for the use of or the mod mod-ern apartment apartment apart apart- ment meat hou house dweller is what one finds in G. G F. F Scotson Clark Half Halt Hours in the Kitchenette to be p published bUs hed by Appleton this week The authors author's purpose is is' is to enable small house households olds and kitchenette cooks to have a variety of or attractive attractive attractive tive food at a low cost and with a minimum of ot trouble The majority of the dishes eV even n the most elaborate elaborate rate can be prepared within half an hour many mary of ot them can be prepared prepared pre pre- pared beforehand and heated up at atthe atthe I the last minute without injury In addition to the recipes Included and the many menus suggested the book offers valuable general directions directions directions for kitchenette cooking New Doctrine for American Writers Sinclair Lewis whose latest novel Arrowsmith has now reached the sale of ot a hundred thousand copies h has s proclaimed in the October Mercury Mercury Mer Mer- ler- ler cury a new doctrine for American authors He ridicules the current tendency of our serious senous authors to write only serious books He fie be believes believes believes be- be that a man with a creative literary gift should not feel that he heis heis heis is lowering his dignity In producing any form torm of ot fiction that he may de de- de- de sire There i is as yet no authority says Mr Lewis other than an authors author's authors author's authors author's au au- au- au thors thor's own desires which will wiil de decide decide tIe tIe- cide what he may mayor or may not nor write It is interesting to note that Mr Ir Lewis is Js at present practicing what he preaches He Is engaged In writing a romance of ot the Canadian northwest the result of or a canoe trip to t tie the e Red River region last year |