wet PAGES 33 TO 40 j PSRT FOUR VOL. XXII. PORTLAND. OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 21, 1903. lNACIGU'RATION OF F"REE eON6E"RTS I7N THE eiTC) P7VRK How Part of Portland's Population Appreciated the Generosity of Public-Spirited Citizens . ' OR tho first time In her - history Portland Is providing her people with high-grade music ns an agency which makes for the betterment of civic conditions, without money and without price, I you will take a "Washington-street car and go out to City Park any Sunday afternoon, between 2 and 5 o'clock, .yov, may steep your soul In the "sounde of tho band In the Park" under circumstances so fav orable that you will come away feeling that Portland, County of Multnomah, State of Oregon, Is a good place to live In. Thanks largely to J. D. Meyer, in charge of tho music in the Parks a season of Sunday afternoon band concerts was in augurated last Sunday and that the ex periment will be a success was proven by the presence of 6030 good citizens and their families who lounged in the shade of the sheltering trees while Charles I Brown's crack band discoursed Its sweetest and liveliest strains. Some came early In the afternoon, brought lunches and stayed until the final 6electlon, while others who had but a few minutes to epare strolled through the Park that they might pick up stray bits of melody to take homo with them. Every where there was satisfaction and gratitude for the local generosity which made the concerts possible. In a clump of firs and cedars within a few stops of the base of gray granite whereon the Iewis and Clark monument is rising stands the bandstand, and around it are grouped benches where elderly men and matrons may sit in close proximity to tho nattily uniformed musi cians, the tuba and big bass drum, amid a flood of memories carrying them back to when the old familiar tunes were new when Sherman was marching through Georgia and Johnnie came home from the front to his waiting Dolly Gray. There are shady by-paths where two may stroll together, all the world apart, while dreamy waits tunes thread their way through the trees, making fond hearts say foolish, pensive things, "and there are broad reaches of green sward where the joungstera may tumble and "waller" in the grass or do cakewalk steps when the fancy of the big blue band lightly turns to ragtime. The programme is varied to suit all tastes, so that the learned and the unskilled may both find pleasure in It. A breathing place on a magnificent height, a choice bit of God's country Im proved my man and with it music! "What better could be done on a Sunday after noon than to hear the band at the City Park? The crowd which was there last Sunday wad cosmopolitan. It came from all quarters of the city and all walks of life. Here was the laborer with his little family, resting from the six days of grind ing toil. He found, peace and quiet and a respite from care, here was the clerk pale-faced and stooped from the close con finement of his employment, here the man of business- and here were visitors from the country. It waa a good-natured, dem ocratic assemblage, which had cast off restraint for a few hours of the joy of living. Sunday music at the Park dur ing the coming Summer will make the Ieople of Portland better and happier. It wiU lessen crime, promote temperance and improve business conditions. It is a good Investment and will pay tangible divi dends The Park Board has done well and those ho have supplied the funds may be Justlyjroud of their part In mak ing the project successful. Today twice as many people as last week should hear the music. It is there for the public's benefit, and It Is the publics fault If it misses an afternoon of rare recreation. NO. 25.