3 TIIE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND. JANUARY 10, 1909. MLkmi ancose MARY GARDEN ROUTED THE IRE JTB PROFANEA JAGRED OPERA. BYTAiTSTOMlNG THE ROlE OFA MAN IN A WORK WHERE WOMEN ARE BAREDo r - N 4 , i ; W P--., .-7 v - . I AY - - . - J nj;- W' is t - ' ssW ', v '-7' coi?os-7c ofstsxe: W S- 1 fi -7" ?- I 'Z ' '?f-t t 'r: : vl ,t "i J" 7 l i Ai lS$i . ' , jkZAT&r tT I -' V f 7j .( ( 1": fc, " L ' S 07SKtL75r cjjrzxsr p fr r"" J i I en" acce,,l-d in lts lrue spirlt rever" : ? -'en M ART OARDKN. the American prima donna, may not find the latchstrlng of Paris out for her j when she returns there. The artistic population of the great French city Is outraged because of the fact that she Is appearing in the role .f Jean the Jusxler. in Massenet's opera, "Le Jongleur tie Notre Dame." Sacrilege" in the term by which many describe her action in assuming the role written for a tenor. They say the injection of a woman into a work written with as reverent ' a spirit this latest production of the noted French composer defeats the whole purpose that Inspired Masaanet to write it. Meantime, ignoring all the hubbub. Mirs Garden has been singing the role in New York and Philadelphia with most distinguished success, and if the attitude of Paris has any concern for her she Is not permitting any traces of her worry to show In the delight fully fresh and spontaneous perform ance she tflves the part. , Back of the row is an Interesting utory. In whl'h are involved the names of at least three great prima donnas and one of the foremost of the world's living musicians. The musician is Masvanet, now aged ti. a wonderful master of orchestral color, whose operas have not only been the delight of Europe, but have come to be deeply loved on thts side. , Massanet has for three decades been composing, and it is a somewhat Inter esting fact that most of his works l'ave been written with some especial prima donna in mind for the leading rol-. He was deeply enamored of the beau tiful Sybil Sanderson, and it was for her that he wrote the operas "Le Cid" and "Manon Lescaut." Sanderson had a romantic career. Sh was a California girl. and. being j: If ted with a good voice, she went to Paris to learn to sing. Here her wonderful beauty attracted even more attention than her excel lent vocal equipment and her dramatic, kill. The city rared over her melting eyes, her boautlful profl'e. hr opulent figure, and no shifter on the French stage wns more talked of than the beautiful Ameri can. Masanet especially came under her tr.rall. and in addition to writing these tmo operas, especially gave her tne add !:!or.al help of preparing her for the part. and or aid'.i:? with his advice and conohirg. Sanderson a'lcceeded In Europe, then she came to the I'nited Slates with the Metropolitan t'era Company, and was m-l'omod in Iut own country. fltuininc to Paris. he was effusively e!romrd by Masanet. who promised to rti. HfoMirr opt'ra. for her. Thi n r.ime her ui!tn marriage witi Ar.toi.lo Trrr. Hi had millions ni -e fair Sb:I was unable to refuse herwelf 'lit'0l of them. 1 he i-omnT was Ini-onsolnhle when ti-i- s;pk'r -thl-t and pltmsed Into his nri-l; wiin tr-f it' rtnyialion to resard been rr.-diud with being. He could only write under the spell of the in spiration furnished by some woman, they whispered. He would lit an opera to Sanderson or to Calve Just as their costumera' would make them a gown. It was not compos ing music in the abstract, regardless of who would sing the parts: it was rely ing on the fame of some noted prima donna to carry Ills productions to suc cess. When finally the stories reached Mas sanet. he became furious. The pride of the artist was intensely Injured by the insinuations. ... Then lie promised to show them. He determined to write an opera, which should be absolutely unique in the his tory of music In that It should contain not one role for a woman. He would abolish the other sex from his compo sition absolutely and produce a work that should depend alone on its musical merits. He would succeed without a woman If only to confound his critics. He looked around him for a subject and then he chanced upon a little storj by Anatole France, one of the foremost of French prose masters. This toid the pitiful tale of how a wandering troubadour, a Juggler in the middle ases. wearying of the hards.iipa of his strolling life had entered a clois ter. Here he would have been happy but for the fact that he felt so keenly his lack of accomplishments, as compared with his fellow monks. They could sing, write music, paint, achieve in writing or sculpture, while he could do nothing but Juggle. Reasoning It out In his own simple way, he Hnally decided that juggling Itself might be considered an accomplish ment if it be directed to the glory of the Virgin, therefore he donned again his juggler garb, took his place in front of the altar and Juggled in honor of the Virgin. It was while thus disporting himself that he was caught by the prior and f!ie other priests. They were horruied at what they deemed his scarilege, but in the midst of their condemnation of the hapless youth the face of the Image of the Virgin lighted up as if to show that the act. fur from being condemned. Massanet fell In love with this little plot and proceeded to adorn it with some of the most beautiful music he has ever written. When it was completed he announced a challenge to his contemporaries and to the critics. Ho had written an opera without a woman. He cared not who produced it. The work should stand ab solutely on its merits. Six years ago it was produced for the first time at Monto Carlo, of all places perhaps the most uniitting for a work dealing with such a sacred subject. But in TOite of the uncongenial at mosphere of the gambling capital of the world, the opera made a prorouna im pression. The enthusiastic critics' of the nation nrnnouneed It a work comparable to Wagner's "Parsifal." It was sacred enough to be produced In a church, they said, and Massanet's triumph was complete. But the daring and original Miss Gar den, one of a. number of American prima donnas who have achieved the marvel of bringing Paris to their feet, had been looking Into the possibilities of the part. Witli only slight alterations, the music of the leading role, the juggler boy, could be changed to suit her sopan3. She was not daring enough to attempt it for the first time in France, but now slie has done it with success in the United Slates. Massanet declines to comment on the profaning of his sacred opera by the In troduction of the sex he had meant to ban. but Paris says it was wrong of ftliss Garden and the critics are heaping their harshest comments on her. She, too. has maintained silence, prob ably finding In her success complete balm. SOME HARD WINTERS IN OREGON Snow Covered the Willamette Valley for Nearly Three Months in 1862-Other Severe Weather. r im i' Mr. Terry d:J not survive long after 1. marriage to the singer, and left her a widow with wen'th almost beyond computation. . Itit only a slmrt time aftr l'aris was started witli the news that the widow hfld also died. Meantime Massanet had addressed him self to the task of eomiiosing an opera f'r another sin3r whose talents he pratly admired. This time It was Emma Calve he fa- or.vl. Taking a short story on the Franco Prussian war. one of the kind of tales that the French writers know so well how to make real, he produced his thrill ing one-ai t music drama, "La Navir raise." it w-ored a splendid success, but In sr.ad of greeting the composer with the a c I.iim due a man who had triumped an-w. Taris had a nuict little laugh to its. if. The Jealous In the gay French capital K(n to intimate that Massanet was not as much of a musician as he had Wrtttrm from Memory by ( J ru H. Walker. ALBANY, Or.. Jan. . (To the Editor.) On the editorial page of a recent number of The Oregonlan was the following: "The oldest inhabitant whose mind goes back to the storm of 'JS. ia having things his own way. Nobody can dispute him." As I am the only '3Ser I know of, the Item probably refers, to me. Of course, being an Infant, born at Whitman Mission December 7 tnat year. 1 have no recollection of events that took place, nor does the diary of my mother, kept from June 10 to December 31. IV!', make any mention of weather condition during December, hence 1 infer the Win ter that far was quite osen. The first hard Winter I can remember was that of lsttMT. The mow at Tahima kaln (now Walker's Prairie, 33 miles northwest of Spokane), was four feet deep. Around our yard enclosed as a stockade about six feet high, to keep out coyotes, and Indian dogs equiilly ns de structive to poultry, the snow drifted so near tre top that I remember I could step over It on the side east of the house and Immediately north of our storehouse, where was kept dried salmon, etc. The Spokane Indians lost nearly all titelr horses and went to work making bows and arrows to trade to the Cayuscs for hores. We caved most of our cattle and horses by taking them to a swamp several miles northwest of the mission and cutting down the pine trees, so they could eat the moss. etc. Cruel Weather in Inland Empire. One day the Indians drove down from the mountain east of the mission several deer: One fine buck lay down on the now on the plain north of our home. My father put on his large Indian snowshoes and started out to catch the deer. I fol lowed him on my snowshoes. When near the deer, it Jumped up and ran off toward the timber north of our mission, when my father caught it in the dry bed of Tshimakain Cretk. I was there in time to see an Indian shoot It in the Bide with a barbed arrow. Pulling out the arrow, the barb remained in the der, which V i t - i 1 : it 7 ,-.:. j v. - it i V :J X. , ' r ' ' Are common among men and women who stand much. Neglected, they are painful, ofttimes dangerous, '.'thro" hemorrhages. Surgeons operate with success, b;it to those who dread the knife, there is relief in our SILK ELASTIC STOCKINGS woven on our own loom, of the best material obtainable, by a skilled weaver, to order from your own measure, and WARRANTED TO FIT. 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AH Rinds of Sick-Room Furniture and Appliances FOURTH AND' WASHINGTON STREETS FIVE CROWDED FLOORS L CYBIS H. WALKER jumped up. ran a few yards and died. It Seemed awful cruel work to mo. Of this Winter. Kev. H. H. Spalding, of the Ner Perce Mission Lapwai, thus wrote to mv father under date. "Clear water. March 8. 1S47. This has been the severest Winter as to snow, cold weath er and want of grass ever known by the oldest Indians in this region. Very many horses and cattle have "died. Some per sons have been frozen to death. Several of my cattle and horses have died. I tremble to hear from your place. We fear you have lost all. There has been snow and cold weather for three months. For two weeks snow was over a foot deep in thus valley. January 16 and 17 were the coldest days I have experienced In the country. Think the mercury would have falen to 30 degrees below zero." Cold and Scarcity of Provisions. The Winter of 1S48-19 we spent in Ore gon City. Back of the bluff at Oregon City during the Winter was quite a lake. This froze over so that we boys could skate on it. but with no skates. One day we got an old sow on to the ice and had lots of fun seeing her try" to walk. The Winter of 1S4!-dO we were at For est Grove. Early In December came a heavy snowfall, about two feet. It stayed on about three weeks, then went off with a warm rain, causing a flood in the Willamette that did first damage to Oregon City. rtw- wintap ..f isr.T-K:! hnd three weeks of deep snow (two feet). A warm rain thoroughly saturatea me snow, ana wim in 24 hours there would probably have been the biggest flood in Oregon's his tory, but it turned cold over night and . . " . l. olifinlr Hia noltihr. hut jroze ciiuuk" .... . c,. the flood was bigger than in lb49. .That was a terribly hard v inter upon uie im migrants, who came that year by hundreds. r lour v .vo i - i bushel. Father Alvin T. Smith, an early . . .-Hrt harf nnp nf the hest pioneci. ... - - farms near Forest Grove, economical as was his training as a Connecticut farmer, sold wheat to immigrants only at J3 per bushel. The Winter of 1853-4 came a blizzard from the North and froze the bare ground very hard. I remember how the Old Academy bell sounded out so clearly mornings. The Winter of 1858-59 was warm and open, with rain, until in Feb ruary, 1859. came cold storms that con tinued until the 1st of April, filling the Coast Mountains with snow. The day before the storms began it was warm and sunshiny, so much so that we students of Pacific University spent a part of the afternoon out of doors on the sunny southern slope south of the Old Log Church. Dr. C. H. Kaffety, of Port land, was one of the students. The next morning it was snowing. One Genuinely Hard Winter. The Winter of 1S61-63 I consider the hardest ever known to white settlers. The first week in December came the Willamette's biggest flood that com pletely wiped out Linn City, across the river faom Oregon City, and carried away Dr. Ml'Loughlin's flour mill. At Albany, the river rose to 3ti feet above low water. Freezing weather followed until Jan uary 1, lb6J, when toward evening a dark bank of clouds came up over the Coast Range and we thought a thaw was coining. But not so. About 9 o'clock it comni'-need snowing. The ground was not bare again until late in March, when the snow disappeared beneath the sun's warm rays. There was sleighing galore that Winter. Several times a thaw would come and it rained a few hours; then the wind whipped to the north and we got more snow. Some clear nights In Febru ary were Intensely cold. The river at Portland froze over and for weeks teams crossed on the ice. Hay that had accu mulated during the very bountiful season of lSi0-61. so much so that you could hardly give It away, rose to fabulous prices. California wild oat hay was $40 per ton In Portland. Oats that were slow sale the previous Fall at 20 cents were Jl per bushel; other farm products rose to a like proportion. It was from the above oat hay that it Is claimed wild oats got a start in Oregon, for Sliany years a curse to our grain fields, but now well eradicated. Some Milder Ones. The Winter of 18;4-bu came a hard freeze about December S. but did not last long. The succeeding February on the llkl. or Washington's birthday. Com panies B and F. First Oregon Infantry, then stationed at Fort Hosklns. Kings Valley, Benton County, celebrated the day in a parade with snow about two feet defp. January 9, IMS, came a blizzard that closed the Yamhill River and other streams for about six weeks. The. steam er Dayton, plying between Oregon City and McMinnville, commanded by Captain J. T. Apperson. failed to put in a welcome annearance to our longing gaze for that length of time. I was then in charge of the Dayton warehouse Shipping Tied Up. During the Winter of lS74-7ri I was at Astoria. After a light snowfall the pre vious evening, about 2 o'clock in the morning of Monday, January 11. came a terrific blizzard down- the Columbia. For several weeks a closed river shut off all water communication with Portland. A Mr. Hoyt was the first to venture down from Portland on the Ice. Nine grain sailing vessels anchored In front of As toria found it necessary to reanchor in the cove front of upper Astoria. At least two steamers came In from San Francisco with passengers during the "closed season." The la3t trip of the two a number of the passengers struck out tiirous't tbe moun tains for Forest Grove and thence to Port land. . The morning the blizzard began I called ( in at the Rev. W. A. Tctiney'ti, the Con gregational minister, then in charge at Astoria; now living at Oakland. Cal. 1 1 found Mrs. Tenney sick at heart ovr the loss of all her house plants. The mercury f. 11 to 10 decrees above zero, unusually cold so near tke ocean. The Winter of lhSl-82 was open uniil near February. 'Si I was at the Warm Springs Agency. There was no storm to speak of, hut it froze night after night until the ground was frozen nearly two feet deep Here in the valley the bar' ground froze for a time, then came a sudJen thaw that killed nearly nil the Winter wheat, and wheat had to be im ported from California for re-tscedlng. It is claimed that the wild mustard seed wahen brought that has been such a nuisance to some fields in the Willam ette Valley. The Last One. During my stay of 15 years at Warm Springs the Winter of 1SS4-S," was the hardest. The snow storm began early the mornli.nc of December 15. The thaw came with a chinook, January S. '85. Snow at the Warm Springs Agency over 30 Inches deep. At The Dalles it was said to have been six feel. Horses and cattle were caught out nn the range, and had to stay where the storm overtook them. Mercury went to 18 below zero. It was a pitiful sight to see the dead animals after the snow was gone; where they had grouped around some juniper trees and had perished in their tracks. In January, 1SS7. came a hard snow storm for Haetern Oregon, followed by In tense cold. One morning the mercury was ?.Z degrees below zero: perhaps the coldest ever known al Warm Springs. In February. 1VA we had a freeze. If I remember r!(,'lu, it was 15 degrees be low zero at The Dalles, and only about 12 degrees below at Warm Springs. The Iiesehutes River never Ikir lee npposile the agency west or the Agency l'hiins east of It. The river may have a tempering Influence down the Deschutes canyon, some 800 feet below the table lands. For 24 years we have had no heavy snowfall in the Willamette Valley, and since lVfl no very cold weather. The present storm is a record-breaker for later years, and yet so far. is not com parable, to the Winters of pioneer iias for severity. I have often been led to think that our climate is getting warmer. Be that as It may, we have one of the best climates in the world, and the healthiest. I grow more and more proud of our peerless Oregon, where all my life has been spent, and want sometime to sleep beside one of her murmuring streams, or beneath her lofty pines. The Woman With a Figure. Atchison Globe. A woman with any sort of a figure ia prouder of it than a man Is of a million dollars.