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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1909)
5 APPEARANCE OF DAVID BISPHAM, MARCH 30, WILL BE , IMPORTANT MUSICAL EVENT This Celebrated Singer to Be Heard at Closing Concert of Portland Symphony Orchestra. THE announcement of David Bisp ham as soloist with the Portland Symphony Orchestra for the con cert to be given March 30 has aroused the most enthusiastic Interest in the concert, and this promises to be the largest audience the orchestra has ever played before. The famous baritone has been singing: to packed houses throughout the present tour. There is no question in the minds of those who are familiar with his attainments that there is no singer in America or Kurope capable of such variety of work In opera, oratorio and song: recital as Mr. Bispham. The Baltimore News re cently referred to an appearance of Mr. Bispham in that city as follows: "Mr. Bispham sang to a packed house last night. ' The celebrated baritone was in his best voice, and the concert was altogether one of the finest ever given In this city." The press notices across the country have been nothing but accounts of his triumphs. In San Francisco he sang to packed houses at four concerts. Mr. Bispham is actor as well as singer. In hearing and seeing him the audience Koems actually to witness the charac ters whose emotions his marvelous art portrays. In dainty things his voice i mellow, sweet and sympathetic, while in dramatic selections it reveals qual ities of richness and robustness that Mi-ouse one to the intensest enthusi Hsni. He is the artist through and through, and possesses rare interpreta tive power and dramatic skill. " One need only to look ' at his face to see that he has a fine intellectual mind, and it is his application of it to his voice that has placed him in the en viable position he holds among .concert ulngers. Mr. Blspham's programme for Fort lurid is an unusually interesting one, including several numbers with which lils name is always associated. "Ho, Jolly Jenkln" 'and "The Templar's Song" from Sullivan's "lvanhoe." he will sing with orchestra. "Hark, Hark, the Iark" - (Schubert), "The Frost Scene" (Purcell). "The Mad Dog" (Liza Irfhmann), and "Dannyj)eever" are in preparation. David Bispham's rich, mellow voice is always a delight to his audiences and his excellent musicianship is edu cational as well as entertaining. In the San Francisco Examiner Thomas Nunan wrote: "With voice as rich, as an old "cello. David Bispham, always a favorite in San Francisco, sang an all Knglish programme, and he was wel romed as though the people thought 4 v v v V Jfe" & ' . . if 7 .1 i. .7. . . . r . I t DAVID BISPHAM, W HO WILL. APPEAR AS SOLOIST WITH PORT LAND SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, MARCH 30. he had been away altogether too long." This concert will unquestionably show the orchestra at its best. The work together under Mr. Rosebrook's efficient direction is telling in the fin ish and smoothness. Waidemar Lind will act as concertmeister, and his abil ltyin that capacity is well known. The symphony to be played is Beethoven's First. In the First Symphony Beethoven is not as heroic nor as oppressively sad as in the symphonies he wrote later. This work is delightful' from beginning to end. This will be the last concert to be given by the orchestra this season. Definite Plans for Second Musical Festival Announced Chicago Symphony Orchestra, With Ten Soloists and Four Great Singers, to Be Heard April 30 and May 1 and 2. THE second annual Musical Festival will be given in this city at the ' Armory the evenings of April 30 nd May 1 and 2, and tha afternoons of May l and 2, making all told five con certs. This stupendous affair will com prise the came two organizations as last year, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra of SO musicians and the Portland Festival Chorus of SOO voices. The orchestra will be under the direction of the noted con ductor, Adolph Rosenbeoker, who made euch a decidedly good impression last year, and W. H. Boyer. of Portland, will again be at the directing end of the baton for ttie Festival Chorus. Coming with the orchestra from the Eat will be four celebrated vocal solo ists, three of whom we are able to an nounce at the present time, and the fourth, the tenor soloist, will be made known In a few days. The soprano will be the gifted high soprano Aida Hemmi. who is well known in this city, having appeared here with operatic organizations in the past few years. This will be wel come news to the music-lovers in this community, as this clever artist Is rated as one of the most scholarly singers that ever came to this city. Miss Hemmi has been accorded the highest praise from the Eastern musical critics for her excellent work both in oratorio and grand opera. The basso will be Frank Arthur Preisch, recently returned from Europe, where he sang at Oovent Garden, London, for the past three years, and of whom many kind words have been said wherever he has been heard. The contralto will be Miss Julia Helnrlch, daughter of the celebrated musician and composer, whom we will mention later. Together with the artists named will be the world-famous pianist. Myrtle Elvyn, of whom the East lias heard a great deal, hut the West only by her splendid repu tation in tlie musical papers. Included In the orchestra will be ten instrumental sulnlsts. among whom Is the sterling fa vorite of last season, Franz "Wagner, cel lo soloist, and the gifted artist. Guy "Woodard, solo violinist and concert mas ter. The chorus will be heard at every one of the five concerts. The chorus numbers at two of the concerts will run IS or 20 minutes, and the remainder of the concert will be devoted to the orches tra and soloists, both instrumental and vocal. The entire programmes will be published in a short t'me. The following numbers will be given by the combined chorus and orchestra: Sul livan's "Golden Legend," "Hail, Bright Abode," from "Wagner's "Tannha'user" ; Gaul's "Holy City," Rossini's "Stabat Mater," up to and including the famous "Inflammatus," and 'The Sanctus," from Gounod's , "St. Cecilia" mass. The fore going worlts- together with several sym phonies by the orchestra and the vocal and instrumental solos and classical-popular selections, will go to make the greatest musical feast the Northwest has ever had. Permits for season tickets to the five concerts are now being sold by the mem bers of the Festival Chorus and at Edlers Piano House at $1 each. There are 2000 of these permits to be disposed of In the following manner: The first cost is $1; the holder is then entitled to secure Ave tickets to each of the concerts in the best $150 seats in either the lower floor or the balcony by paying an additional $2 for the five tickets; or Ave of the $1 tickets to each of the tlve concerts by paying an additional $1. In other words, the sub scriber gets J7.50 Worth of tickets for $3 or $5 worth of tickets for J2-. These per mits will be on exchange at Eilers Piano House beginning Monday, March 29, and continuing until April 6, after which no more season tickets will be sold. The regular individual concert sale will open Monday, April 19, at Eilers, at the regular $1.60 and $1 prices for each con cert, and one can readily see the advan tage In securing a permit, not only for the saving to the subscriber, but because it will assure the financial success of one of the greatest benefits that could be granted the cause of music in the Northwest. of the May wheat deal. . There is an other Patten George A.: a brother who manages to keep himself in retire ment so far as public notice is con Crn George Patten furnishes a lot or the brain that maps out the wheat campaign. He is younger than his brother, but what he. does "not know about the speculative game would not fill a. very large book. James A. Pat ten is the cmnmaiiiliir.in.niii .... v- details are left largely, to his talented brother. The elder man is content to be spokesman, who stands between his business and the public. It is he who gives out the arirolf i ! "nulates the whys and wherefores for public consumption. It with ,.7 : If nacked up oi i V --a.pl Lai. it takes cap! tal to engineer a deal like this. Dunne Becomes Broken Idol. T V. ; Rroir t ... m t0Wn ""J'ed "A m? oL That t,Ue- use1 Jl a J- ij5enTt,mi?ht fittingly applied a ue' ex-Mayor of Chi cago Mr. Dunne seems to have a greater faculty than most men of pick- W oman Suffragists Arm for Battle of Lives in Illinois Measure Inserted in New Chicago Charter Man Behind Scenes in Wheat Deal Joke on Railroads in Standard Case ExMayor Dunne Is Broken Idol. BY JONATHAN PALMER. CHICAGO, March 20. (Special.) Matters are shaping In Illinois for a concerted attack by woman suf fragists on tho State legislature now in session at Springfield. It is hardly expected the London melodrama will be duplicated, but scenes are looked for quite as lively and picturesque as those staged at Albany. There are many aggressive suffragettes in Chi cago who are primed for the battle of their lives. The charter convention which is trying to frame a new or ganic law for Chicago has laid the groundwork for the tight, and already rumbling of resentment come from Hprlngtield. By a vote of 20 to 11 the delegates to the convention ha,e ap proved a bill giving the women of ChlcHKO the right to vote at muntcipal elections, the only limitations being those prescribed by the state consti 1 tution. This charter convention is composed or ritlzens who have volunteered to give their time to debating proposals and drafting bills. These bills must bo sent to the legislature, individually or as parts of a formal charter. The jtate colons will approve or reject them. In the former event they must be re ferred back to the electorate of Chi rajro for Its verdict. The last Legisla ture spnrovjd a charter. The people tied a can to It. Ileal Battle Is Women's. Now there are bills to divorce the -lty courts absolutely from politics, to grant women the franchise, to give the voters the right to recall officials who may be derelict, and others of like advanced ground. So diverse are the particular fads of the delegates that to make progress things have been ap proved which probably the majority did not privately indorse. The real battle will swirl and eddy around the woman suffrage bill. All the influ ence and resources of its friends will be marshaled for the cause, because, if the wedge be entered in Chicago, the second city of the Nation, It is be lieved by many suffragettes that the task of securing general suffrage will be simplified. It is this view which points the promise of lively doings at the capital. Patten Is Man of Hour. "What might be called the other side of the wheat drama is something the public hears very little about. The fireworks displa- takes place on the floor of the Board of Trade. It is that the crowd sees and hears, that from which it gets its thrills and that it reads about in the papers. ' For weeks the other side behind the scenes, if you will-r-has been in the office of the Pattens. In this ciuiet. m-im. business like place, where nobody seems to get ruffled or excited, the daily programme for the pyrotechnics is made out and touched off. To go from the pit to this office is like going from a sawmill into a country parlor, minus the smell of must. Chicago claims airect proprietorship In one member of the Cabinet and in direct proprietorship in another, and is, therefore, somewhat primped up in spirit, but if the amount of public talk means anything in setting one forth as "tue man of the hour." James A. Patten is that man. He is getting more local newspaper space than all the members of the Cabinet put to gether He takes his notoriety quietlv. He is used to it. Walk into his office when pit excitement ts at its height, when men are transformed into ani mals and babel comes down, and you will find him calmly giving directions, mapping out field maneuvers and act ing quite as nochalantly as, if he were ordering a simple breakfast of grape fruit, bacon and eggs. If he hasn't the "poker face," he at least has the poker mien and the steady nerves of lack of nerves behind it. As a matter of fact, James A. Patten Is getting rather more than his pro portionate or just share of fame out Ing out a place on the . toboggan that whirls one down and away from popu larity. His latest deseension took place when he refused to attend the Iroquois Club banquet to Judge Dickinson, the new Secretary of War. His reason ts now stale with age so far as the press . is concerned. Indeed, his fellow Demo- '. crats of the Iroquois Club thought it was in Its dotage when it was born. Mr. Dunne's reason was, in brief, that in ac cepting a place In a Republican Cabinet Judge Dickinson was disloyal to hie party and should be spurned by the faithful. Those who attended the banquet say It was pitiful the ridicule that . was heaped on the name of Dunne. Every mention of his letter of refusal to attend the spread was-greeted with derisive laugh ter, behind which was tacit comment that would have humiliated 'most men. Mr. Dunne has kept silence since that night, but there is reason to believe he feels himself a martyr to the cause, of true Democracy rather than the laughing stock of his party. That the latter is his correct status it needs only a little min gling with Democratic leaders to deter mine. Joke Is on Railroads. Behind the scenes of the "second so called $29,000,000 Standard Oil case, which was virtually " thrown out of court by Judge A. B. Anderson with an order to the Jury for a verdict of not guilty, is one of the Biggest and most costly jokes in the corporation history of the coun try. The joke is on the railroads and the laugh belongs to the Standard Oil crowd. In the case in which Judtre Landis fined the oil corporation S29.24O.OO0. the verdict was . returned on evidence fur nished almost entirely by railroad offi cials. It was the understanding amonc them that they were to be immune from prosecution as a result of anything they line ii t y. jne oianaara un people were without the charmed circle. They were the bad boys upon whom alone pun- isnment should be visited. They got it on paper. The railroad men chuckled and supposed it . was the real thing. The Federal Court of Appeals overruled the lower court and advised it to try again. une government attorneys peeled off their coats' for the second lickinK of Standard Oil, but Referee Anderson, otherwise the judge, ruled out one style of attack after another. Then he de clared the scrap oft and turned' on the boys who had "told on" Standard Oil. These boys are the railroad officials. It looked to him, he said, as If those boys were due for a walloping. Therein lies the joke. It. was proven" to the satisfaction of the court that the railroads are not publish ing "fixed tariff schedules" in accordance with the law and that Standard Oil had no means of knowing It was doing wrong in accepting the rate it enjoyed. It' is up to the railroads, therefore, to publish auuii rmts at great expense to tnemseives and. if they fall - to do so, they can be punished severely. As a matter of fact they can be chastened for what they al- reaay nave tailed to do, says Judge An- aerson.- ,. Banker, Politician, Composer. To be an expert in practical finance, a politician who knows the finesse of the game, and a musician who knows how to construct -a composition with due regard to rhythm, expression and the other nice points, is a combination rarely given to any man. It Is not widely known that this trinity of accomplishments is per sonified in Charles G. Dawes, president of the Central Trust Company .of Chicago and Controller of the United States cur rency under President McKlnley. Re cently Mr. Dawes has been seen fre quently at one of the leading after-theater cafes with parties of friends to whom he sets as host. The orchestra watches for his coming an'd when the diners are well on the way with their unread the conductor gives the word for the playing oi a "Marcn and Two-step in E-Flat Major." Mr. Dawes face at once takes on an aspect of pleased self -conscious ness and it Is adroitly broken to the guests at the table that Mr. Dawes com posed the piece in his leisure moments. Backed by Mayor Busse, the Civil Serv ice Commission of Chicago and other au thorities are determined to put munici pal affairs on a basis such as well-ordered business concerns employ. Employes are to be paid according to their merits, these merits being determined by what they do and how they do it. The dead timber Is to be cleared out. The Civil Service Commission finds there are 710 Inspectors on the various pay rolls and that there are 68 kinds of inspectors. What they do, in many instances, nobody knows, but they draw salaries which foot up to the pretty total of $840,000 a year. "The sixty-eight varieties" have be come a byword. Mayor Busse has bills pending 'in the Legislature looking to an enlargement of . the city's bond-issuing rights. He was 4 told the other' day that these bills would be killed and embalmed If he did not keep his hands oft the Senatorial fight. Straightway there was a general exodus of henchmen from the capital back to j town. $5000 SALVE: FOR BEATING Arthur Osburn Says -He Was Dam aged That Much by I. H. Borden. Arthur Osburn, a real estate agent, wants $5000 from I. H.' Borden,, of the same calling, in compensation for a fearful drubbing he says Borden gave him lately. Suit to recover damages was filed with the Circuit Court yes terday. The trouble occurred over rivalry In the land selling business. In his com plaint Osburn alleges that Borden ap proached him in the office of the Ala meda Land Company, , in the Corbett building, accused him of taking away customers and proceeded to chastise him In a most unladylike fashion. Os burn sets up that he was terribly beat en. Besides knocking him down, Bor den got In a little fancy work foot work, he says, ' with the result that Osburn's- head was badly bruised and marked. This all occurred on March 15, and Osburn says he has been com pelled to contribute to the doctors much since then. He figures that $5000 will put him even. JAPANESE RESENTS CHARGE Tanaka Says He Didn't Steal Hart's Wife and Wants $ 10,000. Ben Tanaka, a Japanese, feels high ly injured because his countryman, H. Hari, accused him of stealing Mrs. Harl some days ago; Tanaka, in a damage suit filed with the State Circuit Court yesterday, says that while Mrs. Harl may have been stolen, he personally didn't purloin her, and consequently doesn't like the blame or credit or whatever .the proper word may be. Two thousand- dollars is the sum Tanaka asks of the woman's husband. Hari spread the report all about that Tanaka stole the woman, the complaint alleges. It was- printed in Portland and Seattle.-- It has upset Tanaka's dignity and caused him great mental stress ' The complaint, however, is one of the shortest yet filed, covering only half a typewritten sheet. ' Articles of Incorporation. THE OREGON METALLIZING COMPANY Incorporators, A. S. Pattullo, F. W. New ell and H. H. Northup'; capitalisation, $5000. I. Ann INVESTMENT COMPANY Incor porators, W. -M. Ladd. S. B. Llnthlum and A. E. Qebhardt; capitalization. 500.000 KENTON TRACTION COMPANY Incor Dorators. C. C. Colt. J. C. Good, George F. Heuaner and Charles H. Carey; capitalisa tion. THE APOL.IV CL.TTB Incorporators. H. W. HORue, Edward I. Bayley, Sidney G. Lathrop, F. S. Pierce and Henry Teal; prop erty valued at $250. New United Electric Railway To Harborton. See adv. Page 6. Section S. - "Watch the movement down the river." - A Most raraor diiary Offer With Every Lady's $25 Suit Sold This Week A Lady s New Spring Hat Free With every lady's $25 suit sold this week we shall giYe absolutely free of all charge a fine Spring hat; made of the best straw and trimmed up'to date. This is done to introduce our new Millinery department and also our fine line of Spring Suits. Outfit Complete for Easter at the Big Eastside Store at little cost. A fiite hat and a Spring Suit at the cost of the suit alone. These ladies' suits are models that embrace all the latest touches of fashion; long coats braid and button trimmed, satin and taffeta lined; per fectly constructed of fine nrunella. nan a.mn. rptw . aiiidtLiy miiimeu. wixn siuc oraici or strictly tailored; skirts W&ffi$m&&i ..v, ,vx axj. iiuc suytcs; m an ine popular S''ISWvi shades too numerous to mpntinn novo tv, a,4. iscA-aa- rTn&t nV and will lbe found far below department store figures for same class of goods. Ladies, honor the East Side with a call before going 01er the river for your Spring suit, hat, shoes, have fheTr hrhney yUrSelf' ?ide PeoPIe employed? - -U our. forty employes 6 en's Fine Spring Suits on Easy Terms Make a Small Cash Payment Then $ 1 a Week Ranges Sold This Week $1.00 Down, $1.00 a Week GEVURTZ BROS. Eat Union Avenue and East' Burnside tLoiB Myrtle Elvyn and the famous Kimball are to appear at the Armory, April 3 O, May l and 2 V I ... Is 5 i -1. L - A V A N 5 ft i i ! ? 1 1 f-....... ... ..-...i:.StaJ . in the Second Annual Musical Festival Chicago Symphony Orchestra DIRECTION ADOLPH ROSESBECHER, AND' 60 MUSICIANS. . Portland Festival Chorus DIRECTION W. H. BOYER, CONraTCTOR, AND SOO VOICES. Permits lor Season Tickets are not on sale at EILERS PI4.NO HOUSE, 853 Washington St., and by members Portland Festival Chorus. Permit entitles holder to attend Fire Concerts for Three 3r" Be" Seatsi or Klve Concerts lor Two Dollars, Next Best Seats. .I-1 112" tto .Ha,s, E,,TP' numerous other world-famous artists nteTeS the Klmba.1 Piano, which 1, repre! Biggest Busiest and Best The House of Highest Quality pmnorttKalrfltt 353 Washington Street, Corner Park peninX Barber We have a fine opening for a good barber with a little capital. It is an especially desirable stand for a married man. . Step Right Into a $30-a-Week Business Tlie present tenant has made money enough out of the place within three years to buy a farm and retire. A two-chair shop, with Irving-rooms in rear, fully equipped. " ' Apply at Front and Gibbs streets, or to Gevurtz & Sons, 173 First street. Country inquiries promptly answered. s "IF YOU CAN'T GET GOOD ROADS GET A STUDEBAKER" IN THEM ALL ROADS ARE ALIKE Will be pleased to prove this by a demonstration STUDEBAKER BROS. CO., N. w. 330 East Morrison.