IS THE SUXDAT OREGONIxVX. PORTLAND, FEBRUARY 18, 1917. BRAND NEW JAPANESE OPERA WILL BE HEARD IN PORTLAND EARLY NEXT MONTH Oriental Prima Donna, Who Will Appear in Title Role at Eleventh-Street Playhouse, During First Week of March, Gives Interesting Explanation of Mascagni's Heroine. - Ik lip ilV-,? iair . c :t Thomas "(?J lrVA '"""r V Zr""- I """fc tions. V i fV $ ? When Mrae. Miura was asked to talk S l j I , about the character of the country I ' 4 VS ' E maiden, she said: "The idea of Iris, ac- i cording: to Mascagni. Is the immortality 2 l '- of innocence. Although Iris finds her- - J self in a geisha house, she remains L Til"' J Vk ONE of the few occasions when Portland music lovers have been privileged to hear a new Rrand opera will occur at the Eleventh-Street Playhouse on Tuesday, March 6, when Pietro Mascagni's new Japanese opera, "Iris," will be presented here by the Boston National Grand Opera Company. The subtle art of "Iris" has perplexed many who have witnessed the presenta , tion of th,is masterwork and when "Iris" is given here the title role will be entrusted to Mme. Tamaki Miura. the famous Japanese soprano. Mme. Borl and Mme. Eames have hitherto assumed this role in New York, and as In the case of "Madame Butterfly," a stronger illusion is conveyed across the footlights by a Japanese artist than WRITER WEAVES WEIRD TALE OF GHOSTLIKE "HUGUENOTS HEAD" SEEN BY LE BRUN FAMILY According to Story, Ever Since Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Ere Head of Evanescent Type Has Appeared to Different Members of Family Just Before Death. BY MARY INEZ MARTIN. ON principle I do not believe in ghosts, but cannot choose but be lieve the testimony of my eyes. Here are the plain, cold facts and you who read shall Judge for yourselves. On the night of St. Bartholomew's Eve when the Huguenots were massa ored and Louis IX stood on the rampart crying, "Perish every one of them, let not one remain to reproach me!" many unrecorded crimes were committed that have left foul stains on otherwise fair escutcheons. The house of Le Brun stood for the King, consequently when Caspar Le Brun on that night declared himself a Huguenot, had he displayed cloven feet and breath of Are he could not have struck- a deeper horror to the hearts of his brothers. ' Imagine the scene when Caspar, find ing his brother torturing an old serv ant on suspicion of being a Huguenot, cried. "For the love of Christ, Jules, spare the man. I. too. am a Huguenot, and I'll stand this no longer." On the spot Casper, eldest son of the house of Le Brun, was stabbed through the heart by his brother. A few months later Caspar's young wife died, leaving an infant daughter, who was carefully brought up within the fold of the church; thus Caspar's life was subtracted from the family and his influence lost. This is as the rec- ord goes. Jules Le Brun put his deed down for a virtue. He had done his duty and gloried in it. And in faith, on that awful night much worse was done. Among the dark deeds of St. Bartholomew's Eve much private re venge satisfied itself under cover of the reigning terror; suitors murdered their rivals, debtors " their creditors, heirs-at-law their nearest of kin, until this chronicle of crime runs red down, down the annals of nearly every fam ily in France. Death Scene Startles. Jules Le Brun. after a life of many activities and much success, relegated the memory of this night to the back ground of his mind until It was rarely . recalled. Crowned at last with years and. honors, he returned to Paris, to the old home that had fallen to his by even the gifted singers of other na tions. When Mme. Miura was asked to talk about the character of the country maiden, she said: "The idea of Iris, ac cording to Mascagni, Is the immortality of innocence. Although Iris finds her self in a geisha house, she remains spotless and pure, and although she is offered for sale in the market place, she undergoes this triar in the same spirit of innocence. It is an allegory, of course, and. like the theme of 'Madame Butterfly,' it reveals many of the char acteristics of l Japanese. I have ex changed letters with Signor Mascagni and I think it is wrong to discuss 'Iris' as a complicated work. It contains simply that one statement that "good is indestructible,' and I call that a very nice idea. "Iris is little more than a child and all the evil which befalls her she turns into something quite different.- When she wakes up in the geisha house she is certain she Is in paradise, and when she learns to the contrary she is certain that she is dead. All this is exactly as a nice Japanese girl would reason, be cause in Japan the innocence, of chil dren is more closely guarded than in Europe and America. Black Side of Life Realised. "Iris In the. opera is a, country maid en who is lured away by wicked men and whose inherent sense of virtue in terprets all the evil about her as good. She is imprisoned in a geisha house, exhibited in the market place not un til she is cursed by her fr.ther, who thinks her degradation was willing, does she understand the black side of life. Even as she seeks death in the sewer her innocence is steadfast and the great theme of the opera is this very point the indestructibility of good in this world. Now that is very Japanese and Iris' complete oblivious share, to spend his declining years among his old friends and the scenes of his youth. In the course of time Jules Le Brun came to' die and his fam ily stood around his bed watching the peaceful close of a long, adventurous life, when, suddenly turning to the wall opposite, his eyes starting out of his head, "Caspar!" he shrieked, and, struggling, resisting, pleading, he died. The horror of this scene and the ag ony of Jules Le Brun's last moments were of course repeated under their breath by the witnesses to the succeed ing generation. But to avoid exagger ation a plain, straightforward account, under the""Le Brun seal, was added to the family records, otherwise the repe tition from generation to generation would at last have had a whole Hugue not army out at Jules' bedside by this time. Although painful to witness, such a deathbed seizure, was not so, very un common in those days of violence. The King himself a few years later died a prey to remorse and the haunting spec ters of massacred Huguenots. The sur viving members of the Le Brun family were now all of a new generation, so, recovering their spirits as time went on, they came at last to regard the story of Jules' death as merely a sick old man's fancy until the next Le Brun died. This was in the Soudan, when Pierre Le Brun died on the - field of battle. The notification sent by his commanding officer enclosed a letter from a brother Lieutenant telling of his death and that Pierre had shrieked "L'Huguenot! L'Huguenot!" with his last breath. Now the family began to realize the deadly import of their St. Bartholo mew's - tragedy. Masses, were gener ously said for the repose of Caspar's soul, but Caspar, having repudiated the authority of the church, was beyond its pale. HsiniFiot's Head Ever Appears. - From generation to generation the record of the Huguenot's Head went on, appearing on the walls of mansion or cottage, the field of honor or the ex plorer's trail. The good and the bad alike of the Le Brum blood have seen the head, of the Huguenot, when their eyes closed to the scenes of this world. ness to the men with whom she comes in contact is not at all exaggerated. "We have barter and sale in our Jap anese rrarriages. . There Is a great deal of finance connected with the wed ding contract, but what of that that is eminently sensible and, I think makes for happier marriages. The Japanese do not wish their children to grow up with false ideas on any point. And women of good families are reared to be senesible and capable wives. We d- safeguard innocence to a certain ex tent, but not ignorance. And in Japan there is a wide line of demarcation between the two classes. Tiro ClaHaea Kever Overlap. . "It is considered no great wrong for a girl of the poorer classes to become a geisha and earn her own living and support her family in that way, but for a woman of the better class to de grade herself. It is great far..:iy shame. One hears very little in Japan of these two classes overlapping and 1 think my people have solved for generations many of the problems of sex. Not un til recently have Japanese women ap peared to any great extent outside of their homes. In spite of our inter course with the rest of the world, we are surprised at the liberty accorded the young American woman married or unmarried." The Boston National's repertory for the engagement at the Eleventh-Street Playhouse on March 5 and 6 will be as follows: Monday evening. "Aida," with Giovanni Zenatello, Lulsa Villani, George Baklanoff and Virgilio Laizari; Tuesday afternoon, Mascagni's new Japanese opera, "Iris," with Tamaki Miura (the Oriental prima donna heard here last year in "Madame Butterfly"), Thomas Chalmers, Tovia ivittay, Vir gilio Lazzari and others; Tuesday even ing. "Faus. with Maggie Teyte. Ric cardo Martin, Jose Mardones, . Graham Marr and others. they are opening upon the next. There have beenthose who, dying suddenly or being unconscious at the last, have left no record of the Huguenot's com ing to meet them, but every generation has left some instance of the Hugue not's Head appearing above the hori zon of the next world. The house of Le Brun has become widely scattered during all these in tervening years. My great-grandfather went to Holland, where he passed his life and married a Dutch woman. My grandfather, having squandered his patrimony, came to America, where, followed by poverty and misfortune, we have cut ourselves oft from our kinsmen in the old world. The American Le Bruns now being no body in particular, have been lost -at sea or died alone with no one to .hang upon their last words or watch for the traditional apparition. Consequently in our branch the Hu guenot's Head has become merely a picturesque story saved from the wreck of our former prosperity and useful to discourage wakefulness at night on the part of naughty little Le Bruns. It is in this attitude of mind that I, in this skeptical 20th century, have seen the Huguenot's Head. Again I aver that I ao not. on principle, believe in ghosts or apparitions, or celestial visitants of any kind; but believing in "the resurrection of the body and the life everlasting." can but believe the testimony of my own eyes. And this time the meaning of the appearing of the Huguenot s Head you. as well as I, will have a chance to Judge. Falher'a Death Sntlden. My father came to Oregon among th early settlers took up a timber claim, endured hardships, made and lost a for tune, but before he died had managed to restore his financial status to such an extent as to leave us a comfortable legacy. . The manner of his death was so strange and sudden we had no way of knowing, whether he had seen the Head.- In fact I do not remember hav ing given it a thought, so remote are we from the original branch with all its pride and traditions. After a few years of widowhood my mother married again, being a very attractive woman, but after my stepfather had squandered as much of her property as he could get his hands on he deserted her, leaving her humiliated and heartbroken. The shock of the death of my own father, the treatment and deception she had suffered at the hands of her second husband, wrought upon her nervous condition to such an extent that within a few years she had be come a helpless invalid, greatly re duced In fortune. So here we are living in a modest little apartment of the flve-rooms-and-bath sort, with a Japanese schoolboy our only servant. In the atmosphere of whizzing electric streetcars and the chug-chug of auto mobiles, motor truVks and motorcyciea in this most western city of the new world. Could anything be farther removed from the romantic, superstitious days of France when sabres dripped in the wake of dancing feet? So in my west- worlft isolation from the tradition and tngedy of the Le Bruns, sitting one evening at the bedside of my mother I raised my eyes to the wall while she slept,' when across the wall flashed a face, bold In outline and of fantastic embellishment. The 'next moment it was gone. . lFare Again la sera. I do not know whether this was the regulation Huguenot of the Le Brun family because cut off from communi cation with them I do not know wheth er he fcas been appearing straight away down the line or not. I was not even sure I had seen the Huguenot at all, so deeply is my mind influenced by this latter-day skepticism, so I wonaered a bit, waited a while, and as nothing more came of it put it down to a flight of imagination. A few months later arising in the night to answer a call to my mother's room, the same outline In heroic size confnnted me on the wall.-A Huguenot of the 16th century appearing on the wall in the glow of a. 20th century arc light robs it of much of its romantic suggestion and all its terror. But there he was as long as I kept my eyes upon him growing and fading with the flicker of the light. Expecting to see a change for the worse I hastened to my mother's bedside, but there she lay comfortable and Deaoeful waiting for me to bring her a glass of water, so I went back to my room to thinkthlnsa over. Not caring to see my murdered an cestor before me any time I opened my eyes at night I hung my crucifix in the space where the Head had appeared, feeling that the figure of the blessed Saviour whose blood was shed for tha pardon of all must exorcise this un friendly spirit. . Apparition Often Present. But again, some time later we sat chatting by the carefully shaded night light. I looked up from Tny embroidery and saw the Head upon the wall. Glancing cautiously at my mother to see if she. too. had seen It, I said, "Uo you see anything unusual, dear?" And she answered. "Yes. that rose in your hair takes -me back to last Summer in the country. I wish you would wear one always." Whether this answer brought me re lief or terror I cannot tell. To know the Huguenot had not appeared to my mother assures me she is not to be taken from me, but who then is it? I have only Just begun to live. The Sis ters at the convent told me I had a fu ture before me in my voice if I could have it cultivated." Also my cousin Jacques in Paris wnteg he is coming over to America to see me at the close of the war. Still the apparition of the Huguenot grows more and more dis-S tinct although it has not the terror for mo ittiad for the early Le Bruns when It chilled their hearts with fear. The crucifix I hung on the wall is no bar to its appearance, -which I take for a sign that with our advancing lib erty in religious thought our Huguenot has lost his prejudice against this sign of holy chupch, else would he cast his reflection upon it? But- day after day as I chat and laugh to keep up my in valid's spirits and know she does not see the Head I thank the good Lord it is not she who will have to go. and yet I do not know what will become of my poor mother if the Huguenot is coming for me. I do not try to explain what I see or what I feel for I come always to the Inevitable conclusion I simply do not know. I have given you these facts and the meaning of the Huguenot's Head lies in your hand if within the year you read "Marie Eugenie Le Brun. a native of Portland, aged 21 years. (Continued From Fas S. event. A wonderful exhibition ot not only the theory of music but the ability of the children to use every on 01 knowledge at the piano keyboard was observed. The work included: Illus trating the theory of music, sight read ing, scale building, rhythm, ear train ing keyboard harmony, history, musi cal terms and the practice of music The participants in the recital were: Dorothy Bleecker, tiiaoys jaier. j-,ucie Calef, Kathryn Clemens. Margaret Dun ning, Kulla Dunning, Kutn running. Alma Dye. Janet Edwards, Lucielle George. Margherita Hay. Dorothy Hub bard. Katie Luslch. Mary Davison. Mary Lu Mallory, Rufus Mallory. Everett McCutchan, Florence Pick, Ruth Pick. Stanley Pickford, Robert Self, Olive Smith Jane rnompson, Louise wan. Cecil Weekes, Hazel Wooddy, Margaret Wright. w . The Dallas Oratorio Society gave its first concert recently in the High School auditorium. It was a distinct success. The chorus of 40 voices, con ducted by Joseph A. Finley, showed the thorough training of the past few months, and responded readily to his direction. The parts were well bal anced, and the voices blend well. Miss Dorothy Bennett was an efficient and pleasing accompanist. Mrs. Finley's sopranos and Mr. Finley's solos and Yankee dialect readings were well re ceived. The programme: "In Praise of Song" (Strauss), chorus; solos, "For the King" (Bonheur). and "Mandalay" (Speaks). Mr. Finley; "O. My Love Is Like a Red, Red Rose" (Garrett) and "Yachting Glee" (Culbertson), chorus; solos, "April Song" (Newton) and "Alone in Love's Garden" (Hawley). Mrs. Finley; "Love's Old Sweet Song" (Molloy), chorus; reading, "Elkanah B. Atkinson" (Day) and "Lute Hawkins' Wife"-(Day), Mr. Finley: "The Miller" (Macfarren) and "Wake Miss Llndy" (Warner), chorus; "Valley of Laugh ter" (Sanderson) and "Megan" (Rob erts). Mrs. Finley: "When Lish Played Ox" (Day), and "Barbara Frietchie" in German dialect, by Mr. Finley: "Gloria from 12th Mass" (Mozart). Last Fri day work was begun on "The Crea tion." parts of which will be sung in concert in early May. Dent Mowrey, the pianist of this city, appeared recently in his fourth piano recital at Seattle, Wash., and achieved a marked success. A Seattle correspondent who was present at this concert writes: "The Dent Mowrey recital was one of the positive successes of the sea son. In an artistic, social and financial way. Mr. Mowrey fulfilled the prem ises that had been made by the press both abroad and at home. One thing, he is so eminently sane, so unusually free from mannerisms, and Mrs. Mow rey, who assisted him m two numbers. shares in that tribute. "The programme played at the Cor nish Hall, which was filled by an in terested and appreciative audience, was nicely balanced between old and mod ern compositions. Mr. Mowrey is a brilliant, pianist, poetic but never sen timental, the master of the lights and shades of his instrument. In the two big numbers of the programme) Mo zart's 'Grande Fantasia' and the Al legro movement from Beethoven's Concerto in C major which, had "been Where Is Your Boy or Girl, Now Ought to buy a . piano here without need of paying Interest, and se cure a musical education. We hear of boys and girls putting- themselves through college. We make It possible for them also to secure a piano and a musical education. The piano thus saved up maintains a cash value that can be. realized upon at any time, after it's yours, by sale when nec essary. Here Is Our Piano Proposition We supply you with this the piano to your home: then you pay $1.25 week ly, or. If you prefer, $S monthly without interest for 24 years. You can afford to pay $5 cash and $1.25 or more weekly, therefore you can. afford to buy now. 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This virtually gives you a one-year trial of the piano you order. , Every piano or player-piano purchased carries with it the Schwan Piano Co. guarantee of satisfaction, as also the usual guarantee from each manufacturer of these new musical Instruments. OPES MOM1AV, WliD.NKSUAV AND SATURDAY EVEM.NGS DIIUU THIS SAL10. TUB STORK THAT CHARGES ISO INTEREST. Manufacturers -f-hf H dT Warrantee Barked by KtrS"- Schwan Piano Co. $12,000,000 arranged by Mr. Mowrey for two pi anos. Mrs. Mowrey assisted. Always subordinate, yet sympathetic, the rich ness of the harmony was appreciably increased by her work. Mr. Mowrey as a composer is undoubtedly Influ enced by the modern Frem-h school, and the so-called 'whole-tone' scale was in evidence with its closer and more fascinating harmony, which con tains the essence of the music or to day and tomorrow. Naturally the in terest of the evening was centered up on Mr. Mowrey's own compositions, the third group of the programme. The "Danse Eccentrtque" was written for Loie Fuller and her company or 30 dancers who appeared In the Sta dium at Athens before the King of Greece. Madame Blanche Waldo Dewey is called the "Tetrazzine of the Birds. from her proficiency in imitating bird calls. She has Just returned to New York City from London, where she ap peared professionally as musical enter tainer at receptions and teas under the patronage of the Duchess of Marl borough. Madame Dewey is a cousin of the late Admiral Dewey. She pos sesses a strange vocal gift .which is neither whistling nor singing, ljut con sists in producing bird-like notes which in truth is wonderful warbling and thrilling. She places her body when vocalizing in exactly the position that a. bird does when trilling wnn lis head twisted slightly sideways and up- lirted. Madame Dewey uses all her vocal cords, and full lung capacity which is not done in whistling. "Lea Palmes Academiquo" was bestowed on Madame Dewey in France because sne ais covered a new sound and made an art of it." As a child Madame Dewey stud ied the violin with Theodoro Thomas and later with Joachim. When but 8 years old she made her debut in Berlin and appeared- professionally thereafter throughout almost every country in Europe. During a long ill nu she lav long weary hours in bed grieving over the breaking up of her musical career; a present oi a uiru lifted her out of the depths. Time passed, and Madame Dewey found her a.lf Imitating the bird's carrolling. Af- tr recovering- she gathered various birds, turning her room into a veritable aviary; she studied ana imiiaitu mem Thi. sn th hecinninr of her devel opment as the human bird singer. Her reportolre consists of songs, opera art as and ballads. . AT Carlin De Witt Joslyn save 1 progr-.mme of songs and piano solos of her own composition at the home of Mrs. Haves. Royal Arms Aparimems who gave a lrnch. Several musicians who were present expressed high ap preciation of Mrs. Joslyn as a song writer and composer. Mrs. Joslyn writes h music and words, and arrarges her own music for publication. bhe. will soon publish two new songs. .t .linton Kelly Methi'lst Episcopal Churcft a sacred concert took place last Sunday night, under the direction of William C. McCullocn. miss t-veiyn Snow. A. B. Caughey and Larry Mann were the soloists. A quartet composed of Miss Theodora Bushnell, Miss Eve lyn Snow, Mr. Caughey and Clifford Woodland sang 'King of Love. My Shepherd Is" (Shelley).. An Interesting meeting of th- New England Conservatory Club was held at the home of Mrs. W. B. Hamilton. Miss Agnes Watt and Airs, orace att Kose had charge of a well-prepared pro gramme of Elizabethan songs and lyricj and sonnets by Sir Walter Ral eigh, Bacon, Ben Jonson, Edmond Spen cer, Fletcher G. Beaumont and other writers were read by Mrs. Ross. 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Monthly Paym'nt Monthly Century, eleven Ear hof Paym'nt Monthly Paym'nt high top, 100 Standard eight follows: "Barbara Allen." "Blind Beg gar's Daughter." "May Pole Dance," all olt". Englis . sung by Mrs. Faye Hunt ington: "See the Chariot at Hand." igh No More. Ladies." Mrs. EdKar B. l iper: "Spring." "Greensleeves," "Who Is Sylvia?" (Schubert). Miss Watt: quartet, Mrs. Huntington. Mrc. Piper, Miss v'att and Mrs. Hamilton; "Hark, Hark, the Lark," "Ye Spotted Snakes." trio: "Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes"; "duet. "Under the Greenwood Tree" (Liza Lehmann). Sonnets." words by George Sterling and music by Lawrence Zenda, has been received for review. Both poet and musical composer make their home at San Francisco. In private life Ijiw- rence Zenda Is Mrs. W. Elgin Travis. who, with her husband, lived formerly in this city. They now live in Cali fornia. The music of these four songs is of charming, haunting beauty, and has found many admirers. The music is set for mezzo and contralto voices. A San Francisco correspondent writes: 'Mrs. Travis' talents as a composer were displayed in several pubiisnea songs before she collaborated wiin George Sterling. It is apparent that Mrs. Travis inherited her poetical turn of mind, for she is the daughter of Mrs. Anna Morrison Reed, who is well known among California writers of verse. There are four songs in this new book for which Mrs. Travis wrote both words and music. They are called A Star." 'The Mist and the Far Off Star (this is dedicated to Mrs. Charles Hollo Peters). 'Just to Be Near' and Yearning." Mrs. Travis in writing and composing has caught the witchery of that moon for which the sea of tears is ever a-tremble. Her effort is to capture 'the word that grief would find, the word that love natn Known,- and she is successful In her quest. Hers are 'slow and" supplicating ' notes' that steal upon the heart, inducing sweetly sympathetic, moods. All these, songs by Mrs. Travis must be sung to a piano accompaniment .if their- perfect beauty to be estimated. But their delicacy mav be Known somewnat irom sucn brooding words as- these: A Star. No unrest on the water's breast. Just stsrllsht like a dream . Held in night's deepening; No wind. Jurt a breath of Sprinrt Myatery In everything: Juat the ocean's undertone. A soul calling to its own, v - Starlight snd a dream! God in th mystic far. Silence and a etar. The piano students of Mrs. J. B.-Kiei nan entertained parents and mends with a monthly recital recently. Piano solos, duets and trios were played by the Misses Helen Tobin. Margaret Connolly, Louise Tobin. Hazel Bruce, Rachel Kiernan. Josephine Tobin, Agathe Harmon. violin solos were rendered bv Miss S. McAnally and Ann Marie Kiernan. and a vocal solo. "Lit tle Mischief." was sweetly sung by little Miss Viola Harper. All the num bers were well rendered and the stu dents received hearty applause. At the British Red Cross meeting, held February 10. F. Bischoff sang "Good Bye" (Tostl) ana "Invtctus' (Huhn). Mr. Bischoff is studying with E. Trevor Jones, end has a fine, robust tener voice, his concert tone being ex ceptionally rich in quality. Both of his songs were beutifully rendered, and well recel red. Dr. John J. Landsbury. of the Uni versity of Oregon school of music, will give two lectures before his extension classes at the Central Library. Friday, February 23. to which the public rs cordially Invited. The' first lecture at 7:30 P. M. will take up the different methods of piano technique as illus traced by the work, of such, men as Tonight? m $0 Cash. $6 Monthly. No Interest. 1H17 Models Illustrated and Oar 35 Per RKD1TRD PRICK EASIEST CREDIT &: Sons, BVfih Qif Cash Q Monthly or... O O Paym'nt $ytZ Cash tf O Monthly 0 or..". O O Paym'nt (iqr Cash C Monthly vlOu or... U O Paym'nt (nnn Cash j Monthly Oa7l or... U 4 Paym'nt (J Cash Q Monthly OOIO or... O Paym'nt fine Cash d e Monthly H14mJ or... O O Paym'nt SA C Cash o Monthly 43 or J O Paym'nt Qie Cash (1f Monthly OO'tJ or... 5Iu Paym'nt $QC Cash tf (- Monthly HO or... O O Paym'nt $rjJ Cash e Monthly a 3 or... Z 3 Paym'nt 1QCS Cash Monthly Ol IO or... I O Paym'nt $qe Cash d o Monthly OO or... I O Paym'nt $OQ Cash O Monthly OO or... O Paym'nt $JC Cash flj O Monthly 0 or... J O Paym'nt $1 Q Cash O Monthly IO or... O O Paym'nt Cash O Monthly VJ or... O O Paym'nt upr't. Sons, grand.. & Pond, organ. stops, at f organ. at now organ. stops, at.- Leschet laky. .Dieppe. Breithaupt. Raif. Mason and others. Dr..Landesbury will point out the strong points In the dif ferent methods and the general criti cisms of each. Parents who have chil dren studying music are especially in vited to the lecture. The second . lec ture at 8:30 P. M. before the class in the science of music, will take up "mod ulation." with special reference to the dominant seventh chord and the domi nant ninth chord, and the diminished seventh chord. Robert E. Millard, flutist, gave a lec ture on "The History of the Flute." at the Jefferson High Srhool before 1400 students last Wednesday. The flute was shown to be the most ancient of musical instruments and frequently mentioned In the oldest literature. Mr. Millard made a rapid survey of the great civilizations of ancient and mod ern times, showing the important place occupied by the flute in the art center of the world at dif ferentperlods of its history: and many interesting incidents were related which showed the condi tion of musical development in those times. At the close of the lecture Mr. Millard played a number on the old style flute of Colonial days, and sev eral solos on the modern Boehm-sys- tem instrument. Anovelty consisting of a flute trio was given by Miss Beulah Clark, F. F. Jancke and R. E. Millard. s At a special musical service tonight at the First German Baptist Churcti, J. William Belcher will sing the tenor recitative and aria from Handel s "Mes- siah.""Comfort Ye" and "Ev'ry Valley." - After two years and a half as soloist and precentor at Third Church ot Christ. Scientist. Mrs. Sara Glouce Bow man has resigned that position. The musical programme celebrating Lincoln's birthday and life, was pre sented by students of Mrs. M. T. Carty at Alumni Hall. The speakers compli mented Mrs. Carty highly for the splen did execution of the piano and vocal numbers. Mrs. Carty was the soprano soloist last Sunday at the Methodist Church South, Union avenue and Mult nomah street. Mrs. Carty was in fine voice and sang "Peace, Troubled Heart (Pinsuit). - - Rossini's "Stabat Mater" will be sungi at St. Mary's Cathedral tonight at 7:45 o'clock with solos by Misses Grace Daw son. Tint Ledwidge. Rubie Goulet. Mrs. Rose Friedle Glanelli, James Flynn and Hugh .Kennedy. Evan Williams, the famous Welsh tenor, now makes his home in this country. - Though he has been singinK for a good many years, his voice has lost none ot its sweetness and charm. He is heard frequently in oratorio, but more often in concert recitals. Welsh residents of this city and other admir ers of Mr. Williams are urging that he be chosen as tenor soloist at the open ing of the Civic Auditorium this Sum mer. G. Martlnelll stands next to the great Caruso among th tenors of the Met ropolitan Grand Opera-House. New York City. Just now. Martinellt is happy, especially in the society of his baby, little Miss Martlnelll. She is going Into training early to be a prima dor.na. She delights to sit beside him at the piano while he practices for "Tosca" or "II Trovatore," though she is only a year old. Communications intended for publi cation In these music columns must be accompanied by the names and addresd of the writers as a guarantee of good faith. s "May I read you my new poem?" "Yes. if you'll let me play you m7. new cantata." Fliegende Blatter. I