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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1907)
...'. THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, TORTLAND. SUNDAY I.IORi:iNO. APRIL 1, 1C37. . t i 'bbbbv- - - aw t mmm - -w ai i m r i O ME TIKES when on artistie ear v la almost spilt in iwg iw harrowing sound from the street L J on is led t wndr why people in general do not invent mecnani- ran ' attractera of attention which ar pleasant to the ear. I hare seen a man with a smile on his faeo atop at a treat corner to greet passing friend. I have seen that smile vanish to be superceded by frown of Impatience. h. of annovanoa. and Anally of actual Buffering- aa the Inelatent toot-toot of the popcorn vender -wnisue sinrca ahrllly upon Ms tender ear drums. Why couldn't the whistle be made with the same volume of sound minus the squeak and barah shrill? It would attract Just aa much attention nay, mere. - and would be an Infinite savins; of nerves. Then there Is the streetcar which bumps and Jolts over the crossings and ever switches. : The Jounctng is bad enough but would be much leas annoy Ins; were it not usually accompanied by a rattle and clatter of the "work-in's" and little groans and shrieks that seem to express the dissatisfaction even of the car. How much leas annoying would it be if the wheels. when they grate together would strike some musi cal strings that would sing with sweet resonance! - . Stand on a street corner for an faouY or so and listen to the various auto- , mobiles that pass by. All are equipped with soms sort of born of warning, and these horns are usually clasaed together when reference la made to them. Yet , there is all thd difference between them i than exists between a nice. There are other voices which are so pleassnt to hsar that one somstimes forgets to listen to the words, so lost la one in the musle of the tones. And this can be cultivated more or less. They say that ons -r way to "cur the hiccoughs Is to listen to them, curiously waiting for the nest -. After two or three attempts . to beer them sad And what they are made of and how they happen, they disappear under the era- barraaalng consciousness. Perhaps., the same effect might ' be worked on the voice If the speaker would only listen to his own for a few moments, .- ', CONCERT UNDER .. v Difficulties in Bay City An Interesting letter from San Fran cisco to a local musician gives an ac count of a unique experleace and ahows bow enterprise may surmount obstacles. a "Suocesa" would say. This extract will be of interest. . "The dust Is now. 'something fleree.' a trip down town being on a piano with a trip across the desert of Sahara, with apologies to the desert. And, to crown It all, the power-house of the electrlo company burned down night before last. leaving the city In darkness and com pelling the withdrawal of 140 street cars from a system already deficient In ears, lack of power making it impossible to run them. Tou ought . to have seen our Loiing concert, which took, place ey : -. . : GAETA IVDRPA WOLD terest to his news, as. for instance, to the following: ' "Prime Minister Marquis Baionjl, who was educated in Pari, and 8. Ma klno, minister of education, who lived In Vienna for many rears as the Japa nese minister, bava a great taste for the western muslo and are doing their best to propagate it la plaoe of the na tive product.".'- r ' - : V. "' E17 YORK'S SEnson tlEim EI1D THE CULTURE OF The Speaking Voice. ' William Aldea Paull of Boston in a recent interview with a Musical Courier represents tlva gives some Interesting views on the speaking voice and Its cultivation. Mr. Paull had an excellent alnaina- voice in his youth and utterly lost It bv slnslnc too much in public and straining bis throat Ho then turned his attention to organ musio, ana grad ually evolved some principle using the breath right to gain correct as of the voice. He baa elnoo then re gained his vole in great part, but hla moat Interesting remarks deal with the speaking voice which he says should be trained Juat aa well aa th singing voice. He pronounces women's voices easier to train than the average man's voice because they are more flexible and free from faults. "Habit of speech.' he said, "become fixed ' and people are speaking unnat urally and nine time out of ten they do not know it 1 But In women thee habit are less fixed, so they are more I easily remeaiea. in wrong use oi me vole misrepresents a man or a woman and continually affect th ' health sooner or later." . Th speaking voice, h holds, betrays mm?' W III 3 A V 2&. Mrs. J. Ernest Laldlaw. woolly dog at ' your fireside and a gnashing, bowling wolf In the wilder ness. 1 have hear some that sound like whole forest of lumber falling down with a mighty crash, ons board on top of another. Others there are that sound like the wall of a dying souL or the shriek of on thst has al ready landed In purgatory.. There are others that hav a low. musical sound that strikes the ear as If it wer cush ioned. And I havs never noticed that the machine bearing this signal of good taste, good ear and philanthropic sens has fslled to get the people out of its way in the street as well as the other nerve-racking, ear-eplittlng, halr-pulllng .nnlnncJ machines. One rolsht get in a word here" about the steam whistles that adorn th varl ous mills, some in high screeching pitch that shrlllv demand to be heard, and others in low. musical tones that com mand attention by their dignity. And there are bells that cry out with S hard metalllo sound for auditors and others that s-lv out a soft, mellow ton. An the difference is noted In clocks; some tick loudlv and Inslstsntly Ilk a esck imvlien. and other tick lust ss rega- larly in a comfortable, eaay way. There Is the same dirrerenc in tne sensing of the clock: snd In alarm locka the difference makes Itself felt, though per- tiaps one should not hav a musical alarm, for It is too easy to sleep past it There are clanging doorbells and alnslna- doorbell. - - On might go so far a to suggest even the preference for hens that cackle in a laay. easy manner t those tnst make their want or their accomplish ments felt In an excitable, hign-strung cackle; or .children - thst cry in low, modulated tone to thoee thst scream fit to wake th dead." But perhapa there I a little more us in turning at ttntlon t th quality of the speaking veto. Th American nation In general Is spoken of by foreigner as harsh volred, due. probably to th high-strung, nervous temperament Of a people al ways on -the rush for wealth, social poaltlon or some ether desired Mecca. Tna hav beard th vole that come rirht out through the walls of a house, renetratea clear across the street and through th wall of th house oppo rue. and sometimes travels nn a way .low th street by th mere force of its rotting power. That Is not a pleassnt voice to listen to, though It may denote 1 kinds of insistency and acuteness. m 1 " -it : ; 1 ; ' : . S i - if! ;, fi 1 WBL . I "ssawaslBsBBBBWwawi ' .. ..... ans'S'W) -; V 1 J Mlamieiott TiTtle. ward Time ta Sanaa a. " Ttia e l daya of graaahnppers and .lull almost forgotten In th pros rna )- of today: although a eltl- r, ,.f ...iH, Karl Hlmmbora has not i f rr tien a bard time he enooun- ..1 i in aaya: "I waa worn out and , nmefl bv OOUgrilfig night and , I . "ii 1 find no relief till I tried Ir. j m New Dlncovery. It took leee . ,, bottle to complete! cure me. - f.'t and most reliable eough and ) r """iv and lung and throat healer r c --overn. :uarantee by rte I i.nrmacy. lua and $L00. Trial . irea. that night In a barn-like hall built since the fire, called the Christian Science hall, at Scott and Sacramento streets. "We reached th hall to find it in darkness, save a few flickering gas light down in th auditorium that fore sight had provided when building, but no lights anywhere near th musicians. Th power-house waa then burning, so we knew It waa all off so far aa getting electrlo lights. "The audience had filled th hall, and aa th new went around there waa all kinds of speculation aa to what the club would da Lights wer essential, as we had a full orchestra to provide for. But we got there -with bells. Wa sent to th California street cable-hous and bor rowed two powerful headlights, placing on at each end of th stage, on on th organ and the other on th piano, set a row of bottles along th front of th stage with a candle la each.' and each man. or rather every other man, held a candle while hi neighbor held the music, and th concert went with a nap that astonished us. When we filed on -with th candle we got a reception that showed the audience was with us. Ours was th only publlo entertainment in San Francisco that night, which, I distinction enough for on season." . JAPANESE MUSIC U;' - With Foreign Influence. hereditary tendencies " and stamp a person as "cultured" or th opposite much mor quickly than on realises. The vole la th man- and so every school and college should make th training of It a matter of coercion. New York. April 11. New Tork la just th place for Waaally Safonoff and Waaslly Safonoff la Just ths man for Nsw York. We Americans dearly love a hero, and Mr. Safonoff is willing to be a hero, especially when part of hi heroism eonalale In accepting salary which makes him th hlghsst paid or chestral conductor In th world. When h threw down hi baton and went at hi orchestra with hla bar hands, wa pressed him to our palpitating Americas heart and declared that he was th greatest conductor In th world. A a matter of fact It make n difference whether h uaes a baton or not; it la th result prochiced that count, and Mr. Safonoff could conduct hla orchestra by waving a red flag, and still be great Last Saturday ha ended hi first on a permanent conductor of th Phll- harmonlo orchestra with a Tqual- nroaram. and Lhevtnne. hi former pu- DlL aa soloist Th performance ahould have been a labor of love for both th "star.? as th program contained num bers which hav brought recognition to them In th past Th Tscbatkowaky Symphoni Pathellqu wa. th work which Safonoff conducted her . two year ago. 'With such sensational affect that It wss largely on that account he waa offered hla present position with th Philharmonic Lhsvlnn. aa soloist plsyed th Rubenstetn piano concerto in a flat which won him a few years ago a conservatory prise over 9 competit ors. . Th composition I a brilliant ahowy piece, of tremendoua difficulty, demanding not only extraordinary tech nic, but great bravura, v Lhevlnne played It with that ease which comes only with complete mastery. -Jt la only when dlf- idloultle hav. ceased to exist that on play with that confidence and "dashea it off," so to speak. Speaking of "wis arda of th keyboard," this young Rus sian does a few llttl stunts with th black and whit keys, that always en title him to be mentioned among those present On this particular occasion he used a plan with an ss pec tally hard, brilliant glaaay ton, which displayed to the beat advantage th agility of hi finger and th dexterity of his wriat but left much to b dealrad In th smoother, mora melodious paa sages. On longed for th mallow, eantabll of Oabrllowltach. , A greater contrast between two men could not be imagined than that be tween Dr. Karl Muck, th conductor of th Boston Symphony orchestra, and Mr. Safonoff, conductor of th Philhar monic Thl difference I displayed la th program of their respective fare well performances, or. Muck presented a program, classical and utterly Im personal Bach, Haydn, Mosart and Beethoven, - conducted tn manner scholarly and Impersonal, while Mr. Safonoff program oa hla laat appear ance thl year was com posed of th two work with which h ha created hi biggest sensations In New Tork th Tschalkowsky Sixth . or Pathellque Symphony, and th Tannhauser - over ture. Not that on can aocus Safonoff of posing. It Is only that th Phil harmonic audience go to hear Safonoff, while th Boston Symphony "audlenoe go to bear th work of this or that com poser. ' In th Tannhauser overt ura, Safonoff bring out th horn part in th closing passsg In a manner which Richard Wagnsr himself perhapa never eonoelved when ha wrote it Th effect la a pleoe a familiar a thl overture, which vary concert-goer muat know by heart 1 Indeaorlbabla, but after you hav heard it It seem to be th one thing needful, and you wonder that no body vr discovered - it ' before. Th overture which closed th concert waa worked up to on of th most wonderful ollmaxss I hav ever heard and brought th Immense audience cheering to it feet Again and again Safonoff bowed hi thanks; It shook th hand of his first violin and Indicated that som of the credit must go to hi splendid or chestra: at his signal th orchestra rose and blushsd aa one man; th orchestra played blm a fanfare, when it wa hi turn to blush with modest pride; he was presented with a laurel wreath almost a large a hlmaelf j mor bowa, deeper than ever" and at 111 . th asembled multitude applauded. . . It waa th sn- thuslasm produced by one of th great- eat personalities in modern music Th Tschalkowsky Symphony waa played . with lrreelstlbls eloquence. Tschalkowsky was not th first man or the last to writ morbid musle, but no on bss written It with uch frankness. It la th overwhelming temperamental fore la thl music thst gives It It tm- preasiveaea and artistic dignity. Style of Opera change. Just as styles of cloth and book and girls. At the lime juaaeanei wroi "a navaroise. in which Mm. Calvs appeared thia week at th Manhattan, the blood-and-thunder. "young Italian" school waa In vogus, so th obliging ' Mr. Massanet wrote 'In th blood-and-thunder-young Italian style In spit of th Introduc tion of such musical affect a cannon- shot th score 1 not particularly pleas ing, and It la not hard to understand why th opera ha not been aa popular Its e teemed contemporaries, Pag- liaocl" and "Cavallarla." Mm. Calv la th tit! role aang with real drama tie power and mor regard for tempo and pitch than ah ha displayed In other operas. , After all. ona cannot blame her for becoming tired of "Carmen." and shs frankly admlta that ah I tired of It nd thl may account for some of th liberties ah take with th written cor. War It a lesa sacred subject than grand opera, on might ssy that she "gagged" th part of Carmen. ' la "La Navarralse,? however, ' shs mad np for a multitud of vocal and dra matic sins, and proved that she is cap able of grsat things. If ah wllL , . i e eve. . . - ,, - Paderewaki' delayed ret ura with th Boston orchestra will be on of th prin cipal events of th musical season of IIOT-I. Th Polish pianist will arrive in New York at th and of October and ' play a first recital In Carnegie hall on t Saturday afternoon, November S. HI 1 tour of 100 concerts will extend to th Pacific coast whll to th Boston or- 1 chestra h will bring th completed cor of hi nw symphony for a first i perrormanc to take place In Boston. HAROLD VINCENT MILXJOAJ. N EWS ITEMS ' of the Musical World "Madam Butterfly" I Juat reaching Brooklyn. New York, opening It wik snergetlo musiclsn to assums so many responsibilities that sh cannot give up her work till a eollaps demanda It Mr. Bauer, beside undertaking th larg amount of concert solo work that naturally devolvea upon th leading so prano of the city, was soloist of., one Sunday choir, and soloist and director of another Friday Hebrew choir, had on of th largest clsssee of pupil in town, kept up with musical matter and musical events generally, directed a club and presided over her home. Musical Portland will mis her sadly. but still must be glsd that a much- needed rest baa been forced upon her. Mrs. J. Ernest Laldlaw and Miss Helen Lytic will each alng two group of flv song at their recital, April it, glvea them by Mr. Wslter Reed at Ellera' recital hall. Among Mrs. Laid law's number i will be Traum Durch dl Daemmeritng" (Richard Strauss), Schubert's "Dl Forell." two Schumann songs "Dl ' Lotosblum" and "Der Nusebeum." "Lena." by Hlldseh, and "Lea Berceaux." by Faure, Invitations hav been Issued. . ' " ;. -', ' It Is reported that rehearsal of "The Prince of Pilsen" may be given In Pari whll the composer, Quatsv Luders. and Henry W. Savage are tn Europe prior to th . coming European premier of this tuneful musical comedy. "Th Prince of Pilsen" 1 now approaching th end of it fifth successful season In this country. Next year th piece will be sent oa an extended tour to th Paclflo coast . . . An English newspaper ' inform th world that th scores of Wagner's "Nlberlungen" operas contain exactly 84.04S printed notes. Thanks! We wer Just about to count Musical Courier. . ' . i . The musle pupil at St Helen's Hall were "resented la a pleasant recital Thursday evening. . Mia Josephine HID and Miss Sophie Beebe are the piano Instructor and Mis Do roll 10. NEW BOOKS FOR THE LIBRARY. : BOOKS ABOUT BOOKS. Lamed Books, Culture and Charac ter, itoa. . . ETHICS. ' : Burnley Summit of Success; How They Hav Been Reached, with Sketches of th Careers of Som Notable Climb er, lioa. 'v. . . , -. SOCIOLOGY. . . ''. Almanach d Oothk HOT. ' Ashmor Th Classic , and Modern Training. 1106. Beal eV Wyman Th Law of Rail road Rat Regulation, with Special Ref erence to American Legislation. 108. Trybora Heller correlated Hand-, work; a handbook for - Teachers, v. L 10S. . - ' Try bom and others Manual Train. Ing; Cardboard Construction. 1104. : SCIENCE. : rrral Popular Treat! on the IF VOU WANT TO SEH THE NEH'tST . IN WEARING APPAREL VISIT THE STYLE STORE BsaulM mm : n aW -on wmim The latest arrivals of ladies high-grade man-tail ored Suits; interpret a slight, yet a noticeable change in " style from those shown in the .earlier part of -the season. Our showing is up to the tick of the clock in every particu lar, embracing every new idea ( in - tight-fitting, semi fitting, straight-front and in the modernized Eton style. All the favorite materials as mixtures, !. stripes, checks, voiles, panamas, silks, pon gees are exhibited in almost endless varieties. Every gar ment ; is of the clever, dis tinct character, and prices are J so attractive mat every in vestigator will become a pur- - ; chaser. Prices range $20, $25, $30, $35, $40, $45, $50, $60 and $75. "; - , - ' A- : j'. Tailorei WafsteS We shdW many pretty mod els in silk, , lace and lawn Waists. In ; this collection youll find the most beautiful materials, ; colors, : 1 artistic tailoring . "and harmonious trimmings at very attractive priCeS. . '. y : .1': Tas fftoee Wh Tou Credit x Cor. Washlnflton and Tenth Petri History of , Egypt, V. 1-1. ' 4. f. Xd. 4, mt-01. -- ' --rrr-.: " .v-;,y i BIOORAPHT. r CattolL J. McKeen American Men of Science; a Biographical Directory, 1(0 ShermanWohn John Sherman, by X B. Burton, 1100. .. ..-' FICTION.'' ; Davis Th ' Northerner. ,; MoLawa Maid of Athens. .' '.' ' ' Let the Red Hsm Wbrk. It 1 only within th laat few year mor sapeclslly within th laat two that th opening of th reservations haa wrought any conslderabls cbang la th Indian' condition. H continued to recelvs hi , rations Winds; Oenersl Motion of th Atmo-In Ured lB B,uon WRy phei. Monsoons, Cyclones, Tornadoes, ! oW' onl l, comparatively few In- of performances tomorrow night. Mas-, snook th vole teacher. The Interest Japan 1 taking la th muala of EuroD and America I char- sctertstle of that country's progreasion In all outers. Needless to say. Its strides In advance are remarkable, and. according' to authorities there, th ef fect of the foreign music l aireaay hawlns- itaelf noticeably. Professor S. Iwamoto of the Toklo Conssrvatory of Musto ha Just begun to send letter to th Musical Courier of New York, and tbey glv an Interesting Insight Into th nation' attitude. lie write that their purpoM la to retain their national music, but to IntroJuoa, ths best of the w eater stmoephere rwo th Intro duction of.Japanss operaa haa begun and two ar co-nmandlng larg audi ences in Toklo and creating som sensa tion. Proirams given at concerts show som of Schubert' and Schumann' ong translstct Int Japanese. The mayor of Tokto, to ancourag th mu sical spirit, hss offeree a prise for th oeet song oa ths "Gllf of. Toklo." Profeesor Iwamoto writes of ths movement to form a club of Japanese musicians to entertain foreign musi cians and to build a concert hall where Europe s and America's master of mualo may be heard. He write in a quaint, semi-foreign style that add ln- cagnl, by th way, I said to be deeply Interested -In th reception hla "Iris" will receive la English after th un paralleled suocess of "Butterfly." - It I an opera somewhat on th asm order, but tt Is ssld th second act will har to be modulated, because -an Ameri can audience would be shocked at what I shown la th original Italian ver sion. r ' " i I ..''' ' ' This, too, from a peaceable New York paper: "A self-styled . "Musle Lover' appeals t o follow: 'Perhaps you might be sbls to Inform ma how it la that th now. world-famous impresnarlo Hammerstem aoea not attempt to bring back to thl country th greateat of all th tenor and living artists M. Jesn d Reask.' Mr. Ham merit el n is running sn opera hous, not eurlo hall. Other wlss he might attempt to bring back Pattl or exhibit the bone of Jenny Llnd." . ' -. i ". . .;. '-' ; '. :- ';",' ' Th Los Angeles Time ha the fol lowing of two well-known Portlandera: "Mis Lot Steer and Mis Wynn Co man of Portland ar at th Alexandria. These ladles ar th Impresarioa ofth whole northwestern circuit and are known throughout th United State, not only for their unique choice of work, but for their business ability. Thsy araeon. ferrlng locally with L, E.Muymer rela tive to a combination of coast forces far next eaaou' work." v "Musle 1 dead,' says Dr. Emit Reich, and concert are th . funeral. Mu sical Courier. ' Then -Is the singer or player th minister expounding th r tuss of th "dea.- departed" or tha hired mourner apontanoously , snd so-jlfully venting hi grief T w Mrs. Rose Bloch-Bauer' illness I a matter of general regret, and her vole snd presence are grestly missed in mu sical circles. It will bs som tlm e-1 fore she can resums her musical work. and now her nervous condition prevents ( her from seetng sny of her friends. It, V, is aa unfortunate fat that, causes aa , w Mis Leonora Fisher ha gone to Cali fornia for a visit of two week. Ml Alda Broughton la supplying har plac as organist at th First congregational church and at Tempi Beth Israel. -.... . . - w . Miss Qrac Wilton will glv sn Invi tational faculty recital early In May. Beckwlth who I on of Miss Wilton' Sh will be assisted by Mis Isabel most' talented students. , W. A. Montgomery, basso of th First Congregational choir, has ' gone- east for a month' stay. P. I. Packard la substituting In th choir work. , Spring I here, and th teacher' work Is dun sr. dona. Thl is ins- season of falling du r, dew, Exchenge. Mrs. Whlgham will hav charg of th concert st th Seamen a Institute next Wdnsday evening. ; The Wily Partridge. ' rroni the Leoeaa Dally Mall. - Every eras rare haa s weederful faealty for determining at what dlatanea a smb. er any thing elM. la able to atrlke, Ita capacities ts this jdheetloa beln far smt sisrked tsaa Bun ears te ecknewtodse. ror inataare, aa flreanae hav - bees tm preeed, the keaser haa becoaie the watehrahwua ef partrMr. Tbejr bare aot beea alow to remwnlae the adviata which the stoosrs ehokahore affords the modern ssnner. ; Oat Sight. ' ' "Out of sight, out of mind," 1 an old saying which applies with special force to a sore,, burn or wound that's been treated with Bucklens Arnica Salve, it's out of sight, out of mind snd out of sxlntence. Plies, too, and chilblains dlssppesr under Its healing. Influence. Guaranteed by Bed Cross Pharmacy. Jfic j '- - J waterspouts. Hailstorms, eta. Ed. X wet. . , Mach Popular ' Scientific Lectures. Ed. t, rev. tt nL 1S9S. - ''. , USEFUL ARTS. Brannt Varnishes, Lacquers, - Print In Inks, and Sealing Waxes; Their Rsw Materials and Their Manufacture. 1191. Butler Th Story of Paper-making; an account of Paper-making from It Earliest Known Record down to th Present Tim. 101, Farrow American Small " Arm: a Veritable Encyclopedia of Knowledge for th Sportsmen and Military Men. 1004. ' i . .) Hurst Painters Colors, Oil and Var nlshe; Practical Manu-L Ed. 4, 100. International Textbook company Th Coal and Metal Miners' Pocketbook of Principles, Rule. Formula and Ta bles. Ed. . rev. At snl. 100S. ' Morris Ten Acre Enough:- a Prac tical Experience, Showing How a Very Small Farm May be Mad to Keep a very irge f amily, bo. i. u : noasan icomotivea, simple, com pound and electric. Ed. I, rev. and nL lfOT. ; .. .. Whlglet Architectural Hardwood Finishing; Practical Treatls on Mod ern Methods of Finishing th Woodwork Of New Building. 100. woodhull Personal . Hygiene, t De signed for Undergraduatea. 1100. ,'. . FINE ARTS. : Crn1-Church Building; a Study of th Principle of Architecture In Their RelatKn to th Church, 10 Sturg' A Study. of th Artist' Way of Working In tha Various Handicrafts and Arts of Design, by Russell Sturgla. v. ga. , - - - . ..AMUSEMENTS. ' Cleveland, 2nd President of th United state Fishing and Shooting Sketches. igs,. - Lehman Brothers Rowing. 1891, LITERATURE. - Gayley Flaherty Poetry of ths PeopU; Comprising Pems Illustratlv of th History and National Spirit of England, Scotland, Ireland and America. 1904. v DESCRIPTION AND TRAVEL. . ,- i Oarrett Th Idylllo Avon: Belnr a Bimpi Description of th Avon from Tewkesbury to Above Btratford-on- Avon with Sons snd Pictures of th River and It Neighborhood. 1904. Lansdal Vienna - and th Vlenneae. Lee Stratford-on-Avon " from ' the Earlleat Time to th Death of Shakes- pear. New eV rev. L 1907 HISTORY. Alison Era rf Napoleon. 1198. Chsmplaln Voyages and Explorations Narrated by Himself;, tr. by Annie Net- tleton Bourne; ed. with Introduction nd Note by Edward Gay lord Bourn, s iue. -:''.. Perkins Franos Under Louis XV. I v. ,1497. ' - ', ', stsnoes Improving hi property.' . With th entrance of th present Indian com missioner, say ths World Today, a rad ically different policy waa Incepted. Thl new movement alma at th' sub stitution of independence and freedom for segregation and charity. Every In Hay's Ilair-IIcalif Restores Gray Hair to Youthful Color. .60c ALL DRUGGISTS. , ducement 1 being offered to th able, bodied ladiaa to go out Into th world ' and seek work sld by aid with th whit man and In free competition with him. . . , . It 1 th -policy of labor and eltlsen shlp, as against th policy of ration and nonenlty, W ar giving th red akin th whit man's chance and asking him to assum th whit man' respon sibilities. . ... . . v, VT . . .It I a bold experiment, fraught with many danger and difficulties for u and tor our waraa. mo on can ba mors keenly alive to the than th corn mis sioned but h haa entered upon th an- . terpnt with a confidence and enthuaU aara that deserve auocess. IN the time of the Arabian Nights' the chief form of amusement was telling , stories. They had no books. Pro- ' fessional story-tellers -went around and : amused everybody who, was able to pay. his idea of being amused is as old as the! human race. "Give us something to en- 5 tertain us" has been the constant cry; The answer in this day arid age is the Edison Phonograph. f ; v , ' ' ; ;', 4 ' ; ' ' " . - ' ; ; C." Every on can bar his own story-teller, hj ow sonnter hla own k.- : ' ( ter right in hi. ow. home. TbT m.a 'who S Zl i ,m "t with th man who keep, aa Edisoa Phonegrsph. Hear hat tb.arl National Phonouraph Company 1 Lakeside Are, Oraage, M, J, Dealer, with rstabllihed More wanted to tell Edison rbonopr.Dhs ha' r town not rnv.r.rl . . , r"PQ vrr town not covered. V'.w '' ''''