e
THE OREGON- SUNDAY. . JOURNAL, PORTLAND SUNDAY ' MORNING, APRIL ;' 5, 1803.
Homely Old Playhouse
; One of Sights of London
Memories That Hung About Drury Lane Theatre Had Special
Attractions for American Visitors to Town of Fogs and Soot
Something of the History of the Building About Which Centered
the Fashion of the Times .
in.
forPortlandmiisiciov
By J. F. S.
'.,''' "Mrs. Flowerdew It was a sealnu
firayer I heard brother make concerti
ng playhouse.
4 , Bird For charity, what la It?'
r. ' F. That the Olobe, wherein (quoth
he) reign whole world of vice.
Hud been conaum'd; the Phoenix
burnt to a the."
Rundolphe's "The Uuii'i Looking
glass." IT was some centuries back that the prudish Mrs.
; Flowerdew voiced her highly appreciative views on
the burning of the old Drury Lane theatre, which
was then known as the Phoenix. And now this
home , of the English drama, which has been so per
sistently followed by the demons of fire, has again been
burned to the ground and the memories of another and
later "world of vice" turned to ashes.
The largest , mualo event before th
people of Oregon la the three day a"
musical festival to be given by the Chi
cago symphony orchestra at Armory
nan. Apni 10, ii and XI With an or-
cneura or C5 skilled muslolane, four
eminent vocal soloists, some distingu
ished instrumental soloist and a chorus
of 100 of the best local singers,- the
brl fit eerie is'gratirylngly
Th 'Chicago Symphony orchestra was
y.mcu in jsyv. Adolun Roaetibeoker,
tne noted director, has Loan rhnua
another aeaaon and will conduct during
Since 1J01. th orchestra has been
rnasing annual tour and it haa been
Th, n,fi,rf. ,),- mcf f,m fr. nf th. .im.. ? ' " Pincipai cities I
made their homes at Drury Lane and there was first t' SZiVL?:
presented "The School for Scandal." Here, too, flour- from here the orchestra went to San
i . t ir -.!- , .i . ... . e m i in.intu, wntri live concerts were
isnea loveiy ixancy uianeia, tne lavorue 01 nurcnm, given and the orchestra was received
Barton Booth played Addison's "Cato," while the name W,A" nigncst praise.
oi v.oney L.iD0er was most closely associated witn It. ra ha mad extended tour to th
Quin, Macklin, Garrick, Kate Give and Mrs. Fritchard
played their best days in Drury Lane. It successively
saw the triumphs of Quin. Macklin and Garrick. while
Alexander rope and ur. Johnson came to admire and
criticise. Also it saw the glories of the erratic Edmund
Kean, of Mrs. Billington. of Miss Parren and Harriet
Mellon, Mr. Nisbet and Macreadv.
lne most important event in the historv of English
opera was undoubtedly when young Michael Balfe, an
insn musician, became a member of the orchestra of
Urary Lane. Balfe was an unassuming young fellow,
" si'". 1 '
a.:.-, ' WV.'V.t.J
T
'! V fj
i .. . . . 1 ' . -
)A m ' 4 1 to ' jf f ' w """" puoiic lor live years ana is
, 1 v s s o t n fi 3 I I i yl widely heralded as a alnger of sterling
, - . - f 1 I ' V Vis Qualities. HI Interpretive power and
v f, ' v I , ' th0 brllliancv of that rarest of voice.
, ' - '- t i I " j purely lyric tenor, have been Instru-
'- r .T t v- .. v." I "leniai in winning nlm the best ot no I through th rebellious aepoya arwl saved
'vi l w.-" .. ; -i , v I tlces wherever he haa appeared. I the boselged U) wn of Lucknow, where
- ! ; I ' tV HI . vole baa been thoroughly
x ' x!" I v Vr." ! ! I; .-t"' t Pl'ooled, and ha handles all the pas-
, ' ,J " j I , " -" Vi' 3 ""Res of Intricate work In the oratorios
' " I . " . A V:vtf other difficult compositions with
i C V T y :. . -A jfrA. K tula Anil tyivtp 141a alnirlnar la M rt
" ,V', A CtJlIU ' O "2x. be markedly aympathatlc. of even qual-
1 , - ' A.isa n7 b ty and sincerity. He I at pres-nt
' . - " V V Ror I. nannnn t,,nor "ololst In Bt Paul' Universal
K i? , -? K0Be anno- church. Chicago and a member of ill
t-i.h-,,,.., a 'I U f' i ' for i -I
i I
. ,fVttMr&lf.-wtM
V II
I
.-V " -A
AT
SHERMAN-CLAY'S
V MUSIC STORE ;
r' arrrx Aim mouhov
10 a, a. Vatu p. m.
J. !.s.-- v
I : liiUu' mi. it
- i1i'Ti riSmaur i.n -
, -It il 1 I I Ifie
ii i
St'
. MBBaBftBaBBBaMssjsBBaatM
GUI CAGO 5YMPMON Y OBCHT55TBA. '
Th Incident on which thl cantata ia
baaed belong to the) period of h In
dian mutiny of th year 1867 when
Scotch hlgnlandera. under Sir Colin
CsmpbeU. afterwarda Lord Cylda, broke
throurh th rebellious sepoy and saved
the bcselged Ipwn of Lucknow, where
British troops' and elrlllans, Inoludlng
many women and children, were Im
prisoned. Girl lares Iowa
Among th beselged was a Highland
Scotch girl who on night gar m
cream of delight and said that ah had
heard th sound of bagpipe mualo made
by advancing Highlanders, Her word
"- a5 .1. . . j f . I " J. '
A -5
Mi
I. f; i.- , . ..j r
. Drury Lane Theatre, Recently Destroyed by Fire.
iic rnosi recent aestruction ot Lirury Lane seerqs aad like most Celts, a dreamer, but somehow he had the
less fated to result in a new and better house to bear stuff in him to make of his dreams realities, and his
"VT ilu viian uia any oi me previous ca- two hrst operas, "The Siege of Bochelle ' and "The Maid
tastrophea For in the old days of Drury Lane the of Artois," were first heard in that house. Later a
pouse stood almost alone in its position as the home of statue of the composer was placed in the lobby of the
tamous plays and players. Its only rival of any con- theatre and it along with the other art treasures of the
.tHuCUi.5w.w,cni oaraen me nouses twain ot theatre was destroyed in the recent fire.
Covent Garden and of Drury Lane" and in those The first building of Old Drury was burnt in 1672 and
- v..,v..vu y. ui me iwu gicBi piay- me new Duuaing, designed Dy Sir Christopher Wren,
: n Alicia ct rTt vi sf rx-k 1 1 m .... m -a t A .
v. k ...vwVKU4 na3 a,, cvciu ui cxircmc im- was opened two years later with a prologue and epilojrue
forSa?Crl0-niUch SO that- both thc tires of 1672 and bv Dryden. It was subsequently owned by Cibber and
vT ,e.ft.thcir Permanent mpnnt on the literature of Booth, and in 1714a life patent was granted Sir Richard
tne periods. Steele. Later Lacy and Garrick secured the house and
VJitl c . 8 backrounl. makes one gasp it was almost wrecked by the anti-French mobs who
.k ; .i. "pei oi it several times, and tt were angered by French dancers introduced by Garrick.
tnJ t u ni nhborhood of the playhouse, then Then Sarah Siddons and her brother. John Kemble,
known as the Globe or the Phoenuc, and still earlier as became the principal attractions of the house and held
M jv. ij" ,,lv""lc na"nl Sl tnc suiy 'ovaole undisputed sway for years, with the dramatist Sheridan
fi". djo,nin? ' was the Rose-where Pepys as proprietor. Here the most wonderful era in English
t J J ,u f J an afte.rnon and his rest, acting was seen, with Mrs. Siddons and the two Kem-
seated near the front of the inn where he could spy blcs playing Shakespearian plays and introducing Sheri-
afely and pleasantly upon the ladies of fashion as they dan's inimifable comedies. miroaucing ihen
tripped along Russell street or alighted1 from their
sedans. Under the date of 1662 lie writes: "To Lin-
coin's Inn Fields, and it being too soon to go to dinner u as ln 1809 when the theatre was again destroyed,
I walked up and down and looked upon the outside of J S1eridan and his goss'P. Barry, sat in a nearby
ne new tneatre Duilding in (Jovent Garden which will tuucc ""sc aranK a Dome ot port while te fa
. be very fine." ' mous theatre burned, Sheridan remarking that it was
"hard if a man could not drink a glass of wine bv his
; It was Thomas Killigrew who in 1663 took out the The rebuilding of Drury Lane was the occasion for
first patent to bu. d the Cock Pit, Killigrew of whom the issuance of that famous book of verse "Rekct?
PePVS wrote that "when a hnv h- umnlrl err, tn h- R-H LAA.... u u , , VC,5C cjccie..
n j i ew .w ... jiuuivaata, luaiciicu ui iiuiacc ana ames Smith and
'jgtAr?. containing 21 imaginay prologues on the Suction
ri. ,j t ' ";,S",U1 scc.inc P,ay Ior nomingr ot tne old tneatre and the opening of the new The
then would he go m and be a devil on the stage, and so essays imitated the styles of the various prominent
get, to see the plays. " The "Red Bull" was another of writers of the day-Byron, Scott, Crabbe?Word worth
the famous old inns of the vicinity-the one before Samuel T. Coleridge, Thomas Moore and Dr Johnson
which, according to tradition, young Will Shakespeare Lord Byron said the verses were the best things of the'
held gentlemen s horses. Later on Pepys was to go to kind since the "Rolliad," and they contain much that is
Drury Lane and see the plays offered there, for he saw still delightfully witty and entertaining
Beaumont and Fletcher's "The Humorous Lieutenant," The new building-the one destroyed last month-in
the first Play given Jn Kil hgrew's house, and of which thc words of one of the "Rejected ManuscriW'-was
Be Wrote: A Silly Olav. I think onlv the snirir in it "a nlain li
SvL! rS FTA tKI &A d then Sinks again Lto nothinff brick P'ayhouse-a large comfortable house thanks o
navmar two heads hrHincr imnn 1 v: r, yr uil.'.i i U3C' luailKS to
"C.in.ababov,c we sPied But: !f Plain and homely Drury Lane, for the Ameri
ir- .i,.. ' a v 8 K . , llicy,Va lca u? ?na we siayea can visitor in .London, had always its own neculiar at
tor them: and Kninn took all in nA c: u- j r ' ,. . 1 Peculiar at-
r ' r - us iu iiaviiuii. Venice
ANNUAL SPRING FESTIVAL
CHICAGO
SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
65 MUSICIANS 65
TO
OLOXSTB 4
10
zvfmvinsvTAi;
SOX.OXITS .
10
300-VOCAL CHORUS-300
ATdMlAPRIL
ARMORY EE
Friday Night
nd Orchestra Concert i
"Fair Ellen"
Br Max Bruch. Story of th Sie
oi juuecnow.
Saturday Afternoon
Popular Orchestra Concert
Saturday Night
Grand Orchestra Concert and
"The Swan and the
Skylark"
By A. Lorinc Thomas.
principal Canadian cities, and on two
occasions as far south and west as
Texas. Manv nf thn lanritnir Tnnaloal
cities and festival centers have been
Vlflited. and nna aorlna liven at tha
wnicago Auditorium.
Leading; Bluffer.
Mrs. Genevieve Clark Wilson, soprano.
Is recosrnized as one of the teadlncr Am. i
erlcan aingtrs. Bhe has achieved notable
success In oratorio and her sympathetic
uire ana aruguc rendering nave won
unlimited praise. She has appeared
with many of the prominent orchestras
throughout the country and by her brll
llant voice, wlnnina- Dersonalltv and in
telligent reading has made friends
everywhere-
Mrs. Roue Lutlirer-Gannon, contralto,
Is slso widely known. She has recently
returned from her studies ebroad with
tne noted Jean De Reszke. Her voice
is remarkable for Its richness and
beauty, has an unusual ranpe and is of
the most finished quality. In her ora
torio work she has been very success
ful, and her rendering of ''He Was
Despised.' from the Messiah, has been
spoken of in the highest term- for Us
fine seriousness and intelligence.
John n. Miller, the tenor, who Is to
be heard with the orchestra, has been
Chicago Musical college faculty.
The fourth member of the solo artist
band is Arthur Mlddleton, basso, whoe
rich full voice, mobile and of wide
range, charms every audience before
whom he appears.
Other Competent Musician.
Many critics have united to place Mr.
Mlddleton correctly before the people
He is said to create rreat enthusiasm.
for he has lust the sort of voice that
th people love to hear. big. rich, vi
brant, mellow. In simple arias and In
difficult and climactic musical composi
tions alike he wins honors.
Beside these we are to hear Edtth
uic uays oi me nrst theatre R.icclt
trZ V a prcuyr woman. wh acted the great part, street has been built up closely with shons and hZZ,
fi'iS l ltry firnC' PFCtty wel1-,1 kis?ed a,ready old and smoky- The Doric porticC on Cafherine
Prohat.lv M?1iv, w e .?iP y . " . on Russell street were added at
a . . , - . ' ; ""v Hi-iijr tiic3j iu -a mici uaic viiau IUC main DUllainc All I r,nAn :
It kissed beneath the shadows of Drnrv T.an-r,nlw m.,HHv ond ro, Knt .u . t).. ".IT, u London is
not all men took the, ore H tni,Zl ..l"' -nZ r CVL, vu"c ! Mreer entrance to
. ... . v 4.vv liiii wives liuiy xvexiic was no ifiiiizrr in siir n a .
: j a ha . " ' " w,,uhiuii as inat
: a 1. . i i , mvii vvirva Aauiv wain w oa nu itj
; Vim -them n1 allmir tViAm U. iL. r . - i. a .
- iv oi.aic mc joys oi Kissing aescriDea in tnc Aaaresses
tviv av.iui inc.
..llii.p.?!?ablI that he Cock Pit was the first theatre
when
cu 1 r . A?. ' "u"un ana open dunne
ftvlOun- TC Cmp.?ny PyingP there waf
styled lne Uueene Servant-e" i kai
passed for the 'suppression of stage laVs'and th Cock
",(d !nto an emLnV proper scnioT
roora, one that would have suited the tastes of Mrs
Flowerdew herself.; This did not last long however-
the nam. was immrt Si uuwever
l permanent use as a srhr.nl
V aUataTaj 4M4 i a H V. .
"Tender beauty, looking for her coarh
Protrudes her gloveless hand, perceives
the shower.
And draw the tippet closer round her
throat.
And ere she mount the step the oozing
mud
Sinks through her pale kid slipper
On the morrow
She coughs at breakfast, and her gruff
papa
Cries. There you go! This comes of
playhouses!' "
Old Drury, with its memories of Harris v
-1 a i a. - . a - "-..Vl Ollli IVfTtlli
Stage property. Later it onr X." "u ana lne .nr" oooin. xai oweet well liwynn and the Sid
position and we find that tireless m 7 i," us u,u aons ana cmDiC. n
. f erring to it repeatedly, telling how KVkPyr' 7" bleSI,ng1d i,r,,the W
. nal" there io 1662. and how th. "e saw Thc .Car'- which looked like a bad
med its old dons and Kemble, will not down merely because it ha
nira time. A lie grimy old build
naplorniHi (r. tj 1 . ,
---o vi a. Jiugann etcninR
time, ihe grimy old building
cesses Had entertained General Monk p was su iiiipuriaiii ui uic niMm-y oi London that to-think
evening.
2,000-YEAE OLD
- PLAY SUCCEEDS
Modernized Version of jPlautus' Com
- , edy ."BIenechlnlt,, by M. Tris
, tm Bernard, Makes Hit,
I0r many an of Russell . street without Drury Lane theatre Wm,M
be to have Washington city without the monument.
- f
V 1 '
i ,
;. Tarla, March l6;-4-Th latest dramatic
noveltr In-Part la a modernized version
f I'lautua comedy, ,"Menaechmt,"' by
ai. i risian Bernard, to Which he bas
rrlven ; the title of -v Jumeaux de
Hrlshton," ;., Ia ;pft xt th , fact that
the plot la,' nearly two thousand- years
oM-th vis eomlca was so rreat that
ti tnndernlsed Itln - comedy had a
et sur'Ms. ; Many present hardly
i' i'-cl that it was not a modern work.
Charles Frohmah at the Hotel Rita
says the comlngr theatrical eeason prom
ises to be the most Interesting In years.
H aid: ' ; .
.aTjer going to be a reaction ln
vi E ? Joward human Interest plays.
ua .tnri Berlsteln in The Thler has
i kT. wa7- but French playwrights
ThL . J?d Americans ln this movement.
The Vft?eLL toward plays like
PhansT' " B1-eilu an a no xwo ur-
Ics""11 dramatic erit-
ooor niU..abu"e managers who produc
inf.rir, J "ul lae auinors.k wno ara
Tha i. "L00 aever criticism.
hoM hi n,,n Rous evidently wants to
Mlaa vV; VCura Ior internationalism.
senLi a Sous brlllUntly. ?pre-
""tf?. fjnfj-'ca for the last ? the
pAl,MVhf,,,Mr revue, "fion AlteSse
i Amour, br mm n n. ji tt
.Ji. -I1.?..11111! HU1. while - the
Mea v rs V? ,,nc,uoa th dlvettes
Meaiy, Gaby, Lesly and Balay. , , i
STBAtIS IS HAILED
IX BADEX VILLAGE
Pure Milk Plant Presented to Sand
hausen Saves Lives of Manv
Babies.
-A
as
V
"r 1 "l iiii
v
f.Ti ,, ,,.,,,,,. j.zzn'
f ' - - : ;
.... s
Sunday Afternoon
Grand Orchestra Concert and
"The Messiah"
By Handel
Sunday Night
Grand Orchestra Concert, with Vocal
and Instrumental Soloists.
PRICES:
Season Tickets
$5,00 for 5 Concerts
Evening and Sunday Afternoon
Lower floor $3.00, 91.50, $1.00
Balcony $3.00, 91.80
rortnvAJt - mere cto.dzeit's
acATZvsa satttbdat atteb-
STOOH , 980, BOo, 7Bo
Mail Orders Received
roox nr avb out or toww
Address letter and make checks and
money orders - payable to W. T.
Pangle, Manager Jlellig Theatre.
GWWve Clark Wilson.
Maxam Gray, pianlste. Jan Van Oordt.
violinist, and Frans Wagner, cello solo
ist. The first evening- will be devoted
to a grand orchestral concert, and 'Fair
Ellen, by Max Bruch, a story in music
of the siege of Lucknow. Saturday aft
ernoon a popular concert will bo given;
Saturday night, a lull orchestral con
cert and '"fre Swan and the Skylark. '
by A. Gorlna- Thomas. , Sunday after
noon a grand orchestral concert, Hn
del's Messiah," will be given, and Sun
day night an orchestral concert, wilh
vocal and instrumental solos.
Scotch night at the music festival
Will be Friday nlsrht. April 10. when
Max Brueh's "Fair Ellen" will be sung. 1
J?CZ,JySO.
was doubted, but ihe persisted ln her
story. And sure enough, arising abov
the noise of battle came the piercing
pibroch of Highland bagpipers, forming
part of the army of avengers under
Mir conn Campbell. It is said that the
pipers played as they and fhe army
came on, "The Campbells Are Coming.
rne town was saved! 1
The name of the heroine who said
she had heard the bagpipes at Luck
now is a matter of dispute. Some give
her name as Ellen Campbell, and the
Hootch poet, Alexander McLaggan, who
died in Edinbufg in 1879, gives the
girl's name in, - his . poem "Dinna, Ye
near 11; cts ueasia uruffu. dujuq
writers even deny that the historical
Incident mentioned ever took place, but
this objection is not usually made if
any Dig Scotchmen are around. The
music Is martial and patriotic, as be
rus me occasion.
This will without doubt be one of
the most satisfactory and interesting
musical events that Portland has ever
had the privilege of hearing. Musical
people from all parts of the state are
coming to attend. The chorus, 300
strong, which is rehearsing with W. H.
Boyer, has entered fully into the spirit
or tne occasion ana wiu add not a little
to the enjoyment of those who attend.
Berlin, March 30. Nathan fitr,.-
Ne York Is regarded almost as a sa
vior by the people of the little South
German town of Sandhausen, which ha
greatly benefited by his "pure" milk
Sf-W"1!. A comPet pasteuriTi
'FnJm . "'Presented to the inuntc
Ipality of Sandhausen by Mr. Straus
for tha tniim i...rU .A:. ....!
LtheRmllk supply, which las hi?herio
been very Inferior.
io the. bad mil supply was attrib-
uted the appalling high Infant mortality
rate of 47 per cent, the highest in the
Grand Duch- of Baden. Many of the
cowsfrom which . the supply was de
rived were In a tuberculous gtae.
Mr. Straus has not on)y 'given the
pasteurizing plant to the town, but he
has borne the expanse of fitting up the
pure milk depot, and also provided for
a free supply of - milk. Thus be has
earned the deep gratitude of the inhab
itants of this obscure German town,
which can now boast ' the purest milk
supply in Europe. Mr. Straus's efforts
ln the direction of pure milk have been
watched with great Interest by the
dowager grand duchess v of Baden, who
has asked to be supplied with reports
on the progress of his . good work.
TELLS MUKDER TALE
BY .SIGNS IN COURT
Dumb. Witness Appears in Trial and
Gives Vivid and Impressive
Evidence.
Harold M. Bewail of Bath has an
nounced himself as a candidate for' the
Republican nomination for representa
tive lnVongress from the second Main
district, to succeed Congressman Little
field, who is to resign In September,
Mr. Bewail -was formerly United States
minister to Hawaii and acting in tbJt
capacity received the - transfer of th
islands to th United States ln 1S9S. -
Paris, March 28. A dumb witness In
a murder .trial at Bordeaux described
In graphic pantomime yesterday the dis
posal of the body, as,' ha alleges, he saw
it The prisoner are three men and
a woman, keepers of an inn at the vil
lage of -Langon. - They are accused of
murdering- a guest named Monget, and
of throwing th body into the rtvox
Garonne. ' -.'
o Three close friends of th witness
acted as "Interpreters," says the Matin,
talking to him by gestures and occa
sionally explaining m pantocaine to thai
r f. ' ; . . . v ij
Judge. The witness Is a railway porter
at the village station, opposite which Is
the Inn. The crowd In court was gen
erally able to follow the gestures as
well bs If he had used words, and
Watched with painful Interest as the
drama of murder was unfolded ln clear
and unmistakable pantomime.
The. mute described how he tried to
enter the inn, of which ho was an
naDitue, nv tne rront door on the day
of M. MoTiget'a death. The door ' was
looked. The mute described in creature
now no went rouna to we cellar door,
how he opened it. how he found, two
men and the woman or .he house frn
tlcally washing their hands,-how he no-
iicqa a great epiasn or oiood on the
woman s apron, new ne pointed It out
to her. and how she aulckly threw the
apron into a nre- . , -
Next he described how he went alone
afterward to the cellar, and there discovered-
In a corner the battered corpse
of M. Monget One of th male prison
ers found him. culled him. cursed him.
and flung him out of the. house.. He
stayed near by to watch. After mid
night he saw th male prisoners coma
out, one holding a candle, another wheel
ing a barrow with the corpse strapped
into it. They went to the banks of the
Uaronne and flung th body in.
So clear was the mute's pantomime
in the final stages of his story that not
a word was spoken. Judge, jury and
spectators watched tnthralled the dumb
man s gestures in tne railing lljrht. and
the teeth
ln helpless terror at their silent accuser.
the only sound was the chattering of
h of the prisoners as they stared
KAISER CLINGS TO
BIG WAR HOARD
Keeps $80,000,000 in Gold Stored
in a Tower as Part of Ger
many's "Preparedness."
Berlin, March 28. Members of tho
appropriation committee of the Reich
stag have urged the government to
consent to the use of the war board of
130.000.000. which Is kept ln the Julius
Tower at Spandau, for the current ne
cessities of the empire, since the coun
try borrows and pays interest to meet
its deficits.
For 37 vears th government has kent
this store of gold for instant use in
case of sudden necessity to mobollze the ,
forces of the empire. It desired to
avoid the necessity of even a day's delay.
secretary or the Treasury Bvdow said
the government would not consent to.
this war treasure belnsr diverted to
general expenses, as it was an essential
part of the general preparedness of th
empire. Under Secretary Twele then.
said that It would be well if this sum
was tnree times a exeat, as the out
break of a war might be coincident
with a general financial crash.
On- these representations the members
of the committee who raised this ques
tion decided not to press it.
Under Secretary . Twele then an
nounced that fhe government would
have to borrow 165,000,000, and he so
asked authorisation to increase the im
perial treasury bills from 187,500,000 to '
n8,750.000. The committee agreed to
this and then approved the entire budget
The latest slate nicked riet.a-et...a .'
large from . Hhicw York to the Chicago'
convention is man up of th name of
Stewart L. Woodford. Frank fi. ri
Seta Low and Jacob iGould Schurman. v