THE OREGON SUNDAY -.' JOURNALS PORTLAND, SUNDAY- MORNINQ, MAY 24, 1803.
ymmm MUST
Special Sale on
GAHLAND GAS
RANGES .
AMERICAN WKDOIV
V SCREENS '
American
Why rrancisJVilson in Whcn'iKnightt Were BoldMM
; 7mr$ Proprietary Dwma and AVritina" Testimw
k Mm
fOtfOTJMFION
TRUTH
:. By J. F. S.
. A FTR ?pite of two weeks, during which the,
i constant readers of this page, my friend the man,. ,
i"L agers, nd my weary typewriter, hive, been given
chince to breathe, I renew my weekly task of
Sisyphus '"'' . '' '
"With many a weary step and many a groan,
down to traditiont, to family and to memories of the
past. A considerable portion of the population of New
England still delights - in contemplating its own an
tiquity,, in supping with ' its great-grandfathers' "silver
spoons and lameitting the days of black stocks and ruf
fled shirt-fronts, A worthy? but tiresome relative of
mine insisted on puttingoff the evil present as long-as
he could at least so far as he was concerned by rld-
TTn the hith hill he heaves a huge round stone,"--; ing in a Condord coach and wearing satin small-clothes
' . . 'v ' to his dying day. .Everyone has had similar eperience
long enough to as-ure my friends that . I have not fallen wjth the senseless effort to prevent the dead past from
a victim to the soft enchantments of the Oregon spring, burying its dead. Therefore when Sir Guy went forth
From,, the theatres I directed my attention for a brief t0 do battle with the dragon of false sentimentality he
space to the Portland police a digression that I feel took with him our hopes, our prayer! and our laughing
amply repaid me tor tne ih on tunc uu , gpod-will.
improved to me that there are aept ns . w Kupio yy yona . go fflf f T wM concerncd Ms- bold and devoted statid
arvythmr the stage knows of. I can ' the, j,,, Wtnk vtrM won my. heart as nothing else could.
ettons oi wr yimi.s ,v..u....v Those chapters In the history of English literature de-
comedienncs;with the Jeeiing tnat jiere. nf c voted tff the praise of the early discoverers ot. blank
verse have always been particularly .detestable to me
is a glimmering oi reason, a uvwv iu v
better things. ,'. ty ' " :v :;v -.v
$ If I have at any time heretofore suggested that I
have sounded the depths of ignorance and incompetence,
I now publicly acknowledge that I was mistaken. It is
therefore with something like a sigh of relief that I turn
to Francis Wilson and his farce, "When Knights Were
Bold, which deligntea some surprisingly rge nous
at the Heilig last week. The houses were surprisingly
large that is, tonhe owners vi the theatre. - No one who
has
was
It seemed that it, would have been better had the chap
ters been tied around the necks of the discoverers and
the whole dropped into the most convenient pond of
sutncient aeptn to insure against rescue., ' . ,
And yet there wss one Incongruity -that stood out
glaringly none of the playwright's making, but the
product of our own times' and styles. We thought tt
S knowkdje oi The public and what iT winU w funny enough when Mr. Wilson was thrust bodily
(S5.Uhrf o rlrmht but that Mr. Cbrt Is stiU "to the clanking and highly uncomfortable armor 6f the
wondering why Wilton Lackaye and Hall Caine's "The r twelfth century. Uur shoulders ached in sympathy's
'dr.w, The producers wve it the Lou- e regarded his plight, nHow immeasurably superior
don production and the London cast, Mr, Lackaye him-.? rIJ?!? "
self was there, spreading the light of his presence upon
it and delivering himself of something more than the
I usual amount of sickening rant - And there was a large
audience the opening night. .
i v
all Mr. Wilson wore without a murmur of complaint a
specimen of the present day fashionable collar,' starched
within an inch of its life and imprisoning his naturally
ample and, for all one could tell, graceful neck like a
vise. It caught him so he could scarcely breathe. It
seriously interfered with his resting. When he tried to
f The simple truth is that no play will amount to much lie down on the couch and take his 40 winks' of sleep it
unless it is the truth.' You can sit down and write yards choked him till he grew purple m the face. It seemed
of sparkling dialogue; have thrilling situations by the to be ' a much more horrible and useless and generally
score and tell a most wonderful tale, but unless there is . obsolete bit of wearing apparel than the steel helmet
something more" than dialogue, plot and tale your piece they brought him to put on. But, unless Colonel Wood
won't last long. Whether it De -tragedy.' or comedy or was present, I fear no one appreciated his plight and
rrra farce, it must deoict with at least some of the ele- made a mental reservation to the effect, that in another
I mnn M trfoth. life, humanity and. character. The traar- 100 years they'll have more eood old limes to talk about
ledy trives the grimmer side, the comedy the pleasanter and more curious relics to hang in the halls of country
Slue ana ine isxce, no icss, iuuii om-n. uumiuu, -a uuuki iu m i o mviu vuw.
aggerating it but not falsifying it.
Few farces will stand the test of examination as well
hi will PJi9r1 Maflnw' It's mainlv because her first
j'idea was good. Little of the play as it now stands was
written by her. ; The funny situations have been care
I fully developed ' through watching of audiences. It is
isaid that when; the piece, was first put on in London
by James Welch he had. a stenographer stationed in the
wings who took down every word and bit of 'business
that was-introduced and recorded just where the atidi
iences laughed. The next day, at rehearsal, the play
would be changed to suit the latest liking of the audi
ence. The "prompt book of the play is a literary curi
osity. .
It will be remembered by those who saw the play in
; Mr; WiUon seems to have bridged the gap that lies
between musical comedy and musicless farce without
much trouble: .In fact he's more entertaining In farce
supported, by his own antics than in comedy supported
by his own voice. ; He's -decidedly preferable to Willie
Collier, who in the part of Sir Guy would have been
as vulgar as a fish-wife. The line of demarkation be
tween vulgarity and humor that the farceur must draw
is at times so tine as to require most careful acting, par
ticularly in case of the satiric comedy.
", ; - ; ... .4 - V
- Looking over the rernaining events schedule for the
fast-waning season ther are some incidents of interest
to be noted. That eminently correct actor, John Drew,
and the lndescrtDaole mine tsurke are coming soon.
Portland on the opening night that Mr. Wilson intro- There is also a prospect of seeing the two great dra
duced several jeryevident noveiues-tney even aiscora matic sensations of the season Mrs. Fiske in "Ros-
fited the members of hi company for the moment and mersholm" that's just a bare perhaps and another
doubtless he is constantly adding funnyisms of his own perhaps Kyrfe Bellew and Margaret Illington in "The
to the piece in the effort to keep it up to the mark and Thief," Henri Bernstein's successful melodrama. Eu-
to continue his prosperity. ,. gen Walter's "Paid in Full" is due in the fall, by a
It 1$ owing to the intrinsic value of the, satire Itself, second company.
however, that it-is a success,- The experience pi luy de " The, Baker company is still holding out bravely and
Vere is no unusual one. There is a very strong psycho- has probably made a very good Season of it. It is unde
logical -b.tsia.Jot thc tntica he it mU to go through In niable - that they deserve success they give excellent
trying to down; once and for all that eternal talk Of the entertainment as a rule. It's not their fault that all
good old days." . The incongruity upon which the plot; piayi are not, goo4 and that they are not able to give
is based Is both spiritual and physical. The cold from . a)j piayg equally well Their great trouble has been
which Sir Guy, is suffering in the first ct doubtless; that they have got in the habit of considering them
offended some, but it performed the task of assuring ,elves m that position where they actually think the
everyone that they neednt grow sentimental over this 90ie duty of partakers of their compounds is to sit
romping scion of nobility. Jt killed lurking sympathy down and write testimonials of their merits. But pa
in just about two minutes. ; Once that was safely driven tent actjng is not infaUible and there is no sound reason,
out you were m a fit condition to see Sir Guy go about wny its ingredients should not be made public in their
ni worn vi n;uuig iiuaBcs, wmui uc uiu, (iuu true proportions. It won't hurt the market for the de-
pe aamittea, wan rare gooa sense ana success. sirable brands and the public can do very well without
( , , ' ' w w w t tne unaesiraDie ones.
7The appeal that lay m the dilemma of the relative- I wish respectfully to assure the individuals in the
ridden, toadytzed : young, baronet was a wide one. company that I shall continue tasting of their wares,
ritANYWINOOW.
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Hobbes' calls the comic sense "a sudden glory arising
from some sudden conception of some eraineney in our
selves by comparison with the inferiority ot others, or
with our own formerly.". It'a about as awkward a defini
tion as you'll find outside of Allen and Grecnough, but
proprietary drama though they be, as long as my con
stitution and the season hold out. Like the citizen of
Kansas who remarked as he ordered another case of
Peruna, It may be bad. but it s got some whiskev in it"
I feel that Mr. Baker's players, although they have their
if you analyze it carefully you will see that it contains bad moments, are not entirely .without redeeming qual-
- - - t . I 1 . . I , . ' T 1 1 1 1 . 1 - ... -1 . x . . . . . .
a Kcrm ji ocimc. usi vi us wno were oorn in ine ines. i snuuiu naic io inmic mat x naa ISDOred Wltn
east or have lived there know what it means to be tied them through six months for nothing. - ; .
fMDOVlN HILL TO PORTLAND"
. ? ' Bx FREDERIC J. HASKTX.
f . .' v (Copjrrtt-at. ISO, br rrederlo 3. Haakln.)
The people of this fair Rose City are enthusiastic student of geography.
The stranger soon finds that while the conversation may begin with tha
weaUbar W the roses, it always ends In geography -It's down hill to Port
land from everywhere." The population ef Portland is 94 per cent purely
American, which is said to bs a higher proportion than any other American
city can show. Another significant peculiarity is that it is maintained almost
; entirely by local capital, there being only three buildings among the 'larger
commercial structures of the entire city that were not built by home money
) While these and other dlstraotive points are always brought out during the
; process of innoculatlng the stranger with admiration' for this ambitious
metropolis, the little lecture on geography Is always the argumentative ace of
trump no matter where you come from It's down hill all the way to Port
land. , ' . .... . .
Not long ago a parson from Baltimore
ivas taking a little jaunt through the
went, and dropped off at Portland to
look over the town. Of course he had
not been there but a few hours until he
encountered the usual monologue on
r'graphy. lils attention was called to
the fact that owing to the lay of the
land everything that break its moor
1is in these carta naturally roll. riVht
down hill into the lap of Portland. , The
Tverend gentleman took kindly to the
in fact he wrote a piece for the
idea;
lPr,
purtlaad's
in wnon tie pointed out that
ma m lODOsrannirai nnnitinn m
aimoei identical witn Uiat of New Tm-k
He made such a strong case In showing
the similarity that it seemed the only
way the people of the western city could
scape becoming a second Ootham would
L-e to chafige the face of nature. This
clever bit of municipal palm reading
made such' a hit in Portland that the
r lmmber of commerce gave the parson a
prise ot tl.000. Ms said in part: ,
Vrtlaa4 XJke Sew Tark.
"Portland -I remarkably like New
York In fveral particulars. If lies
tin tb shores of the Willamette river,
just above it confluence with the COr
Jumbia. The great tongue of land be.
t -en the Willamette and the Columbia;
running; down to a point at their inter-
(-iU.)!L. Is Strlktnclv Ilka Manhattan
l.-,nil. On the went bank of the Wil
J .nifite, representing Brooklyn, now
unu'ts the pusiness center of Portland.
,. ro thcir, on this second Man-
rattan, is tut roruana, spreading
vrrv dr outward and downward until
it will finally reach the Columbia and
lac the city of Vancouver, now resting
rm me nortnein siae oi tnsi river in the
mmeTelaUvyoBllon which Jersey City
u'aln to New York. - .
' Portland is already a notable port,
fie Is U.e only freh water port on the
1 nrin and freeh water I a stronc ad-
hiitnife to a port, as tb water Itself
t.-u tne vessels from barnacle and
n:.r f.tilnc. therbv svng much
llir and exptiHe. .The govern-
i.nt t lie t.uil'lil.ie jet (lee Jowrt the
. i inl' l ntHkinir otlr improve
i .,-ma , 1U g.vu l'ui tituj a clean
waterway of 40 feet out to the Pacific.
The Columbia and Willamette are both
navigable already far above Portland,
and thus she has one of the natural ad
vantages which have made New York
supreme namely, a fine waterway both
In and out.
"But Portland has also the other great
advantage which New York has enjoyed
a most favorable topographical situa
tion. Blxty-flve year ago New York
began Its change into a big city. At
that time Albany was flourishing. A
railroad was planned to go down the
Hudson from Albany, but the paper.
to alwav
angplank to Albany, rid 1-
thinking that New York was to alway
rangplanlc to Albany,.
e undertaking as foolish..
De simply a
tne
culed
railroad was built, however, and its
terminus has now become the greatest
city In the United States. Why t film
ply because it had a fine port and' wa
a natural gateway that we down grade
from everywhere.
. OoauMfee of ' WeV j i:
"Commerce la our counttry breaks
way from the great dividing wall
the Rocky mountains and flow east
and west along the lines of least re
sistance. Apart from the Mississippi
alley In the east it mftve prevailingly
along the line of the great lake,
through the Mohawk valley to the val
ley of the Hudson and down that river
to New York. Hence the New York of
today. The traffic could not' go te
Boston without crossing the Catskills,
nor could it go to Philadelphia with
out expensive srradee. so It want to New
York along the line - of least reel st
ance. Now Portland ha precisely thl
same advantage it is down hill from
everywhere. :
. Take a tonogranblcal man of North
America and draw a line from lower
lauiornia to ML Bt. Ellas In Alaska,
and you will find that your tine fol
low a natural depression . between
mountain range, about a hundred mile
back from the coast In Oregon. Now
Oraw another line at right angles east
and west, following the course of the
Columbia river the- only navigable
stream that breaks throush the Inland
iuuuouud waua. xalm ixa wtu
follow a natural depression with a' grad
ual descent from near Lewlgton, Idaho,
to the mouth of the Columbia. Now
Portland I situated Just at the point
where your north and- South and east
and west line cross each other. She
ha therefore down-grade relationship
to her immense supporting territory.
"The country tributary to Portland
la the final consideration which guar
antees her future supremacy, Tht
territory embraces all of Oregon. Idaho.
a part or northern California, eastern
Washington and western Montana. , It
else may be better understood whan
say that it equal In area the combined
states or Maine iw Hampshire,. Ver
mont, Rhode Island, Connecticut. Mas
sachusetts. New York. Iowa. Indiana
and South Carolina. Even the arid por
tions of tha vast rearlon are tutlnir ran.
Idly developed by Irrigation and its fu
ture riches and greatnese can scarcely
be Imagined.'' , . - '.:.. t
Topulatlon of Oregon. ' 7
If that pareon " aver 1 gets tired ot
preaching he will make a fine real es
tate agent. - But he had' a good subject
to exploit. Th state of Oregon alone
ha more arable land than there Is in
Japan, yet it ha only 600,000 Inhabi
tants. The territory known a the Co
lumbia river basin has the . natural
wealth to support 25,000,000 people, but
up to this time the census taker nave
been; unable to report the first million
of population. Fully half of this proe-
isctlve empire la capable or cultivation
or wheat. - fruit and other crops. It
a Said that this basin must be de
pended upon to ; supply most of the
wheat for all the population of the Pa
cific coast between Alaska and , Pata
gonia... . ' :
,Th present milling eapaolty of thl
grain belt 1 ift.ouo narrei or riour a
day during 10 month ot th year. Th
mill are cioseo two montn aurtng
th summer to make repair and be
cause of the scarcity of wheat At
(resent nair or tne wneai ; grown in
ha tarrltnrv la srround Into flour rwt
tha other half shin tied abroad aa wheat.
Two third of the grain that I exported
goes to Asia, it is said that, the ex
port . trade In .. wheat r ha already
reached It maximum because the ieo-
ple who com In . to raise wheat also
consume it- xne annual increase, in
acreage Is now about II per cent.
Oregon ha one elxth of th stand
ing timber or the United States. In
Sortland the forestry building ot th
ewls and Clark exposition has been
preserved as a permanent exhibition In
ft paric maintained by the clt
oas would cut over a million t
lumber. They were brought from the
forest cwlth their 'bark intact and
many ot them weighed between 40 and
SO ton apiece. Sixty-four of tbem form
a grand colannade no feet 1n lenrth-l
ana is in neignt. nutty-seven " Virie-
ties or vregon wooa are on display,
E
ity. It
feet of
Including th Pacific yew, from which,
th choicest bows are made for arch
err clubs all over the continent, moun
tain mahogany, r which makes aurh a
hot fir that a few sticks of it will
melt an-ordinary stove, and th fehtttem
bark from which th rascara f med
icine Is made. , A fir flagstaff In front
of th Forestry building is lt feet
FOURTH AN D ALDE R STS.
a!VT'
high and ahows what kind of stick
Oregon grow to make masts for the
hipping of the-world. -
' fett lVamfeer Port ' '.,'-'!
Portland is th greatest lumber port
In th world. Its sawmill annually
eut about 660,000,000 feet of lumber,
which goes to Australia, the Philippines,
China and other part of th world.
When th lumber market 1 normal it
la said the sawmills of Portland earn a
profit of $4,000 a day. The manager of
one of, the bis; local firms, in hi testi
mony before the Interstate commerce
commission, atated that hi concern had
earned tl. 000.000 in five year. .: 'The
Investment in timber lands, mill, Tail
way and equipment in the - territory
tributary to Portland doubtless amount
to 150.000.000. - Th notable- feature of
this section la that the trees will out
60,000 feet to th acre, while-less than
ONE OF GOTHAM'S ; .
NEWEST CITIZENS
r
( 5 .
ft
4
, ;-
v t 'i
10,000 feet is the rule elsewhere. Some
idea of the magnitude of our home mar
ket may be had from the statemenc that
less than 10 per 'cent of the product of
th Portland mill I for export. . Ex
perts estimate that It will . be from It
to 60 years before this great eupply is
exhausted 60 year if used at the
r resent rate of consumption, and 18 If
he supply should be exhausted else
where and ' this son become the sol
dependence of the general market. .
Talnabl Dairylar.
Dairying has devSloped Into tha most
Important purely 'productive Industry
in Oregon. It product last yar being
valued at S17.000.000. Ideal climatic
condition which permit of , pasturing
ONLY ONE WAGNER AND
DAMROSCH IS HIS PROPHET
throughout almost th entire year, free
oom irom storms so tnat cow ar out
of door Jnstead of being confined in
barns all winter, and the excellent water
of Oregon, have given the cream and Its
product an excellence and richness to
be found in no other part of the United
State. Many of Oregon's dairymen are
from Switserland. -
Portland has become famous a the
Rose City because It produces the most
beautiful rose In the world, even ur
passing those of the celebrated English
fardens. The solentiflo culture of these
lower Is carried te such an extent that
during wis neignt or? the summer the
choicest specimen are protected With
Japanese Umbrella so their delicate
tint will not be impaired." -i The only
time In the year when th people of
Portland forget their geography la dur-
lr
One of them r was from Main
Inr the Rose Carnival.
old
elte of Portland had a disput
in It.
and thi
Accord in a to an
story, the two men who selected the
She lives' In the Bronx .coo and
her name Is Anita. She Is the baby
of the Tapir family, who'have long
been prominent resfdeintg of that sec
tion of the city';, domain. The ph6to
grapb j'as. taken especially . for ib
HcarBt News Service, 'j w '" 2
over nam-
the other from Massachusetts. One
wanted, to call it Portland, and th other
Boston. They tossed. ; pennies. 1 ends the
man from Main won. He made a mis
take in calling It Portland.- It should
have been named Rosemary that's for
remem prance. n ,. . j , i. ... - .
AVEDS ON XARK;
GAN GO HOME
Marriage Is Annulled and Girl Loses
i Sweetheart She - Hoped -: iX-
BL Louie, May 22. A a result of her
midnight marriage In Clayton ' at - the
end ,of ' an afternoon's dalliance . with
cocktails and, such, Virginia Nelson ha
loat not only her home, but her former
ultor In Kentucky, Whom she hoped to
marry. Bhe was Mr. Patrick Barn
brick until Judge McElhlnnty annulled
the marriage.- . . .
Her father had forbidden her hi home
ana tn Kentucky swam - na turned
her away. Where - ah has gon her
mother doe not know. ' .
The marriage wss "a jolly lark" When
the ceremony was being performed," but
in th cold, array dawn of tha mnrnlnar
after It did not hear the joyou appear
ance It had to the young bride la name
only when she awok In bar -horn,
I6I4A Forest Park boulevard. Patrick
Bambrlek, th men she had mafrled the
night before, -w gone, . but the mar
riage roismiate the Rev; W - M. tant.
try had given her wa sufficient evl
denoe of their folly. ; U : ; : . , .
Th program for all three concerts to
be given at the Armory by Walter Dam
rosch and th New York pymphony
orchestra, June 3 and 4,' have been re
ceived, and they embrace' -masterpiece
of uch diverse character that ever.l
class and kind of musio-lover will be
delighted. Such programs .cannot be
Offered outside the great munio centers
of the world, for a symphony orchestra
that 1 able to interpret the enchanting
but difficult composition written by
the masterminds Vf all ages must com
prise artist of the highest talent, and
men whose whole heart and minis,
well a their xclusiv time are 4evo.ed
to the work of th symphonic orcho
tra. Such men as Walter Damrosclt
ha gathered about him, hi rare genius
as a great conductor, which ha given
him prestige a the most distinguished
musician in America, enablee him to
give Interpretation of splondld ' orches
tral number never before heard in tne
west. The program for the opening
eight la to be as follow: . .
Overture,' . "Oberon"" . . i . . f Weber
Aria, "11 re patore" ........ .Mozart
Mme. Mary Hissem de Moss.
Symphony No. 6 C minor ..Beethoven
- - PART II. ;..f-'..:r-' 'n-;'.
Hungarian" RhapSodte.- No. 1
"Evenlns? Under the Tree",
t Clarinet solo, Mr.. Loroy,
Cello olo.- Mr. Bramsen.
Polonaise from 'Mlgnon"- . .
Mme. Mary Hissem de Moss. ;
UlUva, "The River Moldua" , .Smetana
Symphonic poem.
i Dam rosch has Just onened hi week'
season In San Francisco and among the
hlffhlv llattertna . notice of th . first
program was thi" concerning th eym
phonlo poem of Smetana which will be
played, here on th opening night: -"Vltava''
was a fin study in Instrumenta
tion and a fine free melody on a sway
ing aooropanlment, the whole ' ugge
....Lint
, Massenet
.ThomSS
and th marriage wis a distasteful to
Bambrlek as to Mies Nelson, Alter one
Interview they did not see one another
until they met In court to have the
marriage annulled. ' -
uurinr tae nearinr or tne xaot in
court Miss. Nelson was compelled to
make public the fact that both she and
Bambrlek . were Intoxicated, and that
the only thing she remembered of the
ceremony was that something! unusual
had happened, which did not Impress
her aa being important ,
When Judge MCGlhinney announced
In court that the marriage was an
nulled the newly mad miss clapped
her . hands and exclaimed Joyfully, for
new an wa freed from a hateful alli
ance-and would return to her home with
her maiden nam restored and win back
the lova of her sweetheart in Kentucky.
Said love had received a shock that
would have to be tenderly nuraed. .
Bttit when she got -to her horn sh
found the door closed against her by
her father, John Nelson, whose Indlg.
nation broke -bound at th exposition
of hi daughter's conduct. -
what she expects to do'' exclaimed the
heart-broken mother. ''Her father will
not let her come back."
Before leaving"; her home Miss Net
son told neighbor that she wa going
to Oregon to live. , - ,
' :. ; , " - .
. , :. Money In .Chile. -:
Santiago, Chile, May JS It 1 found
that the deposits v. In. all the saving;
banks of Cbll amount to .the sum of
120,000,000. This city ccrtitalns, aecordr
ing to th census just completed, 408,116
Inhabitant with a population of l,39,
000 ln-th republic. - Congress has voted
U60.000 to establish a penal colony un
der military government. .
i '4... v i mi ir ; ' " -" '''
' New SteaMer Wne. " , ;
Callao. May 23.-Great advantage re
expected from the establishment of the
Italian-Peruvian line of steamship for
the coasting trade of the south Pn,-ifi.i.
since the English eompanle refuse to
mau regular , entries at some of tha.
tlon the aweep of the river from which
the poem In ton took its name.
Tn afternoon program for Thurs
day is one of rare delight, and contains
tn zamous wiav xuarcn By
ky. The full program will
Tschalkow
be: -
Overture. "Mignon" .7. ...... ..Thomas
Air on the' G string .....Baclt
Polonaise for string Beethoven
Concerto in D minor for violin..,.
i ......-..,.. i . ,.i . Vleuxtempa
Mr. Alexander Baslaveky. t. j
, Valse lent , ' ' '.
Pixzlcatl, from "Sylvia" Dell be
(Symphonic poem "L Preludes" ..Ialsrl
i PART II. -i
March from "Ie Propliete" .tMeyerbeer
The Sedan Chair ...,,.,. Chamlnad
The Rain ...i.i. . . .4 . .David
Larghetto from Symphony. No. 2 ..
...........v..;.,..,.... BeethovAii
March, "Slav" ... . .. . , . . .Tschaikowskv
On Thursday evening and the cloning
program wil be a stupendous all Wagner
one, as the San Francisco Call said!
"There still Is but one Wagner and Darn
rosoh. I his prophet"; t ,
Lohengrin ' J
1 Prelude - - . . ,
i Elaa'a song on the balcenv. 1 - . i
Prelude and bridal chorus
Die Meistersinger- . ,
Prelude
' Prise son t - ,
Die Walkure ' t -1 ' '
Th Rid of th Valkyries r
f PART II; :
Siegfried . 5
Tha Sound of the Forest ' ' I
Study from Tristan and Isolde
,i "vreams" .
, 'Mr. Alexander Saslavsky. ,
Tannhause- .
March, act S . . " . ... , ,
Song to the Eventnc Star, 1
. Overture 1 . , , . , ... 1 .
The three concerte will be' at ' the
Armory on Wednesday evenlnf. June
S. and Thursday afternoon and evenln. .
June launder the direction of- lxls
Steers-Wynn Coman. .- All programs ar
subject to slight change.
Neither was la lov with th other,
l ao not know wner m wwnv or i
mailer porta