1 THE SCI? ANTON TRIBUNE SATURDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 8. 1894. jtT - LP f Wat ' 1 i -p ( m? - ' 1 m -5- -- . - -,L-4- k; Gathered in the World 0! Melody Intcrcstiiui Notes Concerning Musi eians at Hoir.euiul Atiroud. SnASON 01' WACXCR OPERA Caibondule Is Charmed by Mr. Carter. Scninton Is Agnin Threatened with on Infliction of "J-:stlicr"-Wiii Mac l urlanc's Couicinplntcd Visit. The C.irbondnlo Herald pays the fol lowing deserved compliment to a well known Scranton musician: "Seldom, if ever, have the music loving people of Caibondule had the privilege of listen ing to such a musical treat as was given in the auditorium of the Methodist Episcopal church last evening. Profes nor George 11. Carter's organ recital was a grand success. The audience was a large one and was composed of the most attentive and Intelligent of the city. The programme for the evening was furnished by threo gentlemen who are tho best talent which this valley affords. Professor George B. Carter, the organist of the Elm Park church, of Sernnton, Is a man of pleasing ap pearance, and the harmonious strains, which were brought forth last evening under his skilled lingers, were wonder ful and evidenced of what may be ac complished In this direction. His manipulation of the ponderous organ with his feet was most remarkable. The eighth number on the programme, "Fugue," written in C Major by Bach, was one of the most dillicult, nearly all of the work being done by the foot pedals. At the conclusion of this num ber he received hearty applause. In the rendition of the "Third Overture and Wedding March from Lohengrin," by Wagner, Mr. Carter's ability was tested and he delighted his listeners to fuoh an extent, that ho was obliged to .respond with that well known favorite, "Home Sweet Home." During each of Ills selections It was a noticeable fact that hy the perfect silence which reigned the audience was perfectly de lighted. Professor Carter won the ad miration of his hearers in the Interpre tation of that old familiar themo, "Annie Laurie,'' at the conclusion of which he received prolonged applause Which he gracefully acknowledged." II II II The operas that have been seleoted to be given during the season of Wagner opera in Now York are "Tristan and Isolde," "Die Walkure," "Siegfried," "Die Gotterdammerung," "Lohengrin," "Tannhauser" and "Die Meisterslngor." The artists wholhave been engaged are: Sopranos and contraltos, Frau Rosa Sucher, Frailleln JohannaGadskl.Frau leln Elsa Kuftsoherra, Miss Marcella Llndh, Frauleln Marie Brema, MIsb Marie Maurer; tenors, Herr Max Alv ary, Herr Nlcolaus ltothmuhl, Herr Paul Lange, Herr Paul Slegel; bari tones and bassos, Herr Fran Sehwarz, Herr Kudolph Oberhauser, Herr Emll Fischer. Herr Conrad Behrens. .Tames F. Thomson, Herr Adolph Dahm-Peter- eon. The New York Symphony orches tra of eighty-five musicians will supply the instrumental portion of the per formances, with Damrosch as leader. The season will begin on Feb. 25. A thousand years ago secular music consisted chiefly of folk-songs, which might, according to Dr. Mackenzie, be divided Into six classes, viz.: (1.) Mln melleder, or love songs; (2) satirical songs; (3) songs of loose character (not allowed In the vlolnlty of churches, but not forbidden bv lawl: f Lnh. or Kh- renlleder songs In praise of deeds of honor or of prowess; (5) Teufelslleder (delvll songs) sung by the people at FLIRTATION MAZURKA. v C4 --x-y I . - .TT .. .t. i -3- -- K -- -"i. -f-lJLa-.:U --ib 1. A Conyrirlit, 1P04, by The New York lluaical Record night In or about graveyards, to fright en away evil spirits who came to dis turb the peace of the dead; (6) war songs among the most celebrated of which was the Song of Roland. II II II A correspondent at Munich thus de scribes the new machinery for produc ing the motions of the Rhine daughters in Wagner's "R'holngold:" Each of the three singers stood in a sort of cornu copia, hung from pulleys and trolleys by nearly invisible wire ropes; each of these three appliances required for its manipulation the aid of thirteen men, and every movement, up or down, to the front or back or side, was controlled by a separate rope; while one man of each thirteen acted as director, 'Indicating each movement as called for by text or music. II II II Scranton has again been threatened with a production of "Queen Esther," and considerable apprehension has been felt among musical people over the threatened outbreak. It Is to be hoped that the effort to review the old chestnut will lie nipped In the bud. "Esther" has served her time as nn Instrument of torture In the hands of ambitious amateurs and is entitled to an unbroken, rest. By all means let Essy's ghost remain undisturbed. II II II The members of the chorus in ithe Im perial opera at Vienna are In no sudden danger of becoming millionaires. Dur ing the first two years they are regarded as students and receive no compensa tion. The next three years they get 25 florins (about $10) a month, to which t'i a month Is annually added, till, in eight years, the maximum of $28 a month Is reached. Illlll Johann Strauss seems to be indefatig able. He has already completed the first act of his fifteen Ui operetta, while his "Jakuba," produced during the Jubilee In Vienna, has hardly had time to reach other Gorman cities. It has now been given in Berlin with even more brilliant success than In Vienna, while Hamburg and other cities will hear it soon. II II II Will C. Macfarlane, the talented young organist, who opened the new organ at Penn Avenue church two years ago, 3 giving a series of recitals in New York, et All Souls' church. The twenty-sixth reoltal of the series will be given on Tuesday afternoon next. It Is probable that Mr. Macfar lane will be again heard in Scranton during the present season. II II II The chorus choir at the First Pres byterian church will be increased to forty voices when the programme of Christmas munlc is rendered. Director Morgan announces that the Christmas music at First church this year will be the finest ever heard Jn that edifice. II II II Talllle Morgan, the well known mu sical director, has been made represent ative of the Musical Courier for north eastern Pennsyvania. II II II SHARPS AND FLATS: "The Trial Kiss" is the name of tho now operetta which Mllloecker hus Just com pleted. The sum of $.r,000 has been so far col lected In Italy for tho monument to Doni zetti at Rergaino. In his thirty hours' pianoforte perform ance In London It Is estimated that Horr Berg struck the instrument 1,830,000 times. The last composition of the late H unita rian composer-Czlbulka- Is a"Waits Berenade" for piano numbered as opus 8!W, There is no chorus and no ballet in Mascagnl's opera "Ilatcllff," which is to have its first performance In Berlin next January. Hans Sommer's opera, "St. Foix," re cently had Hb first representation at the Court theater, Munich. He calls it a "hu morous music drama." 81r Arthur Sullivan has finished all the mimic for tho new version of tho "Con trabandlsta," which will be almost a new opera, as only five numbers of tho original vcralon are retained, while the second act, words and music, is entirely new. Sir i By F. LITTLEJOHNES. s- -f- -e- "Si nS- -e- i ' .c--Z0 --A L. t-p-tS 1 t- j v . Co. Arthur Is now at work on the Incidental music for Henry lrving's production of "King Arthur" at the Lyceum. At a recent performance of Wagner's "Tristan" In Vienna the Isolde was a singer with the musical name of Ida iDuxat KrzyzanowHkl. She halls from Saxony. "Jeanle Deans," by Hamlsh McCunn, a Scotch grand opeii with a .thoroughly Scotch libretto by a Scotch composer, bus Just been given at Edinburgh with great success. Being asked in Taris If It was true that he was writing a symphonic poem entitled "Death," Verdi replied with a smile, "Death Is perhaps thinking of me, but I am sure I am not of It." A London violin-maker hos offered as prizes new violins worth $150 each to the best violin-pupils In the three leading con servatories of that city. An example worth imitating elsewhere. Sir William Robinson, governor of Western Australia, has given birth to a grand opera, called "Predatoros," which, when produced recently at Melbourne, was received with enthusiasm. Sir Arthur Seymour Sullivan, born in 1842, knighted In 1SS3, is said to have real ized $50,000 from sales of his song, "Tho Lost Chord." Balfo received $10,000 for "I Dreamt I Dwelt in Marble Hall." Frau Mnterna has announced her retire ment next month from tho Vienna Opera. A grand farewell performance Is to bo ar ranged for her. She has amassed great wealth Klnce 1X76, when Beyrouth made her world-famed as a Wagner singer. Tho name of the celebrated violinist, Ysaye.whohas taken New York by Btorm, should be pronounced "Ksa" with tho ac cent upon the first letter. It will bo seen that Ysayo is easy when one knows how to pronounce It. A prominent solo singer of one of our churches was overheard to suy: "Yes, we singers get criticised every Sunday, but the sport Is not all one-sided; wo know how littlo tho average critic knows of singing, and whilo ho criticises the gloves, hats, etc., we hear his bad English; see his unblaeked shoes, and note his unchrls tlunltke air. Oh; wo have our fun, too." While musical New York Is listening to Mclba and Nordlca In genernl opera, it Is pleasing to note that Mme. Bluuvelt, who hus so many admirers in Scranton, still holds her own. In speaking of a recent appearance of Bluuvelt, the Musical Cour ier says: "Her voice has grown bigger, but sheretainsthe same luscious freshness and hus the same spontaneous ring in her utterance which first made her here a marked soprano. She Is indeed our littlo concert I'attl, and not unlike the diva In her pretty, piquant personnel." Tho Rotation Tolly. From the Washington Post. The national house of representatives often loses a member, Just when he is en tering on a career of usefulness and honor, because a rival county thinks his county "hus hnd It long enough." Thoso. districts and Btates that give no en couragement to such narrow notions aro those which take the lead in national af fulrs. An Opportunity of Intiinucy. From Pearson's Weekly. Creditor (determinedly) I shall call ev ery week until you pay this account, sir. Debtor (blandly) Then, sir, there seems every probability of our acquaintance rip ening into friendship. Beecliam's pills are for bili ousness, bilious headache, dyspepsia, heartburn, torpid liver, dizziness, sick headache, bad taste in the mouth, coated tongue, loss of appetite, sal low skin, when caused by con stipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. Book free; pills 25c. At drugstores, or write B. F. Al len Co., 365 Canal St., New York. I m-1 " i J I ' 1 ' s. S cr. SSJ Tno. Legale jTlHHTTl 1? fcIJ: pp "N r "- sce: B IWi - . - s I isr I t I ! -I 1- I N?u)s ol the Green Room and Foyer Some of the More Important Doings of These, Our Actors. ROSE COGHLAX'S LATEST FLAY The Critics Agree Thut It Was Magnlfl. ccntly Presented but That It Was In trinsically Not .Much of a play. Other Dramatic Notes. It seems to be the pretty unanimous verdict of the New York cirttlcs that Rose Coghlan's new play, "To Nemesis," produced In Gotham for the first time last Monday night, wtfll not do. The Commercial Advertiser says of it: "The play is new, very new, and most probably will never become stale through wear. As for its originality, tho least said the better. Mrs. Pacheco has Jumbled up a lot of foreign people in a manner that might be called outre. She puts fine speeches In their mouths, every speech accentuated with a Bowery fervor, and puts fine clothes on their backs. The regality of Miss Coghlan Is well set off by the author's costum ing, amd she provides her with lan guage commensurate with the cos tumes, showy but substanceless. "To Nemesis" has a plot that requires the most assiduous attention and a fair stretch of the imagination to compre hend. Thure are kunguroo leaps in it, chaotic lapses and sudden bursts of effulgence that bewilder. The heroine, Mile. Walanoff, marries a man who wronged her, only to leave him imme diately, and then in some unaccounta ble way comes into the possession of a fortune In Russia, where fortunes for peasant c'rls are picked up by Mrs. Pacheco with astonishing ease, regand less of paternity. Then she goes to Purls and meets her husband's twin brother whom she mistakes for tho man upon whom she has Bworn re venge. The kangaroo boglus to leap. Never was there such a frisky kan garoo. A duel (a brought about, and Just as the Nemesis Is beginning to chuckle and gloat over acquired re venge she learns that the wrong man is to be killed that the real man has been dead a long time. A carriage Is right there at the boudoir door, and the kangaroo horses make one long get-thero-or-dle leap, and, presto! there Is a climax, a denouement for the gal lery. On the Bowery or Eighth ave nue 'To Nemesis' Is sure to arouse the plaudits of the house. With the at mosphere of the Star theater It Is a little incongruous. Tho author has manufactured climaxes with a sledge hammer. She spread out a roll of Bin in the first act, demonstrating with tho precision of a delineator upon a blackboard where crinkles might be ex pected to appear, and then she ham mered away with clangs and clangs worthy of any blacksmith. Miss Cogh lan Is surrounded by a very capable company. They do the very best pos sible with tho material at hand and present some really pretty scenes. There are Mr. Frederic de Belleville as the Count Ogareff, tho unfortunate twin who escapes a collcward puncture through tho dexterous manipulation of the playwright; Mr. Henry Jewett, Mr. Cecil York, Mr. Harry Courtalne and other worthy actors, who, with com mendable exertion, aided the move ments of the kangaroo. Then there are Eflle Shannon, and Miss Maxlme Elli ott, an unusually handsome woman, in roles fully as unconscionable as that of Miss Coghlan. The women In "To Nemesis" are beautiful, the men are handsome, the stage setting is superb, and the play is trash. Miss Coghlan's S -fefc M pzzaCaCsc -0-0 i- &3 L L I K j .. .g-... f , 1 i --1 0 0 P costumes are exquisite and gorgeous, and adorned by her splendid person ality charm and please, while the words she has to speak mystify and torture." Those who love comic opera a large element, by the way, of every commun ity, even of Scranton, with all the lat ter's fondness for blood-and-thunder border heroics and slugging matches will mentally applaud Mrs. D. P. Bow ers for saying, as she does In a recent article: "The lurge majority of our public Is composed of hard-working peo ple people who probably work at a higher pressure than their fellows of other nations. When evening comes they are tired; they want to be amused; they want to be lifted for a time out of themselves, and they go where they will be. Surely these people are not to be taken to task for their taste In prefer ring a light amusement to one which presents the serious side of life and works up their emotions. There was a time when audiences reveled In the woes of 'The Stranger'; in the remorse of Sir Edward Mortimer, and the agonies of Jalflerl and Pierre ln'Venloe Preserved'; but that time Is passed, and happily, I think. Our people seem to have un consciously come to the doctrine of Epi curus, who held that 'tho chief purpose of life was the pursuit of happiness. And the fact that they now shrink from witnessing the harrowing scenes of the old-fashioned, gloomy dramas seems to me to speak for their refined and kindly natures." And vaudeville, the bugaboo of so many good people, of this she says: "Its popularity proves nothing against the good taste of the great majority of our intelligent play-goers. This Is the entertainment of our work-people, and the large number of play-houses de voted to It shows that our workers have a universal love for the theater. In no other country in the world does this clnss begin to patronize it so liberally as In this. The good variety show hos its own field and does Its own good In brightening the lives of people whom toll and hardship continually oppress. It gets them Into the habit of theater going and gradually educates them to something better." And sho adds: "Does this condition of affairs prove that we have grown indifferent to the higher form of the drama? Nothing of the kind. We are only too eager to patronize the very best plays, but we demand that those pluys shall be pro duced In an adequate and proper man ner. Whenever Shakespeare's plays aro put on with anything like the sump tuousness of comic opera we give them our undivided support. Witness the recent success of Augustln Daly and Henry Irving. The day Is past when Shakespeare, with a good star and In-dl-Terent ccmpany and setting, is potent Just for the sake of Shakespeare. Rich ard, with a half dozen lean aud hungry supers conquered at last by Richmond with a similar warlike contingent, no longer convinces even the 'groundings,' and I think it Is to our credit that It is so. The true reason for the decline of the poetic drama in this country in tho last few years Is that we have not de veloped players of unusual merit in this direction." FOOTLIGIIT FLASHES: Tho "In the Name of the Czar" company has dlsbundod. William Mcstayer and ElU Proctor Otis are Joint stars In "Oliver Twist." "The Shop Girl,'' the new comlo opera by H. J. W. Dnm, hus made a hit in London. Tho music Is by Ivan Carwll. Jane Hading has withdrawn from tho Theater Francals, and will probubly play tho rolo of Dorcathea Morch In "A Wo man's Silence," at tho Gymnnse. Compared with tho cackle of "Tho Now Woman," the braying and neighing of "The Coming Woman" and the soft bleat ing of "A Way to Win a Woman." this "Woman's Sller.ee" (Sardou's new com edy) Is truly golden. New York Times. FIXE. w 'Ch qui 4 t-Jaz: J L I s a- - ' F -- 0 A I I "r ' I 1- .0 -.-O-ttj i 28 Jf- r-r- D.C.all'ine. WYOMING AVE., SCRANTON. STEINW&Y S SON DECKER BROTHERS KRANICH & BACK STULTZ i BAUER and Others PIANOS Also a large stock of first-class ORGANS MUSICAL nERCHANDISE, MUSIC, ETC. DUPONT'S . IRINING, BLASTING AND SPORTING Manufactured at tho Wnpwallopen Mills, Lt zerue county, Pa., and at Wil mington, Delaware, HENRY BELIN, Jr. Qonoral Agent for tho Wyoming District. 118 WYOMINGAVE., Scranton, Pa, Third National Dank Buildiu'. AOENCIKB ! TITOS. FORD, Hiltstnn, Pa. JOflN B. SMITH & SON. Plymouth. Pa, E. W. MULLMAN, Wilke Harro, Pa. Agonts for the ltvpauno Cheuiical Corn pany's WtfU Explosives. OTEL WAVERLY European Plan. First-class Bar at tached. 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Forced ' to Tako to Ills Bed. Whole Systora Affected. Doctor after Doctor With out Cure. Instant Relief, Speedy Curo by Using Cutlcura Remedlei. My aufTcrlnfrs might have been stopped If I had only known of your Citicuka. KEUEDira einhtoen years (?o. I contracted tho fever and &KUti and it eliuuted my kidneys so badly tUat I bad tobivo an oiieration, from which resulted Idood poison, and I Miliercd untold agonies. To make my BuiferiiiRS moro, my left leg below the knee broke out in largo blood bolls, and com. mcuced a scaly, itching irritation, so that at times I was almost frantic, and would scratch, until tuo blood would trickle down niy Icpr. la the summer tlieso larpo boils would commence, during vhich tlmo I would have three or four which were so painful that at times I was forcod to Uko to my had. Every winter a dry itching scaly mass would gather on my lejt, which witU the boils, sccinod to effect my whole system, lmringall this tlmo, a period of threo to nlno months, I had doctor after doctor, but thoy gave cio only temporary relief, 'fids last fall I com menced U3ln your Cuticuiia, CuticciuSoap, jnd tract; itA Itr.30t.vr.NT, and now tho scales Jwe all ponn, tho itchins all cono.Ihavo not felt sici.-, and have worked all winter. I wo: 11 not sulfor ag:ln as I Uavo for tho past cichtcen years for anything. I had doctors from tha wet to tho cast, all to no purpose I hive not foltsownllor been so Ion;; without a sick spell einca taking your remedies. Thinks to tbea and to you, and tho great Maker o maukiad Xor my lotuxninz health. DANIEL P. VOOnWAPJ), 1 'Wericn.WasUic.gtoa County, VU j WORKS WONDERS CcTictniA Eememes cleanse the system by external and internal modication of every erup. tlon, impurity and disease, and constituto Ui mojt clloctivo treatment of modem times. 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