r. J 8 THE SCR AXTCKN" TRIBUNE SATURDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 2, 1893. Gathered in the World of Melody Interesting Notes Concerning Musi cians ut Home and Abroad. A COXCEKi AT COLLEGE HALL Fine Programme Announced for Tomor ' row Evening Menard Lindsay Will Aoconipuuy Cambro-Amerlcuns. . .Miss Pichel's Progcss. A sacred concert will be given at College hall, Wyoming avenue, tomor row evening, by the choir of St. Peter's cathedral, assisted by Bauer's orches tra. The programme will be rendered try follows: PART I. Overture Orchestra The Miirv'lous Work Haydn Kyrle, tjlorlu, of Grand Itullan Mass, Choir and orchestra PART H. Overture Orchestra Credo, functus, ut Gin ml Italian Muss, Choir and Orchestra Finale Orchestra The solos will be rendered by Mine. F.M. Shilling, Miss Lizzie Snow, Messrs. John Klassen, James Tolan, James J. Mahon, V. It. Bradbury, and M. Snow. The concert will begin at 8.15 p. m., and an admission fee of 10 cents will charged. No reserved seats. I! !l II The friends of Miss Lydla Plchel, the Well-known young vocalist, who has been studying music In Clermany for two or three years past, will be pleased to learn that she has made marked progress In the study In the old coun try. While In Scranton Miss Plchel al ways sang ttlto and was favorably known as a contralto on account of her excellent work In the Elm Park Methodist, the Perm Avenue Baptist and other church choirs of the city. The German Instructors, however, pro nounced Miss Plchel'a voice a soprano, and under cultivation as such It has shown a surprising degree of develop ment. M!s Plchel expects to return to this country 1n the near future, and she will no doubt be heartily welcomed by musical friends old and new who will rejoice at her success. II II II Miss Louise Parry, the contralto, has been engaged 'to sing at the Olyphant eisteddfod on March 17. Miss Parry Is tndowed with a phenomenal voice cf much purity. Her rendition of "Eye Huh Not Seen," in Gaul's "Holy City," on Monday evening at the Providence I'res'jyterlan church was greatly ad mired and has made her a place among the leading vocalists of Scranton. II II !l Mr. Richard Lindsay has been en Kaged as accompanist of the Cambro Amerlcm Concert compviy, that will visit England and Wales the coming summer. This Is a wise selection. Professor Lindsay Is an accompanist of the first order. His wide experience as operatic conductor and accompa nist is ample evidence In this capacity. II II II The Cambro-Amerlean Concert club rehearsed the numbers they will sing at the Carbondale Baptist church con cert, last Thursday evening, at the rooms of the conductor, T. J. Davies, Mus. Bac. The club comprises the best vocal talent of this city, and will make their debut at Carbondale on Feb. 20. II I1 'I Gaul's oratorio, "The Holy City," given at the Providence Presbyterian church on Monday evening, proved a grand success, both from an artistic and financial standpoint. The produc tion of complete works of the oratorio O cru cl, but had a house not long a go, zjj g .1 . grz -0 - fair, And o pen to the O -w"r ""-r raud-ingon your way. rvt -rV s ( gain; O cru 1 -i Vf-, style Is a healthy sign of the musical progress of Scranton. Miss Nellie Griffin, organist at the Dunmore Presbyterian church, 'has had the misfortune ito fall upon the Ice and Bpraln one of her wrists. B. E. Southworth will probably nil the posi tion until Miss .Griffin Is again able to use her hand upon the keyboard. II II II Editor Sam Hudson, of the Times, is at work upon a comic opera libretto which Is of a brilliant character and teeming with up-to-date witticisms. It Is 'possible that Professor Richard Lindsay may write the muslo for Mr. Hudson's plot. II II I! Wtlllam t). Evans, the tenor, of Car bondale, was In town on Thursday evening to attend the rehearsal of the Cambro-Amerlcan club, of which he is a member. II II II Mrs. M. J. Boston-Williams, the well known West Side1 contralto, will be among 'the, soloists at Mr. Carter's organ recital, to be given at Elm Park church on Feb. 12. II II II Mr. Southworth's pupils at Keystone academy will give a recital at the academy in Factoryvllle on Wednesday evening next. II II II Organist J. Willis Conant, of St. Luke's church, has returned from a visit to New Bedford, Mass. . II II II Dr. Mason, of Wllkes-Barre, expects to bring out his new Welsh opera In the near future. II II II Eugene Ysaye, the young violinist who has recently come front Brussels to get his share of the money which Americans are lavishing on foreign art ists, Is destined, In the Troy Times' opinion, to be Che Idol of the matinee girl. In fact, he has already reached that exalted position, and the New York girls are raving about his genius. The Ysaye craze has not quite reached the stage, where the enthusiasts throw things tlowers, ribbons and gloves at the performer, as was the case when ,Paderewskl was In this country, but Ysaye Is certainly the successor of Paderewskl In the affections of the girls, and lit is only a question of time before he will have to dodge the many missiles aimed at his leonine head. At present he seems to take the open demonstrations of admiration with considerable surprise. He has not been accustomed to that sort of thing, and the American matinee girl Is a novelty In his life. The violinist Is a more manly looking man than Paderewski, and wears his hair considerably shorter. ' He also parts It on the side. His face Is rather fat and his cheeks have so fur encroached upon his eyes that the latter are almost closed. Take It altogether he U not -a beauty, and the reason for the adoration manifested by the fair sex Is difficult to explain. But it Is certain that Ysaye Is making no objection, for the coin Is flowing Into his coffers In a steady stream. il i II "Nothing would have seemed more re mote," observes the Philadelphia Rec ord, "than a scandal in that ancient and half-sacred Bardic body, the Welsh national eisteddfod; and yet it seems that these muslc-Jpvlng descendants of the old Druids are terribly agitated over the selection for the heroine of one of their novels In verse of a Welsh lady. the legendary Ardurfyl. who. It ap pears, was 'a woman with a past.' And, strangely enough, the heroine of the old Sanskrit play enacted at New York during the past week, 'Vasantena,' turns out to have been a second cen tury Mrs. Tanqueray. When the old Hindus and mystic Druids Indulged in such social problem plays and studies so many centuries ago, what becomes JANE. r 4 9 be-witch-ing Jane, I'll nev er Z(SZZ A house to let as well you know J? -Ljf -JZt9Z sun - ny air; But you, sweet thief, rZr v BtZ Con amort. i U cru - el Jane, be witch ing - - rZZf rv 5 4 - el Jane, be witch Ing Jane, ar Ki Copyright, iie4, by The New York Musical Record Co. of the latter-day .laurels of rinero, Grundy, the Decadents andDuMaurler? The yellow literature Is yellow only from uge." II II II ' Melba goes to the Opera Coinique In Paris for a month after the conclu sion of 'her American season. Report has placed her salary there at the low figure of IGOOa'inlght, which Is less than one-third of what each appearance ut the Metropolitan In New York brings her. But while rjn-gers are making their fortunes in America, England or Russia, they are often willing to return to Paris for the sake of the artistic gain of their appearance there. Paris usually makes their reputation, and It is no more than just that they should return occasionally for the take of the art of 'the thing. Melba Is to sing "Lakme" and "Nanon" during her sea son at the Open.i Comique. II li II 8HAKPS AND FLATS: Gilbert and Sullivan are at odds again. Christine Nllsson Is spending the winter at Mentone. 1 .illtiiu Nordlca is rust lift at Lukewood, N. J. She has the grip. Joseph Hollman, the vlollncelllst, has returned to New York from Europe. Cttmpanlnl has given up public singing and settled In London as a voice tear her. Miss Hurraden, a sister of the novelist, is composing a comic opera culled "Ta boo." Arthur Nlklsch, of Buda-Pesth, will con duet a series of orchestral conceits in London. Berlioz was dyspeptic and could not con trol his appetite. Weber was an epicure and lived well. Jefferson de Angells will star next Ben son In un opera by Sydney Kosenfeld and Ludwlg Englandur. The memorial fund collected by the friends of the late Eugene Oudin Hinounts to R5UU Paderewski gave $WW. The new comic opera Messrs. De Koven & Smith are writing for Lillian Russell will deal with Napoleon's Invasion of Italy. The chorus rehearsals for the Pumroseh season of Wagner opera In New York are progivssing under the leadership of El liott Schenck. Tschulkowckl's brother says the com poser left unpublished an entirely finished piano concerto and a duet between Komeo and Juliet, with orchestration. The total number of dunces written by Johann Strauss is 44.1, of which 101 are waltzes. The tlrst dunce, written fifty years ago, is culled Sinngedli hte. London will have a series of orchestral concerts to be conducted by the Wagner Ian conductors, Herman Levi, Felix Mottl, Hans Hichter and Siegfried Wau ner. Next year the fifth festival of the Ger man chorus will be held at Stuttgart und there Is already a guurantoe fund of $100, out), the list being headed by the king of Wurtembutg. Russia has an amusement tax which is laid upon every amusement ticket sold, anil the managers raise tho price accord ingly. Already 1,000,000. roubles have been raised In this way. Paderewski broke his contract with an English provinlcal manager because the prices of admission were fixed at $1.25 and 75 cents. He claims that it would be de rogatory to his position as un artist to play to less than 11!.5U stalls and $1.25 a seat in the galleries. Ysaye, the violinist, has a Guardagntnl worth $1,2U0, and Jean Oerardy pluys Um a Uuarnerlus valued at 4,000. Dr. Joa chim, of Berlin, hus a large collection of valuable violins. The Stradlvarlua that belonged to Ernst, and said to be worth $10,0i), has come Into the possession of Lady Halle. Hemenyl hus two rare Cre mona violins worth $10,000 each. F.ilwurd Jakobowskl, the composer of "Ermlnle," "The (Jueen of Brilliants," "The Devil's Deputy" and other light operas, was married last week to Mrs. Clara Ormlde Brown, daughter of the Rev. Dr. Lloyd, of Buffalo. Mr. Jakobow Bki made the acquaintance of his wife two weeks ago, when she upplled to him for employment as u chorus girl. By HUGH DARLINGTON, 1 trust a maid a gain ; Well-built, well-or-dered, furnished, iiiiiMiiiiiiii one sum- mer day, Went by ma- frgsa: Jane, I'll never trust k ,t l; maid ,,' , -a,, il fa.Tn- rui it . ' -r I'll never trust a ' maid (U -. T rir N?u)s of the Green Room and Foyer Some of the More Important Doings of These, Our Actors. SIGNS OP A HEALTHY REACTION Belief Expressed That the Problem Play and Tepid Farce Comedy Have Each Keachcd the End of Their Kopcs - Dramatic Notes. If we are to believe the scholarly critic of the Chicago Herald to whoso opinion In this Instance at least we are fully prepared to hout "bravo!" there will soon be.a healthy reaction In the tastes of the theater-goers of this nation. The Herald opines that this recoil from the nausea or the inanity of the problem-play or the tepid farce comedy will take the form of a strong counter current In favor of the melo drama. That, thinks our western friend, "In lbs best estate Is the ex ponent of u distinct human interest. Even when degraded to 'the uses of sen sational realism It preserves a recog nized dramatic form and Invariably teaches the Important lesson that vir tue yields better dividends In the long run than vice. It is not the function of the stage to teach this or any other lcrson, but If It Is to be taught Inci dentally it Is muoh better that this thould be accomplished through a me dium exciting honest, sympathetic In terest, than by means of those cavil ing epigrams and risque situation which the followers of Ibsen and Houptmann have found necesiary to their peculiar mental disturbances. The Ibstn cult, whtcih has be-en em braced with such suspicious fervor by not only Houptmunn but also by Suderlnann, Plnero, Wilde andNHenry Arthur Jones, not to mention others of inferior consequence, has driven from the 'theaters a large contingent of hone3t, right-thinking, and pure-mind ed people, who formerly attended in search of refined diversion. Those who love to consider themselves advanced thinkers, andarelncllned to assume airs of superiority for the indifferent reason that they can sit through a relation of deml-mondaine infelicity without a blush, are 'insufficient in number to make amends for 'the disgusted patrons who) have been lost to the theater. But if 'these worshipers at the shrine of Ibsen and his official following are not conspicuously numerous, they are sufficiently enamored of their own con sequence and Inspired by a belief In their personal amplitude of superiority to noisily proclaim their new faith, not forgetting to belabor those who do not agree with them. The drama, they as scrt, was not intended for babes and sucklings or for the feeble and colorless Intellects that are so shallow as to de sire propriety and decency in their en tertainments, but for strong men and women who can see soiled linen laun dered without an appeal to smelling salts or disinfectants. It matters not that the "problems" they propose to solve by means of stage puppets and a strained sequence of dramatic events are no problems at all, but self-evident propositions known and read of all men. They tickle themselves with the fancy that they are elucidating psycho logic itruth, when, In point of fact, they are simply feeding upon prurient fancy. "Mrs. Kendal Is one of the most con spicuous among those who imagine that the unhappy results of marrying a courtesan will not be definitely under Rain. You found without a 2r as it were your own, VT Dr nie, The law ful own m & 4- fail to turn you out. ' ' part, But take the ,' -. -5 n J XZ. ' i ' a a J 7 7 m la I pi stood unless the case Is visibly illus- tixled crt tho stage. Those who dance to .her fiddling pretend to believe the F.iine thing, although some of them are ordinarily quite Intelligent and respect able people who do not nefd to be told 'that -two and two make four. Happily, the pioblem-play folly ia too transpar ent to last. Ibsen, Who is & bottom less pit of feverish and distorted im agination, may gently drift along through his second childhood, uttering distempered plays at frequent intervals, but his Influence is waning and his ca pacity for mischief Is rapidly approach ing its limit. He has endeavored to fill the theaters with gloom, but the effort Is a failure. The people prefer sweet ness and light to the horrors of the sociologlc dissecting room, and their preferences are quite likely to control the g'ame, now that the folly of giving the stage over 'to erotic discussions Is so apparent. As sincere human Inter est is wanted In plays It follows that the old form of the drama, together with the modernized, but not vulgarized melodrama, must be tine resource in the near future. Many who remember the electric success of "The Two Orphans" and the long succession of admirable play! that followed at not infrequent intervals will regard the Increasing probability of a return to. plays of that class with entire satisfaction. Not only have erotic plays and farce come dies worn out their welcome, but the anemic drawing-room comedy, with Its cackle and small talk, Ls now out of the running. The people are beginning to cry out for bone, sinew, sincerity and truth, and they are going to gt It. Dramatists who have dawdled to th pleaslngs of drawing-room Inanities and have attempted to picture society by delineating nhams and shoddy must sharpen their pencils for nobler efforts or be lost In the forthcoming shullle." With due deference to this same au thority, we must borrow one more of his clever paragraphs, as follows: And now the bounding west, to wit, tho state of Missouri, has come to the front as the avenger of those patrons of the the ater und their name ls legion who have suffered eclipse, annoyance and disgust from the high hut which the ladles persist in wearing. Only the other duy a member of the .Missouri legislature introduced a bill proclaiming, and, In good set terms de claring, that It shall be a misdemeanor subject to fine, for any one to wear up parel In a place of public amusement cal culated to obstruct the view and therefore curtail the pleasure of others who have paid their good coin for a chance at some fun. Here, then, Is a vision of hope out of the darkness, and the lawyers suy that as a common law right Is Involved the new enactment will be constitutional and proof against all the slings and arrows that may be directed agulnst It. But the Idea is almost too millennial In Its scope to be entertained without some grulns of al lowance, or to put It into the ordinary vo cabulary, the news is almost too good to be true. They will be telling us next that all sorts of nuisances In the theater and In the cars muy be abated, by the simple process of swearing out a warrant charg ing misdemeanor against the offender. The fellow who comes late, crowds out be tween the acts, hungs his coat over the back of his choir so that It occupies hulf of the stall behind him In fact, the all around swine of every name and nature muy by the same token be hauled out under this new dispensation and made to pay roundly for Interfering with the vested rights of others. Of course this Is merely an I'toplan dream. The Ameri can people will continue to suffer In si lence as they have for years. They are too busy with their shopkeeplng and money-getting to trouble themselves either In regard to the character of their public servants or with reference to the In sults and annoyances they Buffer from the omnipresent boor. The announcement that "Nym Crinkle" (Andrew C. Wheeler) has re considered his determination to aban don dramatic criticism will be welcome news to many warm admirers of this m i bolt or . bar, The win - (lows Kin -died the fire, and sat you down P -6- Y er of the fee, As if 'twere clear Com am oei. Dis-lion est Jane, be -witch -ing fc-T- house oh . take this heart ! Oh take, j --yr- -7f-szz: : r-U4ll J-a 1 I 'I "FT 1n trenchant writer's unequalled sweep and force of rtyle and pith of epigram. It is a' 'Viarut trrintitf 9f his to do well whateveV he undertakes; and whether he refrale us with a vitriolic but Ches terlleldlan excoriation of the Howells school of pale realistic fiction or a dy namic diatribe ugalnst dllletantism In the drama. Wheeler Is always and In variably interesting, picturesque, in structive and thought-compelling. His pen in a peculiar sense stnnds out against a background of much vapid and witless scribbling as the conspicu ous chief contemporary exponent of virility and candor in art-critlclsm. He Is, perchance, somewhat too didactic for some. His deliverance ls Olympian rather than seductive. He hurls the trident, rather than waves the palm leaf fun. Sometimes his epigrams, while shining like crystalline gems, burn and sear as If white hut. But there Is at no moment in the perusal of them when the reader has premonitions of lassul tude or admonitions of ennui. Crinkle at least keeps the minds of his followers from getting prinked. As an Idea-restorer or a thought-generator he Is per haps the most remarkable writer of Englhh now living. Scrantiinlans have had two doses of Oscar Wilde and will, in due season, get a third. The certainty that "An Ideal Husband" will some day cross the Atlantic and display himself before a local audience for did not Langtry leap from the Haymarket In London to the Frothlngham In Scranton? lends Interest to the following speci mens of epigram taken from Wilde's latest: "Women discover everything except the obvious;" "Too much rouge and not enough clothes;" "It ls always worth while to ask a question, rarely worth while answering one;" "The pes simists are intolerable people because of the way they wear their hair;" "The modern woman understands every thing except her husband;" "Morality is the attitude we adopt toward people we dislike;" "Vulgarity ls the behavior of other people." Anybody could man ufacture stuff of this sort, but It re quires Impudence to give it circula tion und Wilde has that, in abundance. FOOTLIGHT FLASHES: Modjcska ls in Poland. llurrlgun will play In London. Mrs. Annie Yeumuns used to be a bare back rider. Charles II. Hoyt's new play will be culled "A Civilized Community," and will be a satire on current fads and foibles. Susanna SchafTer. one of the famous family of Jugglers, will appear In New York soon. One of her feats Is to keep an entire set of parlor furniture flying In midair. Maud Branscombe, whose photograph was the ruge ten years ago, hus turned up, a shadow of her former self, in a Lon don police court, looking for protection from the blackguard she hus been living with. Beerbohm Tree Is 42 years old. His fam ily nume ls Beerbohm, and the Tree was added when he tlrst essayed the stage us an amateur. He will give "Hamlet," "FulstafT," "A Bunch of Violets," the "Red Lamp," "A Wife's Peril," "Cup tain Swift," and a new play by Robert Louis Stevenson und W. E. Henley, found ed on the old story of Robert Macuire and representing the robber as a polished thief who believes crime Is a fine art. The play ls culled "Mucoire the Philoso pher." 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