MUSICAJ, NOTES Jfß? EVERETT PIANO · AT CONNECTICUT'S CAPITAL NEW-YQBK DAILY TRIBUNE. ST'XDAY,...

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AT CONNECTICUT'S CAPITAL NEW-YQBK DAILY TRIBUNE. ST'XDAY, NOVF.MBEK 1«. 1901. MUSIC AJ, NOTES < WEEKLY CALEM>An-"ST. rAI!. TO BE FEnronMED-KOCIANS DEBUT BAH im:<m.i:a.mmks. THE EVERETT PIANO THE ONE PMHO OF PHE-BMINIM^ TONS AND IMDtrtiVAUT™ I The piano that is individual and *. original to a high degree. Rare fine and full of valuable distinction -a piano of notable charm and I tonal ability; richer in construction I and much more sympathetic in ex- pression than any piano produced. Warirooms, 141-143 Fifth Avenus, H. t \ Near Southeast cor. of 2Jst Street. iP— ttsrt. Adelaide C, Okell Certificated pupil of Teresa Carrtfio. * ' PIANIST ANT' TEACHER. =\u25a0»-,. for Or-nT.- -\u25a0:\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 57 West Kl*rnty-foarth Street.. V*y EMILIO AGRAMONTE 2m Fifth Avenu*. Katherine Ruth Hevman. A MsbHsbl aiimher of pupils accepted at a*-*— - «/Y or 38 lrvin«r Place, " tul ~ LA ROY WOOD, VOCAI. INSTRPCTiaM; ' '.*' , Church and Ballad IMisataaj a Spesialrr STUDIO. IS4I BROADWAT. LEO KOFLER AUTHOR OF* "THE ART Of BREATllriri<* 1 Vocal lns« rue tern N. T. Studio. 28 E. at St. Tv x I \u25a0 How Studio. 2"9 Carlton Aye.. BraoU>.i.* T"" LILLIE MACKIN KS"SS?F" CerttScat«<t pupil of VannucctaS. LENA - DORIA DEVINE. f VOCAL. INSTRUCTION. 138 STH-AV» ( LACEY BAKER.. ORGAN" LESSONS. lli Eaa; IStlst Louis -Arthur RusWil, Vacel r.i?truetlon. CaraasH) Hal MME. LUISA CAPPIANA. PRIM* DOSSA. -,--*> Itania Op»T^. M •rurr.».l from Europe »nd --i:-f1 \<if \l. l\«TRi.. TIOSI at THE COSrORO. 23« W. 53tS St. --, 3 '\u25a0»»?. Mme. Louise Halcombe, ARTrSTE. PUPIt. OF SIGKOB-V BE RUOA. 33R7XX VOCAL. 3TL"PU- i W ED ST cat dorr w«»t 0/ V.a JL.XK Mme. Marya Blazejewici Fupil ci Mosilco-wski aad Sehsrw^aiii. Comp^»*r-oiaal»t and teicher. Res. stodlo. 13* TT. 94; iEC Also N. T. Conservatory of M««lc. IN W. T»t!j St. MME. EUGENIE PAPPENHEIM, THE rcirßß»rF.n prim* DO.NXA. ' kteaaeves TOcal »tu«o to 101 W. TSth-st . car. Co .->i». sass, MME. TORPADIE BJORXSTEM VOCAI* Ijfsjf Sjl'CTlOJf. '»--!•»\u25a0• Hall. Boom W9. MRS. L. P. MORRILL,. actmrnnc VOICE CULTURE. ' Th« Ch*l*-«. 222 West 23d St. MISS MARGARET goetz. ' _ Masso Ctmtralt% \ I Ifflnrf Sonsr-H^citalii. Concerts. f f Studio. Camesjis Hall. [ liur iuui wrsyro Voic» lur«. Artlstio m* RllnC. Anna Tfcnncn mg. Or»ratlc and Crvcr« I SBusic. Specialty: Classical Storms. Studio. TO Wast SSt-V* I AX KMTEI. TBEV MANN. —Vote* ill lInSBSJI Pupils trained tor church, eeseert & spars. Vi earnest Hall. MME. HEI.EX VOX DOEXHOPF. Caatreita 2 Marie." at K. Mth St. Appointment by latter ask* MR. EDWIN UXTCHART. 121 E. SH-«t.- Vole-, ais»4 i>X properly; breath control; rich, round, resonant toss*. MDIXm AL3INA BARDI. Vocal Musis and *IsjH>IBs) atmetlan. 138 Bast IStb Street, aear Fourth At* | c MIM SI. Krß-'FNER. Teacher of Ztthor. Banjo. Mas- iVJL aelln and FUsjo; thorouah method. 23> last Oi-< MISS PAXXIE HIHSCH. DRAMATIC SOPHOO, Baatdenoe- Studio. "The Niagara." n Bast sTta St NIEDZIELSKI I viounsotocs.- l*lE*MJ£jM.E*iXs&r*.M. | studio «S S-J» Aiv rupll.t attended paraonajtr. Circulars mailed. PRICE-COTTLE CINSERVATOW." ".105 ;- H AYE.. COR. 129TH ST.. N. T. DAILY CLASS Pupils at'eaeicaj thai class r*,-»iv» an hoar an. » \u25a0« 1 \u25a0aualcal ln»tn»etlo« ZVC&Y ©AT. Call or write far circuitr. . S.C.BENNETT. > -XT A L INSTRUCTION. [ S3* CARNBGIS KALI.. 8, Ge PRATT. w*it End Privat* s-.ij.ie! <l WKfi II TUnr, pUymj. r;r!:j ecs- « \u25a0 lin II f carta. reauli. ITS V. 3a y. "signorca'rpi. V*enl Tnatractlom OlUniUn LAnrl. < Italian Method 51i Par. V near «3d St. iFoor Ln«U(MI SAMUEL P. WARREN. :^ ~iaas Batnoay. etc 3tu«o It*West 4Oi* St STEI.I.A PRINCE ' Vop.il lßßiro<-ll««. OTA/^tf pa Studio. 3 West tasft*> STOCK X, Cor. Central Ps»> x - OllTCD! V(l > m Culture and «^a<-h»na;. Waas. OALI Cll lOrmn. lUrmony. SZT Anrnnriaa Ai«> STl!l>IO. ICor. Wta St. the "LESCHETIZKY'.ToM MME. DE WIENZKOWSKA. nsr [ lanniaaa to raeariwakt, L*»ch*:i»k-. Han» Rleater- \u25a0 CAK.MSGIVi 11 *1,1.. Addteas I*7 W. S^rt St. The Sew York I»ntltut* for Violin rl»'""»« Pin no nnrl Vocal (altart. Sao K.IST nil) »^H^^l Equal to any of the foremost aaseefel of Its Use \u25a0\u25a0 Europe.— tllualeal Courier.* h _ F. & 11. CARRI. Dlreftot». TH»oooK BJORKSTEN jsiii faur languages. St. Marc Bulidins. iW. 3»h-* __ TOWNSLND H. FELLOWS. Vocal Instruction and Manager -Taajsaj slnser» '\u25a025? cofreet singing; trained *nd mani»««-1 •»» successra . career* Studio. 533 Cam»gl» Hul!. Apply Room \u25a0 mHB FRANK LEA SHORT ASIATIC SCHOOL. Cg- L -»*te Hall. New York Classes twins organised. \u25a0"" tor circular. _ ; T.ARTHUK^ILLER TUB VOICS PfWDfCTiON SiM.K KKFrjCTOia* STIOIO. OIK: I mH>E«ill-: II VI.I . \'lOt.l\ t.\STKl'CTlOX.—H^rwt^n >-m End» «|jj receive violin pupils at Clavier Hall. " "\u25a0 "ViWi Mondays and Triuri<4avs. at R#»i>Vn StodVn U3 »- \u25a0\u25a0„ St.. Tje»d»vs an.l Fr ! .;j>s. SB W. 151*1 >: *«in**Ui' ana Saturday*. \Vr!t<« for circular and afppinti"*n. . ~ WILLIAM C. CARL Gives instruction in tho art of orasn playlris M the *\u25a0 man! Orijan School Send fw Cataknrue. 34 West IJ-h atraw^ W. H. PURDY. »VU**nm-B&U± VOICE CIiLTIiRK * R«»laeac»-Stadli». >W C. lav» tet n 1 11- rVr> r- a. 1 »fa« »'\u25a0 c »T*r«* R. H DDE N f «•:.: O. \omt CtaeUiii Orsan. rtano. Hirtnw- I*'** nn * tnQ Cr^w _ WIRTZ PIANO SCHOOL^^i^ l^ MMR » \\ A voice culture. «H««* fc \°in3iSi •*• WERNER r^iT^gg^^^ ZELLMANCONSERVATORY of Hi £ •w. uftb it.. »~* u~ *«•- *r* iet ** The programme for Mr. Frohtnan's third con- <»m at the Metropolitan Opera House, this Sunday evening, will be as follows: PART ! Overture. "Fra iJlavolo" Aul>er Orchestra. Concerto, E flat major, for piano an.l orchestra . Liszt Miss Carrie Hirechman. Aria, from "sails en MsillSia" Verdi Herr Van Rooy tilavonie danree . Dvorak Orchestra. quartet in C sharp minor, op. 17 SgambaU Adagio. Vivace ir.a non troppo. Prestissimo. Andante *o«tenuto. AllegTO. Trio for piano, violin and violoncello, in D minor.. •• . A. »\r^nsiis Allegro moderato. Srherzo (allegro moltot. i:ifgitt («daa;ioi Finale (allegro non troppo) Quartet In C minor, op. is Beethoven Allegro ma non tanto. Scherio tandant* scherzoso quasi allegTettoj. M«nu«<to <allegretto>. Allegro. Miss Martina Johnstone. the Swedish violinist, re- turned to this city from Europe on the Deutsch- land on Friday. Miss Johnstone spent the summer at the country home of her mother, near Gothen- burg. Sweden, and at one of the Swedish bathing resorts. The fall she passed In Denmark and Ger- many, appearing in concerts there. Mrs. Hollingsworth Watkins. who will give a re- cital hi Mendelssohn Hall on Tuesday evening. December J. entitled "Three Centuries of American Ballads." sings her programme in three parts. The first is devoted to the songs of Colonial days. The lirsi Kneisel Quartet concer' at Mendelssohn HaU M Tuesday evening. November 2*. will in- clude selections by Ossip Gabrilowitseh as assisting artist. The programme: The following compositions by S. Camillo Engel will be interpreted by Mrs. Lillian Pray, soprano; Emili<. de Gogorra. barytone; Leopold Llchtenberg. violinist, and Paolo Galileo, pianist, at Mendelssohn Mall on Wednesday afternoon: Ballade. Novellette. Paolo Gallico. Ljrisches Intermezro— "Irh hah' im Traum icewelnet." "Allnarhtllch im Traume." •'K» fallt eln Stem h«runt«T " •!m wundernehCnen Monat Mai "Und wus»t»n'n die Bl>im«n die Klemen. Mrs. Lillian Pray. Romarta poor violin ex piano. ly»opold M.-ht«n»>ers; aad Paolo OeiUm English \u25a0 •"•nits "I'rayer to the Honeyed Moon. "The Tear. ' ' \u25a0Oh, My Iv>ve Like a Re«i, Red Bci>. ••riarib*"!." •Th" Dewdrops Fall." Kmilio de Gosorza. Spring. Values Nobles. Paolo Gallico. at Knabe Mall. No 154 Fifth-aye , on November I*. Miss Jewell mill be assisted by Robert Hosea, bary- tone. Chairman Gates of the Republican State Com- mittee swears to contributions of $2:».t>40. from fifty- . it;iit candidates and other persons, while Chair- man Walsh of the Democratic committee only had thirteen contributions, all told, showing that the Republican money came in smaller sums. The amount expended by local candidates of both par- ties was large, comparatively, and those who were AMOUNTS OF MONEY CONTRIBUTED FOU ELECTION EXPENSES WHAT THE LEGISLATURE WILL I>o GOV- ERNOR'B APPOINTMENTS. Hartford, conn. Soy. l". (Special).—The use ef money in .lections has been th^ theme of discussion in the State I his week as the final day for tiling statements of candidates' expenses approached. On Tnuredaj the entire li: t oCState candidates had made their sworn statement*, ar.d there was not a little curiosity as to the anrniiit expended. It ap- pears from the statement Of Melhert B. Car; . the Democratic nominee for Governor, that he expended $i3.*f.*i 31. of which Q&MO went to the State com- mittee, and if the town chairmen tell the truth it was distributed too late Li do any good. The ex- pensea of Abiram Chamberlain, the G.>vernor-elect. were much less, being only $1,197 90. It has been the habit ol the Republican i.arty for many years to name men of moderate fortune for the public officers of the State, while the Democrats have pursued the policy of nominating men of wealth, for the head of the State ticket at least. This policy has borne no fruit, but it has put an Immense amount of money in th«- hands of small politicians, and much of It never went a:iy further. The chair- man of the Democratic State Committee. John J. Walsh, swears that the total receipts of the com- mittee from all sources were $15,366. so it will be seen that Mr. Gary did the greater part c.f the "bleeding." In fact, one of the candidates on the Democratic ticket. Phili;. Hugo, of New-Haven, did not contribute a penny. Kent Hubbard. the next wealthiest mnn to Mr. Gary on the Democratic ticket, contributed only $250. and he made the best run of any one on the ticket. HELP ASKED FOR 1 STARVING FAMILY. The undersigned appeal to the public to help a consumptive Syrian, hia wife and three children, opera In Milan under th» direction of Bignor Gal- lier, and in ISSS he made his debut at the Stadt Theater at Freiburg. His success resulted in his filling a starring engagement in 18S3 at the Dresden Opera House, where be appeared as Lohengrin, Manrico. Faust and Florestan. He was received with enthusiasm and permanently engaged by the Dresden management. His repertory includes the roles of Siegmund, Walther, Yen Btolzlng, Sieg- fried. Lohengrin and Tannhauser. Emil Gerhauser, another new tenor, was born at Krumbach (Bavaria), April 29. IS6S, and educated by the Benedictine Monks at Augsburg. From the Benedictines, for whom he «as in the habit of singing in the churches, he also got his grounding In music. With the permission and approval of these monks lie made his public appearance as a singer. He studied law for a time, and had virtu- ally abandoned his musical ambition when an ac- cident led him to devote himself once more to th« art. This accident was his appearance at a special performance of one of Auber's operas. The purity and beauty of his voice made such an Impression that he was Invited to sing on trial before Baron rvr.'nll. manager of the Munich court theatres. He was then twenty-two. An engagement at the Munich Opera Horse was the result. It lasted till ISM. He continued his musical studies under Eugen Gura. \u25a0 In April, 1892, he left Munich for Bayreuth. where he made a special study of the Wagner music dramas. Frau Wagner took a deep interest in the young singer, and although he seemed at the time neither physically nor musi- cally robust enough for the great tragic repertoire, encouraged him to devote himself to such roles as Tristan, Siegfried and Parsifal. When he was only twenty-nine the Grand Duke of Baden appointed him court singer, and in 1896 he was chosen to be one of the artists who took part in the German concert organized under the auspices of Ihe Emperor Wilhelm, on the occasion of the coronation fftes In Moscow. At the open- ing of the Prinz-Regententheater in Munich, Herr Gerhauser sang Tristan to the Isolde, alternately, Of Mme. Ternina and Mine. Nordlca. l?ur.<la>\ M^'mpolltrfii Opera House. £ '•"' ''\u25a0 m.. Wagner <"onrert unrtrr tlie direction of Waltrr Ttmnrnt-h. Alton ' lub H"i- I p. m.. private concert ,••" the Mi !.!•\u25a0 '«• \u25a0 > r«-n. Arion. Mon^ «'arnegie Hall. I p. m. rehearsal of "St. Paul" by the Oratorio Society, for the Ix-neflt of in* isanaiirs In the public- school?: Concert of Hi. New-York Symphony Orchestral at the Brooklyn A«a<l.my of Music, at 8:15 p. m. Tiies-la}.— Carnegie Hull. I IS p. m.. perCeraaa of Maadeiesnhn's "St. Paul" hy the Oratorio So- ciety: Me .l*lssohr. Hall. 3 p. m.. pianoforte recital l>y Mi - Mali Scha-Je. Wednesday.— Carnegie Hall. *:V> a. m.. orchestral concert by Herman Hans Wetsler; Mendelssohn ii*!!!. 3 p. m.. - .'.it of original i-ompositions l>y S. Camillo Kngcl. Tnureda> Mendelssohn Hall. S:ls p. m.. concert «if the New iVtitury Quartet, of Philadelphia; Sherry's. I p. m.. performance of "flora's Holi- day," for the benefit of the scholarship fund of th« College Women's Club; Association Hall. Brooklyn. 8:15 p. m.. song and violoncello recital ny Mary Mtim-hhoff. Klsa Ruegger and Julian Walker; Ki.al'»- Hall. t'M p. m.. pianoforte re- cital by Mrs. Anna Jewell. Kriday. —Mendelssohn Hall, t'Jli p. m.. violin recital by Richard < '. Kay. Saturday.— Carnegie Hall. 8:15 p. m.. hr«t concert of Joraslr.v Koeian ; Mendelssohn Hall. 3 p. m., concert of original music by Arthur Whiting. THE ONE PLACED IN THE ASSBMBUY ROOM OF THE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE BUILDING WEIGHS 2.780 POUNDS. One of the features of the new building "f the Chamber of Commerce that has attracted much at- tention is the enormous rug upon the marble floor of th» large assembly room. Th»« rug, which was designed and furnished by W. & J. Sloane. of this city, is a hand-tufted Berlin. 59 feet 8 inches by »* feet 8 inches, and weighs 2,750 pounds. The rug is the largest and handsomest carpet woven In one pie« which has ever been brought to this country, ar.d it is so heavy that It took fifty mJn to carry it into the Chamber of Commerce Building. It was handwoven in Germany, and is considered one of the most handsome pieces of car- pet weaving ever produced. ! The size of the ruff precluded its being shipped in the hold of the steamer which brought it to this country, and It was. therefore, placed on the deck, packed in a spe- cially made sine lined case. The total weight of the package was more than three tons. \u25a0\u25a0- _ When the work of weaving this rug was in prog- ress It was necessary to strengthen the looms sev- eral times, as the heavy beams nearly broke under the weight and tension or the rug. but the main difficulty arose when the workmen had to take the rug from the loom to finish and shear it. and it was finally necessary to take a portion of the outside wall of the. building away In order to remove the rug. as the other openings proved too narrow. A noteworthy feature of this rug is its great depths of pile and beautiful even texture. usual Alfred Y. Cornell, VOCAL INSTRUCTION. Oratorio Coaching and ClauMta Sonc In:*rnr«taUoa a, epecialty. .-....: . vmm ..11 HALL. \. V. " ALBERT MILDENBERG, "£%„*„. Studio. 115 Carn«zl» Hall. Sp«ctaiiat. ALYIiTS. WIGGINS, £SZ?£JZ STUDIO 113. CARNEGIE HALL ARTHUR E. STAHI.SCHMIDT. Instruction In all branches of staging. 18 Eaa: s»th-tt. " CLARA POOLE-KING, PRIMA DONNA CONTRALTO. VOOAt. INSTRUCTION Da R»sxl«e Method). LATELY RKTIRXIt)TO NEW TORK AFTER A LENGTHY SOJOURN IN BUROPB. 3TCDIO—1 WEST CSTII ST. CARL M. ROEDER, Pianist. 1.1 lv earnest* HaXL f CLAUDE MAITLAHD GRIFFETH PIANO * HARMONY. STUDIO 133 CARNBOIE HAU. f flOi F IsIIFFT TEACHER Or SINGING. L.fll\L UUI J Room «. 30 East 23d-st. CHARLES KOXnDSKI DAVIS. Violin. Studio H* W. *»th St. Tel. 2.8 M B. River. IJOIGI.AS I.ANK. Basso Ton* Specialist. Wed. a*l Bat. l«> i: 17t!i at . gtodtoe a ant) & EMIL FISCHER, I^te r,, th* METROPOLITAN OPERA CO. A faw hour* reserved Jalty for PUPILS In VOCAL. CULTURE tM OPER-\TIC WORK. 191 HtKK \VK... S. W. CORNER T3«l ST. UnUf D IfIMMEV MlMtcal director CUff D. EMjlilC, f . Bt. Corge a Parish. Limited number el vocal pupli». Studio: Oioir room St. George' a. 20» E. MM St. EDMUND SEVERN, VIOLIN SOLOIST. "Has remarkable itbtlltv as a teacher" STUDIO. 131 WEST 3«rTH ST. E. M. BOWMAN, Vf; !>\u25a0 Hit UUIT 111 nil a oaea hour. 3-S p* m. EUGENE HEFFLEY, PIANIST AND TEACUEH. 107-MS CAKNEXJIE HAU. cnncoi oAUtn, studio. 4s>ath 4V«. Cl ICC DCIUCD Coaenlor. accompanying-. CLIOC nCImCII, Studio. 800 Camegt« Hall. GISTAV L. BECKER, co.^(.^.H^ imams r. COMPOSER .* teacher. (Semi-monthly » ! .- imiilfilii Send far v -«- notice*, etc I West l"«-)i 3: HAWLEY, C. B. VOC «l. AC111 11. New Studlu. 35 Weal 42d St GRIFFITH B. GRIFFITH, Bartton*. Vocal Culture and Art of SlinKing. SOS \V 83d St. H. L. CLEMENTS. VOCAL INSTRUCTION. 3 EAST 14TH-9T. HERBERT W. GREENE, VOCAI. nsmii tio>. *m FIFTH AVENUE. Mr. WM. RUSSEI* CASE, Pianist. Instructor at St. Mary's Bg4aeep*l School. Miss Ann* Brown's School *n<lThe Manor School. Larehment N T Studio: Clarendon Annex. 4th *»»., istb St. How to earn a SCTIOI.ARSHIP In las NEW YORK SCHOOL OF EXPRESSION, ELOCUTION. ORATORT, DRAMATIC ART. Adores* "ACTION AND UTTERANCE." 318 W. 31th St. IRA 8. AHEMSTEIH rs' SSsr l a 810 A. BUZZ! PECCIA, SS™ Art Of Singinjc- 37th St. *nd Park Aye. IOM«J 'fl'^'py Thorouffh piano instruction. JUlin J Allli lii-rman m»tlic.l. .IE. 118 th St. TNSTRUCTION In Sutslng (Stockhausen Method); Viano 1 and tlarmony; rree to talented pupils. Classes belr.* or«aalzeJ. BALER. Carnegie Hall. Studio 405. * JULIAN PhSCIL^^'jjSSvTIL^ UUL.IMII I HUU»IL Studio, 211 West 7Sth Street. JENNii SLATER. Soprano. Vacil InstructloA. Jtil-Slb OLMI El;. Studio. 132 VT, 40t>i St. VMM S. MITCH KLU PIA.VO (UIIMO^V L*«chet:tl y Methi'tl Tuesday and Frldav Afternoon's. 3tti lARNEOIE HAUL. 1 P l 7 7AR II 0 I*** placed - <lMt!8 ' i(i! - Jm I UiiHlltLVU ftepertotre. Carnegie Studio, !»51. - . J. CO\RI.I. SCHOOL * of Physical Culture and Technique of Speech 301 C^rn«.i« Hail. Class.* Monday and Thursday evenings. » ?c?S?k Terms »easonable. «-««>ck. J ARMOUR OAUOWAT, Vole* Culture sad ika> Am m _. «tn..r.« studio, ais Wsm ITtk Street Ne.-r\rl. " A\ EyORJUOiS RVG. ins contributions "in response to recent a_P?.ea^- "C M H.". $50; "J- R- and "W. G. I*. B. . J-a eachf "H: H. T.". $20: Mrs. C. F Taylor Jfß? 'J; B. J. " and "3. S. B.". $10 each; "W. F. M. . ». "Freeport. L. I.". $1- HERR HERTZ. New German conductor. EMIL OCmHAUSCR la Parsifal. GEORGE ANTHES. The new German tenor. Walther LOUISE HOMER. Whose illness will not prevent her singing. •.'opyrisht by Aimw .;->nt i PART 11. Overture. "Die HataSMemgar Wagner Duet from "The Flying Dutchman." Act 2 ... Wagner i«*T.ti. Mr«. Pray. Th» Dutchman. Herr Van Rooy. Preluda and finale. 'Tristan und Isolde" Wagner Dreams, study from "Tristan and Isolde" \u25a0 Wanr.'-r Arranged for orchestra with violin obbli|?at'-j by Sir. Bendis. feong to the Evening Btar. "Tarnhauser" Wagner Herr Van Rooy. True tone. "Die SJelstersinger" " Wagner Mr Van Hoose. Quintet. "Die Melft«T»lniter" ....Wagner Mrs. fia;.. Wit-s Havrar. M»-«^ Van Hease, Quesnel and Van Beef For his last concert. Sunday. November -C, Mr. Frohman announces the People's Choral Union of one thousand voices in addition to the Damrosch Orchestra, soloists and special features. The Oratorio Society of New York. Frank Dam- rosch. conductor, win present Mendelssohn's "St. Paul." fit Carnegie Hall. Tveaii evening, with Iks as-sistance of Mrs. Shanna Cumming, Mis*? Katharine Pclton. Kili^.m Van Heose and Antm. Van Rooy. Arthur llorhwsn who arrived Tuesday on tax Kr..npiiii2 Will . will be the solo pianist in a concert which is to be given to-morrow night at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. He will play the L,!ezt k flat concerto, under the direction at Ru- dolph Bullerjahn, who is now the conductor of the New-York Symphony Orchestra. Mm.-. Alma Webster Powell, who has Just returned from Europe, will ping; selections from DoUbCS and Mozart. /Mr. Bullerjahn will conduct Raffs .<ym- hony "In the Woods," GolGniark 1 * overture **\u25a0•• kutitala." the prelude "Lohengrin." and composi- tions by Pirani. This will hi the only samaaranca of young Hochman in this city, as immediately after the concert he will start on his western tour. PROGRAMME. Overture., "Eakuntala" fleHn US Orchestra. Couch to. T eharr mine: Ernst Koeian. T»-» Slavonic lancet r>\oiek Oreheitra. Corc»rt«tuck for pi»nr. with orchestra Weber Mian Julia Oeyar. "Ride of the Valkjrlor" Wagner Orchestra. prrnade MeJanrholUjue .. I . Tschaikowskv Valae scherxa { iscnaiKowsuy Koeian. Dieam pantomime, from "Hansel and <<retel".Huniperdfnck Orchestra. t»anc« d»a Sorcieret .. I'aganini Km Isa Accompanist. Franc Spindler. At '"arnegie Hall Saturday evrafcur will m > ;r the first appearance in America of Kocian. the young Bohemian violin virtuoso, in eonji with Miss Julij Geyer, pianint. a id \ 'alter r>am- rosch'e orchestra. At Mendelssohn Hall Saturday evening at 3 o'clock Arthur Whiting, with the assistant •\u25a0< Miss Marguerite benton. Miss Marguerite Hall, John Young and Francis Rogers, win he heard in a vocal and pianoforte recital. Compositions at Arthur Whiting will be performed as follows: J>u»t(. tsssSSßßts and barytone) "Fair and Fair George I'*>»|« "Oh. Therc'a a Heart for Every One". .<*'harle> Swain L:<\f life's End" Edmund Spenser conga <aopranpt ••TVnwi I am IVad. My Dearent" '1 "The Sunn** Wakes the L«rk" .. .hrn'in-i R.isse'tl "A Birthday" ... J Barrack room ballad* <barytone»— "Danny I>»*v»r" 1 "Soldier S<Md!»r- - Hu-Iyard Kipling \u25a0Tuny V«m;.-- j Duet (soprano and tenor)— "My Delight and Thy Delight" ... Robert Bridges •ult« (pianoforte, cp. >\u0084, 'L* Dan»eu«e." •oeig cycle. Fl'>r»ana- Oliver H-rfonJ On Tuesday afternoon at I o'clock Marie Schade will five a piano recital at Mendelssohn Hall. Pro- gramme: B*Jla.fl» .......... . . :; ;, Orl? _ 8552: F w rolrKir 6c*Hmu3 SJMurta A "ir -U " : V rttttc ' lt - Prestissimo roe»lbi!e. EtudV. op. I©, So. 11 j Hullfie . ' "\u25a0 i Chopin Ali»gro de Concert - .. "." '* Gulraud Die I*>r*!ey ' UgKt FantasieMu^k \u25a0; - J. P." E. Hartmann Prelude »i Kua^ie. A minor Bsch Daniel Frohman ties arranged with Walter Dam- rosch for another series of musical lectures on the Wagner operas, to take place afternoons at Daly Theatre, as follows: January I, -Tristan und Isolde'; January 13, "Parsifal"; January 13 \u25a0\u25a0Rhelngold"; January 20. 'Die WalkUre"; January 22. "Siegfried. ' and January 25. "Gotterdamme- rung " Daniel Frohman announces that the first recital tha« \u25a0aajajnw by Osstp Gabrtlowltseh. the Russian psaxdet. win be given Thursday aft«rnoon. Decent- her 4. at Daly's Theatre. At M— janssshn HaU Thursday evening. Novem- ber fJ. the Ke«' Century Vocal Quartet— made up of the following: Miss Elsie North, first soprano; Mrs. <Jeeraje Gebble, aerond soprsno; Miss Elisabeth Pane*, flrrt alto; Mies Agn*« B. Retfsnyder, sec- ond alto, and W. Lane Hoffner, accompanist, will give a concert. NEW OPERA SINGERS. Georg Anthes. the new tenor engaged by Maurice Grau, inherits his musical gifts from his father, Christian Anthes. He was born in Homkurg. and from his childhood showed remarkable musical aptitude. At first he studied his art with a view to becoming a violinist. The Impression, made by his pure boyish mezzo-soprano, however, on many occasions when he sang In churches and at < on- certs, led him to change hi?! career. .When he was seventeen he began his vocal studies st Frankfort- on-Msin. under Professor Stockhausen For sev- eral years he sang at concerts in Germany, but his dramatic feeling soon compelled him to aban- •-• the concert nan for the tit** He studied At a praise service in the Lafayette Avenue Pres- byterian Church. Brooklyn, this evening. Dudley Buck? parred cantata "The Triumph of David" will be sung, under the direction of John Hyatt Brewer, organist of the church. \u25a0•UebesfruhllneV Ouverture (aev) Geoff Schumann Orrh*»t»r "Hoch empor" (*um er»ten Male) Fran* Curt Manner* nor a capella. Concert fur violoncello Da 8-waert F.auleln Klsa Rueirger. Arie aus der Oper "Die Zauberfldte" W. A. Mozart Frauletn Mary Mtlnchhoff. BaJlet Suite <zuvn er*t«n Male* Rameau-Moltl Orrhemer. "Glockenthurm»r» Wchtsileln" Relnthaler-Schausell M»n^n>r^^or a capella und Sopran-Solo. Z»el St<icke filr violoncello Romanic Harm Huh#r IVA Will* Schubert Z*-*l Mftnner^hor* a capella— TompeJanißCheji TrinkliM" <neu» Wtlhelm Rischbieter Barvi-in-.--o!o. Herr Julius Scheueh. ••Verstohlen «»'ht der Vollmond auf (neu) ... Dr. Ign. Maachanelc r>rei Usear fUr Sopran •T>u bi*t die Run" » Franz Schubert "Auf dem Nasser ru *ing«n $ Rueslaches Volkslled Alablef Krnulein Mao 1 Miinchhoff. Das Fei t in*" l Max Meyer-OlbwalebSß Mannerchor und Orchester. Following is the programme of the first Arion concori to-night: Raoul Pugiio will give his second piano recital in Mendelssohn Hall on Wednesday afternoon, December 10. The programme will be made up largely of the compositions of Chopin. Frederic Umond will give his second recital in Mendelssohn Hall on Tuesday afternoon, the "JMh. He will play a miscellaneous programme. The resignation of F. X. Arena as director of the People's Symphony Concerts, which were pre- sented at Cooper Union in the last two seasons, has necessarily caused some delay in arranging a series for this season, but plans have now been completed for a continuance of the concerts. Mr. Arens's duties In*other directions compelled him to relinquish the active personal Interest In -the enterprise, but he has consented to act as musical manager of the concerts, and will direct the last of the series. For the other concerts four promi- nent conductors of this city have promised to serve in place of Mr. Arens. These men are Wal- ter and Frank Damrosch, Hermann Hans Wetzler and Arthur Meet). The dates of the concerts are as follows: December 9. January 13, February 17. March 19 and April 21. As before, th« prices of the tickets will be so low as to place the concerts within the reach of every one. Mark H.imbourg will arri\e :n N<-w York the kttter pert Of Woicnjlm and Will make his tii-t aj);>earancf of the season la that city as soloist with the Philadelphia Orchestra. This orchestra will also on this omissnn make its debut In Hie metropolitan city under the baton of Frits B The foiiowiiiK day Mr. Hasabourg will appeal In recital in Boston, ami directly after that will ap- pear with orchestra in Philadelphia. Baltimore, Washington. <'inc!nnati. I'ittshurg, Huffalo, Chi- cago. ot< . The entire tour will comprise only forty concerts and recitals, and these will be Rlv.n only in the larger cities of the country, extending to San Fraiulsco. from which cily llamhouru sails for Australia, where another tour is already nr- ranajed for. Th*> only cities in which Hambourg will appear with orchestra as well as in re.ital are N<w-Vork. Boston. Philadelphia. Baltimore and Chicago. Symphony No. .'.. «- minor Bpeth<>\ en Concetto in O major. No. 4 Beethoven Mr. Oratp Gabrilowitwh. Trelude «nd I«olden» L,iebe»l')d Wagner Concerto for violoncello R-jlilristrt:i Mt»s Elsa Uutet <flr»t appearance). Prelude 'The MeiMerelnger of Number*" Wagner the second to ante-bellum song* and the third to songs «>f modern composers. The songs of th«* first two parts sre by unknown authors, but wrr? Landed down from generation to generation. Mrs Watkin* a Southerner by bir»h. her family !ia\- ing established itself in Ijouislana early in the seventeenth century. The first symphony con«rt in the series projected by Heimann Hans Wetzler occurs at Carnegie Hall Wednesday evening. Max Bcrnlix is* concert meister. The programme: Miss Ann* Jewell, pianist, who r-*-, h<*.r debut •***tytcr &t Mesxlelssohn Hsli. will five a concert Mm'-. 4bm Werner, the sopcsno nngei and teacher of singing, has opened h«>r studio at No. 70 West Elghty-elghth-st.. where she Is busy prepar- ing pupils for church, concert and operatic music In the near future Mine. Werner will be heard In a song recital of classical German f lartti. T Arthur Miller will give recital of popular organ classics in the Scot Ii Hrtsbyterlan Church, Ontral Park West and- Ninety sixth st . on Wednesday evening, November •_•«. assisted some prominent soioiiits. The admlssiun is Mithout Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Severn will have their "at home" musicals on Tuesday afternoons this year, in their studio, at No. 131 West Fifty-sixth-st. Douglas Lane, the basso and tone specialist, who has a large class in voice >-uiture. is also lioi.kiuK a largo list of concert engagements, lie s.iiiy recently before the Teachers' Institutes of Scranton and Wilkesbarre, Perm. Mr. Lane may be se?n at Ms studio, No. 11l East Bevsnteenth- st., on Wednesdays and Saturdays. William C Carl will give the second fc*v organ concert of the autumnal scries next Tuesday e\ening. November IS, in the First Prosbyterian Church, at Fifth-aye. and Twolfth-st.. assisted by Mies Kathrin Hilke, solo soprano of St Patrick's Cathedral. Professor John Joseph has v en for twenty-four years established In thi.- cltj ai plano > instructor, an Ilih.~ hia studio at No. •". Kast On<»-hiindrod- and-nlnete»»nth-st . where he '-ontinues to tea''h. He. claims to us»- the be?t <";pnnan method. Fannie Hirsih. dramatic soprano, has resumfl her informal musicals, which will \n> held :tt hr Studio, No 71 Kast K.ighty-se v. nlh-st.. on the first Tuesday of each month. Ira B. Arensteln, the composer, who teaches piano and song Interpretation, will x\\>- *\x re- citals ini«i season «t tiie Qainsborough, No. 2 West One-httndred-and-twentteth-st., where h* lives. Pour will l»- iui|ilis" concerts, and two will mainly consist r.f Mr. Armstein's compositioni On November 13 w. R. Hedden played tli" organ at st Mark's Church, Philadelphia, for the Ameri- can Guild of Organists, Pennsylvania Chapter. His studio is at No. :'•'. K.K.t Thirty-nfth-st The seventh anniversary of the Temple ihoir was celebrated last Monday evening by a musical given by the choir and orchestra. The officers for the coming year wore installed, and bronze m.-duls were presented to all founders of the choir who are still active. The medals have on the obverse side a sittinir Rytire of St. Cecilia, and on th.- reverse th.i words, "Founded, 1895." and the name of the recipient, Mr Bowman, whose studio Is at st.-in- way Hull, is said to have ir. the Temple Choir at the Baptist Temple. Brooklyn, the largest cti.-.ir in th<- world. The choir ami orchestra consists ol over two hundr.'d members. A piano recital will he given by Miss Pearl Ethel wyne Cottle, Interpretation teacher of the Price-Cottie Conservatory of Music, at the Young Men's Christian Association Hall, No. 5 U'ett One- hundred-and-twenty-flfth-st.. on Tuesday evening November 18. si i mo VOTES BVPERYIHOM, SOT PRE&IUEXT. in a recenl artli \u25a0 In thia paper E. Ballej invitation. \u0084 ;\, the ciaima ol Pal I-. I . to be an Ideal upot for a New-York b man to make nia h< m< In. By an error, made b) a reporter, the word* "Village President" were written after Mr signature. Mr Ballej in fact, ia Supervisor, not President, and Mr Bailey ilid not in an) way Intimate that he was President who are now threatened with death from disease, hunger and exposure Two hundred dollars la re- quired to repatriate them. In their own climate their health may be restored. There is no chari- table organization to which they can appeal H. nee this earnest request for help i*made to the general public. Richard Got t hell. Columbia University, New-York; If.Perelra Mendea Minister, Spanish- Portuguese Synagoge. Contributions may be sent to Dr. H. P. Mende?, No. 'XX West End-are., this city. \u25a0 THE XEW HOTEL SOMERSET. Frank Meehan, who ope tied "nd managed the Garden City Hotel for the A. T. Stewart estate, prior to its destruction by Br« a few year* tgo, and who since then bai been connected with the Park Avenue Hotel, has been made manager of the New Hotel Somerset, No. li><> West Forty-seventh- si . which opened yesterday. At an expenditure of nearly C250.(M0 the New Somerset takes Us place among the finest apartment hotels In this city. Com- plete In all modern conveniences, it lius suite* of one. two and three or more room*, with baths, fur- nished or unfurnished, for *in>rt or long terms. At<iii«- from this, Mr. Median has a number ofrooma furnished for transient visitors, who frequent the city for a day. a week or longer. There Ii an at- tractive dining room in oak and gold, on tin- first floor, where service of especial excellence will be offered. Between the entrance and the dining room la a i Una room, with Raphael arabesque* In blue and Nil- green, and a dome ceiling, while foliage plants add a tow of nature. So much for th« money side of the campaign. Now thai the struggle la over, there la sun. talk as to what must be done at the coming session of the legislature-. There la no Senate contest on hand, as Senator Platt will be re-elected by the entire Republican vote of the General Assembly, not a dissenter to be found. The Important legis- lative duty, and it Is ho considered by the Repub- lican leaders, will be to redlstrlci the State, brtng- iiiK the number of Senators from twenty-four up to thlrty-Blx 01 less, as the Assembly sees tit. This has been authorized by the vote of the State on an amendment to the constitution, and, with a Repub- lican majority of over 130 In Joint session, it la sure to be worked out. The amendment permits thirty- six districts, based on population, the districts to be practically of the same population. There Is some question as to whether the people dtslre so large a number, and thirty-one has been mentioned as a possible number. This would prevent the Senate from becoming a tie, and some of the mod- erate men in the party favor that number. The present Senate, while It Is in some senses large enough, la not representative of population in any way. the cities of New-Haven. Bridgeport and Hartford, with widely varying population, having one Senator each. The new plan contemplates an equitable division, according to population, the only restriction in this line, being that no county shall be without at least one Senator. This Is in- tended to apply to Tolland County, which Is the smallest In th« State, owing to depopulation of some of Its hill towns, growing smaller In num- bers each year. The change is Important, and, al- though the Democratic party will oppose it. as it meets and overcomes their desire for a new con- stitutional convention, it is sure to be made It will put a quietus on that sort of constitutional agitation for some years, without doubt. The appointments* to lie made by the coming Governor are a tread being discussed The term of the Railroad Commissioner. O. R. Kyler, for many years chairman of the State Committee of the Republican party, expires, and there in some interest in th.- possibility •>( his retiring from the canvass for the place owing to ill health. If he concludes to remain there will be no push against him. and the general Impression is that he will. Labor Commissioner Hack desires a reappoint- •ni. and he has proved an efficient and economical administrator of the affairs of his office, not going into extravagances of statistical work, as some of his predecessors have dona. There are two other candidates for the place, W. W. Ives. of Norwich, who was chief clerk of the riffle* for four years, and was not reappolnted by the present Commissioner. Charles N. Daniels, of Wlllimantic. a member of thr> State Committee, and a man of much ability, la also out for it. and if Commis- sioner Back does not win he stands a good chance for the place. Mr. Ives, while he has had experi- ence. is a much older man. and the fact of hi* failure to he reappolnted clerk will undoubtedly operate against him. There is no movement against Michael Kenealy for Speaker of the House, and It Is probable that Dip organization of the General Assembly will be an easy matter, and leave no uncomfortable feeling* behind it. Politics aside, there has been great interest in the Molineux trial In this city. Mollneux's mother was an East Hartford woman, and the family Is well known here, General Molineux having many personal friend The Cornishes and th* Rosen family. Mrs. Adams, the murdered woman, and some of the other minor characters in the case were Hartford people. Rogers, who died in Buf- falo last week, having married after his divorce from Mrs. Rogers, was one of the heel known in- surance men in the city, and for some years had been engaged in looking out for Hartford under- writers' Interests In Western New-York. He had been much disturbed over the trial, and had a con- tinued dread lest he might be brought In as de- fendant in the case, Cornish some years ago con- I ducted an athletic meet for some sporting club in town, and at that time had a certain sort of popu- larity. His father and mother are well thought of. and Mrs. Adams also had many friends here. APPEALS FOR CHARITY. The Charity Organisation Society asks for the Mini .if $W. to pay rent for a Hungarian woman with four young children' She can earn sufficient for other needs, gives her children Rood care and Is very Industrious. She la receiving no other aid and there Is a prospect of settling her in the coun- try within a year. «fa« sodeu acknowledaes receipt of the follow. \u25a0>. ted paid out without stint, and many of tho»« who were defeated were largely out of pocket. That the greater part Of the money was legiti- mately expended la true, as the expenses of run- ning it campaign in this State and locally are In- creasing year by year. "The Hartfori Times" ad- vances the theory that no man should be elected to the State Central Committee unless he can Kuar- antee at least $l.«««» frees In* district. This would have iriven th« Democratic State Committee 121,(00. an there la a commttteeman from each of the Sen- ale Istrlcts. It la true, however, th.A there are several of the districts In the State where a chair- man would have close figuring la raise even $500 for campaign expenses "The New-Haven I'nion." Alexander Troup'a I'uper. scouts the idea, and says it comet from a "ktndergartner in politics." and Mr. Troup knows politics fairly well, especially Ctiniif i'tli-ut !>*p|itifs. By the way. it la Mr. Truii|> who indorses the work of Chairman Campbell, of this city, as the ablest of all the Democratic chair- men, and his record showed that ,he »lid better work than any other local chairman of the Demo- crati'. 1 part) Hi< Is not much of a statesman, but as a practical politician, with an emphasis on the ••practical." lie is a SUCCMS. 2

Transcript of MUSICAJ, NOTES Jfß? EVERETT PIANO · AT CONNECTICUT'S CAPITAL NEW-YQBK DAILY TRIBUNE. ST'XDAY,...

Page 1: MUSICAJ, NOTES Jfß? EVERETT PIANO · AT CONNECTICUT'S CAPITAL NEW-YQBK DAILY TRIBUNE. ST'XDAY, NOVF.MBEK 1«. 1901. MUSICAJ, NOTES WEEKLY CALEM>An-"ST. rAI!. TO BE FEnronMED-KOCIANS

AT CONNECTICUT'S CAPITAL

NEW-YQBK DAILY TRIBUNE. ST'XDAY, NOVF.MBEK 1«. 1901.

MUSIC AJ, NOTES<

WEEKLY CALEM>An-"ST. rAI!. TO BE

FEnronMED-KOCIANS DEBUT

BAH im:<m.i:a.mmks.

THE

EVERETTPIANOTHE ONE PMHO OF PHE-BMINIM^TONS AND IMDtrtiVAUT™I

The piano that is individual and *.original to a high degree. Rarefine and fullof valuable distinction-a piano of notable charm andItonal ability; richer inconstruction Iand much more sympathetic inex-pression than any piano produced.

Warirooms, 141-143 Fifth Avenus, H. t\Near Southeast cor. of 2Jst Street.

iP—ttsrt.

Adelaide C, OkellCertificated pupil of Teresa Carrtfio.

* 'PIANIST ANT' TEACHER. =\u25a0»-,. for Or-nT.-

-\u25a0:\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 57 West Kl*rnty-foarth Street.. V*y

EMILIO AGRAMONTE2m Fifth Avenu*.

Katherine Ruth Hevman.A MsbHsbl aiimher of pupils accepted at a*-*—- «/Y

or 38 lrvin«r Place,"

tul~LAROY WOOD,

VOCAI. INSTRPCTiaM;'

'.*' ,Church and Ballad IMisataaj a Spesialrr

STUDIO. IS4I BROADWAT.

LEO KOFLERAUTHOR OF* "THE ART Of BREATllriri<*1Vocal lns« rue tern N. T. Studio. 28 E. at St. Tv x I\u25a0

How Studio. 2"9 Carlton Aye.. BraoU>.i.* T""

LILLIE MACKIN KS"SS?F"CerttScat«<t pupil of VannucctaS.

LENA- DORIA DEVINE. fVOCAL. INSTRUCTION. 138 STH-AV»(

LACEY BAKER..ORGAN" LESSONS. lliEaa; IStlst •

Louis -Arthur RusWil,Vacel r.i?truetlon. CaraasH) Hal

MME. LUISA CAPPIANA.PRIM* DOSSA. -,--*> Itania Op»T^. M•rurr.».l from Europe »nd --i:-f1 \<if \l. l\«TRi..TIOSI at THE COSrORO. 23« W. 53tS St. --, 3'\u25a0»»?.

Mme. Louise Halcombe,ARTrSTE. PUPIt. OF SIGKOB-V BE RUOA. 33R7XXVOCAL. 3TL"PU- iW ED ST cat dorr w«»t 0/ V.a JL.XK

Mme. Marya BlazejewiciFupil ci Mosilco-wski aad Sehsrw^aiii.

Comp^»*r-oiaal»t and teicher. Res. stodlo. 13*TT. 94;iECAlso N. T. Conservatory of M««lc. INW. T»t!j St.

MME. EUGENIE PAPPENHEIM,THE rcirßß»rF.n prim* DO.NXA.

'kteaaeves TOcal »tu«o to 101 W. TSth-st. car. Co .->i».sass,

MME. TORPADIE BJORXSTEMVOCAI* IjfsjfSjl'CTlOJf.

'»--!•»\u25a0• Hall. Boom W9.

MRS. L. P. MORRILL,.actmrnnc VOICE CULTURE.

'Th« Ch*l*-«. 222 West 23d St.

MISS MARGARET goetz.'_

Masso Ctmtralt% \ IIfflnrfSonsr-H^citalii. Concerts. f fStudio. Camesjis Hall. [

liur iuui wrsyro Voic» lur«. Artlstiom*RllnC. Anna Tfcnncn mg. Or»ratlc and Crvcr« ISBusic. Specialty: Classical Storms. Studio. TO Wast SSt-V* I

AX KMTEI. TBEVMANN.—Vote* ill lInSBSJIPupils trained tor church, eeseert & spars. Viearnest Hall.

MME. HEI.EX VOX DOEXHOPF. Caatreita 2Marie." at K. Mth St. Appointment by latter ask*

MR. EDWIN UXTCHART. 121 E. SH-«t.- Vole-,ais»4i>X properly; breath control; rich, round, resonant toss*.

MDIXm AL3INA BARDI. Vocal Musis and *IsjH>IBs)atmetlan. 138 Bast IStb Street, aear Fourth At*|——

c

MIMSI. Krß-'FNER. Teacher of Ztthor. Banjo. Mas-iVJL aelln and FUsjo; thorouah method. 23> last Oi-<

MISS PAXXIE HIHSCH. DRAMATICSOPHOO,Baatdenoe- Studio. "The Niagara." nBast sTta St

NIEDZIELSKII viounsotocs.-l*lE*MJ£jM.E*iXs&r*.M.| studio «S S-J» Aivrupll.t attended paraonajtr. Circulars mailed.

PRICE-COTTLE CINSERVATOW."".105 ;-H AYE.. COR. 129TH ST.. N. T.

DAILY CLASSPupils at'eaeicaj thai class r*,-»iv» an hoar an. » \u25a0« 1

\u25a0aualcal ln»tn»etlo« ZVC&Y ©AT.Call or write far circuitr. .

S.C.BENNETT.> -XTAL INSTRUCTION.[ S3* CARNBGIS KALI..

8, Ge PRATT. w*itEnd Privat* s-.ij.ie! <ll« WKfiII TUnr, pUymj. r;r!:j ecs-

« U« \u25a0 linIIf carta. reauli. ITS V. 3a y.

"signorca'rpi. V*enl TnatractlomOlUniUn LAnrl. < Italian Method51i Par. V near «3d St. iFoor Ln«U(MI

SAMUEL P. WARREN. :^~iaas Batnoay. etc 3tu«o It*West 4Oi* St

STEI.I.A PRINCE'

Vop.il lßßiro<-ll««.OTA/^tf pa Studio. 3 West tasft*>STOCK X, Cor. Central Ps»> x-OllTCD!V(l>m Culture and «^a<-h»na;. Waas.

OALICll lOrmn. lUrmony. SZT Anrnnriaa Ai«>

STl!l>IO. ICor. Wta St.

the "LESCHETIZKY'.ToMMME. DE WIENZKOWSKA. nsr [

lanniaaa to raeariwakt, L*»ch*:i»k-. Han» Rleater- \u25a0

CAK.MSGIVi 11 *1,1.. Addteas I*7 W. S^rt St.

The Sew York I»ntltut* for Violin rl»'""»«Pinno nnrl Vocal (altart.Sao K.IST nil) »^H^^l

Equal to any of the foremost aaseefel of Its Use \u25a0\u25a0

Europe.— tllualeal Courier.*h

_F.& 11. CARRI. Dlreftot».

TH»oooK BJORKSTEN jsiiifaur languages. St. Marc Bulidins. iW. 3»h-* __

TOWNSLND H. FELLOWS.Vocal Instruction and Manager -Taajsaj slnser» '\u25a025?cofreet singing; trained *nd mani»««-1 •»» successra. career* Studio. 533 Cam»gl» Hul!. Apply Room \u25a0

mHB FRANK LEA SHORT ASIATICSCHOOL. Cg-L -»*te Hall. New York Classes twins organised. \u25a0""

tor circular.• _

;T.ARTHUK^ILLERTUB VOICS PfWDfCTiON SiM.K KKFrjCTOia*

STIOIO. OIK:ImH>E«ill-: IIVI.I.\'lOt.l\ t.\STKl'CTlOX.—H^rwt^n >-m End» «|jj

receive violin pupils at Clavier Hall."

"\u25a0 "ViWiMondays and Triuri<4avs. at R#»i>Vn • StodVn U3 »- \u25a0\u25a0„St.. Tje»d»vs an.l Fr!.;j>s. SB W. 151*1 >: *«in**Ui'ana Saturday*. \Vr!t<« for circular and afppinti"*n. .~

WILLIAM C. CARLGives instruction in tho art of orasn playlris M the *\u25a0

man! Orijan SchoolSend fw Cataknrue. 34 West IJ-h atraw^

W. H. PURDY. »VU**nm-B&U±VOICE CIiLTIiRK

*R«»laeac»-Stadli». >W C. lav» tet

n 1 11- rVr>r- a. 1 »fa« »'\u25a0 c »T*r«*R. H DDEN f «•:.: O. \omt CtaeUiii

Orsan. rtano. Hirtnw- I*'**nn*tnQ Cr^w_WIRTZ PIANO SCHOOL^^i^l^MMR » \\A voice culture. «H««* fc\°in3iSi•*•WERNER r^iT^gg^^^ZELLMANCONSERVATORY of Hi£•w. uftb it.. »~* u~ *«•- *r* iet

**•

The programme for Mr. Frohtnan's third con-<»m at the Metropolitan Opera House, this Sundayevening, will be as follows:

PART !Overture. "Fra iJlavolo" Aul>er

Orchestra.Concerto, E flat major, for piano an.l orchestra . Liszt

Miss Carrie Hirechman.Aria, from "sails en MsillSia" Verdi

Herr Van Rooytilavonie danree . Dvorak

Orchestra.

quartet in C sharp minor, op. 17 SgambaUAdagio. Vivace ir.a non troppo. Prestissimo. Andante

*o«tenuto. AllegTO.Trio for piano, violin and violoncello, in D minor.. •• .A. »\r^nsiis

Allegro moderato. Srherzo (allegro moltot. i:ifgitt(«daa;ioi Finale (allegro non troppo)

Quartet In C minor, op. is BeethovenAllegro ma non tanto. Scherio tandant* scherzoso quasi

allegTettoj. M«nu«<to <allegretto>. Allegro.

Miss Martina Johnstone. the Swedish violinist, re-turned to this city from Europe on the Deutsch-land on Friday. Miss Johnstone spent the summerat the country home of her mother, near Gothen-burg. Sweden, and at one of the Swedish bathing

resorts. The fall she passed InDenmark and Ger-many, appearing in concerts there.

Mrs. Hollingsworth Watkins. who will give a re-cital hi Mendelssohn Hall on Tuesday evening.December J. entitled "Three Centuries of AmericanBallads." sings her programme in three parts.The first is devoted to the songs of Colonial days.

The lirsi Kneisel Quartet concer' at MendelssohnHaU M Tuesday evening. November 2*. will in-

clude selections by Ossip Gabrilowitseh as assisting

artist. The programme:

The following compositions by S. Camillo Engelwillbe interpreted by Mrs. Lillian Pray, soprano;Emili<. de Gogorra. barytone; Leopold Llchtenberg.

violinist,and Paolo Galileo, pianist, at MendelssohnMall on Wednesday afternoon:

Ballade. Novellette.Paolo Gallico.

Ljrisches Intermezro—"Irh hah' im Traum icewelnet.""Allnarhtllch im Traume."•'K» fallt eln Stem h«runt«T

"

•!m wundernehCnen Monat Mai"Und wus»t»n'n die Bl>im«n die Klemen.

Mrs. Lillian Pray.Romarta poor violin ex piano.

ly»opold M.-ht«n»>ers; aad Paolo OeiUmEnglish \u25a0 •"•nits

—"I'rayer to the Honeyed Moon."The Tear.

' '\u25a0Oh, My Iv>ve

• Like a Re«i, Red Bci>.••riarib*"!."•Th" Dewdrops Fall."

Kmilio de Gosorza.Spring. Values Nobles.

Paolo Gallico.

at Knabe Mall. No 154 Fifth-aye , on November I*.Miss Jewell mill be assisted by Robert Hosea, bary-tone.

Chairman Gates of the Republican State Com-

mittee swears to contributions of $2:».t>40. from fifty-.it;iit candidates and other persons, while Chair-

man Walsh of the Democratic committee only had

thirteen contributions, all told, showing that theRepublican money came in smaller sums. The

amount expended by local candidates of both par-

ties was large, comparatively, and those who were

AMOUNTS OF MONEY CONTRIBUTED FOU

ELECTION EXPENSES WHAT THE

LEGISLATURE WILL I>o GOV-

ERNOR'B APPOINTMENTS.

Hartford, conn. Soy. l". (Special).—The use efmoney in.lections has been th^ theme of discussionin the State Ihis week as the final day for tiling

statements of candidates' expenses approached.

On Tnuredaj the entire li:t oCState candidates had

made their sworn statement*, ar.d there was not alittle curiosity as to the anrniiit expended. It ap-

pears from the statement Of Melhert B. Car; . the

Democratic nominee for Governor, that he expended$i3.*f.*i31. of which Q&MO went to the State com-mittee, and if the town chairmen tell the truth itwas distributed too late Li do any good. The ex-pensea of Abiram Chamberlain, the G.>vernor-elect.

were much less, being only $1,197 90. It has been

the habit ol the Republican i.arty for many years

to name men of moderate fortune for the public

officers of the State, while the Democrats havepursued the policy of nominating men of wealth, forthe head of the State ticket at least. This policyhas borne no fruit, but it has put an Immenseamount of money in th«- hands of small politicians,and much of It never went a:iy further. The chair-man of the Democratic State Committee. John J.Walsh, swears that the total receipts of the com-mittee from all sources were $15,366. so it will beseen that Mr. Gary did the greater part c.f the"bleeding." In fact, one of the candidates on the

Democratic ticket. Phili;. Hugo, of New-Haven,

did not contribute a penny. Kent Hubbard. the

next wealthiest mnn to Mr. Gary on the Democraticticket, contributed only $250. and he made the best

run of any one on the ticket.

HELP ASKED FOR 1 STARVING FAMILY.The undersigned appeal to the public to help a

consumptive Syrian, hia wife and three children,

opera In Milan under th» direction of Bignor Gal-lier, and in ISSS he made his debut at the StadtTheater at Freiburg. His success resulted in hisfillinga starring engagement in 18S3 at the DresdenOpera House, where be appeared as Lohengrin,Manrico. Faust and Florestan. He was receivedwith enthusiasm and permanently engaged by theDresden management. His repertory includes theroles of Siegmund, Walther, Yen Btolzlng, Sieg-fried. Lohengrin and Tannhauser.

Emil Gerhauser, another new tenor, was born atKrumbach (Bavaria), April29. IS6S, and educated bythe Benedictine Monks at Augsburg. From theBenedictines, for whom he «as in the habit ofsinging in the churches, he also got his groundingIn music. With the permission and approval ofthese monks lie made his public appearance as asinger. He studied law for a time, and had virtu-ally abandoned his musical ambition when an ac-cident led him to devote himself once more to th«art. This accident was his appearance at a specialperformance of one of Auber's operas. The purityand beauty of his voice made such an Impressionthat he was Invited to sing on trial before Baronrvr.'nll. manager of the Munich court theatres.He was then twenty-two. An engagement at theMunich Opera Horse was the result. It lastedtill ISM. He continued his musical studies underEugen Gura. \u25a0 In April, 1892, he left Munich forBayreuth. where he made a special study of theWagner music dramas. Frau Wagner took a deepinterest in the young singer, and although heseemed at the time neither physically nor musi-cally robust enough for the great tragic repertoire,encouraged him to devote himself to such roles asTristan, Siegfried and Parsifal.

When he was only twenty-nine the Grand Dukeof Baden appointed him court singer, and in 1896he was chosen to be one of the artists who tookpart in the German concert organized under theauspices of Ihe Emperor Wilhelm, on the occasionof the coronation fftes In Moscow. At the open-

ing of the Prinz-Regententheater in Munich, HerrGerhauser sang Tristan to the Isolde, alternately,Of Mme. Ternina and Mine. Nordlca.

l?ur.<la>\—

M^'mpolltrfii Opera House. £ '•"' ''\u25a0 m..Wagner <"onrert unrtrr tlie direction of WaltrrTtmnrnt-h. Alton ' lub H"i- Ip. m.. privateconcert ,••" the Mi !.!•\u25a0 '«• \u25a0 > r«-n. Arion.

Mon^—

«'arnegie Hall. Ip. m. rehearsal of "St.Paul" by the Oratorio Society, for the Ix-neflt ofin*isanaiirs In the public- school?: Concert ofHi. New-York Symphony Orchestral at theBrooklyn A«a<l.my of Music, at 8:15 p. m.

Tiies-la}.—Carnegie Hull.IIS p. m.. perCeraaa ofMaadeiesnhn's "St. Paul" hy the Oratorio So-ciety: Me .l*lssohr. Hall. 3 p. m.. pianoforterecital l>y Mi

-Mali Scha-Je.

Wednesday.— Carnegie Hall. *:V> a. m.. orchestralconcert by Herman Hans Wetsler; Mendelssohnii*!!!. 3 p. m..

-.'.it of original i-ompositions

l>y S. Camillo Kngcl.

Tnureda> Mendelssohn Hall. S:ls p. m.. concert«if the New iVtitury Quartet, of Philadelphia;Sherry's. Ip. m.. performance of "flora's Holi-day," for the benefit of the scholarship fund ofth« College Women's Club; Association Hall.Brooklyn. 8:15 p. m.. song and violoncello recitalny Mary Mtim-hhoff. Klsa Ruegger and JulianWalker; Ki.al'»- Hall. t'M p. m.. pianoforte re-cital by Mrs. Anna Jewell.

Kriday. —Mendelssohn Hall, t'Jli p. m.. violin recitalby Richard < '. Kay.

Saturday.— Carnegie Hall. 8:15 p. m.. hr«t concertof Joraslr.v Koeian ;Mendelssohn Hall. 3 p. m.,concert of original music by Arthur Whiting.

THE ONE PLACED IN THE ASSBMBUY ROOM OF THE

CHAMBER OF COMMERCE BUILDING

WEIGHS 2.780 POUNDS.

One of the features of the new building "f the

Chamber of Commerce that has attracted much at-

tention is the enormous rug upon the marble floor

of th» large assembly room. Th»« rug, which was

designed and furnished by W. & J. Sloane. of thiscity, is a hand-tufted Berlin. 59 feet 8 inches by »*

feet 8 inches, and weighs 2,750 pounds.

The rug is the largest and handsomest carpet

woven Inone pie« which has ever been brought tothis country, ar.d it is so heavy that It took fifty

mJn to carry it into the Chamber of CommerceBuilding. It was handwoven in Germany, and is

considered one of the most handsome pieces ofcar-pet weaving ever produced. !The size of the ruffprecluded its being shipped in the hold of thesteamer which brought it to this country, and Itwas. therefore, placed on the deck, packed in a spe-cially made sine lined case. The total weight ofthe package was more than three tons. \u25a0\u25a0-

_When the work of weaving this rug was in prog-

ress It was necessary to strengthen the looms sev-eral times, as the heavy beams nearly broke underthe weight and tension or the rug. but the maindifficulty arose when the workmen had to take therug from the loom to finish and shear it. and it wasfinally necessary to take a portion of the outsidewall of the. building away Inorder to remove therug. as the other openings proved too narrow. Anoteworthy feature of this rug is its great depthsof pile and beautiful even texture.

usual

Alfred Y. Cornell,VOCAL INSTRUCTION.

Oratorio Coaching and ClauMta Sonc In:*rnr«taUoa a,epecialty. .-....: . vmm ..11 HALL.\. V."

ALBERT MILDENBERG, "£%„*„.Studio. 115 Carn«zl» Hall. Sp«ctaiiat.

ALYIiTS. WIGGINS, £SZ?£JZSTUDIO 113. CARNEGIE HALL

ARTHUR E. STAHI.SCHMIDT.Instruction In all branches of staging.

18 Eaa: s»th-tt."

CLARA POOLE-KING,PRIMA DONNA CONTRALTO.

VOOAt. INSTRUCTIONDa R»sxl«e Method).

LATELY RKTIRXIt)TO NEW TORKAFTER A LENGTHY SOJOURN IN BUROPB.

3TCDIO—1 WEST CSTII ST.

CARL M. ROEDER,Pianist. 1.1lv earnest* HaXL f

CLAUDE MAITLAHD GRIFFETHPIANO * HARMONY. STUDIO 133 CARNBOIE HAU.

fflOi F IsIIFFT TEACHER Or SINGING.L.fll\LL» UUIJ l« Room «. 30 East 23d-st.

CHARLES KOXnDSKI DAVIS. Violin.Studio H*W. *»th St. Tel. 2.8 MB. River.

IJOIGI.AS I.ANK. Basso Ton* Specialist. Wed. a*lBat. l«> i: 17t!i at. gtodtoe a ant) &

EMIL FISCHER,I^te r,, th*METROPOLITAN OPERA CO.A faw hour* reserved Jalty for PUPILS In

VOCAL. CULTURE tM OPER-\TIC WORK.191 HtKK \VK... S. W. CORNER T3«l ST.

UnUf D IfIMMEV MlMtcal director

CUff • D. EMjlilC,f. Bt. Corge a Parish.• Limited number el vocal pupli».Studio: Oioir room St. George' a. 20» E. MMSt.

EDMUND SEVERN,VIOLIN SOLOIST.

"Has remarkable itbtlltv as a teacher"STUDIO. 131 WEST 3«rTH ST.

E. M. BOWMAN, Vf;!>\u25a0 Hit UUIT 111nila oaea hour. 3-S p* m.

EUGENE HEFFLEY,PIANIST AND TEACUEH. 107-MS CAKNEXJIE HAU.

cnncoi oAUtn, studio. 4s>ath 4V«.

Cl ICC DCIUCD Coaenlor. accompanying-.CLIOC nCImCII, Studio. 800 Camegt« Hall.

GISTAV L. BECKER,co.^(.^.H^ imams r. COMPOSER .* teacher.

(Semi-monthly » ! .- imiilfiliiSend far v -«- notice*, etc IWest l"«-)i 3:

HAWLEY,C. B.VOC «l. AC111 11.

New Studlu. 35 Weal 42d St

GRIFFITH B. GRIFFITH, Bartton*.Vocal Culture and Art of SlinKing. SOS \V 83d St.

H.L.CLEMENTS.VOCAL INSTRUCTION. 3 EAST 14TH-9T.

HERBERT W. GREENE,VOCAI.nsmii tio>.

*m FIFTH AVENUE.

Mr. WM. RUSSEI* CASE, Pianist.Instructor at St. Mary's Bg4aeep*l School. Miss Ann*

Brown's School *n<lThe Manor School. Larehment N TStudio: Clarendon Annex. 4th *»»., istb St.

How to earn a SCTIOI.ARSHIP In las

NEW YORK SCHOOL OF EXPRESSION,ELOCUTION. ORATORT, DRAMATIC ART.

Adores* "ACTION AND UTTERANCE." 318 W. 31th St.

IRA 8. AHEMSTEIH rs' SSsr la810 A. BUZZ! PECCIA, SS™Art Of Singinjc- 37th St. *nd Park Aye.

IOM«J 'fl'^'py Thorouffh piano instruction.JUlin J Alllilii-rman m»tlic.l. .IE. 118 th St.

TNSTRUCTION In Sutslng (Stockhausen Method); Viano1 and tlarmony; rree to talented pupils. Classes belr.*or«aalzeJ. BALER. Carnegie Hall. Studio 405.

*

JULIAN PhSCIL^^'jjSSvTIL^UUL.IMII IHUU»IL Studio, 211 West 7Sth Street.

JENNii SLATER. Soprano. Vacil InstructloA.Jtil-Slb OLMIEl;. Studio. 132 VT, 40t>i St.

VMM S. MITCHKLU PIA.VO (UIIMO^VL*«chet:tl y Methi'tl Tuesday and Frldav Afternoon's.3tti lARNEOIE HAUL.

1 Pl7 7AR II0 I***placed-

<lMt!8'i(i!-Jm IUiiHlltLVUftepertotre. Carnegie Studio, !»51.-. J. CO\RI.I. SCHOOL

*

of Physical Culture and Technique of Speech 301 C^rn«.i«Hail. Class.* Monday and Thursday evenings. » ?c?S?kTerms »easonable. «-««>ck.

J ARMOUR OAUOWAT, Vole* Culture sad ika> Am m_. «tn..r.« studio, ais Wsm ITtk Street Ne.-r\rl."

A\ EyORJUOiS RVG.

ins contributions "in response to recent a_P?.ea^-"C M H.". $50; "J- R- and "W. G. I*.B.. J-a

eachf "H:H. T.". $20: Mrs. C. F Taylor Jfß? 'J;B. J.

"and "3. S. B.". $10 each; "W. F. M..».

"Freeport. L.I.".$1-

HERR HERTZ.New German conductor.

EMIL OCmHAUSCRla Parsifal.

GEORGE ANTHES.The new German tenor. a« Walther

LOUISE HOMER.Whose illness will not prevent her singing.•

•.'opyrisht by Aimw .;->nt i

PART 11.Overture. "Die HataSMemgar WagnerDuet from "The Flying Dutchman." Act 2 ... Wagner

i«*T.ti. Mr«. Pray.Th» Dutchman. Herr Van Rooy.

Preluda and finale. 'Tristan und Isolde" WagnerDreams, study from "Tristan and Isolde" \u25a0 Wanr.'-rArranged for orchestra with violin obbli|?at'-j by Sir.

Bendis.feong to the Evening Btar. "Tarnhauser" Wagner

Herr Van Rooy.True tone. "Die SJelstersinger"

"Wagner

Mr Van Hoose.Quintet. "Die Melft«T»lniter" ....WagnerMrs. fia;.. Wit-s Havrar. M»-«^ Van Hease, Quesnel

and Van BeefFor his last concert. Sunday. November -C, Mr.

Frohman announces the People's Choral Union ofone thousand voices in addition to the DamroschOrchestra, soloists and special features.

The Oratorio Society of New York. Frank Dam-rosch. conductor, win present Mendelssohn's "St.Paul." fit Carnegie Hall. Tveaii evening, withIks as-sistance of Mrs. Shanna Cumming, Mis*?Katharine Pclton. Kili^.m Van Heose and Antm.Van Rooy.

Arthur llorhwsn who arrived Tuesday on taxKr..npiiii2 Will. will be the solo pianist in aconcert which is to be given to-morrow night atthe Brooklyn Academy of Music. He will play theL,!ezt k flat concerto, under the direction at Ru-dolph Bullerjahn, who is now the conductor of theNew-York Symphony Orchestra. Mm.-. AlmaWebster Powell, who has Just returned fromEurope, will ping; selections from DoUbCS andMozart. /Mr. Bullerjahn will conduct Raffs .<ym-hony "In the Woods," GolGniark 1* overture **\u25a0••kutitala." the prelude "Lohengrin." and composi-tions by Pirani. This will hi the only samaarancaof young Hochman in this city, as immediatelyafter the concert he will start on his western tour.

PROGRAMME.Overture., "Eakuntala" fleHn US

Orchestra.Couch to. T eharr mine: Ernst

Koeian.T»-» Slavonic lancet r>\oiek

Oreheitra.Corc»rt«tuck for pi»nr. with orchestra Weber

Mian Julia Oeyar."Ride of the Valkjrlor" Wagner

Orchestra.prrnade MeJanrholUjue ..

I . TschaikowskvValae scherxa { iscnaiKowsuy

Koeian.Dieam pantomime, from "Hansel and <<retel".Huniperdfnck

Orchestra.t»anc« d»a Sorcieret .. I'aganini

Km IsaAccompanist. Franc Spindler.

At '"arnegie Hall Saturday evrafcur will m > ;rthe first appearance in America of Kocian. theyoung Bohemian violin virtuoso, in eonjiwith Miss Julij Geyer, pianint. a id \ 'alter r>am-rosch'e orchestra.

At Mendelssohn Hall Saturday evening at 3o'clock Arthur Whiting, with the assistant •\u25a0<

Miss Marguerite benton. Miss Marguerite Hall,John Young and Francis Rogers, win he heardin a vocal and pianoforte recital. Compositionsat Arthur Whiting will be performed as follows:J>u»t(. tsssSSßßts and barytone)

—"Fair and Fair George I'*>»|«"Oh. Therc'a a Heart for Every One"..<*'harle> SwainL:<\f 1» life's End" Edmund Spenser

conga <aopranpt—

••TVnwi Iam IVad. My Dearent" '1"The Sunn** Wakes the L«rk".. .hrn'in-i R.isse'tl"A Birthday" ... JBarrack room ballad* <barytone»—"Danny I>»*v»r" 1"Soldier S<Md!»r-

-Hu-Iyard Kipling

\u25a0Tuny V«m;.-- jDuet (soprano and tenor)—

"MyDelight and Thy Delight" ... Robert Bridges•ult« (pianoforte, cp. >\u0084, 'L*Dan»eu«e."•oeig cycle. Fl'>r»ana- Oliver H-rfonJ

On Tuesday afternoon at Io'clock Marie Schadewill five a piano recital at Mendelssohn Hall. Pro-gramme:B*Jla.fl» .......... . . :; ;, Orl?

_8552: F

wrolrKir 6c*Hmu3

SJMurta A "ir--°U": V rttttc'lt- Prestissimo roe»lbi!e.

EtudV. op. I©, So. 11 j

Hullfie . '"\u25a0 iChopin

Ali»gro de Concert -. . "."'*

GulraudDie I*>r*!ey

'UgKt

FantasieMu^k \u25a0;-

J. P." E. HartmannPrelude »i Kua^ie. A minor Bsch

Daniel Frohman ties arranged with Walter Dam-rosch for another series of musical lectures onthe Wagner operas, to take place afternoons atDaly Theatre, as follows: January I, -Tristanund Isolde'; January 13, "Parsifal"; January 13\u25a0\u25a0Rhelngold"; January 20. 'Die WalkUre"; January22. "Siegfried.

'and January 25. "Gotterdamme-rung

"

Daniel Frohman announces that the first recitaltha« \u25a0aajajnw by Osstp Gabrtlowltseh. the Russianpsaxdet. win be given Thursday aft«rnoon. Decent-her 4. at Daly's Theatre.

At M—janssshn HaU Thursday evening. Novem-ber fJ. the Ke«' Century Vocal Quartet— made up ofthe following: Miss Elsie North, first soprano; Mrs.<Jeeraje Gebble, aerond soprsno; Miss ElisabethPane*, flrrt alto; Mies Agn*« B. Retfsnyder, sec-ond alto, and W. Lane Hoffner, accompanist,will give a concert.

NEW OPERA SINGERS.Georg Anthes. the new tenor engaged by Maurice

Grau, inherits his musical gifts from his father,

Christian Anthes. He was born in Homkurg. andfrom his childhood showed remarkable musicalaptitude. At first he studied his art with a viewto becoming a violinist. The Impression, made by

his pure boyish mezzo-soprano, however, on manyoccasions when he sang In churches and at <on-certs, led him to change hi?! career. .When he wasseventeen he began his vocal studies st Frankfort-on-Msin. under Professor Stockhausen For sev-eral years he sang at concerts in Germany, buthis dramatic feeling soon compelled him to aban-•-• the concert nan for the tit** He studied

At a praise service in the Lafayette Avenue Pres-byterian Church. Brooklyn, this evening. Dudley

Buck? parred cantata "The Triumph of David"

will be sung, under the direction of John Hyatt

Brewer, organist of the church.

\u25a0•UebesfruhllneV Ouverture (aev) Geoff SchumannOrrh*»t»r

"Hoch empor" (*umer»ten Male) Fran* CurtManner* nor a capella.

Concert fur violoncello Da 8-waertF.auleln Klsa Rueirger.

Arie aus der Oper "Die Zauberfldte" W. A. MozartFrauletn Mary Mtlnchhoff.

BaJlet Suite <zuvn er*t«n Male* Rameau-MoltlOrrhemer."Glockenthurm»r» Wchtsileln" Relnthaler-Schausell

M»n^n>r^^or a capella und Sopran-Solo.Z»el St<icke filr violoncello

—Romanic Harm Huh#rIVAWill* Schubert

Z*-*l Mftnner^hor* a capella—TompeJanißCheji TrinkliM" <neu»

Wtlhelm RischbieterBarvi-in-.--o!o. Herr Julius Scheueh.

••Verstohlen «»'ht der Vollmond auf (neu) ...Dr. Ign. Maachanelc

r>rei Usear fUr Sopran—

•T>u bi*t die Run" » Franz Schubert"Auf dem Nasser ru *ing«n $Rueslaches Volkslled Alablef

Krnulein Mao1 Miinchhoff.Das Feit in*"l • Max Meyer-OlbwalebSß

Mannerchor und Orchester.

Following is the programme of the first Arion

concori to-night:

Raoul Pugiio will give his second piano recitalin Mendelssohn Hall on Wednesday afternoon,December 10. The programme will be made uplargely of the compositions of Chopin.

Frederic Umond will give his second recital inMendelssohn Hall on Tuesday afternoon, the "JMh.He will play a miscellaneous programme.

The resignation of F. X. Arena as director ofthe People's Symphony Concerts, which were pre-sented at Cooper Union in the last two seasons,has necessarily caused some delay in arranging aseries for this season, but plans have now beencompleted for a continuance of the concerts. Mr.Arens's duties In*other directions compelled himto relinquish the active personal Interest In -theenterprise, but he has consented to act as musicalmanager of the concerts, and will direct the lastof the series. For the other concerts four promi-

nent conductors of this city have promised toserve in place of Mr. Arens. These men are Wal-

ter and Frank Damrosch, Hermann Hans Wetzlerand Arthur Meet). The dates of the concerts areas follows: December 9. January 13, February 17.March 19 and April21. As before, th« prices of thetickets will be so low as to place the concertswithin the reach of every one.

Mark H.imbourg will arri\e :n N<-w York thekttter pert Of Woicnjlm and Will make his tii-taj);>earancf of the season la that city as soloistwith the Philadelphia Orchestra. This orchestrawill also on this omissnn make its debut In Hie

metropolitan city under the baton of Frits BThe foiiowiiiK day Mr. Hasabourg will appeal Inrecital in Boston, ami directly after that will ap-

pear with orchestra in Philadelphia. Baltimore,

Washington. <'inc!nnati. I'ittshurg, Huffalo, Chi-cago. ot< . The entire tour will comprise only fortyconcerts and recitals, and these will be Rlv.n only

in the larger cities of the country, extending toSan Fraiulsco. from which cily llamhouru sailsfor Australia, where another tour is already nr-ranajed for. Th*> only cities in which Hambourgwill appear with orchestra as well as in re.ital areN<w-Vork. Boston. Philadelphia. Baltimore and

Chicago.

Symphony No. .'.. «- minor Bpeth<>\ enConcetto in O major. No. 4 Beethoven

Mr. Oratp Gabrilowitwh.Trelude «nd I«olden» L,iebe»l')d WagnerConcerto for violoncello R-jlilristrt:i

Mt»s Elsa Uutet <flr»t appearance).

Prelude 'The MeiMerelnger of Number*" Wagner

the second to ante-bellum song* and the third tosongs «>f modern composers. The songs of th«*first two parts sre by unknown authors, but wrr?

Landed down from generation to generation. MrsWatkin* 1« a Southerner by bir»h. her family !ia\-ing established itself in Ijouislana early in theseventeenth century.

The first symphony con«rt in the series projectedby Heimann Hans Wetzler occurs at CarnegieHall Wednesday evening. Max Bcrnlix is* concertmeister. The programme:

Miss Ann* Jewell, pianist, who r-*-, h<*.r debut•***tytcr &t Mesxlelssohn Hsli. will five a concert

Mm'-. 4bm Werner, the sopcsno nngei andteacher of singing, has opened h«>r studio at No. 70West Elghty-elghth-st.. where she Is busy prepar-ing pupils for church, concert and operatic musicIn the near future Mine. Werner willbe heard Ina song recital of classical German flartti.

T Arthur Miller will give r» recital of popularorgan classics in the Scot Ii Hrtsbyterlan Church,Ontral Park West and- Ninety sixth st . onWednesday evening, November •_•«. assisted someprominent soioiiits. The admlssiun is Mithout

Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Severn will have their"at home" musicals on Tuesday afternoons thisyear, in their studio, at No. 131 West Fifty-sixth-st.

Douglas Lane, the basso and tone specialist,who has a large class in voice >-uiture. is alsolioi.kiuK a largo list of concert engagements, lies.iiiy recently before the Teachers' Institutes ofScranton and Wilkesbarre, Perm. Mr. Lane maybe se?n at Ms studio, No. 11l East Bevsnteenth-st., on Wednesdays and Saturdays.

William C Carl will give the second fc*v organconcert of the autumnal scries next Tuesdaye\ening. November IS, in the First ProsbyterianChurch, at Fifth-aye. and Twolfth-st.. assisted byMies Kathrin Hilke, solo soprano of St Patrick'sCathedral.

Professor John Joseph has v en for twenty-fouryears established In thi.- cltj ai plano >instructor,anIlih.~ hia studio at No. •". Kast On<»-hiindrod-and-nlnete»»nth-st . where he '-ontinues to tea''h.He. claims to us»- the be?t <";pnnan method.

Fannie Hirsih. dramatic soprano, has resumflher informal musicals, which will \n> held :tt hrStudio, No 71 Kast K.ighty-se v. nlh-st.. on the firstTuesday of each month.

Ira B. Arensteln, the composer, who teachespiano and song Interpretation, will x\\>- *\x re-citals ini«i season «t tiie Qainsborough, No. 2 WestOne-httndred-and-twentteth-st., where h* lives.Pour will l»- iui|ilis"concerts, and two will mainlyconsist r.f Mr. Armstein's compositioni

On November 13 w. R. Hedden played tli" organat st Mark's Church, Philadelphia, for the Ameri-can Guild of Organists, Pennsylvania Chapter. Hisstudio is at No. :'•'. K.K.t Thirty-nfth-st

The seventh anniversary of the Temple ihoirwas celebrated last Monday evening by a musicalgiven by the choir and orchestra. The officers forthe coming year wore installed, and bronze m.-dulswere presented to all founders of the choir who arestill active. The medals have on the obverse sidea sittinir Rytire of St. Cecilia, and on th.- reverseth.i words, "Founded, 1895." and the name of therecipient, Mr Bowman, whose studio Is at st.-in-way Hull, is said to have ir. the Temple Choir atthe Baptist Temple. Brooklyn, the largest cti.-.irin th<- world. The choir ami orchestra consists olover two hundr.'d members.

A piano recital will he given by Miss PearlEthel wyne Cottle, Interpretation teacher of thePrice-Cottie Conservatory of Music, at the YoungMen's Christian Association Hall,No. 5 U'ett One-hundred-and-twenty-flfth-st.. on Tuesday eveningNovember 18.

si imo VOTES

BVPERYIHOM, SOT PRE&IUEXT.in a recenl artli \u25a0 In thia paper E. Ballej

invitation. \u0084 ;\, the ciaima ol PalI-.I. to be an Ideal upot for a New-York bman to make nia h< m< In. By an error, made b)a reporter, the word* "Village President" werewritten after Mr signature. Mr Ballejin fact, ia Supervisor, not President, and MrBailey ilid not in an) way Intimate that he wasPresident

who are now threatened with death from disease,hunger and exposure Two hundred dollars la re-quired to repatriate them. In their own climatetheir health may be restored. There is no chari-table organization to which they can appeal H.neethis earnest request for help i*made to the generalpublic. Richard Got thell. Columbia University,New-York; If.Perelra Mendea Minister, Spanish-Portuguese Synagoge.

Contributions may be sent to Dr. H. P. Mende?,No. 'XX West End-are., this city.

\u25a0•

THE XEW HOTEL SOMERSET.Frank Meehan, who ope tied "nd managed the

Garden City Hotel for the A. T. Stewart estate,prior to its destruction by Br« a few year* tgo,and who since then bai been connected with thePark Avenue Hotel, has been made manager of theNew Hotel Somerset, No. li><> West Forty-seventh-si . which opened yesterday. At an expenditure ofnearly C250.(M0 the New Somerset takes Us placeamong the finest apartment hotels Inthis city. Com-plete In all modern conveniences, it lius suite* ofone. two and three or more room*, with baths, fur-nished or unfurnished, for *in>rt or long terms.At<iii«- from this, Mr.Median has a number ofroomafurnished for transient visitors, who frequent thecity for a day. a week or longer. There Iian at-tractive dining room in oak and gold, on tin- firstfloor, where service of especial excellence will beoffered. Between the entrance and the dining roomla a iUna room, with Raphael arabesque* In blueand Nil- green, and a dome ceiling, while foliageplants add a tow of nature.

So much for th« money side of the campaign.Now thai the struggle la over, there la sun. talkas to what must be done at the coming session ofthe legislature-. There la no Senate contest onhand, as Senator Platt will be re-elected by theentire Republican vote of the General Assembly,not a dissenter to be found. The Important legis-lative duty, and it Is ho considered by the Repub-lican leaders, will be to redlstrlci the State, brtng-

iiiK the number of Senators from twenty-four up tothlrty-Blx 01 less, as the Assembly sees tit. Thishas been authorized by the vote of the State on anamendment to the constitution, and, with a Repub-lican majority of over 130 In Joint session, it la sureto be worked out. The amendment permits thirty-six districts, based on population, the districts tobe practically of the same population. There Issome question as to whether the people dtslre solarge a number, and thirty-one has been mentionedas a possible number. This would prevent theSenate from becoming a tie, and some of the mod-erate men in the party favor that number. Thepresent Senate, while It Is in some senses largeenough, la not representative of population in anyway. the cities of New-Haven. Bridgeport andHartford, with widely varying population, havingone Senator each. The new plan contemplates anequitable division, according to population, theonly restriction in this line, being that no countyshall be without at least one Senator. This Is in-tended to apply to Tolland County, which Is thesmallest In th« State, owing to depopulation ofsome of Its hill towns, growing smaller In num-bers each year. The change is Important, and, al-though the Democratic party will oppose it. as itmeets and overcomes their desire for a new con-stitutional convention, it is sure to be made Itwill put a quietus on that sort of constitutionalagitation for some years, without doubt.

The appointments* to lie made by the comingGovernor are atread being discussed The termof the Railroad Commissioner. O. R. Kyler, formany years chairman of the State Committee ofthe Republican party, expires, and there in someinterest in th.- possibility •>( his retiring from thecanvass for the place owing to ill health. If heconcludes to remain there will be no push againsthim. and the general Impression is that he will.Labor Commissioner Hack desires a reappoint-

•ni. and he has proved an efficient and economicaladministrator of the affairs of his office, not goinginto extravagances of statistical work, as someof his predecessors have dona. There are twoother candidates for the place, W. W. Ives. ofNorwich, who was chief clerk of the riffle* for fouryears, and was not reappolnted by the presentCommissioner. Charles N. Daniels, of Wlllimantic.a member of thr> State Committee, and a man ofmuch ability, la also out for it. and if Commis-sioner Back does not win he stands a good chancefor the place. Mr. Ives, while he has had experi-ence. is a much older man. and the fact of hi*failure to he reappolnted clerk will undoubtedlyoperate against him. There is no movement againstMichael Kenealy for Speaker of the House, and ItIs probable that Dip organization of the GeneralAssembly will be an easy matter, and leave nouncomfortable feeling* behind it.

Politics aside, there has been great interest inthe Molineux trial In this city. Mollneux's motherwas an East Hartford woman, and the family Iswell known here, General Molineux having manypersonal friend The Cornishes and th* Rosenfamily. Mrs. Adams, the murdered woman, andsome of the other minor characters in the casewere Hartford people. Rogers, who died in Buf-falo last week, having married after his divorcefrom Mrs. Rogers, was one of the heel known in-surance men in the city, and for some years hadbeen engaged in looking out for Hartford under-writers' Interests In Western New-York. He hadbeen much disturbed over the trial, and had a con-tinued dread lest he might be brought In as de-fendant in the case, Cornish some years ago con- Iducted an athletic meet for some sporting club intown, and at that time had a certain sort of popu-larity. His father and mother are well thoughtof. and Mrs. Adams also had many friends here.

APPEALS FOR CHARITY.The Charity Organisation Society asks for the

Mini .if $W. to pay rent for a Hungarian womanwith four young children' She can earn sufficientfor other needs, gives her children Rood care andIs very Industrious. She la receiving no other aidand there Is a prospect of settling her in the coun-try within a year.

«fa« sodeu acknowledaes receipt of the follow.

• \u25a0>. ted paid out without stint, and many of tho»«who were defeated were largely out of pocket.That the greater part Of the money was legiti-mately expended la true, as the expenses of run-ning it campaign in this State and locally are In-creasing year by year. "The Hartfori Times" ad-vances the theory that no man should be electedto the State Central Committee unless he can Kuar-antee at least $l.«««» frees In* district. This wouldhave iriven th« Democratic State Committee 121,(00.an there la a commttteeman from each of the Sen-ale Istrlcts. It la true, however, th.A there areseveral of the districts In the State where a chair-man would have close figuring la raise even $500for campaign expenses "The New-Haven I'nion."Alexander Troup'a I'uper. scouts the idea, and says

it comet from a "ktndergartner in politics." andMr. Troup knows politics fairly well, especiallyCtiniif i'tli-ut !>*p|itifs. By the way. it la Mr. Truii|>who indorses the work of Chairman Campbell, ofthis city, as the ablest of all the Democratic chair-men, and his record showed that ,he »lid betterwork than any other local chairman of the Demo-crati'.1 part) Hi< Is not much of a statesman, butas a practical politician, with an emphasis on the••practical." lie is a SUCCMS.

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