SUNDAY
Princcss Theatre. 8:30 p. m.. violin
reeital, by Rudolf Bowcrs:
Pr<>ltKic and Allcaro tPusnanil-Kreislcr ,
^liano and Rignudon (Francoeurl.. .Krcialer j
t ? hc*fmnl .kreisler i
[vnVc'rto I) major.Paganini-Wilhelmj I
Allwrro maestoso.
favtt at Play.fcdwin Graaaa ,
??*?,<. . Z. l'ibirh
Seique .VictorKolar
?"iW TYl*te .. ..lan. Sibelrus j
jlollf on the Shore.Pcrcy Grainger !
ffiS) Aln .Pablo dc Sarasate ;
(jity College, 4 p. m.. free orgnn re
eital. hy Samuel A. Baldwin:
?Mrada in E flat.Bach
PrrliKif '<' ":'il Ramoisclle Elue".. .Debussy
<<kfk-r.es ot the City.Nevln
??diin Idyll .MUler
slumbr Seng .? ? ? - ? Seely
I'ugiif- '" '?' rnnjor.Buxtenudc
pllgrlms' Chorus.Wagner
Elrtabeth's Prayer.WBgner
To thc Evening 8tar.Wagner
Theme and nale in A flat.Thlele
Aeolinn Jlnl), 3 p. m., second concert
by the Orcheitral Socloty, Vera Bnr
ttow, aoloiat;
Prelude, Choral and Fugue.HaclvAlhert
{iymi>h?>ity No ", in t>. Op. 7,'l.Ilrahmtr'
0vcrtur<\ "ll'i'id'' (Mn, first time).
Henry Hadley
Rondo Cappricioso for violin and orcheatra,
8aint>Sa4na
Mtrt'he Slav .T?ehaikowaky
Carnegie llall, ,1 p. m., piano reeital
by Josef Hofmann:
Sanita Appmmionata . Beethoven
Aleesta. Gluck-Saint-Saena
Cborua of the Derviahes.
Reethovcn-Salnt-Snena
Notturne in C minor, Valse in A flat
msjor, Preludn in T) flat major, Ktudc iu
G flat major, Scherzo in C sharp minor,
Chopin
Poime. Scriabine
Polkhinelle. Rachmaninoff
Rtverie du Soir.Tschaikowsky
Venezia e Napoli. .Liszt
MONDAY
Aeolian Hall, 3 p. m., reeital by
Greta Torpadie, soprano, and Samuel
Lifschey, viola:
Viola:
Sonata No. 1 C minor.York Bowen
Allegro moderato
Poco Lento e Cantabilc
Presto
Songs:
Aftenstemning .Kcrulf
Der driver en Dug over Spangebro..Sj6gren
Jubal.Sibelius
Den stilla Staden.Sibeliu3
Ingrid's Vise .Kjerulf
Viola:
Theme Vari6.; .George Hue
Songs:
La Chevelure .Debussy
r'antoches .Debussy
Effet de Neige.Poldowski
Dormez-vous .Weckerlin
Tarantelle .Dubo-3
Viola:
Plaintive Air .Rubin Goldmark
Poeme (MSS.).Waltsr Golde
Yivace, from Fairyland Pictures, op.
. l*" .R. Schumann
Bongs:
Moorish Song No. 2, "See How the
Moonlit Stream. Ornstein
n7"? i' i>".Kramer
Didn t It Rain..Burleigh
Conigli Ang.oh .Sibella
B*1,at? .Sibella
At 8:15 p. m., chambcr concert by the
Berkshire String Quartet:
Gread Fugue in B flat major, Op. 133,
nn.^ . ? ,- Beethoven
? "J, nllnof (first performance in
New York. . . Henry Eiehheim
*i?rtet in A minor, Op. 51, No. 2..Brahms
TUESDAY
Aeolian llall, 3:15 p. m., reeital by
Caroline Curtiss, soprano:
The Robin Singa in the Apple Tree. . . .
T. , , _, . Edward MncDowell
ine Lark Now Lcaves His Wat'ry Nest.
fiL ? . ?.- . ? Horatio W. Parker
Oj. Let Night Speak of Me. .G. W. Chadwick
Th**?ear'8 at the Spring.Mr*. H. H. A. Beach
Aria, "Doye Sono" (from "Le Nozze di
Fwaro"< .Mozart
if* trots Chansons.Piernp
LOweau bleu.Dalcrote
t. est1 extase Langoureuse.Debusiiy
Mandoline. Dcbustiy
-.?*.N|' ;. Uroux
Ana, Depu-3 le Jour" (from "Loutae")
,., C'harpentio,
thanson Indou?. Rimsky-Korsakow
^,1*,*, . Rachmanineir
U tanari.Tschalkowakv
A Qu^tinn.Kmil .1. Folak
J?vc and song., Rudolph Oanz
]J>1 ?f ?**?.Mary Turner Salter
A .Spring Song (MSS.).. .Louis B. Thompson
Jbe Last Hour.A. Walter Kramer
"?way.,-W'altcr Morse Rummcl
At 8:15 p. m., piano reeital by Guio
Mar Novaca:
Prelwip, Choral and Fugue.C*sar Franck
*<ftfturne: Fantaiaie, Op. 49; Two Mazur
kto: Scherzo. Op. 20.Chopin
%*\?rn'!. G. Faur*
r*]tn1\.I. Phllipp
u> Wrir d?n? Grenadc; l,ea Collinen
o Anacapri ; Mirntrela .Debussy
Carnejrie Hall, 8:15 p. m. Last con
?rt of the season by the Rusaian Sym?
phony Orchcstra:
Ov'rtur-, "Ruaalau and TyrHmila". . .Glinka
aWiphonip poem, '?Spring". Qlatunow
?^""rto No. S .Rublnstcln
r- . Mi^cha Levltzki
*J!.!"n p*?t??o? .Mouraorgnki
mu No. | .Tnchaikow?ky
WEDNESDAY
*^ity Collegt, 4 p. rn. Free organ rc
c"-al by Samuel A. Baldwin:
^?"Phoiiy .Barn?H
S!c1l?rK" .lUndfl
^???ludP an,l j. UKUC ,? g minor.Bnrh
"jr*'Jr. "OBlqwi .Ooopertn
*?*Mr,JC Kong .Bebumann
i?*m<- (varied) jn K.Faull?->)
^,*ur"? .Chopin
"Hntt* .aibeiius
Waldorf-Aatoria, 8:16 p, m. Firat
New York aong reeital by Michacl A.
Mangoa, Greek tcnor:
?*/?? ?,????.G. B. I'ergolesl (1710)
w?tre*r y?? Walk (from ?'Semele"),
f... C. V. Handel (174:i)
'?"> mio Hrn.F. Glordanl (1740.81)
?fj?* k*.}'it? '?r,,rk *ir'.8. Samara
12!* , U Cid"?.J- M*?Ken*t
U.!!" lu ,n*Un.B- F*ai.a.d
u _
* Ca
J* ?ev? <Un Grieux ("Manon").. . J. Ma?a?nct i
j* miroir .G. ?rrarl i
Tat.1"1* "' Gr''i"--..Vlnoeaao BUM
tLii r**,K>no .B. D. Sideri ;
??i A?rypn?.D. Rwiiou
aZj2? ?w? Pe?.H. Bekatorou
IlL- . MiMi .A- R Wa?htm*'?l*r ?
*rkT?-0 HE M*lW?,n.<??? Century,
?ae Harp That Onc? Through Tara'a HalU,
?*-/? ?f m ?. (I7-7WSW)
?'?oor AlWrto Birabonl at the piano.
Carn?gtt Hall. Concert by the Tollef
*? Trio ?t a meeting of the Humani
wrians:
iktttutAe.'.rcrn?nd*z.Arlx?i j
vWa<? t,LLL"'"-:..SalnUSaenn
* U,m <?' ?.Godard:
^ 'n A ii??"" T"" f.h .
u es.,.,..!,:1 ?;:;;;;;.""ch,7;znt,
8*v1**DaiJ6eT *.taur?
??Bau
**???* viv*,^, ??jjaWBoaie^^;'^lX,t
?'??a4a r ?? ,*ll*?ro ""*"" ?
kuZl f/ w?n*r, Op. 20. tt.^i.
?-fcaarta. a ii!?lrf"' *"**?' ???*??? m?
AlicRro con appassionato. allegrctto, al
logro con vivo
THURSDAY
Carnegie Hall, 8:30 p. m. Concert by
the Philharmonic Society:
Bcethovcn?Symphony No. 3, in E f)at
major, op. 55 ("Ercica")
Ippolitoff-Ivanoff. Caucasian Sketches
lone poem, "The Afternoon of a Faun,"
Prelude. "The Mastcrsingcrs.Wagner
Aeolian Hall, 3 p. m. Song recital by
Milderd Bryars:
in" o.,S?fle S*' 9MV.Scarlattl
ln Questa 1 omba Osctira.Beethoven
?fn%?,D*,n*fa *?nelulla Oentile. .Durante
Ah. AAillow. . .arranged by H. Lane Wilnon
ve Hf.cn Roaming.Horn
fca Hnss .Salnt-Saeni
y"**? .A. George,
t unetlrre de Campagne. Hahn
te'1 UJ\.Fourtlraln
I. ultimo Bacio. TWI
DhnmJ Parche.Scontrlno
Seieiint,, rrancege.Leoncavallo
Sotto tl Clel,,.,. HlhHIii
Twlllght. liZ
The Llnncl I, Tunln-t His FiutV....
Ki?fl. Oh Htar.r, cjanz
3?y.Walter Kramcr
At 8:15 p. m., ?ong recital by Bar
bara Maurel:
Lungl dnl Cnro Rene.Seceht
Hwcet Nymph. Come to Thy Lover. . .Morley
i iiviitine d'Armlde. Glueit
Come and Trip It.Handel
Iiike a reak hnow Crowncd, Springtide,
With a Water I.ily. Thy Warning Is
, Good.Grieg
Le Chevellure, Green.Debimay
Entends mon Ame Qui Pleure. Morct
Alger I Le Soir.Fourdrain
Fleur Jetee. Faure
The Day Is No More. .John Alden Carpenter
May Night..Richard Hageman
The Shepherdess.Edward Horsman
By the Waters of the Minnetonka.
_ ... _ Thurlow Lieurance
The Velvet Darkness.William Reddick
FRIDAY
Aeolian Hall, 3 p. m. Song recital by
Yvonne Gail:
C'est Mon Ami. from "Rcinc Marin
Antoinette": Chantons les Amours
de Jean (XVIII Siecle).Weckcrlin
Le Songe et 1 Air d'Iphigenie cn Tauride.
o . , -.' Gluck
Rctour de Vepres, Rosees, l'Archct,
Maman Chante Avec Nous.Busscr
Chanson d'Amour et de Souci, Sur
l'Eau, l'Ane Blanc.Hue
Nanny, Le Rouct, La Fillc aux Chcveux
de Lin .Paladilhe
D une Prison .Hahn
L'Eau Qui Court and La Poussiere
(taken from the legend, "Miarka, la
Fille a l'Ours," by Jean Richepon) .Gcorgea
Ariette. Vidal
Carnegie Hall, 8:15 p. m. Concert by
the Philharmonic Society:
Ovorture. "Fingal's Cave".Mendelssohn
Symphony in B minor. "Unfinished".Schubcrt
Symphony No. 5, in E minor, op. 64.
Tschaikowsky
At 8:15 p. m., piano recital by
Frances Nash:
Sonata (Eroica), G minor.E. MacDowell
Nocturne, Op, 62, No. 1.F. Chopin
Scherzo, Op. 39, No. 3.F. Chopin
gvocation .I. Albeniz
El Albaican .I. Albeniz
Le Soir dans les Pins.Gabriel-Dupont
Toccato . C. Saint-Saens
Brooklyn Academy oi Music, 8:15
p. m., song recital by Marcella Graft,
soprano:
0 cessate di piagarmi.Scarlatti
Ogni Sabato avreto il lume acceso,..Gordigiani
Sogni e Canti.Mazzone
Con gli angioli.Sibello
Serenato . Zandonai
M'ama non rn'ama.Mascagni
Flow Gently, Sweet Afton.Spilman
Idyl . MacDowell
My Love Is a Muletecr.Di Nogero
The Beetle .Moussorgsky
My Heart Is a Lute.R. H. Woodman
Where the Bce Sucks.Sullivan
Far Awa* . Beach
May Night .Hageman
A Million Little Diamonds.Schminke
The Eagle . Polak
A Grave in France.?.Ganz
Nipponeso Sword Song.Fostcr
Emi! Tolnk at the piano.
SATURDAY
Aeolian Hall, .'{ p. m. Piano recital by
Auioro La Croix:
Ten Waltzes from op. 39.Brahma
Impromptu, op. 9, No. 2.Schuhert
Rotulo Capriccioso .Mendelssohn
Sonata. op. 22.Schumann
Av Lac de Wallenstadt and Au Bord
dtlne Source, from "Annecs de
Pelerinage" .Liazt
Impromptu, op. 36; Three Studlos; Bal
lade, op. 23.,....Chopin
Chicago Artists Will
Give Concert Here to
Aid Ruined Churchett
Three artlsts of tho Chicago Grand
Opera will roturn to Now York to
appear in a concert at Carnegie Hall
next Sunday ovening for thc bencfit of
tho ruined or damaged churchos in
northern Italy reccntly occupied by
the Huns. They are AlcsHandro Dold,
tenor; Marguorito, Namara, noprano,
and Virgilio Lazzari, basso. The beneflt
concert in foatered by tho Salesiiin
Fathero of this city a? part of a move?
ment organized by tho Rev. Father
Pantalini, of Milan, Italy( who reccntly
arrived in America for this purpose.
Father Pantalini, a Knight of the
Crown, ia both pricst and journalist,
being 8n associate cditor of "L'ltalia"
in Milan.
The first part of thc programme at
Carnegie Hall will bc occupied with thc
projection upon a Hcreen of pictures
taken in Gorizia, Trentino, Venicc,
Padua, Carso and other devantated dis
trlcts, showing the destruction wrought
during thc war. The music will follow.
Muaic Festival in Newark
The fifth festival of tho Newark
Music Festival Association, which will
be held in the First Regimcnt Armory.
Newark, on May 10, 17 and 19, will bc
called a "Peace Jubilce." The sofo
singers who will take part are Anna
Case, Nina Morgana, Liia Kobeson, Or
villc Harrohl, Thomas Chalmers, Rein:
aid Werrenrath, Fred Patton and Kn
rico Caruso. The last named artist
will sing three aira with orehestra on
the last day of the festival, "and,"
sayn the ofticial announccment, "aa
many encores as the public may de?
mand with piano accompaniment."
This is a \try generous undertaking on
Mr. Cnruao'a part, or a very recklesa
anriouncement on tho part of tlie fes?
tival managemont. The celebration of
peace will take place on the first night.
The ?econd night will bo devoted to
light opera mu?icj?tb,e third lo Caruso.
Th# cojjductor wlli be 0, Mortimer
Wiske.
Music Notes
There is to be a concert in thc
Grand Court of Wanamaker's store in
Philadelphia next Thureday evonihg
before an invited audience, nt which
M. Courboin and thc Philadelphia Or?
ehestra will play Widor's Sixth Sym?
phony. The work is familiar enough
as an organ solo, but it is said by thc
manager of the Wanamaker musical
cntertainments that this will be the
first performance in America. The
Wanamaker organ has tho largest
number of pipes of any organ in thc
world.
Thc last concert at tho Metropolitan
Museum of Art by a Bymphony orehes?
tra, David Mannes, conductdr, will t.-.ke
place next Saturday ovening, Mareh 29.
Dobussy's only contrlbution to a
coppella music, three chansons to
poems by Charles d'Orlcans, will bc
sung by the chorus of the Schola Can
torum at their concert Wednesday
evening, April 9, at Carncgio Hall.
Theso beautiful songs have been given
hero only twico before, tho last per?
formance having been given six years
ago by the Schola Cantorum, and they
are now being revived as a tributo to
the momory of tlie composor, who died
a year ago. Morle Alcock will sing
thc cotitralto eolo in one number of
the group, the Tambotirin Song. Oth
or French works on tho programme are
three borgercttes of Pranca nnd Old
Plnudors, sung not, in the Wcckcrlln
iirrarigeiiients as commonly heard, but
in their orlglnai ohoral form,
Charles Dillinghniif lins already nr
rangod for the Sunday night appoar
ancos of Mmo. Galll-Curci and John
McCormack ut tho Hippodrome during
1919-'20. Both singors will confine
their New York rocitals to this plny
housc.
An event of unusual musical interest ;
will bc tho concert Friday ovening, !
March 28, at thc Brooklyn Acadomy of;
Music, when thc English planist, Ethcl
Leginska, and thc young Belgian 'col
list, Maurico Dumbois, will appoar in a
joint recital with the Duo-Art piano.
This instrument will reproduco tho j
playing of these artists, besido which,
the artists themsclvcs will play solo
numbers. Early in April Floroncc
Easton and Percy Grainger will be the
soloists at a Duo-Art recital in Aeolian
Hall.
"Alien Music nnd Enemy Propa
ganda" will be discussed at St. Mnrk's
In-The-Bouweric, Tenth Street west of I
Second Avenue, this afternoon at 4 :
o'clock. John Powcll will speak on ;
"The Influence of Music on National j
Life"; Mrs. Harriet Ayren Scymour j
will talk about "Thc Influence of Music |
on Body nnd Mind"; Irving Cobb will
deinonstrate Mrs. Seymour's nrgument
in song. A written Htatcmcnt by Wal?
ter Damrosch, cxprcssing his views on
thc use in America of compositions by
German composers, will bc rcad by Mr.
Guthrie who will spoak on tlie same
thomc.
Elizabeth Jones will hcrcitfter be
knowu aa Kvelyn Gwyn, a combination
of her father'a and mother'a pamea,
both of whom were Wclsh.
By Grenville Vernon
Thc Society of American Singers,
having thrown its hat into thc operatic
ring, is determincd that it shall stay
there, and under thc direction of Will?
iam Wadc Hinshaw it is preparing its
plans for tlie eomlng season. These
plans are claborate and they are in
tcrcsting and if propcrly carried oul
ought to lill a void in New i'ork's
musical life, Mr. Hinshaw himself
states that the Society of American
Singers aims to becomo a sort of
Opera Comique, an opera comiquo, ac?
cording to him, being any opera which
benefits by a small auditoriuni, "Tos
ca," "Boheine" and "Bufterfly" thus
nil being opera comique. This is novel
dofinition. Opera comique, in tho ac
ccpted dofinition of tho term, is dia
tinguished from grand opera by tho
use of spokon dlaloglio, Under Mr.
Ilinshnw'.-; rilling grand opera, opera
comiquo, opera bouffa and oporotta
aro all lutnped togothcr. In I'aci, a
majority of the oporas of tho world
becomo at, once opera comique, as tho
list of oporns which beneut by a large
uuditoritiin is comparutivoly small.
Now this is tho list, which M r, lliu
shaw purpose', to presdil, noxt hchhoii
at the I'ark Thealre: "L'Knfaiil I'ro
dlguo" of Dcbussy; the "KntfUhrung
aiiH deni Serail" of Moznrt; "Komco
ot Juliotto" of t'lounod; "liohem." iiikI
".Madaniii Hutterlly" of I'lieeini; "The
Merry Wivos of Windsor" of Nicolai;
"Signor Bruschino" of Roaainl; "Ivan
hoo" of Sullivan; "Carmosino" of Fo
vricr; "Manon" and "Lo Jonglour de
Notro Dume" of Massenot; "I.n Dnme
Blanchc" of Boieldieu; "Les Dragons
de Villars" of Mallart; "La Belle
Helenc" and "Lca Contes d'Hoffmann"
of Offonbach; "La Fillo, de Mme. An
got," "Le I'etit Duc'' and "Girofle-Giro
fla" of Locoq; "Fatinltza" nnd "Boccac
cio" of Suppe; "Dorothy" of Cellier;
"The Fencing Master" of De Koven;
"Carmen" of Bizot, a rovival of an
oporelta by Vict.or Herbort and scveral |
rovivala of Gilbert and Sullivan works,
All thcao works ure to bc sung in Eng
lish, and for many of them special j
translations are being made. Al?
ready Charlca Henry Meltzer lins made
a translation of "I.e.i Dragons de Vil?
lars" and Slgmund Spueth one of "Si?
gnor Bruschino."
This ia a projoct of real interest
und one worthy of real encourago
rrient, Scveral of tho operaa have
never' been given in America nnd a
majority of them aro unknown to tho
present generation. The fact that
very few of them aro opera comique
does npt militnto against Mr. Hin
sliaw's plan. With thc execption of
?'Carmen," "Romeo et Julicttc," "Bo
hi'ine," "llut tcrfly" and "Les Contea
d'Hoffmann," nonc of them is likely to
bo given oithcr by the Metropolitan
or Chicago companies, yet. with one or
two excoptiona all are works of a high
order of muaieal merit, li. goes with?
out aaying that if they are to be given
they must be given well?better than
most of this scason's rcvivals of thc
Gilbcrt and Sullivan opercttas.
Tho Society of American Singcrs j
opened its season bcttcr than it began j
it.iit least in an artistic sensc. Its early
performances of "Los Contes dTIoff
man" were worthy of any opera house '
in thc world; indced, its production
of the Offcnbach work was thc best
thai Now York has scen since thc day.;
of Mauricc Renaud at the Manhattan
Opera House. But the late rcvivals I
were too oftcn slipshod and lacking
in atmosphere. The public was luin
gry for Gilbert and Sullivan and was
willing to take what it could get; it
thronged tho Park Theatre and wiped
out tho scason's ctirly deficit. Yet,
with tho exceptlon of "The Mikado,"
none of tho revivala wcro well dono,
Aa for somo of tha other productlona,
AMUSEMENTS
THE FIRSI rERSIIING SQUARE MUSICALE
'l!'n,"l '*?'"i?".i,i. Weil. I'v? , April ::, ui I ;:n
1 ha ni ii ii i appi .11 iim ,,:, Hiia uoeualou urtii
?r,o
t.ii rverl bi ,-n-., ?5 ??,| ?:i; b0
(seallng alx), |,|iim \h".. W'nr 'I'ax. Mail or
dei? now rccelvt ,l nt tlin ofllce of tho innn
egomont, It. K. Johnaton, n:: Broadway.
MANHATTAN OPERA HOUSE
TO-NIGHT
AT 8:1.1
IjAST A I'l ka it A NCIJ
ANOTIII'K
.IA/./.
I'FS'I'M Al.
>!?'
LIEUT. |h
JIM ^
and his "HELL F1GHTERS BAND"
'? . ?, "Nollilno on top of tho earth In t:..
form of a musical aqijn-gatlon aulto as
iolly ai this l-rau snil r.trlno outflt." Sun
NKW I'KOIJH.tMMIv-NKW JA3SZ
METROPOLITAN OPERA
Mon. nt 8 IS, ObiTon. Ponsolla, llowanl; Martl
nelll, Altiiun,,-. It.-li.,. Uotlilor. ('??;,d.. Bodanihy,
Wcd. Mnt. i?t. J. (*| :,, jal) F.uit. Karrnr. |
! DolauiioU: Marilm>iii. notbler, Werrcnratli I
j I'niid . Monteux, I
Wod. nl '1:15. Rlflol-tlo. 11,-ii-nr ,ins. HraitHii;
Maoki It, Uc l.urii, Smrurola, llot il t'mid., Moranzoni
rhurs. ,u 8:15, Marta. Barrlentoa, IJoinor; Va
rii-ii. Dlil-.tr, MalatenU. Coud., Bodauzky.
Frl. nt 8, Carmcn. I'arrar. HuiiiIoUuh; Martlnelll.
WMtehlll, ttothlar. Cond., Montcux.
Sat. M.lt. Rt -, Bohotno. Mu/.lo. Romalno; l.azjrii
Scotll, Bogurola, Matatoita Coud . Papl
8i\t. al S (7.-.- to $8), Borls Rodunow. lUaUcnauer
Delaunola; Uldur, Altliouao. Mardonoa Cond Papl'
TO-NIGHT ? ELMAN
Concert at 8:30,
Prlcea rroni SOo m ??.:
ENTIRE ORCH1STRA.
CONO.. HAOEMAN.
Oreal ItusMaii Vlollnlat,
MARSH, ,.,??,..,??
HACKETT, ronor.
PIANO l BED
AI'OI.IAN HALL, Irl.lav Kvi
I'lAMt KRCITAT,
Mitrt-h !H
Xlokota 50 ota. to 18.00* Btalnwoy i'luuo
"Jlroottou; , Jimlju iloppcr
and notably that of "Tho Bohcmian
Girl," thc best wcrc an utter silence.
The posscssion of great stars cannot,
of course, bo demanded; the Society is
unable to pay them the salaries they
can obtain clsewhere, but there is no
reason for faulty ensembles, lack of
atmosphere and incomplete rehearsals.
It al least can hc asked that the sing?
ers know their lines and their en
trances. That these defects will be
remedied there is every reason to be
lievc. In Richard Hageman the so?
ciety has a conductor of a high order,
and in John McGhie one who knows his
Gilbert and Sullivan. It was indeed
tho orehestra whicjj ha3 been the
strong point of the present season,
and a good orehestra is a good founda
"During the
Mr. Hinshaw 1
keep Ihe bulk
so thal whatc
eoming season," said
ist week, "we hope to
.I' our company intact,
er outside stars may
appeur we will havo always to sur
AMl SEMENTS
Wolfaohn Musical Bureau announcen
CARNEGIE HALL TO-DAY at 3
Last < oncert
CARNEGIE HALL, SUN. AFT.. April 6 it 3
I \-.T HF-MTALof HKASON?IAHCIIA
8KATN NOW AT l!d\ OflTJCK,
Vrollilil llnll, TOIIOH'U NIOIIT, ?llft
XoUARTfT
TGKPABIE & UFSCHEY
? ?I'ii.iii II .11. TIIMIililKIIV AII'. ii t II
HOl'HANO (Jolnl lli .ii.iii VIOLA
\nilhin llnll. \\v<\. Afl.. Apr. 8 ?i 3.
Two I'laiiu llccltnl liy Roi* nnJ Chnrlotte
> ..!, ni Buj Diii." (Ma dii & ii.iiniin rimiii)
Aeolian llnll. TIhii*. All.. A|>r, B, iil 3
IORRIS
I" uno it ?? lul i.Ma ii A ii.H.il 11. i SaiUNow.
\i illr.n llnll, Frl. Afl.. Apr. 4, nl 8.
Boata N*i>? SiiMI lUiClTAL by ltACIII'L
E
HIPPODiiOMc NEXT SUN. NIGHT
,.M(t II 30. u! 8:15. RECITAL 1IY
1,
HKAT8 AT ll(l\ OFFICE TO-MOKKOW.
Mi-t. ChftH, l.. Wagner & D. F. McSwoenoy.
WALDOP.r -ASTO'IIA. Tiir Evtl.. Mnrc.i Z>. nt !>.
ASHANSKA
i'lt'KETS al COLUMBIA TIU,'ST CO., lilth St. and
I I'tii Ave. ; I.KAUIX'I HOTELS .m.l MiHUIDE'S.
HULDA
Aeolian Hall, Tues. All., Mtirch 25, at 3:13.
SONG
KKCITAL
GAROUNE
Wawiw ?
(I'huilnt) (CelllHt)
?min \ ? \ Hl.t ITAL
Deethoven, itiitluns, Orimtetn (new)
Tlckota nt Bitx Offlce. ,0. to .. is..V(... (12 A ItJ
Ooftoerlt, nrttcrlu . It:rlt(l>, Inttruction.
Uil:, si Nl. Iiol.n Ave. Tel. 4B2U Audubon.
round them with a capable group of
artigts. While we cannot pay high
salaries to our principals, the experi
Dnce and the metropolitan recognition
they will receive will be worth moro
than any salary we could give them.
Only the artists of the Metropolitan,
and only the first amonjr them, have
hitherto had the chance of singing first
parts in a New York season. Now we
give to young artists tlis chance.
Strange to say, however, many young
3ingers have refused to sing with us,
hoping for an entrance into the Met?
ropolitan. Few of them obtain this
and when they do obtain it they
remains for years singing minor roles
and receiving neither experience
lor popular recognition. Tho Society
of American Singers offers these young
people the career denied to them at
;he Metropolitan, and the experience
hey receive with us will enable them
to obtain chief roles at the Metro?
politan or in other flrst class com?
panies later.
"We have been most successful the
poet season. Wo opened to run five
woeks; w? have alrcudy run twenty
aix. The businesa of tho llrst week
was excellent; then camo tho Liberty
Loan and tho influenza, and our audi
enccs wero cut ln half. Wo weuthcred
thia poriod, howevor, and alncn then
full houses havo bocn tho rule. Wo
hnvo croatod a public of our own,
which diffcra from tho Metropolitan
and musical comedy publics, and thia
public is loyal and is ateadily grow
ing, Wo have only recently received
several new offers of financial sup?
port, which shows that what we have
done has been appreciated. Next sea?
son we intend to have a subscription
list, though our plan for this has not
yet been worked out."
If Mr. Hinshaw gives Offenbach and
Lecoq and Suppe and Rossini and Sul?
livan cffectively, he won't, despitc his
own belief, bc giving opera comique,
but he will bc giving something which
will be none the less worth the giv?
ing. In the house of art there are
many mansions, in the mansion of
music opera bouffo and operetta have
their ajjointed place. At court the
jester is at home no less than the king,
and philosophy may be none the less
profound because it is drcssed in mot
lcy.
Lieutenant Europe's Concert
Lieutenant James Reese Europe and
his band of jazz instrumcntalists,
singers and entertainers will give their
final concert at the Manhattan Opera
House this evening. A popular pro?
gramme has been arranged. Lieuten?
ant Noble Sisale will again sing the
stirring "In No Man's Land."
Clef Club Orchestra
"Jazz" of seventeen different species
will be featured by the Clef Club Or?
chestra in its regular Sunday night con?
cert this evening, which will bc given
at the Eltinge Theatre instead of at
the Selwyn.
Included in to-night's programme
will be "Arabian Nights," a jazz one
step; "Rip Van Winkle," a new jazz
song; "Hindustan," a jazz fox trot;
"Gallicurci Jazz," a grand opera trav
csty, and a jazz wedding march. Other
features include Will Patrick, the Ala
AMUSEMENTS
TO-NIGHT 8:30cah*5!l?'e
Major-Gen. r V Maurice
Mi-iir Him Tell
"HOW THE WAR WAS WON"
Mnjor-Gpnoral
JOHN F. O'RYAN,
Com. of the Famoua
27th IMvlBion,
will preaidc.
Seats $2.50 to BO cta.
at Uox Offlce.
Oeneral Maurlce's Amcriran Tout Is undor
tli" cjclufllvo inaiiagernpnt
LKB KKKDHK, 487 11fth Ave.
THE
NEW SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
of the MiiaitintiH' Nimv OrcKaatra Boclely
EDGAR VARESE, Conductor
CARNEGIE HALL
EVGS.--APR.L 11, 25--MAY 9
MATS. -APRIL 12, 26--MAY 10
I h on Tlcketa Ihrao ovanlnRa or tlirr?
i!-V !!,'".'""; '?"'?", ""' boxaa (alx saata),
? fifMQ: Lppar tler Ihixcm (N|x sphIhi, 14<i 5(1 ?
Purquot iwata, IfUO; Drt ... Clrole, 14 9f,!
' !'',""">' f>ont, 18,30: Baleony, 12.48; 8ln?-la
?.*c?*Vtti'? ,bPxci' *3'80' ,-';'- oihon, 82.20,
?) oo, ii.in, 88e, Thooa prlcea Inolude war
.,"?, *^n????-ri|.ti..iim ihould bn mallad to
IHE \i:\v SYMPHONY i)itciii;.s"rit.\
.,- ?. H, s MACMItuLBN, Mi.nnK.M-.
-> W. 426 st. 'Phona Murray lim 8420,
MttHi.ti & llanilln Plnnoa l'r<ed.
Carnaffle HaJI, We,i. kv<\. April Oth
SCH0LA CANT0RUM
KURT SCHINDIiBR, Conductor
Nh<ip<| Workw of Vletorla A Morulea
(Kuater Week Mualr ../ 4)ld Hpiiin)
I hree ( imnaona of t laude DebuMr
H<TKrrrttf? of old France ,V Hiindera
Mualc from a New Llttirgy of
KAC11MANINOFF
(Flrst performanc oulalde. of Kusala)
Noloiat: Merle Alrnrk, Contrnlto.
.S-iit.H j: to 60c, on Salo at iio.\ Ofllcc.
TO-NIGHT
mippudromk
Annual Teati
monlal ? SUth
Street Temple ? \f g->o
RAOUL VIDAS S0?,XFrWK!b
l-'RANK KTKDMAN.FinnUt
IIIIPOIUtOMK HTAHS ANH 4 H4IRI M
CONCKRT STARTN H:2t>. l?4)X OFFICE
OI'KNH AT NOON.
MAUREL
BARBARA
Maaon-Hamlln
Piano
Tloketa .50 to 82. Jilgt. Wlnton-Llvlnsaton.
Prlncvn* Theatre, Sun, Kve? Mar. 80 at 8:18
Berta Reviere
SOPRANO
Mri. Antonta Sawyer. fat}, Stainway Piano
AP.OMAN 1IAI.I-. Thia Vfi niomt ,.t 3.
ORCHESTRAL
8?i-l?t> of N.*\", (?."> Mii.i.-uin?>
MAX JACUBH.t ONIH CTOR
SOtOlat- Vem. ItirMun?VIoftnlNt.
Tickota 2&o to 81.50, at Box OfBco.
bama singer; George llines, world's
champion trap drummer; Lonzo Will
iams and the Tcnnessce Banjo Bud
dies.
Park Theatre
The Society of American Singers'
new series of Gilbcrt and Sullivan
opcras, which opened last week at the
Park Theatre with "Pntience." will in
cludc three weeks more of these pro
ductions before the society resurncs its
schedulc of other opcras.
"The Mikado," the most popular of
Jefferson de AngeUt, in "'The
Mikado," Park Theatre
the series already given, will bc given
beginning next Tuesday ovening, March
25. It will bc sung, also, on Thursday
nnd Saturday evenings, and "Paticncc"
repeated on Monday, Wednesday and
Friday evenings and Saturday matince
with the same cast.
The New Symphony Society
Thc programmes for the three con
certs to bc given by the New Symphony
Orehestra, Edgar Varcse, conductor, are
announced as follows:
APRIL 11 AND 12
Sonata. "The Hcavcns Laugh and the
Earth Rejoices" .J. S. Baeh
Gteue . Debussy
Notti di Maggio (for women's voicea and
orehestra) . Casella
Nocturne . GrifTes
Suite, "En Pleine I'leur'; *'Noee Villa
Koise" . Bela Bartolc
Le Chant de la Dcstinec.Dupont
APBIL 25 AND 20
Dardanu Suite . Rar-i?iu
Ranga, "Introduction and Dancc of th._
Princess" . Whithorno
Pohjola's Daughter.Sibelius
Pagan Poem .LocfTIer
MAY 9 AND 10
EvOt-stion, "Les Dieux dans l'Ombre des
Czvernes" .Roustid
Gymnopedies. No. 1!.Satia
Bcrceuse Elegiaque.Busoni
Clouds . GrifTes
Redemption .Franclc
Daphnis et Chloe.Ravel
.... ju^rma.. ...... .<ini, *a, O . ! .J
_ ,_ ?Ul.'IOMAK?
NOVAES
Tl'KflDAV
I'.VI-.MM,,
M IKI II 28TH,
AT R:;tO r. M.
AMUSEMENTS
Aeolian llnll. Tuesday Kve., Mar. 25, 8:18
PIANO -aa. ??? ~WWOMAB
RECITAL
I'ostpoiieU
from
Jail, '
Met. Loudon Charlton. Steinway Piano.
AEOLIAN HALL,
EKIOAY All..
MAK. 2H. AT 3,
honu Keeltal
YVONNE
ItcneHI Cir Mpeedwell Porirty
for < onvaleacenl < hlldren.
Mc?. Loudon Charlton Tli-kcta 82 to 50c.
AEOLIAN HALL, SaL Afl., March 20, af 3
LACROiX
Prlcea $l.:.o to r."--. Mgt, Loudon Charlton.
ApoIUiii llnll. Knliinlitv \fl.. April 5, 2:30,
-PIANO KKOTAL
GABRILOWITSCH
TIcketM BOc t<> $2, Srlitirniiim-f htpim Frnr.
Met. 1/mili.n L'lirirli'iii Mk ..:i A Hmiilli: 1'Unu.
METROPOLITAN OPISRA IIOI SH
MARY
QARDEN
FESTIVAL
MARY GARDEN
ln her two graateai rolea, lupportad by Al.
fre.| MhrikiiiiI, LoulM l'-/..t, M. O'Hullt
\H 'I . " ".'1.,''?'" ?'?''? '" "MUIHK" aOd *'? LEO
ARTHUR RUBENSTEIN
lill'llt l'..)l..|, I'Jtt'l! '.
GEORGES BAKLANOFF
Itunidii Murltom .
PAVLEY & OUKRAINSKY
ln "!.\\ pr.-,.. mi.ii j'unc f -in. " by D-'bumy.
TH'KKTK Kl.50, BC, *A ANO *H
NOW ON SALE Ai HON IIIIKK.
PHILHARMONIC
JOSEi strannky.(onductor
REQUEST PROGRAMMES
Carnrcle llall. N>\t ThurMluy Ev?\. nt 8:30.
Hr?.|h'?vi.|i, Bymphony "EroicH."
Ippolltoir-Ivanofl', Debuany, Uagner.
CariMifif llnll, Nrxt 1 rhlxv Afl.. nt '4:30.
Behnbcrt, Symphony "l minlshrd."
Ti'hiiikovttky. ,".lh h.inipliuii).
< itm.g???? Hall, Ne*t Sumlav Aft., at 8.
8.k,i?t EDDY BROWN vi?i,a
Tlcket* st Box Odloe. 1'elU F. LelfeU. >Igr.
AEOLIAN HAI.I., Wcd. Aff., Mar. 20, at 3,
WLonia ?&. Bteaard
ins-Qendron
SONATA RECITAL
Management Dnnlui Mayor. ntitft Piano.
Ciirnrah. liull. Tuewla? Evr.. April I, at 8:13
. pamjjav VIOL1N I'KCITAL
BreeskiN
T5c to $1. Mgt. I>milcl Maycr. Kranlcli & B?ch l'iaii*
CnnicKin Hall, Tuet?. Ev.. March 35 at 8:1 &.
Klflb '?'.<i l--t *...'-!., .
RUSSIAN
SVMI'HONY SOCIETY OF X. Y.
M0DEST ALTSCHULER, co?dH,i,,r,
?*? I -F V I T T MT I
(itlnk* Glcuunoff, MtuourssKI Itiil.in.,if|n. T<i!i?l
kowmky. Beat* Bfc ?u ?.'. Mimmt. l'mn.l M?.?.?.
AEOLIAN MALL, S?m. Alt.. >',,r. ;:t?. nt 3.
THIRO I'lANOltmri; RECITAL sER<;H
PROKOFIEFF
Mliiiunt. Hiwwl v*i Jouea. sswinwu:,' l'uao^