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SESS OSH
VENING
as CS ow
(3? 3? VY
ston Festival Orchestra
J. W. CROWLEY, Principal
used exclusively by the Handel and Haydn Society
NINETY-BIGHTH SEASON
Bo
MR. GEORGE E. RASELY
Bass, MR. WILLARD FLINT
MONDAY E
December 23, 1912, at 7.45 o'clock
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MR. H. G. TUCKER, Organist
MR
MR. WALTER SMITH, Trumpet
Tenor,
Soprano, MME. WILHELMINA WRIGHT CALVERT Alto, MISS MILDRED POTTER
be MR. EMIL MOLLENHAUERR, Conductor
Chickering Pianos
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Caustic-Claflin Co.
Printers
32 Brattle Street, Cambridge
SYMPHONY HALL Sunday Afternoon, December 29, at 3.30
OLIVE FREMSTAD Principal Dramatic Soprano Metropolitan Opera House, N.Y.
RICCARDO MARTIN The Distinguished American Tenor
Metropolitan Opera House, N.Y
JOINT RECITAL OF SONGS Mme. Fremstad will sing Elizabeth’s aria from ‘‘ Tannh&u-
ser,’ Franz’s ‘‘Aus meinen grossen Schmerzen”’ andj‘ Stille Sicherheit,’’ Schubert’s ‘‘ Fischerm&dchen,”’ Reger’s ‘‘ Wenn die Linde blaht, ” Rich. Strauss’s “‘ Befreit,” and four Swedish Songs. With Mr. Martin she will sing the parting duet from Wagner’s ‘‘ Dusk of the Gods.” Mr. Martin’s numbers will be announced later. Tickets at Box Office. 50 cents, $1, $1.50, $2. 1,200 seats at $1
SYMPHONY HALL Sunday Afternoon, January 5, at 3.30
First American appearances
CLARA BUTT The Sensational English Contralto
KENNERLEY RUMFORD The Distinguished English Baritone
A BALLAD CONCERT Mme. Clara Butt, the possessor of the most phenomenal
contralto voice of our time, will sing Handel's ‘‘Rendi mi °'l sereno”’ and ‘‘Lusinghe pit caro,”’ Schubert’s ‘‘ Der Wanderer,” Schumann’s%‘‘Der Nussbaum,”’ Brahms’s ‘‘ Von ewiger Liebe,”’ Debussy’ 8 “Air de Lia’? and ‘“ Mandolin,” Peel’s The Early Morning,” Loughborough’s ‘‘Women of Inver,” Leont’s ‘‘Leaves and the Wind,” and by special request will sing with harp and organ accompaniment, Arthur Sullivan's ‘* The Lost Chord’’ and Liddle’s ‘‘Abide with Me.’
Mme. Butt and Mr. Rumford will sing Goring’s Thomas’s ** Night Hymn at Sea.”’
Mr. Rumford will sing songs by Richard Strauss, Hugo Wolf, Vaughn Williams, MacDowell, Grieg, Stanford, and Davies.
Tickets, 50 cents, $1, $1. 50,$2. 1,200 seats at $1
M. EUGENE YSAYE, the great Belgian Violinist, will give his only recital in Boston at the tenth popular concert in Sym- aie all, on Sunday afternoon, January 12, at3.30. Prices,
cents, $1, $1.50, $2. 1,200 seats at $1. Mail orders for these concerts addressed to L. H. Mudgett,
Symphony Hall, filled promptly.
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3 cE abe Geert
Handel and Haydn Society OFFICERS AND MEMBERS OF THE CHORUS
President
WILLIAM FROTHINGHAM BRADBURY
Vice-President
EuUGENE D. RUSSELL
Secretary
JOHN C. BRODHHAD
Treasurer
GEORGE M. BrRooks
Librarian
WILLIAM N. Eustis
HDWARD P.
JOHN W. HALL
GEORGE #3. HATCH
SAMUEL L. HILLS
Abramson, Miss Charlotte W. Ames, Miss Georgia Armstrong, Miss Minerva V. E.
Balcom, Miss Lillian Morse Bartlett, Miss Edith M. Beliveau, Miss Celina Briggs, Miss F. M. Brown, Miss Angela Bryan, Miss Florence E. Bryant, Miss Mary L. Burr, Miss Mabel F.
Caro, Miss Miriam Carpenter, Mrs. Frederick W. del Castillo, Mrs. Minnie G. Clark, Miss Mabel E. Colleton, Miss Alice M. Collins, Miss Alice Cowlishaw, Miss Nita
Dahlke, Miss Amanda Davis, Mrs. Howard C. Davies, Mrs. L. Florence Dodge, Mrs. Waldo C. Dowd, Miss Mary F. Duhig, Mrs. Charles R. Dyer, Mrs. John L.
BOYNTON
Directors JOSHUA @. LITCHFIELD
JAMES A. MURPHY
HENRY H. TURNER
DUANE WHITE
SOPRANOS
Eddy, Miss Eleanor Elwell, Miss V. Delle English, Miss Agnes
Feinberg, Miss Bessie Feldman, Mrs. M. W. Fillebrown, Mrs. Sylvester L, Finneran, Miss Winifred Fleming, Mrs. W. E. Ford, Miss Evelyn G.
Francis, Miss Idabelle Freeman, Miss Jeannette W.
Gallagher, Miss A. G. Gallivan, Miss Madeleine Gould, Mrs. Minnie S. Greenberg, Miss Lora R.
Hale, Miss Florence Hall, Mrs. Jeanette C. Hallett, Miss Maude A. Hallett, Mrs. Elizabeth L. Hanley, Miss Ella Harris, Mrs. Carrie Henderson, Mrs. Anna M. Higgins, Mrs. George J. Hodgens, Miss Nellie Holmberg, Mrs. Jeanette I. Howard, Mrs. Henry
Ide, Mrs. Emma §S.
Johnson, Mrs. A. June Jones, Mrs. Edna
Kamber, Miss Agnes M. Knox, Mrs. Ruth B.
Lawrence, Miss Margaret L. Learned, Miss Josephine Leavitt, Miss Mira D. Leavitt, Miss Mary L. Le Bosquet, Miss Grace K, Lewis, Mrs. Theodore B. Lohman, Miss Anna
Macdonald, Mrs. Jessie H. MacDonald, Miss Marion H. Machon, Miss Maude McGowan, Miss Adelaide McKinley, Mrs. W. T. Mahler, Miss Helen D. Maklausky, Miss Gertrude Malton, Miss Mildred C. Manning, Miss Minette Margot, Miss Carrie T. Matz, Mrs. Abram H. Meek, Miss Mary I.
Mulcahy, Miss Johana Murray, Miss M. A.
Newman, Miss Miriam Nisbet, Mrs. Frederick S. Nugent, Miss Alice
O’Connor, Miss Ellen F. Ogg, Mrs. Emma P.
Paine, Miss Isabella S. Partridge, Miss Rella Peavey, Miss Beatrice D. Penzanska, Miss Minnie D. Perham, Miss Alice G. Perkins, Miss HE. A. Plumer, Mrs. Ruth Powers, Miss Nellie E. Prince, Miss Clara
Quirk, Miss Elizabeth A.
Adams, Miss Helen C. Anslow, Miss Charlotte Arnold, Miss Beryl] T.
Bacon, Miss Lilian H. Bagley, Miss Clara EH. Barkley, Miss Gertrude W. Bartholomay, Mrs. J. P. Billings, Miss B. W. Birnbaum, Miss Ernestine Boland, Miss Mary A. Briggs, Mrs. William R. Brodhead, Mrs. John C. Brown, Miss Helen M. Brust, Miss Alice R. Burton, Miss Edith G.
Childs, Dr. Edna M. Chivers, Mrs. T. S. Clare, Miss Josephine L. Colgate, Miss Mabel S. Cosby, Miss Hazel M. Cross, Mrs. Leon E. Cullen, Miss Katherine L. Cullum, Miss Margaret Curtis, Miss Emma D. Cushing,~Mrs. Arthur W.
Daly, Miss Sadie A. Darling, Mrs. A. C. Davol, Miss May B. Dobson, Miss Dora Dodd, Mrs. Ernest M. Dorr, Mrs. Elsie L. Dowd, Miss Helen L. Drew, Miss Mabel L. Dunnels, Miss Marion
English, Miss Frances Estes, Mrs. Grace F.
Rea, Miss Ethel Hague Stevens, Miss Marion F.
Rebello, Miss Josephine A. Sullivan, Miss Alice L.
Reed, Miss Beatrice A. Svehle, Miss Jeannette T.
Rhodes, Miss Maud V. Riche en esiMise Myra iy Thompson, Mrs. Katherine C.
Robinson, Miss Eva . Rogers, Mrs. Katherine P. Yose, Misa a Ross, Miss Edith F. Walsh, Mrs. F. C. Ross Miss Ella F. Weise, Miss Cora
Wheeler, Miss Helen Salling, Mrs. Annie W. Whitcomb, Mrs. Clara H. Sanborn, Miss Susan Whitcomb, Miss Edith B. Sherman, Mrs. Edna K. White, Mrs. Daniel L. Sias, Miss Clara G. White, Mrs. Ina EH. Skinner, Miss Eva Wildes, Miss E. M. Smith, Mrs. Edith T. Wile, Mrs. Park B. Snow, Miss Annie E. Wiley, Mrs. Caroline Sparrow, Mrs. A. C. Williams, Miss E. N. Spencer, Miss Inez M. Willis, Mrs. Helena C. Staab, Miss Louise R. Wilson, Miss Hmma F. Staniels, Miss Ethel Winter, Miss Maude I. Stedman, Mrs. W. H. Wood, Mrs. Inez W. Stephenson, Miss Claire Wrye, Mrs. Charlotte L.
ALTOS
Farrell, Miss Alice G. Newcomb, Miss Grace B. Flynn, Miss Annette Newton, Mrs. B. P. Forbes, Mrs. A. F.
Foss, Miss Viola G. Packard, Mrs. I. M. Foy, Miss Anna C. Parks, Miss Maud
. Partridge, Miss Jean Greene, Miss Grace A. Patterson, Miss Winifred N.
Hadcock, Miss Beatrice L. Pearce, Miss Elsie M. Haines, Miss 8. F. Peirce, Miss Anna G. Haynes, Miss Irma Pitcher, Miss Leonora §. A.
Hersey, Miss Nellie P. Potter, Mrs. Edgar S. Higgins, Miss Helen L. Powers, Miss J. E. Holland, Mrs. Mary B. Prescott, Miss Juniata E.
Hotaling, Mrs. Florence H. Howes, Mrs. Clifton A. Robbins, Miss Bertha M. Heustis, Mrs. Cora L. Robinson, Mrs. Alice W. Hunt, Mrs. Alice N. Rose, Miss Hlizabeth Hyde, Miss Adelaide K. Royle, Mrs. Lucy S.
Johnson, Mrs. C. S. Salisbury, Miss L. B.
SIFT RG renner —paemnepemvemanmrcmmemmy es OViRST OMe hi Seton hae Teron Schroeder, Mrs. Bessie W. Kelley, Miss Bertha E. i
: : Schweizer, Mrs. W. H. Kelley, Miss Julia B. Smith. Mi
Kuhns, Miss Belle mit 2 eS Doretta H. ‘ Smith, Miss Elizabeth
Lawton, Mrs. Charles O. Sprague, Miss L. Gertrude
Lee, Miss Genevieve Squire, Miss Marle Libby, Miss Adaline T. Lyman, Miss M. L. Thomas, Miss J. B.
Thompson, Miss Estella F.
MacKenzie, Miss Marjorie Tower, Miss Carrie I. Marwin, Mrs. Phillips Brooks __. McCarthy, Miss Ella Vine, Mrs. John M. McKay, Miss Jessie G. Vosberg, Mrs. Nellie
McKenney, Mrs. R. V. McKenzie, Miss Jennie F. Warren, Miss Helen Farrar Mills, Mrs. Jennie B. Wescott, Miss Harriet C. Muir, Mrs. Edith Whipple, Mrs. Margaret M.
Adelman, Samuel
Baier, Karl H. Batchelder, Walter S. Boynton, Edward P. Butler, Arthur F. Buttrick, Arthur C.
Clancy, John J. Coffin, John H. Comstock, Marshall E. Cosby, Richard Cronkshaw, William Crocker, Wilfred A. Cross, Leon E.
Dean, Henry M., Jr. Dodge, Hermon L. Dow, Eugene M. Downes, William J. Drew, Luke H. Ducey, William T. Dyer, John L.
Eaton, Percival R. Entwistle, Robert
Armes, Louis F.
Beal, Carleton D. Beeler, Howard A. Bonney, George HE. Bradbury, William F. Brodhead, John C. Brooks, George M. Brown, William L. Burditt, George L.
Carpenter, Arthur W. Chamberlin, Elton M. Cole, William A. Champagne, Joseph L. Cowlishaw, Walter I. Cristy, Alfred M. Croswell, Ralph H. Cummings, William F. Currier, Wilton L.
Dadmun, Albert C. Delaney, John M. Dewing, Lewis A. Dodd, Ernest M. Dodge, Charles H. Dow, David E. Dowd, Harry J.
Emerson, Luther O. English, Thomas A. Eustis, William N.
Falconer, James Faunce, William H. Fisher, Ernest Fisher, Horace B.
TENORS
Fillebrown, Sylvestus L. Fish, John A.
Gibson, Warren H. Greenwood, Elmer E.
Hall, John W. Hawkins, John M. Higgins, Wilbur O. Hills, Samuel L.
Lane, J. Harold
Lincoln, Charles F. Lovelace, Hardie H.
Manson, William C. Meggett, Frank H. Meyer, Carl Moakler, Vincent J. Moorehouse, Arthur B. Moulton, Albert R.
Newton, Brainard P. Nickels, Frederick HE.
O’Connor, Joseph Ogden, John, Jr.
BASSES
Grabill, Ethelbert V. Greenleaf, William O.
Guild, Courtenay
Harding, Arthur C. Hatch, George F. Hatch, Royal
Haynes, Charles R. Holmes, Thos. W.
Howard, Seth C. C. Howes, Clifton A.
Jewett, Sumner Johnson, Ernest W. Jones, Arthur V.
Keleher, Albert E. Kingman, Arthur D. Kuhns, Henry Kyle, Clinton W.
Lamson, Albert H. Leach, LeRoy J.
Litchfield, Joshua Q. Locklin, William
Marque, Joseph Marquis, William B. Martin, Antonio E. McAfee, Edwin R. McAuliffe, Thomas L. Merrow, Harold K.
Morrell, Frederick O. Murphy, James A. Murphy, John T.
Pike, Clarence H. Porter, Francis W. Pugh, Samuel
Ralston, Robert S. Rich, Frank B. Richardson, Cheslie A. C. Robbins, Warren C. B. Roberts, John A.
Sefton, Arthur C. Sheehan, Francis P. Short, Henry C. Small, Adin C. Smith, Charles W. Spain, Laurence J. Sullivan, Edward L. Suminsby, Warren S. Sweeney, John R. Swett, Edward H.
Wall, William H. Weale, George H. Wiley, Chester G. Williams, Frank H. Wingfield, Walter T. Woodworth, Leslie E.
Noyes, Fred S.
Odell, Herbert F.
Parker, Maurice W. Parmelee, Harry
Piper, Walter I.
Plummer, H. L.
Ricker, Clinton A. Risdon, Isaac W.
Russell, Alfred M. Russell, Hugene D.
Saunders, Alfred
Schroder, John H. Shaffner, William E. Small, Augustus D. Smith, Merrill J. Spain, Paul F. Sprague, David HE. Swan, Frederick W.
Tucker, Gardner Tucker, Henry M.
Turner, Francis C. Turner, Henry H.
Walker, Arvard L. Whelan, G. Lawrence White, Duane White, J. Robert Whitney, Richard S. Whitney, Stephen H. Woodward, Herbert M.
SECOND LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS TO THE SITE FUND
EXPLANATORY.—Recently certificates bearing the seal of the society, in two
series, A representing one dollar and B five dollar contributions, have been offered
through the members of the chorus to friends of the society in order to raise a fund for the purchase of a suitable site for the proposed Handel and Haydn Building. There has been previously acknowledged a total of $1623.79.
SERIES A
Alameda Company Mr. Nathaniel Hastings Miss Josephine Allen Mrs. Lewis A. Hilborn Mr. John J. Attridge Mrs. A. L. Hinds Mr. John W. Ballard Miss Ada Jourdan Mrs. W. W. Blackmore Miss Julia B. Kelley Mrs. John C. Brodhead Mrs. M. McCallum Mr. William H. Buntin Lieut. Gen. Nelson A. Miles (3) Mrs. Cornelius Cahill Miss Margaret E. Monahan Mrs. J. Dudley Clark Mr. Leo A. Munnie Mr. John L. Clark Mr. Francis W. Porter Miss Hazel M. Cosby Mr. George K. Porter, Jr. Mr. W. A. Crocker (5) Mrs. A. C. Sparrow (2) Miss Minnie A. Culbert Mrs. R. Sprague
Mrs. Ellen A. Cullen Mr. Walter Stone Miss K. L. Cullen Mrs. J. T. Sullivan Miss Ellanora Curtis Miss Margaret L. Toohy Mrs. Alice Deane Mr. C. A. White Miss Margaret E. Doherty Mr. D. L. White Mr. Truman E. Ellinwood Mrs. D. L. White (2)
Mrs. John Galloway Mrs. Mamie L. White Mr. Augustus P. Gardner Mr. C. C. Wood Mr. Charles L. Hanson Mrs. Mary C. Wyman
SERIES B, OR FIVE DOLLAR CERTIFICATES
Mr. H. W. Berry Mr. Frederick A. Tupper Mr. John C. Brodhead Mrs. A. S. Wheeler A Friend (5) Mrs. Georgianna B. Wright (10) Mr. J. Monroe Longyear (10)
Note.—Numbers following names indicate the number of certificates taken by the contributor.
It is intended to publish lists of contributors in our programs until sufficient money has been raised to accomplish the purpose of the certificates. Checks made payable to The Handel and Haydn Society and sent to Pres. William F. Bradbury, 369 Harvard Street, Cambridge, will be acknowledged by the return of certificates of the number and series called for.
fSEORGE FRIDERIC HANDEL
THE MESSIAH ORATORIO, composed in 1741; begun August 22, finished September 14. Text selected from the Scriptures by
Gorn in Hate, Fesruary 22, 1685
CHARLES JENNENS. Producedin Dublin, April 13, 1742, under the direction of HANDEI.., OZART, 1780; and by ROBERT FRANZ, for the use of the Handel and Haydn Society, completed and ments by
Digd in London, Apru 18, 175%
Additional accom pant
published in 1884. First performance by the Handel and Haydn Society, December 25, 1818, in Boylston Hall; present performance one hundred and twenty-seventh.
PART ONE
THE PROPHECIES AND THE FULFILMENT
OVERTURE grave: fuga, allegro moderato
2-3 TENOR RECITATIVE
Comfort ye my people, saith your God: speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem ; and cry unto her that her warfare is ac- complished, that her iniquity is pardoned. The voice of him that crieth in the wilder-
ness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord:
make straight in the desert a highway
for our God.
AIR
Every valley shall be exalted, and ev-
ery mountain and hill made low; the
crooked straight, and the rough places
plain.
4 CHORUS
And the giory of the Lord shall be re-
vealed ; and all flesh shall see it together:
for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it.
5 BASS RECITATIVE
Thus saith the Lord of Hosts: Yet
once a little while, and I will shake the
heavens and the earth, the sea and the
dry land; and I will shake all nations; and the desire of all nations shall come: the Lord whom ye seek shall suddenly
come to his temple; even the messenger
of the covenant whom ye delight in; be- hold, he shall come, saith the Lord of Hosts.
8-9 ALTO RECITATIVE
Behold, a virgin shall conceive and bear a son; and shall call his name Em- MANUEL, God with us.
AIR AND CHORUS
O thou that tellest good tidings te Zion, get thee up into the high moun- tain. O thou that tellest good tidings
to Jerusalem, lift up thy voice with strength: lift it up, be not afraid: say un-
to the cities of Judah, Behold, your God. Arise; shine; for thy light is come; and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee
Io-It
BASS RECITATIVE
For behold darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the people: but
the Lord shall arise upon thee; and his glory shall be seen upon thee, and the Gentiles shall come to thy light, and kings to the brightness of thy rising.
AIR
The people that walked in darkness have seen a great light; and they that dwell in the land of the shadow of death,
upon them hath the light shined.
I2
CHORUS
For unto us a child is born: unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful; Counsellor; the
Mighty God; the Everlasting Father ; the Prince of Peace.
PASTORAL SYMPHONY
larghette
(on the traditional air of the Calabrian pifferari)
14-15-16-17
SOPRANO RECITATIVE
There were shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flocks by night. And lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them; and the glory of the Lord shone round about them; and they were sore afraid. And the angel said unto them, Fear
not; for behold I bring you good tid- ings of great joy, which shall be to all people: for unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour which is Christ the Lord.
And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host, praising God, and saying:
CHORUS
Glory to God in the highest ; and peace
on earth, good will towards men.
18 SOPRANO AIR
Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion: shout, O daughter of Jerusalem. Be- held, thy King cometh unto thee. He
INTERMISSION
is the righteous Saviour; and he shall speak peace unto the heathen.
19-20 ALTO RECITATIVE
Then shall the eyes of the blind be opened, and the ears of the deaf un- stopped: then shall the lame man leap as a hart, and the tongue of the dumb shall sing.
ALTO AND SOPRANO AIR He shall feed his flock like a shepherd;
and he shall gather the lambs with his arm, and carry them in his bosom; and gently lead those that are with young. : Come unto him, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and he will give you rest. Take his yoke upon you, and learn of him; for he is meek and lowly of heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls.
21
CHORUS
His yoke is easy, and his burden is light.
iO MINUTES
PART TWO
THE PASSION AND THE TRIUMPH
22
CHORUS
Behold the Lamb of God, that taketh
away the sin of the world.
23 ALTO AIR
He was despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief.
24-26
CHORUS
Surely he hath borne our griefs and carried our sorrows. He was wounded for our transgressions: he was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of
our peace was upon him. All we like sheep have gone astray: we
have turned every one to his own way: and the Lord hath laid on him the
iniquity of us all.
29-30
TENOR RECITATIVE
Thy rebuke hath broken his heart: he is full of heaviness. He looked for some to have pity on him; put there was no
man; neither found he any to comfort him.
AIR
Behold nd see if there be any sorrow like unto his sorrow.
31
TENOR RECITATIVE
He was cut off out of the land of the living: for the transgression of thy peo-
ple was he stricken.
33 CHORUS
Lift up your heads, O ye gates; and be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors; and the King of Glory shall come in. Who is the King of Glory? The Lord strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in battle. The Lord of Hosts, he is the King of Glory.
40
BASS AIR
Why do the nations so furiously rage together ; and why do the people imagine a vain thing? The kings of the earth rise up, and the rulers take counsel to-
gether, against the Lord and against his anointed.
42-43 TENOR RECITATIVE
He that dwelleth in Heaven shall laugh them to scorn; the Lord shall have them in derision.
AIR
Thou shalt break them with a rod of iron: thou shalt dash them in pieces like a potter’s vessel.
44
CHORUS
Hallelujah! For the Lord God omni-
potent reigneth. The kingdom of this
world is become the kingdom of our Lord
and of his Christ; and he shall reign for
ever and ever; K1nc oF K1ncs AND Lorp oF Lorps, HALLELUJAH!
PART THREE
THE RESURRECTION AND THE GLORY
45 SOPRANO AIR
I know that my Redeemer liveth; and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth: and though worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see God. For now is Christ risen from the dead,
the first fruits of them that sleep.
50-51 BASS RECITATIVE
Behold, I tell you a mystery: we shall not all sleep; but we shall all be changed in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet.
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AIR
The trumpet shall sound; and the dead shall be raised incorruptible ; and we shall be changed.
56-57 CHORUS
Worthy is the Lamb that was slain, and hath redeemed us to God by his blood, to receive power, and riches, and
wisdom, and strength, and honor, and glory and blessing. Blessing and honor, glory and power, be unto him that sitteth
upon the throne, and unto the Lamb, for ever and ever.
Amen! Amen!
HALL
Se Steere eM ees
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—
AESACHUIE TR ANhend £304 oy.
Se AEE TEST SAE ESE
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CONCERT MONDAY BEGINS AT 7.45 P.M.
MISCELLANEOUS CONCERT SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1913, 7.30 P.M.
Soprano, MRS. CAROLINE HUDSON ALEXANDER Alto, MME. SCHUMANN-HEINK Tenor, MR. PAUL ALTHOUSE
Bass; FREDERIC MARTIN
ELIJAH
EASTER SUNDAY, MARCH 23, 1913, 7.30 P.M. Soprano, MRS. GRACE BONNER WILLIAMS
Alto, MISS HELEN ALLEN HUNT Tenor, MR. DAN BEDDOE Bass, MR. EARL CARTWRIGHT
Vol. I. of the History of the Handel and Haydn Society from 1815 to May 1890, and also No. 1 of Vol. II. from May 1890 to May 1897 in- cluding lists of the concerts and of the officers from May 1890 to May 1912 written by W. F. Bradbury are on sale at C. W. Thompson & Co.’s Music Store, A and B Park St.
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PIANO SINCE 1823
so favored by the musical public as this famous old Boston make. The
world’s greatest musicians: have demanded itand discriminating people have purchased it.
The Chickering Piano enjoys the distinction of being the recipient of
N° Piano of American make has been
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Its wonderful tone and action call it to the studio to stimulate and encourage the pupil, and it is sought by teachers and musical people when the best is desired.
Made in five sizes of Grands and three of Uprights.
CHICKERING WAREROOMS 169 TREMONT STREET
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