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Notices.

* * * "Mr. John C. Fillmore, of Milwaukee, one of the most distinguished of American theorists."
* * "one of the most valuable contributions ever made to this branch of ethnological study," - (said of "A Study of Omaha Indian Music," the joint work of Miss Alice C. Fletcher and Mr. J. C. Fillmore, published in 1893 by Harvard University.)
* * "Mr. Fillmore is a man of literary as well as musical education, * * he has gone at a novel species of work with scientific directness and thoroughness." - H.E. Krehbiel, in N.Y. Tribune.

"Mr. Fillmore has struck the only scientific basis for dealing with all primitive Art." * * "These experiments by Mr. Fillmore take this question out of the realm of conjecture into the realm of fact, and in this fact we may read a deep significance touching the innermost nature and essence of man"
* * "I believe these papers to be the most important contributions to the subject of primitive folk-music, and as laying down the lines; in general along which any true investigation of primitive music must follow." - C.B. Cady in Music Review, Oct, 1893

"Mr. Fillmore has become expert in the delicate undertaking of interpreting Indian music to a degree in which he is perhaps surpassed by no other white person." - W.S.B. Mathews in Music, Sept. 1893.

"Prof J.C. Fillmore, who has won a national reputation as an authority on the subject of music, and as an author of several notable books treating on the same, is the most commanding figure in the local coterie of musical talent." - American School Board Journal (Milwaukee), May, 1894. 

LECTURES
BY
John Comfort Fillmore, Cl. M. 
[[picture of J.C. Fillmore]]
DIRECTOR OF THE 
Milwaukee School of Music,
207 GRAND AVENUE.