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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
| Muéic CALENDAR OF. CONCERTS tPAULIST CHOIR 'TN BROOKLYN APRIL 12-19 The Paulist Choir, under direction SATURDAY of Father William J. Finn, will pay Aeolian-Afternoon, piano recital- | its final visit to Brooklyn next Sunday Jan Chiapusso; evening, HATP | evening at the Academy of Music. Wh’ning. oint recital- Hulda Lashaneka, Susche Jacobson. SUNDAY Aeotian-Afternoon, Orchestral So- dgay“ Academy Music-Evening, Paulist Choir. MONDAY Aeolian-Evening, Schumann Club of N. Y. TUESDAY Aeolian-Evening, concert by Letz Quartet. THURSDAY Aeolian-Evening, piano recital- Robert Schmitz. 200 Ca ie-Evening, Oratorio Socie- ty-St. Matthew Passion. SATURDAY B'lyn Academy Music-Evening, the Duncan Dancers, with George Cope- land, pianist. CHIAPUSSO, SECOND RECITAL Saturday afternoon in Aeolian Hall Jan Ohiapusso, Dutch pirnist, vyfll again be heard in recital, playing compositions of Bach-Chiapusso, Ro- meau-Godowski, Beethoven. Schubert, Ravel, Grainger, Alebusky, Chopin and Brahms. SALZEDO HARP ENSEMBLE The Salzedo Harp Ensemble, assis- ted by Vera Janacopulos, will appear in Aeolian Hall on Saturday evening in Bach's sixth \French Suite,\ seven songs by Georges Enesco, five poetical studies by Salzedo, and both song and harp transcriptions by Debussy. LASHANSKA-JABOBSEN On Saturday evening at Carnegie Hall, Mme. Hulda Lashanska, so- prano, and Sascha Jacobsen, violinist, will make their first joint appearance. Mme. Lashanska wilf sing arias from \Hamlet\ and \Louise\ and groups of songs from Russian and French com- ts. Mr. Jacobsen will play the t’ivnldi concerto and shorter compo- sitions by Debussy, Sarasate and oth- ers. GABRILOWITSCH WITH LETZ QUARTET 'The last concert of the Letz Quar- tet will be given Tuesday evening, April 15, at Aeolian Hall. Ossip Gab- rilowitach will be the asisting artist, laying the Caesar Franck quintet. q‘he programme also includes Fritz Kreisler's A minor quartet, which will be heard for the first time. CAPTAIN SCHMITZ IN PIANO RECITAL E. Robert Schmitz appears on Thursday evening, April 17, at Aeoli- an Hall in programme of modern com- positions. Mr. Schmitz was until very recently a captain of artillery in the French Army SPANISH OPERA AT THE PARK The Spanish Theatre Company, Manual Noreiga, director, will open its season at the Park Theatre on Aprib 19, with Amadea Vive's new opera, Maruxa. ORATORIO SOCIETY The usual Holy Week performance of the St. Matthew Passion by Johann Sebastian Bach will be given by the Oratorio Society, assisted by the boy choir of St. Thomas' Church and the New York Symphony Orchestra. The rformance will be conducted by T. ertins Noble owing to the fact that Walter Damrosch is in France. ORCHESTRAL SOCIETY OF - NEW YORK The last subscription concert of the Orchestral Society will be given in Aeolian Hall Sundaeflbernoon, April. 13, at 8 o'clock. soloist will be (rene Williams, American soprano. The No. 4, D minor symphony by Schumann will be played, and Miss Williams will sing arias of Mozart and Boito. » . JOHN PFISCHETTO Concrete Walks and Cess pools Laid. Cement Block Foundations and Garages Built. work cuaranten . |qnp | Nassau & Suffolk Lighting Co. GEO. MacDONALD, President «Offices at Hempstead, Freeport, Rockville Centre, Mineola. Estimates Cheerfully Furnished 45 Woods Ave. Rockville Centre, L. I. | brief. nice phrasing. The chorus is composed of forty boys and twenty men. Mrs. Maude Ken- ned: Willi-ta soprano, will assist. A fnz’un of evening will be the singing of James Duffy, who sings in the alto, tenor and baes choruses. GABRILOWITSCH AGAIN Last Saturday afternoon at Aeolian Hail, Mr. Oseip Gabrilowitsch, con- ductor and distinguished pianist, for the second time this attracted ciators of no-forte | music, ich filled the hall and the # stage. ng: Conining to two dimpes. ing. compos- $5. Schumann and Mr. Ga- forilowitech opened his programme with the former's Fantasia in C ma- jor, 17, in three parts. The fact alloyed. imerest \Iwas \probably | due i 'was more to the Manuela-u 1&1; to | nless the artist's playing of it. there is mucfi ”a richness in the performance, Schumann in bits is | more palatable. . The sonata in G minor was richer in suggestion, and the last movements were acceptably It was in the Chopin ups that pure pleasure to his admirers, for in the numbers of those groups, he was | as most of us like him, at home in | choice and delicate variety, and in | The auditors seemed to approve his rendering of the con- positions of his countryman, whose work made up the whole of the pi- | mnist's first programme, rather than his presentation of Schumann. . Of | course, Chopin gives a greater stir to | the enthusinams. Musical New York will not be con- | tent with less than two performances | of piano music each year for Mr. | Gabrilowitsch. AND MISS BYRD AGAIN Not only repeating, but intensifying , her earlier success as an unusual young pianiste, Miss Winifred Byrd | appeared at Aeolian Hall last Tuesday | with a programme tempered to dis- | (lay her sheer musicianship. All of Miss Byrd's work showed unmistaka- ble evidence of her sound claim to a | reputation as a serious artiste of the | irst rank. Whatever was Tacking in tonal depth and intensity may be as- cribed to the young lady's vouthful- (ness. But every requisite of the ar- tiste is either full-fledged or more than promising. Of peculiar charm was Miss Byrd's apt performance of the Schumann roup, \Scenes from Childhood,\ Opus 15. In the brief compositions com- posing that number, she created a series of moods, sincere and direct in their appeal. The programme in- pelled to pay CASH for manufacture of gas. We cannot do this and continue to furnish gas ing these critical times, co-operate with us and pay their bills promptly. Every business man and every patriotic citizen knows that this is a reasonable request on our part and we trust that our consumers will ac- cept it in the sprrit in which it is given: __ Mr. Gabrilowitsch offe the most | The National Council of Defense and the Federal Reserve Board request that the people of the country pay their bills promptly so that money may be kept in circulation AS A HELP TOWARDS WINNING THE WAR. As a Public Utility company we are com- el hape b’dilwr f ere -de ' JOHN CORIGLIANO A mere boy of sixteen, John Corig- liano played on the violin at Hall last Tuesday evening in a nan- ner which belied his years. John, a | pupil of Alois Truka, may his short-comings to his years, and hope that they vary inversely with his in- creasing 2 major, Halo's Symphorine Espang- nole, with a grouo of r selec- tions, were in the programe. RaxpourH SommrviLLs Forgoing a continuation of the prosperous engagement of Mf. John Barrymore in Tolstoi's \The Living Corpse,\ Mr. Arthur Hopkins pre- sented a new play at the Plymouth Theatre on Wednesday evening with the Barrymore brothers, Lionel and John, in the cast. . The new play which | is from the Italian of Soin Benelli, and is named, ''The Jest,\ will be reviewed 'in this column next week. After a successful tour of the east- ern cities, including Albany, Hart- ford and New Haven, where a per- formance was given before the stu- dents of Yale University, the Shakes- peare Playhouse production of \Ham- let\ with Mr. Walter Hampden, the chief exponent of poetic drama, in Arnerica today, will conclude its sea- son with two performances in Greater | New York on Saturday, April 12. At 10.30 at the Plymouth Theatre the first enactment of the tragedy will occur; at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Mr. Hampden will again ap- pear as Hamlet at 8.15 o'clock p.m. The breezy trench farce, \The Bet- ter 'Ole,\ which delighted London for | about two years before an American | producer would jassume the heavy royalty demands, has proved a verit- 'able cloud-burst of success for the Colburns. The original production, with Mr. Colburn giving his inimita- ble personation of the \Old Walrus,\ and Mrs. Colburn as Victoire, is still , entertaining hosts at the Cort Theatre whither the production was moved, | after its assurance of success in the Greenwich Village Theatre. There are reports of six \The Better 'Ole\ con- panies operating in the brush; and | two actors of no less capacity than Mr. DeWolf Hopper and Mr. {helyn Arbuckle are carrying the song of Old Boll, \She's the Venus de Milo to Me,\ into such serene spots as Chi- cago and Boston. The New York vlavers chalked up their two hun- | dredth performance last Wednesday evening: and, as yet, there is no stay in the offing. 5 TO OUR CONSUMERS _ all material used in the to our consumers dur- unless our consumers ._ Handel's Sonata in D1 Page 10 THEATRES THEATRES ~. OcEaN SIDE | | | iet seee of fer PLAZA THEATRE -.- Miss Florence Buck is convalescing from a severe attack of tonsilitis. j GROVE ST., FREEPORT Telephone, 753 Program for Week of April 14 Mrs. Erle Preble entertained a num- ber of guests on Sunday. | I _The Misses Anna and Bessic Hig-. mon. MARGUERITE CLARK gins were in town on Sunday. APR 14 In LITTLE MIS$ HOOVER \ Richard Keyser of Draper avenue Matinee By Maria Thompson Davies entertained guests over the week-end. 3.30 Ford Weekly | , George T. Soper and son Raymond VIVIAN MARTIN | were the guests of Mrs. Stephen Buck | Sing 99 5 Cole of \rs. Stephen Buc tues. 1s JANE GOES A WooING . Story by Edith Kennedy Joseph Riese and family have re- M,“ 16 turned to their lcomtzgwgonw Caller Christie Comedy-*\Why Husbands Flirt\ spending the winter in Manhattan. A tion of the e succe a The Young People's Society was en- WED. set the whole world talking! iumined by Mrs. Edward Schwerzel APR 16 ALICE JOYCE | on Tuesday evening. ls THE LION AND THE MOUSE w Matioet From Charles Klein's famous dramatic . Saunders was the week-end 3.30 success ngMr. and Mrs. Galadet of Flagg Comedy-*\Independence B'Gosh\ cean . hn i GLADYS LESLIE y PR af ol aa in fro THURS. | 1s MISS DULCIE FROM DIXIE Watts. - APR 17 From the novel by Lulah Ragsdale f . CURRENT EVENTS Sanford Story and family are oc- cupying their new home in Weeks ave- ETHEL CLAYTON nue. Io THE MYSTERY GIRL Miss Mildred Ellison, formerly of oes riot move. \ \\ | this place, is spen ding” mgm; gt FRIDAY George Bart McCutcheon Ridgewood, N. J., for the benefit of | Aeris PEAR WHITE in the 9th episode of her health. 1 THE LIGHTNING RAIDER P e ! FALSELY ACCUSED rhfi Pictograph Cartoon al f SAT. VAUDEVILLE v ; APR 19 SHIRLEY MASON wo it © I Mar, 3 In GOOD BYE BILL signed :. ' Evening Story by Anita Loos Potash to , 735 and 9 Cartoon Comedy much Pertilizers contalcine high potash «or I LEILA LEE low j SUN. ls THE SECRET GARDEN From novel by Frances Hodgson Burnett N. J. Fertilizer & Chemical Co., Factory, Croxton, Jersey City. Office, 60 Trinity Place, N. Y. BURTON HOLMES TRAVELOGUE Coming Wednesday, April 23rd | APR 20 ‘ Douglas Fairbanks in \Arizona\ Mobis Teg clt s oo oot, ccs Maxwell- A Car of Assured Reliability . HE reliability of every Maxwell is assured by the volume produced. One model quantity production involves the investment of millions of dollars in special machinery, plants, laboratories, etc., before a single car is produced. R Therefore, the basic design must be right-right beyond any question-before this special equipment is installed. ' And after production starts absolute accuracy in every ~<r. must be assured to prevent delays, wast- age, hand-labor-things we can't afford. _ No tools are too expensive-no precautions too elaborate-to assure this result. This was our original plan and it has been con- sistently followed in producing the 300,000 Maxwells now on the roads of the world. It is the reason why of Maxwell reliability- economy-uniformity. Y A car made right. to begin with saves yo a dollar even after you buy it. you many I Have a Big Demand For Furnished Houses ' List Your Property With Me For Quick Results « OWNERS .« CHARLES F. BEHR General Real Estate and Insurance Agent 341-A Railroad Avenue Opposite Station Telephone 1228 Freeport Freeport, L. I.