A merkair "elvish Periodical Cater
LIMON ATENUI • CINCINNATI 20, 01110
PAGE THREE
TilFMFTWIT /rust WO
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36 Moms West, in the Stroh Budding
3 Doors East Gf Adorns Theater
"Reliable
FURS"
N.
Easter
Offering
in Fur
Jacquettes
'159
VD
[es
u ' 1
Charming garments—selections from our dis-
tinguished stocks—specially priced for this
event. At $159 we include Jacquettes
of Silver and Golden Muskrat,
and Russian Suslika—beauti-
THS
ful garments of typical
ROLLINS quality.
nth Houses
LEMEN
0
0
Silver Fox Scarfs, '119
Just one of a series of desirable
offerings designed to appeal to
the Easter purchaser.
erry 1940
Storage and Remodeling
Bring in your fur coat and let
us safeguard it for you during
the summer months. Our rate
for storage is only 3'. for the
season.
WA
SICWIsISV•%%%'
r
MUSIC AND MUSICIANS.
0‘..0
I
mm
3
This Great
Sale
Nears End
By I erm•nn H ester.
' III
Heifetz, Famous Violinist and
LJ
Lv
BON HU,
The redeeming feature of the tit-
Puoil of Leopold Auer, to
teenth pair of concerts by the Detroit
Symphony Orehest ra at Orchestra
Be in Detroit April 7.
Hall this week is the unusually line
singing of the soloist, Sladame Flor-
Jascha Ileifetz, world famous vio- •
ence Easton. soprano (rout the Metro- linist, who will appear at Orchestra
G oo d t o
politall Opera lima pauy.
a most engaging smile Hall Tuesday evening, April 7, is the
look upon. with
,
and a radiant personality, Mme. Ens- fifth attraction offered this season by
ton easily carries off the honors of the Civic Music Association.
this concert. Iler voice has retained At the age of 5, Jascha, whose first
much of ic youthful charm, though teacher was his father, entered the
her upper tones have a tendency to
become .trilent and those in the low-
el? rog.st•r hollow. She was evidently
nervous at her appearance on Thurs-
day night, otherwise there would have
been no need of so such effort in the
i'slivery of her arias. The air from
Mozart's - Cosi fan twit." is compar-
ativ•ly easy In comparison to the
great "Ocean thou mighty monster"
from Weber's "Oberon," and yet it
seemed the store labored of the two.
' But l■ lnie. EfiXtoll found great favor
with her audience, which appeared to
be extremely thankful for the excel-
lent diction of the artist in the
Weber aria particularly, as this was
sung in perfectly intelligible English.
And to Mr. Gabrilowitsch's credit it
must be recorded here that he provid-
ed an •xreHent accompaniment for
the soloist. There WEIS no piano on
the stage, otherwise Mine. Easton
would surely have responded to her
many recalls with an encore.
For the orchestra Mr. Gabrilo-
witsch had chosen three "Jewish
Poems" by the Swiss-American, Er-
JASCHA HEIFETZ
nest Bloch; Beethoven's Fourth Sym-
phony and Tschaikovsky's "The 'rein- Royal School of Music at Vilna and
pest." This program was little better
graduated before he was 8 years old.
than some of the recent net for
Ile attracted the attention of Profes-
which the conductor apologized at the sor Leopold Auer, who accepted him
last subscription concert, and if the
for his master's class as his youngest
audience paid respectful attention to
pupil.
Bloch and Tschaikovsky, it dozed
Mr. Ileifetz's New York debut,
placidly during the Beethoven selec-
ocea-
tion, even though Mr. Gabrilowitsch Oct. 27, 1917, is a memorable
son
in the annals of musical history,
was at his best in this old and fa-
it success so sensational as to be al-
classic.
But
his
reversing
the
: India:.
order of the Bloch poems helped not most unprecedented in the memory
a hit. They may be poems, and they of the New York critics. During his
may even be musical poems, but they first American season he appeared 18
' certainly are not music in the stan- or 20 times in New York and has
dard accepted sense of the word. since played over 500 concerts in
Vague, racophanous, only in the most America, not including two trips to
distant manner suggesting the printed Cuba. This year he will become an
program, and never for a moment American citizen.
Mr. Ileifetz's violin was made by
during to boast of the merest melody,
these three essays, "Donne, Rite, Cur- Joseph Guarnerius and is extremely
' lege funebre," are neither fish nor rare, having belonged to Wilhelmj
' good meat, and most assuredly they and previously owned by the famous
are not Jewish. Only the dance makes old teacher, Ferdinand David. It is
the slightest concession to anything valued at $4,500.
savoring of the oriental, and this is
Mr. Ileifetz's program includes Jo-
' insufficient to make it Hebraic. The seph Achron's "I.a Romanesca,"
author admits in the printed notes which will be played for the first time
'
. that he has held himself back; that in Detroit. The program follows:
'these poems to not present the ma-
5aint-Sanna
turity which must have crept into his Cir+1 Sorat•
Mooret.Dandelot
de in E Minor
later works, but that this is neverthe- i .e . Prlit Moulin. • 3/est....Couperin-Press
rei•ler
less music "my music." If this be
Dvorak
then many in the audience must 41.vonir Dance to E Minor
SO
Lili Itoulanaer
have been disillusioned, and it is de- ( ' 0, "Xe
Main Store
Soon
Will Move
Save to 50%
Make no mistake about this: Even
after we have moved into our New Store
on Washington Boulevard we are going
to continue our present Main Store as an
EAST SIDE Branch BUT of course,
we must greatly reduce the stock before
the city starts to tear down the building
in order to widen High Street!
Our new store will open with an en-
tirely new stock, so we have cut prices as
much as 50%! A rare opportunity!
Our
New
Home
Will
Be
Ready
in
a
Short
Time!
Watch
for
Opening
"La Hornonesea" (Sixteenth Centory I ...
Jo,eph Aehron
toady to be hoped that at the ear-
liest opportunity in the coming sea• Pet pet uuni Mobile
Cyril Scott
The Gentle Maiden
' son some of the more mature works intro(itletion and Tarantella
Saranate
of this Jewish composer will be
Our dealings with customers does not end with sale of car.
lsitlor Achron will accompany Hei-
played, with a firmer grasp of the in-
Your new Chevrolet is here.
tricacies of the score, no that the fetz at the piano.
'rhe famous violinist will spend the
reputation •hnb has preceded him
New Bodies
next year in Europe.
here may be saved.
New Finish
New Chassis
New Clutch
New Appoint-
"The Tempest" is not the most rep-
New Axles
ments
resentative of Tschaikovsky's tone- Djina Ostrowska, Harpist, and
poems, and in the evirated score
Joseph Corner, Violinist,
which Mr. Gabrilowitsch had pre-
CENTRAL CHEVROLET COMPANY
to Play Sun., April 5.
Service."
Superior
"The House of
. pared for the OCCASE On, there was
E. RO SENTHAL,32 President
even less excuse for its performance.
H. CRUDDER, General Manager
gewood 43
Ed
composition has many' weak-
2287 East Jefferson Ave.
The popular concert under Victor
-- messes besides those of irritating repe-
Kolar in Orchestra Hall to be given '
tition and brings several of the more Sunday afternoon, April 5, presents
popular of the author's works tan- as soloists two favorite members of
talizingly to mind. There are themes t 1.. symphony orchestra, Djina Os-
strongly reminiscent of "Romeo and tr ..vska, first I a -- pill, and Joseph Gor-
luln•t;" of the sixth symphony; of ni r, one of the li.?st violins. Madame
better use of the same material by Os' aiwsl.a has proved herself to be a
Itimsky-Korsaktiff and Gliere, and fin- harpist if rare tel.nt and fine mu-
ally, there are empty extremes which siciunship. ys ago she Was Ss-
mean nothing and which sadly ma- hoist -vith Ih• or • 1)- t a in Columbus,'
lign their author. Mr. Gabrilowitsch Ohio. and her pInv'per created a sens-
evidently tried his best to bring life ation. Madarie Ostrowska will play
and color out of the music which he Salzedo's N'ariation a Theme in
had left on the printed page, and the the Ancient Ftvle (without orchestra.'
orchestra responded nobly to his beat
Mr. Gt.rn.r is once f the very fine
anti urge. But "The Tempest" cre- violinists which helps to make the see-
fully no
stir at and
it might
nterci-
fully
be great
spared
these
concerts
fur tion of first violins in the orchestra i
er
mph Thumin.
RE
The
•-■
,
r,
:ra Hall
another generation.
The conductor's best work of the
evening came with the performance
of the Beethoven symphony. It is
not the kind of music to appeal to the
younger set of subscribers any more,
though their elders seem to derive
much pleasure in watching the formal
development of themes and the pro-
gression of the four movements. The
third would have been more interest-
ing, and why not the eighth?
•
.
0
00.
Main 72.1
1■ ■
,11:40% ,1 •• ••■■
I04341.000o 000004
DLORD
We do our own
want • doplex,
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nd
For Over 70 Years
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Full ',sloe allowed on other
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Catalog sent you on r
GRAND AND UPRIGHT
PIANOS FOR RENT
April
6.
%•••‘%%
11•100 00 )
There will be a concert of unusual
interest at Arcadia Auditorium next
Monday night, April fi, by the Polish
Folk-Lore Orchestra. This is said to
he a bona-tide organization which ap-
pears in national Polish costume, and
under the direction of an experienced
conductor, with the assistance of na-
tive instruments, it gives programs
of real merit. Tickets may be had at
among the hest in the country. He is
a Russian and has been with the or-
Ile
chestra now for several years.
will play a Fantasy on Airs from
Gounoti's r pera, "Faust" made by the
great Polish violinist, Witiniawski.
Mr. Kolar has put on the program .
charming Caucasian
Sketches which vies almost with i he
"Nutcracker" Suite and "Scheheraz-
ade" in the favor of the public which
'
cues to Orchestra Hall. Other
hers alit be the Fingal's Cave Over-
ture of Mendelssohn, two pieces frci,
Sibelius's Suite "King Christian II."'
neither of which has been heard hert••
and the Bacchatiale from Saint-Sio•n's
tipera "Samson and Delilah .'•
non' Cdaal
HIGH AT HASTINGS
I s
Open Evenings
Free Bus Service From Woodward and High
Farce Comedy, "We've Got to
Have Money," to Play at
Majestic Next Week.
the Arcadia on the night of the con-
Youth, triumphant, impudent, fear-
less, ambitious and successful, will
come into its own at the Majestic the- /
Give "Who Ater on Sunday evening when th•
Yiddish PI .
Woodward Players will offer "We've
Is Right?" at Orchestra
Got to Have Stoney," an amusiint
April 12.
Hall
comedy cif youth by Edward Lasko 7o .
Originally offered at the Playhouse /
In order to accommodate those who in New York, "We've Got to flay ,
Yiddish Play-
were unable to see the
Money" received considerable favor-
ers at their playhouse at 2014 Hast- able comment from the press.
ings street, arrangements have been
The cast includes the by who 1- /
made for a performance to be given
the rause of all the trouble and hi-
at Orchestra !tall Sunday evening,
sweetheart; a sharp, humorous, su-
April 12. when the modern tiperatta
who keep - I
in four nets, "Who Is Right?" by J. .ieptible boot manufacturer
stenographer
Fauzman. will be presented. The one eye on the lovely
and the other eye tin the threc
Yiddish Players have received much
student, with an in 4;
commendation by the Yiddish press youths; a dreamy
vention to sell; a German invent., o
the
best
and are considered among
with a comic dialect and a wife called /
ctors on the Yiddish-speaking stage. Lent, and a bookkeeper with a fund
.A along the leading actors to appear
of comic personalities. All of which /
at Orchestra Hall are Slischa Fishson,
for the /
Frank, Isaac Ark. and Vera will provide good material
Belly
. NV...1,yard Players.
This will he the far
: t
_ _
nut -
time th.• I layers have r appeared
r. 1 in
side 1 0. •
,
cert.
to
SPEND PASSOVER WEEK AT
on
Wright - Kay. Prepares for
over Silver Demands
Pass - I
of
Detroit Jewry.
Sunday Ater , noon,
an extraordinary supply of fine silver
..
and individual piece. th i
-enrinev
spring from the well known ulver-
.rliths they represent.
According to E. F. Wright, special
attention was given to the regain-
meats of the Jewish trade, which
th.•
forms a considerable part of
firm's exclusive business.
Michigan
Ticket. 25e to St 51 Grinnell'. sad
Gl....290
Orchestra
April 17
LAST SYMPHONY CONCERTS
Condo , for
and So'o
OSSIP GABRILOWITSCH
.. to $2.50 •5 Grinnell'.
Ticket.
Hall. Gln.
nd 8290.
Orehe.t
SAMUE1. ELKIN
MAX ELKIN
SAMUEL ELKIN & SON, PROPS.
DJINA OSTROWSKA, Harp
JOSEPH CORNER, Violin
so—rri..
I
Afount Clemens,
Apr-I 5. .11 3 30
VICTOR KOLAR. Conducting
Thur., April 18--51
/
MINERAL
BATHS
POPULAR CONCERT
So.o•t.
favorite'
Detroits
W1- 1.h' • Kay,
jewelers. have purchased
d o wn•own
/
and
ORCHESTRA HALL
Detroit Symphony Orchestra
/
HOTEL
ELKIN
a
troit.
a.'
5
are having pecial services in the hotel. Give
During the week of Passover, we
pleasure, by
and at the lime time a week of
your wife a much needed rest,
made
to
Hotel
Elkin
for
Passover
Week.
If
you
haven't
bringing the family
yet
phone
Mt.
Clemens
135-136
NOW.
your reservations
.....
... ...... ...