P__ IEVeHturr,inushiilittedm PAGE FOUR BABY DAY NURSERY TO HOLD BALL MARCH 4 the ball are for the purpose of estab- lishing a new and larger home for the poor little children who are not for- tunate enough to have one. The pub- Vice-president Morris Fishman of lic is urged to subscribe liberally and the Detroit Life Insurance Company a good time will be had by all. Mrs. Gussie Mishkin is general takes pleasure in announcing the ap- chairman of the dance committee and Mrs. Anna Katz is chairman of the publicity and tickets. Latest Addition to Detroit Life Staff The Detroit Hebrew Ladies Baby Day Nursery is holding its sixth an- nual Purim ball at the Arcadia, Thursday evening, March 4. Tickets are now on sale by the committees in charge. The demands on the sere. ices of this institution have become Fortune and misfortune are two so great that the present premises are inadequate. The proceeds from buckets in a well. AN HONEST DEAL There is basis for real pride in the fact that customers seldom ask us to guarantee our Used Cars. It indicates that our efforts to build up public confidence were well directed. Our reputa- tion is ample assurance of honest deals and honest values. THOMAS J. DOYLE INCORPORATED 3922 WOODWARD GLENDALE 7117 Remember— A used car is only as good as the firm you do business with. H. P. HOROWITZ pointment of H. R. Horowitz as a representative of the company, with offices in suite 302, Detroit Life Building, 2210 Park avenue, Detroit. Mr. Horwitz is well known to the De- troit business community through his many years of association with life insurance work. He has been direct- ly serviceable to a very large clien- tele, through his representation of Eastern life insurance corporations. His connection with the Detroit Life in his new capacity is announced to take place March 1. Y. M. H. A. NOTES Builders' Show "Ideal ', Home Near Completion Prize House Will Be Open for Inspection Beginning Sunday, February 28, and Will Be Open Every Day From 10 A. M., Until 8 P. M., Until the Show Closes. Detroit's "ideal" home, which will be given away without reservation at the eighth annual revival of the De- troit Builders', Realtors' and Better Homes exposition, to be held at Con- vention hall from March 13 to March 24, inclusive, will be sufficiently com- pleted to be thrown open to the pub- lic for inspection next Sunday. The home, which is of brick, con- taining six rooms, is rapidly nearing completion on l'ark Lane boulevard, just off Grand River avenue in May- fair subdivision, and officials of the Builders' show declare it will be the moat modern and complete dwelling ever built in Detroit. Open to Inspection. The "Ideal" home will be opened to the public at noon next Sunday, and will be kept open until 8 o'clock that evening. It will be open every day thereafter from 10 a. m. until 8 p. m., with A. LeFevre, assistant secretary, in charge. The home will he given away to the exposition visitor who makes the most accurate estimate of the cost of the house, including the lot on which it stands and the materials and equip- ment utilized in its construction. An- nouncement of the successful estimate will be made on the last night of the show. Charles J. Prost, secretary of the exposition, announced Saturday, Feb. 20, that one of the many exhibitors at the show will be the official interna- tional sample fair, of Havana, Cuba, maintained under the supervision and subsidy of the republic of Cuba. Exhibits are also being prepared from home material and equipment manufacturers in all parts of the country, and several real estate boards from various sections of the country will attend, each as an organization, they have notified Secretary Prost. Will Set Record. "The eighth revival of the Detroit Builders, Realtors' and Better Homes' exposition will be the most complete and attractive display of its kind ever held in the United States," Secretary Prost said Saturday, and added: "The various civic and municipal organizations of the city have united for this exposition as never before in the city's history and the real es- tate men and furniture interests have joined heartily with the builders to assure success of the show." Only the most dependable building materials obtainable in the open mar- ket have been used in constructing the "ideal" home, Secretary Prost said. Some of the most important items of equipment and construction were fur- nished by the following concerns, he reported: Common brick, Detroit Common Brick Manufacturers' association; face brick, Dresden Brick company; lumber, Ilartwick Lumber company; tapered shingles, Beckman Dawson company; steel casement windows, David Lupton; Kelvinator, Walter Rodgers; Insukite, R. E. Hamilton; Flaxlinurn, T. B. Rayl; steel joists, B. Gabriel Steel company; washed hot- air heat, Furnace Engineering com- pany . trate his lecture with a string quartet played by Mrs. Abel, Mr. Leggett, Mr. L'Anierieux and Mr. Abel, who will use four instruments made by Stradi- varius and four from the workshop of the great Cuarnarius. The club will give a concert with its members in April for the young artists' fund of the National Federa- tion of Music Clubs. At this time the Chamber Orchestra of the Abel school will make its first appearance, playing the Ilaydn Symphony No. 11. Willis; Puch, Dorothy Sorock; get-Me-Not, Maxine Wilde; Ki Catherine Aheame; Queen, June Pointe, Ann Arbor; Judge, if, Barnhart; Prime Minister, in Hutto; Betty, Gretchen Schoenf l and an ensemble of everythin g c ceivable in Fairy Land. A number of specialties will low this performance. Tick. t , be purchased at Grinnell's sr tra Hull after March 1. March Frolic at Orchestra Hall ORTHODOX RABBIS CLOS CONTROVERSY OVER WI S The Ethelyn Briggs-Mann School of the Dance and Dramatic Arts of the Detroit Conservatory of Music takes great pleasure in announcing the "March Frolic" at Orchestra Hall, Saturday, March 6, a fantasy in which over 200 well trained children will participate. Jules Klein has kindly placed his ensemble at our dis- posal, and Mr. William G. Schenk will be the organist. The frolic is composed of dancing and drama, and the age of the per- formers range from 3 to 12 years. Mrs. Mann is the first teacher to put before the public a group of chil- dren in drama and specializing the dancing with toe and denishawn. These tiny tot players and dancers are bringing to the public an ultra new and beneficial move in the arts for children. Three performances each year will be offered to the public, productions in which only children are the per- formers and each time there will be an entire change in the cast, which will give to all pupils an equal oppor- tunity to display their talents. In this March Frolic Mrs. Mann has revised the drama, "Why the Fuscha Hangs its Head" bringing in a num- ber of ballets and character dances. The principals of this cast are: Prim- rose, Janet Hubbard; Fuscha, Vivian Concerto in E-flat major. Drozdoff is a graduate of the Petrograd Conserv- atory, where he was awarded the gold medal prize and also the Rubinstein prize. The program will open with Bizet's By Hermann H dramatic overture "Patric" and will close with Rinisky-Korsakov's "The The magnificent auditorium of the Bumble Bee" from "Tsar Saltan" and new Masonic Temple was informally the first performance in Detroit of Financial Statements as prepared by dedicated to public use last Monday Glazounoff's "Dance Salome" after night. Informally, because the pomp Oscar Wilde. • ISENBERG, PURDY & COMPANY, and pageantry which one would natu- At the 13th pair of symphony con- Certified Public Accountants. rally look forward to and expect at certs, Thursday and Friday evenings, such an even were woefully missing, March 11 and 12, Conductor Gabrilo- BALANCE SHEET AS OF NOV. 30, 1925. and that to the unmistakable disap- witsch has designed his annual all- pointment of hundreds of the faithful Wagner program, and will have the ASSETS— and their families and friends. As it assistance of Margaret Matzenauer, $ LIMN Cash on deposit in Dime Savings Bank was, the occasion became a sort of contralto prima donna of the Metro- $42,500.00 Land and Building-308 Edmund Place spectacular try-out for the Detroit politan Opera Company of New York Originel cost of the property occupied by the Home. 13,797.30 Impromment• Symphony Orchestra in a new setting, City. Weekly Meeting Suspended: Original cost of Improvements on two buildings, such The program is as follows: Sieg- and it is to be hoped that the experi- The weekly meeting held at the Y. at remmleling and equipment of building. W. H. A. building at 89 Rowena ment will lead to some very definite fried's Idyl, Siegfried's Rhine Jour- TOTAL COST OF HOME (Fire Insurance Is carried for 58297.30 ney into Walhalla from "Das Rhein- 329,0001 street between 5 and '7 p. m. Sundays conclusions. 8,228.30 LAND CONTRACTS RECEIVABLE will be suspended this week. Mem- At this time it is of interest to note gold," Isolde's Narrative from "Tris- Balance due on contracts donated the Home by Inmates bers are requested to favor the Kadi- that the acoustics of the hall are sur- tan and Isolde" by Madame Matzen- Feinberg and Grabowsky- $27,500.00 mah card party to be held at the prisingly excellent. But if the De- suer, Brunnhilde's Immolation from Let—Linwood and Davison Originalcoat of lot purehaned In 1921. Knights of Pythias hall Sunday, Feb. troit orchestra is ever again to play "Gotterdammerung" by Madame Mat- 10,972.00 Additional Lot Cost 28, at 2 p. m. there, and if it intends and expects to zenauer, Prelude to Act III "The Mas- Interest on Land Contract and Taxes pald. 38,472.90 TOTAL LOT COST secure the same effects in dynamics tersingers" and Forest Murmurs from New Publication: and color that it so easily attains in "Siegfried." $184415.14 TOTAL ASSETS Sunday afternonn, March 7, Mr. The Y. M. 11. A. Exponent, a pub- its own home, it will be absolutely lication issued in connection with the necessary to bring on the platforms Kolar has designed a most interesting LIABILITIES— and popular program, consisting of Purim ball to be held this Sunday regularly employed at its home per- $13,711.90 Land Contract Payable evening, Feb. 28, at the Statler Hotel, formances, and in order to make its but three numbers, Dvorak's Fifth Balance due on 1.411,1 Contract for lot on Davison and Linwod. promises to be a real treat to Detroit volume in the vast spaces of the Ma- Symphony, in E minor (from the New 3,200.00 Mortgage P.y.bl. Jewry. Two thousand copies will be sonic hall equal to that obtained in World,) Suite Primeval by Skilton, Balance ilase on Contract received from Grolnimiky. $ 10,981.80 • distributed. Orchestra Hall, the orchestral person - the American composer who has de- TOTAL LIABILITIES 92,83324 SURPLUS--As detailed In Schedule 1 nel ought to be strengthened by the voted much time and study to Indian Plan Purim Ball: addition of at least two dozen men. tribal melodies. The closing number $109,515.14 TOTAL LIABILITIES AND SURPLUS The various cmmittees are conclud- Otherwise the music will not carry is the Och's Ilumeroua variations on ing their arrangements and plans and the performance will fall as flat a German Folk-Song in themanner of •Ihere wat an outstanding liability of 51.079.52 for current operating ex- which has been paid during December, 1925. penses on Nov. SO, have been carefully laid out to prop- as most of the numbers last Monday seven different composers. erly take care of the friends of the did. Conductor Gabrilowitsch will STATEMENT OF INCOME AND EXPENSES JUNE 30, 1912, Y. M. H. A. at the ball. A very in- have to change his conceptions of Webster Hall Recital. TO NOV. 30, 1925. teresting dance program has been what is loud and what is soft in this Being ■ Period of 13 Years •nd 5 Months. planned for the evening. With the connection, and if he is wise he will Mrs. Clair Chayes, charming young Y. M. II. A. Exponent, the first copies not again play here without a more pianiste of Detroit, showed a marked INCOME— to be distributed at this affair, the substantial background and roof for development of talen Friday after- 156.56735 Nestle. .d Memorials 57,43322 Y. M. II. A. Purim ball promises to his musicians. To do justice to the noon at Webster Hall in a short pro- Members' Dues 54,071.68 Inmates' Fees be a memorable social event in Detroit hall and the audience, the orchestra gram before the Music Study Club 23,563.12 Annual Ball Committees annals. last Monday should have numbered of this city. She seemed at her best 22,828.18 Men's and Ladies' Choy. Kadisha and Ladies Annillory 1,119.69 about one hundred and ten. on Opposite in sonorous passages, played with 1372.52 Int aaaaa on Land Contracts The soloist of the evening was the much color and vigorous dash with a 9,797.00 Rents Received overly-advertised American colora- clear technique and perfect relaxa- 5226,752.76 tura soprano, Luella Melius. It is tion. She showed that she is a pian- TOTAL INCOME Purim Party: safe to say that no foreign songstress iste of quality in phrase-building, ex- On Sunday afternoon, Feb. 20, the need be afraid of her laurels, and cer- pression and a dependable finger flu- OPERATING EXPENSES- 58,022.08 Y. W. H. A. will entertain its mem- tainly not the peerless Galli-Curci. ency. The program consisted of Pres:Maw 55.98920 Wage. bers with a Purim party. A very in- Mme. Menus has evidently studied 7,234.00 Annual Ball Expense teresting program is being arranged, long and earnestly, and if she were Grieg, McDowell and Von Weber. 9,669.10 Unclassified Expense—Funeral Expense., Tombstones, Supplies, Etc. 1.050.54 one which is appropriate for such a less kittenish in the course of her Mrs. Chayes is a pupil of Alan Kopel- Telephone 3930.50 joyous occasion. A large number pi performances there might he more to son, teacher of the advanced class of Stationery, Printing and Postage 13,707.73 pianoforte at the Detroit Institute of Light, Heat and Water girls is expected to be present. 4,704.14 write about her singing. Her playful Musical Art. Mr. Kopelson recently Maintenance e1 Home—Painting, Plumbing, Repairing, Etc 11433 In•urance caperings detract greatly from her returned from Vienna, where he was 560.00 The "Y" Juniors: Marble Tablets interpretations, which, on the whole, 1,734.01 Linens The "Y" Juniors are to give • fall below the standards set by the assistant to Malvinie Bree of the Le- Purim program on Saturday, Feb. majority of foreign coloratura artists, schetzky School of Piano-playing. 9157,405.53 TOTAL OPERATING EXPENSES 27, at 2:30 p. m. It will consist of a Mme. Melius' voice has no individual, 21 69,347.23 NET INCOME FOR PERIOD Mme. Onegin at Arcadia. one-act play. "Cinderella Mary," and outstanding quality, nor does it pos- a Purim play. Any girl interested in sess any degree of ingratiating STATEMENT OF CASH RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS becoming a Junior "Y" member is in- warmth. Iler grand operatic arias Mme. Sigrid Onegin, Metropolitan JUNE 30, 1912, TO NOV. 30, 1923. recital at Ar- vited to attend. failed to arouse her audience because contralto, will give a Being • Period of 13 Years and 6 Month.. of these defects, and the few songs cadia auditorium on Monday evening, 492.39 $ March 1. This is the last concert of Drama: Cash in Bank July 1, 1912 she essayed fared better because they The Strolling Players will present made no great demands upon her ad- the Philharmonic-Central Concert se- RECEIPTS— 336,752.78 Income •• detailed In Exhibit '1" three one-act plays on March 9: The vanced art. One can only wonder ries. Mme. Onegin appeared in De- 30,000.00 Sale of Winder Property China Pig," "One Hundred Dollars" what the Chicago critics have in petto, troit two seasons ago with the Detroit 1,477.411 Psyments on Land Contr.. and "Cinderella Mary." The per- now that they have sent us Toti dal Symphony Orchestra. Her recital 3,71120 Received 00 Condemnation Proceallegs—Linumod 440.82 formance will not be repeated and Monte and Luella Melius. What next? repertoire is a great one, including TOTAL CASH AVAILABLE tickets are limited. songs in Italian, French, German, DISBURSEMENTS— $42,500.00 Leonard Braun, the well-known De- Spanish and English, and the music Land and Buildings, Edmund Pl.* GINSBURG LIBRARY PROGRAM 9,725.17 troit tenor who recently returned to which she sings ranges from Bach Improvements, Edmund Plane 4,072.13 Building Equipment, Edmund Place the city after a prolonged period of and the old Italian masters to the 3,42729 Intereston Land Contract. Edmund Place The Bernard Ginsburg Library, 637 study and concertizing in several Eu- composers of today. 3.502.96 T.., Edmund Place, prior to occupation by Home — Brewster street, will celebrate its fifth I 300.00 • ropean capitals, appeared in recital at Critics have been unanimous in hail- Payment on Grahowsky Mar ggggg annual neighborhood night Wednes- Payments on Lot—Linwood and Davlsien- Orchestra Hall last Thursday night. ing Mme. Onegin as one of the most $13,7111.20 , day evening, March 3, at 8 o'clock. In a representative program of Ital- amazing artists of our time. Paid on Principal 4.55023 on Contract I ' A symposium consisting of "Books Tickets for this concert are on sale ian, Russian, German and Yiddish Taxes Paid—Assessment and General Prop- and Libraries," by Soloman Schklo- 6.392.87 erty arias and songs, Mr. Braun disclosed at Grinnell Bros. 24,691.10 ven; "The Jews as a Book Loving a most pleasing and finely trained TOTAL PAYMENTS ON LOT TO DATE.... OPERATING EXPENSES AS DETAILED IN EXHIBIT Nation," by Samuel Weinberg, editor Netzorg at Orchestra Hall. $157,405.53 organ, which he uses with skillful and of the Jewish Daily Forward; a one- 245%624.18 TOTAL DISBURSEMENTS FOR PERIOD telling effect in whatever he under- . act play, "Conflict," presented by the Bendetson Netzorg, pianist, will takes to interpret. The tenor's voice $ 8,818.64 NET CASH BALANCE—NOV. 30, 1925 Young Women's Hebrew Association, seem to be ideally suited to play in recital at Orchestra Hall and music by William Pecherer form and art the interpretation of the type of song Tuesday evening, March 2. It will RECONCILIATION- the bulk of the program. Bernard $0,139.11 which has made Isa Kremer famous, be his first public appearance in De- Cuh IN Savings Account , Ginsburg, in whose honor the library 478.53 Cub In Commercial Account and Mr. Braun may eventually find troit in two years. $ 6,818.64 , was named, will preside. TOTAL CASH—NOV. 30, 1928 Recognition of Mr. Netzorg'a stand - that his greatest success will come to him as a specialized interpreter of ing as a pianist is seen in the fact it that he has played eight times with international folk songs and ballads. Meanwhile, an early return engage- the Detroit Symphony Orchestra and has recorded many numbers for the ment is promised under the auspices of a combination of Jewish fraternal Welte-Mignon player :piano. For his 1926 recital Mr. Netzorg organizations. has made a program ranging from Bach to Debussy and including sev-1 Symphony Orchestra. eral numbers that are seldom heard. In loving memory of Louis Gold- He has revived a dance by Schubert, who died 13 years ago, Feb. 27. At the concert Sunday afternoon, berg, who in the middle of the eighteenth Feb. 28, by the Detroit Symphony, century enjoyed with Eckard the dis- Sad and sudden war the rail Victor Kolar, will present for the first Of one so dearly lo•ed by all. tinction of being the foremost harpsi- time in Detroit, a new symphony by chord player of hit day. Another The blow was bard, the shock We little thought the *rid to near. Beethoven, that is, new to Detroit aud- is ■ rondo by Nicholas iences. The "Jena" symphony, how- novelty Forget him? No. we never will . Stcherbatchev, one of the less known ever, is in all probability, older than young Russians of the latter half o f Friend* may think the wound is healed. Rat little do they know the sorrow even his Symphony No. 1. It is prob- the last century. The sonata is That Iles within our heart concealed. ably, his first orchestral composition. Beethoven's celebrated "Pastorale." is not His Loving Wife and Children. The reason why this symphony known is because it lay in obscurity A Stradivarius Evening. in the archive chambers in the college I In loving memory of our dear of music in Jena, until sometime in mother, Mary Basil, who died one MOUNT CLEMENS, MICH. The Senior Paganini Club of the the first decade of this century, where year ago, Feb. 19, 1925. it was found by the then professor of Abel Violin School will present Wil- Greatest Health Resort In the World for Rheumatism, Nervous lec- the Jena college of Music, Frits Stein. liam H. Leggett of Pontiac in a Disorders, Blood Pressure, Tired and Run Down Condition. In our hearts your memory linters. Sweet. tender. kind and true. While the exact date of this symphony ture recital Tuesday evening, March The most exclusive and finest Resort Hotel in America. Spacious There Is not a day eon o•er 8, at the school studio. Mr. Leggett, to be be- is not known it is believed 1obbies, beautiful billiard rooms, ballroom and dining rooms. Cuisine That we do not think of you. finest private col- tween 1787 and 1790, while Beethoven who has one of the unexcelled. American and European plans. Write for booklets. lections of old instruments in this Her Loving Daughters. Mrs. N. Blat- was yet a boy between the ages of 17 MAX ELKIN, Manager country, will talk to the club of the nikoff and Mrs. R. Rosenblum, and and 20. Operated by ELKIN HOTEL AND BATH COMPANY The soloist of the afternoon will be two great violin makers of Cremona, Her Loving Grandchildren, Pearl, Antonious Stradivarius and Joseph Elkin Hotel under same ownership. Lillian, Daniel and Saul Rosen- the Russian pianist, Vladimir Droz- Cuarnarius del Janu, and will illus- doff, who will play the Liszt First blum. JEWISH OLD FOLKS HOME Organize Another Gymnasium Class: The Y. M. H. A. of Detroit is or- ganizing another gymnasium class, to be held at the Hutchins School, Wil- Ron and Ilazelwood avenues, every Tuesday evening between 7 and 10 o'clock. Instructors will coach the boys in the various activities in which they may be interested. Y. M. II. A. members will now have two gym- nasium nights: Tuesday night at the Hutchins School and Thursdey at the Jefferson Intermediary at Fourth and Selden streets. Members may attend one or both classes. Non-members may also attend by paying the Y. M. H. A. initiation fee and at least one month's dues. Y. W. H. A. NOTES OLYMPIA HOTEL AND BATHS NEW YORK.— (J. T. A.) --' controversy which arose as a re , of the protest of the Union of (in dox Rabbis against Dr. Stephen Wise came to an end following a cial convention of rabbis called the union. It was declared that the pro!, contained an exchange of letter; tween the Union of Orthodox Its and the Zionist Organization America. At the close of the no ing, the following statement ma: sued: "The convention of Orthodox I Isis confirms the decision of the ox tive committee concerning Dr. 11 Concerning the work for the re struction of Palestine, every rats free to work according to hi, and inclinations." This resolution was props, .1 Rabbi Dr. Hillel Klein. The rt., for Dr. Klein's resolution was th: view of the fact that the Coini Orthodox Rabbis consists not onl y Zionists but also Mizrachi mem b. and members of the Agudath the duty of working for the lit Palestine Appeal cannot be imp upon all members of the union. An old friend is better than new ones. M USIC You Don't Pay More Monty for foie Furniture in March that in February Special Discount Means Nothing We give you the best values alway: Make rour Comparison. FIEDENBERG. FURNITURE HOUSE "The Store With ■ Reputation." HASTINGS AT FOREST OpenEvenings Until 8:30. IRA FRIEDENBERG, Pr. PHONE MELROSE 5509 A Trainload Over Sixty-seven Miles Long This would fairly represent the 8,884 cars of fuel and other supplies received by us last year, if they were all placed end to end. During the same period we loaded and shipped 988 outbound cars of tar, coke and other byproducts, substantial evidence of the resourcefulness and thrift that characterize our opera. tions. These records should be of interest to you, because you, our other 300,000 customers and our own 3,000 employes comprise one large family, so to speak, whose interests are inseparably connected. DETROIT CITY GAS CO. Chas. W. Dena., Vice Pre.. mad Gem Clifford at Bagley Mr. BRANCHES. Boulevard General Motor, Bldg. Hanirreincit 9707 Wymadmte-76 North Biddle Ann /monk Ce.V.i. 4