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2% & PRZZAANS /P8 % 08 THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JANUARY 18 1931, ACROSS. tor. . Slag from tin . Envoy. smelting. . Those who ar- . Subside. range articles. 11. Tale of sorrow. . Vituperative dec- . C o o k insuffi- lamation. ciently. . Arabian military . Rumanian mone- leaders. tary unit. . Elder. Process. . Exists. . Indefinite article. . European natives. Means of trans- . Melancholy. portation. . Larger in extent. Beverages. . Stop up Pronoun. . Russian river. Stripling. . Chemical suffix, Named; archaic. . Obstructed. A Polander. . Specific essay. ‘Wheel projection. . Pen. Roman highway. Egyptian sun god. . Unshorn sheep; . Lofty nests. dialect England. . Attacked zeal- English novelist; ously. 1836-1901. . Indian mulberry. . Priestly caste of . Wandering. Media. . Brook. Rages. . Gruesome. . Chinese jade. Habitations. Deserves. . It is so. . West Indian vol- . Wanders. cano. DOWN. Made iridescent. Mitigates. . Rejoin. . Factitious. . Cheek treth, European fish. Oriental. Thrice; music, Funeral song. Flat plate. . Biblical city. . Ordinance. . More somnolent. . Vehicle used in . Suffix signifying English mines. pertaining to. ¢ The tarpon fam- . Denoting pres- ily. ence. . Throb. . Game bird. . Blossom. . Annihilates. . Facetiousness. . Edged, as of a . Remove the hair. roof. . Forms of fortifi- . Heavenly body. cation. . Moccasin, . Build. . Thick. . Visible . Stitcher. sion. . River in Russia. . Possessive . Small particle. noun. . Ceremonies. . South American . Spanish Ameri- sloth. can shawls, .An endowed . Punitive. widow. . Scythe; Scottish. . Adversaries. . Period. . Black loam found . Norman monk. in India. . Atmospheric dis- . Pass by request. turbance. . A point in the . Old woman. moon'’s orbit near- . Athletic instruc- est the earth. 8-‘. - » - q. LRI - 0N - W R NavswNne ] - 2a impres- - -o pro- - E agexg e e 32. Disaster. 34. Slept. 36. Wild hogs of New Guinea. 37. Fruits. 39. Oozed. 41. Hybrid animals. 42. Seed vessels. 44. Engine wheel. 46. Eye; Scottish. 47. Japanese dry measure. 49. A new word. 51. American Rear Admiral; 1878- 1889. 53. Rubiginous. 55. Ward off. 57. French resort. 58. Unit of energy. 60. The female ruff. 62. Character in an Ibsen play. . Leave. . Soft food. . Consumed. . Complot. . Reimbursed. . Full-grown. . Crowded. More rational. Helical. Tracts of land. Turbine wheel. Empty spaces. Inactive. Grandfather's grandfathers; obs. Means of trans- portation; abbr. Overcrowds. Suffix forming nouns. Fault. Issue. Part of a circle. Local positions . Apelike. Oll-yielding plant. . A city in Ver- mont. . Eschews. . A king of Phrygia. . Opine, . Actual. . Faction. . Unit; dialect. . To call out. . Oriental abode. . At home. .The soul in Egyptian religion. Winter Zgoess 82 3 Bpemda: News Of the MUSiC WOI’ld — — Continued From Nineteenth-Page immortal prelude to “Lohengrin,” played on the organ by Malton Boyce, will begin the pro- gram. This will be followed by Gounod's finale to part 2 of the oratorio, “The Redemption,” “Unfold, Yet Portals Everlasting,” and Henry from the modern compositions through the “Great is Jehovah, the Lord,” completes his first period. “Oh, Worship the King,” put to words by Sir Robert Grant, opens the second period, and is followed by that delightful melody of the 124th Psalm from the Genevan Psalter, “Turn Back, O Man,” and the “Hallelujah,” by Purcell. Henschel's “Morning Hymn” continues the pro- gram, and the delightful chorale from the tmas oratorio, “Break Forth, O Beauteous venly Light,” by Bach. “Let All the World in Every Corner Sing,” by Tertius Noble, com- pletes the second series. The third period opens with an outstanding Gergorian number by Sir George Martin, “Hail Gladdening Light,” and Grieg's ‘“Ave, Maris Stella.” Two final numbers, “Regina Coeli.,” the Easter chorus from the every popular “Cavalleria Rusticana,” by Mascagni, and the “Pestival Hymn,” by Dudley Buck, ccmplete the program. THI Russian concert and bal masque, in the Williard Hotel ball room on Saturday night, January 24, is to be given for the benefit of the city mission work among the unem- ployed of Washington, conducted by St. Alex- ander’s Russian Orthodox Church, and in charge of Archpriest Viachislav Gindlin. Heading the group of Russian artists will be Mme. Nina Koshetz, who will bring with her Mme. Marie Koshetz, contralto of the Philadel- phia Grand Opera Co.; Victor Doubinsky, baritone of the former Russian Imperial The- ater; Boris Kogan, composer-pianist, and Gabriel Leonoff, dramatic artist. Other soloists will include: Lebedeff, celebrated Russian tenor; Ciro de Ritis, baritone of the Chicago Civic Opera Cop.; Ouzdanoff, foremost impersonator of Caucasian dance characters, and Henry 8. Gregor, pianist and composer, and Emanuel Zetlin, violinist. TH! Rubinstein Club will give its first con- cert of the season 1930-31 on Tuesday at = the Willard Hotel. Lawrence Strauss will bc the guest artist. This is Mr. Strauss’ first ap- pearance in the Capital. He comes from San Prancisco, but has spent a great deal of time abroad. In Paris he studied under Jules Algier and Jean de Reszke. Mr. Strauss will include in his program: Aria, from “Suzanne” (Paladilhe); “Amour d'autau” (Chausson), “Lettre a une espagnole” ‘(Laparra), “Auf Flugein des Gesanges” (Mega delssohn), “Auftrage” (Schumann), “Goin Home"” (Dvorak), “Lord Rendal” (Old English), - “My Father Has Some Very Fine Sheep” (Old Irish) and “Cargoes” (Dobson). The club will render: *““The Water Nymph" (Rubinstein), “In the Boat,” “In the Hall of the Mountain King” and “I Love Thee” (Grieg), “Hymn of the Sun” (Mozart), “Peter Pan” (Beach) and “The Dance” (Moszkowski). Mr. Strauss and the club will be assisted by Daisy Sickenscher, cello; Mrs. C. E. Bush, first piano, and Ruth Walker, second piano. Flora McGill Keefer, mezzo-contralto, will assist Lewis Corning Atwater, organist, in a pro- gram of music by Jules Massenet at All Souls’ Church, Unitarian, Sixteenth and Harvard streets, this afternoon at 5 o'clock. At the 11 o'clock morning service Elsa Raner, violinist, will be the assisting artist. The finance board of the John Wesley A. M. E. Zion Church has arranged a musical vesper service to be held January 25 and February 22, from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. at the church, Four- teenth and Corcoran streets. On January 25 the artists will include Louis N. Brown with the Harmonic Quartet; James Lomack, the John Wesley Quartet, Minnie Pet- tiway, Mrs. C. Cassandra Stewart and John M. Johnson; also Ulysses White and Ellesworth Honesty, violinists. Warren F. Johnson will give an organ re- cital at the Church of the Pilgrims this eve- ning at 7:30 o’clock. He will play “Alpine Suite, Op. 12”; “Morning,” “Shepherd’s Pipes,” “Evening,” “Hymn of Praise,” by Benna Moe, and “Drifting Boat,” Egener. Mrs. William T. Reed, Washington contralté, and Stella Lippman, pianist, also of this city, will be heard in a program this afternoon at 5 o'clock in the fourth floor music room of the Young Women's Christian Association, Seven- tenth and K streets, to which the public is invited. The soloist for the German service at Con- cordia Lutheran Church today will be Raymond Escherich, tenor, who will sing the aria, “Dann werden die Gerechten leuchten,” from “Elijah” of Mendelssohn, Marine Band. HE schedule of concerts to be given by the United States Marine Band and Orchestra during the coming week will be as follows: Mon- day, January 19, at 4 p.m., band concert; Wed- Notes of Art and Artists Continued from Twenty-first Page museum exhibits. It is excellently exemplified in some of the exhibits in the National Museum in this city. The Natural History Museum, New York, has carried it perhaps still further. In the Charleston, S. C. Museum and the Mu- seum of the University of Nebraska, excellent work has been done along similar lines; and now, through Mr. Frank J. McKenzie working in co-operation with scientists in charge, this remarkable series has been produced and set up in the new African Hall in the Los Angeles Museum. A COLLECTION of water colors and silver point drawings by Theodore Hardy is to be seen in the lounge in the Belasco Theater. The water colors are of landscapes and woodland scenes, chiefly in Autumn coloring; the .allver points portraits of famous actors. Lm'HOGRAPHs of public bulldings in Wash- ington by J. H. Himmelheber, which are well known to readers of The Star through re- production in the rotogravure section, are now on exhibition on the second floor of the Public Library. These drawings make evident the beauty added to our National Capital through architectural design and structure, and should ®o far toward increasing civic pride. TK! PHILLIPS MEMORIAL GALLERY pur- chased from the most recent biennial ex- hibition of the Corcoran Gallery of Art three paintings for its permanent collection—one the work of a local painter, another by a painter at one time resident here. They are “Town- send’s Corner,” by Beulah Weaver of this city, “Man and Horses,” by Peppino Mangravite, for- merly of Washington but now of New York, and “Along the Seine,” by Arnold Wilts of New York. Two pictures were sold to private col- lectors and, as previously announced, the Cor- coran Gallery of Art purchased five to add to its growing collection of American art. From this exhibition 21 paintings were invited for a traveling exhibition to be shown first in Phoenix, Ariz., and later on a circuit under the auspices of the American Federation of Arts. The attendance at this exhibition was excep- tionally large. On the four evenings alone it amounted to 2,249. NOTABLE Pan-American exhibition of eon- temporary paintings opened last week in the Baltimore Museum of Art. This exhibition comprises works by leading artists of the South and Central American Republics as well as from the United States, Mexico and Canada. It has been in preparation for over a year and has been made possible through the co-operation of the Department of State and the Pan-Ameri~ can Unioa. nesday, January 21, at 8 p.m., monthly syme phonic concert; Friday, January 23, at 3 pm, orchestra concert. The feature of the Wednes~ day night symphonic program will be a solo for pianoforte with orchestra accompaniment, the “Hungarian Fantasie,” by Franz Liszt, with Helen Corbin Heinl as the guest soloist. The program will also include Cesar Franck’s cele= brated “Symphony in D Minor,” the rhapsody “Culprit Fay,” by Henry Hadley, and Arthur Honegger's symphonic poem, “Pastorale D’Ete.” Helen Corbin Heinl, pianist, will be the soloe ist with the United States Marine Bank Wede nesday night, January 21, at the Marine Bare racks auditorium at 8 o’clock. Mrs. Heinl will play Liszt's “Hungarian Fane tasie” with the orchestra under the direction of Capt. Taylor Branson. The concert will be heard over the Columbia Broadcasting System in a network to the Pacific Coast, including Station WMAL in Washington. Navy Band. HE United States Navy Band, Lieut. Charleg Benter, leader, will play a public concert at the sail loft, Navy Yard, Wednesday evening at 8 o’clock. The program opens with the over- ture “Maritana,” Wallace, and includes the “Peer Gynt” suite by Grieg, scenes from Wag- ner's “Tannhauser” and excerpts from the mu= sical comedy “‘Sweet Adeline.” Musician Bire ley Gardner, cornetist, and Lcsis Goucher, xylophonist, will be heard in solos. Detailed program of this concert will appeas - In the Wednesday issue of The Star. Shoe Qutput of Country. THE extent to which women are going in foe outdoor sports is probably better shown in the shoe-production industry than in any other. The output of athletic and sporting shoes for 1927 totaled 261,000 pairs, while two years later, during 1929, 1,600,000 pairs were turned out, or about six times as many. The shoe industry as a whole was just a bit shy of the billion-dollar class, the return for the year being $939,000,000. Parents apparently received new shoes more often than the chile dren, for both men’s and women’s shoes ine dicated a substantial increase in production, while children’s and infants’ fell off slightly. Altogether there were about 325,000,000 pairs of shoes and boots produced and nearly 40,000~ 000 pairs of slippers.