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18 tation. 83. Clothed. 84. Rescue, 85.Set with small brilliant bodies. 89. However. 90. Became visible. 94. Peels. 95. The atmosphere. 97. Monkey-like ani- mal. 99. Cubic unit of metric measure, 100. Angered; obs. 101. Daub. 103. Collected to- gether. 105. Aperture, 106. Sped. 107. Pensive. 109. Russian titles. 111. Noted humorist. 112. Not vocal. 114. Mockery. 116. Gives. ,118. A rhomb; obs. 119. In music, slow. 120. Manifest. 121. Slim. * 122.City in Germany. 123. Rumors. DOWN. 1. Crowned. 2. Partake again. 3. Regards highly. 4. Negrito of Luzon. 5. Drunkards. 6. Construct. 7. Abandoned. 8. Boxes made of wooden slats. 9. A rodent. 10. Superimnosed. 11. Style of painting. 12. Part of garment. 13. Painting in imita- tion of wood. 14. Pastoral pipes. 15. A land measure, 16. The ocean. 17. Lamentable. 18. Unfolded. 19. Scoffed at. ings. 28. Require. . Roman god of the 30. Withered. sea. 33. Not metaphorical. . Pranks. 35. Began. .To stay in expec- 37. Jungle b2asts. ACROSS. . Wrinkled. 8. Jutting rocks. . Seized. . Replace. .South American badgerlike animal. . Accept. . Properties. . Expiate. . Gas and air charger. . That girl. . Odor. . Superintend. . Yale. . Chinese coin. . Woody plants. . Levels. . Noisy. . Ermine; ref. Sp. . Trials. . Silkworm. . A Shoshonean In- dian. . Foreordained. . A malt drink. . Surrounded. . Minced oath. . Train. . Narrow valley. . The fish hawk. . Colonized. . Artists’ frames. . Pertaining to cen- tral principle. . Takes out. . Wanderer. .Chum; colloq. . Month of the Hebrew calendar. . Lessened. . More superior. . Mechanical repe- tition. . Fragment{ of cloth. . Wooden shoe. . Mixture of snow and rain. . Yielded. . Malicious burn- News of the Music World — group of local musicians had been invited. DBut the effects were far-reaching. People went home. They said to their neighbors, “We have a very fine composer in our midst— tell me what you know of her.” Mrs. Emery, one of the most versatile of local composers, has had her history repeated a hundred times Guring the past week. Mrs. Emery is only one of a dozen or more talented local composers who are daily writing and publishing (the latter must be counted) more and more. A week from Mcnday, for instance, the Composers’ Club will present a prcgram of its members at the American As- sociation of University Women. Here Arsenio Ralon will play the “Ballade” which La Salle Spier wrote and which was recently played by Sylvia Lent in New York. Mr. Spier will be there. So will Mrs. Emery. Others who will be honored on this program will be Edward C. Potter, R. Deane Shure, Henry S. Gregor and Karl Holer. It is an event of considerable importance in the midst of this Winter’s hey- day of music. Musigraphs Continued from Sizteenth Page - A program of special music will be given to accompany the reading of the advent drama, “Bethlehem,” at the National City Christian Church next Sunday afternoon at 5 o’clock, by the choir of the church, directed by William E. Braithwaite; Robert Ruckman, organist, and Katherine Riggs, harpist. An organ recital will be given tomorrow eve- ning by T. Guy Lucas at St. John's Church at 8:15 p.m. Mr. Lucas will play Bach’s “Toccata and Fugue in D Minor,” and prelude on the advent chorale, “Sleepers, Wake”; Handel's suite from the “Water Music,” and shorter compositions by Parry, Purcell, Spohr, Bair- stow and Franck. Willa Semple has moved her studio to 1809 Kalorama road, where she is now teaching. Gertrude Lyons, president of the D. C. Fed- eration of Music Clubs, entertained Mrs. Elmer James Ottaway, national president of the Fed- eration of Music Clubs, when she stopped over a few hours in Washington last Monday. Pearl Waugh will begin her lecture course, “How to Listen to Music,” at the Y. W. C. A. on Wednesday of this week at 4:45 in the fourth floor assembly hall. There will be 12 classes, which will occur every alternale Wednesday. These classes will include musical history, musi- cal biography, instruments, different styles and compositions and analysis of form in music as w.ll as ether interesting subjects. Esther Spier, pianist, recently gave zeveral se= lections at a luncheon meeting of the Civitan 39. African river. 41. Long cuts, 43. Beg. 45. Refusal. 4'7. Wing of building. 49. Understandable. 51. Blotted out. 52. Merciful. 54. Musical drama. 55. Measured by the sun. 56. Pieces of pressed tobacco. 57. Threads under the skin. . Recipient of gift. . A refrain in mu- sic, the after song. 61. At subsequent time. 62. Winter vehicles. 64. Salt water floun- der. 66. Confronted. 69. Skin of sheep tan- ned with bark. 70. Flurry. 71. Iterates. 73. Obstructions. 74. Make invulner- able. 75. Dens. 77. Possessed. 79. Peer. 80. Covering for head. 82. Driver of a team. 84. One that dis- tributes. 85. Helical forms. 86. Lady's sunshade. 87. Sandy. 88. Legislative assem- bly. 90. Diving birds. 91. Narrator. 92. Caustic. 93. Hates. 96. Kind of lottery. 98. Elderly woman. 101. Scorch. 102. Precepts. 104. A number of animals. 107. Staff of authority. 108. Magnifying glass. 110. Small piece. 113. Feminine name. 115. Summer; French. 117. Bustle. EALAL Club held at the La Fayette Hotel. Miss Spier also gave a program at a recent meeting of the Chevy Chase Women's Club. Tamara Dmitriff, pianist, will give a program of piano selections over Television W3XK on Friday evening on a program arranged by Ger- trude Lyons in the interest of the unemployed. Mrs. Lyons will sing a group of songs on this program. Announcement has been made -that Hans Kindler will attend the rehearsal of the Wash- ington Choral Festival Association tomorrow Last Words Before Winter By Louis Untermeyer All my sheep, Gather in a heap, ¥ Farcwell, my flocks, Farcwell. For I spy the woolly, woolly wolf. But let me find you Safe in your stall and barn and box, With your Winter’s tale behind you. Farewell, my cattle (both); I leave you just as loath As though you were a hundred head, Instead Of two-and-a-half. (Two cows and a calf.) Farewell, my apple trees; You have learned what it is to freeze, With the drift on your knees. But oh, beware Those first kind days, the snare Of the too promising air, The cost Of over-sudden trust— And then the killing frost. Farewell, beloved acres; I leave you sn the hands Of one whose ecarliest enterprise was lands— Your Maker's. Yard, hutch and house, farcwell. It is for you to tell How you withstood the great white wolf whose fell Is softer than a lambkin’s, but whose breath Is death. Farcwell, hoof, claw and wing, Finned, furred and feathered thing, Till Spring— All my sheep, Gather in a heap, For I spy the woolly, woolly wolf. e N Wi jEEmEE EL L1} Continued From Sixteenth Pagé - evening. A full attendance is hoped for. Louis - Potter is conductor for these bi-monthly re- hearsals. The Intermediate Orchestra Class of the Beard School of Music gave a musicale last Thursday evening. The feature of the evening was a trio composed of Walter Spillman, Betty Beall, and Bobby Morgan. “The Duel,” a poem by Eugene Field, has been set to music by Karl Holer for the Chaminade Glee Club. Warren F. Johnson will give an organ recital at the Church of the Pilgrims at 7:30 o’clock this evening. He will play “Toccata on 'Ein feste Burg,” (Middleschulte), “Harmonies du Soir,” (Frysinger), and “Fantasia” from “Four Tone Poems™” by Max Gulbins. An interesting program was given over the Television last Wednesday by Mme. Marie von Unschuld. Mme. von Unschuld, who originated piano technique via television in a New York studio, added a short piano lesson to her Wed- nesday’s program at the request of an official of the Bureau of Education, Department of Ine terior. She demonstratad this with the playing of 9-year-old Clayton Norris and 12-year-old Irvin Phillips, who have been studying with her under this television method for some time. Emanuel Zetlin, teacher of violin at the Washington College of Music, will be heard in concert at chapel of the College of Liberal Arts of American University, next Friday morning at 10 o’clock, in Hurst Hall, on the campus, Mas- sachusetts and Nebraska avenues. He is to be accompanied by Fannie A. Roberts, head of the theory department at the Washington Col lege of Music. Canned Goods Improved, HE McNary-Mapes amendment to the food and drugs act, approved last year, has brought about a definite improvement in the quality of canned vegetables, Federal officials have found. This amendment permits the Secretary of Agriculture to set up a list of standards for the canning industry and good falling below this standard are not permitted in interstate shipment unless the labels indicate that the product is below standard. No goods which are unfit for human use are permitted in interstate commerce, of courge but those in which the fill or quality is not u[; to standard must be labeled substandard in large print. To show the effects of the amendment, a recent case in the pea canning industry in the territory around Chicago may be cited. Fede eral inspectors visited 45 canneries and found only one shipment below standard, this one containing a large percentage of hard peas. The shipment was seized because the label did not indicate the substandard nature of the agnients.