24 WINNETKA TALK April 9, 1927 or || The Smartest Coat and Ensemble Collection in Chicago $79.50 - $195.00 Reproductions From Leading French Houses Now Being Shown by § ; ApS? oH bods Ps S17 No Michigan Ave Chicaga V/A fees BEGIN TICKET SALES FOR MUSIC FESTIVAL Establish Headquarters in Evans- ton; Edward Johnson and Mary Lewis Among Soloists Announcements giving full details of the programs that are to be presented during the North Shore Music Festi- val, May 23 to 28, have been mailed to subscribers. Under the direction of John H. Hilton, business manager, the sale of course tickets has opened at the office of the Festival association, 1580 Sherman avenue, Evanston, just south of the City National bank. The office is in charge of Mrs. Elmer Baer. This office can be reached over Briargate 4200 without toll. It is pointed out to patrons that the buying of course tickets is of mutual advantage to the Festival association and to the ticket holders, as the Festi- val association is given the assurance of financial support in advance and patrons are favored with better seat lo- cations, as well as enjoying the advan- tage of hearing five concerts at the price of four. The saving to buyers of course tickets amounts to {rom twenty to thirty percent. Prices range from $5 to $16, according to location. At the performance of "Elijah," at the first concert, there will be oppor- tunity to hear Horace Stevens, the fa- mous English baritone. The other so- loists will be Louise Loring, soprano; Doris Doe, contralto; and Paul Alt- house, tenor. P. C. Lutkin, musical director of the Festival will conduct. Johnson Here May 24 Edward Johnson, the popular tenor, and Mischa Levitzki, pianist, will be soloists at the second concert, May 24. Frederick Stock will be the conductor. The concert will open with two Beet- ES ire wn ag RE de SER Trees Trimmed Correctly! Proper pruning permits the neglect of no dead limbs no matter how far up or how inaccessible. ture demands extraordinary thoroughness, skill and courage. Dead and dying branches spread tree diseases and insects. Accidents are caused by decayed branches falling. The Fundamental Principles may be briefly summarized (1) the removal of all dead, decayed, diseased and injured wood and bark; (2) the sterilizing of all cut surfaces; (3) the water-proofing of cut surfaces; (4) aid- ing quick recovery, as by filling and cover- ing deep cavities; (5) inspection, once or several times a year to forestall the action of new defects that may arise. This phase of tree cul- of Tree Surgery as follows: Lynch Tree Surgeons work and live on the north shore. They know how to properly handle your Tree Surgery problems. Pests and decay creep downward from the top. Skill and courage play a part in successfully con- trolling them by pruning. > hoven numbers, the "Lenore" overture, No. 3, and the aria, "Adelaide." The piano number will be by Saint-Saens, opus, 22. After the intermission will come an aria from "Carmen," a suite from "La Giara," by Casella, Lohen- grin's narrative and a Slavonic dance by Dvorak. Both Mr. Stock and Mr. Lutkin will conduct the third concert, May 26, the soloists being Florence Austral and Horace Stevens. The program will open with the overture to "Die Ge- schoepfe des Prometheus," and the Fifth symphony, by Beethoven. Then will be heard a scene and aria from the opera "Fidelio," by the same composer. After the intermission will come the big novelty of the Festival, the "Sea Symphony," by Vaughan Wil- liams. At the fourth concert, the afternoon of May 28, the Children's chorus of 1,500 voices will be heard in two groups of children's songs and in the cantata, "Old Johhny Appleseed," by Harvey B. Gaul. Sophie Braslau, contralto, will be the soloist, and will sing two arias. The orchestra, under direction of Mr. Stock, will play the overture to "Wil- liam Tell," Rossini; waltz, "Tales from the Vienna Woods, "Strauss ; suite from the ballet, "Sleeping Beauty," by Tschaikowsky; a waltz movement by Volkmann and a polonaise from a ser- enade by Beethoven. Mary Lewis Sings May 28 During the final concert, the evening of May 28, Mary Lewis, soprano, and Lawrence Tibbett, baritone, will be the soloists, together with the chorus. A feature of the concert will be the performance of a movement from a symphony by Mr. Oldberg, with the composer conducting. The program in- cludes the overture, "Le Carnaval Ro- main," by Berlioz, aria from "Herodi- ade," by Massenet; aria from "Louise," by Charpentier and another aria from "The Masked Ball" by Verdi. The suite from the "Fire Bird," by Strav- insky will be followed by the Bird Song from "Pagliacci" and a scene from fi- nale from "The Mount of Olives," by Beethoven. It will be seen from this that an un- usual treat is in store at the Festival this season as the programs are attrac- tive and the soloists are all artists of the first rank. Frederick E. Clerk in Lecture on "Americanism" Frederick E. Clerk, principal of the New Trier High school, spoke on "Americanism" before the students of the National Kindergarten and Ele- mentary college last Thursday after- noon. In one of the finest lectures of the semester Mr. Clerk showed the necessity for alert interest on the part of Americans and especially of the teachers of young Americans, in the affairs of other countries. He sug- gested that a melting pot, as America has so often been termed, may be used for one of two things--it may be used simply for mixing, in which case the worst elements become a little better and the best a good deal worse; or it may be used to refine and carry off the baser metal or impurities, to the better ment of the entire mass, and it is up to the people of America to de- cide upon the use to which the country shall be put. ANNOUNCEMENT . STELLA HAGEMAN HOWD CORSET SHOP THOMAS J. 564 Lin Soin Avene Tree Specialist 12 years on the North Shore Telephone 1294 L ) N C HH : 1328 Stevens Building 17 No. State St., Chicago has just returned to the city and is again Personally in charge of her II 3 I Green Bay Road Establishment. Newest things in GLENCOE corsets, corselettes, lingerie, negli- gees and Kickernick Bloomers. Telephone 514 FOR APPOINTMENT : ~ PHONES DEARBORN 4623-625 "