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l'lWM'EKllY, NUT \ ~

~

' Prof. l~1lwn1·1l A, Uoss oi

1

I=

''."·1lk at For \
in th ere ls
. Suc h a
prospcrlt )'.

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of th e U11 I
on " Com11
nlng.

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;1g llH\11 w h

e c.. ~ nt be r :lb. '1"
',t-l5\ ~ 1-t..a. rc! ~,~c.e.
li'f'r-

J'nrh ~ttll flrrtiugn

.

;-ord Hall Meetinirs

THIRD SEASON- I 909-l 0

to ·of the worsl bliu.al'(I Jl-01•

s•eien in 11 .years, a lmm1l com•
hlo ckin g all kinds of tram
il e by actual counl c11niu ouL
Sunday eve ning' s m ee ting to
0. P . G iffo rd, _ who Hl_
lollO .o~
, "Holid ays .and lloly 1)11)8,
-~I pr e liminary couccrL
\\'118
d wi-th because th e 11rth1t a
,t get in from their s11h11rl11111
"s. D r . Giffor d co111plel1!IY won
e n ce from the ve r y s tart hy
that th e greatest day · In tho
him- hi s birlh1Jay- wa,-; n!Mn
because it •marlrn<I th e d ea th
iam Lin e oln ancl th e free1l0111
ews from Egyptian 1>0111!111,u.
:Je n ·o.f hi s m e ssage WIIH t lrnt
to share hi s lrn s l days with
ws and h e wantc1I to hnvu 11
th e ir h eist days . Hi s r c n1wn ·
1some pr ese ntation of thu
,a,t li e back of Sunday, Christ·
the Fourth of Jul)• cap tlvat o,I
irs. One c le an -faced A m e rkan
nan ca m e up at th e cloHe or
in g ,to Mr. Cole m an an,! very
d: "l n eVH' go to c hurc h any•
ut if Dr. Giff,orcl ])l'e a e h c d In
1 I'd go, to h e ar him eve ry
A physician prese nt who haH
,een to c hur c h in ::o yc arH,
known, Or. Gil'ford by r c putu•
I:
'' 'My, d o e s
h e _al\\':t)'ll
ike thal? l €J1joye1l ti \' C l'Y
<\. M e th·o di st mis s ionary a111I
· h a,me on fu-rlough from ('hl!ssecl a keen desire to alll!lld
"venin gs say in g it was just
iy n e ed e d to h e lp I.hem
In
·k. ''-t<I i•~.:....~ ,__ ,._ .,."' -·-

EVERY SUNDAY EVENING

December 5 . - PnoF.

whose · lecture, last
season, on '•Tolstoi's Story of A Soul's Resurrection" proved to be one
of the most profoundly ethical ad<lresses yet del.ivered on this platform,
will speak on "Bernard S/iaw as a
Social Critic." That Shaw is a wonderful wit and a dramatist of ex traordinary gifts the litera ry folk have long been
contending; but just what this writer
would have us un<lerstand by all his brillia nt paradoxes ha s not been so clea r.
Some of us, however, have suspected all
along that Shaw m eant quite as much, if
not more, than he said. Perhaps Prof.
Salter is similarly mind ed. Ce rtainly hi s
lecture will be thought-provocative and it
is more than likely that we shall come
away, after hearing it, not only with a
new insight into · the '\-Vork of Bernard Shaw but also with a fresh
inspiration to help set rig ht those social wrongs which Shaw has so
valiantly de pi cted. The music will be supplied by 1v1iss Helen Tufts,
~violinist; Miss Bessie Tufts, mezzo soprano;_ 1vfr. Donald Tweedy,
piano. Their program:

• l

2,

'

1

\,Vn,L IA~I

SALTER,

Iloe1ne" .

SJi,grem

a.
b.
{ c.
d.

"Me in Glaubiges Herz",
"D ' un e Prison,,
.
.
" Son ntag"
.
.
.
'' Flower Rain "
.
.

ti,



{

a

" Roman ce An<laluza"

b: "Gavotte"

,_

!';;

'1·

;,,'!

\ .. ,

.

"Chanson d'amour" (with Violin Obligate)
·

,t~ 1o·e. ·r
.._1

Brahms
S chneider
Sarasate
Crossec

~hss )ll!Ll!N TUFTS

4.

~ll ss llK ssrn Tu..-,-s

.bu sch .

,,- l / ,
.. . ,r

. Bach
. I-fah11

Mi ss B Ess111 Tu1;Ts

Olt'tord D. D. ot nrooltllno
j. 18 evening In IJ'ord llnll on
~' nnd Holy Daya." Tho epcnkorK
u·y uro: Jnuuury 2, ','Comnwrclul•
·otcsso r rn, A, ]loss ~t tho yu ·
, r - \\'IHcO nsin; .1nn11111y 0,
\In~
,·ch J,'nll ell?" I\ishop J,n wren co,
l(I "'J'h<l Soelnl l!'unctlon ot tho
N~nnnu
Hnpi:0011 ot Col\lc•r's
J ·1111111 ry 23, "llct'o1·m nu<I 1l o•
, itnhht Stephen Wisc; J11nu:11·y
nsltlo n trom Present to Co-or,111:i, or Sodety," Professor "ultcr

- - - - - - - - - - - - - ---- -

' }.i',1
1
#

whir

prlnctr> f':l

. n r eli g ion

01

w e thu s a l

THE PROGRAM FOR DECEMBER IS AS FOLLOWS:

> 1,

./"'

5

us bl essin g,

of Sunday Meetings in
Foi·d Hall Planned.

t.

lu st nncl h

su ccess nre

AT 7.30 P. M. ·

GIFFORD TO SPEAK.

oo 0MA


:n ess men
. c l ean u p

m ent,

Miss HRL RN TUFTS

Cl~ u~

1

I 11Hll1, "Yn11

I.

--~-

1in ess to lh
.n ppl)' , b11I
the matt er
~n at t a cl, l ,
rn te r.

--

. ,VTl"--Wf"~-;;;;r which spo il s (hfl- ·111rrnca nee~, .11\'S tlte mcphlllc odo1·s or pa cltscn.p , t t . \V e 1n11 s t ha v e HO Cllll (I
1

l

tng

~4

_P

d

1,.~· 110

~~J~\~tbut

\ ' plutocrat.

.~

c urt olhn enl

or

t11 e

h~Hll'::i

I '

trucl,lc a nti benll to the
·- ·

.

rloll111an

e unl \' c r sit y

ow how nlH
Harl h e p
a VC I' )' ) 01'{ ;
lid thn t h o I,

nncl

l' C fU H{•

. . , - -- -

NOT WEL .
I

; Men, Wh o
ys Prof. Ro :

t e of I.he ,
in the sa,hl
Ross of th e
I spealdng 0 1
rord h nll Ins
: th e OK of l
elect ed p l
n1nn whos,,
µsln ess Is apl
1ue s tlon of c·
>f weullh Is o
i anlmhl e. \\'
· Is not well

I

e

des troy ed nn,
e of the 1
1ois11
ot s nwllini; pl.
Ill to that pl.lit.
11 is wn s te<l , o \
.stcd, but tJ,,,.
ul111·e. But o
,ln ess mnn is ,
spirited as 11 1
Jt is not s1
·
ihi ch he Is the
1.s behind it a
ri lcccpern un
,
1 tohucco d v.
st. l!lvll e ll Y
pres ent th e p c
:erc sts.
Co rr
1ade so hY · 1

I

,L
.t'

t

.

~

; urun i<en " "'" ~---- brought
tion, because lle

n on1t:

111.:,

... - - ,

\ per week and she was dependent upon \
l

that for

hP.T"

livinsz- .

.

c<>-.UJ

.

7Je<:-e. m'r.:>e
JoHN HoPKINS DENISON wi1l consider one
of the questions with which Shaw has
December \2.-REV.
dealt unconventionally. Dr. Denison is
new to our platform but keen searchers
for light on social questions here in
Boston know him very we1l and they will
agree with us, we think, in feeling that
we could not have foun<l a better man to
discuss the great question of Marriage.
The topic he has chosen is, " When ls
}lfarriage a Success?" Come and hear
what he sllys about it. The music will
· b~ supplied by John Hermann Loud, at
the piano. Miss Vic:,....¥au Orden, c"'ontralto, and :M.r. Carmen A. Fabrizio,
violinist.

Their program :
A. (;1tilma11t

Piano Solosa. "Prayer and Cradle Song "
b Im pr ov isatio n on some familiar hymn .
c. '' T he Pil grims' Chorus" LOUD
~IR.

1.

Contralto Solo,a. "God Sha\\ \Vipe ;\way All Tears"

2.

JVag,,e,--Lolld

.

Art/111r, S1dlivall

(From•' The Li ght of \Vorld " )

b. "The Dawn of Hope,.

J{rogmami

~tiss

3.

V iolin Solosa. q Romo.nee"
b. " Canzondta"



VAN OR DEN

TVeuiaws/.:i
D'Ambroz,o

u( -tT ~ -ft½-

r.1\

life to answer this query in the affirmative for he was the first to introduce active settlement work in this country, having organized, in r886,
the Neighborhood Guild, which is now
the University Settlement of New York.
Though he is an American by birth he
bas long been ic.lentified with important
social movements in England and at the
last election he was a candidate for Parliament.
In the shaping of policies
which have made England the most progressive social democracy of our time he
has had a vital and an intimate share and
we are indeed fortunate, at Ford Hall, to
have au opportunity to hear him. His
book, entitled "National Idealism and a
State Church," has ha<l a wide reading
among thoughtful men. Dr. Coit has a background of ripe scholarship
but'11e believes that a man is a man " for a' that" and a woman a
human being-even if she is a woman. He is a most forceful and
eloquent speaker, too. You will need to come early. The music will
be supplied by Dr. G. Geruff, tenor; Mr. Joseph Edmund Harling, Jr.,
violinist; Mrs. Perry vValton , at the piano. Their program:
r.

"Dance of the Blessed Spirits - .
"

Metcalf
Fooie
J
lfrs. Beach

~ ~"d Director of Meetings
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairma,, -··
Secretary for the Meetings, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD

~-

{ a. Shidvirka Juisc (Russian," The Jewess" )

b. '~Aria "

COMMITTEE _
IN CHARGE
Leander K. Marston
Ernest S. Butler
Benjamin N . Upham

COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Rev. Edward:,Cummings
Rober.t A. Woods
Miss Ellen Paine Huling
H. A. Wilder
· Franklin H. Wentworth
Miss Mary Boyle O'Reilly
Rev. Charles L. Noyes
Henry Abrahams
John T. Prince
Rev. Dillon Bronson, D. DRev. Edward H. Chandler
Edwin D. Mead
Meyer Bloomfield •

m
l

i rl

t

r

I

Hele11a

&oitnod
DR. GEROFF

3. "Romance"

Svenson
MR. HARLING

Toslt

{ a . " Goodhve"
4· · b. "None Ver"

kiattei
DR. GE ROFF

Offic< Hours at Room 3, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30·4 30 daily, ex,ept Saturdays.
Telephone, Haymarket 2340.

n

Gluck

:WR. HARLIXG

--

h1

~ w ~-

December 19.-DR. STANTON COIT of London will speak on
"Am I 1v Brother's I·teeper .2 '' Dr. Coit has done much during his
.ry

MR- FABRIZIO

Contralto Solosa. '' Sea Dreams"
b. "The Night Has a Thousand E yes"
c. " The Year's at the Sprin!!" ORDEN'
.
)l1SS \TAN'

William N. Hartshorn
James A. Floyd

z,,.__,__J,L

HOW SUPPORTED:

These meetings are made p~ssible through

the funds left to the Bo~ton Baptist Social Unjon ' (in whose hall we
m~et) by the late

Companz"on.

Daniel Sharp Ford, who owned T h e l'oztih's
.

.

.

The management of the meetings is in the hands of a

committee from the Social Union.

,
1 - T'II
~-

I

30rll ~a11 fflf fllU!J5

December 26.-REv . . O. P. GIFFORD, lJ. lJ., or .1:1rooK11ne, w111
speak on "Holidays and Holy Days."- We heard Dr. Gifford here,
last year, in our Socialist symposium and
learned that, for twenty_ years, he has
been associated with movements looking
~
:~
to brotherhood and economic justice. Dr.
Gifford, however, is an optimist as well
as a Socialist and life, as he sees it, is full
of possibilities that we owe it to ourselves
to utilize to the full. Holidays, for instance.
Thanksgiving and Christmas,
mean much to all who have ever had a
home; but that they might mean higher
and holier things than they now do our
lecturer will help us to understand.
vVe'll enjoy ourselves, too, while hearing,

THIRD SEASON - 1909-1 O

EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
AT 7.30 P. M.
THE PROGRAM FOR JANUARY IS AS FOLLOWS: .

.~

for Dr. Gifford is a very brilliant, witty speaker. The music will be
supplied by Mrs. Bertha Cushing Child, contralto ; Mr. Russell B.
Kingman, violoncellist, and Mrs. R. B. Kingman at the piano. Their

,

_,,,,,....

program:
1.

Back
JVagner-Sc!tulz

a. "Aria"
{ b. "Am Abendstern "
:\• ie KINGMAN
l

2.

a. "\Vhat the Chimney Sang"
{ b. "Q.!1estions "

Gertrude Griswold
Pauline Cus!t ing

)1RS. CHILD

3.

Popper

"Hungarian Rhapsody"
iiR. KING~tAN

4.

Folk Songsa. \Velsh-"All Thro' the Night."
b. German-"How Can I Leave You."
c. Hebridean-"Skge Fishers' Song."
d. Irish-"Kerry Dance.''
e. Scotch-" My Love.''

Gounod

5. "Repentance" (with ' Cello Obligato)
a.nd

j

-1

1.

1fRS. CHILD

.M RS. CHILD

January 2. - PROF. EDWARD A. Ross, of the University of
vVisconsin, will speak on "Commercialz"sm." · It was Prof. Ross who
originated the famous phrase " smokeless
sin," that is, offences against the law of the
land-such as rebating and the like-which
may be carried on quite "respectably," but
which are, none the less, real infringements
of law and bear in their train the moral disintegration consequent upon all law-breaking.
Prof. Ross has been associated with the
sociological departments of Harvard, Johns
Hopkins, Cornell and other of our leading
univers1t1es. For more than a year we have
been trying to get him at Ford Hall and we
heartity congratulate ourselves that, at last'\
we have succeeded in finding him available
on a <late we had open. The music, which again this month has been
volunteered through Mr. Russell B. Kingman,-who so interestingly
analyzes it,-will be supplied by Mr. Arthur Dwight Babcock, basso,
accompanied by Mr. Lee M. Pattison; Miss Josephine Thorpe Durrell,
violinist, with Miss Stella Durrell 1,t the piano. Their program:
a. "The Splendor Falls on Castle \Valls"
b. "Ina G arden".
{ c. "The Birds Go North Again
~(R . BAilCCCK

( a. ' ' En Bateau ,,

MR. KINGMAN

Benj. W!te!pley
C. B. Haw lev
C!tarles Willeby

-· l b.

Debussy

"l\-1enuet" .
.M.1ss DURRRLr..

THE MEETINGS ARE · ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED

r a.

"Ope Thou l'l'line E yes"
~ b. '' The Earth is the Lord's"
3• I C. '' Sunrise and Sunset"
Ld. '' Pilgrirp 's Song"

Eben H. Bailey
A. TV. Lansing
Chas. G. Sp r oss
Tsc!taiko;,:;sky

),{R. BABCOCK

FORD HALL, car. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place

+· " Habanera"

Sarasate
MISS DURRELL

Doors open at 7 o'clock
~

HOW SUPPORTED:

15

These meetings are made possible through

the funds left to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
meet) by the late Daniel Sharp Ford, who owned The Youth's

Companion.
The management of the meetings is in the hands of a
committee from the Social Union .

-. - ----. -----~ no L h1A
,
- I

.....

-,

-"

r rm n
r- -

,

January 9.-RIGHT REVEREND vVILLIA.\f LAWRENCE, D. D.,
Episcopal bishop of Massachusetts, will discuss for us the great topic,
'' Has the Church Failed.2" This is the first time a bri~f for the
church has been presented on our platform,
but we think the fair-minded people who
frequent Ford Hall are about ready, now, to
give the case for organized Christianity a
sympathetic hearing. Certainly we are fortunate in the speaker who is.to tell us how
far, in his opinion, the church has fulfilled
its high calling. And that not simply because, for more than fifteen years Dr. Lawrence has been at the head of the Episcopal
church in Massachusetts, - succeeding in
that office the greatly beloved Phillips
Brooks, - but because he is a man who
knows and understands men. He comes of
'
sturdy stock, from forebears who at Bunker Hill, and ~~n in antislavery times, struggled in behalf of the oppressed. For him that -has
meant ranging himself on the side· of the workers and· more than once
his well-known sympathy with organized labor has caused him to be
named as arbitrator in time of strike. He feels with mill people from
having lived among them. For his first parish was in the town which
bears his family name and which is one of the largest industrial centres
in the state. Just because he has bad larger opportunity than most of
us to know both sides of the question we owe it to ourselves, do we
not, to hear what he has to say for the church. The music will be supplied by Miss Ell a M. Clark , contralto; Miss Kate Thomas, violinist,
and Miss Bee Mayes, harpist. Their program :
I

Oberthur
Handel

( a. " Berceuse"

· ' l b. " Largo "

Miss

THOMAS

and :\hss

January 16.-Norr:vrAN HAPGOOD, editor of Collier's rVeekly, will
speak on "The Social F zmction of the Press." Happily, this speaker
has demonstrated in his own career that the pre~s has a social function. You will recall that, three years ago, he was
tried and acquitted in a suit for criminal
libel instituted by a certain set of individuals
in New York whose blackmailing practices
he had dared to expose through the columns
of his paper. Besides being a courageous
and enthusiastic journalist Mr. Hapgood is
an author of high repute. He has written a
vital unconventional study of Daniel vV ebster
and a very remarkable life of Lincoln. Born,
as he was, on Lincoln's own ground and
brought up largely with Lincoln traditions,
he knows exactly what it was in the martyr
president that makes him the idol of American democracy; and it i~ precisely this knowledge which makes Norman
Hapgoou a highly desirable Ford Hall speaker. He recognizes that
" yellow journalism " for instance, is justified, in spite of its faults,
because it is the voice of the people, because in the battle against
oppression in this country it has helped enormously the purposes of
democracy. Something .of this will very likely come out in his lecture.
At any rate you are safe in anticipating a stimulating evening. The
,music will be supplied by Miss Asunta Michtlini, soprano; Miss Ruth
Skeel, contralto; Miss Marion Althea Burt, violinist, accompanied by
Miss Vivian Helena Burt. The program:
a . " 0 Rest in the Lord," from the" Elijah "
r. { b. '·PraJer"
xflss
~1,ss

2.

r a. '" On Mighty Pens," from "The Creation"
I, o. "Ave :1faria" ( with Violin Obligat o).
a. "The Blessed Damozel"
{ b. " Bachanal"

.Yhss CLARK

Hayd1t
Bach-Gounod

MISS MICHELINI

Brijrgs

a. "Melodie"
3· { b. "Eliegie"

rJ 'enia ..t·ski



Campana

a. "From .the Depths" .
{ b. " Hold Thou My Hand"

BURT

"Legend" .



~'!AYES

i1le11delssohn
Tosti

SKEEL

Edmund Severn
Ednumd Severn

MISS BURT

Charpentier
1
riassinet
Miss TH0:.1As and :\11ss ~1A YES

4. "0 ;,Ia L y re Immortelle," from Opera of Sapho
(With Harp Accompaniment)

Gounod

~IIss CLARK

GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Secretary for the Meetings, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD
OfficG Hours at Room 3, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, except Saturdays.
Telephone, Haymarket 2340.

COMMITTEE IN CHARGE

THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock

rr·-t· - - - - - _ _ __________

~~

1

5

William N . Hartshorn
James A. Floyd

Leander K. Marston
Ernest S. Butler
Benjamin N. Upham

COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Rev. Edward Cummings
Robert A. Woods
Miss Ellen Paine Huling
H. A. Wilder
Franklin H. Wentworth
Miss Mary Boyle O'Reilly
Rev. ·Charles L. Noyes
Henry Abrahams
John T. Prince
Rev. Dillon Bronson, D. D .
Edwin D. Mead
Rev. Edward H. Chandler
Me)'.er Bloomfieid
Russell B. Kingman

r;n-·- n

enness ai
~YS STRE!

OF UN
'When I s 11rn 1
-' lopl c of nn

n

•ntJng, In s t el'(
•Jlklns Denison
llrc•h.

,eeper, sn hl 1\
t·lng- up of goo
s lhe qu es llot
Han i~ ce had
n

i

ne s in ce th e b
111 d

lrl e ,1 so me
Hn.~ Polygamy,1
wornau w as tt
>n one of the ls:
·ch ,e had one
mnn h ad no r

January 23.-RAnm STEPHENS. W1s1s,
the most sought-after public speaker of the
day, will <liscuss "Reforms and Reformers."
There is no need to dwell at this time on
.Rabbi Wise's remarkable eloquence and his
compelling magnetis m. The hundreds who
hea rd him here, last year, quite suHlciently
sang his praises to other hundreds who were
turned away for lack of room. But isn't his
top£c interesting? The music will be supplied by Mr . \Villiam Caven Barron, composer and pianist, assisted by :tvliss Ethel
Mau<l Tomlinson, reader. Their program:
1.

ll1 0S: l

<'_.''

ll ct

or

: 111po1

sn ld

lh o
l11ng ls so dial
ll'ifc

a uthor!
th

over

d

s lh e c !:!Jdren
o ld SYHtem or l
1111 Y
Und er tJ
•·Jn ge tl1 e wi fe :

J ; .lhe Pagan 1

nan

11 t

th o henc

,7e. suit hlm th
Old-Fashloni
Js a grcn f. th ·
up . and r ea JJze.
. lllore Import
,s a n,1 P Jtty wl
discipline ha<! .
111 inany cases /
In the h om e.
1

Yo u nre go ing t1
on1e, lhe bes t o
Is real u·
work.eel very w~
,c believe In 8
h e re, It Is one
111 a n Js on tJ
iody el se dowr.
n. lwo-h en<lecl c<
) Plan we nro t
n America Is a
,o wllJ of two Pl
:ne obj ect, bu·
111

are at ·pref
i 1 he re

i11s country one'
n n divorce nn

e nki11g up the 1
llfe,
There Is

Jr divorce It Is
·inrrJn g e does n't

IO

b. "Lullnlo."
1\11t,

2.

r.

llAltHON

"R eadin g' '.
M JSS

TOM LI NSO N

a. Scotch Sketches , Opus 11 ,

.
a. "The D e parture." b. "Absence." , ... "Re turn ."

': ns lh e y beJon·
1 Il e

1

Irish Sketches, Opus
a . ''The Collee n."

f'



r
lb.

' ' Lon g in g"
.
.
c. "l\lazurka Fantas ti c " .

.
.

.
.

, •:
'
.

'M R, BAllllON

4. Rending," The 'l'll'c nl_r-Third P sa lm,'' with ll-Insic
1\[tss Toi\lLINSON anti

January 30. -PHoF.

Mn .

BAHHON

RAu sc11ENnusc11 of l{ocb
N. Y., will speak on II Tli e Tra111ilir," ,
tlie Present to a Co-opcralh•c Ord
Society." Tlie Amerirn11 1
1/aga :lff
recently published a very intcrcating a
, on Prof. Rauschenbusc h who111 it hall •
came of his remarkable hook 11 Chrl•lf
and the Social Crisis," as one of the pr
of our time. The paper which w ar
hear at Ford Hall might he term I.I
primer of this prophet's progrnm,
company of social experts who hcn nJ h
the Sag amore Sociolog ical Co11fercn 1
summer, w ere so profoundly ~tirrctl
that for days they could talk of littl
For Prof. Rauschenbausch has 11 ct11nll
lined he re some practicable first-step to
the realization of a co-operative democracy. Better btill, he . how
the thing is evcu now g-oiug- on! The music on this occ:ibion wlll
serious progra 111, ta ke;i from the following great classics of ch
music, and rendered by The Schumann String '(.ziiartct, Cnrm o
Fabri zio, first violin; John Imparato, second violin; Edwarcl J r
viola; Ru ssell B. K ingman, violoncello; assi~ted by Mrs . H. ll. K
man, pianist:
vVALTEJt

N,,/,rrl Srh11 ,..u
d. "Int c rrn<'r.zo. "
c. '' Adngio ."
(, "Pres to."

1.

Q.!,nrl et in A lllinor, Opus 41
a. "Andante Expressh·o."
b . "Allegro."
c . 11 Sc he r 7.o. ''

2,

~iint e t in E Flat, for Piano and Strings
a. "Grave-Alleg ro ma 11011 Troppo."
b. "Audanle Cn11tabile."
c. "Rondo."

·s are lhn rc1< ulf
for libe rty,"

1

T11E SCHUMANN S-rn1Nr.

(-l_ HTF.:r
uA

1\1 HS , KtNGMAN

"Andant e Cnntnbi le," from a Q.!inrlel
"Canzonettn," from n Q,~inrtcl ,
'1'1rn ScllU'1ANN STIIJr<r. QUAIITICT

7'y /,11,'h ,11'JI)
11/rndr/1 j