Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, October 28, 1920, NIGHT EXTRA, Page 17, Image 17

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    1&I:. j?.1h lmm& 28, -4Bb
At
''d
'ii
s
National bomhiander tyli,A
i tendVAffaih tfortoring' Chief '.
I ' of StatovOrgantzjj.tiqn ?
&
rr , . . . - -- , . i - i .. . t - -f tij ( k vinA u1 .-. jL-r-'x, t J r -
!SSw Jfe'- 'BBk'"' S& prggy '
r-iV" t, "l
w i
DONAHUE POJSTTO; DAflCE
,,5 ,.
ArrnnRtmcnU ' to ' aommoditfJ 250
(....riM'iit: tliereffntloh'to Dcn'art-
f;. rommnnilprDaria' J. DftVl8.Jof the
'American Lelo'n,-cro Mrfccled.yes.
'terday by the 4ricptWn' com'mUtee,
iVrJcd by David n.'8lmpiht.sTlo?. de
MrtmeDt. commander.,: The jr?eptlon
Jrfll be held at tho City Club JU3 .South
jjroad street, JfbvrriblT?.at 7 o'clqk
Jn.thc evening., , '
Fred W. Oalbralth, , of .Clncjnnatl,
the' national commander, .has wired -Ms
acctptance of'the committee' invitation
to be present. A.groaMhaJOrlty..of;tho
port officers will-attend, , Two 'meiHbcrs
Jaw been added to the&mmUtee-W.U
Jlam H. Creamer, pfBellalcPost," anil
' Andrew V. Olien, "of All-Nvy Post No:
107. ' '' '?! . ''
James J. Donahue Post will .hold A
e"ncc tonight InthcKnlgh'ts of Colurn
bus Hall, Th'!rty-clRhth and' Market
streets. Thedance committee Includes
E. H. Kerr, chairman : Irving Kramer,
C. F. Hums, Isaac Itonsall, Clarence
Gundakcr nnd Frank. Craigi- . .
Word wnB received at' state Jieadquar
1 ters from Washington thrit the dlsmlisal
e( Iiouls F. Post as assistant secretary
of labor was formally osked of President
I Wilson yesterday .by the 'American lo
tion. A committee, under dlrcctionvof
Mr. Golbralth. visited thc-White House
and presented the facts on which the re
quest Is bawd. The, Legion committee's
report charged that the Department of
Labor from January 1, 1020, to June
1C, canceled 2110 deportation warrants,
ordered deportation In MO cases and de
ferred GO cases. Its main contention la
that deportations ceased when Mr. Post
took hold. "
Fifteen permanent charters were, Is
sued to Philadelphia posts yeseterday:
Nos. 21, 41. 89f 07, 151, J74, 183, 188,
204, 270, 315, 310, 320. 32JL and 417.
Only part of the permanent charters
lire been received at headquarters. '
Armistice Day will be observed by
Olney Post, No. 388, by a celebration
In which the churches, fraternal organi
sation, Boy Scouts and business or
ganizations froin Olney, Lindley and
Feltonville will participate. .There will
be a banquet'ln the evening.
GABRILOWITSCH OPENS
THE RECITAL SEASON
'V" (,r ..'.;.;. ''
.. .. -i W'.' ;- l '.
wrr
Gives First Impprfant Solo Per
formance of thev Season Before
Large Audience at Aca'demy
Ossip Gabrllowltsch gave his first
ulano recital of the season at the. Acad
tmy of Music last evening. Orchestral
conducting Iias apparently had no ill
effects upon Mr. Gabrllowltsch' virtu
osity as a pianist (be, is the conductor
of the Detroit Orchestra), for he dis
played all the tonal beauty. ""M-h has
always been ins greatest asset aa a per
former without any evident losa in
technique, although bis hours for prac
tice must necessarily have been greatly
diminished. " '
The program which Mr. Gabrilo
itsch chose was not one especially
designed to show him to the best ad
vantage nor.fit must be said, was it of
as great interest as it might have been.
The Beethoven 'sonata, with which, he
opened the concert (the one in B flat op.
22) is one of the lesser known, or rather
ltss frequently played Of, the. earlier
sonatas, and was well done, especially
the slow movement, where Mr. Gab
rilowltsch's exquisite tone was. used, to
fine purpose and in the charmlng'rondo
irlth which the sonata closes. In the
prelude, chorale, and fugue of Cesar
Franck, which followed, the prelude and
the fugue were superb, especially the
former, although the tempo, of -the
chorale seemed to be "a little fast'.
i It was in the two Schumann numbers
that Mr. Gabrilowitsch rose tohls
greatest heights of the evening. These
1 ere the beautiful but seldom played
Arabesque and the spirited Novelette
yp. 00. In these works the character
istic poetic feeling of Schumann was
clearly brought out with no loss of'the
design of each composition. Tonal
Mauty, sentiment and intellect com
oined to make the performance memor
able. The final group was of the Schubert
Impromptu op. 142, in which there is
gore than a trace of the theme of the
ilosamunde ballet music and of theslow
jnovement of tho A minor string quar
tet, the brilliant but somewhat meretri
cious rondo "La Galte" of Weber and
two Chopin pieces, the D-flat nocturne
and the tarantclle in. A-flat. All were
Jell received, especially the Weber
number. At the close of the -concert
v "brilowltach played two encores,
m audience refusing to leave without
hearing him again.
WILL SPEAK FOR TEACHERS
Program for TonlQht'a Co-operation
Meeting at Wm. Penn High 8ehooi
Announcement has been made of
?. !he complete program of the meeting
& held tonight in the William Penu
iilKh Sehnnl n oatnklUk ...
jmong all bodies of ppbllc school teach
ers in the coining legislative campaign.
. .i? "nfakers will bo George Went
orth Catr, chairman of the Philadel
phia county committee of the American
Jwgion: Edward Bok, chairman of the
llv.J ,P8 committee j Simon Grata,
ftj"tdent of the Board .of Kducatlon;
I'Ptate Henator AueiiHtns- V. nlr. .W..
and GcorKe Wharton Pepper, a member
j,, t.0 cltlzen8' committee. Mr, Bok
will be temporary chairman and will be
ucccedcd in the chair by 'Mr? Grata.
Mono will bo furnished by the Boys'
&ghMSch ?' th WeSt -Ph,ladf,n",,i
10,030 IN Y..W.IC. A. r '
In
That Number la Membership
Four Branches
v.S? semiannual meeting of the mem
?"n'P committee of the Philadelphia
D5 JYnn'B Christian Association
fif"'1'llat night at the Central
"fanch, 1800 Arch street.
H. A. repor ' .ot the treasurer showed
aVn ,ei aMclation is In per cent self
aS?,0lD,: an 'ht out of $300,000
S'1 Pepdlturcrt but 12l,000:was
th. vut,f dot'on from friends of
ahj W - A- The report alao
owed that 15,240 voung men and
5JS.5. aro-fed .monthly "at the ' Central
nch cafeteria. , .
urJr totn memberahln of the four
S??!1 "mounts; to 10.030 women, ac
A.f ? rftD,rt of be branches. .
A. BDOrr nfrrA.nmni I tLatfAMM 4
a"!!!-)!"!1!
. im.MB,HuygiTm AiJtatf
'
t
1 .an
I u . S
1W V -V -i, lAi.
CaitWinAPrize
WrrteAxiEssaijInThe
V aisliaw m ' m A sr aB
sTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTam BaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaV assssssssaaTsaT ssssssssaaTsaw BaTsaTsaTsaTsaTsaTsaTsaTsaTsaV BaTsaTsaTsaTsaTsaTsaTsaTsaTsaTsaT sTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaw
slrslrslrslrsIrS slrslrslrslrsIrM aLVLIrLlrLlrLlrV slrslrslrslrsIrM txslrslrslrslrslrsW slrslrslrslrslrsw slrslrslrslrslrsw
LsilllllllllllW alllllllllllllllllllllH sillllllllllllllllV m silllllllllllllllllV M sillllllllllllllllllv m
iHllllllllllllllllllB aasHHHHHHHllllllW sHHHHHHHS aHHHHHHlllllllllllW sHHHHHHUlM aHHHHHHlllllllllllllV sHHllllllllllllS m
aVsHHV sUHHw sUH sUHHw tLHIV sHHHHw sUHV x sHHHHv
?
CASH PRIZES
i
v .C
ESSAY CONTEST
.
Conducted Rtj The Makers Of
"PHILADELPHIA'S' BEST"
: !
sf ' "J , , i i J ""i ' ' "aw t ' Ly j"" '
!
Subject For All Pupils In
GRAMMAR GRADES
Of
Public, Parochial, Private Schools and In
stitutions in Greater Philadelphia and
Radius of 35 Miles.
"Why I Like
Good Ice Cream"
100 Cash Prizes
50 for BOYS and 50 for GIRLS
1st Prize $100
2nd Prize .t... 75
3d Prize . .,...,., 60
4th Prize: ... .i 50
5th Prize ... 40
6th Prize . ...-., 30
7th Prize' ... $25
8th Prize 20
9 and 10,. each 15
11 to 20, each. 10
21 to 30, each. 5
31 to 40, each. 2
41 to 50, each. 1
fyscUl Trim trill JU AwardtA W Teachers of Frlit-Wlnnlor Puolls
Every schoolboy and schoolgirl in Philadelphia, Cam
den, Trenton, Wilmington, Norristown, Chester and all
other cities within a radius of 35 miles of Philadel
phia is invited to submit an essay.
Surely YOU can write a prize-winninjr
essay on: "Why I Like Good Ice Cream"
or "Good Ice Cream as a Food."
Do you know that good ice cream has a
food value? Professor R. M. Washburn,
of the University of Minnesota, says: "Ice
Cream is a food, whether classified as a
confection, a luxury or a necessity."
A quart of good ice cream has the food
value of one and a half pounds of steak,
or four pounds of potatoes, or eighteen
eggs. According to Dr. F. G. Gephart,
of the Russell Sage Institute of Pathology,
an ordinary dish of ice cream supplies twice
as much nourishment as a charlotte russe,
a chocolate eclaire or a serving of corn,
starch pudding.
Just go to. any store selling
COLONIAL ICE CREAM or
write to us and get full in
formation rules of contest,
how essays will be judged
and prizes awarded.
Contest Closes Dec. 15
Subject For All Pupils In
HIGH SCHOOL GRADES
Of
Public, Parochial, Private Schools and In
stitutions in Greater Philadelphia and
Radius of 35 Miles.
"Good Ice Cream
As a Food"
100 Cash Prizes
50 for BOYS and 50 for GIRLS
1st Prize $100
2nd Prize .-.,. 75
3dPrize 60
4th Prize 50
5th Prize 40
'6th Prize 30
Bpecl.l rrtz-M WIU Do Awarded ta T.aeher. et rrii.-Wlnnlng- Pnpij,
7th Prize . . . $25
8th Prize 20
9 and 10, each 15
11 to 20, each. 10
21 to 30, each. 5
31 to 40, each. 2
41 to50each. 1
JL
1 If um mu"BI
COLONIAL ICE-CE5EAM COMPANY
FOURTH AND POPLAR STREETS
Ql I rau
President,
Telephones Market 5400 or Park 1465
tf
r
T -J'
Vice President and General Menage.
Treasurer.
AH! SO PURE
yy J tt
fm
Secretary.
S'
,'.ii'.tv-r.vv i"-.
xv idMrflJfr;,u m vrt
fca--i- '-.-i-JK"-, .-t vA"lAAji.'-ilAVaJ''.'-.
l
f.t
m
I
&