Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, November 12, 1920, Night Extra, Page 16, Image 16

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EVENING PUBlAe JMDOtEbrfism.
B1IRHXA,
KUBELIK'HERE AGAIN
Bohemian Violinist Falls te Find
Support He Once Commanded
Jan Kubellk nppnrcniiy Is no longer
name te conjure with. The llehe
mUn violinist. he uncd te appear
here te crowded auditoriums, came back
te Philadelphia after an nbsunce of
several jenrs and played last night at
the Metropolitan Opera Heuse. He
faced row after row of awnlngly
empty bemihcs. with a few people
KaAcred intimately ue front aud quite
representative throng in the dim dis
tance of the great balcony.
Whether it was the chilliness of thv
unfilled seati or the slewing down of
maturity, after the expenditure of all
the fire of genius in the "meteoric career
of Infant nredlgy, the fact remains that
the Kubellk of last night wan scarcely
even the suggestion of v'hc Kubellk of
old. He nlajed with ipmmqdlc tlafdies
of surpassing tcchnlc. lntprxpered with
periods of such merely perfunctory piny
inj as might mark a ichears.il. Hut
there was never nh Insplratleual mo
ment. Ills st.le has become Htelld. hjs
tone small and with no vlbrance. his
bow arm has Ftlffencd and the wrist
has lest its flexibility.
Even a muHlr school graduate is ex
pected t6 stir some emotion of response
and cyinpath) with the well-loved an
danvV of the Mendelssohn concerto, but
Kubellk did net. In the 1'agnulnl eon een eon
certe he seemed mere nearly te find him
vveelf. and In its tremendously involved
and difficult cadenza he reall) rose te a
fineJieight and gave a flash of the man
we once knew. His program closed with
3 nrn mim1tir "H.1V nliahc
and "Introduction and Cnppriclose. I
Pierre Augleras. who plavcd the ac-1
cempunlments. appeared also ns voletsi.,
cheesing the Chepin K Majer Halliule.
He dUplaved an unusual plijslenl pewn ,
and an nblllty te get the uttermost tone
from his piano.
SCHOOlOPENSJN MILL '
Yeung Gloucester Workers Net te
Miss Education
A continuation school was opened bj
the Heard of IMucntlen of Gloucester
City tedaj in the recreation build Ins
of the Arge mills. Monmouth and I.llN
streets.
Under n new state law every bev and
girl between 14 and 10 jeirs of age
who Is employed must attend school at
least six hours per week. It is the
duty of all emplejers te t.ee that the
law is carried out.
About fift children will attend the
nchoel which is In charge of Prof. t
Emerj aingru.Ii. Willianu-pert. 1'n. In
stead of going te school one or two
hours n dnv the majerltj of the bejs
and girls will attend six hours in one
day.
Te Discuss Better Business Bureau
The Hett-r HusincM Hureau and its
work will be discussed ted.iv nt a lun
cheon of the HuslnesH Science Club
In the Hete' Adelnhin. The sunnkers
Include Herbert Titj . Tlichard Norten
and Kllwoed Uuv-el. Walter l.ec
Kesenbergcr. former iiresident of the
Business Science Club, will pres'de.
ERib$;, neveM&r: J2Jm
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'
ULLIAN GINRIOH REClTAt "
Philadelphia Seprano In Varied Pro
gram, Including "Frelschutz" Aria
Mlllan Oinrlch, a Philadelphia se
prane, gave a recital at Wltherspoen
Hall last evening, presenting a program
representing a whlc range of composi
tions, from two Hamlet numbers, three
of Schubert's familiar song-,, "Softly
Sighing," the leading soprano aria from
"Her Frelschutz," down te three pop
ular selections, which included James
Francis Coeke's "Of Carolina" and
Fny Fester,! "The Americans Come."
the Inst given, as the program nn nn
neunced, "In honor of Armistice Day."
Miss Oinrlch has a voice of consid
erable range, and considerable variety
as te quality, for the most part of a
p'enslng charnctcr. It was her artistic
rendering of her descriptive songs that
afforded the most delight. She wn te
linve sung Handel's "Come and Trip
It. hut replaced this number with
"Oh. Hail I .Tubal's Lyre." It was net
nntil she reached the Schubert num
bers, which made up the second section
of her program, that she seemed te
meet fully the requirements of the se
lections. "His Huiitsmau, Itcst," "The
Yeung Nun" nnd "The Trout." are
descriptive songs, and it is in Nelcctleud
of this character thnt she excels rather
than In the mere somber Hnndcl,
although a little mere attention te
enunciation would have nlded mate
rially. Her rendering' of the recitative
and nrla from "Her rrelschutz" was
satisfactory only in parts, lackiug, nt
times, in firmness nnd' force of delivery,
though the florid section vvns sung with
much sweetness.
Miss Oinrlch seemed perfectly nt ense
throughout the recital and had the able
support at the piano of Hills Clnrk
Hnmmnnn. After her "Frcisehut!'."
iiumtcr. arJ again after her fourth ecc ecc
tien of songs, she was compelled te re
spond with nn encore, nnd she sang the
patriotic "The Ameucnns Come" with
such fine spirit tlmt the Inrge'audlcnce
heartily responded She lecelved several
handsome collections of flowers.
POMMER WON BY 6638
1 s
Official Vete for Councilman and
Presidential Electore Announced
Charles J. Pemmer's plurality ever
James Gallagher for City Council from
the first district nt the recent election
was 00.18. according te the official count
of returns completed yesterday. -The
total vote was: Pemmer. 1!..321 ; Gal
lagher, 18,08.1. t'nefBclnl returns gave
Pemtncr a plurality exceeding 7000.
The returns by wards show that
Gallagher, whose nnme nppcared en the
Democratic! ticket, rcc'elVcd '10,081)
Democratic votes, lie received 740 votes
en tlio'Setith Philadelphia ticket and
104 Socialist votes.
The returns for presidential electors
for the entire city fellows llcpubllcnn,
807.823; Democratic, DO.ltU, n major
ity for the Republicans of 217,074. The
vote en the lean bill was: Fer the bill,
103,071! opposed te the bill, 47,738.
The vote en the Constitutional amend
ment was: First amendent, In favor.
183,183! opposed) 27,214? second
nmendment, In favor, 100,003; opposed,
30,433.
we-eufH
tfhe Most Beautiful
Car in America
vTjrteMeit SoTviceablff
Truck in America
Will YQUR Car De This?
Tett Ne. 4
On Brewery Hill, which runs from East
River Drive te 33d and Girard avenue, the
Paige 6-66, with gas and spark retarded,
climbed, with four passengers, from bottom to te
top in high gear at a speed- of less than 2i
miles an hour, without a miss or backfire. . ,
cuv a: wuiev jhAs
394 ?RTH BR9A0 STREET, PHIlAOaPHfA
vc
Hand
Yeu
Spec!
for PiZWiSKiV
3 Days $&X A
Only t-Jz. -$LyM
Tumbling Down
EXTRAORDINARY
Diamond Sale
at I. Press & Sens I Yeu Save 50
Dealing DIRECT with large
producers like ourselves you
get ALL THE BIG REDUC
vTIONS BUT YOU GET
THEM AT ONCE, and you gat
them WITHOUT ANY
CHANGES, and en LIBERAL
rmcif isa.iui aky srvLt:
n-K hei.iu aer.n iww.r
en hbvh iier"iia.
WE NOW LAUNCH ANOTHER
GREAT DIAMOND SALE
ALL GRADES ALL SIZES
Incomparable Values!
With tlir iirriial or till let or dhi dhi
titeni from Kurrpe till vfeli. to te
grthrr Willi etlirr Mprtlnl iurtliix
mnde li unr Mr. A. !'r"n. In VinHlrr.
dani, He tire prepared te vlve you
values the Uke of hkh are without
a parnllrl In Amerlta Indrty. follou fellou folleu
Inr nre 4 smiles thnt renrrsent a
-rain" for the menev 1I(M hnrt of
asteundlnir, Theite UlameiuU reulil
net he purrhnnetl at IIOI.i:SAI.K
teda nt the prices we lime mnrkeil
them for this unle. The fnlleulne
pedal prlrra Inrliiiln nnj hIjIk 14-K.
elid Keld ladlrt' or men's rlnci.
FINE PURE WHITE
$13
$28
$46
$76
$95
carat
carat
I
rarat
1'?
fa rut
rarat
$114
$133
$150
$249
$332
vaJtjss
w?y s p r j n
MtM WJQWA
iaaaV. bUbIbb-V 1 S
ar ' I I I ' MA'FffniAT'l
at tMSUT .bZZV ttM
I With Prices h PBKfP .Popular stores' ' I
V f 1 wT
urn 1
LjLJ tr
uST )r Werd
I I is
' 0uT Bendt s
95 S
WEEKLY
CREDIT
Our SIMPLE WEEKLY-PAYMENT CRBD11 PLAN Is cne
of the most wonderful things about our bnsiness. It's juit
the'aame as though yen went into our bis sanitary work
rooms and selected the new STYLES right out of the hands
of enr designers and PAID FOR THEM AS YOU WISH
ED! N questions, no recommendations, no delays.
Ladies' & Misses'
COATSW,
BEAUTIFUL BLUE WHITE
$211
$36
$55
$75
$91
A
rarat
"Ji
rarat
-i
rarat
T.
rarut
1
rarat
$143
$177
$215
$250
$285
Extra WESSELTON BLUE
$215
$274
$320
$371
$425
$32
$50
$77
$112
$180
tnrat
rarnt
raijit
Ta
rarat
1
curat
EXQUISITE BLUE JAGERS
$84
$122
$160
$235
n
rarnt
1
rural
rantta 3) (OU
2
cars
$358
$475
$785
at. $1048
Mall Order Killed Hit Catalonia l'rre
Cer.8th&CHESTNUTSTS.
'1117 MARKET ST. M MARKET ST.
.'AtA JfHKKK HTOKiyt OPKN' WVKNI.NOa
This ii one of the most
aitending offers or
COATS wi have ever
made in Season. A beau
hFul sleek of the NEWEST
STYLES te select from
.11 AT NEW REDUC
TIONS! DRESSES
Smrt frtcU
fr Fill if (ilk
cl.lk RE
DOCEO TO
up
WhatcTtr w ad
vrtle. we stick te.
Whatavar we sir
about our TERMS
or MKRCUAN-
D I S E you can
dtpced ent
ft' TWV lit & V
SPECIAL SALE of Men's and Yeung Mens
SUITS in new Cheviots, Cashmeres and fancy
mixtures, all wonderfully lined and finished.
The styles are smart and up-te-date, running
from snappy models for Youths te conserv
ative models for Men. SPECIALLY RE
DUCED for this occasion
Men's & Yeung Melt's
OVERCOATS $39;
v
Buy
New
Pay
LATER
jsjii t f f6fBm r& We
vfjr m imtmv&im I5- "credit
zWe Mop fa twnf
Charge 736 MARKET ST. PHILADELPHIA Amount
11 OPEN SATURDAY EVENING TILL 9:30
v
1 . r 4$? tv r:
I t
I. 1
Last Shipment of English
Overcoats Just Out of Bend
Te be Sold
at
20
6ff
An unexampled opportunity te own a typical British overcoat made
of typical English cloths in greatcoats, meter ulsters, walking ulsters
and regulation English Chesterfields
$32 Overcoats at 20 off, or $25.60
$35 Overcoats at 20 off, or $28.00
$38 Overcoats at 20 off, or $30.40
$40 Overcoats at 20 off, or $32.00
$42 Overcoats at 20 off, or $33.60
$46 Overcoats at 20 off, or $36.80
$50 Overcoats at 2ei off, or $40.00
": 'ibt? 'wffi A. ' bsBIsbbbbbW.
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"iV' r!!f! I SlpBsaHfBH
k i- Tk fir- 'M mMMJR -f .Vsbsbsbsb
i iwmmm
::JM ('tj H
$58 Overcoats at 20 off, or $46.40
$65 Overcoats at 20 off, or $52.00
$68 Overcoats at 20 off, or $54.40
The overcoats arc made of fleeces, elysians, vicunas, shetlands, lamb's-ivoel, close-woven
chinchillas, every geed and accepted overceating and coloring.
Every overcoat in the offer is either silk or satin lined, net only IN THE SLEEVES, BUT
IN THE SHOULDERS AS WELL.
The fabrics weigh from 24 te 32 ounces te the yard.
The sizes and the models are suited te every man's stature and every man's taste.
Yeu Can Buy at 20 Off
any article of clothing (whether it be a pair of gloves, an overcoat or a suit)
you may need in a stock of new merchandise werth.a half million dollars.
William H. Wanamaker ciStSJsSS
With Our Back te the Wall
THE MANUFACTURERS OF THE FAMOUS "NU -STYLE" CLOTHES FOR
YOUNG MEN
ARE FORCED TO MAKE A
Gigantic Disposal Sale
Suits and Overcoats
very latest styles new 'in our factory, and te be sold directly from the factory by
our own people, with such help as may be necessary te handle the crowds sue te come.
Prices Less Than Manufacturing Cost
SUITS -OVERCOATS $12 SS
All of which cost us the manufacturer almost double te make.
Every man knows the appalling conditions
new prevailing in the clothing business.
The warm weather alone has been ruinous.
Add te this the many cancelled orders
from retailers and the general business
depression, and it is easily understood why
wiDtlrtn(wreu
we MUST positively MUST shoulder
tremendous losses te move, our stock. NU
STYLE CLOTHES are known all ever the
United States. There are none better made.
A money-saving opportunity like this has
never before been known in Philadelphia
or elsewhere.
Every Garment is Guaranteed
Every garment bears the NU-STYLE label, attesting its genuineness. Only one suit or
overcoat te a person. All sizes. Newest fabrics. Latest models.
7th FIoer-Mulf erd Bldg., S. W. Cor. Bread and Wallace 7th Fleer
(,1'ermcrly Metropolitan Bldg.)
gjgwl Open 8 A.M. te 6 P.M., Including Saturday I w. mi,r
'(' T- 'iil
"S -V . rt,.
'-
. ' v
U
", fV.J. h,
SWffiES$r rj
MtetvVfjtlkr,
..R 't(iij $& j
'p0LmJzi