The evening world. Newspaper, November 2, 1916, Page 17

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THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1916, we brilowitech | ees Tere pourica | pourra | pouirica, aa A RA Gives Recital; . pes . hate ahd Rp CREME cme, ’ setae EY SpA HMDA ATS IIR. poy - R os By Sylvester Rawling. | web pR ‘Lge SSIP GABRILOWITSCH gave a m recital at Aeolian Hall yeater- day afternoon. That he main-| : @ © his established position among ‘ foremost pianists of our time s + without saying. Almost one * - it rest with the mere announce- ‘ of his appearance, But, for host of his admirers who were @ part of the enthusiastic audi- that beard and acclaimed tim r ) jay, a word must be sald of, programme, which comprised ex- jes of three distinct periode—the lo, the romantio, and the modern. @ach he displayed the mastery ich permits him to translate into jous tone pictures the images ed to him by his unusual mu- | jeal sensibility. First there was the Beethoven so- ta in EB fat major, opus 31, Save or alittle dryness in the conception ff the menuetto, this was a pure dee | ight to hear, Next came the Schu- | mann sonata in G minor, opus 22, the ndantino of which he made the plano, ‘to sing with entrancing tone. A Cho-! pin group followed and then Ravel's “Jeux d'Eau,” a feature of bis pro- ramme of modern composers that he} exploited last season, a remarkably) colored interpretation of it. For the Qnish there were two dainty exam. | {, ples of Debussy, the “Clatr de Lune" | } and “L'isle joyeuse.” | 66 @ CROSS the road we are to travel this next four years, even though we start right and move with prudence and courage, serious hazards are thrown like the breaks in a roadway made by a torrential rain. These all rise out of the war torrent which has overwhelmed Europe.” Katharine Dayton, a y the Punch day afterno favor from a ' was said t i) Yvette Gu French wom ad | ding . the genius of the! diseuse is individual and, 1 am think-/ iss Dayton hasn't yet found . She lacks spontaniety. She made a pretty She was palpably nerv spoken | introductions t yhich mean 8o much, and her gestures were too studied. Neve Miss Dayton has yout and voice capacity for st make the mos Her pro French and her accompanist at the plano w. George 8. Hir: é What a pity Gertrude Auld pu ') the “Ernani, involam!” aria of Verdi's upon her recital 1 ARR eee 66\\7HEN this war began over a million American working men to # 5 Sur egphicatey eae Ana ieuoest were seeking vainly for employment. When the war ends and eS grou of tk gone at the bar the developed energies of a new Europe are thrown into commer- ginning, Mme. Auld projected much . . ° e . ne) ‘ Sharm These aongn Eerviay Biel cial production, our nation will face a competition such as it never Bohemian, Dutch and Greek | me i) —most of them, t—were sung Knew. in thevoriginal. Bi » Mme, Auld Offered a French an English up, made up of the songs she nt sand cam Anes nd one Re 66Q\NE of two things must happen—cither that "wag Sauating . ™“* millions of men will be seeking work in vain or else there must be thought out in ad- vance the problem of commercial organization as France and England and Germany are seek- ing to think out the problem today.” 2 heseeo. that. Harry M. Gilbert was her ac- companist. os FAMOUS INSTRUCTOR IN NAVIGATION DEAD a Capt. Howard Patterson Had Num. | , . ; i Sicid: May Bich Yechtaran 6¢E.VERY one of these nations is preparing ‘ Among His Pupils. to defend its own market by a protective Capt, Howard Pattergon, teacher, tariff.”’ W tecturer, navigator, author, founder * of the New York Nautical College, and called the “father of the Naval Reserve movement,” is dead from Bere aia none: Noonte Maes 667 F we are to save our laboring men from a eer a at ces in toe Blau tisét] catastrophe we must plan a tariff protec- ee Wivriaweecu-ne entered’ | tion along sound, just and economic lines.’ To Fer tea exicrhavia ‘intias: Biaiee this endeavor I pledge myself and the men who Dee iat ts sa titared tua 'soers are to be my colleagues.” chant service, In 1880 he became * professor of navigation and astron- } omy in Brown's College, Brooklyn, but gave this up a year later to § found the New York Navigation 6 School. From 1889 to » was in command of the Hay! avy. Capt, Patterson tute on nautical yer oer Mr. Hughes Never 3roke t wag author of and seamansh rs a lecturer on al subjects for e the Board of Education. He ts sur- a romise vived by a widow, a daughter, Mra. Fyert Winbert, and one son, Russell Patterson, a Motorman Badly Beaten, | Z Charles O'Rourke, forty Fast Tremont Avenue, a n ployed by the Union Railw in the Bronx, was assaulted this morn- ing by four men at Bryan nue and Foston Road, whils on hi y home, O'Rourke D: ith his assailants, but wis ov ne and badly beaten. He was atte at Fordham, Hospital ni | and the Protective Tariff . eee Killer iy fae oe Republloan National Publicity Committee our Deugris

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