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April 05, 1918 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Jewish Chronicle, 1918-04-05

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

ANICTICall

y'avish Periodical CeNter

-

CLIPTON /MENU • CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

rAGE THREE

THE JEWISH CHRONICLE

SOCIETY

M rs. Pauline Rose, who has bee
making her borne in Grand Rapid
spent a few days in the city with he
daughter, Miss Edith Mary Rose, as
week.
Lieutenant Harold Rosenfield, w di 0
has been with the signal corps i 11
training at Kelly Field, San Antoni,
Texas, during the winter, spent a In
days with his parents, Mr. and Mr,
Monroe Rosenfield, during the wee
en route to Boston, where he will en
ter the aviation school of the Massa
chusetts School of Technology.
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Nlikels (Deli
Marx) of Long Beach, Cal., :immune
the birth of a daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. David Scheyer, who
have been spending the winter in Cal
ifornia, have returned to the city.
Rowland W. Fixed, who is with the
quartermasters' corps at Camp John-
ston, Fla., spent a few days' furlough
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Adol-
phus Fixed, last wet k.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Morse l'o•
hen, 1050 Brush street, a son.
Mr. Max klinkofsky has returned
from Lansing.
Mr. David Wilkus, who is stationed
at (in at Lakes Training Station
spent a short furlough with his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. S. P. %Vilkus, last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. II. M. Morris, of Saul
Ste. Marie, Mich.; Mrs. M. Levy, o
Jackson, Mich., and Miss Lenhoff, of
Saginaw, are guests at the Hotel
Statler last week.
Dr. M. E. Fodor, formerly of 2272
W. Jefferson avenue, has removed to
Iris new residence at 275 Vinewood

rim
mu

their realization of their national aspirations and of
the goal toward which they were really striving
was vague and indistinct. But step by step they
struggled onward and upward toward a light which
grew clearer as their eyes and minds slowly opened
to its significance. Today, as a result of their strug-
gles and their sacrifices, we possess and enjoy our
priceless American institutions.

q

These institutions must be preserved. The
structure so laboriously reared in these one hun-
dred and forty-two years will be utterly destroyed
if we do not spring to its defense with every atom
of our energy and determination. This is not a
situation which may be trifled with, or evaded, or
put off. It is one which must be met now—today
—no matter what sacrifices it may entail, or what
the cost mu be.

Thus Space Paid For and Contributed By

Ill savivaattenos

It is just one grouping, selected at random, from scores of similar suites, pres-
ented just as they would appear in your home.

Detroit Metal Refining Co.

Our entire third floor is divided into a series of suites where the finest furni-
ture may be selected, free from distracting influences.

EXCLUSIVE RUGS AND FLOOR COVERINGS
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL

Robinson-Cohen Co.

Ce

COMPLETE HOME FURNISHERS

CORNER 9 HIGH and HASTINGS

F IVE BLOCKS EAST:, WOODWARD

FIVE BLOCKS NORTH
NORTH-BOUND YOU/U[2MM CARS PASS THE DOOR.

e/ GRATIOT

FINSJEfALV

321 Woodward

Avenue

Bet. Columbia and Montealm.

Cadillac 839.

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- --]
a

i

Z-1

Be ore

Wed Ends 1
ci
=
nnual Spring Sale

is

E

.

=

Take Advantage of the Sfilenclicl Bargains of Our

=

7th

.F:--
.- t..

—and give the cheer and happiness and charm inseparable
from a handsome, sweet-toned piano or player-piano a per-
manent place in your home life!
How greatly such a purchase would be welcomed by
those of your family! Don't make them wait an y longer.

_



$177 Below Original Price $263 Below Original Trice -=

—A Large Mahogany

STERLING

5 259

Sale
Pric•

H. F. MILLER

'237

—A Burl Walnut

$ 173

Below Original Price

A Full Size Mahogany

$

KNABE P iano

Great Value in a Small

Style, Sweet-Toned

Sale
Pric•

'88

Peerless Piano

$138 Below Original Price $120 Below Original Price

—A Full-Sized Mahogany

Oniy $255 or $143

HAYDEN

Player-Piano

At This Price a Modern Oak Player-Piano
in Good Condition

-"N $385 Buys Aeolian Player-Piano

=

485 Buys Stroud Player-Piano

$650 Mahogany, a "Pianola" With Metrostyle,

-



t425 Buys Well-Known

etc.

Player-Piano

Mahogany, Original Price $850, Great Bargain

6 Player Rolls,
Sale Price, $1.12

88-note; perfect playing

Player Roll
Cabinets, $12

Great specials in a dis-

ES condition. Good assortment. continued style. Also a num-
▪ Your own selection.
ber of other rare bargains.

Wear Diamonds"
GriswoldSt. and „Tanbet:,:r.heate,

LIBERTY
BONDS!

The above illustration is made from an actual photograph of a group of liv-
ing room furniture arranged upon our sales floor.

$450 Style, Fully Modern, Like New

al
"Meet Friedberg-

The Imme-
diate need
is the Invest-
ment of our
money In.

As a Fine Art . . . . .

daughter.

its

government one hundred and forty-two
years ago.

Home Furnishing

The Young Woman's
Summer Dress Marked
By Simplicity
with warmer :Ma longer days at

hand dresses for warm weather wear,
bridal gowns and frocks for the
young girl come into the limelight
of fashion publicity.
Even this early B. Siegel Co.'s re-
ceiving rooms are piled high with
sheer summer costumes made up in
Chiffons, Crepes and Nets and Sum-
mer Silks and fine cotton and linen
stuffs.
Bridal gowns deserve a shay all
their own, although they do not vary
so much from the lines adopted for
the rather formal summer costume,
and the dress for the young school
girl has for its distinctive features its
sheer daintiness. Simplicity, of
course, it should have, and must of
the sheer, summer dresses are quiet
little affairs.
For young women's dresses this
House is showing Chiffon, Georgette
Crepe, I )rgandy and thin white cot-
ton. Many of them have only self
trimming, little frills, picot-edged or
hound, shirring, cording, tucking or
flouncing. Many of our lace trimmed
dresses are not conspicuously showy;
just a little frill of lace or perhaps a
dainty collar of lace.
.\ flesh colored, shell pink or rose
petal pink organdy or chiffon trim-
med only in narrow pique edged frills,
is a delectable thing and It. Siegel
Co. are showing many models of this
sort.
One of the exclusive houses in-
forms them that organdy is to have
a tremendous vogue this summer and
the models which they have sent
them express admirably the chic sim-
plicity so much to be desired in con-
Material. ,kdr,
nection with

HE American people fought their first
T battles
for liberty and the rights of self-

q At that time, and (or many years thereafter,

avenue.
Born, to Mr. :Lod Mrs. Mitchell
Ketai, 154 E. Montcalin street, a
daughter.
Miss Sol (linkman entertained a
number of friends on Friday after-
noon in honor of Mrs. Albert (link-
man, formerly Miss Elaine Stone, of

Utica, N. Y.
On Friday evening, March 29. Miss
Jennie Ilolskin, of 316 Watson street,
entertained in honor of Sergeant Ju-
lius Rubiner, who is with the 502nd
Aero Construction Squadron at Ar-
cadia, Florida, and Private Herman
Weisberg of Company 11, 339th In-
fantry, stationed at Camp Custer.
Sergeant Rubiner and Private NVeis-
berg were home on a short furlough
to observe the I'assover holidays.
Other guests of the evening were the
Misses Minna Benderoff, Ilattye Le-
vine, Anna Shapero and Mr. Louis
Rosenzweig.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Eichner, of
Frederick avenue, arc receiving
congratulations on the birth of a

One Hundred and Forty-TwoYears
of Labor and Struggle

rinnell Bros

Wad to mail you complete descriptive
list of bargains. Write us or phone (Cherry 3600).

HEADQUARTERS,

243 247 Woodward Ave.

-

$ 112

Sale
Price

—A Beautiful Mahogan y

Olivet Piano

Below Original Price

—A Large Weathered Oak $28

Grinnell Bros.

2

$108

P .

7

Below Original Price 74

—A Large Walnut

Opera Piano 14,17. $

140 E

t
E -

$172 Below Criginal Price $182 Below Original Price

—A Rich Toned Mahogaly

fi 7 3

VOSE Piano A',..

—An Excellent Mahogany

Stuyvesant

$

Sale
Pricy

168 I .

.

These or any other

,„FREE EXCHANGE TRIAL

E

_.

You take no chaes
nc
in :

Pianos in our stock sold
•horing in these specials
Exchanged, sample, rental, shopworn and discontinued style instruments am included in this stock of remarkable =
bargains—every one is carefully adjusted and tuned by our factory expert•. Many, even at great reductions, cannot
be told from new.
=

IF THE MATTER OF
PAYMENTS

have ever stood in the way of
your owning a piano or
player-piano, you'll find they
do no longer. Every sur-
plus instrument must
go. Tell us how you
want to pay!

OPEN
EVENINGS
DURING
SALE

Come Before

the Week
End.

In the

"HARRINGTON"

I % ♦

you will find greatest
value in a low-Priced
grand piano.

No such reliability is offered elsewhere at
an ywhere near this price—no such fulness It
and richness of tone—no such widely noted
It
worth. See it, hear it, examine it thoroughly
every detail—learn, too, how easy owner-
ship is made through our especially conven-

ient sale terms.

!

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