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August 06, 1920 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1920-08-06

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

America with Periodical Carter

CLIFTON ATINUI - CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

PAGE FIVE

THE DETROIT JEWISH CI-IRONICLE

TUNNEL MAY PASS
ZANGWILL TAKES
UNDER JERUSALEM
ARMS AGAINST

ANTI•SEMITES

tGoontinued Front Page 11

utensils are few in moldier—one clay
cooking pot, a couple of large wooden
bowls in which to knead the dough
and a couple of smaller ones rued to
cat from.
"Having inspected the dwelling
portion, which at once is kitchen,
storeroom, bedroom and living room,
we descend the steps into what the
natives call the stable.
"Below the mastaby, or raised plat-
form, just described, among arches
so low that a man can scarcely walk
erect, arc the winter quarters of the
goats and sheep. To shut the flocks
in, these arched entrances arc ob-
structed with bundles of brush used
as firewood for the winter. -I he rest
of the floor space, which is open to
the ceiling, is do'fited to the few
work cattle and perhaps a donkey or
camel. Around the wall are primitive
mangers for the cattle, built of rough
slabs of stone placed on edge and
plastered up with mortar.
"often the owner makes a small
raised place on which he sleeps at
night to keep better watch over the
newly born Iambs, lest in the crowded
quarters some get crushed fir trod-
den down by the older ones. Here
he often sleeps by preference on a
cold night, for he sai s the breath of
the animals keen- Cm warm."

PONTIAC NOTES

The Jewish Ladie s'
met Tuesday, August 3, at the sum-
mer home of Ntrs. J. N. Gold, n at
Lake.
-- -
Mrs. Saul Orman delightfully en-
tertained 24 ladies at a card party,
Thursday, July 28, complimenting her
house-guest, Mrs. NI. Jacobs, of New
York City. Prizes were awarded to
the folowing: Mrs. L. Solomon, first;
Mrs. S. Fleisher , second; Mrs. J.
Kovinsky, consolation. A dainty Inn-
cheon was served at a beautifully ap-
pointed table. The mu-of-town guests
were hi rs. Mose Velick and Mrs. S
Starch, of Detroit; Mrs. S. Fleisher,
Rochester, N. Y.; Mrs. 11. Fedlman
and Mrs. L. Kramer, Brooklyn, N. Y.,
and Mrs. L. Meyers, Peoria. III.

Mr. J. Meyer has returned front a
ten-day trip to New York City.

Mrs. B. Feldman and Mrs. L.
Kramer, of Brooklyn, N. Y., are visit•
Mg Mrs, Louis Klein.

Mr. and Mrs. Abe Weinstein and
Nfr. and Mrs. Clarence Goodman
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Nor-
man Buckner, of Chandler avenue.
Mrs. Samuel Nlagdisohn, of Flint,
is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs
Joseph Barnett. at Cass Lake.

Mr. Seymour Buckner, of Columbia
University, New York, is spending
his vacation with his sister, Miss
Alma Buckner, of Whittemore street.

Mr. Ilarry Orman has returned
from a week's trip to Alpena, Mich.,
where he was the guest of his sister,
Mrs. M. Cohen.

ri

LONDON-sin the last issue of the
"Sunday Pictorial" Israel
leading Jew and famous novelist and
poet, makes the following answer to
those anti-Semites in .‘inerica who
have striven to make capital out of
the publication of the "Jewish Peril."
"The war has accentuated race-
consciousness, and so the Jew—
though he has fought and died for
all his fellow-citizens—finds himself
today suspected of all, slandered by
the more civilized, and slaughtered
by the less civilized," said Nil-. Zang-
will.
"The popular imagination seems
able to think of the Jew only in
terms of melodrama. It is perhaps
some dim response in the mob to
the real romance of his indes-
tructibility.
"Nothing, according to the anti-
Semite, is too colossal for the Jew
to have achieved.
'Ile has at once made the world-
war and pulled the strings of the
peaced raps.
".\nd similarly nothing is too small.
For example, the warning given to
the world by Dr. Ilallinan, Bishop
of Linierick,• as to the true inward-
ness of the latest feminine fashions.
"'The new modes,' wrote the
learned Bishop, are designed not by
women but by men—Parisians, Jews
and Freemasons—seeking to uproot
Christianity by these dangerous and
indecent dress,:
"It was Jews who murdered the
Tsar, an accusation actually incor-
porated in the British \\lite Book,
and still exploited by the reactionary
Russians, despite that even the Nlin-
ister of Justice under Koltchak's gov-
ernment has certified, 'That among
the number of persons proved by the
data of the preliminary inquiry to
have been guilty of the assassination
of the late Emperor Nicholas II. and
lias family, there was not a person
of Jewish descent.' ND. Chesterton,
writing of the Irish, caustically re-
marks that, having for rrurtrrics been
accused of religious iantieism, they
cannot now be inflicted for its anti-
thesis. Yet in NIT-. Chesterton's own
organ the most paradoxical accusa-
tions against the Jew find hospitality.
"And for the world at large, al-
though it is as the capitalist that the
Jew has been abused throughout the
ages, there has been no difficulty in
sifting the count to that of Bol-
sliesisin the moment a more inala-
dorous bogey appeared mi the scene.
"Shylock is now a Socialist, rabid
to destroy all property, including his
own. And it is only the other day
that he was a VC1101110115 pro-German,
a supporter of monarchistic militarism
and Hun atrocities.
momentary
despite
the
"But,
charge of Bolshevism, and the more
permanent charge of poverty—for it
is an invading pauper horde that
Jewry more frequently figures to the
Christian legislator- Capitalism is
destined to remain die chief of the ,
criminal stigmata by which the Jew
may be known.
"But not Capitalism merely for
profit's sake. Capitalism for Jewry's
sake. The Jew hankers of the world—
that notorious intercatenation of

GREAT SALE OF
SUMMER FURNITURE

We are offering an entire shipment just received from The A. L. Randall
Company at greatly reduced prices. Included in this collection are reed chairs, rock-
ers, chaise lounges and davenports in various colors and designs.
Chairs and rockers in frosted brown, blue and gray are reduced to

the very low price of
The same style rocker or chair with a higher back has been
marked at
Davenports to match either one of the above items will be disposed of (tac
at the extremely low price
All pieces are well designed, and finished and are upholstered in a good quality
of cretonne.

$32.50
$39.00

Our Reorganization Sale Goes On With Everything in
Our Stock Reduced 1-4 From the Regular Selling Price

If your home is need of furnishing of any kind—providing they are good fur-
nishings—you can do no better than come to this great 1/4 Off Sale which we are
holding at the present time. Everything has been reduced, and the values being
offered are most unusual.

THE HARTMAN FURNITURE COMPANY
Formerly the

Graq Furniture Company

340-342 Woor•www) AvEbrus
UPPER Woodward-Lowe• Prices

(Continued On Page II.)

Hughes & Hatcher's

40
Per
Cent
Off

AUGUST SUIT SALE!

An unreasonable discount vou will say. Yes,
we are losing money on them. Hut I lughes &
Ilatcher's is growing, and we are going to
make it grow faster. The profits we are sacri-
ficing today are not lost. We're investing them
in thousands of new friends who will become
our constant patrons. The eager crowds we
have served since this sale started is self evi-

OPEN
EVENINGS

ti

dent that the men of Detroit appreciate this
opportunity to secure the finest suits that can
be made. Every one is tailored expressly for
us, to standards that place them far above

"mere clothes." The majority of the styles
are the same as you will see shown for fall, and
the fabrics, which were chosen from the choic-
est patterns from the Nvorld ' s most famous
looms, are of year-'round xveight.

$35 SUITS, Now . . . '21
'70 SUITS, Now . . . '42
$40 SUITS, Now . . . '24 $75 SUITS, Now . . . '45
$45 SUITS, Now . . . $27
'80 SUITS, Now . . . '48
'50 SUITS, Now . . . '30 '85 SUITS, Now . . . '51
$55 SUITS, Now . . . $33 '90 SUITS, Now . . . '54
'60 SUITS, Now . . . $36 $95 SUITS, Now . . . $57
'65 SUITS, Now . . . $39 $100 SUITS, Now . . .'60
'125 SUITS, Now . . . $75

All alterations will be made at cost. The sacrifice
of all profits during this sale makes this necessary

Woodward A alontcalm

OPEN
EVENINGS

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