fit PerKorrjr:wtsit PAGE TEN ito,N [cm ?s.N.WCWCNISW.IMI•I•101.1SIO•1 ■ 50XWOCSCISWWW.S14%1510. Audits Tax Reports Investigations 5 rg Factory Cost Systems Office Bookkeeping Systems Monthly Reports of Operations 0 ce6.- Accountants and Auditors 616 FORD BUILDING TELEPHONE MAIN 5464 Resident Partner: WILLIAM B. ISENBERG Certified Public Accountant (New York and Michigan) Offices: New York City Syracuse, N. Y. Detroit, Mich. AtiPLNISSAIMIAW•WILCIMSICSAWILWRIMIMILIGNIMASt. Par Ex Pharmacies Owned and Operated by the PEOPLE'S DRUG COMPANY LIEN TANNENIIOLZ, Pres. R. W. RENNIE, Tress. ropoription ■ 1)impen Si 0 d C orrectly AT WRIGHT, KAY & CO.'S BUILDING Woodward at John R., Second Floor from First. Telephone numbers will be Main 556 and 557. BY MAY 15 Special Sunday Supper 5:30 P. M. to 1:00 A. M. FIRST CLASS SERVICE KLEIN & LEITNER RESTAURANT 1307 BROADWAY Cad. 3285 ova `BE VERAGES otr' ,44-1 ARE MADE IN THE FOLLOWING FLAVORS ORANGE CHERRY LEMON ROOT BEER RASPBERRY STRAWBERRY CREAM SODA BIRCH BEER GRAPE GINGER•ALE COLA APPLE CIDER HAVE A CASE DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME FEIGENSON 13IZOTH IF, RS CO. ... From the President's Desk—Talk No. 49. Sending Money Abroad Sending your personal check on your local hank would be unsatisfactory, as both you and your bank may be unknown to the bank at which your check might be presented. For this reason, most banks have ac- counts with many foreign banks with whom they do business regularly. This bank, for inat tKe, i would issue you a Foreign Draft, payable to your correspondent in the city or country where he resides — payable in the money of that country. Often, when unusual haste is necessary in sending money abroad, the money may be cabled, just as you would telegraph money to other parts of this country, 0 ,,,,...„...L.„6.4.4. xa• IRS STATE BAN K 1 413 to 14 4 7 CLIFFORD WOOD WA RD AVM. A STORE FOR MEN Satisfaction Alon•y Promptly Rel'undcd • The Rumanian Chamber of Deputies adopted, by 144 for to SO votes against the bill providing for the creation of a department to deal with national minorities. • • • • During the past month four new lodges of the Independent Order B'nai Brith were instituted in Massachusetts at Lynn, Lawrence, Ilaverhill and Salem, respectively. • . • • The University of Panama has conferred the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws upon Dr. Leo S. Rowe, of Philadelphia, director 'general of the I'an-American Union. •• . Abraham L. Genn, who was a • leader in the Belfast, Ireland, Jewish' community, passed away last month. He was the president and founder of the local Cherrah Kadisha. Sir Philip Sassoon, Bt., M. P., has been appointed a trustee of the Na- tional Gallery, in succession to the late Earl Brownlow, on the nomination of the British Prime Minister. • • • • Mrs. Jacob Morse, who passed away at Boston, Mass., at the age of 84, was active in charities, especially in the work of the Leopold Morse Ilome r.t Mattepan, founded by her brother-in-law, the late Leopold Morse. • • • Rabbi AL M. Eichler, of Buffalo, addressed the Jewish Student Congre- gation of Cornell University at its last regular monthly meeting, and iitressed the value of religion in moulding the characters of men and women in the modern world. • . • • Reports received from Budapest establish.the fact that during the first .,ix months of 1920 no less than 10,000 Jews in the domain of Hungary adopted the Christian faith. During the same period there were also 526 mixed marriages between Jews and Gentiles. • • • • Dr. Thomas I'. Ilart, editor of the Catholic Telegraph, and Isidor Wise, of the American Israelite, protested against the Gorrell bill, which would make daily reading of the Bible compulsory in the public schools of Ohio, to the Ilamilton county delegation at a hearing held at the hotel Gibson. • • • Through the instrumentality of Rabbi Ira E. Sanders, of Allentown, Pa., a Jewish University Club, composed of men, was recently organized among university alumnae from the different cities of Eastern Pennsylvania for the purpose of fostering a finer interest in all matters pertaining to the Jew and Judaism. • • • Governor Miller has appointed Rosalie Loew (Mrs. Travers II.) Whitney, of Brooklyn, as a member of the New York State Labor Board for a term of two years at an annual salary of $8,000. Mrs. Whitney is a (laughter of William N. Loew, of New York, and a niece of Chief Rabbi Loew, of Buda- pest, IIungary. • • • • William B. Blumenthal, instructor in modern history and economics and vocational counselor at the East Side lligh School, at Denver, resigned his position here this week to take up the work of visitor to the State institu- tions of California under the direction of the Jewish Committee on Cali- fornia State Institutions. • • • • Rabbi Halpern has protested to the Polish Premier against the refusal of the Polish Minister to allow 10,000 Galician Jews in Budapest to return home. The Ilungarian government threatens to intern them, but the Polish Ambassador only consents to grant them vises for Palestine. The Polish Premier has promised to .reclinsiderthe matter. What You Men Have a Right To Expect In a Suit , 11 or '24 First, you have a right to expect QUALITY, You have a right to expect fabrics that will with- stand wear—that will retain good appearance to the last day of their usefulness. You have a right to expect style and more, style that is suited to your individual taste. You have a right to expect a perfect fit. You have a right to expect shape-retaining tailoring. — The Board of Trustees of the Max and Sarah Bomberger Seashore Home at Philadelphia, Pa., have received a check for $5,000 from the executors of the estate of Simon I. Kohn, late treasurer of the home. It was decided to invest the same in a special fund, to be known as the "Simon I Kohn Fund," the interest to be devoted to the use of the home. • • Many prominent Jews of Boston are planning mass meetings of protest and indignation over the alleged anti-Jewish remarks contained in recent speeches of Commander-in-Chief William A. Ketcham of the Grand Army of the Republic and Comrade Ham before the House and at a banquet to Commander Ketcham at the Boston Elks' Club. Ham declared that the tone of theatrical productions and responsibility for the wave of indecency in dress reposed with the Jews in this country. • • • • Mrs. Minnie Freiberg Ransohoff, widow of Dr. Joseph Ransohoff, who died last month, has presented the University of Cincinnati with $25,000 for the establishment of a chair of surgical anatomy in the Medical College of whose staff Dr. Ransohoff was a member for many years, serving first as professor of anatomy and later as professor of surgery. The professor- ship thus established is to bear the name of Dr. Ransohoff and all publica- tions arising from it shall be under the same name. • • • • Frank & Scdcr Men's Store-3rd Floor. The Polish Ministers of the Interior, Finance, and Education, have con- ferred with the Jewish leaders, Dr. Nossig, Deputies Farbstein and Thon, and Messrs. Prilutzki and Kirschbaum. Dr. Nossig proposed as a basis ••■•••■•101,11.1 le,,morgr for an understanding the abolition of the old Tsarist anti-Semitic laws, the repeal of the Sunday closing law, and the establishment of a Special Min- (COMMUNITIES PROTEST e tICSOCIPWCyCNSWCItli.W.S.W.AWVOIC% % stAs.s00.1.1W CW• liNst,W r isterial Department to deal with Jewish affairs. In reply, the ministers! 'nvited all Jewish parties to agree upon one memorandum stating the Jewish METHODS OF AGENCY demands, and to present it at the next meeting. . • • • LONDON. — Reports received in N. Gounaris, the Greek Minister of War, has lately completed a tour in Eastern Macedonia and Thrace. Ile was accompanied by Mr. Peppo this city from Poland, Lithuania, Germany and Austria relate that the Be sure to advise with an in the matter ce design as well as sub- Mallah, a Jewish Member of Parliament. In all the places which the minis- ter visited, he gave particular attention to the situation of the various local Jewish press and various por- stantial savings in price. Exclusive designs as well as artistic sug- tions of the different communities small Jewish communities, took notice of their requests, and promised to gestion" will be made without charge are up in arms against the decision see that they were granted. Mr. Gounaris affirmed his great friendship , for the Jews and declared that the liberty which had been accorded to of the "Agudath Israel" secret con- ference to take all possible measures Thrace through the gallant efforts of the Greek armies would be equal against the Zionist Organization and liberty for all the elements rseitling. in that province. to appeal to England not to recog- nize the organization as the Jewish Dr. William Kohlmann, surgeon-in-chief of Touro Infirmary, New Or- 1423 Washington Blvd. agency for Palestine. The Jewish Main 77 leans, La., died suddenly last week. Dr. Kohlmann, who was born in Ger- many in 1863, lived in New Orleans since 1891. Aside from the high press declares that this is an un- paralleled act of treachery and that womoistsoonoomsztvaoisoonomwmtwcwocsomotwcycoos position he occupied in the Touro Infirmary, he also held positions of no self-respecting Jew can now re- importance and great responsibility in other institutions of the city and main in the ranks of the "Agudath state. Ile was professor of gynecology in the post-graduate school of the Israel." Loyola University; he was the chief visiting surgeon in the gynecological and bostetrical division of the Charity Hospital; the chief gynecologist and obstetrican of the Touro Infirmary, and the consulting gynecologist and NEW HOSPITAL FOUNDED obstetrican of the New Orleans Dispensary for Women and Children. WOODWARD CORNER WATSON. MAIN 481. • • • • LONDON. — Mrs. Peter Schweit- I The worlds largest school for the correct teaching of correct doming The Hebrew Free Loan Association of Baltimore has accepted the zer, a leading Zionist of New York, management of a fund created by Mr. Paul S. Levy, St. George, Md., in today laid the foundation stone for 200 LADY AND MEN INSTRUCTORS memory of his departed wife, Sarah Baron Levy. It is to be known as the a new hospital in Tiberias, according Sarah Baron Levy Memorial Fund and to remain in perpetual working to a dispatch received here from Je- Private lessons and classes daily—day and night. order. Loans are to be rondo to women only under the same rules as rusalem. Mrs. Schweitzer is at pres- II cite hour lesson', teaching the waif. one step, fox trot and two step other loans are made by the association and without interest. The super- ent in Palestine as a member of a 5 . 0 0 , vision of the fund is vested in a committee of three ladies representing commission headed by Mrs. Joseph Including free admission nightly for I year to our public dances. the Ladies' Auxiliary Society of the Hebrew Friendly Inn and Aged Home, Fels to purchase land for the "Zion Public dancing every night. of which Mrs. Levy was the organizer and the first president; the Deborah Commonwealth" and is the founder Lessem rooms separate and destintit from public ballroom. Lodge of Baltimore City, of which Mrs. Levy was also the first president of the hospital which is soon to be Hall to rent for special occasions. and organizer, and the Levy family. put up. Above all, you have a right to expect VALUE You get good fabrics, goo] style, good tailoring--- and MATCHLESS VALUE---in Frank & Seder suits at $24. Choose from cassimeres,. serges, unfinished worsteds---herringbones, pin stripes, mix- tures---blues, greys, brows and novelties. In Decorating Your Home M. GOLDBERG CO. OF DETROIT Lumber Prices are Deflated Lumber, the last great commodity to advance in price, has been the first to get back to a normal basis. While lumber constitutes less than thirty per cent of the cost of the average frame house, these reductions mean an important saving in building costs. Detroit Lumber Dealers' Association 700 Vinton Bldg. A gang of robbers recently plundered the synagogue at Shonebeck, Germany. • • • • The Norwegian government has appointed Mr. Albert Delbergo to be consul general for Greater Lebanon. • • • The Vilna government has decided to publish two weekly newspapers in Polish for the Jewish population. • • . • Dr. Poznanski, who has hitherto held the office of preacher in Warsaw, has been appointed rabbi of that community. • • • Mr. Herman Struck, the well-known painter and etcher and leader of the German Mizrachi, is about to settle in Palestine. • • • • Morris Cukor, for the past three years president of,the New York Civil Service Commission, has resigned and will resume his law practice. • • • • The Lithuanian government decided to supply the Jewish soldiers with kosher food, which will be prepared under the supervision of the Jewish communities. . • • • Mr. Lazard Kahn has beep appointed delegate of the Cincinnati Chem- her of Commerce to the International Chamber of Commerce at London, England, in July. • • • • The estate of the late Maximilina Stern of New York has been appraised at $1,050,319 net. A bequest of $10,000 is given the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies. • . • Rabbi Lewis Browne made the principal address at the mass meeting held in the Municipal Auditorium of Waterbury, in behalf of the American Campaign for Irish Relief. • • • • "David Copperfield," by Charles Dickens, has been translated into He- brew by M. Ben-Eliezer and published at Jerusalem. This is the first book of Charles Dickens translated into Hebrew. • • . • In memory of her late husband, Leopold Michels, merchant and philan- thropist, Mrs. Carrie Michels has presented a library to the Young Men's Hebrew Association of San Francisco, Calif. • • • • "The Jews of Abyssinia" is the subject of a very interesting little book recently published in hamburg by Dr. Carl Rathgens, who has himself been to Abyssinia and made studies among the Falashas on the spot. • • • • The Jewish people of Bakersfield, Calif., last fall purchased the Womarl's Club, which they remodeled into a synagogue, and as the B'nai Jacob Syna- gogue it was formally dedicated on March 27. 606 Woodward Majestic Institute for Dancing