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May 13, 1921 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1921-05-13

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

PISPETROMAngi WM ICU

PAGE TEN

VSNISIZ%

Factory Cost System.

Audits
T • x Reports

Office Bookkeeping System.
Monthly Report. of • Oper•tions

In•estig•tions

R A

Accountants and Auditors

Advices from Lodz report the death of

616 FORD BUILDING

TELEPHONE MAIN 5464

A Swiss association of Jewish students, artists and writers called Ha-,
ruach has been formed at Zurich.


A new publication called the Freie Zionistiche Blotter is being issued
by German Zionists at Heidelberg.
• • • •
Jews of Binghamton, N. Y., are engaged in collecting a fund of $15,000
for a Jewish community center.
• • • •
111
In its last issue, the London Weekly Dispatch brings figures showing that
there are at present more than 250,000 Jews in the British Isles.

Offices:
New York City
' Syracuse, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.

Resident Partner:
WILLIAM 13. ISENIIERG
Certified Public Accountant
(New York and Michigan)

well known Rabbi Ilalpern.

Sir Ilerbert Samuel, G. B. E. contributes a paper on "The Life and
Poetry of John Keats," derived farg
ely from the writings of Sir Sidney
Colvin, to the current number of the London Contemporary Review.
• • • •
In response to an appeal made by Rabbi Stephen S. Wise to the members
of Tempt Beth El, Buffalo, N. Y., for contributions to the building fund
for a new synagogue, within a few minutes 48 members subscribed $21,200.

1413 to

11

PEOPLE'S DRUG COMPANY

A Jew named Solomon was beaten to death by a Polish official in Vilna,
according to a dispatch from that city. The police officer accused the Jew
of having purchased stolen perchandise. The authorities are now investi-
gating the happening.
• • •
John Wenger, formerly of the Capitol Theater, where his scenic settings
were the great attraction, has been engaged by Selwyna to arrange the
I backgrounds and lighting effects for their new production, "The Poppy
God."
• • • •
Mrs. Babette Carp, who was the oldest Jewess of Texas, passed away
at the age of 96, at Fort Worth, where she had resided for almost half a
century. Mrs. Carp was in full possession of all her faculties until a few
months before her death.
• • • 5
The recent census in Switzerland showed that out of a total population
of 3,857,840, 20,951 are Jews. Their distribution among the various can-
tons shows that Zurich contains '7,000, Bern 2,057, Basel 2,600, Lucerne
558, Geneva 2,772, St. Gall 1,100, while Uri contains only seven Jews. •

It. W. RENNIE, Ph. G., Treas.

reseription•

D ispense d

C orrectly

Will Be Opened Saturday, May 14th

AT

WRIGHT, KAY & CO.'S BUILDING

Woodward at John R.,
Second Floor from First.

si

Special Sunday\Skipper

5:30 P. M.

to 1:00,A. M.

FIRST CLASS ERVICE

KLEIN & LEITNER

13.ESTAURANTI

1307 BROADWAY

Cad. 3285

BE VERA

Ges

ARE MADE IN THE FOLLOWING FLAVORS

RASPBERRY
STRAWBERRY
CREAM SODA
BIRCH BEER

ORANGE
CHERRY
LEMON
ROOT BEER

The White Terror has been resumed in Budapest, according to latest
advices received in Vienna from the Hungarian capital. Within the past
few days, the bodies of five Jews, merchants from the province, have been
found murdered on the shores of local rivers.
• • •
Professor Seinig, the noted pedagogue of Scharlotonburg, who is at
present making a study of Vienna school conditions, has manifested par-,
ticular interest in the private Jewish schools of this city, a great number
' of which he has visited.
• • • •
The noted Zionist, Engineer Kremnetzki, has just returned from a trip
to Palestine. Ile declares that the situation in that country is entirely
satisfactory andjhat there is not the slightest cause for misgiving in so far
as the future orPalestine is concerned.
• • • 5
Professor Boris Schatz, the founder and director of the Bezalel Art
Institution of Palestine, has purchased machinery for artistic printing which
is to be installed in the Bezalel. On these machines, the first Palestine
stamps as well as the first bank notes will be printed.
• • • •
Artists exhibiting at the Exhibition of Modern Art at the Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, include Ben Benn, Bernard Gussow,
Samuel Ilalpert, Morris Kantor, Jules Pascin, Maurice Sterne, Abraham
Walkowitz, Max Weber, William Zorach, Marguerite Zorach and Horace
. ' Brodzky.

The Gertrude Charity Society, which has been engaged in charity work
at St. Louis, Mo., for the last 15 years, is about to institute a "Home for
Boys." The object is to provide a residential home for boys upon their
discharge from the orphan lffne, and for boys of limited means who come
to the city to study.
• • • •
Morris Light, who died at Syracuse, N. Y., left an estate which has
been appraised at $96,027.45. Mr. Light left $5,000 to the Jewish Orphan
Asylum in Rochester, $2,000 each to the Syracuse Memorial hospital and
the Jewish Home for Aged, $1,000 to the Temple Society of Concord and
$500 to the Onondaga Orphans'11ome...

GRAPE
GINGER.ALE
CULA
APPLE CIDER

HAVE A CASE DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME

FEIGENSQ,

BROTHERS CO.

From the President's Desk—Talk No. 51.

The Men Who Are
"Making Good" Today

are those men who are working the
hardest. They're not waiting for
business to ''pick-up"—they're help-
ing to pick it up.

z.

CLIFFORD

I know a salesman—a depositor of
this bank. I stopped him the other
day to ask him how he found things.
"Fine," said he—then, as an after-
thought, he explained—"I'm making
money, but I'm working five times
harder than I did last year for it."

That's the solution of the business problem of to-
day. Last year business was coming to you--this
year you must go after it. You'll find it if you go
after it hard enough. Soon, you'll find you have
no time for worry. Try it.

......Lk,K...i...z...44......6.4./

IRS

STATE BANK,

OF DETROIT

The Strongest Reason for Owning A
Home Today is Thrift

Thrift means wig buying as well as saving. Home
ownership is the means by which the earner can
capitalize his earnings and lay the foundation for
future comfort and affluence.

Detroit Lumber Dealers' Association
1720 Vinton Bldg.
606 Woodward

EDER

WOODWARD AVE.

Har'e's a Remarkable
Opportunity' to Save !



2.Pants. Suits

land

ki, 24 ,

-..

Bands of Polish hooligans are terrorizing the Jewish communities around
the city of Vilna, according to a dispatch from that city. In one city
(Kemelischek) they entered a synagogue during the hours of prayer and
ill-treated every one of the congregation.

Owned and Optirotod by the

Telephone number. will be Main 556 sad 557.

1447

Jacob Marks, a well known merchant of London, who recently died'
there, left his son $100,000 on condition that he should marry a Jewess,
one who is a daughter of Jewish

Par Ex Pharmacies

1

AND

mE\T I

Chalutzin on their way to Palestine passing through the city of Munich
are subjected to uncalled for difficulties on the part of the police, according •
to reports received in Berlin from that city.

BEN TANNENHOLZ, I'res.

GRAND
TwR I( VN E I?

,4 f

A

:1

,--

I_*--

------

1

-

-.„„

The Best Quality
The Best Made
We've Seen
NP;Suits
.
at $24•

,

/

/

I

1

t

I /

'

/

'

1(111

.

r

SICCaitu

9ts

\\

/

!1,

i

HERRINGBONES,
WORSTEDS,
MIXTURES,
SERGES.

You'll feel the same way
about them the minute
you see them!

The good fabrics used in
them, the stylish way they
are cut, the way they are
made—everything about
them readily reminds one
of the finest suits.

Many With Two Pairs of Pants!

GREYS, BROWNS,
GREENS, BLUES,
FANCY MIXTURES,
PLAIN COLORS

Count Stefan Bethlen, the new Hungarian premier, in an address to
the Hungarian Parliament, made it clear that he did not deem an anti-
Semitic policy desirable. At the same time, Premier Bethlen assured the
Parliament that the government would take necessary measures to see
that the Jews did not monopolize the trade of Hungary.

The Roumanian authorities forbade the Jews of Kimpoleng, Bukovinia,,
from holding a National Fund meeting, according to advices received from
Czernowitz. Permission for the meeting was finally obtained after its
initiators promised 25 per cent of the collection of the meeting towards
the Roumanian Invalids Fund.
• • • •
According to Jerusalem advices, Zeid, a brother of Emir Feisal, is
about to be officially announced as the ruler of Transjordania. The ter-
ritory to be governed by the Arab prince will be officially known as Eastern
Palestine and will come under the jurisdiction of the Palestine High Com-
missioner.
• • • •
Governor Miller, of New York, has signed a bill authorizing the incor-
poration of the "Corner House," an auxiliary of the Hebrew Orphan Asylum,
the function of which will be to offer a home for former inmates of the
asylum until they pass into man's estate. The "Corner 'louse" is to be
situated at Amsterdam avenue and One Hundred Thirty-eighth street,
opposite the asylum. • • • •

M. Landesco, the J. D. C. director for constructive relief, conferred
with representatives of a number of Jewish labor organizations in Warsaw.
The chief subject for discussion was the question of co-operative enter-
prises and it was finally decided that the workers' co-operatives should elect
a committee which should work out complete plans to be submitted to the '
J. D. C. workers.
• • • •
Der Yud, a daily publication appearing in Kishenev, charges the Bol-,
ahevist authorities on the frontiers in the neighborhood of the Dneister with'
being particularly poor in their treatment of emigrants and refugees. The
publication asserts that the chief responsibility for this fact lies with the
Jewish section of the Communist party, the members of which look upon
every emigrant as a counter-revolutionary.

A large number of London Jews attended the unveiling cd a memorial
table for 535 members of the Jewish lads Brigade who had fallen while
doing their duty during the last war. Rev. Dr. Michael Adler, Senior
Jewish Chaplain of the British forces, was the chief speaker and in the
course of his address declared that the large number of Jews who fell
during the last war amply demonstrated the Jew's devotion to his country
and his exemplary behavior on the battlefield.
• • • •
Mr. Morris Clark, of New York City, has joined the staff of the Depart-
ment of Synagogue and School Extension of the Union of American Ilebrew
Congregations, taking the place of Rabbi Jerome Rosen, now studying
Jewish conditions in Europe. Mr. Clark for some years gave lectures on
"Jewish Folk Music," and during the war was one of the staff of enter-
tainers of the Jewish Welfare Board.
• •
A special appeal has been issued by the New York Relief Association for
Hungarian Jews in Europe. The appeal states that at no time since the be-
ginning of the war have the Jews of Hungary made any direct appeal to
American Jewry and in view of the urgency of the situation in which Jews
in Hungary now find themselves, the association hopes that there will be
a liberal raponse on the part of the many Hungarian Jews in this country.
It is proposed to raise $500,000 within the next 30 days.

fre

1444

1"

,p54

FATIMA.
CIGARETTES

Imam &

Y°,.t1214a
/

M11111 TOBACCO CO.

More than 70 writers were present at the conference of Hebrew writers
which has just been held in Jaffa, Palestine. The conference decided to
found a publishing company for Hebrew works and expressed its regret
at the discord between the Zionist World leaders and the Zionist leaders
of America, at the same time condemning the attitude of the American
leaders as showing their falure to comprehend the national meaning of
Zionism. It was also resolved to request the Zionist Organization to con-
sider Hebrew literature and its furtherance as an integral part of Zionist
work. The conference cabled greetings to Achad lia'An, Stybel, Dubnow,
JERUSALEM—The Jewish labor
Bialick, Cherichow, and elected on its board Dr. Bergman, Glickson, Ben-
organization has applied to the gov-
zion and Nadler.
• • •
ernment for permission to open a
Mr. Meyer Kiersky has presented to Congregation Gates of Prayer, of workers' bank. The application gives
New Orleans, La., an unusual and valuable gift consisting of the former £40,000 as the initial capital.
The government has just made
synagogue and site on Jackson avenue. When the congregation moved into
its new and beautiful edifice on Napoleon avenue last May it was decided public a decree permitting any
to dispose of the old building and site by raffle. When the drawing took change of names desired provided
place Mr. Kiersky held the winning ticket. Ile immediately wrote a letter the change is duly advertised in the
to the congregation saying that be desired to donate the old synagogue official gazette. This decree was
and site, valued at more than $10,000, to the congregation to be Bold and made necessary by the continuous
the proceeds to be used toward the liquidation of the indebtedness on the adoption of Hebrew names on the
part of new-arriving immigrant&
new house of worship.

WORKERS TO OPEN
PALESTINE BANK

IlkICMCSC:42CMCMCICIXICOV

I'll Figure It Out For You!

Books opened, audited, trial balance and
financial reports prepared. Reasonable rates.

Daniel L. Tickton

(Formerly with Sarssohn & Shetzer)

Hickory 4448-M; Main 8295.

353 Navaho© Ave.

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