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64,

PIEPEMOIT

PAGE TWELVE

NOVEMBER 4, 1921.

When in LosAngeles, See Us

AS GOOD TODAY
AS 25 YEARS AGO

We welcome Detroitera and are glad to give
any information desired about Los Angeles.
Our reputation in Detroit is our recommendation

General Realty Co.

25 years ago when the makers of San
Felice first started to manufacture
this cigar they decided to make a
cigar that would be the best possible
for the money. They put a high
grade Havana filler in the cigar
wrapped it in the best of wrappers
and sent it forth to the cigar world.
Today San Felice still maintains the
high standard it started out with over
25 years ago. It numbers among its
smokers thousands of men who could
well afford to pay more than 8 cents
for a cigar but who find in San
Felice all that they desire in cigar
satisfaction.
Try one today—you will find out it
really is a great cigar.

1004 Wright & Callender Bldg,
Los Angeles, Calif.

4

CARL SHAPIRO
CARL SUMETZ
We Specialize in Business Property.

On Saturday, Oct. 22, a new Jewish daily entitled Yevreskaya Masel
appeared in Riga, printed in the Russian language.

It is learned in Paris that Marshal Foch has received an invitation from
the Ku Klux Klan to be its guest during his stay in America.
• •
•
•

Dr. Caster, the Setardic Hallam, has returned to London after an ab-
sence of several months, during which he visited Roumania.
•
.
.

The Jewish National Fund Bureau in London announces that in the past
nine months it collected $360,000 for Palestinian purposes.
•
•
•
•

The Roumanian government has refused the plea of Soviet Russia to
extradite the well known counter-revolutionary and pogromist Machno.
Machin, will remain in Roumania.
• •
•
•

A bill has been introduced in the British Parliament making it an offense
for Jewish Rabbis to give a divorce until the civil courts of the country
grant an absolute decree of separation.
• •
•
s
Sir Philip Saf1.011, well known young Jewish millionaire, who is private
secretary to Premier Lloyd George, is scheduled to come to the United
States to attend the Disarmamnet Conference.
•
• • •
In a large Warsaw state theater, a Polish company of artists danced
an ugly caricature of a "Mayoffes" dance. Jews in the audience protested,
a general tumult followed and 10 Jews were arrested.
• •
•
•

The newly created World Relief Conference is negotiating with the lea
for the purpose of creating one general committee for relief work in
Soviet Russia. The committee is to co-operate with Dr. Nansen's League of
Nations Commission.
• •
•
•

LEE & CADY

Harry Greems, an American Jewish actor, is playing the title role in
Hoffman's comedy, "Welcome Stranger," which is now being produced in
London. Local newspapers give Mr. Greems very excellent criticisms and
&flan him an artist of high rank.
• •
6

Distributors for Detroit
and Michigan

•

From the President's Desk—Talk No. 75.

"Gold Reserve" the

backbone of a nation

Without it a nation's credit standing
would suffer or fall entirely. On it
depends everything else.

Nations differ very little from indi-
viduals in this respect, for the man
without a savings account is not con-
sidered a "going concern" nor a good
risk.

You should build up a "gold reserve" of your own,
in the form of a savings account, in order that you
may be able to meet emergency demands and lake
advantage of opportunities that are always being
offered the man with ready cash. Make this bank
your depository.

•-■

,t6 "..1

I ot

Dr. Bode, curator of the German National Museum, announces that he
has been forced to sell the major part of his library because of the im-
possibillty of obtaining proper accommodations for it, owing to the tre-
mendous influx of Jews who have rented or bought all available houses
and buildings.
* •
•
•

A conference of representatives of the American Joint Distribution Com-
mittee held in Berlin decided that the J. D. C. establish relations with all
Jewish and non-Jewish organizations desirous of participating in the relief
of starving Russia, Definite decisions as to the measures for adoption
were not made.
• .

°p it

At All Good
Cigar Stores

Albert Lucas, who spent several months in Europe as special representa-
tive of the Joint Distribution Committee, returned to New York and de-
livered his report to the officers of the committee. A. Zucker, who spent
a year in Poland in the services of the "Joint," returned last week on board
the Berengoria.
• •
.

,

60, 661.46, •

.6i, 61

' ,UM,.

Try One
Today

A conference in Vienna of Pottle Zion leaders, with representatives of
the union of l'oal Ha-Zoir and Zeire Zion, decided on common action on
behalf of the Palestine Workingmen's Bank. Beret Katzenellenson and II.
Aaronreich left for America, where they will conduct a campaign for the
selling of shares for the bank.
• •
•

IRS

0'

GEO. F.

KEARNEY

for COUNCIL

Age 44 years.

Born and always lived in
Detroit.

Taxpayer.

Educated in Detroit Pub-
lic Schools.

Has held positions of
prominence and trust,
including Detroit
Board of Education.

Spanish-American and World War Veteran.

Conceded in Public Press well qualified.

Endorsed by:—

Fred

Judge John Faust
M. Alger
Judge C. L. Bartlett Theo. W. Kolbe
Rowland W. Fixel
Dr. F. B. Broderick

Arthur E. Fixel

Wm. R. Kales
James T. Keens

Ernest P. La Joie

E. E. MacCrone

C. S. Mott
Frank Murphy

E. G. Pipp

And hundreds of other business men and soldiers

in Detroit.

ARTHUR R.

KOSEL

— for —

Justice of the Peace

Eminently qualified by years of prac-

tice in ALL courts and intimate knowl-
edge of business methods—large and small.

• "Jritite

and Service to All."

It is rumored in Berlin that the banking house of Rothschild is con- i
templating the floating of a $500,000,000 loan to the German government,
which would place it in a position to pay the reparations to the Allied
Powers and to re-establish its industries on a firm basis. The money for
the loan is to be found in the United States and England.
• •
• •

Replying to an interpolation of Jewish deputies in the Polish Sejm
against the repression of the Yiddish language in Grodno, the Minister of
Interior declared that he had given orders to the governor of that city to
print Yiddish parallel to Polish in all oflicial notices and public documents,'
and has asked that persecutions against Yiddish cease immediately.

According to a recent census which took place in Kiev, the population
of the city numbers 544,569. Of this number 144,524 are Jews. Before
the war there were but 30,000 to 40,000 Jews in the city of Kiev but,
owing to conditions in the surrounding territory, Jewish inhabitants of the
small towns and villages have flocked into the metropolis of the "Little
Russian" district.
• • • •

Skirmishes between Bolshevik and Roumanian frontier guards have
taken place during the last few days all along
the Dniester. At least 20,000
Jews, refugees from the Ukraine and Soviet Russia, are congregated in
small towns along this region. They are the principal sufferers from the
recent affrays and are stricken with panic because of their inability to flee
in any direction.
• •
•
•

"

The movement on the one hand of Jews leaving Russia is countered by
another which, according to reports that have reached Riga, has been or-
ganized in such countries at Lithuania, Latvia and Poland. Russian refu-
gees who have resided in these countries for a more or less extended period
are organizing themselves into groups and are preparing to resettle in
their former Russian homes.
• • •
•
At a conference of Polish trade unions held in Warsaw, resolutions
were adopted urging the expulsion of Jewish children from manual training
arnools and asking the government to expel all Jewish refugees from the
country. Several influential leaders attempted to prevent the passage of
the resolutions, but the chauvanists and strong anti-Semites were adamant
in their insistance on the anti-Semitic measures.
• •
•
•

The Galas Rosily, a Berlin newspaper, reports that the government of
Lettland is daily deporting on the average of 100 Jews to Soviet Russia.
Many of these are recent refugees from Russia, but many also are per-
manent settlers of the country who are accused of ctmmunism. The Jewish
population of the country ie terror-stricken, for deportations
are fnade on
the flimsiest charges and with little or no investigation.
•
• •

SECOND ANNUAL

Charity Dance

so

Given by

Pisgah Lodge No. 34

At the Beautiful

The present Palestinian land law has given rise to an impression that
persons living outside of Palestine are not permitted to purchase land in
the country.
El Nafflr, a Jerusalem Arab newspaper, writes that while
it is true that the governor of any district may not sanction the
sale of
land to a person dwelling outside of Palestine, the High Commissioner
has
the authority to permit such purchase through an attorney,
provided the
purchaser signifies that he is prepared either to till the land or to
build
upon it.

•

A

General Averescu recently visited Czernovitch on behalf of the Central
Roumanian government and received delegations from various national,
minorities in the new Roumanian province of Bukowina. The delegations 1
without exception complained bitterly against the treatment of
Roumanian
officials, who did everything in their power to prevent the exercise of
na-
tional rights. Dr. Evner, head of the Jewish representation, spoke
against
the special restrictions which had been placed upon Jews and demanded to
know why the Roumanianization of Bukowina had to begin with the Jewish
population.
• • • •

At a meeting held in Wilhelmsdorf, near Berlin, Nahum Sokolo•, still
weak from his recent illness which kept him at a sanitarium, declared that
many of the articles of the Mandate in its present form are unsatisfactory
to Zionists. Ile further stated that his presence in Berlin was an indication
of the fart that Zionism stood higher than the bloodthirsty war god. He
decried the present limitations on Palestinian immigration and expressed
the view that the influx into Palestine today was not an expreaaion of a
desire to go to • new home but rather to return to an old one.
Addressee
were given by Dr. Schram,. Levin, Vladimir Jabotinaky and Georg Halpern,

rcadia-- Woodward at Stinson

Don't Forget the Date

• • .

The prefect of the Parisian police force is initiating an international
police army which will combat criminal and bandit bands operating in
various countries and having no regard for national boundaries He advo-
cates that the new institution, consisting of experienced detective personnel,
should have extraordinary passport privileges and be permitted to follow
up and arrest bandits in all countries of Europe. The new police
will be
able to prosecute bandits guilty of pogroms in the Ukraine and in Russia,
who have taken refuge in European cities

"It's Here"
"It's

and Waited For—
Detroit's Greatest Affair!

Mrs Julius Smion, wife of the well known Zionist, ex-member of the
Zionist Executive, died in a train while traveling to Berlin on her way from
the Zionist Congress. Mrs. Simon was prominent in Jewish and Zionist
affairs and was a gifted writer. Simons projected voyage to America,
where he was to negotiate with members of the Brandeis minority group,
has been postponed indefinitely on account of the death of his wife.

Thursday, November 10th

At 8:30 P. M.

.•

, .r.

`^i' s r ,,a ct ,t s r et;:;1 7. 4 ..a

Dr. Kopp, the first official German government representative in Pales-
tine since the Turks retired from the country, arrived in Jerusalem as
vice-consul and took over affairs from the Spanish consulate, which has
been representing German interests. Dr. Kopp's official temporary resi-
dence is in the building of the Spanish embassy.

STATE BANKT
tIrarg=1 " ..

r.

A report from Moscow indicates that the Jewish Commissariat has begun
the registration of all Russian Jews who have relatives in the United States
who are America ncitizens. The Commissariat means to facilitate the emi-
gration of such persons, especially those below the age of 18.

The director of a Christian high school in Warsaw, in which a majority
of the pupils are Jews, threatens to expel all'Jewish students who absented
themselves from school on Torn Kippur. This same director threatened
before Yom Kippur to expel those Jewish pupils who even asked for per-
mission to be released on Yom Kippur.
• • •

•

John C. Cowan
Frank D. Eamon

The executive of the Joint Distribution Committee in Vienna has
assigned the sum of $10,000 for the purpose of building a large Jewish hos-
pital in Hungary. Local communities will be asked to give financial assist-
ance and will be granted part control of the institution.
• • • •

d.„

4-4=`

