711 EDErizon;filosn6RONICLE PAGE TWO COMMUNICATIONS From Pisgah Lodge No. 34, I. 0. B. B. A Worthy Opportunity Discontinued Suites and Individual Pieces of Bed- room Furniture will be dis- played on our FACTORY FLOORS beginning Monday, May 15th, and enging May 20th. The opportunity of makng a se- lecton from these fine pieces war- rants a trip out here. While these illustrations may or may not be taken from the dis- continued designs, there are about 130 odd pieces, including dressers, beds, chiffonettes, chifforobea, tables, chairs, in great variety and of our usual "GOOD FURNI- TURE" standard. Seventeen complete suites are in this exposition. WHY We are discontinuing these de- signs before the Furniture Expo- sition, when we expect hundreds of buyers to visit our factory. We are not anxious to keep them as "odd pieces." Our patrons may avail them- selves of this opportunity. 3cfroif utnifufc,Qops .13Luttn . at 3lioptlIc Melrose 3454 We have a lengthy communication for this column from Pisgah Lodge No. 34, I. 0. B. B. The publication of this com- munication is deferred until our next issue, when it will be pub- lished in full. VERA GORDON GETS HER KNEIDLACH AND DINES ON PASSOVER How Jewish Actress Accepted Inuit.. lion of Wisconsin Governor to Dinner and Upheld Traditions. By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Mothers are the dominant figures of the day, and the "Mother of the Movies" is the heroine of the hour. Vera Gordon, the most "natural" mother, is the topic of discussion wherever theater-goers are, and in the Jewish circles in particular, the woman who made the mother role dominate the movies is receiving a "Boruch Ilaboh." Officially, Mrs. Gordon is appear. ing at the Broadway-Strand Theater in her movie, "Your Best Friend." But unofficially she is the guest of Detroit Jews. And the bargain is proving a mutual one. For Mrs. Gor- don's talks are enjoyed by her audi- ences, and the honors that her hear- era shower upon her appear to be appreciated. The Men's Temple Club was the first body of local Jews to hear her and these "Republican" Jews—the Mother of the Movies has coined this name for the Reform Jews—will long remember Vera Gordon. Loves Traditions. Let Fatima smokers tell you half of her earnings for charity. She has adopted 25 orphans in New York and supports them all. In her suite at the Wolverine Hotel Mrs. Gordon produced a picture of her aged mother and her grand- mother, who died recently at the age of 86, and she pointed to it with pride as an example of a beautiful family in real life, loving and worshipping the mother. Mrs. Gordon's appearance in De- troit was marked by a family re- union. Her husband, Nahum, and son, William, a big fellow of 17 who plans to enter Columbia University next semester, came from New York to spend two weeks with wife and mother. The daughter, Nadya, al- ways travels with her mother. The son spoke with pride of his mother. "My mother wants pictures to be a force for education," he said, and his mother nodded consent. Mrs. Gordon is to appear at the Broadway-Strand Theater for an- other week beginning Sunday, and during her stay here will be enter- tained by numerous Jewish societies. The Ladies' Auxiliary of the Shaarey Zedek, the local B'nai B'rith lodge and other organizations were for- tunate to secure Mrs. Gordon as speaker. FATIMA SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR SYMPHONY REPORTED MOST ENCOURAGING This time she spoke not of the mother role, nor of the movies, but The condition of the subscription of the people she likes beat—her own for next year's symphony concerts is, people. She spoke of her people's to say the least, most encouraging to traditions—and "love" was the term the supporters and friends of the she used in expressing the way she Detroit Symphony Orchestra. felt for her nation's customs and The formal prospectuses for the "minhagim." season were mailed only the past Vera Gordon was speaking of Mat- week and up to last Saturday and zoth on Pesach and fasting on Yom Sunday, owing to delays which ine- Kippur—and she won her point. Her vitably followed on the change of children will be "Republicans"— management, no definite announce- surely; they will be good Americans ment had been made of the plans —undoubtedly. But they must never- for next year other than the fact theless remain good Jews; they must that there would be 14 pairs of con- deep down in their hearts retain the certs and a brief announcement some spark of Jewishness that has kept the weeks ago of a preliminary list of people alive. soloists. Despite this, renewals of It was a smoker that the men of subscriptions for the Thursday even- the Temple were gathered for, and ing concerts total to (late about 80 for entertainment was Mrs. Gordon per cent of the subscription of last called for. But combined with the year, which is an extraordinary high entertainment a Jewish actress average for the spring and one which preached her religion and her sin- tills the directors of the orchestra cerity won her converts. with much hope for next season. "A Big Subject." The list of soloists for next year, "I'll starve for a day, I'll starve which has already been published, for two days, but Matzoth on Pesach seems to meet with very general ap- I must have." And evidently Mrs. proval, especially the fact that the Gordon gets her Matzoth on Pesach, management has avoided a feature because she is, in her own words, "a I which came under such general criti- big subject." (Her plumpness, how- cum the past winter—an over-per- ever, doesn't seem to worry her a centage of pianists. As already an- bit.) nounced, only three so far have been "I was on the road during the en- engaged for the coming seasons, and tire eight days of the last Pesach," they are three very great artists- she was saying, "and I got my Mat- Rachmaninolf, Samara' and our own zoth. When I couldn't get my Mat- Gabrilowitsch. There will probably zoth, I lived on eggs—hard boiled be one more added to this list later eggs. And my daughter has no ob- in the Re118011. jections to hard boiled eggs, either— A most interesting development on Pesach." during the past week has been the Mrs. Gordon believes in proving confirmation of the coming to De- everything she says. So she asked troit next winter of Bruno Walter, her daughter to show herself, and who will conduct, as guest conductor, pretty 16-year-old Nadya was there one pair of concerts. lie comes to as a confirmer of her mother's state- this country directly on invitation of ment that not only (lid she eat eggs Walter Damrosch of New York and when there were no Matzoth, but that for him is to conduct in New York they didn't hurt her a bit. She took three concerts of the New York Sym- after her mother. phony Society. Ile has also been That wasn't all Mrs. Gordon had engaged to conduct certain concerts to say about Matzoth. For Matzoth of the Minneapolis orchestra. Mr. she was ready to give up honors, so Gabrilowitsch, who has long been a when the governor of Wisconsin ex- friend and admirer of Walter, is in tended her an invitation to dinner on the main responsible for his coming Passover—but let Mrs. Gordon tell to America. Bruno Walter is one of her own story. the great conductors of Europe. Ile She Gets Her Kneidlach. is of a younger generation than that "What do I do? I refuse! He may race of giants which counted such be the governor of a state, but I am men as Nikisch, Mottl, Richter, Levi, just Vera Gordon, and I must have Mahler, Muck and Weingartner, of my Matzoth on Pesach. So what do which all except the last two named they do? There is a very fine Jewish have been gathered to their fathers, family In Madison, Wisconsin, by the and he is in a sense a direct descen- name of Sinaiko. So they managed dant, professionally speaking, of Gus- to get Kosher dishes and a good tav Mahler. lie first came into pub- Kosher Pesach meal—and Vera Gor- lic view when he went to the Royal don ate with the governor. Opera in Vienna as one of the young "There were some Jewish women conductors under Mahler and in 1901 at the dinner with me who ate Cho- became one of the first conductors of metz. I had kneidlach and the best that institution. Ile left Vienna in of Passover maacholim. Now, I ask 1914 to succeed Mottl as conductor you, who was better off, those ladies and intendant of the Court Opera in with the dried bread, or I with the Munich: This post he resigned last kneidlach?" winter. Equally as important in her re- Ile was born in Berlin in 1876 and gard, says Mrs. Gordon, is her Yahr- went into the theater almost imme- zeit and Yiskor and the fasting on diately after he left the conservatory. Yom Kippur. She follows these tra- Before going to Vienna he was con- ditions religiously and, it may be for ductor in the Opera of Cologne, Ham- this reason, she is worshipped by the brug, Breslau, Presburg, Riga and Jews. Wherever she goes she is given Berlin. While in Vienna he was one a royal reception. B'nai B'rith lodges of the conductors of the famous Phil- in Seattle and Winnipeg have made harmonic Orchestra of that city. lie her honorary member. Jewish wom- is best known, however, to traveled en's societies have showered honors American music lovers in Salzburg upon her and members of both sexes and in Munich as conductor and di- have flocked to the theaters to see rector of Mozart's Festival. Alto- her pictures. gether his coming to Detroit next "Humoresque" "Made" Her. winter will be an event of most ex- Mrs. Gordon is best remembered as traordinary interest. the mother in "Humoresque." Al- though she has been on the Yiddish and English stage for a number of GIVES INTERESTING TALK ON THE JEWISH MOTHER' years prior to that, this picture "made" her. And now she is the greatest mother of the screen. Mrs. Included in the various celebra- Gordon told several local newspaper- tions by the Department of Recrea- men that she owes her success to tion on the observance of Mothers Fannie Hurst. The well known au- and Daughters' Week, was an un- thoress interceded for her with stage usual program at the Trowbrgde managers and Mrs. Gordon thus was School, Forest and St. Antoine given the chance of "proving her- streets, Tuesday evening, May 9. self." Mrs. Gordon also appeared in In addition to an excellent musical two other movies, "The North Wind's program, Miss Mary Caplan, educa- Malice" and "The Greatest Love." tional director of the Jewish Insti- In "The Greatest Love" Mrs. Gor- tute, delivered an inspiring and il- don acted the Italian mother and luminating talk on "The Jewish there proved her worth not only as Mother." a Jewish mother, but as an interna- She said in part: "Jewish custom tional parent. An Italian church in bids the Jewish mother, after her New York lights a candle for her preparations for the Sabbath have every Sunday in appreciation of the been completed on Friday evening, to manner in which she portrays the kindle the Sabbath lamp. That is mother-role. symbolic of the Jewish woman's in- And Vera Gordon doesn't dis- fluence on her own home and, through criminate. She likes oppressed na- it, upon larger circles. She is the in- tionalities. "If I only wouldn't be spirer of a pure, chaste, family life afraid to express my opinion, I'd nay whose hallowing influences are in- I like niggers. But I am afraid," she calculable; she is the center of all said. spiritual endeavors, the confidante Mrs. Gordon doesn't use rouge and and fosterer of every undertaking. has never been a paint addict She To her, the Talmudic sentence ap- makes the appearance of a sedate plies: 'It is woman alone through matron. Her hair is combed straight whom God's blessings are vouchsafed back and her dress is plain and neat. to a house.'" "I am just plain myself," she says, "that's all." MAKES CITIZENSHIP EASY Believes I. Charity. REVAL.--(J. C. B.)—Residents of Added to all her qualities, Mrs. Esthonia since Nov. 26, 1913, will Gordon is a great believer in ehhrn, sutomatically become citizens if the Charles Schwab, her manager, says bill ;ntroduced by the government in that Mrs. Gordon gives up more than Parlia(nent becomes a law. CIGARETTES Always higher I. price Mae also Tarkssh Blood cigarrites bat — just taste the difference/ LIGGETT SE MYERS TOBACCO CO. SOVIETS CATALOGUE BANDIT MASSACRES Russian Delegation at Genoa Presents Claim for Jewish Sufferers. GENOA.—(J. T. A.)—The claim for reparation in behalf of the Jew- ish communities and individuals who suffered at the hands of the various leaders of the insurrectionary' bands to be presented to the conference by the Soviet delegation will include the names of 300 places in the Province of Kiev alone that have been peg- rommed, members of the delegation inform the J. T. A. The catalogue of murder, rape and plunder includes exhibits showing that there were 200,000 so-called "direct" victims of the pogroms, mostly aged people, women and chil- dren. In some of the towns the pog- roms were repeated as many as 20 times, none being visited under three times. In many places not a single woman was spared, while hundreds of persons were burned alive or had their heads and limbs severed. In- stances of towns that were razed to the ground are cited and the grue- some scenes of the massacres are fully described. The statement will show that the number of "double" orphans is 40,- 000, which is exceeded by the large army of "single" orphans. Fleeing these massacres, the refu- gees succumbed to epidemics, the ac- tual number of Jews dying in this way being greater than the victims of the actual outrages, the reports show. Continuing, the report recalls that 500,000 Jews fell at the hands of Petlura and his band in the Province of Wohlynia, and that 400,000 refu- gees died of cholera and typhus epi- demics. • • • per cent of the German delegation to the Genoa conference is disproved by reference to the list, showing that there are six Jewish experts and not 12. The Jewish experts are: Kremer, editor of the Vossische Zeitung; Bernhard, a contributor to the Voss- ische ; Professor Bonn, Professor Deutsch, ex-Minister Cugenheimer and Director Goldschmidt. There are three other experts of Jewish origin: Professor Wolff, Schwarz and Gagers. HARDING DISAPPROVES KLAN MEDFORD, Ore.— (J. T. A.)--Fol- lowing a recent declaration here by a speaker describing himself as a rep- resentative of the Ku Klux Klan, "that President Harding was friendly to the organization," Mrs. Frank L. Applegate of Medford recently wrote to the President asking concerning the truth of this statement. Mrs. Applegate said she received a reply from George P. Christian, NOT AS MANY EXPERTS secretary to the President, stating AS THEY THOUGHT that the President "heartily disap- GENOA.—(J. C. B.)—The allega- proved of the organization and has tion in the German Reichstag recent- repeatedly expressed himself to this ly that Jewish members constitute 33 effect." An Understandable Statement MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE BANK At the Close of Business May 5, 1922. I.—Cash (Gold, Bank Notes and Specie) and with legal de- positories returnable on demand. II.—Checks on Other Banks 1,257,141.26 149,077.42 These checks are payable in one day. III.—Loans to Individuals and Corporations 6,896,765.50 IV.—Mortgages on Real Estate, and Bonds 4,272,629.65 This is the amount we have loaned (after a thorough investigation) to individuals and corporations on their notes and against approved collateral. These are salable securities issued by the U. S. mu. nicipalities and other corporations of first quality; also first mortgages on high class real estate. V.—Stock in Federal Reserve Bank VI.—United States Securities 45,000.00 309,393.75 VII.—Branch Banking Houses and Furniture and Fixtures 478,516.92 This includes U. S. Government Bonds, War Savings Certificates, Revenue Stamps and United States Cer- tificates of Indebtedness. Thirteen of these branches, all located in the city of Detroit. VIII.—Other U. S. Government Securities 569,050.00 Left with us for safekeeping. Total Assets 13,977,574.50 Deposits Entrusted to us May 5, 1922 $11,376,283.85 Bills Payable and Rediscounts 450,000.00 Other U. S. Government Securi- ties Left with Us for Safe- keeping 569,050.00 Total $12,395,333.85 This Leaves Capital Stock, Surplus and Undi- vided Profits of $ 1,582,240.65 Which becomes the property of the stockholders after the depositors are paid in full, and is a guarantee fund upon which we solicit new deposits and retain those which have been carried by us for many years. Established 1853. First State Bank of Detroit Main Office: Lafayette and Griswold Street Thirteen Gratiot and Hastings Chose and Gratiot Mack and Mt. Elliott Woodward and Eliot Branches: Hamilton and Webb Ferndale and Springwells St. Clair and Mack Jos. Camp•u and Newton Forest and Van Dyke Linwood and Vicksburg Grand River and Virginia Park Shoemaker and Montclair Buchanan and Scotten