• Tive9erRortkingtORMICIE PAGE FOUR W.;<;1!4,00 - 4 4st i t%) Our city-wide reputation for values has been built on our abil- ity, day in and (lay out, to offer high quality furniture at tremen- dous savings. • JEWS OF UKRAINE STILL HAVE HOPE .-11 Included in our showings are the choicest products of America's leading makers—the selected of- ferings of skilled craftsmen. (Continued from page 1.) A Great Treasure Chest • of Christmas Furniture • When you select your Christmas gifts here, you know they are products of America's finest makers! You know you are getting them at rock bottom prices! You know they are certain to be appreciated through- out the years to come. Junior Lamps • In many new designs. Specials this week— $14.95 Floor Lamps Complete with benuti_ ful aiik shades, at - $16.50 Genuine Oriental Rugs • Library Tables In oak, mahogany or walnut, as pictured— $21.50 Davenport tables In mahogany. Plain or poly chrome orna- mentat;on— $14.95 Just as Detroit has come to expect better v•lues in furniture here, no Detroit expects lower prices on genuine high-grade Oriental Rugs. These four typical features are but examples of what your money can do here in savings! • Tilt Tables - $9.85 e Priscilla Stands ( , * In mahogany, exactly as pictured— •• $4.95 k ‘r ? t OODWARD SAMPLE Phoncigraphs • • ■ $39.75 (rand Rapids make. In solid mahogany, as pictured— OPEN EVENINGS 42 ELIZABETH STREET WEST Open Evenings to ee Gateleg Tables URNITURECOMPANY As pictured. Plays all records. Special— "THE SALE . ,f,,\,,,, .4.,„4„,,,,,,....„,. ,gwi,,,„y, ,,,.. ..: ......,..4. 1. $22.50 Near Woodward 0. 4.W7s1, re. .:1,90. 15, ..... ...... F-4"; P ..y 74. .if -s- • p,, JI, NI ., , __ .. of a THOUSAND 99 LAMPS Any Complete Lamp- Remember! We give you unrestricted choice, folks. Take any COMPLETE LAMP you want, Davenport styles, table styles, reading or bridge lamps, juniors and high floor lamps. All at one low price. You've never seen such a sale. There's a thousand $ 2 7 la ps in it. An assortment unbeatable. m 0 eL The one you want at Over 250 Styles-- _ The newest colors and shapes in silk shades. The finest array of stands you've seen this season. Hand stippled polychrome, walnut, carved mahogany. The widest range of choice. They're all worth more than $27.50. There's some in the lot that would ordinarily cost you $50 or more. Make your choice now; we will hold them until you want delivery. They're going fast. This is the third big week. They won't last much longer. (1. It' r The Direct Factory to Home Method of Merchandising-- II Gives you advantages in buying new things for the home that no retail store, regardless of where located, could possibly offer you. Here where we make furniture you pay one single low profit to the manufacturer. Buying through a retail store you necessarily MUST pay TWO—One to the man who makes it, and one to the fellow who sells the merchandise to you. Figure it out yourself! Which way YOU want-to buy. Come to the factory! Get a wider range of choice. Newest styles, cleaner goods. And eliminate the big profit you do not have to pay. . No. . . '',,;!' • ...... N. ti 4i Sez o; ..w., .. % — -:,. jot' ,.. - ......__ kunarin* _.................._ . 511 LEIB STREET, at Lamed East Furn iture at KING'S The 1922 Holiday season finds this great "GIFT STORE OF DETROIT" more than ever prepared to serve the needs of particular gift buyers. We have assembled — on four sales floors—a well select- ed and comprehensive collec- tion of "good gifts" of known quality. Our 73 years of Christmas service to Detroiters is your guarantee of sound value in every gift purchased at King's. All gifts boxed and packed as only King's know how, leneriff JP) 6 Co, ilftikTICILIE AIM( ordNewlICI • serve, M. Gll fowl River. Established 1541 » • M1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 1 1 7=- Time Is Passing Ploughs, Ploughs, Ploughs! Why not come right down to our store today? A large selection now. You will find the better goods moderately priced . THE HAND BAGS— Such exquisite models, beautifully em- bellished, and in such wide va- riety of styles. .7= 1 - VANITY CASES— Attractive shapes in Patent and Fa n , c Leathers. MANICURE SETS— Fine assortment, fancy leather, silk lin- ings, pearl shell and ivory fittings. CASES— For over-night and long trips, with fit- tings of ivory and shell, silk linings. -E Martin Maier & Co. Manufacturing Trunks and Bags Since 1865. 532 Woodward Ave. Between Congress and Lamed. = 1667 Woodward Ave. "But that's only a beginning. The E 2 . David Whitney Building. solution of the problem lies not mere- ; ly in helping the Jews of the Ukraine !alone, but in helping all of the Rus- Isian people who are starving by mak- ing that beautiful, fertile country once again productive. Ploughs, ploughs, ploughs are needed to solve SECOND AND FRONT ST3. Russia's problem—and something to Leading Bash Establishment of the Wee* pull the ploughs! Her horses and SULPHUR, MINERAi,, TURKISH, TONIC, SWEDISH AND ELECTRIC cattle are gone. They cannot be re- BATHS, GENERAL TREATMENT, SWEDISH MASSAGE stored in a day or a year. Today Don't Delay Building Up Your System "Most Wonderful Sulphur Mineral Water in this or any ether Country" Russia is being kept alive by Ameri- Remarkably Effective in cares of BileUmatism, Neuritis, Sciatica can charity. She is a beggar and Troubles; quirk relief for all aches anti pains Expert Masseurs and Attendants, open Day and Night for Men •nd ii . . bankrupt nation with undid assets Take Woodward Cam marked through, get off at Second. Under the le ■ within a foot of the surface, waiting management of .1. R. HAYES. for the plough to turn them into ROBERT IRWIN, Supt. PHONE CHERRY 4784. gold. F 11111111 11111111111111111111111111011111111110111111011111111111MIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIP 1111114 THE WAYNE BATHS November Record the Greatest in the History of the DETROIT LIFE ▪ New Business Written--- $2,001,000.00 Total New Business, Eleven Months of 1922— $15,000,000 Established 1859 - -32 = The Detroit Life Insurance Company has consistently broken records ill F.2 life insurance production in the State of Michigan. =-- The november record of $2,000,000 is simply another evidence of the sub- stantial progress of this great Michigan company. Two million dollars written in November compares with a record of = 3 $904,000 written in November, 1921, an increase of 121 ==. per cent. The recoord of $15,000,000 of new insurance written during the first eleven months of this year compares with $9,972,000 written in the corre- sponding period of last year. This is an increase of $5,028,000, or moie than 50 per cent. Exceptional opportunities throughout Michigan for kith-clan men and women Ao engage in life insurance salesmanship—a rem live and pleasant occupat'on. Home office co-operation guaran- tees success. Regis now and grow with this rapidly growing Michigan company. For details call or wirt• F.. - = :-_-- ES -. :-_-- .--- ..--= f- 4 :. -- Detroit Life Insurance Company ..... . = z . = - . : F. .: .7.- Manufactur ers of Good Open Every Evening "But I don't want to give the im- pression that the problem is one of : alms-giving," Brown interrupted him_ :self. "That sort of thing is impor- tant enough, just now. But we can't go on doing this sort of work over Iand over again. We must give the 1 Jew of Russia the chance to escape I from this terrible situation. We must I help him up and up, until he can return to his old self-respecting, self- upporting position. We must give to this man who looks into the future with hope, in spite of all the misery of the terrible years through which he has passed, who believes that in spite of all the black yesterdays and todays, there will be a bright tomor- row for his sometime, the means with which to regain his grip on life, the implements with which to produce. From the standpoint of relief, the feeding program which the American Relief Administration is carrying nut in the Ukrains with the funds fur- nished by the Joint Distribution Com- mittee is a wonderful thing. And the effort undertaken by Dr. Joseph Ro- sen with the $1,240,000 furnished by the Joint Distribution Committee to settle 55,000 Jewish families on the soil is a great piece of reconstructive effort. Consisting of the full-size Davenport and the Arm Chair or Rocker to match at a price no retail store would ever hope to duplicate. They have very best spring construction throughout, loose cushion seats $ and are guaranteed in eve every way by ourselves (the menu- facturer). Two pieces 6 8 DEINZER UPHOLSTERING CO. .4.... ; )&et "It was bitter cold when I left Russia. The winter sets in early--in October. I shudder when I think of what is going to happen there this winter. Of the thousands who will , freeze to death because there is no fuel. You can go for miles around Odessa and see the destruction of large and small cities, literally picked to pieces for the wood they con- Mined. Brick buildings have been !torn down for the sake of the wood in their rafters, in the joists, in the window-frames, the doors and their floors. It has meant a terrible amount : of labor, but so desperate are these people with dread of the freezing . cold that they have torn these build. tugs down with their bare hands in ardor that out of the wreckage they may get a little warmth. "And then there are thousands of homeless children. They are every- ' where and they constitute a terrific problem. Just what the future holds in store for these children God only knows. Genuine Chase Mohair Suites-- tr the past seven years. As I .ant in ase of my letters: 'It 0°11 , 1 he better to shoot or gas them th.:- to &ban- don them now.' Morn I. that: it would have been better : have let them perish in the first ii ,nee than to stop helping them II,' hen ste have aroused hope in 0.• r hearts, and by our past acts nin definite promise for the future. Christmas Not Problem of Alms-Giving. 1 __ 2,750,000. Is it any wonder there is famine in the land, with worse to come? Help the Russians to make the country produce, to set all of the wheels of industry and commerce into motion, and you save the Rus- sians—you save the Jews." "It's a great thing we have done, but there is still a big job in front of us—a job that we dare not shirk. It would be a crime to let the Jews When Winter Comes. Beautiful, rich "Anatolian" Mats in beautiful de- signs $12.50 Several Oriental "Beluchistan" Rugs—a master- piece $35.00 One of the famous "Uran" Rugs, of superb craf6- manship $42.50 Large size "Kazak" Rug of superior quality.... $50.00 Of mahoganhy, exact• ly as pictured Becker, like Dr. Boris Bogen, like Dr. Joseph I. Rosen, like Dr. Frank Rosenblatt, could have gone into that country when they did, and come out of it without being complete wrecks, is a mystery to me. They are heroes. I got some idea of what they saw, and what they themselves had to suffer in order to perform tht minion of mercy on which they were sent. To travel in that country one must carry his own blankets, sheets, pillows and even insect powder, though the insect powder is, never effective. Bes'des you must carry a complete cooking outfit, and all the food and water you may need on the trip. Then, if you are going by rail, you ride in coaches that have not been repaired in seven or eight years, not even good enough for junk. And every minute of the day you come face to face with human suffering in the worst forms imagin- able. "You see sickness, starvation, dis- ease, nakedness, terrible congestion, children living like animals; you hear women crying for bread for the chil- dren in their arms. You see old women starving, freezing, naked, in homes for the aged, sleeping on old boards, with only a. burlap bag filled with straw instead of mattresses, and rags to cover them . No sheets, no pillows, no heat, no food—literally starving to death. "And no shoes, no stockings, no soap, no water and literally covered with vermin. And then you go to a children's home. Do you remember 'Jimmy' Becker's description of a children's home in the Ukraine? Ile understated lac situation. Even now the children huddle together four and five in a bed to get the warmth from each other's bodies, because there is no other way in which they can get warm. "In 1916 Russia possessed 7,950,- of the Ukraine succumb new, after 000 ploughs. In 1921 she had only we have kept them Rh, 'w ing - = M. E. O'BRIEN, President Home Office, Woodward at Forest