PAGE TEN rimPerRnrri/Ewtr.tharna4 41 ■ 14,1• ■■•■■■•■■• Engagements "WI in Quality—Not in Price" Mrs. B. Suravitz of 702 Medbury bouevard announces the engagemen of her daughter, Sara, to Samuel Ku lie of New York City. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Lebowitz of 638 East Warren avenue announce the engagement of their daughter, Dorothy E., to Emil Nussbaum. Leo Coskey of this city announces the engagement of his sister, Miss Hilda Coskey, to Theodore Crantz of Pittsburgh. Ma rr iages MBett (Biel tie Oacial anti •rsonea Miss Rate Nurick of Toronto is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Jacob Burrows of 1724 Burlingame avenue. Mr. and Mrs. I. Levy of New York, Mrs. W. Feldman of Toledo, Mrs. Rose Shapiro of McKeesport, Pa., and Morris Cooperman of New York were The marriage of Mrs. Sadie R. in the city the past week in attend- Newell of 214 Erskine street and Jo- ance at the funeral of Sol Schreiber. seph Stotter of Cleveland was solemn- ized on Thursday evening, Dec. 7, in A meeting of the Hebrew Ladies' the parlors of Temple Beth El, Rabbi Aid Society was held at the home of Leo M. Franklin officiating. Mrs. Mrs. Leo Schinagel, 4447 Brush Edward Hirsch of Akron and George street, to discuss final arrangements Newell of Cincinnati were guests at for the annual ball, to be held at the the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Stutter K. of P. temple, 3153 Cass avenue, will make their home at 880 Herford on Sunday evening, Dec. 17. A so- drive, Cleveand, Ohio. cial hour followed the meeting. A GIFT of some unusual piece of furniture need cost no more than a gift of passing fancy or limited utility. But what a sense of satisfaction and gratification there is in giving such a gift—in know- ing that it will continue to be cherished on through the years to come. BAER-KAPLAN Mr. and Mrs. P. Kaplan of 4666 Brush street announce the marriage of their daughter, Fara, to Harry Baer of this city, which will take place Dec. 24. The young couple will leave for an extended trip to New York for their honeymoon. WEBER.SCHULTZ In Pringle's Sixty-five Display Rooms you will find many such gift pieces, and it is not one bit too early for you to come, make your choice, and we will gladly set them aside for you until such time as you want them delivered. Spinet Desks Library Table. Davenports End Tables Smoking Stands Card Tables Book Ends Fireside Chairs Dining Tables The marriage of Miss Gussie Schultz of Brooklyn, N. Y., to Hy- man Weber of Detroit wit be an event of Sunday, Dec. 31. After an ex- tended wedding trip east, Mr. and Mrs. Weber will make thier home in Detroit. Floor Lamps Reading Lamps Foot Stools Chaise Lounges Gate Leg Tables Bookcases Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Davidson (Sa- rah Wetsman) of 5010 Brush street announce the birth of a son, William M., on Tuesday, Dec. 5. Bedroom Suite. Day-Beds Rugs Mr. and Mrs. Max I. Blumberg (Thelma Hartz) are receiving con. gratulations on the birth of a daugh- ter, Adele Ruth, on Nov. 28. Pringle's Rug and Carpet Deportment will prove of interest to all who are in quest of Good Floor Coverings at the Most Mode- rate prices. We cordially invite you to in- spect our displays. p • ar e g 431 Gratiot Avenue David Pringle President One and One-Half Block from Broadway Harry V. Mutter Gen. Mgr. CRITICS OF JEWS GET INFORMATION IN HOTEL LOBBIES 11 4. 6 , • it • „jai '' , , (8 . Endorsed by and for benefit of European Jewish Women's Welfare Association. "Better than 'Humoresque' be- cause more true and human," said the New York Herald. This great Jewish picture both pleases and helps the Jews because of its truthful sympathetic appeal. You should see it and THEN send your non-Jewish friends. You'll love it and so will they. UNGRY EAR By Anzia Yezierska Titles by Montague Glass. BROADWAY STRAND WEEK STARTING SUN., DEC. 17 Prices 20c, 30c, 50c Daily 11 A. M. to 11 P. M. not have come back here saying Europe doesn't need our help." Expressions of Gratitude. EXPERIMENT SAVES TEXAS $25,000,000 The saving of $25,000,000 is prom- ised the state of Texas by the agri- cultural investigations of a young Jew, Dr. J. J. Taubenhaus, a grad- uate of the National Farm School at Doylestown, Pa., which is now cele- brating its twenty-fifth anniversary. Dr. Taubenhaus is chief of the division of Plant Pathology and Phy- siology at the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, and has been working for years on a cure for the boll weevil pest which annually men- aces the cotton crop of the south. His discoveries tending to check this evil is expected to result in this huge saving to the cotton growers of that state. Dr. Bernhard Ostrolenk, director of the National Farm School, has received a letter from Dr. Tauben- haus in which he speaks of the op- portunities offered him by the Na- tion Farm school to prepare him for his present career of service. His letter to Dr. Ostrelenk follows: "Dear Mr. Ostrolenk: "It is rather difficult to tell you how much the National Farm School has done for me in preparing me for my present career. As a matter of fact, the school has done so much that it is diffciult to enumerate the many things which helped to build the character of a young boy and to lay the founddations for a solid structure whcih could stand the bat- President of Soviet Ukraine Derlar rr Zionists Are Supp ....r ter•Revolution en , Louis James Rosenberg addressed the Italian branch of the Americaniz- ation committee on the subject of "Mazzini and the Value of Ideals." Mr. Rosenberg is the Michigan repre- sentative of the nations Dante com- mittee and has written and lectured on various Italian subjects. STOTTER-NEWELL Make This a Christmas of Furniture Giving NEW ECONOMIC POLICY REVIVES JEWISH TRADE neL w Aelj coS tI N iiN e FP-o— licyt.jbasTit h%f-' ect7hol h j i n e itsh he no,l(drpetit ;,hstrade the peasants, according to Christian the 4. kovski, president of the Soviet Repub. lie of the Ukraine, in ail interview with your correspondent. Ile felt that the situation had not undergone any noticeable change. An elf..rt made to build up co - operatives has been for the peasant which would reply, e the sm all merchant, but none of these co-opers. tines can as yet boast of ;tr1y signifi• runt h (e 1 .7eeli's 'P r n i' o 'in hti. ng to fear from the 11 aid M r. i g ti.s io'" isentimen " t strong with the peasant masses. Anti Only the small gentile bourg.isie of the cities is anti-Semitic RIO even bete decreasing. G ener a l misery it W as sa k n'sl. I Y ieonnearly propaganda are the causes of anti. Semitisin," Mr. Rakowski continued, "Anti-Semitism is the socialism of fools, ignoramuses and 'mandrel. By improving general conditions and by spreading public education the Soviet government has suppressed po. t r. es e. - se:n t a bt Mr. and Mrs. Louis Zeiger, daugh- ter Rena and son Paul, left on Fri- gr° " m Th Neelw ito irre dly; ;ersecution' is not the day for Los Angeles, Cal., where they proper one to indicate meAsures d will remain until May. Bernard Zei- precaution which the local flitherities ger is in New York City. have, with the consent of the Central government, undertaken in order to Bernard Zeiger, who is continuing combat certain forms of agitation,' his studies in New York City, may be said Mr. Itakovski in reply to a ques- reached at University Settlement, 184 tion regarding the arrests .f Zionists Eldridge street, New York. and Jewish clericals in the Ukraine. "The measures n su m e„si t lioh ar r g e . di i : Thomas B. Marwil, student at the rected not particularly against n ou Zion . University of Michigan, is spending but the vacation period with his parents, ti iTa kag eraiie t i he t n T s hhi:, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Marwil of 1936 Longfellow avenue. are made necessary by the entrain. dinary situation which prevails in the Cantor A. Minkowsky left for New country." York City to meet his brother, Can- "Is there any desire on the part of tor Pinches Minkowsky of Odessa, the Jews of the Ukraine to emi- one of the best known cantors in the grate?" Mr. Rakovski was asked. In world, who arrived in this country the beginning of 1921 the tendency to this week. Cantor Minkowsky will emigrate existed, but at present it is also remain in New York to attend exceedingly weak," he replied. the wedding of his son. Mr. Rakovski stalest further that the Jewish agriculturists in the goy. Mrs. Esther Schlesinger, daughter ernment of Nikolaiev show no desire Etta and son Harold have moved to to engage in other uprsuits. By grant. their new home at 2442 Chicago ing credit to the farmers, but only boulevard. without discrimination against the non-Jewish agriculturists, foreign Miss Sarah Sandelman of Twenty- Jewish organizations can he of some ninth street entertained on Thursday assistance in promoting agriculture last at a farewell party in honor of among Jews, Mr. Rakovski declared. Miss Tillie Bozic and Mayer Freed- man of Pittsburgh, Pa., prior to their return home on Friday. SHUBERT - MICHIGAN The Oakland Mothers' Club will hold its monthly meeting Saturday afternoon, Dec. 16, at 3 p. m., at the Moore School, corner Alger and Cameron. The principal speaker of the occasion will be C. R. Thompson of the Board of Commerce, his sub- ject being "The New Citizenship Law for Women." At the Shubert-Michigan Theater next week the Bonstelle Company will offer a play of unusual human and emotional appeal, "Things That Count," by Laurence Syre, author of "Miss Nelly of N'Orleans." During this week Marie Curtis will be af- forded one of her best opportunities, for the real lead of the play is a female "Grump"—that of an hiss cible, tyrannical, biting woman, and LANGUAGES BRANCH FIRST the theme has to do with her senti- IN JERUSALEM UNIVERSITY mental undoing. JERUSALEM.—(J. T. A.) —Lec- tures of the Philological Department of the Hebrew University here, to be opened around Passover, include Pro- fessor Louis Ginzberg of the Jewish rat a saaaa,aa•lathaaa Theological Seminary of New York, and Professor Henry Matter and Max IN MEMORIAM L. Margulies of Dropsie College, Phil- adelphia. The language department is the first of the faculties to be open- In loving memory of our holoved ed and noted Jewish scholars from mother, daughter and sister, Ilenrieta Europe invited to Jerusalem include Salzstein May Marks, who died three Prof. Tobler of Berlin, Prof. Kraus years ago, Dec. 21, 1919. of Vienna, Rabbis Tchernowitz arid Gone but not forgotten. Chajes of Vienna, and Prof. Jahuda By her Loving Parents, Husband, of Spain. Children, Sisters and Brothers. Dr. Krass didn't sit around. He went and saw. In Vienna he saw a great hall in which university proles sots, pedagogues, writers, men and women of the small burgeoise seated around long tables and dining as guests of the Joint Distribution Corn mittee. He dined with them and Dr. Nathan Krass Makes State- heard their expressions of gratitude to the Jews of America. ment on Conditions in In Carlsbad he was the guest of the municipality, but he accepted noth Vienna. ing except the honor. The rest he paid for as if ho were an ordinary SAYS RICH MAY ANY DAY tourist. "It wasn't to me, as an in that this honor was shown,' ALSO BE IN BREAD LINE dividual, he says. "Through me, because I have tles In lfye. done a little for suffering Europe my humble opinion, I am Refugee Problem Prevents Carlsbad sought to express its grat firmly convinced that whatever little Rude to the Jews of America." success I might have attained so far, Prague from Returning In l'rague, which he revisited, he perhaps the greatest share in attain- to Normal. found conditions much better than ing that success is due mostly to my when he was there a year ago. Bu early training at the Farm School, the refugee problem is preventing I shall never forget the inspiration NEW YORK.—The so-called rich Prague from returning to normal and the high ideals which I absorbed Jews of Vienna against whom the Poland Recuperating. during the (lays when I was a student finger of scorn has been pointed in Of Poland he says tha )the Jews at the Farm School. Neither will I many quarters for their alleged fail- of America will never understand ever forget the wonderful inspiration ure to help their unfortunate breth- how valuable their contributions have derived from the weekly visits and ren are not rich at all, says Dr. been toward the restoration of nor sermons of Dr. Krauskopf, the found- Nathan Kress who visited European mal cnodiitons. Like others who have er of that school. countries last summer. reported recently, he says that Po "The National Farm School gives "It would be humorous if it were land is recuperating rapidly. 'Just to its students a foundation for a not so sad," said Dr. Kress, to con- as eager as they were once to get profession which brings them closer template the plight of these men. on the bread-line—during that ter to nature and, indeed, closer to God. On the face of things they are rible time when they were facing It teaches its boys by means of books wealthy, very wealthy. Yes, they have slow death from hunger and disease and laboratory work, and especially fine homes, elegantly furnished; so eager are they now not to receive by means of practical demonstration they have art galleries; they wear any more charity. The explanation ni the field, all of which prepares good clothes, and all that sort of of this paradox is that they are the young boy for a career so that "Convenient Credit Terms to All— thing. But the Krone is falling so straining every effort to become self he can either go back to the farm rapidly down that bottomless pit on sustaining and even to take care of and make good, or continue his Open An Account at Finsterwald's" studies at college, so as to be able which all continental money is fall- their local problems. "Dr. Bernard Kahn, head of the to go into the various lines of teach- ing, that any day they may be wiped out. Any day, they, too, may have Joint Distribution Committee's Euro- ing or research in agriculture. pean Council, one of the ablest so- to be in the bread-line. "1, therefore, say unhesitatingly, cial workers I ever met, told me that that no matter how much a student Raise Fund for Orphans. there is a distinctly hopeful note, pre- learns about agriculture at a college, "Nevertheless they are doing their vailing among the Jews of Poland. such a student is by far inferior if duty, on the main. and as far as they The orphan problem still exists, but he only possesses the theoretical are able in view of the circumstances. they are doing everything their lim- knowledge and lacks the practical Under the leadership of Gemeindes- ited means permit to reduce that phases of farming. I consider my rath Julius Neuman, one of the fore- problem and to cooperate with the college training far more valuable to Michigan Ave. at Washington Blvd. most Jews of Vienna, many of them Joint Distribution Committee. me because of that early training at are raising funds locally for orphan "But I do not want to give the im- the Farm School. The National Farm care. Herr Neuman, a cultured, pression that our task is done. It School instills into the mind and heart "We Guarantee Everything We Sell" charming, public-spirited man made is gmid though to see the first signs of its boys a desire for learning and a fine contribution to the fund, and of a new day dawning on the black a passion for accuracy. Every day so did many others, though when they horizon after all these terrble years. were facing bankruptcy. I was very horizon after all thCse terrible years. I appreciate this more as I devote my days to research, the kind of work glad to cooperate with them in a If the Jews of America will only which requires infinite patience and small way. ,VMSSOCSISMICSIMIswesm socwomgwooppoppogoom s.sA stand by their unfortunate brethren extreme accuracy." "It's very easy to criticize the so- across the seas now when they are Numerous scientific articles, the called rich Jews of Europe if you sit struggling back to their normal con- results of Dr. Taubenhaus' studies around in the lobbies of palatial dition, they will be the saviors of and researches on "Plant Disease hotels and give ear to every malicious, their people." Immunity," have been published in antisemitic remark about 'profiteers' scientific journals throughout the and 'exploiters' and men with hearts cuontry. The E. P. Dutton company JEWISH CALENDAR of stone. That's how so many Jews of New York have published five who have come back from Europe of Dr. Taubenhaus' books, on the Its full, rich tone and beau- 8683-1922 loudly protesting that the Jews over culture and disease of various crops. there, don't need our help, got their Chanukah (Feast of Dedication) 'iful case designs will appeal to Friday, Dee. la information. It's a great pity that Rosh-Clincleth Tebeth ... Wednesday. Dee. 20 you. Its easy pumping, re- those critics of European Jews didn't Fast of Tebeth Friday, Dee. 20 CONCESSION TO JEWISH sponsive action and perfect ac- 8683-1923 BANKERS IS ATTACKED take to trouble to go into the cen- Ro4-Chodech Shebat Thursday, Jan. Is centing device overcomes all ters of distress and see for them- Rosh-Chodmb Mar Saturday, Feb. 17 selves what the need is. They would Purim (Feat of Esther) ....Friday, March 2 mechanical effects. Made and WARSAW.—J. C. B.)—The Fi- Rosh-Chodevb Ni... Sunday, March 18 hav e seen enough to make their Pa.sover ance Ministry is the object of a fierce maranteed by Hardman, Peck Irmaehl Sunday. April hearts sick, to have made them eager Pascover (Seventh Day) —Saturday, April 7 I attack in the Gazeta Warszawska, al- & Co., makers of the famous ..... Tumday. April 17 leging that the monopoly for selling to help. They would have seen hun- Rosh-Chodech Vg t•Omer Friday, May 4 Hardman Piano. ger and disease, they would have seen Rosh.Chodeth Simn ...Wednesday. May 18 Polish government bonds had been wretchedness and despair. They Shabuoth (Confirmation Day) granted the Jewish banking house of Full Value. Allowed for Your Old Piano. Monday, May 21 Daniel Dreyfus of Paris. would have heard merican Jewry Roth•Choleth Taiyuan. Friday, June IS spoken of in terms of gratitude and Rosh-Cboclesh Ab. Saturday, Jai, 14 love. They would have seen martyr- Fast of Ab SondaY, July It Not without reason goes the crow 2030 Woodward Avenue Rosh-Chodevh E11ui Monday, Aug. 111 dom! They might not have had such Open Evoniags to the raven, but because it is of its 21124 1523 Near Adams a pleasant time of it, but they would New Year's se. Monsar. Sept. 15 kind.—The Talmud. Thousands of Sensible Christmas Gifts at Moderate Pricings ! A Small Deposit Will Hold Any Article Until Christmas. 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