PAGE TWO

TifEtkrRon;frAisn 61 Roractz

Detroitftnnitu.reliops

Vanen &Riopelle

This plate is our
signature and
your assurance of
honesty and
sincerity in
furniture

This beautiful Sargent design arm-chair,
genuine Rolill mahogany, waxed finish, in
the popular high-lighted antique style.
Generous and comfortable in size.
This arm-chair can be had in various
beautiful patterns, plain and figured, of the
finest quality mohair. velour or tapestry.
When you visit our shops, ask to see this
unusual offering. Compare its value with
goods at many of the so-called "cost sales"
so prevalent in Detroit and we are quite
sure you will be agreeably surprised at its
beauty of design and the worth represented
in its fine tailoring and careful workman-
ship.
We have only 18 of these arm-chairs to
sell at the very low special price of $45
each.

building.

We are closing out our
Oriental Rug Depart-
ment. In order to quick-
ly move this merchan-
dise, we are making
very substantial reduc-
tions in prices.

Visit our permanent
Better Homes Exhibit—
three complete floors-
108 rooms.

•

,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

END TO CONFLICTING
REST DAYS IS WANTED

confusion in production, distribution,
New Process Engraving in
etc. A day will be fixed, one (lay for
Detroit.
the whole Soviet Russia, fur all its
workers and all its peoples. Instead
RIGA.—(J. T. A.)—The question of a day of religious nationalism, it
Since the first of this year, the
of a universal weekly rest day for will be the rest slay of the Proletarian Process Engraving Company, whose
Russia has become a serious concern International."
advertisement is in this issue, have
of the Jewish Communists, with some
been giving Detroit a new service in
of them favoring Sunday, others Mon-
engraving at the mace of printing.
KALICH, PICON IN VIENNA
day and still others Wednesday. The
The Process Engraving Company
Ernes, in an article on the subject
specializes in commercial, social and
says:
fraternal stationery, which they exe-
"Sunday is not only a rest day, but
VIENNA.—(J. T. A.)—Jacob Ka- cute artistically.
a day of the 'Sun God.' Saturday in- lich and Molly Picon, the pair of Am-
Many prominent business institu-
stead of being a rest (lay, has become erican Jewish actors who have had a tions and societies, as well as indi-
a day of Jewish religious observance. checkered stay in Europe, at first be- viduals, are now taking advantage of
Against this sanctity of the rest days, ing reported killed in an accident and this new and exclusive service. Upon
we have started a campaign in Russia. later the principals in the Bucharest request their representatives call with
The workers in Odessa and Kiev have theater which was attacked by anti- samples.
decided to make Monday their rest day Semites, have arrived safely in Vien-
Associated with this organization,
The workers of Poltava have decided na. They left Bucharest premature- who will give personal attention to
to rest on Wednesday. But a rest day ly, the theater at which they were readers of The Jewish Chronicle, are
must be a general rest day through. playing being closed by the govern- Murray J. Sutkin, Samuel Sternberg
out Russia so that there should be no ment.
and Al. Schostak.

HUDSON COACH

'1525

Speedster • • • - $1425
7-Pass. Phaeton • •
1475
Sedan
2095

Tax Extra

JEWISH CONGRESS
IS CRITICIZED BY
ISRAEL ZANGWILL

BAZAAR FUND TO HELP ALLEVIATE
F U R STORAGE
MISFORTUNES OF UKRAINIAN JEWS Repairing
Cslt

Remodeling

(Concluded from Page One)
possibility of extraordinary immigra-
tion, safeguarded by special condi
•
tions. And obviously the first step in'
such an inquiry was to ascertain the
character and climate of the region
proposed by President Obregon. Orig-
inally, jor example, Lower California
had beet suggested; a province the
Jewish Territorial Organization had
rejected nearly 20 years ago for its
aridity and which was not even free
from litigious issues. Mr. Rothenberg
cabled me that is tract of 5,000.00i
acres in Chivahua had been substi
tuted, free from any necessity eithe r
of irrigation or litigation .
Whethe
this was the tract proposed to th e
American Jewish Congress I do no
know, or whether it was the disma
area described by my friend, Haman
Garland. According to state docu
ments unearthed through on investi
ration inspired by the Wnai B'rith
the Mexican government was willing
to cede large tracts of national land
in Chiapas, Tabasco or Quintana,
though it frankly advised that su-
perior tracts climatically could be ob-
tained by private purchase. But
whatever the region suffered, it wa
s
clearly the business of the American PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN IN POGROM DISTRICT OF BOBROUISK

Jewish Congress to have dispatches
thither a reliable scientific expedition
and to have published the report o
its experts together with a full state
ment of the Mexican terms and con
ditions. Even if the congress had no
sgion,tax na cmoiunsaltyionotioefreislhetosa take
tt e. ore

Bandits in the Ukraine have to help 'make the bazaar a success,
slaughtered the parents of the unfor- that Ukrainian Jewry may be saves].
Plans,for the bazaar were com-
tunate children in the above photo-
pleted at a meeting held Tuesday
graph. Their misfortune has moved evening at the home of 31. Shatzen,
kind-hearted people who have had 2276 Gladstone avenue. Mrs. M. Bar-
mercy upon them and are taking care nett, Mrs. II. Horowitz and Miss
of them. Hundreds of thousands of Schmittke represented the Eastern j
these orphans, however, are without Star, from which a committee of 10 •
the means of existence and unelss is to be chosen to assist in the bazaar
immediate help comes from American activities.
Jews, they will die out. There are
A committee from Pisgah Lodge
also hundreds of thousands of adults No. 34, I. 0. B. B., consists of the
who must be helped.
following: Milton M. Alexander,
The Michigan Federation of Uk- Louis Cohane, Theodore Levin, M.
rainian Jews has arranged for a ba- Buchner, J. Langer, R. Simm, J.
zaar to be held during the week of Greenberg, L. Goldstein and J. Mil-
April 28 to Muy 3, the proceeds of ler.
which will go towards relief in Uk-
Shatzen, D. B. Brown and H.
minis. Dozens of organizations have Weinberg, who are in charge of then
already joined with the federation to bazaar preparations, are using all
make the affair a success. It is the their efforts towards the success of
bounden duty of every Detroit Jew the undertaking.

bodies would have felt that
this was its natural duty; that it
alone was in a geographical position •
to investigate economically and ex. •
peditiously.
On what grounds, then, has the
congress neglected its plain duty?
On the grounds that a large coloniz-
ation scheme would involve "enor-
mous sums of money" and "innurner. •
able and immeasurable difficulties,"
and need "the support and collective
co-operation of the organized Jew-
ries." Moreover, such opportunities
as the scheme might offer could not
be immediate.
Other Offers Stand Rejected.
But these are the conditions at-
It was for these to decide whether
taching to all colonization. They are to take up the scheme or not. If the

known to everybody. There was no geographical report had been un_
need for a solemn pretense of con-
sideration. On these grounds l'resi- favorable, the thing would have col-
lapsed of itself Had it been favor
dent Obregon's offer might have been a bl e,
it would still b e open to the
rejected as soon as it was made. On
hese grounds every other offer stands Jewries of the world to decide whath-
rejected before it i smote. Were Ire- er by an heroic effort they could turn
Ire- 'the territory into a land of refuge.
land—depopulated by mutual murder,
—ever offered for a Jewish home, as They would have had to consider the
was indeed the suggestion of an political prospect and limited recep-
r tive capacity of Palestine, the ever-
eighteenth-century English states-
man, the offer would be waved wear- tighter closing of the American door,

ily aside. Were France to invite the the menace in Eastern Europe, and
the probability that sooner or later
Jews to colonize its deserted regions,
there would be a panic-stricken mass-
the offer would be repudiated withJemigration for which it was their
resentment. If, as is more probable,
Canada, or Australia were to pro- duty to make provision. And, as we

pose setting aside a tract, the Jewish have already seen, the Ica's co-oper-
Congress would whine over the (MIL , ation would not have been improb-
culties. able. Nay, it seems to have been as-
But all it had to do in the Mexican' surest in advance, for, according to
the aforesaid state documents, the
matter was to lay accurate informs-
lion before the "organized Jewries." Montefiore Society of Rotterdam had
already sent an emissary to Mexico
and this emissary represented his so-
ciety as acting in co-operation with
the Ica, and with the Jewish Union
of Bucharest into the bargain. The
organized Jewries being thus ready
to co-operate, the remissness of the
' American Jewish Congress becomes
more inexplicable than ever, and the
black fog now surrounding the whole
business is not lightened by the revel-
ation in another of the documents re-
ported to be filed in the Mexican Min-
istry of Agriculture, to the effect
that the American Jewish Congress
telegraphed that it would accept the
offer, provided it was made officially
by President Obregon to the heads of
the organization. The only fact that
stands out clearly is that without ade-
' quate authorization another flaming
vision of hope was kindled before our
suffering masses and with equal friv.
•olity extinguished.

Jewish Willing to Endure Labor.

ESSEX

Prices

Touring
81045
Cabriolet

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Coach

Closed Car Comforts Only $100
More Than Open Car Cost

Famous Super-Six Chassis—and a Fine Looking
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Within the Iinlitsof a moderately priced
closed car you can get only so much.

The Hudson Coach puts value in things
that count. durable, comfortable,
gpod-looking closed car f: ir only f:1111)
more than the open model gives cIt
unequalled value in usefulness and es-
sential quality.

With It you get the lasti n , r satisfaction

of tile f:iinotis Super-Six chassis. That
!liens a car that %% ill stay out of the
repair shop, keep its fine performance
mil remain smooth, quiet and e•onom-
ical for years.

Jest see and ride in the ('oath. It may
I e the very car you want. It-twill save
you from 5 S( . 0 to si 500 over closed cars

ca comparable irechanical quality.

Aaron DeRoy Motor Car Co.

Woodward Ave. at Garfield

Associate Dealers

BEMB•ROBINSON CO.,
Jefferson at Beaubien.

CASS MOTOR SALES CO..
5764 Cass Are.

ACME MOTOR SALES CO.,
5232 Grand River Ave.
THOMAS BROOKS, INC.,
Woodward •I AlenandrIne.
LA SALLE SALES CO.
7744 Twelfth St.

GUARANTY GARAGE.
6880 Twelfth St.
HARWITH COMPANY,
11651 Woodwud Ave.
E. B. FINCH
7744 Woodyard

TRIANGLE MOTOR SALES,
2699 Gratiot Ave.
YOUNG BROS. SALES CORP.
6460 East Jefferson Ave.
FRED K. HENRY
362137 Michigan Ave.
HARRY B. DEANE
3020 East Canfield Ave.

i That colonization offers no imme-
diate opportunities for mass-emmi-
gration is, of course, perfectly true;
though it would be less true if our
people were more largely agricultu-
ral. But a remedy, if it is to be sure,
' must be Slow. And the Palestine
work has shown sufficiently that we
have pioneer farmers and other hardy
!elements able and willing to endure
the first primitive labors. And on the
!basis of these rural activities, urban
industries soon arise by way of com-
plement and little towns begin to
spring up. As for the money neces•
sary, such sums are neither to be
' had nor to be demanded from philan-
thropy. The development of the
earth's surface is a business upon
which millions are expended daily all
' over the globe, and few territories
can count on such a sure source of
profit as lies in the steady and ever-
increasing influx of a Jewish labor.
\tforce. It is not even necessary that
the Land Development Company
should be Jewish. Already the land
rejected by the Jews in East Africa
J has advanced considerably in value,
and American financiers might quite
easily be found who would supply the
capital for a said Mexican enterprise.
Were men to be deterred by difficul-
ties, there would be an end to the
taming of our planet. Had the Pil-
grim Fathers trembled like the Jew-
ish Congress, that congress could not
' have deliberated under such comfort-
. able conditions. Even the contem-
plation of Salt Lake City should
shame such spiritless councillors. If
a mere mushroom community could
establish a home foritself and make
the desert blossom as a rose, why
should the oldest and ablest of civil-
ized peoples wait to be eliminated by
pogroms or prosperity? It may be
said that Jews would not go to a raw
colony but already a Roumanian Jew,
with capital of his own, has written
to me to inquire whether Mexico is
open only to English Jews, and if not,
by what route should he travel.

Thus, then, President Obregon-
who, according to Dr. Killon, the fa-
mous publicist, is one of the few
great personalities the war has
thrown up: a successful soldier who
understands that the spade is might-
ier than the sword—has offered the
Jews a territory about the size of
Palestine, and it is declined without
thanks. There is not even the sug-
gestion of a small trial colony. At
this rate even the Jew's rare sympa-
thizers will retire discouraged. The
only comfort I can find in the whole
episode is that it supplies yet another
refutation of the calumny that "the
Elders of Zion" wish to conquer the
world. Why, they would not have it
as a gift.

"Buy From the Mul., •

Are You Happy?

Are you in your right work —
work for which you are ripe.
daily fitted? Does your work
make you happy and is your life
a success? Psychoanalysis
brings out your real talents and
furnishes scientifically con NI
direction.

J. AUSTEN NEWMAN
Psychoanalyst
Book Bldg.
Cadillac 5466

J7r

HEADACHE

9

Or

E Y E

e

STRAIN

JEWISH TRAGEDY
AT CLOSE RANGE

LET US ADVISE

Trostianetz is a little town which
YOU
before the pogroms hail about 2,500
Appointments by PL ,
Jewish population. There was a large
sugar factory and several smaller in-
dustrial establishments, so that Tros-
Service
tianetz might have been accounted as
Broken Lenses Replaced
one of he most prosperous towns of
While You Wait .
its size in Podolia. The population
appears to have been mixed, Jewish
and Christian. In May 1919 there was
a pogrom made by the peasants, led
by the -so-called Christian intelligent-
1543 BROADWAY
sia. Three hundred and forty-one Jews
Main 3356
were driven into one house and there
three hundred and forty were massa-
MADISON THEATER BLDG,
cred. The three hundred and forty
(Ground Floor)
first escaped by a miracle and now
0
acts as guide when you come to look
at the scene where the horror took
place.
After this pogrom there were minor
pogroms in which one hundred and
AND
ten Jews were murdered. Further-
more, four hundred Jews died of hun-
ger and typhus and as many- more fled
from the town. Of four hundred
Buy now at big reduction in
Jewish owned houses, sixty were de-
price. A Sphinx Receptacle for
stroyed, fifty were rendered uninhab-
garbage can now be purchased for
itable. The remaining buildings be-
$7..00 complete, including delkery
longing to Jews have deteriorated and
and installation. We can guaran-
are also becoming uninhabitable
tee these low prices for iinly a
through neglect, writes an American
short time. Place your order NOW
journalist who visited the town re-
through
cently.

Complete Optical

Myron Optical Co.

CEMENT GARBAGE

ASH RECEPTACLES

Alms from Murderers.
The present Jewish population of
Trostianetz consists of about 1,200
person of the following categories.
100 widows and 300 children. 20 full
orphans. 50 handicraft workers (250
if families included.) 40 small mer-
chants (160 if families included.) 25
employees of various institutions
(families includes], 100). 240 unem-
ployed, invalids and old people.
The widows of Trostianetz are trad-
ing. They get up at dawn, take along
heir children and set out for the near-'
est villages. They take with them a
basket in which they have their en-
tire stock in trade, usually two ounces
of soda, two ounces of pepper, five
pounds of salt, a bottle of kerosene,
and two ponds of soap. They trade
this for a few pounds of potatoes and
flour. As a truster of fact they are
more beggars t!..an trailers; they re-!
ceive alms often from the very peas-
ants that murdered their husbands.
These widows that cannot beg, starve.
The day before my arrival in Tros-
tianetz, Rivka Doumskaya died ofj
starvation, leaving three orphans to
the mercy of destitute neighbors.
There is one orphan's day-home,
where 15 to 20 children get a bit of
food now and then and daytime shel-
ter. The majority of the "full" or-
phans make their homes in the streets
in ruined buildings and in the partial-
ly destroyed public bath houses.
School in House of Deaths.

There is a school kept by the sugar
factory where some 25 children learn
trades. The history of this school is
interesting. It has been put in the
house where the massacre of the 300
and 41 people took place. This house
had stood for three and one-half years
as a reproach to the local Christian
population. They sent a messenger
to the government authorities asking
hat the house he pulled down in order
that this terrible memory he wiped
out. But the authorities retorted that
they would not destroy the evidences
of what had been done. Then the pop-
ulation again sent a message asking
that something he done to wipe out
these hideous memories. The authori-
ties then suggested that the population
install in the house an orphan asy-
lum where the orphans of the murder-
ed Jews might fins! shelter. This
would be an atonement and might ap-
pease the restless ghosts. But then
the Jews objected and said it was un-
thinkable that children should live and
be brought up in a house full of
"groans of their murdered parents."
Finally the trade school was net up in
that house. Meanwhile the rest of the
orphaned children are in terrible
shape, as are the widows and pogrom

sufferers.

In order to cope with this situation
the Joint Distribution Committee rep-
resentative founded a home for 75 or-
phans, He arranged for the repair
and equipment of the building in

which the home is to be. And this is
only a beginning. Blankets, sheets,
and other necessary things have been
given by the American Relief Admin.
istraion. And mattresses, beds and
other equipment are now being pro-
vided. ,tore money, as it is required,
is being sent. So that within a week

or two, the most pressing cases of or-

Poverty comes from God, but not phan destitution will have been cared

dirt.—The Talmud.

J. KAUFMAN
1402 Broadway Main 139E1

for.

H. M. KOFFMAN

912 E. Hancock
1303 let Natl. Bank Bldg.

_,

Melrose 6556
Cherry 1472

■■■•

eatN.a ELISISAig. •

Select Dancing Nightly

Palais de Danse

Particular People Prefer
the Palais
Strictly censored. Highest
Standard

Floyd Hickman Superb Orchestra

MAN and the MAST

A man is like the mast of a
ship. His family, his neigh.
n and his in ve s tmen ts
a ".
i np
the s t y s
b
d him
h old
right. The gale comes and the
give
taut. If
may snap
drift
i y f h f g a e r o t w o leeward.
n
t t h .

To prevent such accidents in
times of stress one should look
well to these stays in the prime'
of life. He should invest only
will hold
ru
in
fiat under pressure.

Prepare for the future today with
well safeguarded investments.
Buy the First Mortgage Real
Estate Bonds we offer for sale.

Ask for Booklet

AMERICAN BOND &
MORTGAGE CO.

Capital end Surplue over 113,000,000

DETROIT OFFICE:

Farwell Building.

Cadillac 6010

NevYaA

