,Amterieamjavisk Periodical Carter CLIFTON ATTNEI • CINCINNATI 20, OHIO PAGE NINE entordonsti filmy - Ninth Season of Symphony Or. chestra Closes. The ninth season of the symphony orchestra which closed with the brit- , belt concert of Friday evening was one of the busiest and one of the most successful the orchestra has ever had. Particularly gratifying was it from the point of view of the growth of the orchestra in public appreciation. The board of directors of the Symphony Society is not yet prepared to make a public statement as to the results of the season but they have let it be known that the symphony concerts have shown an increase over last year by approximately twelve per Past cent, this despite the fact that the sea- son side of tickets was considerably less for 1921-1922. Moreover, it is the belief of the directors that the at- titude f o t he public in gener al toward the sym ph ony orchestra is undergo- in g a very great change. The public more and more is realizing that the and Utica. This makes a total of one orchestra is not a plaything of the few hundred and two concerts in twenty- but is one of the great civic institu- eight weeks, an average of nearly five- tions of the city. and a half pee l week. In the 2i weeks which have elapsed since the beginning of the season un Oct. 9, the orchestra has given 7t) con- certs in Detroit. These have been di- vided as follows: 28 symphony con. certs, 20 Sunday afternoon popular concerts, live young people's concerts in Orchestra Hall, 25 public school concerts and one special omicert con- ducted by Erno Dohnayi. In addition to these concerts the orchestra gave five symphony concerts in Buffalo, four concerts at the University of Michigan, two concerts at the State Normal School at Ypsilanti, symphony concerts in Lansing and Jackson, Michigan; Urbana and Bloomington, IIL, Kansas City, M41., Rochester sod Utica, N. Y., :old two Young Peop•'s concerts in putrid" ;11,,i one each in Urbana, 1601111110011, ('ity Japanese Visitors at the Cadil- lac Plant Here. I'. M. Toriumi, special reporter and technical editor of the Japanese Au- tomotive Journal, Tokio, Japan, and ides Vmeniura, secretary of the in- dustrial department of the Young Men's Christian Association, at Osaka, were visitors at the factory of the Cadillse Nlotor Cur Company lost week, in t h e course of a tour they are making of the country's leading in- dustrial plants. Japanese visitors at the Cadillac plant iluring the current Se1114011 hare included, in addition to these latest visitors, representatives of the Japanese artily, navy, banks and industrial institutions. A City-Wide Furniture Store e, n t . 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The Chifferobe has five concealed drawers inside with room for at least six suits or gowns. It is 67 inches high and 40 inches wide. Has full size bed with bow ends. Entire suite has solid drawer bottoms and is of dust proof construction. For t 0.00 , . HIGH GRADE WILTON RUGS AT SPECIAL PRICES Best designed Wilton Rugs from the very best American makers. Deep rich pile. Size 9x12 Beautiful and serviceable Wilton Rug. Size 8:3x10:6. Introductory price Medium of Purchasing Power. Is the Herald New York's Own "Morning Post?"—Who Is Francis M'Cullough and What's He After?—Questions Raised by a Few Perplexing Cables from Russia. In an interview for The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, L. Seward Carrick, president of the Associated Retail Credit Men of Detroit, declared that a charge account is desirable "be- cause it brings within the reach of every man and woman possessing the qualifications necessary for credit ex- tension an effectual and gratifying medium of purchasing power." The interview with Mr. Carrick was occasioned by the educational campaign that is being conducted by the Detroit merchants umd profes• snood men to educates-Plow-paying customers to the fairness and impor- au tance of paying bills promptly when Tilt; out the hewn from thine eye. —The Talmud. By GERSHON AGRONSKY (('opyrieht, 1923, Jewish Correspondence Bureau.) The New York Herald has pub- renegade Jews is intense and extreme fear for their own lives will draw lished this week a few cable it the latter closer together." from its Russian correspon- As will be seen, Mr. M'Cullough is dent which are, to put it mildly, per- 110 Mere corresp on dent. Ile is at plexing. once the purveyor of prejudice, the Introduced as an illuminating de- relnyer of impressions, which may he scription of conditions in the city true and which may also be false.lhe (Moscow) of anarchy and death fol- recorder of "facts" which are highly lowing the execution of Vicar-Gen- questionable. Ile combines within eral Butchkovitch, the rrisages by 0110 message the functions of prose- Francis M'Cullough omit to have cution, jury and judge. Ile is above a purpose other than niece reporting all a propagandist of no mean talent, of news and conditions. for if the stuff in his cable is not the In this campaign it is emphasized 61 r. M'Cullough seems anxious to height of exploitation and propa- that the prosperity of the city of De- convey the impression that the exe- ganda, these terms were never prop- troit, so well 05 of the state and na- cution of the Catholic prelate, the im- erly applied to any "copy" sent out tion, depends upon the prompt dis- prisonment of another and approach- by a man with an au to grind. ing triad of still others, is the work of Jewish communists who have,,,in consequence of Lenine's illness, 51 r. M'Cullough is after something seized control of Russia. Moreover, a reading of the lines, and between or somebody, whom and what he is subtle enough not to state. There is the lines, reveals that the correspon- dent would have the reader believe no point in inquiring into this cor- respondent's religion ; t hat probably this frightfulness is being carried out by these Bolshevik leaders who are has nothing to do with the case. Cath- olics have not been :.lone in giving .1e•S as Jews, "renegade Jews" though they may be. expression to the indignation at the $ io, r fs, °JAW $80.00 All from good makers. Recently bought for our. fine new store. COME IN AND CONVINCE YOURSELF OF OUR SUPREME SERVICE "The fact that an account balance is small is no reason why it should not be paid promptly. When one pauses to consider, some of the stores of Detroit carry from 10,000 to 60,- 000 active accounts on their books each month, the number of accounts under $25 would total approximately $750,000. If everybody who owed $25 would hold up payment of the account because it was a small amount, the merchants would be very much embarrassed in meeting their obligations. "It is up to the people of this city to sustain the reputation of Detroit in its collection percentages as well as in its other various phases of civic life. The only way this can be ac- complished is by the prompt payment of their monthly obligations." BERI.IN.—(J. T. A.)—The Vos- sische Zeitung here published a tele- gram from Lemberg stating that a revolt had broken out in Ukraine at- tended by attacks on Jews. The re- port declares that Jews are fleeing in masses to the Polish frontier. A. D. HILLMAN Real Est•ta Exchange Specialist I exchange what you have mid du not want for what you have not and do want. In fact, Mr. M'Cullough hardly Soviet executions. Jews in New but such as are York, Warsaw and London, and prob- mentions any Officials ably everywhere else, joined repre- known, by the SOUMI of their names, sentatives of all creeds in denouncing to be of Jewish origin. Where the the deed. What M'Cullough probab- sound is not readily suggestive, Mr. ly means to convey is that Christian M'Cullough dips down into the con). prelates are persecuted by Jews. Ile mbear's past and displays, paren- wants to show that the Russians are thetieally, the alleged real name of aware of this and are going to exact the official in question. The "Herod" reprisals through wholesale massacres of the Butchkovitch-Cepliak trial is of Jews. Ile forgets, deliberately, Litvinotf, the reporter assures us, that Russian rabbis have been tried and that there may be no mistakes and sentenced. Ile "neglects" to as to his identity, the name "Finkel- mention the anti-Passover carnivals stein" follows in parenthesis imme- and the incessant "drive" against the diately after. In charge of the Jewish religion. "'Anglo-American affairs" are Wein- tein, Cohen and Rubenstein. .'This ' group of Jewish communists, who, If it is M'Cullough's purpose to with Lenine's eclipse, dominate Rus- L. SEWARD CARRICK sia, did their utmost to preve int the make the Jews of the world respon• outside world learning the fact4 'of sible fur the misdeeds of a handful charge of all obligations; that prompt the trial," we are informed. Tchich- of "renegade Jews," assuming always payers will place business on a higher erin, according to this tale, being that these and no others are impli- stamlard and keep the factories run- "nominally a ehristian" (it should cated, his correspondence should ning; that merchants cannot buy be ndted that M'Cullough sees noth- properly have been addressed to the from jobbers and manufacturers un- ing "nominal" in the Jewishness of Dwa Groscha in Warsaw or the less they pay, and that overdue book the ('ohen, Weinstein and Ruben- Morning Post in London. There, at accounts are not considered very stein) was somewhat distrusted and any rate, he would have found read- highly by the merchant's bunkers. therefore forbidden to receive limo- ers who would subscribe to his inter- Mr. Carrick pointed out that the tests against the trial and execution, pretation of the events and believe use of a charge account in retail mer- etc., etc. in his conclusions. Anti-Semites in chandising has, during the past few Poland are demanding, without any decades, broadened from the exclu- prompting of M'Cullough, that all sive circles of the wealthy, from a The dispatches abound in this sort Russian Jews in Poland be held as few thousand accounts, until it is now of thing, but they do not stop there. hostages pending the outcome of the functioning in more than '3,000,000 Mr. M'Cullough has his prophetic mo- trial,: and that the rabbis be im- homes. ments, as well as impressionistic anti prisoned and hung in the event On Mr. Carrick further pointed out expressionistic ones. 'Besides edi- sentence un Bishop Zepliak is not that the abuse of privileges of credit torializing in his news-message, he commuted. The Morning Post would is detrimental to business as a whole, preaches and predicts. Describing surely have been delighted to fea- for if the retail merchant is not paid "Cohen" as the tyrannical censor who ture this account, lending color to promptly, it is impossible for him to deletes, mutilates and suppresses cor- its vaporing about the Jewish con- meet his obligations with the jobbers respondents' stories, Mr. M'Cullough spiracy and its alleged belief that the and wholesalers. He said: pauses to exclaim: "Yet Cohen hopes term Bolshevik and Jew are synony- "The average credit man has been to return to America in triumph as mous. In every city in Europe there very much misunderstood ni the past the Bolshevist mabassador when is at least one newspaper which would by the retail buying public. So long America recognizes the Soviet gov- have paid a wheelbarrowful of kronen as an account is being paid promptly, ernment." From this outburst of or marks for the use of these mes- very little is heard of the credit man- righteous indignation as if censor- sages. M'Cullough might also have ager, but just as soon as his confi- ship is a crime perpetrated by none gladdened the heart of Dearborn had dence invested in a customer is but the Soviets), the reporter pro- he cabled his messages there collect. abused, then it becomes the duty of ceeds to paint the dismay and fright the credit manager to collect that caused among the Bolsheviki by the which is due his concern. He func- storm of protests against the sen- But M'Cullough is the New York tions exactlysithe same as the finance tences. The picture complete, M'Cul- Herald's correspondent, and perhaps officer in the bank. As quickly as a lough indulges in this bit of vicious no one else's. He must have taken note becomes due in a bank from a prophecy: his instructions from this paper. By bank's bustomer, it becomes the duty "This probably will be compli- displaying with such prominence his of the finance officer to collect the cated by quarrels among the Com- messages, this paper expressed ap- note. So it is with the credit man- munist leaders themselves. Lenine's proval of his views and conclusions, ager. strong personality has held them to- thereby raising the question whether "The prompt payment of open ac- gether even when he was ill. Just the Herald does not seek a place for counts in the retail stores is just as now the renegade Jewish element in itself among the brilliant galaxy of important as the prompt meeting of the government is grasping every- newspaperdom headed by the Morn- a note with a bank, and the indi- thing, but being mortally afraid of ing Post and Dwa Grosha. This is a vidual's future purchasing power is the other Communists, the members question many Jews in New York jeopardized just as much by the slow will become moderate, with the re- would like to put to Mr. Munsey, payment of open accounts as is the sult that the non-Jewish influence publisher of the Herald, and a large business man who permits his notes will get control again and a frightful number of other newspapers and to go to protest. periodicals besides, although they massacre of the Jews will begin. "The hatred of the people for these doubt whether he would answer. "In the past this educational cam- paign has been an appeal directed particularly to the integrity of the buying public. The response to this appeal has been gratifying. Thou- sands of people have never realized just how serious slow payment of their open charge accounts affected their social as well as civic standing in the community. 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