'PAGE EIGHT rftEPLTROMEIVIR LFAI ROT4 CLE att d Qrsonal Mrs. Abe Robinson and daugh- ter, Sally, and Mrs. B. Silverberg of 3200 Chicago boulevard have left for a motor trip to Indian- apolis to attend the auto races. --- Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Foreman of 2955 Fullerton avenue will be at home Ill Sunday, June 5, from 2 to 5 and from 7 to 10, in honor of the confirmation of their son, Jay , Leonard. No cards. Gulian's Greatest Sale of Oritntal hugs Mr. S. G. Gulian is going to the Orient to personally select next season's stock. We earnestly desire to dispose of a greater part of our present collection of Oriental Rugs prior to Mr. Gulian's departure for the Orient, and of- fer our entire stock at greatly reduced prices for a limited time. 6 Chinese Rugs, 902 ft. Choice $265.00 Maks Roe. Price Sine Iran 6-6x3-3 Lilihan 5x3-6 Saruk 5x3-3 Saruk 6-6x4-6 Keshan 6-10x4-6 Arak 12x9-6 Ispahan 12.6x9-0 12-6x9-0 Saruk Kerman 12-6x9-3 Kerman 16x10 $ 65.00 95.00 135.00 200.00 300.00 485.00 535.00 875.00 825.00 1,450.00 Sate Price $ 42.50 65.00 95.00 150.00 225.00 335.00 395.00 635.00 575.00 975.00 "A Gulien Rug is an heirloom of tomorrow." .G.GulianItu.g Co. 142 2 FARMER. STREET , ar tart grand River avenue Fifteen Irttrit of Sincere Floral Service. tithing 3ITImuers I; For the June Bride THE JUNE BRIDE OF 1912 is our best refer- ence to the June Bride of 1927. Fifteen yearn of floral service hits fit us for the last minute details in modern wedding flow- ers. ill I II The June Bride of 1912. Modern floral equipment and facilities, original ideas at moderate prices are assured, if you permit Friedman to create your floral requirements for weddings or other occa- sions. the (51!uptt (Linnopu Jea(,h marriage mrenone require • n overhead covering. Mr Fried. an hal designed an original Can- opy Stand made of hammered wrought Iron, carrying out the Spanish Period of Design. The ream can he furnished with eith- er • covering of and!. •nd fresh ,I1ower• or a brocaded allkcloth. The entire canoPY stands by- Itself end is approved by the rabbis of patron. The idea I. original and t covered by pending patent'. Fur- bished to dune brides exclusively Friedman. r rnectman ORIENT THEATRE BLOCK Garfield 5047. Open. Evenines. Sunday,. and Holdot. • Flower• telegraphed to •Il part" of the U. S. A. and Canad•. Tha June Bride of 1917. ee. Kalka5hZkfUgn-.V_ckli rr,-a an ?el atmosphere delightfully different PECIAL LUNCHEON in our attractive main dining room every week day, be, tween the hours of 12 and 2, served at1 1.00 a plate. Music. Enjoy the excellent cuisine that has already distinguished the Detroit•Leland. You will appreciate the restful surroundings, too, and efficient and correct service. Busy business men and cultured women, alike, will find this popular innovation to their taste. DINNER DE LUXE at $2.00 served deify from 6 to 8 p.m. YOlithfOlDaTOiterS are enjoying our Dinner Donets every Evening from 6:30 to E:jo and there is no Cate Charge during these hours . . . Supper Dancing Nine Thirty to One a. en. trz MUSIC BY THE DETRO1T.LELAND ORClif STRA TV! the beautiful new DETROIT.LELAND HOTEL CASS AND BAOLEY AVENUES r DIRECTION CONTINENTAL • LELAND CORP. They Dance in Tel•Aviv A Protestant Minister's lmoression. By Dr. Wolfgang von Weiel. Welfare Federation Awards Scholarship HAKOAH WINS IN FAST GAME, 2-0 Fred Stern Chosen for $1,500 Scholarship to New York Banquet Given for Team; Prominent Detroit Men Training School. Speak. Fred Stern, young social service worker of Milwaukee, is the lucky man who has been chosen to re- Following nine months of travel in Arabia and Egypt, I returned at last to l'al•stine. I was n little Anxious over my return. I had left he country in a time of economic •rises and knew that the situation had become worse since then-8,000 Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Berry and Jewish workers unemployed, the Mr. and Mrs. S. B. %Vex motored city ef Tel-Aviv and the workers to Detroit from their Chicago Organization submerged by debts, r colonization work facing total home for u few days. While in How would I the city they were at the Hotel reorganization iind Palestine now? Steller. I found it as well as before and On Tuesday afternoon Mrs. I was happy. Indeed, I found the country poor- Samuel Muss was hostess at a ie than it was, but the bottom had luncheon and bridge at her home been reached and everybody was on Gladstone avenue. making a super-human effort to --- Miss (lassie Gleeckman of 753 carry on. The cost of living fell, saving was to be noticed on every Langlois avenue, Windsor, enter- side; survival is the command of tained with a delightful pajama the hour. I went through the and week-end party at her home streets and saw the old familiar over the last week-end. A mid- pLiture and I observed the delight- night lunch was served and a most ful people of the new Palestine, I enjoyable program extended until saw the youth which reigns here 6 a. m. Prizes for best jokes and supreme, which hungers and is tricks were awarded to the Misses FRED STERN glad. All because they are in their Gertrude Levine and Jennie Sap- own country to which they give ceive the scholarship of $1,500 erstein. Many guests from De- their character. from the Jewish Welfare Federa- troit were present. Accompanied by a countryman of tion of Detroit. mine, a minster and scholar from The scholarship entitles young Complimenting Miss Gertrude Germany who intends to write a Stern to a full course of training Watersone, a bride-elect of June hook on Palestine, I walked through at the New York Training School 26, Mrs. J. II. Epstein entertained Allenby street. A poster arrested on May 19 at her home at 8640 my attention. My companion, too, for Jewish Social Work. It cov- LaSalle boulevard with a miscel- , vas interested in its inscription. ers a regular post-graduate course of 15 months. After graduation LEAGUE TO DISCUSS laneous shower and bridge-lunch- I translated the Ilebrew to my com- eon. Decorations were carried out panion, the minister. It was the he will be employed by the Detroit MINORITY COMPLAINTS in green and white. Covers were announcement of a performance by Federation or one of its affiliated agencies. From his sixth to his laid for 30 guests. the l'rima Ballerian of the Opera, GENEVA, - (J. T. A.) - The fourteenth year Fred Stern went Rine Nikowa. Council of the League of Nations to the grammar school and worked George A. and David A. Klein- The minister looked at me with at its next session will take up the man spent a fortnight in Phila- some expression of mistrust. A as a bootblack on Sundays and hol- complaints of national minorities delphia. Before returning home Ballet. When he was here as idays to help out at home. • in European countries, including a At the age of 14 he graduated they visited in Cleveland. Chaplain in the German army, review of the Jewish situation in from grammar school and went to there had been no ouch things in Hungary and Roumania . work in a box factory, working 59 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Frank of l'alestine. Indeed this entire Tel- The forty-fifth session of the 1120 Chicago boulevard will be at Aviv was almost non-existent then. hours a week for the munificent league's council will be opened wage of $5.90. Working in a home on Sunday, June 5, from 2 Moreover, a performance by a Pal- here June 15. The Roumanian and to 5 and from 7 to 10, in honor estinian Ballerian-that was un- printing plant, then in a machine Hungarian questions are on the shop and other such employment of the confirmation of their daugh- imaginable. agenda of the council, took up two more years. Stern ter, Pauline Harriet. No cards. "Can we not see it?" " We can," I said. And we be- then went to work in a brewery Miss Esther Whitman of 233 took ourselves to the hall where and, after two years, having saved MAY REVIVE COUNCIL Farnsworth avenue is a distin- Madan' Nikowa was about to per- a few hundred dollars, he enrolled REJECTED BY ARABS in a business college. guished member of the June grad- form. Abandoning the business course, JERUSALEM. - (J. T. A.) - We went about two or three kilo- re. uating class of College High School, Detroit's newest high meters along the cement streets of he enrolled in high school, working Great interest was caused in po- school. Miss Whitman will be the the Jewish town. My companion, as a street car conductor before litical circles here by the publica- youngest student to receive a di- ie German minister, was a little and after school hours. Follow- tion of a report in the Arab press ploma at the .high school's com- excited. The Holy Land of today ing three years of high school that the Palestine government mencement exercises next month. vas entirely different front what it work, he attended the Milwaukee plans to revive the legislative She is 15 yeare old. In honor of was in Anno Domino 1918, when he Normal School, taking a medical council, once rejected by the course, and later dropped that for Arabs. her graduation, her parents, Mr. left it. He said to me: and Mrs. Max Whitman, will en- "At that time, the German col- a liberal arts course at Marquette The Assists quotes a high offi- tertain with a dinner-dance at Ilo- •fly, Samna, was like an oasis in University. It was while he was cial in the l'alestine government to doing social srevice work for a tel Addison. the wilderness. Today wherever the effect that the government you cast your eye you will see about year at the Lincoln House in Mil- contemplates the revival of that --- Mr. and Mrs. J. L. liaker of you green, green green. And even waukee that he was urged to enter council. 1472 Burlingame avenue have left the Arab villages possess stone the field as a professional. Two on a 10 days' trip to Toronto to houses. Now, Tel-Aviv and that years ago he married a girl who attend the races. ringing Hebrew-it has become a was also planning a social service totally dfferent country in the nine career and together they enrolled at the University of Wisconsin. Mrs. Alex Applebaum of 2014 years since I left it." JULIUS BURNSTINE Stern is a member of the Alpha He interrupted his conversation West Euclid avenue entertained Julius Burstine passed away at with a dinner and bridge at the as we approached the exhibition Kappa Delta, an honorary fratern- his residence, 950 Medbury ave- Chatham Apartment Hotel honor- Fall which radiated a blazing light. ity for sociology students, nue, on Monday, May 23. Surviv- ing her sister, Miss Helen Klay- Hundreds of people endeavored to ing are his wife, Yetta, and chil- man, a bride-elect of June. Coy-, make their way through the en- CRIMEA SITUATION dren, Mrs. Meyer Pereira, Mrs. trance. era were laid for 16 guests. Louis Dunn, Mrs. Ben Kahn, Sirs. SATISFIES WARBURG The crowd, mainly workers, was Mr. and Mrs. Jacob II. Davis of Sam Goldberg of Buffalo, Mrs. cagier to see Nikowa. The huge Harry Satovsky, Meyer, Samuel, YALTA, Crimea.-(J. T. A.)- 2224 Chicago boulevard will be at hall was sold out. Palestine has The inspection tour of the new Louis and Aaron. Funeral serv- become thrifty and the prices of home oil Sunday, June 5, from 2 ices were held from the residence Jewish colonies made by Felix M. to 5 and from 7 to 10, in honor of admission cards are of crisis times on Tuesday. Burial was at Clover the confirmation of her son, Jo- -from 15 to 80 cents. In the first Warburg and his party came to a Hill Park Cemetery. row one observed people in evening close with a visit to the Julius Ro- seph. No cards. clothes, in the rear rows, workers, senwald colony. SIMON ROSENBERG Of the 136 new Jewish colonies, Hadassah sewing committee has workers, workers. There is no mid- Simon Rosenberg passed away 27 were visited by Mr. Warburg, completed its quota for the sea- dle class art in Palestine. on May 19 at the Jewish Old As any companion glanced around who was accompanied by James son and will discontinue the work H. Becker, Dr. Bernard Kahn and F olks Home at the age of 64. the hall, he observed: until fall. Burial took place at Machpelah "It is astonishing, imbed, very Dr. Joseph A. Rosen, head of the Argo-joint in Russia. In addresses Cemetery. Miss Mollie Haber of West Phil- astonishing. I was under the im- pression that there was a crisis in to the settlers, Mr. Warburg ex- adelphia avenue entertained at THOMAS SCHUBB pressed his pleasure at the rate of lovely appointed bridge-luncheon Tel-Aviv; I believed that Palestine Thomas Schubb, 1218 Fifteenth development and the energy and and hosiery shower on Thursday was already half dead; I see that it street, passed away at Providence efficiency of the colonists and the evening, May 19, in honor of Shea is alive, very much so. Strange, management of the Agro-joint, Hospital at the age of 33. Mr. Belle Leach, a June bride-elect. very strange." In astonishment the minister the agency of the American Jew- Schubb was a World War veteran Miss Leach was the recipient of ish Joint Distribution Committee and proprietor of the chain of took a scat And waited for the ap- many lovely gifts. responsible for the colonization shops under the name of Thomas pearance of Madam Nikowa. Independent Tailors. Ile is sur- work. Only IS months ago there was Mrs. Maurice Gantz (Estelle vived by his mother, Mrs. Eliza- Levenson of Philadelphia) of no art of the dance in Palestine. In beth Schubb, and six sisters, Re- the opera, where dancing is indis- Without bread and without wine Twelfth street will return home beeca, Minnie, Fannie, Rose, Mrs. Saturday, May 28, after a three- pensible, as for instance in "Aida," love will come to nothing. I. Shiffman and Mrs. I. Baskin of strenuous efforts were made to train weeks visit in Philadelphia, Atlan- Pit is b urg , and d two brothers, Ja- several young Indies to set their Let the wolves be satisfied and tic City and New York. cob and Max. fret in motion. These efforts met the lambs will be safe. Burial took place at Cloverhill with the warm sympathy of the na- "CASEY" BATS AT REGENT Park Cemetery, with Rabbi Hersh- tive public and with the hilarity of man officiating. the visiting foreigners. Then Russian Tolstoism and Dostoyev- That funny comedy with a base- Nikowa arrived and created the skyism which had poisoned the ball diamond background, "Casey first Palestinian Ballet in a period JACOB SIMON mind of the Jewish youth from Rus- at the Bat," with Wallace Beery of 18 months, Jacob Simon of 2506 Edison as the belligerent, batting player, . I saw the beginnings. I remember sia. "Long live the body," "long avenue passed away at Grace llos- live beauty" as the trumpet call of is the screen feature this week at how she started the training of pital on May 17, at the age of 65. the first Jewish ballet of Palestine. the Regent theater, where the workmen's children who had never Surviving are his wife, Betty, and The country responded to this call. film program offers also a remark- peen a dance in their lives. I dis- eight children, Mary, Esther, Em- For the first time in the history of able history of life in an African tinctly remember her solo dancer ma, Bessie, Meyer, Reubin, Calvin Israel, beauty appeared not as a jungle called "The Gorilla Hunt," and her almost ludicrous-appearing danger to the people but as a way and Morris. Burial took place at and other pictures. Machpelah Cemetery. stage decorator from Charkoff of life. Paul Specht and his clever mu- whom she trained. I witnessed her In contradiction to the technical sicians, in a colorful stage setting presiding and often executing the CHARLES TONKIN dances that one sees performed in appropriate to the big number of necessary costumes. How Madam Charles Tonkin, 19 years of age, Cairo by African, English, French their week's program. "Yankee Nikowa overcame with unusual and Arabic women, always calu- ' passed away at his home, 2059 Doodle Blues," play a new list of persistence all the obstacles she en- lated to the erotic appeal, the Pal- Taylor avenue, on May 17. His hits. Louis Calabrese, a member countered because of the country estine ballet of Nikowa is a re- parents, Mr. and Sirs. Louis Ton- of the orchestra, plays banjo and and the people! Naturally there freshing experience. It is humor, kin, survive. Burial took place at trumpet numbers and Wesley Ed- was no money-this is a Palestine swiftness and beauty embodied. Beth David, with Rabbi Ashishkin dy gives an amusing Italian dialect tradition of art. For four hours the public was re- I officiating. number. The theater, the opera, the ballet, moved from the world of thought, I3esides Anna Case, soprano, in I as education media for the people, which is so terribly wise. For hours; a beautifully staged Spanish fiesta are not yet understood in Palestine. the spectators were transplanted to scene, and the Twelve Radio Kids Much less it is considered that the world of the eye and they providing comic antics, the Vita- ithese media are the most important "eyed." There were classic dances phone program offers the special features of propaganda for Arabs and there were mimic dances and seetelet and patriotic feature of Abraham and Englishmen, fur the Jewish as there were grotesque dances in af- Line o l n's Gettysburg address well as the non-Jewish tourists who fiance. Nikowa does not dance but spoken by Lincoln Caswell, said wish to traverse and study the poses, she is only beauty. In loving memory of our dear to bear a startling resemblance to country in eight days, anxious to The Protestant Minster on my know what the Jews can accom- right nodded his head and said: mother, Esther Shellfish, who the martyred president. Among the entertaining vaude- plish, what do the new Jews "You know, Doctor, at first it ap- parsed away one year ago, on June 1, 1926. ville acts are Ruloff and Elton, in- peared to me altogether strange %1, 'ei‘t.eo hi h ?ut assistance, without sup- that one dances in Palestine. In One year has pealed since that sad den, ternational dancing stars, direct from the Paramount Theater, New , port, the young generation of Jew- my time there was not such thing. When one we to wan called •way. York; Ates and Darling, with their ish artiste in the Holy land accom- Now that I see how many came to God took her home. it ws• Hi. will. But within our heart. she !inert, 'till. dog, a brother of Rin-Tin-Tin, in plished its task. So did Nikowa who witness the performance and that "Beautiful But Dumb;" Adele found, instead of assistance, ob- the spectators are workers-just at Her Children, Nathan and Jennie Gould, "blues" singer, making her stacles, misunderstanding. The this time of the crisis-1 was pleas- Shellfish and Henrietta Arden. first local appearance, and Jack parents of the pupils were against antly surprised to see how good the it. "My child, better go to learn performance was. I enjoyed my- Hunter, "The Dancing Fool." In memory of our loving son. tailoring, than to dance. Do you self immensely. Rut what surprised Charles K. Smith, who passed believe that one can make a living me more is the fact that these danc- When the judge is unlearned it away 10 years ago on May 29, by dancing?" es and the dancers are so innocent, 1917. is the robe we bow at. The first efforts of the new school so unerotic.' In Germany one can- Sadly missed by His loving Moth- were viewed without understanding not see such dances. Tell me, Doc- er, Father, Sisters and Brothers. by the public. "Has dancing any- tor, is it always this way or is it ! thing to do with art?" Finally the just today. by accident?" public gave its reply: "Yes." I smiled. "Be sure, Minister, The workers, the Yemenites, the that Madam Nikowa has no idea FUNERAL SERVICE , new immigrants and the Arabs that you are in the audience." 1125 SHELBY STREET Reformed and strictly Orthodox came to see the Nikowa perform- "Naturally," he said thoughtful- KOSHER SANDWICHES Funerals cared for in • meat d g- ance. Something entirely new ly, "that is just the problem. How AMERICAN STYLE niAM manner. Latest type Lm. sprang up in Palestine. Art which do you Jews bring it about, to be imams Hearse and Packard end, I Dowrotaire Ray Jewelry) emphasizes consciously that it here in Palestine, so incomprehen- meet used exclusively. All ar- stands outside the realm of thought, sible, odd. Your workers are all aaaaansents personally suparvimal. intellect; outside of poetry, music scholars, your girls with whom I and painting, which are considered I spoke here are terribly modest and GOODY! in Palestine intellectual afters. The Original they are such idealsts, they have There is something different, that no equal, anywhere. Andyour bal- Cass Lake Kosher Delicatessis ■ Mortician. is, body and its beauty, the move- let girls are so young and beautiful wet Open SATURDAY, MAY 2S ment of the body and its rhythm. and m-dent. Strange country and 604 DELAWARE With complete line of fresh It is Helenism of today, not the a strange ballet. May God sustain Deli•atmsen At Second Blvd. Empire OM 4 kind which is ■ reaction to conserv- •you." he said piously. C. and P. FEIG, Props. Free Parking ative Judaism but • reaction to (Copyright 1927, J. T. A.) szareTanz - una- Fiani 1275 WOODWARD AVENUE The members of the Ilakoah soccer team of Vienna were the guests of a group of 100 Detroit Jews at a banquet at Webster !lull immediately following their game with the Michigan team here last Sunday, from which the Jewish team emerged victorious by a score of 2 to 0. Among the speakers were Fred Ni. Butzel, who spoke in German in response to a brief address of appreciation by Herr Arthur Barr; David A. Brown, Morris D. Wald- man, Rabbi Leon From, Benjamin "Bennie" Friedman and Jacob Ma- zer. Milford Stern presided. The game itself well repaid the several thousand spectators who witnessed it. The Europeans' rep-. utation for maintaining a fast , pace was fully lived up to, the game being a ding-dung affair from start to finish. First half favored Ilakoah, but a different tale was told in the second period, Michigan being on the offensive for the greater part, and but for a fine display of goalkeeping on the part of Fabian the visitors would have been beaten. Time and again he saved his side single-handed, as shots were rained in from every angle, the marks- manship of the local quintet being as good as anything seen this sea- son. , OBITUARY I The Smartest of New Summe'r FROCKS in a Sensational Sal,' at '19 I Values up to $45 The smartest of Paris-in. spired styles for street wear or fashionable afternoon oc- casions . . . including in- teresting versions of the jacket and bolero then, . . . smart ensembles in flat crepe and georgette. All- around pleated, tiered, and flared skirts. Flutt ering drapes, jabos, scarfs! Come prepared for the best buying opportunity of the season! AMES - SECOND FLOOR P • 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 O# IMAIM.\ \ IM Ikl IM IMWIIALIMII•Ms 1101 ■ 110 ■ \ WILIV • • • • • • • • • Notice Due to a bomb being thrown into 0 my store by the striking bakers, have 0 0 0 0 0 0 had to close down until repairs are 0 0 0 completed. 0 0 0 Will open very shortly with a full 0 0 line of delicious baked goods. 0 0 0 Your patronage is solicited and 0 0 0 0 will be greatly appreciated. 0 0 0 0 HOPTMAN BAKERY, 0 0 8916 Twelfth Street, 0 0 Between Taylor and Hazelwood. 0 0 d w.I.I...........kwimom.wx.Im.m..w... A Sidney L. Alexander Adjustments Arbitrations 1008 Penobscot Buildinng Randolph 69S1 J J warsisorsairearesseamm,,,,~„,,,,...,~ Detroit's Finest Funeral Home. Free Use of Our Chrorl LEWIS BROS 7739 JOHN Seymour Lewis R. ST. Saul Lewis GeoPrEh°Le .e .. n FUN ERAL DIREC T ORS D E s v i ll I/4 MEMORIAM 'ac l MEISNER' Edmund G. Lewis OLYMPIA HOTEL and MINERAL BATHS Try one of the Sunday Di eeeee served at the Olympia for $2 00 . DINE AND DANCE Mt. Clemens, Mich. 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