The Jewish Monitor (Fort Worth-Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, September 24, 1920 Page: 4 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 16 x 10 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Page Four
THE JEWISH MONITOR
Friday September 24 1920.
Ifort worth news
NOTICE.
Regular meeting of Isidor Straus
Lodge No. 519 I. 0. B. B. first and
third Wednesdays of each month at 8
o'clock p. m. at the Hebrew Institute.
MEYER MEHL President.
E. L. GILBERT Secretary.
Congregational.
Temple Beth-El at Hebrew Institute.
Services Friday evening at 8 o'clock.
Synagogue Ahavath Sholem: Fri-
day evening services at 8 o'clock. Sat-
urday morning at 8 o'clock. Sabbath
School Saturday morning 10 o'clock.
Please Phone News Items to Lamar
6460 Rosedale 5383 or 455.
Mr. Leonard Art father of Ben Art
has just returned from a seven weeks'
vacation in Colorado. Mr. Art cele-
brated his 70th birthday September
21st and his many friends hope that
he will see many more such happy
days.
Mrs. A. Fred and daughters Lillie
and Rose of El Paso street have re-
turned from an extended trip to New
York and Edgemere Long Island.
Mrs. Minnie Friedman and little
daughters are home from an extended
visit in California.
Mrs. Harry Gressman and daugh-
ter have returned from Kansas City.
Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Roddy and child
of Temple were the guests of relatives
during the holidays.
Announcement has just been made
of the marriage of Miss Lena Solo-
mon and Mr. Roy Gernsbacher which
occurred in Kansas City the latter
part of June.
Mr. and Mrs. U. M. Cerf were visit-
ors in Corsicana last week.
Mr. Henry Schiff of Gainesville is
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Morris Schiff.
The following invitation has been
received: Mr. and Mrs. Louie Gordon
request the honor of your presence at
the marriage of their daughter Alma
Rose to Mr. Albert Maling on Sunday
the twenty-sixth of September One
Thousand nine hundred and twenty at
half after six o'clock in the evening
Parkway Hotel in the City of Chi-
cago. At home Parkway Hotel.
father and was met at the altar by
Mr. Maurice Simon Klotz. Mr. Sam
Klotz brother of the groom acted as
best man.
The bride's dress was of pink or-
gandy handsomely trimmed in laces.
With it she wore a pink taffeta hat
and carried a shower bouquet of
bride's roses. Her attendants were
dressed in pink organdy and carried
French baskets of pink roses.
A buffet supper was served to the
guests after the ceremony and for
this part of the event the appoint-
ments were most tasteful. Pink and
green trimmed the tale where roses
lent their fragrance. About forty
guests were present. .
Mr. and Mrs. Klotz left on the mid-
night train for New Orleans. The
bride's going away suit was of brown
silver tone with accessories to match.
TYLER.
Friedlander-Klotz Wedding.
A very pretty wedding took place
Wednesday evening at 8:30 when Miss
Lena Fricdlander and Mr. Maurice
Klotz of Napoleonville La. were mar-
ried by Rabbi M. Faber the doublo
ring ceremony being used.
The home was beautifully decorated
in pink and green and in the living
rrom where the ceremony was read
an altar fashioned above a large pink
bell suspended above a bank of greens
served as a picturesque background
fcr the wedding party.
To the strains of Mendelssohn's
wedding march played by Mrs. Abram
Scheucr sister of the bride accom-
panied by Mr. Scheuer on the flute
the wedding party entered led by
Miss Ruth Friedlandcr as bride's maid
and Mr. Bernard Friedlandcr follow-
ed by Mrs. Jake Goldstein sister of
the groom as matron of honor and
Miss Ethel Friedlander as maid of
honor.
The bride entered on the arm of her
Miss Rae Meyers of Peoria III is
visiting in the Friedlander home.
Mr. Isa Block of Peoria 111. was a
guest at the Friedlander-Klotz wed-
ding. Mr. S. Klotz and Mr. Sam Klotz of
Napoleonville La. were guests at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. I. Friedlander.
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Goldstein and
son of Placquemine La. were guests
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. I. Fried-
lander. Mr. and Mrs. I. Friedlandcr enter-
tained with a 5-course dinner Tuesday
evening in honor of their daughter
Lena and house guests.
THOUSANDS HONOR COL. HARRY
CUTLER.
While thousands of men on ! women
unable to gain admission to the build-
ing stood in Broad street packed fcr
a block on either side of the -'.r nture
funeral services for Col. Hnrry Cut-
ler were held Thursday iifnti.tii n
Temple Beth-El Providence K. I.
The outpouring one of the largest
that has ever marked the f'l.icrul of
a public man in the state w.n a tri-
bute from the men and women of the
city especially those of Col. Cutler's
faith to one whom they had come to
know and love because of his good
works.
Col. Cutler's body had lain in state
at the Temple since Wednesday morn-
ing and thousands had viewed it
there. The funeral services were set
for 2:30 but before 2 oclock Broad
street in the vicinity of the Temple
was choked with people the gathering
being so large that Police Cap'tain
Costigan and Headquarters Sergeant
Linchan and twenty-four men some
of them mounted were kept busy con-
stantly in an effort to keep a lane
open for traffic through the street.
EXECUTION OF JEWS
CONTINUE.
Warsaw: (By I. J. P. B.) In addi-
tion to the Jews executed in Siedlce
on charges of high treason and con-
spiracy to aid the Bolshevik) a num-
ber of Jews in Warsaw met a similar
fate. Moses Waldblum was executed
charged with high treason and the
following received prison terms at
hard labor: Isaac Silverman ten
years; Isaac Ackerman Aaron Green-
Men's Hat Sale
with an. incentive that is Rousing men to prompt action.
It's a matter of reducing our stock. Men who saw the great
display of Hats occupying 340 feet of our show windows are
wearing one of these hats at a saving of 20 to 30 and are
today exponents of this great sale which had its inception
last week and continues to gather forces daily. Why not buy
for less here than pay more elsewhere?
NEW FALL 1920 MODELS
The season's fashionble shapes and colors the product of
makers who have the rare faculty of studying men's needs
and abiding by their preference. Plain and novel felts and
popular Velour Hats. Read the price and savings below:
$4.00 Hats now $3.00 $30.00 Hats now $22.50 !!
$6.50 Hats now $4.00 $20.00 Hats now ...$17.50 ;;
$6.50 Hats now $5.00 $15.00 Hats now ...$12.50
$7.50 Hats now $6.00 $14.00 Hats now ...$11.50 "
$8.00 Hats now $6.50 $12.00 Hats now $10.00 W
$9.00 Hats now $7.00 $10.00 Hats now ...$ 8.75 ;;
$10.00 Hats now $7.50 $11.00 Hats now ...$ 9.00 "
of things could not be charged with
Bolshevist sympathies.
cr Jacob Malvantchik Isaiah Groz-
icky and Zacklstcln five years each;
Isaac Vinograd eight years; Wiskos-
sky seven years.
The executions in question are only
the final act of a scries of outrages
perpetrated against a quiet and harm-
less populace. Even before the Bol-
shevik! entered the town the Poles
began to rob and plunder every Jew-
ish store and business in Siedlce. The
Jews who were found guilty of asso
ciation with the Bolshevikl are for
the most part members of very relig-
ious families who in the very nature
Satisfaction that the women of
Palestine enjoy equal rights and that
under Jewish supervision Palestine
would grant its women civil and po-
litical rights was expressed by Mrs.
Carrie Chapman Catt at the Interna-
tional Congress of the Women's Suf-
frage Society in Geneva at which Dr.
Rosa W. Straus represented the Pal-
estine Women's Equal Suffrage Society.
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Fox, George. The Jewish Monitor (Fort Worth-Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, September 24, 1920, newspaper, September 24, 1920; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth296779/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .