A merica AIWA Periodiad Carter CLIFTON MMUS - CINCINNATI 20, OHIO PAGE SEVEN THE. JEWISH CHRONICLE THOMAS F. August Cyrowski FARRELL Republican Candidate for County Clerk JOHN A. KRONK Came to Detroit in May, 1SSS, and lived here since that time. Seven years he attended the Polish Seminary at Detroit where he completed his classical course and philosophy. Com- pleted his studies Of Law at the Detroit College of Law from which he received the degree of Bachelor of Laws on the 22nd day of April, 1899. TWO days thereafter he was admitted to the practice of Law in :Michigan Courts and on the 2001 of Feb- was admitted to ruary, 19(10, Primaries, August 27, 1918. Sherman D. Callender for State Senator THIRD DISTRICT WARDS 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 Member of Charter Commission. COUNCILMAN John T. Thompson taring six years Mr. Cyrowski was practice in the federal courts. deputy clerk of the recorder's court, appointed by Judge Alfred J. Murphy. During the last ten years, however, devoted all his time to the practice of law and has men with success. Mr. Cyrowskl is a re- lie a as well qualified. Vie heartly ree• moment! him: Joseph M. Weiss Alexander J. Groesbeck Charles C. St1110118 Judge Codd —FOR— COUNCILMAN publican candidate for Broad enough to represent all the people. Circuit Judge Fred M. Butzel Judge Dingeman Primaries, August 27th. VOTE FOR HIM and is well qualified. Your should vote for him. For Circuit Judge Archibald F Bunting BANCROFT Able—Fair—Fearless Legislature W. AUCH GEORGE C. LUCIAN LAWYER —FOR— FIRST DISTRICT (All Wards in Detroit.) E. A. Snow, R. C. Flanigan, W. 0. Perkins. CONGRESSMAN 'COUNCILMAN Republican Candidate for Endorsed by the well known Circuit Court Judges F. W. Mayne, P. II. O'Brien, E. R. Gilday, VOTE FOR Your Support and Vote at Primaries, August 27, 1915, will be appreciated "Our Country and Michigan First." Primaries, August 27, 1918. Public and Born in :Michigan. Normal School Education. Twelve years teacher in Detroit Public Schools. Former President Detroit Board Education. Led fight for bust ness methods and discharge of use- less employes. In Council advocated necessity of up-to-date Technical school. I I II I To the Man ho Has No xe To Grind An Open Letter From JAMES COUZENS CHARLES A. i Nichols li! I I For Re-election 111 it 1 11 !li You and 1, as citizens of ktroit, have certain R1( l ITS. We arc tremendously proud of them. We arc prompt to tight any attempt to take them away from us. But we must alit forget that, as citizens, we also have certain DUTIES. These DUTIES arc the basis of our RIGHTS. One of them—the duty to vote—is our sole lit means of protecting our rights. In I Protect y our RIGI ITS by doing your DUTY next Tuesday. Not as a candidate for Mayor, but as a citizen of Detrot, I make this urgent request of you. If ALL Detroit soles nest Tuesday, answers to we will c t the every question up for decision at this RIGHT momentous primary. But, if we limit the tote to such degree as to allow the old-time machine methods to prevail, we will have nobody but ourselves to blame for the inevitable calamity that will follow. XVIII! (0,000 Detroit voters with the T colors, each of these axe-grinders sees in this primary of Tuesday an op- portunity of a lifetime. It will take fewer votes to swing a majority. And there is the possession of the city government for a three-year term as a rich reward—a reward all the more tempting from the increased power and influence which our splendid new char- ter imposes on Detroit's chosen Mayor! SO s ole next Tuesday not only to protect your own rights but also to pro- tect those of that soldier who, absent, has made you steward of his civic duties. VOR the axe-grinders are hard at I . work. The candidates of class and special interest, the professional politician, the ward boss, the political organizations of various method, purpose and motive, are lined up and busy. At every election they poll a definite and well instructed vote. I have no patience with the candidate who plans to win by getting HIS supporters to the polls and keeping THE REST AWAY. If I cannot WIN FAIRLY, I prefer to LOSE. you—the man who has NO sae to rrind For I neither expect nor ask the vote of a man who has an axe to grind at the City hall, be he rich or pooi—ICepabli- —come out and vote. can or Democrat. But they can never carry an election if If I am neminttcd on Tuesday it will because you, the taap•yer, the home owner, the household brad, believes in be me and comes out and VOTES. ‘701. , are the matt whom all of them I FEAR They remember former occasions N11.41 coat have r isen 111 )0111- and „sserted yourself. They might know that. whoa y011 nial.e up your mind to pat YOl'R representative in the Mayor's chair, there will he no chance for THEIR candidate. And it is time for you to act. Ali 't■ The re-election of Otto Stoll to Office of Register of Deeds, means a continuance of a clean business administration in that office. of The New City Charter will be it fr III But where is the LOBBYIST FOR THE Irr Co R Register of Deeds The Letter and the Spirit Regardless of your choice of Mayor, there will always be lobbyists hovering about the City Hall—lobbyists for the gamblers, the wide open town advocate ;, the vice profiteers and the other appli- cants for special privileges. There will always he suave representa- tives of the I) U. R.. the Michigan State Telephone Company, and the other spe- cial interests. and we have recently seen what sorb men can accomplish. Otto Stoll III 1 111 Best Interpreted By Its Makers JOHN C. NAGEL Chairman of the Charter Commission is DETROIT HOME? There is but one way for you to establish him. You must seat him in the Mayor's chair. • R j , CA A_ A ---• h A Candidate for COUNCILMAN John C. Nagel has been a resident of Detroit for 30 years, a worker and business man In Detroit all his life: a public official in Various capacities during ten years of his residence in Detroit, and has In all his relations secured the approval of the press and public of the city, Vote for John C. Nagel for Council- IL man on August 27 ALL WARDS