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May 14, 1920 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1920-05-14

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAGE TWELVE

THE DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE

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11
Motors, Oils, Mining and Curb Industrials for Cash
or on Moderate Margins

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owl,

0 0 CHARLES A. STONEHAM & CO.

Real Estate Exchange Bldg., Detroit

TELEPHONE CADILLAC 6150

(Established 1903)
41 Broad Street, New York

I

fAXI

CADILLAC

Private Appearing Cars
Limousines—for all
occasions

Direct Private Wires Il
Weekly Market Letter Sent Free

II

"No Promotions"
ocio,==toaco===o

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Philip Harrison, brother of Dr. Leon Harrison of St. Louis, died at his
home in New York. Ile was assistant corporation counsel of New York.




10

SAM LEVISON, Mgr.

Rabbi Sidney Tedesche, of Ohcv Zedukah Temple, Springfield, Ohio, has
been inNited to give a worse of lectures at the summer course of the Uni
versity of North Carolina this summer.




HUDSON TAXI

-

A joint committee representing the various reform congregations in St.
Louis, Nto., and vicinity, has been appointed to raise $35,000 for a synagogue
and community center to be erected for the Jewish students of the university.




Otto Kraemer, who has served as president for some years, was re-
elected at the fortieth annual 'meting of the Oregon Hurnane Society, held
at Portland last week.




GREAT LAKES ELECTRIC CO.

David Eckstein, 93 years old, a pioneer settler of Lansing and for tli•
past twenty-four years a resident of Detroit, died Thursday at the home of
his daughter, NIrs. A. hi. Ermann, 33 Hancock street, West Detroit.




Mr. Samuel Horowitz, of Lemberg, has offered the community the sum
of one million kronen towards the foundation of a Rabbinical Seminary in
that city.




You also know that it takes more "power"
today to keep a business going than it ever did
before. Workers must be paid more if they
are to meet the increased cost of living; also
everything that goes into the building and re-
pairing of property has gone up in price.

le





MI

A *

-

Members
Federal
Reserve Bank

, , 7 ;,



A class in Ilerov composed of students, Jews and non-Jews, front among
the student body of the University of Chattanooga has been organized and
Rabbi Abraham Holtzberg, of Chattanooga, appointed its instructor. The
class has been meeting regularly once a week since the mid-winter vacation
period and the students are making excellent progress.




United
States
Depository

ImsIt.
Avno

[

Std I 1,AINK
OF DETROIT

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RESTAURANT

2 5 BROADWAY

Most attractively furnished restaurant. Good, tasty, borne cooking
served at lunches and dinner, daily and Sundays, Parties catered.

Second Floor B'nal B'rith Building

Formerly Weiss's Restaurant

.

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London.—A bronze plate commemorating activities of the late Charles
Froli man in London will be placed on the later's favorite table in a secluded
corner of the Savoy grill by David lielasco. Mr. Belasco upon his arrival
here asked the hotel management to give him the same suite which he and
Erohnian had occupied during their last visit to London in 1908.

Palais de Danse

WATER PROOFING rowances

CELLAR FLOORS.

Bwtd

-

Dop PROOF to

teomCDIARtoROar

50 <le,,

OROOISREPIIRED

ALSO

RE-COVERED

GUARANI ft D •

reS° WATER PROOF PAINT.
PLASTIC- SLAT E,GRAVELSIATFTILE ROOFING.
CORNICES.SKYLIGHTS.GUTTERSeCONDUCTORS.

MOONEY SCHREIBER. SEC* &TREAS.

212-214 HANCOCK AVE. WEST.

DETROIT MICH.

STARKWEATHER-BUICK

Salesroom and Office:

2843.2851 East Grand Boulevard

Phone, Market 2892

Service Station NO. 1
21-23 Clairmount
at Woodward
Phone Market 4732

Service Station No.2
East Gd. Boulevard,
Belle Isle Bridge
Edgewood 681

BUICK

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CHRONICLE WANT ADS PAX, 1

.
..s—,....-.........

.

Telephone Cadillac 2755.
Horne Cooel op
J. LOEWEN BROWN. Prop.
120 Broadway,
Detroit. Mich.

'

Detroit Branch:
750 Woodward Ave.

— WE PAY SPOT CASH —
ALKON AUTO SALES

Select Dancing Nightly

35 Palmer West, Near Woodward

s.

Particular People Prefer
the Palais
Strictly censored. Highest
standard

lacks

JEWELRY,

Floyd Hiokman's Superb Orchestra.

I,

146 Woodward Ave.

I ,

Carmel Kosher Restaurant

and Service at

HOTEL FRANKLIN

—Absolutely Kosher

75 BROADWAY-2nd Floor

Service from 11 a. m. to 8 p. m.

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Abraham Cooper
David Cooper 04
4
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41.

COOPER INSURANCE AGENC

2219 Dime Bank

Cadillac

Y

7509

GENERAL INSURANCE SERVICE

Fire
Plate Glass
Automobile

LIFE

Burglary and Theft
Health and Accident
Compensation

DETROIT, MICH.
Rates Single-61.50 to $2.60.

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A Policy With Us Means Security
::•:•:•:•-•::•:•::•:0:•::•:•:•:::.:•:•.:•:•:•:.:•:•:•:•:•xtx.x.•:•:•:.:.:•:•:•:•:::•:•:•:•:•:o

WE HAVE MOVED FROM '

49 STATE STREET TO

9 Washington Boulevard

Schechter's Drug Store

477 Hastings St., Cor, Division
Detroit, Michigan.

Phone Cadillac 3299.

Two Doors from Michigan Avenue.

Our Rates on Loans Remain at the
Same howFigures: 2% on loans over
$100. 2 ,42 % on loans from $10 to $100
3% on small loans up to $511.

Federal Collateral Society, Inc

A Banking Institidion.

PRUNK

ENGRAVING COMPA N Y

700 MAFIGUETTE 15L00.
COLOR-PLATES
DESIGNING
PHOTO-RETOUCHING HALF - TONES

M. J. POWERS, Manager

Removes carbon and prevents Its
formation.
Volatilizes all the fuel.
Makes starting easy. Saves battery charging. Increases mileage.
USED IN ALL INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINES.

[ E•C C•O•L•E•N•E

Eccolene Manufacturing Co., 1208 David Whitney Bldg.

Cherry 1378

Corner Lamed and Bates Streets
One block from Electric Depot

s

S • k--.

Under personal supervision of Rabbi Judah L. Levin
A real Kosher Restaurant, with the beet of home cooking, all
foods strictly fresh. Served in attractively furnished quarters. If
you want a real Kosher home-cooked meal come up to



Comfort

"THE MADISON"
KOSHER RESTAURANT

rT

Service Station No. 3
Marshall & Smith
1537 Grand River
Garfield 1650

Wanted

wiiirdiiiiiiiikviiiiii.v., •

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Glendale 2777-2778-2779

USED
CARS

,

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Nearly twenty years ago, during a particularly severe winter in Chicago,
a young art student was earning his tuition by painting signs. There are
probably many Chicagoans who will remember an enormous advertisement
painted upon the side of a grain elevator near Twelfth street and the river,
portraying a friendly old gentleman holding in his extended hand a package
of breakfast food. Seymour M. Stone, then just emerging from his teens,
was the painter who swung back and forth in a suspended cradle and painted
that huge figure. From that humble beginning of slashing with a big brush
at the corrugated iron surface of a building this Chicago artist has progressed
to an en v iable position among the portrait painters of Europe. He is on his
way home now after fifteen years' work in practically every European coun-
try. His struggle for recognition has had its ups and downs, but in the end
has been crowned with success. lie has taken with him on his return to
America his latest work, a portrait of Mrs. Ramsay, wife of the British
charge d'affaires itt Sweden, and her two children. It has been admired by
Stockholm's critics and by various members of the court and is sure to .....
find favor when it is exhibited in America.

STATEMENT OF CONDITION
At the close of business May 4, 1920.
RESOURCES
Mortgages and Bonds
$ 7,516,727.05
Loans and Discounts
6,170,202.27
United States Bonds (Liberty)
794,650.00
Federal Reserve Stock
20,700.00
Banking Houses
376,168.42
Furniture and Fixtures
112,750.75
Premium Account ...
6,275.73
Overdrafts
405.79
Cash on hand and in banks .... 3,175,513.24
$18,173,393.25
LIABILITIES
Capital
.
.$ 1,000,000.00
Surplus . . .
400,000.00
Undivided Profits
107,480.55
Bills Payable at Federal Reserve ,
Bank ....
100,000.00
Dividends Unpaid.
216.91
Deposits ...
16,334,199.10
Customers Bonds Held for Safe
Keeping
130,200.00
Reserve for Savings Interest...
50,000.00
Reserve for Liberty Bonds ....
51,296.69

— -
$18,173,393.25
OFFICERS
Walter J. Hayes, President
James J. Brady, Vice•Pres. L. II. D. Baker, A sst. to Pres.
L. W. Schimmel, Viee•Pres. II. W. Proctor, Asst. Cash.
Chas. P. Lamed, V ice•Pres. S. A. Mauer, Asst. Cash.
Gordon Fearnley, Vice•Pres. Robt. M. Allan, Asst. Cash.
G. W.J. Linton, V. P. & Cashlfenry M. II ild, A sst. Cash.
Philip S. !Janne, Vice•Pres. Fred W. Allen, Mgr. For. Dept.
F. C. Mac Donald, A editor.
DIRECTORS
Jos. A. Belanger Walter J. Hayes Frank E. Logan
James J. Brady Frank A. Kelly
W. Schimmel
Fred W. Dolby Henry S. Koppin Louis
Harm. C. Walker
Frank II. Dohany Chas. P. I.arned II.
B. Wallace
BRANCHES
Mack and Cadillac
Mack and Townsend
Gratiot and McClellan
Grand River and Trumbull
Kercheval end Holcomb
Jefferson and flinger
Woodward and Clifford
Michigan Ave. and 35th St.
Harper and N'an Dyke Aces.
Concord and Kercheval
Randolph and Macomb
Davison
and Riopelle
Gratiot Central Market
Woodward at Grand Md.
Jefferson As e. at Alter Road Riopelle
and Scott

at. w.—...

IP

A protest signed by sixty-live Polish notables, savants and writers,
was published in the Press, deprecating the decision of the Senate of the
University not to appoint Dr. Ashkenazy as a Professor. They regarded the
action of the Senate as harmful to the prestige of the country, and as in-
jurious to the interests of the L'itiversity and education.




Albert Edward Woolf, the chemist whose discoveries of the uses of
peroxide of hydrogen and decomposed sea water as disinfectants made him
know internationally, died Monday. He was 74 years old. He gave the
medical profession the benefit of his discoveries in connection with the usage
of sea water, decomposed by electricity, in sanitation. His method was
adopted by the United States Government in combating the yellow fever
epidemic in Cuba.




1E Am E RicAN

Cadillac 4692

KLEIN & LEITNER

In

Mr. Alfred Goldman, Mr. S. It. Grant and Nlr. S. Mudd have just been
awarded the Boylston prize of $300 from Harvard University. This prize,
which is open to medical men all over the country, is given for the best
original work in experimental medicine 7- he subject which they worked on
as joint authors was the "Effect of Cold on the Throat and Tonsil."




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a letter to the Board of Trustees last Monday night, Rabbi C. A.
Rubenstein, of Baltimore, informed the Har Sinai Congregation that he stood
by his decision to leave the Temple at the end of the present Congregational
year, October 1, 1920.




TELEPHONE COMPANY

CLEVELAND

169. 171 E. Jefferson

The United Synagogue of America is about to launch a national campaign
for membership, with Dr. Cyrus Adler as the national chairman. Dr. Ber-
nard M. Kaplan of New York has been appointed campaign director for
New England.




So long as you furnish the necessary "power" we will see to it
that the telephone keeps running.

Drina Nee & Washouse

-.

The board of trustees of the Irene has announced that the last week in
Slay has been set aside as the twenty-lifth anniversary week to 1:0111111C1110-
rate the founding of the Settlement, which has grown from its small begin-
ning to one of the largest Settlements in the United States.
• •


IF YOU ARE
TO HAVE THE
TELEPHONE

■ ►wl ■ ►w1 • Iwwwl ■ awwwi ■ pwwwa w

DETROIT

Rabbi Rosen has organized modern services in Danbury, Conn., and is
now arranging to have various rabbis of the district conduct worship there
at regular intervals.




In other words you can't run a car without gasoline. A tele-
phone company or any other company, is in exactly the same
fix; it can't run unless it gets enough financial
"power" to keep the employees working on
WE MUST HAVE all cylinders", and to insure proper operating
YOUR SUPPORT conditions.

MICHIGAN STATE

Michigan's Largest Electric Supply Miler

Nam NW ts Wurhoute

In addition to Rabbi Thurman's visit, services have been conducted by
Rabis Louis Witt of St. Louis, }tarry II. Mayer of Kansas City, Mo., Rabbi
Meyerowitz of Leavenworth, Kans.




You know what happens when a car runs dry for lack of
gasoline—it it just naturally out of business.

MAXWELL L. COHEN, Secretary

We stock and Recommend "Colonial" Mazda
Lamps because they're best. Our Illuminating
Engineer can help solve your lighting prob-
lems. No charge.

The session of the New York state assembly was opened last Monday
by the delivery of the invocation by Rabbi Reuben Rabinowitz of Temple
Beth Israel, Richmond Hill, I.. I.




"More Power ",

-.-.

A. LAPIN ('OMEN, President

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