Ps EY)Erttordmilsii
PAGE TWELVE
RON tan
WEEKLY USED CAR BULLETIN
Be sure you
find our name
plate on the
running board
THOMAS J. DOYLE USED CARS I
Authorized Dealers:
Ted Snowhook
2009 Hamilton Blvd.
Russell W. Hollister
1128 Grand River Ave.
Brown & Cooley,
780 Kercheval Ave.
A used car is only as good as
the firm you do business with
Bucknell & Knowlion
1012 Michigan Ave.
Ed. Novak
Mich. Ave. and 31at 8t.
USED CARS
Jacob R. Geoffrey of Pittsburgh. Pa., is to be the superintendent of the
Boston Y. M. H. A., beginning this fall season.
•
• • •
Alice, the popular daughter of l'resident Masaryk, has been married to
Dr. Borsky, Czecho Slovakian Ambassador to Rome. Dr. Boesky is a well
known Jew of Bohemia.
•
•
si
For the first time since the Jews fled from Spain in l'492,. official recog-
nition by the Madrid authorities has been given to the "Kehillah" of that
city says a report from the Spanish capital.
•
•
VIENNA—Because he had previously declared that anti-Semitism was
immoral, ex-Minister Gathern was prevented by anti-Semites from addressing
a political gathering at Neurenber .g.
VIENNA—The Jewish National Council of Eastern Galicia has sent a
delegation headed by Dr. Gelber to be present at the Russian-Polish Peace
Conference at Riga in order to safeguard the rights of the Jews in Eastern
Galicia.
•
•
is
LONDON—The foreign office has cabled instructions to Palestine to
recruit 500 Jewish young men in order to reinforce the Jewish Legion, a
small company of which is still in service in that country.
•
• • •
Among the donors to the fund for restoring Westminster Abbey are Sir
Marcus Samuel, £1,000; Messrs. N. M. Rothschild & Sons and Messrs. E. D.
Sassoon & Co., £250; Sir Edward Stern, £100, and Mr. Morris Marcus, £100.
•
•
LONDON—Haifa dispatch brings the news that Soloweitchick, one of
the earliest and best known of the Jewish pioneers in that district, was
killed by a band of Bedouins. The murderers escaped.
•
•
•
PARIS—Dr. Leo Motzkin, vice-chairman of the Zionist Greater Actions
Committee, has received from committee members a number of telegraphic
requests that a 'fleeting of the committee be called at an early date in order
that the present situation might be discussed and deliberated upon.
•
•
is
Professor Chaim \Veizman, noted chemist and leader of the Zionist
World Movement, has changed his plans and instead of paying an early visit
to Palestine will visit America according to information reliably obtained.
Dr. Weizman plans to go to the States early in November it is said.
•
•
•
Henri Bergson delivered the chief address at the International Congress
of Philosophers, which is at present meeting at Oxford, England. Viscount
Haldane, who was chairman of the session addressed by Bergson, lauded his
work and referred to him as the most prominent living philosopher.
•
si
•
The bulk of a $300,000 fund is set aside for the establishment of a fund
from which Jewish residents may borrow money free from interest, under
the will of Mark Browarski, who died in Pittsburgh last week. The will
directed that the federation of Jewish philanthropies have charge of the fund.
LONDON—The English Postal Administration now accepts telegraphic
messages for transmission to Soviet Russia, according to an announcement
made public. Letters, the announcement says, can be forwarded only
through the Crimea and Trans-Caucasia.
• • •
LONDON—Among the nine Jewish soldiers who were recently killed in
the train accident while on their way from the Jablona camp were the fol-
lowing: Meyer Batchman, Baruch Lichtenzeig, Abraham Molkovsky, Meyer
Mendel and A. Swisazki.
• • •
At the congress of German scientists which has just concluded at Man-
beim, Professor Grege, the noted scientist and scholar, declared that Pro-
fessor Einstein's theory of relativity has been confirmed by experimental
investigations.
J. A. Greenberg, the owner of several apartment buildings in Chicago,
MEMBER D. A. D. A.
reduced the rent of his tenants ten per cent on October 1st, and announces
that another reduction will be made on May 1st. The name suggests that
he is a co-religionist.
•
• • •
s ■ IIP
Rabbi Marius Ranson has accepted a call as assistant rabbi extended him
by Temple Bethel of New York city. Rabbi Ranson was ordained at the
Hebrew Union College in 1914. For five years he was rabbi in Paterson,
N. J., after which he accepted a call to Tremont Temple, New York city.
•
• • •
The Jewish Assembly in Palestine will he opened on October 7, it was
officially announced. The main object of this first gathering of Jewish
representatives from all parts of ,Palestine will be the election of an inde-
pendent executive composed of Palestine Jews to replace the present Zionist
Commission.
•
• • •
For three days more we have decided to further reduce the now very low
The grand master of Masons for New York state has reappointed Rabbi
prices on our used cars. Sixty-five, all of standard make, overhauled, rebuilt, re-
Elias Margolis of Mt. Vernon as a grand chaplain. Other appointments
are those of Philip S. Seligman o" Brooklyn, grand sword bearer; Edward
painted and guaranteed, must be sold during this sale.
J. Rosenthal of New York, grand steward, and Mortimer B. Bernstein and
Abraham A. Wiener of New York, district deputies.
This is the greatest opportunity ever offered the public to purchase high
•
• •
•
grade cars at these prices.
Bert Frey, son of Dr. and Mrs. S. Frey, superintendent of the Jewish
Orphan Home at Huntington Park, Cal., bravely rescued a man from being
drowned at Long Beach, Cal. Bert Frey heard the man's call for help
Peerless "8" 1919
and fearlessly swam through the high tide and reached the bather just in
$1875
time to save him from the second impact of the high waves.
Peerless "8" 1917
985
•
• •
Essex, 1920
1250
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Maurice Harris sailed for Europe on the Royal
George.
Dr.
Harris
has
been
asked
to
address the Jewish clergy of London
Buick "6" 1919
1000
on the "Religious Conditions Among the Jews in America." He has also
Willys-Knight Sedan, 1919
1775
been invited to preach in the Reform Synagogue and also in the Liberal
Synagogue.
Stearns-Knight, 1920
1775
•
• • •
Chandler "6" 7 Passenger, 1919
1100
More than 5,000 immigrants are arriving daily at Ellis Island, the De-
Chandler Sport Model "6" 1920
partment of Labor announced in reporting that the tide of emigration that
1625
set in after the armistice had been signed had been exceeded by the increas-
Mitchell "6" 1920
1395
ing inflow of immigration. Approximately 800,000 immigrants arrived dur-
Mitchell "6" 1919
ing the twelve months ending June 30, as compared with 141,132 the year
950
before.
Mitchell "6" 1920, Sedan
2375
•
• • •
Reo "4" Touring, 1919
At the annual meeting of the directors of the Jewish Home for the
985
Aged,
Rochester,
N.
Y.,
the
following
officers were elected: President, Lester
Reo "6" Touring, 1918
875
Nusbaum; first vice-president, William Brown; second vice-president, Mrs.
Iteo 114" 1917
Toby Goldman; third vice-president, Mrs. Reuben Goldstein; recording
525
secretary, Joseph E. Silverstein; financial secretary, Anna Wolfe; treasurer,
Reo "4" 1916
475
Frank Sheman.
Grant "6" 1919
• • • •
490
THOMAS J. DOYLE
732 Woodward Avenue
Glendale 7117
Further Reduction
T E R M S . Half Down, Balance Easy Monthly Payments
M. A. YOUNG,
New Jerusalem Rises
From Ancient Ashes
(Continued From Page 1.)
Today, on the site of Solomon's tem-
ple, stands the Mosque of Omar. It
is built over a great rock, held holy
from the dawn of history. Beneath
the great stone, say the Moslems. is
the well of souls' where the dead
of Islam gather to pray. There is a
small cavern in the rock, and this ac-
cording to a tradition, is the piece
where the first rites of Masonry were
performed by Solomon.
"While the changes in the physi-
cal appearance of Jerusalem and in
the make-up of its population oc-
curred even under Moslem rule, there
are many far-reaching changes that
have taken place only since the ex-1
pulsion of the Turks. The city has
been unhealthful for a long time,
largely because of a lack of an ade-
quate and pure water supply. De-
pendence was placed entirely upon
dirty cisterns. After the occupation
of Jerusalem by General Allenby Dee.
11, 1917, an old uncompleted project
of the Romans to bring water to the
city was pushed rapidly to comple-
tion. The system employs a never
failing spring 15 miles to the north
beyond Bethlehem and a reservoir of
5,000,1300 gallons capacity constructed
by Pontius Pilate as a part of the old
project. Within a few months after
the expulsion of the Turks the new
system was delivering to the city
through a six-inch pipe—the modern
aqueduct-320,000 gallons of water a
day. Thus the greatest need of the
city was supplied and planning was
660 Woodward Ave., at Brady
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•
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From the President's Desk
DETROIT MICH.,
—
Talk No. 25
Andy
THE TELEGRAPH
OPERATOR
Philadelphia.—Vampire flappery—the knee-high skirts and the transpar-
ent waists—are the "rags" that waved in front of modern men are turning
them back to "animals." In an Atonement Day sermon recently at Rene-
seth Israel synagogue, the Rev. Dr. Joseph Krauskopf warned of "the im-
modesty in dress" and called upon men and women to "take a stiff dose of
the old-time religion to stiffen society's moral backbone."
•
• • •
PARIS—The Jewish Community of Minsk has adopted a resolution ap-
pealing to humanity for protection against the Poles whose cruelty is inde-
scribable, according to a dispatch received here from Kovno. The dispatch
adds that the entire Jewish population of Lithuania is in serious danger of
begun along other lines to improve of reaching and even overtopping the pogroms by the advancing Polish troops because the Jews of Vilna and other
centers freely and publicly manifested their pro-Lithuanian sympathies.
the conditions of sanitation.
heights which it reached in its golden
Expulsion of Turks.
age. When modern irrigation works,
Two of the most pregnant events now planned, bring back to its old
BERLIN—A Lithuanian delegation consisting of Professor Czepinski,
in the long and event-crowded his- productiveness the 'land flowing with leader of the Social Democrats; ex-Premier Slezeeitz, vice-president of the
tory of Jerusalem were the expulsion milk and honey,' it is probable that Lithuanian Seim Staugaitis, and Dr. Soloweitchick, Minister of Jewish Af-
of the Turks by the British in 1917, the population of Jerusalem, now be- fairs, is reported to have arrived at Koenigsburg. The delegation it is stated
exactly 400 years after Turkish rule tween 60,000 and 70,000, will increase will appeal to the various powers of Western Europe for protection of Lithu-
began; and the giving of a mandate many fold; and though the new Jeru- anian independence which is now threatened by the Polish invasion.
•
•
•
over l'alestine to Great Britian, by salem that promises to spring up out-
the Supreme Council of the Allies side the walls will probably enjoy •
In memory of her late husband Mrs. I. Loewenherg, authoress and civic
Powers at San Remo, Italy, April 25, most of the physical and social aids worker of San Francisco, Cal., has made donations to eleven local charities.
1920.
to community life that this modern The Pacific Hebrew Orphan Asylum, the Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum
"General Allenby announced that age makes possible, travelers to the and the Protestant Orphan Asylum head the list with $1,000 each. Other
though his forces were predominant- city may safely count upon finding beneficiaries are the San Bruno Community House, Emanu-El Sisterhood,
ly British, he considered that he was the old city still in truth the shrine San Francisco Tuberculosis Association, San Francisco Association for the
commanding an Allied army and act- of the religious world, its holy places Blind, Y. W. C. A., Salvation Army, Associated Charities and Happyland
ing entirely in behalf of the Allies. carefully preserved, its cramped little Charities.
•
• •
He made his conquest of the city streets still harboring much of the
more difficult by refraining from fir- atmosphere of the days of old.
Rabbi Maxwell Silver, formerly of the Putnam Ave. Temple, Brooklyn,
i ng a single shell into the city, and one
and of Lafayette, Ind., has been unanimously elected Rabbi of the Flushing
of the first orders issued after occu-
Division of the Free Synagogue. Rabbi Silver, who is a graduate of the
pation was that no building be de-
POGROM IS REPORTED.
Hebrew Union College, has rendered excellent service in the middle west
stroyed or damaged and that even
congregation and in the Brooklyn pulpit where he made a fine stand for
alterations of buildings be prohibited
pulpit freedom. The installation exercises at which Judge Elkus and Dr.
Carlsbad.—As a result of inciting
except under permits issued by the au-
Wise spoke took place on Friday evening, Oct. 8th.
thorities. The announced reason for speeches against the Jews made at a
the taking of these steps was the meeting of Czecho-Slovakian legion-
CARLSBAD—A number of public gatherings have recently been held in
desire that the Holy City and its aries in Neustad, 70 legionaires on Prague at which the socialization of the schools was demanded. In con-
many sacred places the preserved in- their way from the meeting ill-treated
servative circles fear of a Bolshevist revolution seems to prevail. "Venkov,"
a
number
of
Jews
and
robbed
a
con-
violate. A beginning has been made
the official organ of the Agrarian party, published an article in which the
toward planning the future growth of siderable number of Jewish stores,
says a report received here from Neu- Jews are threatened with pogroms in the event the Bolsheviki should make
the citso that structures erecte
stad.
a move towards a revolution. The Jewish National Council of Czecho-Slo-
henceforth shall have an architecture
vakia has appealed to the executive of the Agrarian party to discontinue its
practical enough for modern needs
anti-Jewish propaganda.
but. which shall harmonize as nearly
• •
•
LEMBERG.—The Ukrainian lead-
•
as possible with the dominant an- er, l'etlura, has now undertaken a
Palestine has natural possibilities of becoming one of the world's great
cient architecture.
series of pogroms in a number of health resorts, according to Dr. Henry Keller, New York physician, former
With modern jurisprudence func- Galician towns. Pogroms have taken
member of the American Zionist Medical Unit, which has been waging war
tinning, with competent engineersplace in Dealtyn, Kalusz and Stanis- on disease in the Holy Land for over two years. "Palestine, owing to
its
setting about the solution of its prob. tau. In Stanislau 12 Jews were killed,
topography. its variegated climate, its mountainous regions of various alti-
Isms of sanitation and construction, 20 Jews perished around Stanislau.
tudes and its eight months of continuous sunshine, together with its beau-
and with a spirit of confidence actuat- In adcrtion a large number of Jews
ing all of the many groups of its were cast out of trains and thrown tiful landscapes and picturesque environment, is destined to become the
mecca for health seekers as well as pleasure seekers," he said.
population, Jerusalem gives promise out of wind Own.
AT YOUR SERVICE!
That's all Andrew Carnegie was
when he began to realize what
HIS possibilities were.
Yet there are hundreds — yes,
thousands of telegraph operators
in this country today who draw
their pay—just as Carnegie did
—and spend it all—just as Car-
negie DID NOT.
had Andy, the operator, not saved then from his
meager wage, he would have missed those earlier
opportunities which later made him steel king-
rn illio n a ir e—ph ila n throp is t.
Are you prepared for your FIRST opportunity?
F
IRS
STATH A NKT
ONNOWN4
INS
JEWEL FEATHER MATTRESS & BEDDING CO.
WILL J. DENT, Mgr,
Improved
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