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October 22, 1920 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1920-10-22

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

PAGE TWELVE

•••••••■ ••

WEEKLY USED CAR BULLETIN

CADILLAC

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.

Bucknell & Knowhon

1012 Michigan Ave.

A used car is only as good as
the firm you do business with

Ed. Novak

KOVNO—General Balachow itz, the Russian military commander, who
has for some time been in alliance with the Poles, has occupied Minsk.
• • •
The new synagog of the Olney Shalom Synagog at Harrisburg, Pa., has
been dedicated.

The Twenty-third Annual Convention of the Zionist Organization of
America, is scheduled to begin at Buffalo, N. Y., on Thanksgiving Day, No-
vember 25.

Dr. Emanuel Schreiber has been elected by Temple Emanuel, of Los Angeles,
a recently formed Reform congregation, to fill the pulpit for the coming year.

ROME—Vittorio Leone Morpurgo, wealthy Jewish resident of Trieste
who recently died there bequeathed his large fortune to the "Kehillah" of
that city and Palestine funds,
according to a report received here.
'

THOMAS J. DOYLE

732 Woodward Avenue

Glendale 7117

MEMBER D. A. D. A.

Made in Detroit

eiliarettes

A New Product
An Old Firm

Made from the best parts of best
Kentucky tobacco leaves.

Sold All Over Town

John J. Bagley e? Company

Manufacturers Since 1850

Special Sunday Supper

5:30 P. M. to 1:00 A. M.

CONCERT BY FAMOUS HUNGARIAN GYPSY BAND

FIRST CLASS SERVICE

KLEIN & LEITNER

NEW YORK—Phillip Lieboff, statistician for the Metropolitan Life In-
surance Company, and a well known figure in insurance circles, died recently
at the Lebanon hospital, this city,. from typhoid fever.

RESTAURANT

BERLIN—German-Jewish newspapers have offered the suggestion and
have now begun the propaganda for a meeting of a Jewish world congress
to be held at the same time and place as the Assembly of the league of Nations.
• • •
VIENNA—In the campaign for the forthcoming elections to the Austrian
Diet, the Communists have excluded from their list of candidates all Jewish
intellectuals.

RIGA—. relief conference at which all the Jews in Latvia are repre-
sented is at present meeting in this city. Among the fifty delegates present
are also representatives of the joint distribution committee.


CAIRO—Several persons are reported to have been killed in an explo-
sion of ammunition which occurred in Rafa. Rafa is on the border line
which separates Egypt from Palestine . .

25 BROADWAY

Mr. Tobias Roth, who for the past fifteen years has been associated in the
capacity of superintendent with the Emanu-El Brotherhood, New York city, has
accepted a call from the Jewish Young Men's Association of Rochester, N. Y.

USED CARS

10
HUDSON TAXI

SAM LEVISON, Mgr.

LONDON—The foreign office has cabled instructions to Palestine to
recruit 500 Jewish young men in order to reinforce the Jewish I.egion, a
small company of which is still in service in that country.

WARSAW—The Polish government has closed and requisitioned a
number of synagogues in this city. These synagogues were being used on
permits issued by the old Czarist overnnsient.

Mich. Ave. and 31st St.

Private Appearing Cars
Limousines—for all
occasions

LONDON—Henri Bergson delivered the chief address at the Interna-
tional Congress of l'hilosophers which is at present meeting at Oxford. Vis-
count Haldane, who was chairman of the session, addressed by Bergson,
lauded his work and referred to him as the most prominent living philosopher.
• • •
ZURICH—According to university authorities, there are more than 2,000
Jewish students who are literally starving. The university administrations
have organized a relief committee in their behalf but the assistance rendered
is totally inadequate and a special appeal is directed to American Jews.
• •
KOVNO—Every element and party of the Jews in Lithuania is repre-
sented on the special committee which has been formed in Kovno for the
defense of Lithuanian independence and the campaign to drive back the in-
vading Poles from Vilna.

Louis C. Lowenstein, of I.ynn, Mass., and former professor of science at
Lehigh University, was injured in an automobile accident at Newton Centre,
Mass., Saturday afternoon. Mr. Lowenstein is a former Philadelphian and
brother of Mr. Sidney Lowenstein, of this city.

VIENNA—The Ukrainian government in Eastern Galicia has issued an
official protest against the recent pogroms which are reported to have been
made by Petlura's troops. The protest expresses compassion for the Jewish
victims and accuses the Polish authorities of responsibility in these pogroms,
since they failed to intervene although they were in a positon to do so.
• •
WORCESTER, MASS.—Delegates representing the various branches of
the Jewish Co-operative Society of America, who are in conference here,
adopted a resolution today calling on the American government to free all
political prisoners. Another resolution asks the government to recognize the
Soviet government of Russia. • • •

Poson—The Jewish merchant Erich Bock was arrested and shot by the
Poles. Bock was a prominent figure in the Jewish community of Posen.
The reason for his execution is unknown. It is said that he was strongly
pro-German, but Poland is not at present at war with Germany. The unfor-
tunate incident caused great sorrow among the local Jewish population.
• • •
BERLIN—The Jewish children of Germany, who now suffer so much
at the hand of their anti-Semitic schoolmates, have started an organization
of their own to combat anti-Semitism in Germany. They have prepared
little posters and handbills which are being put up or distributed at public
kiosks and other places frequented by the public.

Miss Jane Manner returned from a three months stay abroad recently, bring-
ing with her exclusive reading rights of langwill's new play, "The Cockpit."
She was entertained at luncheon by Mr. and Mrs. Zangv,•ill in their home, Far
End, East Preston. Another interesting experience was the day spent with Mr.
and Mrs. Claude Montefiore at Cold East, Southampton.

John M. Rothchild, one of the leading specialists in commercial and corpora-
tion law and senior member of the law firm of Rothchild, Golden & Rothchild,
of San Francisco. Cal., died recently. Mr. Rothchild, who was 68 years old at
the time of his death, was born in Louisville, Ky. His wife died three years
ago. Before her marriage she was Miss Adelaide Marx, of San Francisco.
♦ •
After a two years' agitation of the subject by physicians in charge of the
Baltimore (Md.) Hebrew hospital, a dental clinic has been established there.
The new clinic was made possible by a gift of $10,000 from Dr. Harry Adler.
as a memorial to his parents, the late Charles and Caroline Adler. Dr. Adler
has ken- greatly interested in the work of Hebrew hospital, and believes that
proper care of the teeth will do away with many ailments now ascribed to other

scources.

• • •

With the death of Joseph A. Karch, who was drowned recently near Cleve-
land, Buffalo lost one of the most brilliant newspapermen in the city and local
Jewry was bereaved of one of its finest members and workers, writes the Buffalo
Jewish paper. Joseph Karch was horn in Gloversville. During his two years'
residence in Buffalo he worked as a reporter on the News and the Courier. lie
was trained for his work here and in Cleveland, and in the Columbia University
ted in 1916.
School of Journalism, from which he was gradua

Emil Friend. of Hinsdale, famous in financial and newspaper circles as
"Boersianer," under which pen name he wrote articles on finance which were
widely published throughout the country, died at the Sacred Heart Sanitarium
in Milwaukee last Saturday. Recently Mr. Friend published an open letter to
the Polish Ambassador at Washington denouncing Polish attacks on the Jews,
which was republished broadcast. "Boersianer" was born in Prague, Austria,
in 1863, and was a graduate of the University of Vienna.

Elma Ehrlich Levinger, one of our frequent contributors, has been awarded
a prize of $250 by the Drama League of America for the best one-act play
dealing with Biblical subject. The first prize, for which only longer plays
were eligible, was not awarded, as the judges unanimously considered Mrs.
Levinger's play, "Jephtha's Daughter," the best of the 150 plays submitted. Mrs.
Levinger is the wife of Rabbi Lee Levinger, executive director of the Ninety-
second Street Y. M. H. A., of New Yrok City.

Rabbi Israel J. Sarasohn (II. U. C., 1916) has accepted a call from Con-
gregation Beer Chayim of Cumberland, Md. Rabbi Sarasohn's first charge
was at Natchez, Miss., and after leaving his post as army chaplain during
the war, he was at the head of the Augusta, Ga., congregation. His home
was in Worcester, Mass., and he is a graduate of Clarke University. He is
a young man of zeal and ability and the congregation will prosper under his
leadership. • • •

Select Dancing Nightly

Palais de Danse

ALKON AUTO SALES

MI Palmer West, Near Woodward

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From the President's Desk—Talk No. 25

Andy

THE TELEGRAPH
OPERATOR

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-
millionaire—philanthropist.
Are you prepared for your FIRST opportunity?



'

IRS

The project for building a Jewish Hospital in Buffalo, N. Y., which was
first discussed several years ago and temporarily given up on account of the
war. has been taken up again. A temporary board of directors was named
with Dr. Julius Ullman as president, and preliminary steps for carrying the
project through have been taken The organization was incorporated it'
1916. Following are the names of the temporary officers: Dr. Julius Ull-
OF DETROIT
man, president; Joseph Coplon and Harry Harriton, vice-presidents; Arthur
Victor, treasurer, and Israel G. Hollender, secretary.
• •
The marriage of Rosa Raisa, famous dramatic soprano, and Giacomo
Rimini. Italian baritone singer. who has sung with her in opera and concert.
took place in Neples, Italy, just before they sailed for this country to commence
their concert and operatic engagements for this season. The young couple arrived di. Abraham Cooper
David Cooper
in New York several days ago on the Italian liner Duca degli Muni, Mine.
Raisa then met her father, whom she had not seen for ten years. He is living
its the Bronx temporarily. Mme. Raisa's father came from Russian Poland after
many hardships due to the war. The family suffered in a pogrom at Bialistock
years ago during the great singer's childhood.
2219 Dime Bank
• • •
Cadillac 7509
A conference of Polish Jews for the purpose of considering the Jewish
situation there, was recently opened in Warsaw. The government was officially
represented at the opening by Minister Dashinsky and Minister Wrublewsky.
Fire
Burglary and Theft
Among the Jewish members of the conference are the Deputies Farbstein, Green-
Plate Glass
Stealth and Accident
baum, Shipper and Noah Prilutzky. Eliezer Kirshbaum represents the orthodox
Automobile
Compensation
community and Diamond and Levenstein represent the assimilators. The chair-
man of the conference is Mr. Sterling. Dashinsky's address was regarded as
most encouraging and it is expected that much good will come out of the
deliberations.

RATE
STATE EiANKT

COOPER INSURANCE AGENCY

GENERAL INSURANCE SERVICE

A Policy With Us Means Security

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