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October 28, 1921 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1921-10-28

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

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PAGE. TWELVE

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Factory Cost Syst•ms
Office Bookkeeping Systems
Monthly Reports of Operations

A u 41 i t.
Tan R•p•rts
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1446 :

Accountants and Auditors

1

618 FORD BUILDING

TELEPHONE MAIN 5464

1

OMces:
New York City
Syracuse, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.

Resident Partner:
WILLIAM B. ISENBERG
Certified Public Accountant
(New York and Michigan)

• •



We welcome Detroiters and are glad to

give

any information desired about I.os Angeles.
Our reputation in Detroit is our recommendation .

General Realty Co.

1004 Wright & Callender Bldg,
Los Angeles, Calif.

CARL SHAPIRO
We Specialise in Business Property.

CARL SUMETZ

---

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HELMAR

TURKISH

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• • • •



the President's Desk—Talk No. 74.

"Biggest Gold Reserve
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the situation up In a recent address

to Detroit business men.

He also suggested the remedy

"WOltK." When hundreds of thou-
sands of American workers—every-
body in our various industries, is

willing to give his full share of labor
and effort and co-operation for those

dollars, we will all have more money.

Are you doing your share to get t at gold out
of "reserve" and back into "circulation?" Put
some of the money you earn into a "Reserve" of
your own. Open a Savings Account with us.

, .......L.cjec.......464„...4.4,

Flagg
STATE DANK
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"A Trustworthy House"

WILLIAMS & HASTINGS, INC.

— Hupmobiles

"

Before you buy a new or used car, come in, get acquainted
with as. We have a complete line of standard makes in
used cars. Our stock includes Buick,. Dodges, Maxwell.
Reo, Hudson, Franklin.

5901 Woodward Ave.

4116 Woodward Ave.

Sidney L. Alexander

.

Authorized

LICENSED
ADJUSTER

;
1

i

J. Wolovsky, editor of the Canadian • Eagle, states that the Jews of
Canada are prepared to open a bank in Palestine with a capital of £1,000,-
000. The bank, he maid, would concentrate on furthering the development
of the house-building industry.
• • • •
Three hundred Jewish children from • the famine districts along the
Volga river are expected in Witebsk within a few days. They will be
cared for by the local Jewish community, which has received aid for the
purpose from relief institutions.
• . • •
Dr. Feitelowitch, the discoverer of the black Jews of Abyssinia, who
recently returned from that country, is on his way to the United States,
where he will conduct a campaign for financial means to improve the cul-
tural and material status of the Falaches.
• • * •
It is reported that Dr. Brutzkus, prominent Jewish communal worker
from Moscow, is about to be named Minister of Jewish Affairs in the
I ithuanian Cabinet, to take the place of Dr. Solowecjik, who was recently
elected member of the Zionist Executive.
• • • •
At a meeting in Bialostok, Ex-Premier Wittos delivered a bitter attack
against Jews, whom he blamed for the decrease in the value of the Polish
mark. Ile urged Poles to boycott the Jewish population of the city and to
make their economic existence impossible.
• • • •
The "Achuzuh" at Siebenburgen, Austria, has signed an agreement with
the National Fund by which it will be permitted to settle 300 families in
the vicinity of Merchuvyuh, Palestine. The new colonists are prepared to
leave for Palestine within a month and plan to live by cattle and sheep
raising.

The Rishon Le-Zion, Palestine, community committee has signed an
agreement with an engineering company in Prague for the building of a
water system and electric plant. The new water system will greatly increase
the water supply of the colony and is expected to have a salutary effect
on the agricultural output.

GREATEST VALUE OF ALL CIGARETTES

From



Colonel Young of the British Colonial Office, sent to investigate condi-
tions in Palestine, has arrived in Jerusalem. He is accompanied by Major
Vernon. It was announced before Colonel Young left England that no
definite decision on British policies would be taken before his report was
presented. • • • •

CIGARETTES

p

A report published in Berlin states that the Commissar of Education at
Moscow has ordered the immediate cloning of all Jewish Chedorim and
Yeshivoth.
. • • •
The Korrespondenzia W'ashawska, a Warsaw news agency, reports that
i n the near future a well known Polish orientalist will be appointed Polish
consul in Jaffa.
• •
A large transport of tools collected in Berlin, New York and London
has arrived in Miscow and will be distributed by the Ort among the Jewish
workingmen of Moscow.

• •

When in LosAngeles, See Us

E LMAR f.

OCTOBER cd, 1921

Announcing to Chronicle readers the au-
thorization of Sidney L. Alexander by State In-
surance Commissioner L. T. Hands of Lansing
Lobe a licensed adjustor of claims through 1.)s.,
by fire.
In addition to adjustments of claims through
loss by fire, Mr. Alexander will conduct an or-
ganization at his present address, No. 409 Vin-
ton Building, for the adjustment and settlement
of all commercial claims and differences.

Professor Albert Einstein recently attended a performance of Perez
Ilirschbein's Yiddish play, "Die Poste Kretchme," (The Idle Inn), in Berlin.
Ile has written a letter of appreciation to the directors of the Yiddish Vilna
Art Theater, which produced the drama, describing the deep impression
the production made upon him. • • •

The Joint Distribution Committee closed its offices in Jerusalem on
Sept. 30. The liquidation of practically all the activities of the American
relief organization has been completed. Dr. De Sole Poole, former Joint
director, will remain in Palestine as head of the newly formed Loan Bank
created on the initiative of the Joint.
• * • •
The Jews of Vilna will not be permitted to boycott the government
which has been established by the Poles in Vilna, according to a statement
made by the Vilna Minister of Interior, Dr. Sienkewicz, in a conversation
with the Jewish representative, Dr. Wigodsky. The minister demanded that
the Jews of the city go to the polls together with other residents of Vilna.

The daily Jerusalem nationalist paper, Philistine, reports that in Naza-
reth and other Galilean cities Moslem organizations have been formed which
oppose the present Arab delegation which is now negotiating in London.1
These newly formed societies have sent a common protest against the dele-
gation to Sir Herbert Samuel. In local Arab circles it iv accepted that
the delegation will soon be recalled to Palestine.
• • •
Dr. Cyrus Adler of Philadelphia, who, after the death of Dr. Solomon
Schechter, accented the office of president of the Jewish Theological Sem-
inary of New fork temporarily, has again consented to act as head of the
institution for the coming year. Dr. Antler will retain his position at the
Dropsie College in Philadelphia and will visit New York regularly to attend
to his duties at the seminary.
• • *
The directors of the Vilna Kehillah have refused a grant of 700,000
Polish marks assigned them by the Joint Distribution Committee for the
maintenance of 100 war orphans of that city. The money was awarded
quite some time ago but for various reasons was not forwarded to the
community officials, who now flatly refuse the subsidy and declare that it
in insufficient for the purpose. • «

In many small towns throughout Poland and East Galicia, where Jews,
constitute a large majority of the population, census officials do not per..
mit them to register Yiddish as their mother tongue and consequently Jews •
are automatically entered as Poles. The Jewish Sejm Club in Warsaw has
filed a protest with the Minister of Interior demanding an investigation and
the punishment of the guilty officials.
• • •
Professor Ponikowski, Polish Premier and Minister of Education and
Religion, has revoked the limitation according to which only a small number
of Jewish students were permitted entrance into the Lember University.'
Following the intervention of Jewish Sejm deputies, Ponikowski has
promised to make the entrance requirements of Jewish students into Polish
high schools less stringent.

Messrs. Busker and Rappaport have arrived in Lemberg for the purpose
of co-ordinating the activities of all organizations working on behalf of
the Jewish refugees from Russia and the Ukraine. Busker intends to create
in Lemberg a joint committee which will consist of representatives of the
America Bias, the Joint Distribution Committee, the Ukrainian Verband
and the Polish National Council.
• • • •
The French consulates in Palestine and Syria have received instructions
from their government in Paris to adopt a more friendly attitude towards
Zionism. It will be remembered that recently Buren Katzenellenson, leader
of the Palestine Labor party, appealed to Jean Lunge against French anti-
Zionist machinations in the Near East. Lunge on that occasion promised
to bring the matter before the French chamber.
• • •
It is learned here from well informed sources that the withdrawal of
Jewish aldermen from the Warsaw municipal council following the failure
of the council to grant Jews permission to trade on the Saturday evening
before Rosh Ilashona has had a telling effect and it is understood that the
next meeting of the aldermen board will consider the withdrawal of the
prohibition to trade on the Staurday evenings which come within the holi-
day period.
• • • •
The Jews of Posen are endeavoring, as far as possible, to refrain from
participating in the current Polish census. As matters now stand, they
would be forced to register either as l'oles or Germans and in either case
they would arouse the wrath of one of the parties. In an attempt to
remain neutral, therefore, and to save themselves from reprisals, they are
avoiding the giving of any information. A similar movement exists in East •
Galicia, where conditions are somewhat similar.
• • • •
The Council of the League of Nations which met in Geneva decided to
appoint a sub-committee which will collect information regarding the na-
tional status of inhabitants in the mandated countries and will not come
to a definite decision on the drafts of the mandates till such reports are
forthcomnig. The league discussed the report of the Permanent Mandate
Commission and announced that it was studying the reports on the man-
dates of all countries with the exception of those on Palestine and Meso-
potamia.
• •





Dr. Angelo Puellido, a member of the Spanish Senate, has published a
remarkable booklet in London in which he appeals for a reconciliation
between the Spanish and Jewish peoples, and attempts to explain that much
has changed since the days of the Inquisition and the Expulsion in I492.
The senator especially urges Sefardic Jews to return and assures them of
excellent treatment. Commenting on the booklet, the Manchester Guardian
remarks that Jews would obviously require a very definite assurance re-
warding the benefit such a return could have for them.

The anti-Semitic feeling in Germany, which has been on the increase
since the end of the war brought the problem of East European Jews into
the foreground, has served to cement together a number of political fac-
tions into a party, now definitely organized, which calls itself the German
Social Party. Its platform openly urges the expulsion of East European
Jews who entered the country since Hold and the surveillence of all others
as aliens. At the foundation meeting of the party speeches were made
ized.
against the kaiser, who was attacked fo.rthb:ei j ne g w.:, J huds aejin

o l e.dk •
c oBmrpelsatin Lti t fiv
Club
lab against the
In
who have been conducting a systematic
authorities
s r o r to e in
military a n e
campaign of Jew-baiting, the Polish War Minister made an open declara-
tion in the Sejm that the Jews of Brest-I,itovsk were communists and that
the military authorities were therefore justified in their repressive tactics.
The Jewish Seim Club interpolated the War Minister on an incident in which
the well known Rabbi Suchwalta was beaten and robbed by Polish privates
The minister replied that the incident wag unfortunate and that he regretted
that the guilty ones had not been apprehended.

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$ 2350

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fie-frbo.„

This is a reduction of $625 from its
former trice, and of $1290 from its
price a ',ear ago. Knowing what this
car is, w: say with utter confidence that
nothint in the market even approaches
its valte. Once you ride in it, and drive
it, you will say the same.

=.•

....4

,..k

C

The Toting Car . formerly $2975 . . is now $2350

The Rnabout .. formerly $2975 .. is now $2350
The Oupe . . . . formerly $3750 .. is now $3125

The f..dan . . . . formerly $3975 .. is now $3350
.

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New prices effective, October

.

:11) •
DI

.n.

24, 1921

a'
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D.


. =
e. . Packard Motor Car • Company

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arm

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