PIED alt011:11,111511 61 RON ICLE
PAGE EIGHT
NEW YEAR GREETINGS
CARNEY CEMENT CO.
District Sales
460 BOOK BUILDING
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Wetsmus
1590 St. Clair Ave.
—
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
John B. Coffey & Brother
Refrigerating and Ice
Making Machinery
8050 Grand River Avenue
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wolfgang and Family
3714 Brush
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a happy and Prosperous New Year.
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Wyner and Family
Garfield 1927
et—
8630 lieaubien St.
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a Happy and l'rosperous New Year.
WILLIAM A. HAHN
Land Contracts
1709-10 First National Bank Bldg.
Woodward Ave. at Cadillac Sq.
Telephone Main 1305
Mr. and Mrs. R. Zuielsack and son Sheldon
8819 Dexter Blvd.
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
Mr. and Mrs. M. Zack and Family
121 Josephine St.
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
8730 Second Blvd.
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a floppy and Prosperous New Year.
Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Wolf and Family
1237 Broadway
Extends his best wishes to his relatives and friends'
for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
7454 Churchill Ave.
Extend their hest wishes to their relatives and friends
for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
Phone Glendale 6458
Mr. Moe Leiter
Mr. Israel Zither
as District Manager
Mr. and Mrs. I. Louis Zuieback
A TYPICAL GREAT-WEST LIFE
Mr. and Mrs. H. Y•nover and Family
LIBERTY HOME
BEVERAGE CO.
1036 East Kirby Ave.
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a Ilappy and Prosperous New Year.
Liberty and Detroit Brands
Mr. and Mrs. I. S. Yarrows and Family
Pure Barley Malt Syrup
Perfection and Maltobop Prepared,
646 East Ferry Ave.
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a Happy and l'rosperous New Year.
Milt Syrup, Hops, Crown Corks
Capping Machines, Etc.
—z —
1367 MICHIGAN AVENUE
Detroit, Mich.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Ziskind and Family
ACTUAL RESULT
Mr. and Mrs. Jos. A. Zechman and Family
404 East Ferry Ave.
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a Ilappy and Prosperous New Year.
Policy issued April, 1902.
No. 15258. Age 38.
$2,000. 20 Year End., 20 D. P.
S. A. Premium $55.75.
Total Premiums paid in
20 years $2,230.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ziff and Family
654 Medbury Ave.
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
Mr. and Mn. Leo Zuckerman and Family
699 East Kirby Ave.
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
51 Edison Ave.
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a Happy and Prosperous New Year
IWAIOFIRRS I
TOOL.
the Appointment of
2448 Hazelwood Ave.
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a happy and Prosperous New Year.
—
—
Announces
end Mrs. M. H. Zackheim and Family
Mr. ■
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Warren and Family
1923 Glynn Court
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
The Great West-Life
Assurance Co.
Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Zuckerman and Family
651 King Ave.
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
W—(Continued)
Phone Cherry 2626
JO
I
en in from the fields among the corn
and had passed over you.
Ruth and Shulamith they are the
two extremes, the two opposing ideals
By LEO KENIC
of woman and womanhood. Ruth is
passivity, the symbol of pious humil-
2829.33 Baker St.
(Copyright, 1922, Jewish Corre-
ity. Shulamith is dark and comely,
Mk at Halm
Nat Ills
IL II. Milk.. Pron.
spondence Bureau.)
burned with the sun and with passion.
Phones West 380.689.156
A. L. KOWA &ley:Tree.
I think Ruth must have been a blond
Of the Bibical Shulamith one would pole and blond. "Thy people shall be
my people, and thy God my God.
rather think in winter. It is cold out-
16181MIMIOSIS8'IMMOSSIMNIMISVIMISIISIC
Whither thou goest, I will go."
side, and we are hemmed in in our cul-
Shalamith could not have said that.
tured selves. How beautiful it is then
If she had found herself placed like
to call to life the passion-glowing, sun-
Ruth, she would have said to Naomi,
burned Biblical Shalamith. She nes-
"Whither thou goest I will run after
tles close in the shadows of her tent,
thee." Shulamith is too tempestuous,
she is sick of love. She has annointed
her form with perfume, with myrh too full of passion. She could not fol-
and frankincense, with all powders of low quietly after anyone.
And Ruth—even by the side of the
the merchant, and she ss waiting for
her beloved, for Solomon. Her bed is calm and peaceful Naomi—Ruth was
the ideal of quietness and humility.
decked with golden apples which are
She lacks the embitteredness of Na-
reflected in her bronzen form. Slid-
omi, notwithstanding that she is much fi
enly, he knocks, he whom her soul lov-
younger, and must have felt her loss
eth.
more keenly.
How shall Igo down to open for
"Whither thou goest, I will go." No
him? she asks. I have washed my feet, atom of revlot. Ruts is permeated
how shall I defile them?
with quiet faith, full of humility; and
So he goes, arid she rises from her when the wise Naomi tells her to go
bed, and she runs after him in the city out at night and lie down at the end
in the streets, and in the broadways , of the heap of corn, at the feet of Boaz
and she asks, "Saw ye him whom my she goes out and uncovers his feet and
lies her down.
soul loveth?"
Shulamith would never have done
The watchmen that go shout the
city find her and smite her. "I charge that. She is the passion of love; Ruth
is
its calm.
ye that ye stir not up nor wake my
One would rather think of Ruth in
love till he please.'
summer, when nature overcomes us.
Of the Biblical Shalamith one would
Immediately you mention the name
rather think in winter.
In summer, when we feel ourselves "Ruth," it is as if a cool wind stole
called out to the field and wood, we over you out of the field among the
would rather ponder on the quiet Bib- corn.
Which is more Jewish? The sun-
lical Ruth.
If you but think of the name of burned Shulamith or the quiet Ruth?
Which of these two Biblical figures
Ruth,
it
is
as
if
a
cool
wind
had
stol-
. %8VMSISIM.
18%3CIMICKSW88MCIfiWISISMVISISWMICWIMA
express more truly the Jewish type of
woman?
flow solitary is Ruth among the
Biblical women! Miriam, Judith,'
Shulamith, they are all such strong
heroic figures. If we put Ruth at
their side she looks almost like a shad.
ow against them. The Book of Ruth is
the quietest poem-novel in the Bible.
Ruth is like a stranger in the immor-
tal pantheon of prophets, prophetesses
and kings. A little quiet stream has
hidden itself in a valley among fire-
splitting volcanoes.
"Thy people shall be my people, and
1../Ilika
whither thou goest I will go."
Shulamith, like the rest of the Bib-
lical women, is by temperament a
slaughter or younger sister of those
manly giants the prophets.
Ruth is like a stranger among them.
It is not for nothing that the old sages
and scribes constantly referred to her
as "Ruth the Moabite,"—Ruth who
came to us out of the fields of Moab.
She recalls the most placid of Raph-
el's Madonnas.
41," rib
Shulamith is storm-tossed love.
Ruth is the calmness of love. She is
statis. Shulamith is dynamic. These
two women are the eternal motives of
all literature, and we have not yet ex-
hausted their mentality.
Which is more faithful? Shulamith
anoints her form and feet for the sake
of her beloved, and allows him to go
away when he comes. fearing lest she
defile her feet by going down to open
for him. Ruth again, has attached
herself so thoroughly to her Jewish
husband that she is prepared to adopt
his family, his nation. and his God.
She obeys unhesitatingly when Naomi
tells her to go out at night and lie
down at the feet of Boaz.
Shulamith is the jealous priestess,
watching over her love. Ruth is the
pious, obedient servant of her love.
.ftIIPMWMWIIIMMWIIMNflRVMM
And yet Ruth is not wholly solitary
in our Bible. She is not quite alone
in our ancient and modern history.
There comes to mind Mille!, that most
saintly figure in our history. He has
probably condemned less than any
other Jewish prophet or sage. He lov-
ed more and pardoned more than did
after him his disciples and his follow-
ers.
King David, too, inherited some-
thing from his grandmother, (How
ran we think of Ruth as being old!)
Otherwise, he could not have sung his
psalms "when he fled from Absolom
his son."
And in more modern Jewish history,
Ruth has her counterparts also. I
would say the Baal Shem, Reb Nach-
man the Rabbi of Aisle (in "Between
two Mountains," by I. L. Peretz) are
grandchildren of Ruth and not of
Shulamith.
Shulamith is the ripened glowing
Judasim of summer, Ruth is its cool
of morn, its early spring, when the
world is still in dream, and quiet.
JEWISH WOMEN
Office Towels Our Specialty
RESULT:
Cheque sent as follows:—
Matured End.
Detroit Towel Supply Co.
Finsilver's
Fish & Poultry Market
An Up-to-the-Minute, Sanitary Market
that merits your patronage.
1
A Complete Line of
FRESH, SALTED AND SMOKED FISH
Poultry Dressed Daily
Choke Kosher Meats
We Deliver
-
ilIeWasifiliT4I
VI
Phone Garfield 3912
ET%
---
AMIN V olfsif If 47%1111111
armaiisrarr
16
Cash Div..
$2,000.00
1,142.00
Settlement ..
$3,142.00
THE GREAT-WEST LIFE
ASSURANCE COMPANY
Condensed statement for 1921, showing development of last five years.
1921
'
$ 54,227,962.00
New Business Issued
(Excluding Group Insurance)
286,718,765.00
Business in Force
(Excluding Group Insurance)
Income (Premiums and Interest) 11,316,222.80
2,196,218.09
Surplus Earned
2,963,331.94
Payments to Policyholders.
1916
$ 25,575,373.00
133,016,448.00
5,594,041.34
746,980.03
1,725,197.12
DURING 1921-
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)
(g)
The Company's leading position in new business production
has been amply maintained.
The rate of interest has been increased from 7.20% to
7.5W; .
An important decrease in the death rate has been experi-
enced.
The high intrinsic value of the investments has again been
demonstrated.
Due provision has been made for the continuance of the
large profits payable to policyholders.
The general financial standing of the Company has been
appreciably improved.
The surplus earnings were 58% greater than those of 1920,
which in turn were greater than in any previous year.
Offices: 1203 Book Building
Phone Cherry 3453
Attractive contracts open for high class agents.
Plat-Pft 1 ~ T 717"171 Tmmoissgmommogn ill'A fi t + +1 1- 1. 9 +
mow
vikwr 1.1.ii
OUR NEW STORE FOR YOU
ADJOINING THE NEW LOCATION
Mr. Lieberman takes this opportunity to extend his feeling
of appreciation to his many friends who have made this undertak-
ing possible and wishes you all the Season's Best Greetings.
629 TO 639 GRATIOT AVE.
•
re Not
e Stitch!
HE predominant feature of our new
Fall topcoats and suits is fine work-
manship. Every garment is labored
over as diligently as a lapidary polishes
a stone. And this refers, not only to
stitches that are visible, but to those that
are not. The workmanship you see in
the fabric is equally good in the canvas.
There is nothing underhanded in our
under-stitches. The foundation is as fine
as the finish. You're not buying silver
polish but the polished silver of work-
manship that's good all through!
And there's no extra charge for it.
It's our standards that are higher.
Not our prices!
Fall Suits $30 to $75
Topcoats $25 to $60
JEWS SEEK AUTONOMY
LEMBERG.—(J. C. /L)—The Po-
lish government having announced its
intention to confer a measure of au-
tonomy upon the residents of Eastern
Galicia, Jewish representatives decid-
ed to demand the right to administer
their "cultural and national affairs,"
including the right to take a census.
The demand is based on the claim that
the Jews rank numerically third in
the list of minority nationalities in
Galicia.
"DC79(017'S nI CC8rrrExD STTLZ COVV9r
OPEN
FNENL • I GS
Woodward eat Afontcalm
EXCLUSIVE BUT NOT EXPENSIVE
OPEN
EVENINGS