ThEfrettorK/nosn CARONI=

PAGE TEN

THINK OF US WHEN

Do lkiem Bon of Candy
You Want • DEL
IVER ED.
We Same Light Lunches at All Hours.
W. put up Special Orders for Dam.
and Parties.
Phone U•—Northtmy 3516.

CAMPAIGN AGAINST
JEWS CALLED FIGHT
ON U. S. LIBERALISM

(Concluded from Page One)

DE LUXE CANDY SHOP

United States, well known to me per-
sonally, a man of the highest stand-
ing and character. Mr. Vasailivitch
indicated to my friends that the pro-
tocols which the Russians were then
(From cables of Jewl•h Ciare•pondence Bureau and Jewish Telegraphic Agency.)
intending to market here would be
stopped for a compensation.
The Sports Council of Vienna has decided not to subsidize sporting
"At this time Mr. Brasol was re- clubs which exclude Jews from i S ner:bel - shir
ceiving interesting assistance from a
lawyer well known in New York. His
Large numbers of Jews are leaving Western Hungary on account of
name is Maurice Leon. Mr. Leon is
the pogrom threats made there by the anti ;Semites.
himself a Jew, but he comes from one
of the French possessions and looks
The Polish government has given satisfactory assurances to the League
upon France as the country which he
is called upon most energetically to of Nations regarding the treatment of Russian refugees in Poland.
represent. During the war Mr. Leon
The editor of the anti-Semitic organ the Volkischer Beobachter, in
was extremely patriotic. He found a
great many whom he believed trai- Munich, has been fined 1,500 marks for libeling Rabbi Dr. Beerman.
tors. Ile passed the names along to
the United States government. In
A German Nationalist society has been formed in Austria, the members
the course of his round-up of the dis- of which must have no Jewish friends and no Jewish blood in their veins.
• • • •
loyal he made up his mind that the
German-Jews, as the head of the In-
Ex-Governor Moses Alexander was nominated by the.Democratic party
ternational Jews, were the oustand- for governor of Idaho by acclamation, at the state convention held at
ing, menace.
Floyd Hickman Superb Orchestra
Bailey, Idaho.
• • • •
Picks on Jacob Schiff.
"Mr. Leon had in his possession a
As a result of a recent visit from Rabbi Julius Leibert of Spokane,
cross index, more complete than any- Wash., a society for the promotion of Judaism has been organized at We-
thing that Brasol in any of his dif- natchee, Wash.
• • • •
ferent organizations had worked up.
This cross index of Mr. Leon's is mo-
The Polish Minister of the Interior has ordered an inquiry into the
mentous. Ile began by picking out anti-Jewish excesses at Mlava and the complaints regarding the inactivity
AND STERLING SILVER SETS
one conspicuous New York Jew—Ja-
cob Schiff. He then took the index of the police during the rioting. • • • •
of the New York Times and made a
Georges Dreyfus of the French Aero Club has presented a cup for
9120
Byron
list of all the public functions Jacob
` Market 5880
Schiff attended. One step further gliders to be contested over two years, with an annual prize of f400. The
enabled him to find out who else was machines and pilots must be French.
• • • •
at each one of these functions. Ile
Another Hebrew gymnasia was opened this year in the city of Wilko-
then took each Jewish name and ap -
plied the same treatment to it that mir, Latvia. All the seven classes of the school are in full operation with
he had applied to Schiff. For ex- a satisfactory enrollment of stu .den4ts.
ample, at one of the public luncheons
which Schiff attended was present
A leading publishing house of Berlin will soon print all of the writings
also Miss Lillian Wald. Miss Wald of Walter Rathenau in two editions, one edition de luxe and the other a
then became the center of more cross popular edition within reach of the masses.
indexing. Everyone who attended
the functions attended by Miss Wald
The Jewish communal leaders in Egypt demand that the government
came in turn under the index. By should arrange for a Jewish electoral college at the parliamnetary elections,
the simple device it was not long in order to secure Jewish representation in the house.
before a world conspiracy was ade-
quately constructed. There is good
The supervisor of the village of Vladimir-Wolinsk in Poland has issued
reason to believe that the Dearborn
Quality
Sarni.
Independent vision of the Jewish orders forbidding the placement of the Mogen-David on Jewish synagogues,
world conspiracy, headed by a few for, in his opinion, the Mogen-David is a symbol of Bolshevism.

5015 Wsodwaml Am at W

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Enjoy Om of Our Famous Mmls.
BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH • • • 50.50
11:00 A. M. to 200 P. M.
TABLE D'HOTE DINNER - • • • $0.75
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12.00 to LSO P. M.
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A Delightful Place I. Eat In Hot Weather

A. D. HILLMAN
Real Estate Exchange Specialist

I exchange what you have

dictators at the top, had its origin in
this elaborate cross index of Mr.
Leon."
In the November' article Mr. Hap-
good will show how Henry Ford
forced his automobile agents to sell
his anti-Jewish literature to Ameri-
can citizens. It will cotain a lead
pencil sketch by Boris Brasol, which
will indicate Brasol's belief that
Beiliss and two other Jews should
have been convicted of murdering a
child in order to drink its blood. It
will also show that the so-called Rus-
sian embassy in Washington spent
money in keeping Russian monarch-
ists busy at their propaganda in this
country.

and do not want for what
you have not and do want.

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Digesting the Week's News

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The conference of the organization of anti-Semitic students has met at
Wurzberg, instead of Marburg, where it was not permitted to hold its meet-
ings, on the ground that its deliberations . were a danger to the republic.

Former New York Alderman Louis Zeltner has been nominated by the
Republicans to contest the Twelth district Congressional seat. His op-
ponents will be Meyer London, Socialist, and Samuel. Dickstein, Democrat.

Max Coleman, one of the most active members of the Dublin, Ireland,
Jewish Board-of ,Guardians, is dead at an advanced age. He was for many
years honorary treasurer of both the board and the Dublin Talmud Torah.
Ile helped both these institutions materially during his lifetime and upon
his death bequeathed a large sum to them..

Colonel Harris Weinstock of San Francisco is dead as the result of a
fall from a horse. Colonel Weinstock was for many years a partner of the
late David Lubin at Sacramento, where he amassed a fortune. He was
especially interested in market conditions and was at one time State Market
Director, contributing his entire salary to • charitable institutions.

The Sosnowitz Jews are living in constant dread of fresh pogroms. The
local Polish newspapers are agitating openly for wholesale pogroms, and
(Concluded from Editorial page.)
the local authorities have taken no steps to curb this propaganda. Dr.
burg. Dr. Alexander M. Dushkin, as l'earlman and S. Weiss, the representatives of the local Jews, have ap-
chairman of the campaign, issued an pealed to the Minister of the Interior for . protection.
appeal to the youths of New York to
Official announcement has been made of the transfer of 16 officials of
make themselves "intelligent, happy
Jews, and in consequence also better the sanitary department of the American Zionist Medical Unit to the Health
citizens of America and broader hu- Department of the Palestine government. The government, in augmenting
man beings." The "Juin" movement the sanitation personnel, is taking off a share of the Zionist activity for
is a timely one not only for America's which the recent Karlsbad meeting did not • fully provide.
• • 4,
metropolis, but ought also to be follow-
A resolution declining the invitation of the Jewish parties to join the
ed here. Conditions in American
Jewry are such that they call for an minority nationalities' bloc for purposes of the approaching Sejm elections
immediate rallying to the colors of the was passed by the "Poles of the Mosaic Persuasion" in conference in ',ern-
entife Jewish youth. The sooner we berg. The resolution is accompanied by the statement that "assimilation-
copy New York's example, the better. ists" are not a "homogeneous party," its members therefore being entitled
to vote with the Polish parties according to their political connections.

LIGGETT St NITERS TOBACCO CO.

WEDGWOOD COMING
FOR KEREN HAYESOD

(Concluded from Page One)
will do much to obtain justice, first of
all for the Jews in all countries, and
then for all men.
le Labor Leader.
Colonel Wedgwood is at present
vice-chairman of the Labor Party.
There is no member of the British
House of Commons with a better
knowledge of foreign affairs. It is in
relation to foreign and colonial sub-
jects that he is now chiefly prominent
in Parliamentary business. The treat-
ment of the colored races in the wide
areas of Africa, which now are corn-
ing under Mandates given to Great
Britain, and the protection of these
races from commercial exploitation
has become one of the objects dear to
him.

Zionist Resolution Signed.
The co-ordination of the various Warsaw committees engaged in Jewish
The following from hte Congress- emigration committees projected by Messrs. atzki and Tiomkin and ap-
ional Record of Sept. 22 marks the proved by the committees concerned, remains inoperative owing to the party
finishing touch on a great triumph for feeling among the Jewish leaders due to the Sejm election campaign. It
the Zionist movement in this country. has been found impossible to have the leaders of the emigration committees
"A message from the President of who are also the party leaders to meet . together until 1923.
the United States, by Mr. Latta, one
of t is secretaries, announced that the
The Young Israel of Williamsburg has purchased the Hanover Club
President had approved and signed building, at Bedford avenue and Rodney street, for many years a promi-
bill.• And joint resolutions of the fol- nent social center of the eastern district of Brooklyn.The club is to be
low:nit. :ties:
disbanded. The club property, which is an attractive brick and stone
"On September 20, 1922:
building, fully equipped with modern furnishings and club accessories, will
"S. J. Res. 322. Joint resolution be taken over at a price of $5,000, much below its current value.
favoring the establishment in Pales-
tine of a national home for the Jew-
In keeping with his custom inaugurated during his last visit to the Holy
ish people."
Land, Nathan Straus, veteran New York philanthropist, sent another con-
The passnge of the Zionist resolu- tribution of $1,000 for an Arab orphanage in the Jaffa district, Palestine.
tion by unanimous votes of the House
This instalment was handed to Dr. David de Sole Pool, Rabbi of Shearith
of Represe ntatives and the United
Israel, on Central Park West, for transmission to the Zionist commission
States Senate and its subsequent ap-
in Jerusalem, which will hand over the money to the Arabs in charge of
proval by the President is a triumph
unequalled in Jewish history. The the orphanage.
victory in America is of as great im-
With flagrant disregard for the feelings of the Jewish population of
portance as the approval of the man-
date by Cie League of Nations, be- Upper Silesia, the Polish authorities fixed the elections for Sejm deputies
for
Sept. 24, the second day of Rosh ha-Shanah. Rabbi Levine of Katto-
cause this is the first time in our his-
otry that a democratically elected witz stated the Jews will not immediately lodge an appeal against this
decision
with the League of Nations in the hope the government will alter
body of the world's greatest power
recognized the hopes and aspirations the date. The Upper Silesian Jews have decided to have a separate ballot,
i f our people to a home we can call nominating their own candidates for the Silesian Sejm.
our own. There is a reason for re-
The promises of the Ministry of Education notwithstanding, Jews are
joicing. There is reason to believe
that our cause will triumph in the end, not admitted to the colleges of the Budapest University, it is charged on
human opposition and unfortunate ob- the basis of figures from an excellent source. Only 40 Jews were enrolled
in the department of arts and science, having room for 800, while 100 were
stacles in our way notwithstanding.
rejected, it is stated. In the law department, normally accommodating 800
students, Jewish applicants are accepted only according to the established
Shute Polities.
percentage norm, although the number of applicants is far below the
This is the season of synagogue
politics. Orthodox congregations, this accommodation.

• • • •

• • • •

time of the year, hold their annual
elections, and there is campaigning
proportionately equal to national poli-
tical campaigns. A friend offers the
explanation that the reason Jews take
such a vital interest in synagogue
elections is because they cannot run
for public office. They can't run for the
legislature, or the bench, or congress.
So the greatest interest they have is
to play politics in "Shule." One sug-
gestion we wish to make to our elders
in Jewish life, as they turn their a -
tentions to new administrations in
their respective congregations. Very
few, if any, of the younger generation
take the slightest interest in the do-
ings of the Jewish community. Ex-
cept for attending the synagogue ser-
vices several days in the year, the wel-
fare of the Jewish community has lit-
tle concern for our Jewish young men,
It is time that leadership in Jewish
affairs was turned over to the young,
before it is altogether too late. And
if leadership is to be retained by the
older folks, they ought at least remem-
ber that a duty involves upon them to
interest the young. Worthy young
men should be elected to office. They
should be interested in one way or an-
other in the doings of the Jewish com-
munity. Once the interest of the
young is aroused, there will he a
brighter future for our pe-ple at
large.

The Jew who is true to himself wi'
labor with especial energy in t h e
cause of peace. H s religion, his his-
tory, his mission, all pledge him to r
policy of peace, as a citizen as well
as an individual. The war-loving Jew
is a contradiction in terms, The "Mar
of Sorrows" must beware of helping.
however remotely, to heap some
upon others.—Morris Joseph.

•

• • •

The Jewish Joint Distribution Committee announces a contribution of
$10,000 for relief work among the refugees of Smyrna. In announcing the
contribution, Felix Warburg, chairman of the committee, said: "Although
this amount has just been forwarded to our representatives in Constanti-
nople to be used in any way he may see fit to relieve immediate suffering
among the population of Smyrna, the committee stands ready to join with
other American relief organizations in further comprehenkive relief meas-
ures on a non-sectarian basis in the stricken districts."
• • • •
The Council of the League of Nations has adopted the resolution sub-
mitted on behalf of the British delegation declaring the provisions in the
mandate for Palestine concerning the National Home for the Jewish people
do not apply to the territory east of the Jordan, known as Transjordania.
The council has also ratified the British boundary line between Palestine
and Transjordania, the southeastern boundary being fixed at two miles
west of the Gulf of Akba, the eastern one up to the center of the Wady
Araba, the Dead Sea and the Jordan as far north as the junction of the
Yarmuk river.
• • •
Settlement of the dispute between the New York Yiddish players' union
and the managers of the Yiddish theaters over the length of the theater
season and minimum wake will be effeced soon, the recommendations sub-
mitted by an arbitration board having been accepted by the union and
confirmed by the managers. The arbitration committee, composed of B.
Vladeck, manager of the Jewish Forward; John L. Bernstein, lawyer, presi.
dent of the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, and E. Paley, have recom-
mended a 36 instead of a 38-week season and a wage cut of 10 per cent
for actors drawing over $75 a week. The minimum wage has been fixed
by the arbitrators at $55 per week. The musicians' union has declined to
submit its grievance to arbitration, which may prevent the Yiddish theater
season from opening on time.
• • • •
That it is "inevitable" that Jews should hold administrative posts in
the Soviet government is the explanation made to Russian workers and
peasants in a proclamation by the Soviet Ministry for Foreign Affairs, cir-
culated in hundreds of thousands of copies. The statement as published
by the Warsaw Moment follows: "The Jews have played a specific part
in the Russian revolution. Being an urban population, they were discon-
tented with the Czarist regime and were consistently oppositional and revo-
lutionary. It is impossible, however, to speak of a conspirative unity among
the Jews. The Jews have produced not only Trotzky and Zinovieff, but
also Hessen, Kaminka, V.naver, Gotz, Hendleman, Don and Martoff. That
Jews should occupy administrative posts in the new Russia is inevitable,
irrespective whether the new Russia would have been Cadet, Social, Revo-
lutionary or Proletarian. Those who cannot accustom themselves to this
fact ought to undergo certain treatment in order to cure themselves."

Col. Wedgwood, who is reported to I the visit by Colonel Wedgwood Is
be a speaker of great force and per- headed by Joseph Chaggi.
Prior to commencing the Fall Keren
suasive power, spiced with a genial
humor, is expected to visit the most Ilayesod campaign, the local commit-
tee
urges all pledgers to the Keren
important Jewish centers in the Unit-
ed States and Canada, where he will Ilayesod to make payment at once on
all
old
pledges. Approximately $25-
elucidate the problems and policies of
the British government in Palestine, 000 is still outstanding and the hope
of
the
local
organization is that this
and urge the Jews to mobolize resour-
ces of men and money on a vast scale sum may be cleared in time for open-
ing
a
new
campaign
for the Palestine
for the realization of the l'alestine
Foundation Fund.
Homeland.

•

•

COLONEL WEDGWOOD TO BE
GUEST OF DETROIT JEWS

Announcement is made by the De-
troit Keren Ilayesod Committee that
Colonel Wedgdoow is expected in De-
troit during the latter part of Oc-
tober. Arrangements are being made
for a monster meeting here. A com-
mittee appointed to make plans for

SHUBERT MICHIGAN

-

The winter season of the Bonstelle
Company at the Shubert-Michigan
will open Monday, Oct. 2, and the at-
traction for the opening week will be
Sir Arthur Wing Pinero's whimsical
comedy, "The Enchanted Cottage,"
which is being given its first American
performances by Miss Bonstelle in
Providence and Detroit.

An
Understandable
Statement

MEMBER
FEDERAL
RESERVE
BANK

At the Close of Business, Sept. 15, 1922

I.—Cash .

(Gold, Bank Notes and Specie) and with legal depositories
returnable on demand.

on Other Banks

H.—Checks
These checks are payable in one day.

1,438,223.93

250,737.00

M.—Loans
This is the amount we have loaned after a thorough in-
vestigation) to individuals and corporations on their notes
and against approved collateral.

to Individuals and Corporations. .

7,082,661.71

IV.—Mortgages on Real Estate, and Bonds . .

4,531,855.21

These are salable securities issued by the U. S. municipali-
ties and other corporations of first quality; also first mort-
gages on high class real estate.

V.—Stock in Federal Reserve Bank
VI.—United States Securities

45,000.00
673,708.62

VII.—Branch Banking Houses and Furniture
and Fixtures

475,352.01

This includes U. S. Government Bonds, War Savings Cer-
tificates, Revenue Stamps and United States Certificated of
Indebtedness.

Thirteen of these branches, all located in the city of Detroit.

VIII.—Other U. S. Government Securities.. .

Left with us for safekeeping.

507,150.00

Total Assets
$15,004,688.48
Deposits Entrusted to Us Sept.
15, 1922
$12,883,342.80
Other U. S. Government Securi-
ties Left with Us for Safe-
keeping ..
507,150.00
Total ..
$13,390,492.80
This Leaves Capital Stock, Surplus and Undi-
vided Profits of.
$ 1,614,195.68

Which becomes the property of the stockholders after the
depositors are paid in full, and in a guarantee fund upon
which we solicit new deposits and retain those which have
been carried by no for many years.

Established 1853

First State Bank of Detroit

Gratiot and Hastings
Chen. and Gratiot
Mack ■
and Mt. Elliott
Woodward and Eliot

Main Office: Lafayette and Griswold, Street.
Thirteen Branches.
Hamilton and Webb
Linwood and Vicksburg
Ferndale and Springwells
Grand River and Montclair
St. Clair and Mack
Shoemaker and Montclair
Joe. Campim and Newton
Buchanan and Scotten
Forest and Van Dyke

