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February 16, 1923 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1923-02-16

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

PAGE TEN

— --
JOY
FARM

Single Homes,
Duplexes
nd
Home Sites

A Business Man for Mayor

(From rubles of Jewish Correspondence Bureau and Jewish Telegraphls Agenc7•)

HIRSCH
• • Realty Company
8748 Linwood, Corner Blain.
Garfield 2423-5380

Military circles in Lodz are excited over the rejection of Wolf Gruenstein,
who volunteered as a private in the Polish army. The authorities responsible
for this will be taken to tusk, it is learned.
• • • •

COMMENTS OF THE PRESS OF DETROIT

Jewish communities throughout the world are urged by the head office

of the Jewish National Fund in Jerusalem to arrange special collections on

Keane, Higbie & Co.
MUNICIPAL
BONDS

List Upon Request

431 Griswold St.

Main 2963

Detroit

Michgan Paper Stock Co.

MEYER BARRON, Prop.
Boyers of All Kinds .1

WASTE PAPER
1342 Brewster St.
Cadillac 1708
Cadillac 1709

LEE MACHINERY CO.

MACHINE TOOLS
New and Used.
For Sale or Rent
• Horthway 5663

4 39 THEODORE

Select Dancing Nightly

Palais de Danse

Particular People Prefer
the Palais
Strictly censored. Highest
Standard

Floyd Hickman Superb Orchestra

awn

mommemas inn ow

Henry the Hatter

Detroit's Exclusive Hatter
Library Park Hotel Bldg.

Gratiot at Library.
no um


MANUEL URBACH

Granite and Marble

Monuments

664 Winder Street

Phone Cadillac 48

Luis A. Wisrbe, Representative

"Th. Only Jewish MONUMENT

Dealer in Detroit.

Storage



(NO

Moving Trucks

Purim for the Garden City in memory of Max Nordau.

Now for Action.

By arrangement with the Latvian Government, Moscow has agreed to
release 21 Jews, Latvian subjects, imprisoned in Russia. In exchange, Latvia
undertakes to release Russian communists held in custody there.
• • • •

Rabbi J. Krusz and Rabbi II. Rosenfeld, prominent in Jewish religious
and political circles in Ilungary, arrived on the Cunarder Mauretania. After
a brief stay in New York they will visit other large cities throughout the
country.
• • • •

The district school committee for higher Educational Institutions in
Neukoelln-Berlin has decided, Town Councillor Dr. Loewenstein being in
the chair, to rename the Reform Polytechnic in the Boddinstrasse the
Rathenau School.
• • • •

In consequence of the students' threat that Jews will be barred from
classes unless arrangements are made for the delivery of Jewish corpses for
dissection, the Jewish authorities have arranged to supply one Jewish corpse
for every 10, at Cracow.
• • • •
The students' aid association known sa the "Bratnia Pomoc" having de-
cided to exclude from membership all Jews, including even those whose
grandparents were Jewish, a new society is in process of formation, which.1
will admit all students of Polish nationality regardless of creed.
• • • •
Quoting the dispatch to the Sanomat at Helsingfors, the Morning Post
reports serious pogroms took place on Jan. 19 and 20 at Kursk. Workmen,
peasants, and socialists of the Ited'Army participated in the rioting, the
report continued, resultiung in the murder of "hundreds of thousands."
• • • •
That Jews have been living in India for 2,000 years and never Buffered
persecution at the hands of the government or neighboring communities, was
the substance of reports presented at the fifth annual conference of the all- I
India Israelite League, meeting at Poona. President Khan Saheb presided.
• • • •
Recent reports from London quoting dispatches from a newspaper in }lel-
eingfors that a pogrom took place in Odessa JAIL 19-20, resulting in 40 Jews
killed, is denied in a statement issued by the American bureau of the "Idges-
com" (Jewish l'ublic Committee). A Moscow dispatch of Feb. 2, is cited by
the Idgescom denouncing the report as a "contemptible lie."
• • • s
Dr. Chaim Weizmann, president of the World Zionist Organization, is
leaving for America Feb. 28, at the head of a delegation of Zionist leaders,
to participate in the spring campaign of the Keren Ilayesod in America.
It is reported that Ached Ham (Ascher Ginsburg), the noted Jewish phil-
osopher who has settled in Palestine, will be a member of this delegation.

Prolongation is contemplated until Sept. 1 of the residence of Jewish
refugees (rem Russia and the Ukraine holding serial numbers entitling them
to American visas. All others are doomed to be expelled April 15, it is
learned. The authorities are already proceeding with the registration of
"aliens," the term being applied also to Jews who have lived here for decades.

A memorandum has been received by the officers of the International
Students' Union in session at The Hague, protesting against the percentage
norm as applied to Jewish admissions in universities and deploring the anti-
Jewish agitation thruoghout Eastern and Central Europe in which students
are taking an active part. The memorandum comes from the World Union
of Zionist Students' Societies.

Miss Wilma Krigel of Minsk, Russia, and the leading ballet dancer of her
home city, arrived on the Cunarder Mauretania and after spending the week-
end in New York left for the home of her brother, Martin Krigel, 2117
Seventh avenue, Minneapolis, where she will rest up before embarking upon
hr American career. Miss Krigel is nimble, young and pretty and was one
of the big hits in the ship's concert.
• • • •
Wholesale pogroms on Jews are urged as a means of providing corpses for
the dissection rooms of the Klausenburg University, in on article appearing
in the students' publication at Bucharest. The writer predicts that the
pogroms will serve a two-fold object: the extermination of the Jew, and the
supply of corpses. The university authorities have taken the student publi-
cation's assertion under advisement.
• e • •
Among the passengers arriving en the Mauretania was I. Rapoport of the ,
Rapoport Food Products Company of 105 Hudson street, New York, who said
•e had obtained a $5,000,000 concession for the importation of fond into
Russia and the exportation of products out of Russia. Ile talked with Lenin
in MOSCOW and declared that it will be all up with Russia if he dies. Ile is
the only one, the importer said, who is really trying to connect Russia with •
the rest of the world.
• • • •
A gang of Nationalists raided the Regina Hotel in Munich seeking Jews.
The diners were terrorized and it was be to the intercession of the
manager that actual violence was prevented. The charge' that Itrichswehr
is supporting Adolph Hitler's Fascisti forces occurs now and again in the
liberal German newspapers. The Vorwaerts, Socialist organ, reports that
Chancellor Cuno personally ordered the release of 300 Hitler men who had
been taken into custody.

No Man Is Too Big.

"If Detroit wants the right sort of
man for mayor, Detroit has got to
get busy and pick him. It wants
a man who has a record of char-
acter and service behind him....
His business interests probably
will be considerable; he will be
reluctant to leave them. But De-
troit will insist that public service
is paramount
News, Dec. 16, '22.

'CUNARD

Privileged by the Russian and
Polish Governments.

25,897 Russians and 26,862
Poles'

May come to America commenc-
ing next July. The Cunard serv-
ice is the fastest for your relatives
comir,g over to America. Emi-
grants holding Cunard tickets can
sail at once, as there is a Cunard
ship leaving Europe almost every
day of the month. The Cunard
Line has made excellent arrange-
ments for emigrants in Russia and
Poland to personally conduct them
by one of the company's repre-
sentatives, relieving the emierant
of all worries. No extra charge
for this service.

For further infornition apply to
nearest agent.

CUNARD LINE.

1227 Washi nnnnn
Blvd..
Detroit, Mich.

KLECZYNSKI

Straight
Chiropractor Only

Chiropractor

Melrose 3435
4738 McDougall Avenue

Near East Forest
PIONEER CHIROPRACTOR et DETROIT
A continuous successful practic• el
the scleac• In Dev•n* sinc• 1911.

IF THE SPINE IS IS RIGHT, THE MAN
RI GHT.

Let Kleczynski make you a Live
Wire anti you won't be stepped on.

4 ,

SPRUNK
ENGRAVING CO.

Commercial Artists
an Engravers



Times, Dec. 8, '22.

Can We Get a Man Like
Couzens?

"This lack of public accounting
may also be on the mind of Mr.
David A. Brown, who says: 'De-
troit today is in greater need of a
business administration than over
before in its entire history.' Mr.
Brown explains that he refers to
'the numerous activities in which
Detroit is engaged' — almost as
numerous, we might say, as Mr.
Brown's personal activities in
which he has acquired that broad
experience in executive work
which Senator Couzens requires
in his successor in the mayoralty."

Plain Business.
"It is simple business, tremendous

business, that demands a business
executive of the broadest cal-
iber."
News, Dec. 9, '22.

The Kind of a Mayor Detroit
Needs.

"Detroit needs a whale of an ex-
ecutive in its City Hall. It must
pick that sort of character if its
splendid new tradition is to live."
News, Dec. 25, '22.

—Saturday Night, Dec. 23, '22.

A Business Man for Mayor

DAVID A. BROWN

Measures Up to the High Standards
Set by All Newspapers

Published and paid for by friends of David A. Brown.

■ 111=111NIMEIMEMIMMI

esting t

M

LETROi7

com mittee of seven at a
t (.4 It
-
A Catholic educator once declared:
tee of the Joint Board of the Dress and Waist Makers Unions in New York. ,, Give me the children of six and I
The officers reported the break in the negotiations between the union and the don't care who has them afterwards."
employers and a debate on the question of calling a strike at once followed. The Jews, like the Catholics, always
The motion to call an immediate strike was defeated and it was decided to practiced this principle as a means of
give the union representatives another opportunity to attempt a settlement. preserving the race by commencing
If a strike is called it will probably not take place before Wednesday morning, the education of the child when it was
Julius Hochman, general manager of the Joint Board, declared.
lice or six years old. The recent cries
5 5 • .
of despair from Jewish circles in
The opening of the Jewish Archaeological Museum in the Tower of consequence of the lessgning of the
David is announced from Jerusalem, the principal contents being the an- Jewish interest came as a result of a
tiquities excavated by Dr. Nathum Slousch near Tiberias two years ago. deviation from this practice, In re-
The museum was founded by the Jewish Palestine Exploration Society, and cent years, boys were given a taste
Dr. Slousch, now in New York, appointed keeper of the museum. The of Jewish learning only when they
!recently discovered antiquities in charge of the society include a seven- approached their thirteenth birthday
I branched marble candelabrum of rare beauty, an engraved door of an ark and had to be prepared for Bar Mitz-
in which Hebrew scrolls of the law were kept, a chair which tradition has it vah. Girls were not even given this
was called Moses' chair, and several hundred household utensils of bronze taste. A return to the practice of
and glass, clearly belonging to the pre-Christian era. starting the Jewish education of the
• • • •
youth a very ealy age is t heref ore
Announcement has been made of the sale of Temple Emanu-el of San ' the most
ost d esiraberaly
le and the m st to b
be
Francisco, dedicated in 1866 on Sutter street, between Stockham and encouraged "back to—" movement.
Powell streets, to a client of Hugh Goodfellow for $410,000. The conditions Its inauguration by the Hebrew edu-
of the sale are that the congrega ti on shall occupy the temple for two years, colors throughout the country is to
pending the construction of a new temple at First avenue and Lake street. be commended and spread everywhere.
The new temple will cost approximately $1,000,000 and will be one of the For, when we have the child at that
finest edifices of its kind in this country. Louis Bloch, member of the age, we shall have no fears for the
building committee, has returned from a visit in the East, where he viewed 'future of Judaism.
with view
w to the bu ildin o of the
h
various

HE MI .6,11:1I :

IN et,

r \ t ,

es

Robinson Storage Co.

14•Alavi.T CE epee.

"Selection of a mayor is the most
important matter confronting the
City of Detroit. Detroit does not
ask for a super-man; any hard-
headed, honest, sincere citizen
who has demonstrated capacity
for successful organization and
the carrying out of large plans, is
eligible to the list of contenders.
The mayor's duties . . . will be
difficult for those whose training
is limited to professional pol-
itics."

• • • •

of Iv.. Wotk Pc ■ ne

MAIN
1491

Detroit's Next Mayor.

"The natural initiative is with the
city government. Therefore wise
voters will see to it first of all,
that the next mayor is a man who
not only will promise to take up
the rapid transit question and an-
swer it, but who also may be de-
pended upon to fulfill his pledge
in a business-like, non-political
way."
—Free Press, Feb. 6.

...111111

Ilh

1 : 1 4 ai ali ty. ! :II:11 7 I I- -

4 e1 :1: 4

11L
liti -1 1
- ,_

.

.---._

19

...

.

--

... _

,

0

,

Why Do We Run to Capacity?

Because there are enough housewives in Detroit who have proven
to their entire satisfaction that our high grade work—at our
prices—and with our splendid service, is more economical and
more efficient than any home method they have known.

Palace Model Laundry

Glendale 5680

17 Convenient Branches

of a fund with which to build the
Nordau Garden City in Palestine
ought to meet with the heartiest re-
sponse ever accorded any Zionist fund,
the Kern Hayesod included. Such
a fund, when collected, will serve a
double purpose: It will help in the
redemption of the Palestinian soil as
the inalienable property of the entire
Jewish people, which is the aim of the
Jewish National Fund, and it will
build a memorial for the greatest Jew
of the age, whose passing two weeks
ago, shocked the world. Max Nordau
was one of the greatest and most
eloquent champions of the Jewish peo-
ple. He labored for the Zionist cause
self-sacrificingly and with a loyalty
that can hardly be equalled. In the
past few years, when he suffered
want, the Jewish philosopher and
savant refused aid that was offered
him by the Zionist organization. He
refused any aid offered him by any- •
body. This great man is now among
the dead, and the most fitting monu-
ment that will do him due honor is
that which will at the same time help
in the realization of the Zionist ideal.
Nothing could have satisfied Nordau
more had he lived. The fund for the
Garden City was started four years
before Nordau'a death, but only the
poor Jews of Eastern Europe re-
sponded with contributions. It is now
for the American Jews to do their
share.

EDMUND
G. LEWIS
& CO.

Detroit's Only Jewish
Licensed Funeral Director

NEW LOCATION:

6041-43-45 John R.
Street

NEW PHONES:

Northway 5535

Northway 3564

Member of Detroit Funeral Directors' Association.

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