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August 22, 1924 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1924-08-22

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

America ,swish periodical Carter

CLIFTON AVIINUI • CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

PAGE FIVE

insfl aiRo
_To_Eki_
At te

IINTERMYER'S WIFE,
LONG ILL, IS DEAD

BROWN LEVELS ATTACK
ON CAMPAIGN PLEDGES

MORGENTEAUS FEAT

Candidate for Prosecuting Attorney

Insists Oath Counts.

Was Patron of Art and Music,
a Notable Hostess and
Lover of Flowers.

Let us send you floor

pattern FREE, show-
ing met space the

Premier occupies.

Write or phone

(Cherry 3600).

You Could Pay Far More

—and still not obtain quality sur-
passing that found in the dainty

Premier

Small Grand Piano

A great manufacturing or-
ganization, and specializing
in the production of one
type of instrument exclu-
sively, make possible this
low price. For mansion, cot-
tage or apartment, the Pre-
mier is a splendid choice, for
it embodies such excellence
as make it a permanent de-
light wherever music is
loved.

ONLY

$625

Long Time
to Pay.

Grinnell Bros

Catalog mailed you on request.

Hdqrs., 1515-21 WOODWARD AVENUE

—easy to enrich your home
with this beautfiul Grand
RIGHT NOW.

IN TRANSPLANTING
GREEKS REVEALED

"Murder and robbery have become
so common that it is not safe to be
on the streets or even in one's home. Woman Correspondent Re-
Heroic measures are necessary. The
counts Colossal Work Bank-
NEW YORK.—Mrs. Samuel Unter- game old complacent way of doing
er Had Assumed.
,
myer, wife of the well-known lawyer things and the age-old game of 'pass-
died Aug. 16 after a prtIonged ill-
neas, at her country home, Greystone,
SOLVED MANY PROBLEMS
Yonkers, the old home of Samuel J.
WITH AMAZING SKILL
Tilden, where for many years before
her health began to fail she and her
husband had kept open house for art-
Regrets America Withheld Aid
ists, musicians and other persons fam-
In Program of Vital Re-
ous in the world, and had held many
memorable gatherings. Only a few
habilitation.
weeks ago, despite Mrs. Untermyer's
failing health, the home was the scene
NEW YORK. — Writing In the
of an important reception in honor
magazine section of the New York
of the delegates to the Democratic
Times recently, Anne O'Hare McCor-
national convention.
mick recounts the amazing story of
Mrs. Untermyer before her mar-
the transplanting of 1,600,000 Greeks
riage was Miss Minnie Carl. She was
from Turkey to Greece under the
born in St. Louis, Mo., on June 9,
provisions of the Treaty of Lausanne
1859, the daughter of Manlius and
and the brilliant achievement of
Pauline Carl. Her father had come
henry Morgenthau in placing these I
to the United States with Carl
repatriated Greeks upon a basis of
Schurz, the German patriot, when he
approximate self-support.
fled from Germany in 1848, and, like
Former Ambassador Henry Mor-
General Schurz, he became a soldier
genthau was requested by the League
in the Union army, fighting under
of Nations to head a commission man-
General Rosecrans.
dated by the League to tackle the
Mr. and Mrs. Untermyer were mar-
problem. Ilow this problem, viewed
ried on Aug. 9, 1880, and she became
in terms of a similar situation in
a factor with him in many philan-
America, Miss McCormick describes
thropies and charities. She and Mr.
as follows:
Untermyer were also jointly interest-
"Consider what would happen If
ed in flowers, and Mrs. Untermyer is
30,000,000 people were dumped into
credited with the culture of the Un-
the United States in a single year, if
termyer rhododendrons which won
FREDERICK B. BROWN
90 per cent of those people were so
first prize at the flower show of the
American Horticultural Society, firs t ing the buck' will not accomplish any- destitute that they were not even
in 1910 and often at later exhibitions . thing. A strenuous, militant policy clothed, if '70 per cent were women
and children, if all were wards of the
She was equally well known as a is required."
patron of art, literature and music.
This is the attitude Frederick B. government. If, in addition, one
On May 25, 1916, Mrs. Untermyer Brown, Republican candidate for could imagine the richest and most
entertained at Greystone during the prosecuting attorney of Wayne coun- resourceful country in the world
spring festival of the Poetry Society ty, has taken in the public addresses bankrupt, exhausted by a dozen years
of America 200 poets and persons he is making in Detroit and about the of war, in the throes of revolution ,
broadly classed as lovers of poetry. county, and he is severely criticizing possessin neither land nor sustenance
She had entertained the poets and the time-worn ''campaign promises" sufficient for the population before
poet-lovers on a less pretentious scale many candidates are no prone to the influx, it might be possible t o
form a dim idea of the problem of
the preceding year. The first time make.
she invited the poets to recite some
"As to the enforcement of the law , a little country of four and a half
millions like Greece In trying to ab-
t
of their own inspirations.
one's promise to do so is perhaps no
Greystone and the Untermyer town particularly important. If one does sorb overnight a million and a guar.
house at 2 East Fifty-fourth street not consider that his oath of office ter refugees."
Greece Unequal to Task.
were the scenes of many notable mu- puts him under obligations to do
Writing of the part Mr. Morgen-
sicales and other social gatherings. what he can to enforce the law, it is
In February, 1911, when Count Ap- quite plain that he would not regard thau played in the emergency which
confronted Greece when, on Jan. 1
ponyi, leading statesman of Hun- a promise very seriously.
gary, was visiting the United States,
"So far as liquor, gambling and last, his commission took over the job
Mrs. Untermyer arranged the first re- vice laws generally are concerned, the of rehabilitating these refugees, Miss
ception in his honor. Mrs. Untermyer, enforcement depends more upon let- McCormick says:
"The League of Nations commis -
with Count Apponyi and Mrs. William ting these elements of society under-
J. Gaynor, wife of the late Justice stand that the officials mean business sion came to continue the permanent
Gaynor, then mayor of New York, than it is to arrest a multitude of settlement which Greece found her.
received the guests. Assisting Mrs. people and clog the court dockets self unable to carry on without inter-
national help, and it was natural for
Untermyer on that occasion were with cases that are never tried.
an American at Athens at the time to
many distinguished persons, includ-
"A 'slap on the wrist' once or twicc,
ing Mrs. Myron T. Herrick, wife of a year is not enough to keep down share the satisfaction of the Greeks
the future Ambassador to France; the lawless elements, but a firm, that the commission was headed by
Mrs. Gertrude Atherton, the novel- steady and unyielding policy that will an American long popular in Greece
ist; Mrs. Henry Villard and Mrs. Er- let the gamblers, blind pig operators, and experienced in Near East prob.
nest Thompson-Seton.
murderers and bandits understand kms and psychology. I watched
Throughout her life here Mrs. Un- that the law must be respected , and turned over to a New Yorker the en-
termyer was interested in music in that violations mean punishment is tire department of colonization of the
many ways, and she supported the what Wayne county needs now as Greek government, and got some-
thing of the movie fan's sense of
Music Settlement with as deep inter- never before."
swift thickening of the plot when I
est as she contributed to the Philhar-
saw henry Morgenthau, surrounded
monic Orchestra and other musical
by American filing cabinets and hus-
organizations.
tling stenographers, settled in the
same room in which a few days be-
Cornell University Acquires Says Crecho.Slovalcia Will Stand for fore I had interviewed Colonel Nag-
tires, chief of the revolutionary gov-
Knabe Ampico for Its
Absolute Justice.
ernment.

CLOVER HILL PARK CEMETERY
Of Congregation Shaarey Zedek.

Most beautiful well kept Jewish Cemetery in the city. Family plots
ranging from four to twelve graves can be purchased by the Jewish
community at reasonable price..

Leonard S.

COYNE

of DETROIT

Republican Candidate for

Lieutenant
• Governor

Formerly Assistant Attorney

General of Michigan

Assistant United Staten At•
torney,

PRIMARY SEPTEMBER 9, 1924



The name of Cornell University
has been added to the already Impres-
sive list of educational institutions
that are now using the Ampico, ac -
cording to Janney-Bowman, local dis-
tributors of the Knabe Ampico, in
the Park Avenue Building.
The sale to Cornell is more than
usually significant because Dr. Otto
Kinkeldey, head of the Cornell music
department and former librarian of
music in the Metropolitan library,
New York. is as critical a musician as
he is a thorough scholar and his
preference indicates confidence in the
perfectness of the instrument.
Janney-Bowman also call attention
to the fact that in Michigan the Am-
pico is used in Alma College as well
as in other educational and musical

institutions.

■ ■
.
■ ■•■ 11\ 1■ 16 1621g.

ttlb IhMeNIVII.1 ■11:

Scope of Achievement,

"A REAL THINKER AND HARD WORKER FOR THE
PLACE"

JOHN B. SOSNOWSKI

Is Our Choice as Candidate for

Congressman, First District

(Republican Ticket)

WHO HE IS:

Born in Detroit. Fifteen years' military service (Cuba, Philip-
pines; disabled, pensioned, surrendered pension to re-enter serv-
ice on Mexican border, in the Great War), retiring with rank of
Captain. Water Board Commissioner for six years. Helped
direct Detroit's greatest water extension and erection of city's
filtration plant, a $12,000,000 program. Successful real estate
broker and contractor.

WHAT HE STANDS FOR:

More representatives from De-
troit in Congress.
Economy in Government, with
tax reduction whenever justified.

Reasonable railroad rates so as to
aid Detroit's industrial progress.

Fewer laws and more sensible
ones. Strict e nforcement of all
laws.
Elimination and punishment of
corruption in Government service.
Removal of any inequalities and
defects in present immigration
laws.

St. Lawrence Waterways — to
make Detroit • powerful seaport.
A national road building pro-
gram.
An efficient merchant marine to
aid in building and retaining
America's foreign markets.
Abolition of blocs and more re-
sponsive representation in Con-
gress.
Encouragement and development
of commercial aviation.
Unqualified support of President
Coolidge's policies.

Reward Ability and Energy at the Primaries, Sept. 9.

SOSNOWSKI FOR CONGRESS COMMITTEE

MOURN SYNAGOGUE
STUDENTS BOMBED

at

In.ikuLdal:111=1'

Detroit Institute of Musical Art

UNSURPASSED In the Middle West

't

HA

Ideally Located—AM Centel
Library
Next to New Public Llbra

-r -'

rr

Fall Term Opens Sept. 8th

DISTINGUISHED FACULTY, many of national reputation.
Highest Type of Musical Instruction for Professional or Amateur,
COURSES in Every Branch of Mask, Applied and Theoretical.

LANGUAGES
STUDIO THEATER SCHOOL
AESTHETIC DANCING

(Ballet and Dsolohown)

Large Concert Hall
Symphony Orchestra of 50
Certificates, Diplomas sod Degrees
Students registered at any time for day or evening instruction

Illustrand Catalog free ow applicorioto
Northway 2955
II. It. MANVILLE, Barise u Malta:sr, 52 Putnam Ave.

000,moottoo-t

PRAGUE.—(J. T. A.)—Professor
"Mr. Morgenthau has recently re-
Thomas R. Masaryk, president of the
turned to America after six months'
Czecho-Slovakian Republic, who has
wrestling with immigration on a scale
been making an official tour through that would completely dissolve the
the province of Moravia, has been re- Congress of the United States if that
ceived everywhere by deputations of body ever had to tackle anything like
the Jewish population. At Troppau, it. He reports that up to the present
N. Finij, head of the local Jewish 320,000 refugees have been made
communal organization, welcomed the self-supporting on the land and 93,-
president.
000 in the cities. About 250,000
President Masaryk, in his reply, have succeeded in settling themselves
said: "You know well how I and my without help. That leaves between
government have stood in our attitude 600,000 and 600,000 still to be pro-
towards the Jews, and you may be vided for, and as it has now been
sure that for the future also I shall demonstrated that a refugee can be
.
remain true to my principles. I hold planted
i in the soil, no to speak, for
that there should be the most abso- about $60, Mr. Morgenthau figures
lute equality of rights for all peoples that an international loan of from
and religious communities."
£6,000,000 to £8,000,000 will be re-
In Maerisch.Ostrau, Dr. Rufeisen, quired to complete the settlement.
president of the Zionist executive in On his way home he succeeded in
Czecho-Slovakia, presented Masayryk persuading the Bank of England to
an address.
advance another £1,000,000 to pre-
vent his program from being halted
during the summer. lie expresses
great satisfaction with the work al-
ready accomplished, tempered by re
gret that his own country did not
Oko to Head American Group to As. share with England the honor of of-
sist Orientals.
fering advance aid in a work of re-
habilitation which he believes to be a
SHANGHAI.—(J. T. A.)—Ameri- world responsibility."
can Jews will participate in an et-
fort which is being made here to pre-
serve Judaism in the ancient Jewish Bases Candidacy for Congress
colony of Kai Fung Foo (Fai Feng) ,
on Need for Protecting Re-
the capital of the province of Honan ,
ligious Liberty.
A society which was formed here
in 1900 for that purpose is now being
The Klan, prohibition and the re-
revived and it intends to send a spe-
cial expedition of scholars and social ligious bigotry prompting the paroch-
workers into the province to study ial school amendment in this state
the history of that unknown Jewish are among the things aimed at in the
platform of John B. Sosnowaki, 677
colony and to bring relief to it.
Adolph S. Oko, librarian of the Ile- East Grand boulevard, Republican
brew Union College at Cincinnati, has candidate for Congress from the First
district.
volunteered to head the expedition.
"The rising tide of religious big-
The colony of Kai Fung Foo was
originally discovered by Catholic mis- otry, social intolerance and racial
t
hatred
were the chief factors in per-
sionanes in the seventeenth can
The Chinese Jews do not differ in suading me to listen to my friends
and
enter
this race, said Mr. Soo-
general appearance from their coun-
trymen and are distinguished only by nowski. "I felt that it was my duty
to
take
a
personal
part in the war
their adherence to the Jewish religion.
that must be waged to down these de-
structive elements."
Mr. Sosnowski was born in Detroit.
For years he has been active In city
affairs. For six years he was a com-
VIENNA.—(J. T. A.)—A unique missioner of the Detroit water board.
scene took place in Joszahely, Tran- He has an enviable military record ,
sylvania, where the entire Jewish running 16 years from Cuba to the
community sat in mourning for its Great War, ending with the rank of
synagogue, which bad been dyna- captain. Ile in now a successful con-
mited by three Roumanian students . tractor and real estate broker.
According to ancient Jewish cus-
tom, the members of the Jewish com-
their shoes and sat Comedy Offering Heads Bill
munity took
the entire day on the ruins of the
Coming to Keith's Temple
synagogue, praying and weeping for
Theater Next Week.
the desecration of the Holy Scrolls,
which had been destroyed.
Ted
and Betty Healy are an
Three students, named Pavel, Ivan
Talochner and Paul Serb, who were nounced as the headliner at B. F.'1
Keith's
Temple Theater beginning
arrested by the authorities, confessed
,
that they had placed dynamite in the Monday matinee. The Ilealys are
youngsters
making a hit wherever
ark of the Holy Scrolls, intending
that the explosion should take place they appear. They have a comedy
during evening services when many offering this season called "A Flap-
worshippers would be assembled. For- per and • Philosopher." Ted is the'
tunately the explosion occurred two philosopher and Betty is the flapper.
hours later than they had planned Others listed include Gattison Jones
and Elsie Elliott, assisted by Hal
and no lives were lost.
The Union of Transylvanian Jews Fisher's California Orchestra, which
has wired to the government to send hails from Los Angeles and is com-
the
an investigating commission, which posed of college men; Pepito,
of buf-
should hand over the arrested crimi- Spanish clown and muster
a favorite of King Alfonso;
foonery,
nals to a court martial.
Frank Fisher and Eldrie Gilmore in
"Her Bashful Romeo;" Margaiet
Solomon Levitan, state treasurer o r
Ford, soprano-baritone double voice,
Wisconsin, is a candidate for re-elec -
and Burns Brothers, "Society Gym-
tion. He will be supported by Sen-
nasts."
ator Robert 55. La Follette.

WILL AID JEWISH
COLONY IN CHINA

I. SAULSON, 300 East Hancock
Glenda. 3582

M1,11111'111 '111

MASARYK REASSURES
JEWS OF EQUALITY

Music Department.

L. KATZER, 1555 East Kirby
Nortboay 24188
or

'

■ I IIMIlk %.. \ ■ ■ •■ •■■•■ •• ■ ■ ■ ■ • ■■•11 4

Ilk

In Casa el Ilsvosvrosont Call

For Information Call
D. S. LEMON, 515 Virginia Park
!Empire 8040
J. IL EHRLICH, 5653 Second Blvd.
Northoar 0312
I. SADIRON, 390 East Hancock
Glendale 9982

1313#5H8358:830I':

1000130001:1004:1614304204353541

Federation of Ukrainian
Jews of Michigan

A Conference Will Take Place on Thursday, Aug.

28, 1924, at the Talmud Torah, 540 Farnsworth
Avenue, Detroit, at 8 P. M.

All Jewish organizations are hereby invited to each
send three representatives, as it is most essential that
every Detroit organization be represented at this
conference.

ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A GOOD
INVESTMENT?

"See Slobin for Jos. Campau Frontage."

Jos. Campau, the Woodward Menu. of Haintramck, is to be
This will
widened between Davison and the Seven-mile Road
too, can
sfiou,
make Jo,. Campau hotline • good investment H
a
done.
make money, just as many others hi

Get in on the ground floor before others beat you to it. HURRY!

S. K. SLOBIN

403 Ford Bldg.

Cherry 6062

RE-ELECT

Dr. J. E.

ct

urgess

Republican Candidate

FOR

Coroner

My Record Speaks for Itself.

Primaries September 9, 1924

HONEST — FEARLESS — QUALIFIED

VOTE FOR

Herman A.

Schmier

State Representative in Legislature

FIRST DISTRICT

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