America/ Autish Periodical Coder

CLIFTON sriNua - CINCINNATI 20, 01110

PAGE FIVE

Ar_
iEf

net

Oil 8 0149tiTS

GIAS - 1-1--. dos E P

(Copywright, 1921.

By Chu. H Julph.)

tli?"

wenty-sixth con-
preliminary to e t w
platform, the country club, social
of the union.
amusements and the latest cults of a vention
Mr. Straus gave credit to the
fashionable world. You in business Federation of 'Temple Sisterhoods,
and you in the pew are participants which is also in session here, for in-
in these self-same organizations. Can spiring the creation of the temple
you afford to give only' a third-rate brotherhood federation, which he said
recognition to the synagogue? The is rendering a real service in appeal-
synagogue will not come into its own ing to the religious consciousness of
until the religion of the Jewish busi-
ness man will be institutionalized
rares t in religion and em..
prophecy. Shall the synagogue be a comm on m ideal, as contrasted with

ionally some official of the Klan exhibits signs of human intelli- I mere house of brick or a gilded math I phasizing the
making a ilis- 1
s me a clipping from a newspaper stating that Ben i •soleum? Will you permit it to be a , the "We
material.
side
life.
believe
we of are
attorney who is a Jew, has been engaged i sneak imitation of a lecture hall or
ney, or Locke,
an
o Galen
Shall
the said
Straus, "and
contributing
to
odeiend
Dr. John
grand dragon of the Colorado realm of the \ the rear end platform of the
moving
tinct Mr.
contribution
to American
life,"
attr
a Jewish
P:st(a
no special
ecial train of social service?
Klan, charged with conspiracy
kidnaping.
I see
riticized for and
acting
in a professional
capacity synagogue be swamped, or shall it the happiness and well-being of the
t ma sman. No more b than a physician who is a Jew should refuse to drift, or shall it ride triumphantly on, individuals affected."
Ito on why I.aska a
• • , with a membership in
of
modern business world,1
r t
waves its
o a precious
ca lled the
carrying
cargo
to
ports
January
1923, of 42 societit•s . 34
ad-
added
ti-Semite.
It
is
well
known
that
Jewish
doctors
were
a
klan
cet io .
safety? Yours is the responsibil- ditional ' 1;rotherhoods were
• to
,:' d
an
a an
members of the royal families of Russia and Germane
Of course
tten attend
since then. Most of these are newl y'
o . .1 newspaper ' , ii t.
go.
a
nd
the
total
nom-,
tention of a Jewish attorney makes
t its'. Yours is the answer."
h•
,
se ized bodies a
u • • .
" it up.
e
this ry klansm
To stem the tide of irreligion whit '
and the newspapers have been playing
1 bet of individuals enrolled in th
over. Some day I wouldn't he surprised to see a group of
go
d ory excited
ppear in synagogue looking for the collection arn
plate
in human
order to
l Dr. Simon
was an
growing
that
I stronger
daily, declared
he proposed
organ.' brotherhoods throughout the country
&gine , a
I ization in which all phases of Juda- is 11,000. These brotherhoods have
moves en. we g ro w t o l e
; ism—Orthodox, Conservative and Re- synagogue
engaged in attendance,
such tasks as conducting
increasing
leave a contribution. As time
nature doesn't change much
fundamentally.
---tt----
directing attention
the same old story in a different setting. A doctor now , form—should be represented. Ra id : o h% open forums and
to the religious needs of Jewish stn.
e are prepared," he
the London Sunday ,
it 's
Of COUnir,
is London
writes
me a letter enclosing a clipping from
w of present-day conditions, to ad- 'i dents at colleges, social service and
vie ,,tAt
Reform 1 religious work in correctional institu
van•e one step in the line of practical
follows:
08
pictorial,
lions. A unique feature instituted by
c o-operation and pi', gress
I wonder, is the motive of the German end Austrian Alpine
Judaism must not 'nor should the , s ome of the brotherhoods is fellow-
%lst , xcluding all Jews as I read they do, from their club huts.
dinners to which each memb
Union of American Hebrew Congre. '
clubs in t,, e as Leslie Stephens long ago pointed out, though not a race
invites a non-Jewish friend and at
' • 1 a h ion:Ihii,
gations ., 1' 1,..
• • in st i dr . ,' atis it oi iso
fiat
The
Je
of mountaineers,
were at any rate the first people to identify "high
which
representatives of Chrisn
It cannot be liberal to the Christian '
of
and illiberal
the Orthodox
The I i denominations are among the speak-
places" with holy places.
that lie to ahead
of us are Jew.
so great
ask s
The writer in the Sunday Pictorial need not wonder. Anti-Semites have t
i that they call for the energies of a , ern. " The aim of the brotherhood move-
motive other than that of anti•Scmitism• The reason is probably social
ment is to make felt in the pew the
in
this
instance.
In
another
circumstance
it
may
be
commercial
or
profes•
united Israel in America for their spiritual leadership of the pulpit,'
AO
o f e verything else, the Ger-ladequate solution. The problem of . said Mr. Straus in his message. ''We
aionalantagonism. Having kept the Jews out esus, the Jew, figured they I Jewish education is greater than the I
are an adjunct to the synagogue and
man and Austrian Christians, worshipers of J
might as well make it unanimous and include "huts" as well. I could say capacity of Reforin
or Orthodoxy.
nthusiasm
of a united not a substitute for it, and we must
at this point that would probably shock my readers. But if mY • The talent and e
never permit a feeling to grow that
correspondent
will send me the address of the "climbers" who don't want hrael must be drawn upon to meet attendance at our meetings takes the i
aomething
in a statesmanlike plan of religious
I have an interesting statement to Bend them.
education, the difficulties involved in place of attendance at temple serv.
Jews,
----::---
ices. The men's clubs and brother-
been the plastic age Or revolt of youth."
Rabbi Rudolph L Coffee of Oakland, Cali, has
A 100 per cent increase during the Moots are keeping the ideals for
Le
I just chaplain
learn that for the present legislative session of the Californiaek-
elected
years in the number of con- which they are organized well in
ture, the first time, I believe, that a rabbi has been so honored. Rabbis toast 10
mind and I have seen evidence which
with the Union ,
is have opened sessions, but I understand that to select a rabbi to be the chap- gregations affiliated
o f American Hebrew Congregations assurt•s me that many hundreds of
lain for alt entire season is unique. Dr. Coffee has been doing splendid
men , wh o at limits have forgotten the
was pointed to by Charles Shohl, .
work as a member of the State Board of Charities and Corrections, and his
beauty and inspiration of our refl. ,
election as chaplain is undoubtedly a tribute to the tine public st•rvice he president of that body, in opening the
Ion, have been reawakened MA won
has rendered. It is always a source of satisfaction to be able to record the , convention, as indicative of the trend ,
back to Judaism."
active participation of our leaders in the broader welfare work of an entire of the Jews of form
this country
toward
a
of religious snot-
more modern
ship.
FRANKLIN DISPUTES
state.
Urges
Free
Synagogues.
John Jay Chapman of New York seems d etermined to make Harvard
ELIOT ASSIMILATION
„ Our synagogues ought to be free
entleman
who
protested
not
an s
i the g
C
I have become
ADDRESS ON JEWS
University
uncomor•
Jews," he said.
so long ago against
the electon
of a Roman Catholic as a fellow of he.
i
in even more convinced of this from an
'university. Now, as a result of articles of his which have appeared
n
th e M assachuset ts t•xperience I had not so long ago in
(Concluded from page 1.1
d
du
n
b
as
y,
a
rlution
hee
introce
in
eso
by big , New York. I was there during Rosh come together." The bond which
s
mazines recentl
culture is being cruhed
determine whether "tr ue
to llarvard.
Legigaslature at
business"
Mr. Chapman has evidently taken a leaf from Upton ; l o lnaeshoonah , and I attended services at unites these "choicest spirits in Amer-
t it great temples. The eyrie-
WAR "not racial.
's sensational attack on the colleges and universitie! n his book
s arouse d ican Israel," he said,
inclair Goose Step." It seems that a storm i s threatening ' it Harvard.
The real uniting bond is the Jewish
"The
This
I
found
t
of
which
will
be
the
invest'.
gogue
was
half
empty.
i
qui
on
nry
n unnery and
th e I • i
faith, and they who at amp
that may have far reaching effects, nut
obliged to close his shop at Harvard and that the reason why the service was , religious
• • the lace and the part of
gation of why Professor Baker WAS
p oor lyattended was because the the Jew in the world's life apart from
ttendance minus-
open up at Yale.
offi cers had made a
his religious passion are bound to fall
WeitMann, over 2,000 sible for hundreds of Jews because o f into errors and misjudgments."
message quoting Dr. Chaim
According
to each
a cable
Jews
are going
month to Palestine, the largest exodus, says Weizmann,I the high price which it demanded for
This, Dr. Franklin believes, niust
tickets. Synagogues like all other in-
xplanation for the statement
in Jewish history. I can't quite figure that out. Two thousand, of course,I
must, of course, be con- he the e
of Dr. Eliot, whom he praised as a
is a much larger number than formerly, but it seems to me to be a long I s
k
distance
from being the "largest Jewish exodus in history." Apparently ducted in a businesslike manner, but humanitarian and a just man. Because
l there is a point where business must of Dr. Eliot's distinction in these re-
the economic conditions must have greatly improved to offer opportunity
so we are I stop so far as the synagogue is con- lations, his utterance, Dr. Franklin
for this increased migration. There are 10,000 s Jews
earned, and that point is when its said, "was all the more surprising, and
that waiting,
only a fraction
told, each month to go to Palestine, but it seem
nd fees be come pro hibitive. all the more disappointing."
be accommodated. While all this is interesting, we must not forget in our I dues and
th ou san ds upon thousands
"Dr. Eliot," the rabbi asserted,
enthusiasm that more Jews will continue to live outside Palestine than There
of Jews, good citizens, good Jews, "mistakenly interprets Jewish distinc-
•
who
cannot
belong to a temple be- tiveness in racial rather than in re-
inside.
---::____
cause their financial resources are not ligious terms. In the increasing num-
Thank goodness, I have thousands of eyes reading for me, otherwise 11
I such as to make it possible for them ber of intermarriages he sees a thin-
never could collect the necessary material to fill several columns a week•
the high fees and dues de-
Among the letters that came this week was one from Cleveland, containing to pay
ning of the Jewish racial blood. But
minded.
in the past intermarriage has been op-
1 clipping of the sort that does help to eliminate prejudice in certain guar-1 1 mended.
"A way ought to he found to posed by the Jew not on the ground
ters. For example, this item, appearing on the sporting page of a daily '1 :finance synagogues in a manner which
that it would thin his racial blood, as
paper, helps remove certain ignorant ideas concerning the Jew's:
will not close their doors in the faces Dr. Eliot presumes, but rather on the
, of these very worthy and very desir-
ground that it would weaken his re-
Hebrews are said to have an eye to finance, but two Jewish boxers
' able people This way must be found
boxing Tuesday night showed that the Hebrewsdo
consciousness."
: if we are to perpetuate Judaism in ligious Views
in the l'ublic Hall
}Talker refused the
on Intermarriage.
not take advantage. Bennie Gershe and Archie W
! i America; if we are not to estrange
Dr. Franklin discussed the inter
forfeits posted to guarantee that their opponents, O'Connell and
these thousands and their children
marriage
question,
saying that while
Gardner, would make certain weights. They were found to be over-
I and alienate them entirely from our
weight, but the two Jewish boys refused to take the money. That's
man who is some rabbis will not officiate at t
' I faith. It is hard for the
mixed marriage, he did not hold tha
' barred out of the synagogue because 'intermarriages are the one insur
real sportsmanship.
;:—._.
he k a poor man to have any respect
mountable bar to marital happiness.
This isn't high brow material, but it has its place in establishing a better I
understanding of those Jewish boys who take a swift upper cut to fame. for our religion and it will be harder He explained that he does not encour
his children. Many Christ-
s ti ll f ur
them but that when they tak
ay to
Read this paragraph and then the one following. The second I believe, ' tian churches have found a w
y
dal burdens
on their poorer
congre-
is the result of the statement of Bishop Brown, who is being tried for finance
their institutions
so that
the . place he insists that the parties prom
, will not have to impose heavy finan. Ise to raise the children in the Jewis

occas
0. A reader sen d

Here, in brief, is the
merchandising
policy of the
Frank & Seder
Store.

E have undertaken to develop here a great
popular-price retail store—a store that shall
win the confidence and good will of the public
to an ever increasing degree. To do this we
have established certain fundamental policies. We
believe you are interested in knowing just what these
policies are, and why we adopt them.

All our merchandising experience, and all we have
The only kind
access to, convinces us of this one thing:

of merchandise that ever really satisfies the purchaser

By this we mean merchandise
that is sincerely made in the effort to put into it a cer-
tain quality, as against the kind of merchandise that is
skimped here and there with the intention of selling it
at a certain price. Quality merchandise is the only
Will
logical basis for building up confidence and Good
for a store. It is the only kind that represents sincere
service to the public. It is the only kind that is entitled
to he called "Standard," or to be characterized as
"Worthy." Our conclusion, therefore, is this: We
of QualitysMer -
established for this store the standard
But
chandise, in the medium and less expensive grades.
whatever the price, it must be sincerely manufactured,
sound and trustworthy. To sell such merchandise at
the lowest prices we can, and with the best service we
can—that is the fundamental merchandising policy of

is quality merchandise.

this store.

wooDwARD AYE

heresy. Ile says:

-
e-
n-
or

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10

id
r,
ic

red

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sh
ts.
IY,

re-
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nd
trn

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IAs
rte

in-
nd
sal
in
de-
of
ng.
to
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son

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iew

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and
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risk

are

;ht.

OTC

not
the
but
rust
nist
to
be
ter-
hole
look
ing.
r he
p at
uni-
be
t as

others
wretched,
gents. Surely we Jews, who are said riages
faith. happy
He has and
seen
some
interma h
.
Jesus Christ, virgin-born and visibly resurrected from the dead,
, oug ht Salt • ,
, to be such able business men
the difference betwee
Because
to be able to find a way to do the
is a myth just like Santa Claus.
religious an
non-Jews is relig
same thing. The present membership Jews and
This belief is taking root in too many minds to be eliminated by threats
f the man}'
hundreds of Jewish con. not racial, Dr. Franklin continued, '
ni
" veersDr. Eliot
of all sorts of superstitious punishments.
gregations in America ought to con- assertion that the Jews have not bet
According to a statement made by Bishop McConnell of Pittsburg, at centrate a little thought on this sub- resent wit a my p
Women : ject, so that their doors may be assimilated into the life of Amerits
Missions' Council and Council of
and that it is not desirable that they
the closing session of the Home
w ide open to all who would enter."
should be. Is this the voice of the
for Home Missi on s, in Atlantic City:
Executive Sec retar y Reports.
great liberal speaking? Is it the word '
untes
I Appointment of six rabbis to act as
States
is
not
a
Christian
nation,
and
foreign
cori
regional
directors
for
the
Union
of
of
the profound student of history?
te
d
The Uni
from American missionaries, because
' American Ilebrew Congregations; the Or is it the each of a false
mind
that has
will Net accept Christianity
philosophy
it practiced here. The greatest obstacle that the
n ot
rganization and development of syn. been
infected
by that
th
u
meet is that the truths he teaches are ore,
which
has proponded
a Nrdic
I o
foreign missionary h as to
eref
pe. theory, that remains to be proved o, an d :
isti an nation. It is said, th o
Ig
a
exemplified I n thi s supposedly (the
thssionaries
represent thse w ho
I communities;
of efforts
a s has imbided the spirit of the Ku Klux '
mi
to appointment
devote all his
by the so-called heathen that
; .
• k •
-
1 • to ex loit the land of such heathen.
d ' •
, to the development of religious wel-
Dr. Franklin dealt with the posse• ,
that Dr. Eliot feared the "spit- i
vites among Jewish students h'I'
f
r
•
acti
Well, the heathen aren't such dumb bells.
wn to ' in the universities and designation o
who have o trans- a specialist in the field of youth edu- itual genius of the country would suf..
Almerindo Portfolio is an Italian, 47 years of age.
Ile is kn
country, ot. that a few days cation to thousands of children now fer by contact with the spiritual
ver to without such training were among the genius of Israel. If the Jew be what i
thousands o f J ew i sh merc hants through out the
do
n
acme
ny
of
them
know.
o sheer recommendations made by Rabbi we claim he i s, s position
acted b us i ness w ith hi nt . m a
becomes
not
uit business
built
and up
turned
through
pesonal-
Dr. Eliot a religious
a nd s industrY.
retired
from
the
cloak
ago Portfolio
George Zepin, executive secretary o f ity•
merely untenable but ridiculous and
hi s en tire $ 7,000,00
thou[ 0
six of
immi - . the union.
despite
its
forts boo
uc and hard work, without clock-watching.
This Italian
his program stamps itself,
a Jewish boy who d e
Rabbi Zepin's report contained a
late
Isaac
Seder
of
gr
eei l i onpt, A 1 , ,y, like the
rprise,
has There
contributed
the romance
of review Of the past year's activities of tragic elements, a very farce." On
try of the United
States.
are any to number
of others
great comme rcial en t e
ew in Am erica might
that the own
like gar
these
have created through their own ability, without influence the synagogue and school extension the contrary,
Dr. Franklin expressed
ment two,
i n du who
s
the
d J from the heights of
ey
or help of any kind, wonderful business hisecountr,
enterprises, a testimonial to the
charge.
department,
He told which
of the is
increased
under his
ac- fear
be pulled
"
by
t he present "monon.
t"
iliza
country. Portfolio drew no tivities carried on during the past 12 . the spiri g, ple asure-mad civti"
in t
opport uc it y o ffered to men of ability his
business
to
his
employes;
loyalty,
months
in
the
various
divisions
of
the
g
rubbin
Delegates
to
Convention.
religion, or racial lines i n presenting
the re. department. During 1923, he said.
Headed by Dr. Franklin, a large
mmerc
we find these no m
were the o n l y conside rations So
ilit y m
a,
ial genius: Samuel A. 133 small communities were reached. le legation representing Temple Beth
b
tG bop
i de n mt, am thee generosi ty o f this Italian co Samuel Pasternak, Edward J.
of the work of 48 s were
a
result
o
El
attended the twenty-ninth biennial
As
k, Ed E. Nathan,
Gold an, Ills Sch encward
he pointed out, religious school preach-
ra b
convention of the Union of American
Scully and his brother, Pasquale Portfolio.
Hebrew ('o of regattons in St. Louis.
onvention opened last Monday
Thank you, Glenn Frank, editor of the
Century.
Your remarks
I organized
in 19 cities.
C places.
should
be specially
mailed on
to the
Stan-
ing Reviewing
was organized
in four
the religious
work of the The e c and was concluded on Thu rs .
su.
bject of the 100 per cent American
department, Rabbi Zepin reported
multaneously with the uni on's
wood Sli•ncken, every Grand Goblin and Dragon, to say nothing of the . that considerable progress was made day. Si
g, the convention s of the tie'
solemn-faced gentlemen who wear the Bill Bryan frock coats.
Seventy-two
rabbis
visits to meetin
tional Federation of Temple
Brother.
n of.
Intelligence acmes to be ---::-----
snaking some headway these days. Let us read t I I during
the past
year made
in this 288
direction.
eratioheld
the Nat iona l
per cen
50 universi. hoods andSisterhoo
Fedalso
ds were
Amerisan
:"
, 50
universities.
Of these
about
that
peculiar
individual,
the
"100
'ties, If were visited once during the Temple
*hat Mr. Frank says
, year; 27 at irregular intervals of The delegation from Detroit, besides
' more than a month, three at monthly I/r. Franklin,
consisted of Rabbi
Henry J. Berkowitz, Adolph Finster-
that body of citizens who have honestly but
intervals, three at weekly intervals scald. president of Temple Beth El:
I he first group is
irritatingly appointed themselves as guardians of our American insti-
the work Mr. and Mrs. Milford Stern, Mr. and
, and one at hi-weekly intt•rvals.
c at-
pu bli those
tuthin s , Another group may be called profiteers at patriotism,
Mrs. Wallace Rosenheim, Milton M.
Rabbi 'lupin also reviewed
. of the commission on Jewish educa -
%rho have sought by their 100 per cent talk to distract the
lion, which is headed by Rabbi David Alexander Imac Dreifuss, Adolph
tendon from their own anti-social policies and practices. The third
of
Cincinnati.
This
cum-
Freund,
Mr. and Mrs. Abe Shiffman,
group is the rank and file of rt•actionary politicians who have made
. Phillipson
mission is composed of rabbis ap- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Finsterwald,
of IIIII per cent Americanism a convenient smoke screen for their
Mrs. Ben
pointed by the department of sync- Bernard Ginsburg, Mr.
and
es A.
Smith, Isaac
, but
bankrupt political intelligence.
Lvery good citizen is interested in loyalty and patriotism
trogue and school extension and the D. Marks, Mrs.
Dr. Charl
Rosenzweig
and
Sarah
there three groups of professional agitators have during the last wing
six
. Central Conference of American Gilbert,
' Rabbis, and under its auspices school Sam Summerfield.
years been most in evidence. And some of us have been gro
more and more dissatisfied with their ideas and policies. I refuse to
• t•xtension work is conducted. Its ac-
measure a man's patriotism by his flag-waving and his characteristic
catchwords
' tivities come under four sub-commit.
all change is
--
and slogans. The neurasthenic fear of
, teeselementary education, youth
of this type of man, who sees something sinister in spelling reform
university edu.
• Monthly Meeting:
education, adult and
and Esperanto, and who thinks the millenium will be here when
cation, and teacher training. It is i The monthly meeting of the Y. W.
ill memorize the Federal Constitution and look upon
will be held Sunday, Jan. 25,
ss
it hLoG
I c oh dilid nrse pn irw
ed
planned to have e ach-division headed I. A.
by an expert. Dr. Emanuel Gamoran at 3 o'clock. G. E. Densmore of the
department
and is
on a English department of the University
—
travail and travel of Israel. The story is tart'
educational
director
of now
the elemen.
of Michigan will speak on "American
of the wandering Jew is matched by • year's leave of absence in Palestine Iumor." A musical program has also
SIMON ADVOCATES
prayer
wandering
the
the
glory
of
RELIGIOUS ARDOR
book. Can you not feel that prayer ' for further study abroad. been arranged.

Y. W. -1—
F . A_. NOTES

vl

rous
of
ard-
the
wish

.
›mt

BY BUSINESS MEN

(Co tnued from page 13
The synagogue is even more than this.
i re s the social expression of our re-

ligious unity. It represents the tie
Which links the past and the present
in unbreakable responsibility. The
'Ynagotrue visualizes its binding hold
by means of • prayer book. The He-
brew prayer book, full of tears and
triumphs, Is the self-revelation of the

Developing Lay Leaders.
is worthy of your respect, your sin•
Camp Reunion:
daily usage? Is it neces-
The development of a la y leader-
The "Y" camp reunion will take
care and
sary to make a plea for prayer in an ship which will he a telling factor in'
flow
co mmercial?
hard life is, after
and how its
I congregational life n and the establish- place Tuesday evening, Jan. 27. It
itself all,
age that Call!.
on every hand!; meat of • spirit of unity as some of i will be held in the form of a costume
How weak beset
we are
two years
the
attendance
will be lim-
us despite our boastithe fruits of the founding
mysteries
Federation
of party
I ited and
to ths
e receiving
invitations.
Any girl who attended camp and
ago of the National
and intellectual strength!
Brotherhoods
were
empha-
o( physical
rs T e sized in the message of Roger Yr'. did not receive an invitation is te-
you
find
detracto
and
competitors
of the
congregation.
"On
all rides
to enter into rivalry for n. Straus of New York. president of thatiquested to call at the clubhouse and
lt is ask ed with the stage, the lecture ' body, which opened its sessions as • l make a reservation.
patronage

PROGRESSIVE

Thousands of readers of this per who are co-partners in the Detroit
Life Insurance Company's business by reason of their ownership of policy
contracts with the company, will be interested in the following salient
facts from the annual statement of the company just issued:

Total amount of insurance in force • • . .$47,000,000.00
3,553,000.00
Reserves
4,100.000.00
Gross assets
Total new insurance written in Michi-
12,926,000.00
gin, 1924
1,848,000.00
Total premium income in 1924
Total death claims paid to Jan. 1, 1925 1,135,804.19

The Detroit Life Insurance Company announces quarterly f dividends
payable to stockholders, February 1st, establishing the stock o the com-
pany on a basis of 12 per cent on par.
Readers likewise will be interested to know that the Morris Fishman
agency continues its LEADERSHIP of all lie insurance andd

cent increase in premium incomes in 1924.
Detroit Life offers every well known form of legal reserve life insur-
ance policy upon equitable rates and under Michigan legal requirements.

Attractive opportunities for ener-
getic men, with or without experi-
ence, in the greatest business in the
offered by consultation
world are
with }'ice-President Morris Fishman.
Indicative of the company's co- opera-
for happiness and success in its
tion
agency force, the Detroit Life an-
nounces that all agents who pay for
*60,000 or more business in the first
seven months of 1925 will be taken
Agency Convention at
to the Annual
Houghton, in the Copper Country, on
the palatial steamer "Tionesta," a!!

DETROIT LIFE
INSURANCE CO.

"Th. Company of Service"

2210 PARK AVE. AT COLUMBIA

expenses paid.

MORRIS FISHMAN, Vice-President
M. E. O'BRIEN, President
JAMES D. BATY, Secretary and Treasurer.

