'- _. - 14"TI:sit IEN1SII PAPP. EIGHT KONILLE beelienfheinn oriusr Prophets. You will l iivnespbiiye the them:—The im . Itvait„hufrulati::.itiihten all the peoples believed in seeking the ethers, by the dignity of your lives, neighbor as thyself." aron the elevation of your thoughts, the The development of Israel in Eretz favor of idols, through bloody an work you will do for the betterment of k ferocious cults; the constitution of the humanity and peace among the na- il • I • if • .(1 I • Every Precaution Taken. family founded upon the respect of ) e on7ett again t) ( Y tions! You Can Be Assured of Cleanliness and Quality. great past through the chain of your children for their parents, that basis traditions. What could a small group of society the negation of which would "FROM . FARMER TO CONSUMER" Nationally Known French Jew Tells of Results of Five Years of Jews isolated upon a corner of the plunge us into chaos; the relations of Hudson-Essex Has Sold 5,520 of Devoted Labor to Cause Building Up a Cars in Wayne County earth, abandoned to the primitive ma- men towards one another based upon that the maxim "Do not do unto others terial forces, in the midst of vicissi- Jewish Homeland in Palestine. During Year 1925. tudes in the life of nations, do to re- which you would not have them do un- sists tempests which assail and some- to you." (Copyright, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, 1926.) Even without the stimulation of Phone ARLINGTON 9025 CARDONI AVE. Later, our Prophets, in words of new models, Hudson-Essex business is times destroy even the most powerful Morris I. Goldfeder, Mgr. There is one figure in the life of the Jews of the world today that con- on earth? You would not be able to fire, proclaimed the great principles maintaining a record pace of activity. of morality, of pity, of purity, in relig- tinues to thrill the Jewish imagination despite the passing of time and events. resist the slightest squall. It would Official registrations of new cars in Fifty years ago he startled the world by throwing his vast financial resources be like those soap bubbles which iri- ious thought which reaches up towards Wayne County for all of 1925 up to into the work of rebuilding the old land of the Jews. Today, after several desce with the most beautiful colors, the Eternal. Sept. 1 show that 5,520 Iludson and Besides, our history is, for all na- Essex cars have been bought in this decades have witnessed the rise in Palestine of a new Jewish life founded but which the slightest breath of air through the money and devotion of Baron Rothschild, his words delivered blows before it, like a shadow which tions, sacred history par excellence, Detroit market, or a margin of 2,008 the sacred history of the world. Lean- over the next most popular six-cylin- in the presence of his own handiwork cannot fail to appeal to every Jew. is effaced by a cloud. No words spoken in recent years by leading Jews connected with the In all that you will undertake, in ing upon our wandering fathers, dis- der line. upbuilding of Palestine have a deeper significance than those of Baron the most human tasks as in the most persed throughout the world, assailed "Nearly a year ago, Detroit motor- VII which he uttered recently on his visit to Palestine. sublime speculations of the spirit, you by the moat terrible tempests that any ists began to recognize the outstand- hschild m The baron, who has spent $30,000,000 of his personal fortune in the agri- should seek the character proper to people has ever had to endure, have ing values in Hudson and Essex," said Jewish aspirations, — the pursuit of traversed these long centuries of agon- Aaron Delloy. "Now this knowledge cultural development of the Jewish land, said: 1 turn my heart full of gratitude towards the Almighty who has granted moral perfection, which constitutes izing misfortunes, full of power to re- has become far more widespread with me the favor, in the evening of my life, to witness the admirable spectacle the essence of our religion. The im- sist adversity. They had in their the result that Iludson-Essex is doing of the resurrection of Israel. When I look back in my mind to the distant mortal doctrines of the most elevated hearts the faith of their ancestors, and a volume of business which is thou- CITUATED in the heart of New York and connecting spiritually which Israel gave to the in the blackest days of their history sands of cars a month larger than period of nearly a half century ago, when I commenced my work, and when uicksands into which it might be led world thousands of years ago, at the they dreamed of a better world, of one that of any other maker of six-cylin- I-, directly with the Grand Central and Penn Stations. I look back in my memory to the Pal- astray, the Jewish Home should evolve time when all the nations who sur- in which men would act together for der cars. As Hudson-Essex volume eatine of those days, with its soil cov- to the end that it may occupy that rounded him were living plunged in the good of humanity, transmitted has increased the public has been given An up-to-date first class hotel, newly furnished and ered with stones, thistles and weeds, position in the world, to which it ought the most abominable barbarity, have from generation to generation, to their the benefit of constantly lowered maintained the Jewish people always children, like a torch of light, without prices, so that now our cars sell for completely equipped to give the finest service available those unhappy fellahins who tried to aspire. ever allowing it to become extin- the lowest points in their history and alive, assuring to it its vitality and its The task to which you should set tp , wring from that barren soil a meag- on a scale of rates lower than other hotels in the city. guished, the divine thought, which at less than half their 'peak' prices." er harvest, it all seems to me like a yourselves, above all, is to give to the persistence during the centuries. Those Tables of the Law which they conserved in their hearts, the Jewish National Home, that admirable dream. teachings of our sacred Scriptures. "... and then shall ye do unto him Then, in the face of the terrible suf- conception, the widest possible signifi- Moses brought down from Mount Sinai 400 Rooms and Baths — In Singles, Doubles and Suites It is by continuing these traditions as he had purposed to do unto his ferings of the Jewish population in cance, and to work with all your are still today the basis of all modern brother." This wording ("as he had that you will be able once again to oc- Eastern Europe, crushed beneath the strength to develop its prosperity. civilization. During all their wander- a purposed to do," instead of "as he weight of oppressions, terrorized by This prosperity will benefit the whole ings in the desert, the Jews were al- cupy a great place in the world, did") gives rise to an extended dis- bloody pogroms, in spite of the deplor- population of the country. As in time ways preceded by the Holy Ark, with place which is fitting for the descend- cussion on the whole question of false ants of Patriarchs, for the descend- its precious Tables of the Law, con- past, you will continue to have the best able state of Palestine, I saw salve- ants of those who heard the voice of witnesses.—Talmud. tier' only in the return to the Holy relations with your neighbors, thus re- taining the sacred principles which Land. I believed that it was there that the Jews would be able to show to the world their moral and intellect- ual worth, as well as their capacity i•••••• •• ■■ ••••••reamose for work, and I entertained the hope that Israel would take on new life in Eretz Yisroel. 'Far from me was the thought of an exodus of all the Jews in Palestine. I thought of the establishment only of a center as important as possible, where there would develop the Jewish genius and the great intellectual cul- ture of our race, to such an extent that it would have a most happy re- action upon the situation of the Jews all over the world. But in order to attain that end, it was on land where it was necessary to begin by estab- lishing the first foundation. It was necessary to organize agricultural work. The pioneers of the earliest days fought bravely against diseases as well as against the untractable land which showed itself unresponsive to all their efforts. The first groups soon became hamlets. Finally, after hav- ing triumphed over all difficulties, ma- terial as well as political, those ham- lets have become splendid colonies. They used to say to me in those re- mote days: "You are building on sand," but this sand has changed into stone, and, as the Psalmist says, this I I r atone has become the Rosh Pinah, the keystone of the arch of the great edi- fice of Israel. The sight of those fields so well cil tivated, these orchards, these vine- yards, these orange-groves that stand ... • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • ■ • • • • • • • • out like an oasis of verdure in these desert plains, will attest the perse- verance, the ardor for work of the Jews. The impression which it has made in the world was of tremendous service to the Jewish cause, when the generous movement, created by an in- spiration stamped with so much gran- • deur, inspired a sentiment of solid- • arity among the Jews and assumed • • • • • • •• • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• such large proportions that it brought • • about, since the Peace Treaty, the • • proclamation of • National Home. • That the leaders of great states • have proclaimed the Jewish National Home, that the League of Nations has recognized it, should we not see in this the realization of that prediction which, during so many centuries of suffering and woe had sustained the • • • • • „ • ... . . • • • •• • • • • • 00. . courage of our ancestors and which, • • after two millenia, finds itself real- • ized? "A day will come when all the nations of the world will bring back the Israelites to the Holy Land.' What joy to live at this blessed time when one can say that that day has comet On all sides there have sprung up new colonies which, in time, will equal • • ..... • • • • .0.000 the older ones in prosperity. Towns, • • • . • • • • I completely Jewish, have been estab- lished. Tel Aviv has become a large city, a veritable human hive, buzzing with activity and labor. Private ini- tiative has created here industries of every sort, and thus with the progress which the colonies have made, we can say that the National Home is sup- ported on two solid foundations,—ag- • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . •• • • • • • • ir • • • • riculture and industry. But that which should constitute the truly Jewish character of the Nation- al Home is moral and intellectual la- bor; it is in this direction above all that the Jewish genius can develop. • Thus, the opening of the University ought to be recorded as a great event in the modern history of Judaism. Having, as we do, in the various coun- tries throughout the world, in every • • • • • • I • branch of science, so many worthy • representatives, why may we not pre- • sage that the Jewish University will shine with great splendor, both in the domain of pure science as well as in • the realm of sublime speculative thought, philosophic and religious, and that we will produce some day more Eimteins and more Bergsons? • It is in Hebrew, the language of our ... • • • . .. • • • • . • • • • • 1, forefathers, that instruction will be given at the University. From my very first visit to the colonies, I have insisted that the instruction in the schools be given in Hebrew, and I was .. ... • able to attest before long, to my joy, that Hebrew had again become • liv- ing tongue. The Jews, coming from different countries, were thus able to converse in a common language, which established for them a bond between the present and the past, re-linking • thm to the soul of our ancestors. While language promotes cohesion between people, it does not constitute nation- ality. Nationality, for the great pow. era, is the resultant of various special interests, of the form of developments that are brought about in the course • of their history, and the aspirations • • which derive from them. It impresses • upon their politics ■ certain direction which, in a measure, they are able to • follow. It must not be believed that •• because the idea of nationality plays • so important a role, at the present time, in the relations between states, that it should actuate the Jews who are coming to Palestine. That cannot exist for them, for we are dealing here with • country about to be formed. My v - where the people who are arriving in • . .. . . St have lived for centuries in various countries. the authority from I am taking what I have already done in Palestine, to impart to you my idea of how, avoiding the pitfalls into which it laifilt be trapped by Illusions, and the B Pure, Wholesome Milk Edmunde de Rothschild Speaks To Jews of the World• your People's Creamery Co. tbe eabillac.Patecs r'd unde Rot woo otel Broadway and 93rd Street q JOSEPII E. GOULET : Managing Director p 921 , today 25 years avoavand O. 9 No. of Branches i; • • • • .14[0,021Em 1 8 thousaud, • No.oaccounts, ••••• •• .... •••• • • 12 mom Ca041.,Surplus andividedinv • 19 • • :ccatim e• ciai ll mink* • • • .. MOM Savi n 13 Wink* • • • • ...... ... . .. . . • • • • .... .... .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • ge • • • Wayne CountyAnd Home Savings Bank BRANCHES EVERYWHERE1N DETROIT_ • . . . . • • • • • • •