PAGE FIVE
MbikrttorrfctvisrtRowcIA
"MUC HI ADO ABOUT NOTHING"
By SAMUEL SUMMERFIELD
Possibly i word of reassurance would not be amiss at
this time. T ) those who may be apt to view present day
events in an alarming light, a hasty survey of those ale
ments which comprise American history and government
is enough to reinspire confidence.
As far b telt as the early part of the seventeenth can
the New World
tury, the prig nary causes for the settling of the
demand for
may be trac ed to one common source
religious tol e !ration.
In the v c Iyage of the Mayflower we are afforded the
best exampl i of that latent desire for toleration; a spirit
suddenly fla ming and bringing about the settlement of
Plymouth. Lord Baltimore in the establishing of Mary
land not on l y succeeded in escaping the narrow intoler
ance of Old England, but endeavored, in a broad minded
way, to find a practical solution for the problem itself as it
existed in hi 9 own colony.
William Penn, that foremost exponent of brotherly
the most successful of the ex
love, proba l )ly furnishes
.. ,, ,„„ ,,r n,,,,nseteonia
Tho do-
periments i t.
scendants of those Huguenots who, forced to flee French
intolerance, found refuge in America, are even at this
moment ardent advocates of those high principles which
led them to found posts in Florida and the Carolinas.
What then has any American citizen to fear observing
the broad and firm ideals upon which the very being of
these United States is founded.
We do not err in calling this the golden age of toler-
htion. From those revolts in England, France and Spain
through the colonies up to the present day, the spirit has
not wavered. The writers of the Declaration of hide-
pendence and the framers of the Constitution embodied
the idea of tolerance as a basic feature. Such leaders as
Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, Roosevelt and Wilson have
expressed themselves irrevocably upon the subject. Even
during the past year, President Coolidge, Charles Hughes
and John Davis as spokesmen for their parties have given
sufficiently evident grounds to establish their ideas with
reference to this topic.
The subject of tolerance does not appear as an issue
fact and an inalienable right. Any effort to corrupt this
in the discussion of our national life. It is accepted as a
underlying principle of our country meets with silence—
evidence of its absurdity and the weakness of its opposi-
tion. The debate is closed, after years of strife in foreign
lands and at last, the United States, at once pioneer and
pre-eminent among nations, attests by word and deed and
practical demonstrations to the success of the very right-
ness of the foundations upon which it has builded.
-
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—
-
-
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----
° zee , : aver Slipper, Detroit's Newest
a rP.uhbOlr is th i y i nga aid
0 fB t ho hl P w s h y k ch ho i a: a to l y
merin s
the t i !ett e tn. resignation
Cabaret, Has Brilliant
an l
eJewish
appear
Minister
of r
hoe
Opening.
mineriseein n C ' LI e knt ra nt iii i siai, en froc m ote th ea d South by Professor Freud will be published
status and the A , k.ff
under the caption, "An Accounting
Jews must wait as well.
for declared that this was not due to
Detroit's newest cabaret, the Silver
With regard to the question of the anti-Semitism, but the incident arose With My Opponents." In this article lipper, opened Thursday evening.
1 11
► Jewish
population In Lithuania, Dr. due to a misunderstanding.
Professor Freud enumerates the ar- S More than 600 people filled every
Motzkin stated that this matter has
Tisn
-- -
he commhesion all its negotia- guments of those of his opponents i nch of apace in the former Ritz
not yet been settled. The Committee
Sout i n American goy- who, as they claimed, fought the psy- t aurant at Woodward and Forest ave-
t
Foreign Minister Tells Jews at of Jewish Delegations has submitted e Ions with urged
that no distinction
rnments
t
-
analytical theory on the ground nues, which has bene entirely trans-
Geneva of Friendliness
the
league
new
data
and
has
re
to
be made between Jewish and non - chp -
formed into a moat delightful and
calved an acknowledgement stating
of Government.
he stated in an or pescudo-science.
immigrants,
cafe.
that the question will be considered. Jewish
"My personality as a Jew who has modern
interview
with
Dr.
Motzkin.
William Rich, proprietor of the Sli-
Marvin Loewenthal, representative
never d denied his Jewish origin con- ver Slipper, created this charming
GENEVA.—(J. T. A.)—The exist- of the American Jewish Congress in
an
of
on
creati
tribute toward the
at.
'lance of an anti-Semitic movement in Geneva, is working with the Commit- THEORY OPPOSED
antipathy against psychoanalysis all rendezvous. He presented a most
Bulgaria was the subject of discus•
t roetive entertainment. •
of Jewish Delegations.
over the world. In spite of the fact
BECAUSE
OF
RACE
ion between Lau Motzkin, executive tee Colonel
Foremost
among
the
performers
are
Proctor, bead of the South
that arguments of such • nature were Pepino and Dilworth, two very excel-
!'secretary of the Committee e of Jew. American Commission
appointed by
ish Delegations, and Kaloff, Bulgarian the League of Nations to study the Claim of Prof. Freud in Article Pub • never openly expressed, it is regret- lent dancers. Pepino, the male mem-
tidily true that this circumstance has
of
Hamel in Vienna.
Foreign Minister and Minister
of the team, is a remarkable
immigration possibilities in Latin
not remained without effect. Perhaps ber
and
—
Educa tion , who is attending the As- America declared that the Interne-
that a Jew was the dancer. Other entertainers sang of
VIENNA.—(J. T. A.)—That the 1 5 is no accident
sembly o f the League of Nations here. tional Labor Office, which has repro-
danced
to the high amusement
first
exponent
of
psychoanalysis,
te-
The Bulgarian Foreign Minister as- senta fives from all cotries,
present.
un
will be theory of psychoanalysis found many
re- those
cured Dr. Motzkin that the anti. in permanent contact with the Jew- opponents because its author Dr. Sig- cause the forming of new theories
Ilenry Thies and his orchestra, just
Semitic movement in Bulgaria is con• ish emigration committees, as will the mund Freud, was a Jew an:I that he uires the ability to bear t he fate of returned train a successful season at
opposition.
fined to a small group and that the two bureaus which the International created the theory because he was a aloe eness' and to endure
familia r . to the the Castle Farms in Cincinnati, pro-
government
r nment . is doing all in its power Labor Office is establishing in Buenos Jew, is the opinion expressed by Pro- Such a fate ias nmore
vide the music both for dancing and
!
Jews than to y on e else , " Dr Freud for the various vaudeville numbers.
It.
fessor
Freud.
Regarding the legalization of the Aires and Rio de Janeiro for the regu•
In an almanac of the International declared.
lotion
of
immigration.
With
regard
' Jewish Consistory in Bulgaria, the
BULGARIA OPPOSES
ALL ANTI-SEMITISIx
Detroit Life Insurance Co. RENEW DISCUSSIONS
ON POLISH AGREEMENT
Wrote $1,300,000 of Buai-
ness During August.
The production of written business
by the agency force of the Detroit
Life Insurance Company for the
month of August was $1,347,000 in
the State of Michigan, according to
Homer Guck, assistant to the presi-
dent. This brings the total for the
year up to $14,974,000. The August
production is $400,000 in excess of
the production in August, 1924, and
the total for the year, to Sept. 1, is an
increase of 34 per cent over the same
period last year. The record of paid.
for business by the Detroit Life In
August, 1925, was $1,236,000. "If
our agency force maintains its presnt
ratio of production for the remainder
of the year, the Detroit Life writings
in 1925 will total in excess of $18,-
000,000," said Mr. Guck. "This is
the very best evidence of the prosper-
ity and the healthful business pro-
gress in the state, for the reason that
It Is representative, not only of De-
troit, but of every section of Michi-
gan."
WARSAW.—(J. T. A.)—The work-
ing of Polish Jewish agreement will
he a matter of renewed discussion in
the near future in Polish Jewish par-
liamentary circles, the Jewish Tele-
graphic Agency correspondent here
learns. Members of the Club of Jew-
ish Deputies, mainly coming from Con-
gress Poland, are preparing what was
termed an offensive on Dr. Loon Reich,
initiator of the agreement, urging him
to call for a general meeting of the
Club of Jewish Deputies to explain
the results of the agreement. Rumors
are also afloat that Dr. Reich will be
asked by the club to explain the pur-
pose of his proposed journey to Amer-
ica and possibly to postpone it.
CARD OF THANKS
William Foreman and family of
1705 West Philadelphia avenue wish
to thank their relatives and friends
for the kindness and sympathy shown
them in their recent bereavement.
fie
in
at
a-
is
Safety Deposit Boxes-
-Yearly and abort time rates
of
Id
to
From the
n-
he
President's
Desk—
ok
of
Id,
Talk
No. 241
PS-
ier
ich
Ice
di-
an-
eral
and
une
Jar
11
pep-
tone
I be-
Sun-
so1.1
play
Alice
ssful
"---handed to him
on a silver platter"
Such was the comment made on one of
our young depositors who had made
some money on an investment recently.
Fact was—he had withdrawn $300 a
few months previously as a payment on
a lot, and had just sold at a profit and
redeposited $600.
Yes--Opportunity has an annoying
habit of laying her favors on the pro-
verbial "silver platter"—BUT, you must
own the platter—the money in the bank
which the opportunity calls for.
Prove YOUR right to her favors by
maintaining a savings account with this
bank.
Detroit Clearing,
aring
House Assn.
C le
and Federal Reserve System
IRS
STATE BANK
OF DETROIT
FOUNDED IN THE YEAR 1853
Griswold at Lafayette
as,
os.
NINE VITAL FACTS
Here, in brief form, we present for your information nine
vital facts underlying the success of Dodge Brothers, Inc., and
the goodness and value of their product.
Dodge Brothers, Inc., consider these facts so fundamentally
important to the motor car buyer that they will be re-
peated, from time to time, until every newspaper reader in
America may be presumed to have read them:
Dodge Brothers, during the
past eleven years, have built
and sold more than one million
four hundred thousand motor
cars—and more than 90% of
these cars are still in service.
This record r.;quires no com-
ment It stands impressively
alone in motor car history.
It has never been Dodge Bro-
thers policy • to build yearly
models. When an improve-
ment, that is really an im-
provement, is discovered, it is
made at once. Their slogan,
"Constantly Improved But No
Yearly Models" is familiar the
world over.
Dodge Brothers build one chas-
sis and only one. This policy
materially lowers manufactur-
ing cost It also enables Dodge
Brothers engineers to concen-
trate their entire time and
thought on the betterment of
this one type.
Dodge Brothers have never
had an "off year" or an "off
car." This is because they have
?X-
ec-
ent
his
It
rid.
act
ing
t is
raw
-
Min i ister
torreeenhumrc
received an official
FIFTEEN CONVENIENT BRANCHES
never used the public as a test- .
ing ground for "nw models"
or lowered the quality of their
product in the slightest degree.
Every change has been an im-
provement on the original
design.
Dodge Brothers pioneered in
building the first all-steel open
car and the first all-steel closed
car. These epochal develop-
ments have saved Dodge
Brothers owners many millions
of dollars by materially prolong-
ing motor car life and by effect-
ing marked economies in man-
ufacture. This construction has
also reduced incalculably the
danger from accident and fire.
Dodge Brothers sell directly
through their dealers to the
purchaser. There are no sec-
tional distributing agencies to
increase the cost of distribution
and the cost of the car.
Dodge Brothers have never
given so-called "free service."
The car is sold at a fair and
honest price. Nothing is added
to this original purchase price
to pay for service that the owner
may never need.
Dodge Brothers Dealers were
pioneers in unanimously
adopting the flat rate service
system. By this system, the
owner knows in advance what
any service job will cost. There
are no unpleasant surprises in
his bills.
The sturdiness and long life of
Dodge Brothers Motor Car is
reflected in its resale value.
Comparatively few Dodge
Brothers Motor Cars are ad-
vertised in the resale columns of
the newspapers. The values
they bring testify unanswer , bly
to their goodness—and the pub-
lic's belief in their goodness.
The purchase of an automobile is a serious and important
business. The time has passed when transient novelties
can lead a thoughtful buyer to overlook the great essentials
of motor car worth.
go
A few of these essentials are clearly outlined above. They the
far to explain why Dodge Brothers name is accepted,
value.
world over, as the hall mark of dollar - for - dollar
Dons EI3ROTHERS,INCe
D ETROIT