'"72 7—..1Wilailettiwonansonesemes.
PlEIAT14/11;kfiiSit OIROXICUS
Shows Increase in Sales.
More sales records will be estab-
lished in 1926 among auto men than
any time since automobiles have been
manufactured. At least this is the
contention of Joseph Neubauer, who
heads a Dodge Brothers sales agency
at 8564 Joseph Campau avenue and
who is doipg something himself to
bring about his prediction.
In eight days he has merchandised
31 cars. "This," he says, "is signifi-
cant because it is more than twice the
volume of business transacted in the
same period last year. It all goes to
show that the forecast made for busi-
ness in 1926 was conservative. Janu-
ary, for example, is considered a very
ordinary month from the standpoint
of sales, but this year it is different.
Our sales have jumped over night.
"There is, of course, but one an-
swer. Intensive production has re-
duced the price of motor cars to a
point where it is really an economy
for every one who has an income to
own a car.
"Motor cars are better today than
ever before, despite the price cut.
The quality ia the same and the ap-
pointments that a few years ago
would be considered luxuries are now
necessities."
The Northeast Motor Company has
been established one year, but has
built up a large business among the
Polish people. Mr. Neubauer speaks
Polish fluently.
Protect Your Walls and Curtains
with
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Glendale 6359
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79 MARTIN PLACE
Half Block from Woodward Ave.
MASTER HEAT
REGULATOR
It opens dampers only an
amount equal to the draft
actually required.
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no clinkers—no waste of
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FUEL SAVED.
Henry [Morley
(Do
044 W. Warr. Ave.
Glendale 0252
RHEUMATISM
The Jewish Educational
Situation In Detroit
ADVOCATES OF LAND
COLONIZATION ARE
ATTACKED BY B1ALIK
By BERNARD ISAACS,
Superintendent United Hebrew Schools.
lion in the land of our forefathers
has, therefore, been intrusted from
now on into our hands. It all de-
pends on the will and ability of the
Jewish people. The Jewish people in
all its parts must, therefore, take
upon itself the fulfillment of this his-
toric duty with love and enthusiasm,
the duty toward itself, its past and
toward its future, if we do not want
to deny the substance of our life and
of our historic existence. The sooner
we fulfill this duty, the better it will
be for us. There is no doubt that the
question of honor for the Jewish peo-
ple and its status in all the countries
of the Diaspora.
As in most communities, the Jewish schools of Detroit vary widely in
type. The main schools in which the bulk of the educational work is con-
centrated are the Talmud Torahs and Sunday Schools. Then come the
"Yeshivah," where instruction is given weekly, after public school hours,
with stress laid on the study of the Talmud, and the Yiddish school, where
instruction is given in Yiddish literature and Jewish history with complete
elimination of religious subjects. These schools, although unimportant
numerically, are of interest. There are also a number of private chedorim,
on the average very poorly organized and managed, and a few schools con-
nected with congregations rather well organized both in teaching and
physical equipment. However, the great majority of the pupils who receive
Jewish instruction are those that attend either the well organized Sunday
Schools or the Talmud Torahs of the United Hebrew Schools system, where
2,000 pupils are given an intensive,:
course in Hebrew, in Biblical and
obtain support for the present needs,
Post-Biblical Literature, Talmud and let alone to provide • for necessary
Jewish History.
growth and extension. The budget of
From the standpoint of numbers,
the schools is $90,000. As formerly,
particularly in view of the intensive.
nesa of instruction offered, and of the about one-third of this sum is obtained
total budget involved, the center of from tuition fees. Membership dues
gravity in the Jewish educational situ- supply an additional 15 to 20 per cent
ation in Detroit, lies in the United Of the funds. The balance, fully 50
Hebrew Schools. The first school of per cent of the total budget, consti-
this system was organized in the tutes the crux of the vexing problem.
Last year a United Emergency
spring of 1919. The board of direc-
tors, headed by Esser Rabinowitz, Drive which included the stranded ref-
looked upon the establishment of this ugees, the Ort and a few local insti-
school as the first step in the creation tutions, was launched. The quota was
of a system of institutions that would set for $150,000, -10 per cent of which
serve the needs of the community as was to be allocated for the United He-
whole, not merely of one locality. brew Schools. Under the able man-
The writer has been invited to direct agement of the director of the United
the work of the school, which opened Jewish Charities, Morris D. •Wald.
with an enrollment of 600 pupils and man, the drive was successful. Nev-
a staff of eight teachers. The prob- ertheless, the problem of the United
lem of financing the work in the early Hebrew Schools has not been perman-
stages was comparatively simple. The ently solved. Several plans have been
budget amounted to $20,000, one-third discussed, chief among which is the
of which was raised from tuition fees idea of affiliating the schools with the
proposed Jewish Federation of De-
and the balance from subscriptions.
The last seven years have witnessed troit. This plan has finally been
a considerable expansion. The devel- adopted.
An adequate solution of the finan-
opment has been along two lines: to
provide additional facilities for larg- cial problem is essential, first, in order
er numbers and to follow the shift of to hold together what has already
Jewish population into new sections of been accomplished and second, to
the city. The latter problem has been make further headway in the solution
particularly burdensome, in that it en- of the Jewish educational problem.
tailed the erection of new buildings. Sixty per cent of the children of De-
There are now five schools in the ays. troit are still among the unschooled.
tern distributed in various sections of A few schools in the new districts,
the city, with a total enrollment of chief among them the Oakland and
2,000, as noted above. The two larg- the new Fenkell districts, are needed
est schools, giving instruction to 1,300 immediately to provide for editions]
pupils, are housed in the Kirby and children. It is sincerely to be hoped
that the new plan will have the back-
Philadelphia centers.
With the work extended to city wide mg of the community as a whole and
proportions, the problem of financing will permit a concerted effort in the
the organization has become very ser- direction of the solution of the prob-
ious. The board finds it difficult to lem of Jewish education in Detroit.
MAD STRUGGLE FOR
BLACK BREAD SEEN
IN WILNA STREETS
Polish Jews Seek
Palestine Visas
(Continued From Page One.)
5,000 Register For Immediate
Jew. of World Responsible.
"The final responsibility for the so-
lution of this problem—ill the posi-
tive or negative—will fall, whether
or not we want it, on the heads of
allparts of Jewry. The failure of
the Jewish national home will be
counted from now on as the last and
final failure of Judaism throughout
the world.
"The Jewish people which seeks
not only the existence of a 'living
dog,' but of a life of honor and pride,
must consider this question and draw
from it the theoretical and practical
consequences. The only and final
consequence of this consideration
must be that the re-establishment of
the national home must, at any price,
become the task of the entire people
without exception and that the recon-
struction cannot be delayed but must
the sight around me—those half froz-
Departure From Warsaw;
en, undernourished boys and girls.
3,500 Artisans.
Suffering but too proud to whine. All
of them came from other parts of Po-
WARSAW.— (J. T. A.) — Four
land. children of workmen, who, starv-
ing themselves, were unable to send thousand one hundred and fifty two
men
and 1,053 women have registered
them anything. And here they are,
studying under the most incredible in the last few weeks at the Palestine
office
of the Zionist Organization of
hardships. Thirty had to be sent home
last month. Had to be ordered home Poland for certificates to leave im-
because such is their spirit that they mediately for Palestine. Fifteen hun-
do not surrender until they collapse. dred of thin number are Zionist and
Besides, as one said, what is the use Mizrachi Chalutzim, and the rest con-
/ of going home. Things are worse sist mainly of artisans and skilled
' there. But, with all their fine spirit workers.
A group of 500 Jewish emigrants
I am afraid of what will happen to
them. Most of the girls had swollen left here for Palestine on Feb. 2. They
hands and feet—that ugly swelling proceeded to Constanza where they
from malnutrition. Arid how the sailed on Feb. 5. Additional groups
! teachers live is a mystery they don't are expected to proceed shortly.
During the month of January 1,100
I reveal. They haven't been paid in
emigrants left Poland for Palestine
seven months.
"I was shown the answers to a through the Warsaw Palestine Office.
psychology test. The students had The some number is expected to leave
been asked to write down what they in the months of February and March.
discussed the evening before. The present economic crisis in P Po-
Every other answer paper described land had its effect on the emigration
a discussion of various methods for to Palestine and resulted in the be-
self-deception, of convincing one's self sieging of the Palestine office by appli-
that hunger is just a mere mental at- cants for l'alestine visas. The Pales-
tine office of the Zionist Organization
t Rude.
"But I have found out about the in Poland has received 2,500 certifi-
cotes during the six months from
teachers. They have been getting, October to March. All thes certifi-
past
or a eight
an cater have already been distributed
average
average
of seven
20 zloty
week, months,
about $8
de-
a month, and they and their families and immense crowds of those
clam-
live on tea, black bread and potatoes. sire to emigrate to Palestine
acing
for
certificates.
All
of
those
"Ilygenic conditions in Wilna are
awful. The lack of soap adds to the persons possess the necessary travel-
squalor. Wash cannot be hung out to ling papers and doCuments. All that
dry because it is instantly stolen. In- they require is the Palestine admis-
door drying has increased tuberculo- sion certificate, being anxious to emi-
sis From 35 to 40 per cent of the grate as speedily as possible. The Pal-
Jewish children are suffering from estine office for this reason has been
gland tuberculosis. The local hospi- compelled to cattle three times in the
tals are closing for lack of funds, and last three weeks to the Zionist Execu-
the people cannot afford to pay physi. tive in Jerusalem, urging that another
clans fee. Instead they call in quacks 2,500 certificates he sent immediately,
at least 1,000 of which are for those
who kill more than they cure.
"There is about 90 per cent unem- who have already liquidated their
ployment among Jews of Wilna. The homes and must emigrate immediate-
knitting industry that gave work to ly. Those who stormed the office, ask-
5,000 is at a standstill. Of 2,000 globe ing for permissioh to go to Palestine
makers only 200 have work. Butchers comprises three classes: those who
have no money to buy meat—and if were completely ruined by the econom-
they did there would be no one to ic crisis and see their only hope in
whom to sell it. The bakers are ru- emigration from the country; Zionist
ined because flour is no longer sold on idealists, mainly young men and wom-
credit, and people cannot afford to buy en prepared previously for agricultur-
al work and; those who go to relatives
even black bread."
and friends who have prospects of set-
tling in Palestine with their aid.
Temple Has Varied Bill.
Don't suffer—get quick relief.
Effective and inexpensive.
It tosts nothing to come down and
find out.
THE WAYNE BATHS
Second and Front St..
Sulphur, Mineral, Turkish, Tonle,
Swedish, Electric Baths.
SWEDISH MASSAGE
Take Woodward Through Car.
Cherry 4784
Let
SHEKELL
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Cut Rate Moving and Storage.
1917 GRAND RIVER AVENUE
Plume Car[Iliac 68534679.
Select Dancing Nightly
Palais de Dance
Particular People Prefer
the Palais.
Strictly censored. Highest
Standard.
Joseph E. Howard and his "Broad.
casting Revue," with Pauline Zenowa,
Marjorie Lincoln and Jason, Robson
and Blue, Billie Senna and company,
the Jimtown Rhythm Kings and a
Michigan Paper Stock Co. snappy singing and dancing chorus
features the bill at B. F. Keith's Tem-
MEYER BARRON, Prop.
ple Theater, starting Sunday after-
Buyers of All Kinds of
noon. Others billed: Joe Boganny
WASTE PAPER
and his eight comedians in "Fun in
1342 Brewster St.
a Bakeshop:" Weir's baby elephants
Cadillac 1708
presented by Don Darragh; Bill Rob-
Cadillac 1709
inson, "The Dark Cloud of Joy,"
Nalsosimmausemsossomusinir America's foremost tap dancer; Jed
Dooley, the "Cameo Comic," in a
routine of rare travesty; Courtney
MANUEL URBACH
and
Keyes, musical comedy favor-
Granite and Marble
ites, in • song and dance interlude.
Petals Musicians—Th. Band
You Love to Dance With.
Monuments
Drama Plays at Bonstelle.
564 Winder
Street
Phone Cadillac 0048
Tise Only Jewish MONUMENT
Dealer in Detroit.
PLAN FIRST WORKERS
SUBURB FOR JIDRAH
JERUSALEM.—(J. T. A.) — The
first workers' suburb in the proposed
industrial city, Jidrah, will be built
shortly, according to a decision of the
Jewish Manorial Fund headquarters
here.
The Jewish National Fund, the
agency of the Zionist Organization
which has for its purpc e the buying
of Palestine land as the inalienable ,
property of the Jewish people, decided
to allot 5,000 dunam at Jidrath, near
Haifa, for the workers' suburb. It
was estimated that 1,200 families will
be nettled in the suburb.
The industrial city to be built near
Haiti, Palestine's future port, is to be
the center of the textile industry of
the country. The Co-operative Manor
Company of Poland, for whom the
proposed industrial city in to be built
by the Siemens-Schukert concern of
Germany, has been organized by a
group of three hundred textile men of
Lodz, Bialystok, Thomashow and
other textile centers in Poland. The
total capital of the Manor is 175,000
contributed by three hundred members
at f250 each.
John Fleming Wilson wrote an un-
usually powerful story in "The Man
Who Came Back" and one that is
particularly pertinent today in view
of the present relation between fa-
ther and son; Jules Eckert Goodman
lost none of the virile points and
added much to his comedy in the
dramatizat'on, which is being revived
at the Bonstelle Playhouse at the
present time. Donald Cameron, lead-
ing man, displays surprising versatil•
ity as Henry Potter, Jr. Silence is as great an art as speech.
1 r 1
SPRUNK
ENGRAVING CO.
1 . •■■■•■■•■•■ 1611.1011. ■•■ 1011.WMIIMIVIEWLIMILT,
Commercial Artists
and Engravers
700 ats12004779 SLOG
(Co, titmed From Page One.)
ig io
0E70017
•
LEWIS BROTHERS
Funeral Directors and Embalmers
7739 Jolts R Street
0i
Teirphoso Empire 2114
■
71910111191E1011,10117117111111:101210171100116.101.111310101 41.11M14,1C9MISO
FEBRUARY 19,
be carried out with the greatest speed
and efficiency possible, with tremen-
dous enthusiasm and with a maximum
of effort of all the creative forces,
both material and spiritual, which are
at our disposal.
"The Jewish people met with a
misfortune that the Balfour Declara-
tion was issued simultaneously with
the complete destruction of the Jew-
ish community in Russia—this won-
derful source of national energy in
the previous decade—and with the
impoverishment of the other parts of
the Jewish people. American Jewry
is, therefore, at present the only part
of Jewry which can take upon itself
this task. It must do so, because
there is no other redeemer. It must
fulfill not only its duty but the duty
of the other parts.
"American Jewry is strong and
healthy. It has broad shoulders. The
burden which history has placed upon
them is in accordance with their
strength.
"No danger! I am confident Amer-
ican Jewry will bear this burden and
come out victorious.
"The 'eternal A h a s v e r' has
glimpsed his star which told him
'here is your place of refuge.' Will
the Jew take this refuge? Has he
grown so accustomed to wandernig
that he cannot rest? There is no
other way out. The only way left to
us is the path of life prescribed to
us by the history of the Jewish peo-
ple," the poet concluded.
The choir of the Young Men's He-
brew Association, under the leader-
ship of A. W. Binder, and the Ilebrew
opera singer, Myro Glass, sang sev-
eral of Bialik's poems. They were
enthusiastically received by the audi-
ence.
Mortgage Loans
Land Contr
Ash your friends regarding the prompt service and fair ti
ment given by WI. If you want first or second
mortgage, or
mortgage on vacant, or wish to sell your land contract, are
Investment Mortgage Comps
PETER PATTERSON, Manager
313 Hammond Building
Cl'
Detroit C
learing House Assn
Clearing
am) Federal Reserve System
IRS
.
STATE BANK
OF DETROIT
FOUNDED IN THE YEAR 1857
Griswold at Lafayette.
15 Convenient Branches
A Great Year i•t
A Great Car
and Lower Prices
1925 was the greatest year in Dodge Brothers history.
More than a quarter of a million Dodge Brothers
Motor Cars were built and sold, yet demand was far
in excess of production—and continues to mount.
To meet this world-wide need for a smart and de-
pendable motor car, Dodge Brothers, Inc. have
recently completed a $10,000,000 program of expan-
sion, vastly increasing production and lowering the
cost of manufacture.
Remarkable new machine equipment has also been
installed—further reducing costs and perfecting
quality.
As a result Dodge Brothers, Inc. were enabled on
January 7th, to announce a schedule of prices that
has revolutionized all previous standards of motor
car value.
Prices all the more impressive because they apply to
a dependable and trusted product made still better in
many vital respects—
Engine operation incredibly smooth and quiet.
Instant engine response and elasticity.
Stylish new bodies finished in rich and dis-
tinctive colors.
Exceptional driving vision.
And the most important advance in steel body con-
struction since Dodge Brothers pioneered in building
the first all-steel body.
Touring Car
Roadster
Coupe
Sedan
$795
$795
$845
$895
Plus Government Tax only
No handling charges
THOMAS J. DOYLE
INCOli•ORATIID
JEFFERSON AT CHENE
WOODWARD AT MARTIN PLACE
EDGEW0013 4460
GLENDALE 7117
Highland Park Motor Co., 16123 Woodward_Arl. 3730
Hergenrceder, Inc., 14615 E. Jefferson.. Hick. 7600
Mercies Motor Saks & Service, 4426 Chene.. Mel. 6667
Hiles Auto Service, 12217 Twelfth
Hem. 4297
Norwoodward Motor Co., 9115 Woodward.Emp. 6980
Midwest Motor Co., 9111 Grand River _.Gar. 7100
Docknell•Knowlson Co., 2445 Michigan..__Glen. 9888
Laf. 1601
Dix-Western Motor Co., 3950 Dix
Northeast Motor Co., 8564 Jos. Campau._ Emp. 4083
_Lin. 1172
Gratiot Motor Co., 8226 Crratiot
North Central Motor Co. , 8517 Linwood__ Euclid 1880
DODGED EIROTHERE
MOTOR CARS