America lavish Perla/ilea! Cotter canon CINCINNAll 20, OHIO PAGE TEIREll Tif; r KOH;AWIS/1(11RON1Ct ,f. Frigidaire Breaks Ground For N et $20,000,000 Expansion Project. U. H. S. PUPILS CONDUCT SERVICES Junior and Senior Minyons Elect Of- ficers for Ensuing Year. Will Have Annual Output of 600,000 Electric Refriger- ator Units. By An 06 d er 50 ne P- se ad to qty ey and Prayer, it is commonly said, is a lost art. We think that only the old people find real efficacy in prayer. Youth, however, has not yet discov- ered its full value. Yet anyone who would observe and listen to the Sab- bath services of the children's min- l'on of the United Hebrew Schools would find it necessary to revise his opinions considerably, • for here is a group of young children, boys and girls. who come to pray with surprise nig eagerness, and who go about the services with the ease of the aged folk. 1 attended these services tone Sat- urday morning as a casual observer, at the Philadelphia-Byron Talmud - Torah, and I was entirely taken by surprise by the atmosphere of their synagogue. The children have their own officers, including a shamus (beadle) and chazan (cantor). The chazan, a youth of about II years, conducts the services with great ease. His voice is clear and his prayer sin- cere. Probably the most beautiful and impressive port of the services is the congregational singing. The whole - congregation chants forth those old Jewish melodies with a spirit and fervor that thrills as it comforts. For are not these little Jewish children the rock and strength of our people? And so they sing and chant those beautiful psalms until their very souls seem to go up in prayer. After shacharis, the first part of the morning prayer, a faculty mem- ber of the school delivers a short sermon. Usually a few verses of Pirke Ahos are explained and de- veloped in a way that will impress the children with their ethical value. Oc- casionally a selection from the scrip- tural portion of the week is the text. Because of varying degrees of fluency in reading, the congregation is usually divided into a junior and senior minyon. The senior minyon conducts complete services in the ac- cepted Conservative manner. The juniors omit certain difficult or-minor portions of the text. Recently election of officers fur the Philadelphia-Byron minyon was held for both groups. Those of the junior minyon are: President, Rob- ert Brown; vice-president, Alfred Lippitt; treasurer, Frank Solomon. The senior officers are;, Honorable president, Sadie Shur; president and chazan, Oscar Cohen; first vice-presi- dent, Seymour Rosenberg; secon•I vice-president, Dorothy Selick; treas- urer, Joseph Cohen; secretary and assistant chazan, Jacob Cohen; ser geants-at-arms, Milton Schuster and Dorothy Ilt•cker. Installation of officers took place after the services the Saturday fol. lowing the elections. Refreshments were served in the Talmud Torah auditorium for all Co. children. These little social gatherings for the chil- dren are given from time to time. u• The expenses for these refreshments are defrayed by the children them- selves The services are supervised by the faculty of the school. BETH EL MOONLIGHT SUCCESSFUL AFFAIR One of the most successful moon- lights of recent years was given on Monday evening, June 21, by the Young Peoples Temple Club of Tem- ple Beth El, on the Steamer Colum- bia. Jules Klein's Serenaders fur- nished the music for dancing on the spacious second deck and the Red Apple Club of Station WC X, Detroit Free Press, entertained on the third deck. Sammy Lerner, well-known Detroit song writer, sang several of his own compositions, including. "Do You Remember Me." "By the Sign of the Rose" and "You Never Can Tell the Depth of the Well. by the Length of the Handle on the Pump." The program was in charge of Norman II. Birnkrant. All those who have not as yet paid for their tickets are requested to do) so. Kindly mail checks to the Young Peoples Temple Curb of Temple Beth F:1, Gladstone and Woodward ave- nues. Awnings Now Is the Time to Place Your Order. CADILLAC 4 309 FOR SERVICE NATIONAL TENT AND AWNING COMPANY 422 W. JEFFERSON F: I e r trio refrigera- tion is the outstanding R. F. Callaway, Manager, Detroi Branch, Delco Light Company, us ing his $20,000,Q00 shovel in help ing to break ground for the $20, 000,000 Frigidaire factory expels lion. This occurred in Nylon Ohio, June 18, 1926. OBITUARY 7 MEYER GROSSMAN 9he High Cost Of Excess Weight Excess weight in motor trucks is expensive. It increases the purchase price and it costs as much to carry as an equal weight of pay load. Its cost is even greater, because it must be carried all the time. industrial udevelopment of the present decade, says R. F. (rallaway, who has just returned from Dayton, Ohio, where he had a part in ground breaking for a new $20,000,000 Frig- idaire expansion pro- ject. St r. Callaway is the local manager of the Detroit branch of the Delco-Light Com- pony. C. F. Kettering, vice-president of Gen- eral Motors, and E. G. Biechler, pr e s i t ant and general manager of the Delco- Light Company, a subsidiary of General Motors and I Man makers of Frigidaire, Left, E. G. Biechler, President ■ and G ager, Delco-Light Company. Right, C. F. Ket turned the first sod tering, Vice•President, General Motors. Ninety-nine Frigidaire distributors and branch managers with nickled shovels then took their turn. The new Frigidaire factory will be one mile long. It will be in production early in 1927 and will have an annual output of 600,- 0110 electric refrigera- w Frigidaire Plant now under construction at Car units. Upon Mr. N ew Dayton, Ohio. A plant one mile long; employ- CallaWay and the other ment for thousands of people; double the ou.. distributors and branch Put of Frigidaire., $5,000,000 for buildings; managers will fall the $7,000,000 for machinery; $8,000,000 for m•- responsibility of mar - terial, inventories; ground broken Friday; four keting this output. Frigidaire. a minute; 600,000 Frigidaire. a "We expect to sell year; greater production of all Delco-Light two or three times as products. tit,).. „1:t roirgyidainirels 92in7 n th ' as we will dispose of in 1926," said Mr. Callaway. There is a tremendous demand for electric refrigeration and this demand is growing steadily week by week. "General Motors regards Frigidaire as one of the most promising mem- bers of its great industrial family and is ready to back it with all the money necessary to enable it to command the field. It gives the household something new in the way of service and fits perfectly into the American scheme of living. General Motors expects the electric refrigerator to fol- low the automobile as a great quantity production industry." WORKERS HOLD MEET FOR SCHWARTZBARD Dr. Teitel and Dr. Goldenweiser submitted a memorandum describing the condition of the Russian Jewish refugees. It was stated that the In- ternational Labor Office promised 4 subsidy out of the NallS011 fund for the purpose of extending productive to the refugees and to take Resolution Declares That Pur- credit with the German government steps • ity of Motive Cannot be with a view toward the abolition of Questioned by World. the restrictions. Graham Brothers Trucks have a larger pro- portion of pay load to chassis weight than is usually available in their respective capaci- ties. careful buyers are giving this due recognition, as their marked preference for Graham Brothers Trucks indicates. Built by the largest exclusive truck makers in the world—powered by Dodge Brothers dependable engine—these trucks are capable of an exceptional amount of profitable work over a long period of life. Graham Brothers Trucks, with Dodge Brothers 3/4-Ton Commercial Cars, meet 90% of all haulage requirements. 1-Ton Chassis (G-BOY) $ 885 11/2-Ton Chassis • - • 1245 MBM Low Chassis • - 1295 Delivered Prices THOMAS J. DOYLE INCORPORATED JEFFERSON AT CMENE WOODWARD AT MARTIN PLACE GLENDALE 7117 MEW= 4460 ' Highland Park Motor Co., 16123 Woodward_Arl. 3730 Metrics Motor Sales 81 Service, 4426 Chene..Mel. 6667 Norwoodword Motor Co., 9115 Woodward..Emp. 6980 'Bucknell - Knowlson Co., 2445 Michigan_ __.Glen. 9888 Northeast Motor Co., 8564 Jos. Campau___Emp. 4083 Colonial Motor Sales, 683440 Michigan_ _Cedar 3138 North Central Motor Co., 8517 Linwood..Euclid 1880 Hergenroeder, Inc., 14615 E. Jefferson_ _Lenox 4400 Hein. 4297 Hiles Auto Service, 12217 Twelfth Gar. 7100 Midwest Motor Co., 9111 Grand River W. 1601 Dix-Western Motor Co., 3950 Dix Lln. 1172 Gratiot Motor Co., 8226 Orattot Lenox 0707 Fairview Auto Sales, 10940 Mack Delray Motor Sales, 7132.34 W, Jefferson Codar 3132 Meyer Grossman of 355 Leicester court passed away suddenly at his `one on Wednesday, June 23. Mr. Grossman was 67 years of age and, had resided in Detroit for the past 311' years. Ile is survived by five laugh- Mrs, Mrs. Edward A. VerLinden, — Mrs. J. Goldberg, Mrs. C. Jaeger, . — Dr. M BERG.—(J. T. Al NEW YORK.—(J. T. uil.) —A reso- Mrs. M. Greenstein and Mrs. E. lution giving expression to the senti- Piotrowski, the recording clerk in the Tr•nyr. investigation preceding the trial of Funeral services were conducted at ment prevailing in certain quarters Jewish workingnien in connection Stanislaw Steiger, who was accused SOLD BY DODGE BROTHERS Lewis Bros. Funeral Home, 7739 of with Schwartzhard's assassination of I id' having thrown a bomb at the for- John R. street, on Thursday. June 24. l'etlura was adopted at a mass meet-. mer Polish president, Stanislaw Woj- DEALERS EVERYWHERE Interment took place at Maehpelah ing, called by the Jewish National ciechowsj, and subsequently acquit- Cemetery, Rabbi A. NI. Hershman of. Workers Alliance, with headquarters ted, committed suicide here. ficiating. at 22)4 East Broadway. New York. Seven hundred workers were pres- MRS. CHYNA LEAH GOLDMAN ng at w hic h th e reso- ent at the meeti sugg Mrs. Chyna Leah Goldman passed lution, at the estion of Baruch away nt the Old hulks Home on Zuckerman. was adopted. The reso- Thursday, June 24, at the age of 93. lution read in part: She had been a resident of Detroit Not desiring to anticipate the de- for the past 40 years. cision of the Paris court concerning Mrs. Goldman is survived by three the role of Petlura in the wholesale daughters, Mrs. F. Mentlelsoh)1, Mrs. massacres in the Ukraine, we , declare .1. L. Colman and Mrs. William N. that we view Schwartzbard s art as Slone, and five sons, Aaron and at protest against the fact that the en- Alex of Detroit and Louis, Jaroh S tire world has passed over with silence and Ilenry of Port Huron, Mich. our great and heartrending sorrow. Funeral services were conducted at Schwartzbard's act is a challenge to the home of Mrs. F. Mendelsohn of the world to direct the attention and 2052 Taylor avenue on Friday, June consciente of the world to the tens of 25, at 11 a. in. Interment took place thousands of wounds, through which at Nlachpelah Cemetery, Rabbi A. M. we have bled and were bleeding up to Hershman officiatttig. today. and to the end that once and for all an impartial tribunal should - MRS. BERTA HELD issue for all generations to come the Mrs. Berta Held of 3350 Calvert verdict of the unheard of brutally ' in- avenue passed away at her home on human crime which was committed by Thursday, done 24, after an illness the champions of Ukrainian freedom of live weeks. Mrs. Held Was 60 against an innocent and helpless peo- years of age and had been a resident ple. of Detroit for the past 39 years. She "We declare before the entire world is survived by her husband, Otto; two that we do not doubt the purity of daughters, NIrs. Samuel Singer and Schwa rt zbard's motive." Mrs. M. P. Fisher, and two sons, Do Not Condemn Ukrainian M Charles and Oscar Held. The resolution further declares that The body is now at the Edmund "despite all the massacres that were G. Lewis Funeral Home. Second committed on our inntx•ent children, boulevard at Delaware avenue, and women and men by the ignorant, in- will be removed on Nlonday. June 210, cited Ukrainian masses, we do not to the chapel of Temple Beth El, .totem the entire Ukrainian people. from where services will be conduct- We sympathize with their tight fur the ed at 2 p. independence of their national exist- Interment will take place at Wood- ence. Deep in our hearts lives the mere Cemetery, Rabbi Leon Frain hope for the day when the enlightened officiating. children of a renewed and independent Ukrainian will, by their own deeds, re- Henry Santrey at Temple. move the blood stains by which their fathers and hmefathers have be- Henry Santrey, Detroit's own bari- smirched the pages of the history of the Ukraine. tone with his symphonic orchestra "At the same time we declare that headlines the hill at B. F. Keith's those leaders of the Ukrainian people Temple Theater starting Sunday mat- inee, June 27. Santrey, offers a jubi- who directly organized and partici- pated in the massacres, those under lee of song rind syncopation embracing everything from opera to jazz. Other whose command the raging bands ex- act,. are: Edith Clifford, with Miss tinguished the lives of innocent tens Marion Carr, Harry and Anna Sey- of thousands of our people, violated mour, Raymond Bond and Miss Helen thousands of our daughters and instil- Sullivan, Ilenry Santrey' and Anna led a feeling of terror and panic in ... They form a joyous accompaniment to the light- Seymour, 13 rams, Fitz and Murphy the souls of the 3,000,000 of our breth- Brothers, Snell and Vernon, Ilart and ren, those we hold responsible fur the ened moods and backgrounds of summertime. greatest wholesale crimes in t he his- LeRoy and weekly screen subjects. tory 44' mankind. . . . They double the life of the more ornate and ex- "Wr will call them to the judgment if world history." pensive decorations by releasing them for cleaning Among the speakers were Moses Katz, at one time representative of the and storage during an exceptionally trying period. Joint Distribution Committee in the Ukraine, who said he met Schwartz. ... Simpler materials and designs adapt them to open- hard personally; Jacob Rachlis and Solomon Y. Jacobi, organizers window conditions and render than easily cared for. of the Jewish Self-Defense body in the l'kraine; 1/r. A. Moukdoni and Joseph Barondess. Two hundred dollars were Dean's drapery and upholstery treatments of eighty years as Michigan's leading subscribed at the meeting for the Schwa rtzha rd Defense Fund. decorators and furnishers, will effect this for summertime arc a worthwhile invest- GRAHAM BROTHERS TRUCKS Dean's Summer Draperies Serve A Threefold Purpose REMOVAL NOTICE! M. H. Zackheim 17 Year. of Personal Service in All Branches of Insuranet. Announces The Removal of His Offices from 1113 MAJESTIC BLDG. T e M••ri• Spacious Quarters at 932 Majestic Bldg. Same Phone Numbers— CAD. 4257-8 LABOR OFFICE GETS REFUGEES APPEAL ment that serve over many seasons. Dean's facilitio, developed over a period Russian Jews in Germany Ask Abo- lition of Employment Restrictions. GENEVA-1J. T. A.) — The plight if Russian Jewish refugees in Ger- many, their difficulty in gaining a livelihood in view of the handicaps and restrictions imposed upon them, were presented to the International Labor Office of the League of Na- tions by a delegation representing the Federation of Russian Jews in Ger. many: The delegation, consisting of Or. J. Teitel and Dr. Goldenweiser, called on the director of the Interna- tional labor Office, Albert Thomas. and the chief of the refugees depart- ment, Mr. Johnson. transformation speedily, reasonably and authoritatively. HARRY J. UPHOLSTERING - EXTERIOR PAINTING - INTERIOR DECORATING - WAIIPAPI Rs EXQUISITE IMPORTED AND IR FURNITI RE OF ALL PERIODS atv,s AND DRAPERIES CARPETS - LAMPS AND SHADES - w INDONV SHADES OBJETS d ART COMPANY Prior to the completion of our new studon at 119, Jefferson Avenue hit we arc omitting temporary quarters at 1112 Jefferson Avenue Fait MICHIGAN'S LEADING DECORATORS AND FURNISH FRS FOR EIGHTY YEARS :1