?fitEl)erstot
LEAGUE WILL GET CONGRESS REJECTS
REFUGEE PROBLEM
JACOBSTEIN BILL
Serious Plight of Russian Jews
Wives and Minor Children of
Stranded In Germany
Declarants Are Refused
Will be Presented.
Entry at This Term.
BERLIN.—IJ. T. A.)—An appeal
to the League of Nations concerning
the plight of the Russian Jewish refu-
gees in Germany will be submitted
by the Union of Russian Jews in Ger-
many. J. I. Teitel, president of the
onion, dotelared in an interview pub-
WASHINGTON.—(J. T. A:)—The
immigration committee of the House
refused to take action on the resolu-
tion introduced by Representative Ja-
coltstein which would permit wives
and minor children of declarants to
fished in the Rul, Russian daily, in enter this country as nun-quota nanny
Berlin.
nts.
"Berlin," he said, has become the
graAn identical resolution introduced
refugees' cemetery. In spite of the in the Senate by Senator Copeland al-
economic depression prevailing since
192:1, Germany is an important cen-
ter for refugees, even those who in-
tend to go further west being obliged
to make a more or less prolonged
stay here. Those •it., succeed in
leaving Germany have always some
asset or other, be it health, courage
of pecuniary resources. Those who
remain are the more unfortunate
refugees—the sick, those with large
families, those whose courage has
been sapped by their trials.
The Russian and Russian-Jewish
organizations of Berlin have a most
difficult problem to solve. What is
to be the fate of the refugees? There
are only two alternatives," he de-
clared, "the Emperor Caligula's idea,
the wish that the mass of refugees
had but one head, which could be
felled at a stroke, or a genuine means
of preventing them from starving to
death.
"It is by now a crime to give way
to fond illusions and to imagine that
'everything will be settled somehow.'
All who are interested in the cause
must be told that the charitable or-
ganizations find it absolutely impos-
sible to be of any real assistance to
the refugees. The Union of Russian
Jews, in spite of its activities and its
income of 150,000 marks, cannot
satisfy 5 per cent of the real need.
Besides, all those in distress do not
apply to the organizations." Mr.
Teitel stated he knows families who
are dying of hunger and refuse to re-
veal their destitution. "What Berlin
can to is not enough; help is needed
on it state scale, on an international
scale. An appeal for this must be
broadcast throughout the world," Mr.
Teitel declared.
Mr. Tend,, accompanied by A.
Goldenweiser, the director of the
legal section of the union, is pro-
ceeding to Geneva. They will pre-
sent particulars of the material and
legal situation of the refugees to the
League of Nations through the In-
ternational Labor Office. Albert
Thomas, director of the International
Labor Office, in an interview granted
to a delegation from the union when
he was in Berlin, suggested that a
written report be submitted to hint
in Geneva and promised to support
the applications made to Dr. Nansen,
the high commissioner of the League
of Nations.
so has been held up by the immigra-
tion committee.
Coert Du Bois, head of the viva di-
vision of the State department pre-
sented to the committee estimates
showing that about 175,000 wives and
children would to- admitted under the
Jacobstein resolution. Mr. Jacobstein
said:
"The figures submitted by Mr. Du
Bois are estimates based on rough av-
erages made by the consuls of impor-
tant stations in Europe. I estimate
that 75,000 would come in under may
resolution. My figures are based on
the American sources, taken from fig-
ures supplied by our own Bureau of
Naturalization."
SI e. Jacobstein expressed regret
that no estimates had been presented
by the Naturalization Bureau, saying:
"No reason was given for this. I
am sure that those figures would prove
PAGE FIVE
(Alto/Hem
SOVIETS WIDEN SCOPE
OF SETTLEMENT WORK
that the State Department estimates
are too high.
"The truth may lie somewhere be-
tween the figures of the State Depart-
ment and my own, but for the sake of
the argument 1 ant going to assume
that the State Department figure is
correct. It simply means that there
are that many wives and children still
detached from the husbands and fath-
ers on this side. It will require several
years for these families to be reunited
under our present quota immigration
law.
"Surely a country of 115,000,000
souls can, without danger to itself or
its institutions, admit 175,000 wives
and minor children. Only the most
short sighted and narrow minded
prejudice can account for obstruction
of the passage of this just and hu-
mane amendment to the immigration
law."
MOSCOW. — (J. T. A.) — A con-
centrated action to recruit from the
former Pale of Settlement candidates
for settlement in the new Jewish col-
onies in Soviet Russia is the 'sense
of a new 'volution adtipted by the
praesidium of the Zik, the central
executive committee of the Commun-
ist party.
The praesidium adopted this reso-
lution following a report submitted
to it concerning the progress of Jew-
ish settlement work. The resolution
expresses approval of the plan of the
Comzet, the governmental depart-
ment (or settling Jews on the land,
to settle 100,001) Jewish families on
the land in the next few years, de-
claring that "this plan is in accord-
ance with the interests of the state
and the needs of the Jewish popula-
tion." The resolution further pro.
poses that the Comzet concentrate
primarily in taking the Jews out of
the former Pale of Settlement, ac-
cording to the economic needs, and
to devote itself more to the building
of houses in the new colonies.
The resolution also urges the Ziks,
In loving memory of Gilbert Har-
four
the central executive committees, of old Mishy, who 'departed this life
years ago, July 22,
all the Soviet republics to co-operate
His Loving Parents and Sisters.
with the Jewish settlement plan by
allocating large areas for this pur-
In loving memory of Bessie Gold-
pose.
man, who passed away one year ago,
The, Ukrainian Ozet, the Jewish July 26, 1025
society for settling Jews on the land,
allocated the amount of 80,000 rubles
in order to enable the settlers to buy
houses, machinery and seed. The
Ozet bleu granted a loan of 178,000
rubles, :10,000 rubles of which were
given for agronomical assistance.
Goal celled her home,
It we. Ilia will;
list In our heart.
She lingers still.
Her meniorr is aa dear today
A. In the hour she passed away.
Item Loving Husband and Family.
We Built a $10,000,000 Body Plant
to Make This New Essex Possible
1
D. & C. Serves Public Health.
__—
Aside from the safety of passen-
(
gers on Great Lakes vessels, the
greatest care of steamboat managers
is to safeguard the health of passen-
gers and crew, according to A. A.
Schantz, president of the Detroit &
Cleveland Navigation Company.
"In modern lake passenger steam-
ers generally the room for passengers
and for members of the crew: are
large, well lighted and airy," said
Mr. Schantz, "and the ventilating
problem has received very careful at-
tention. In the ships of the D. & C.
fleet sheet metal ducts lead fresh lake
air to all inside rooms. Toilet spaces
are ventilated into the stacks where
possible and ventilator heads exhaust
the foul air from the top of the dome.
The fans which are driven by motors
are located on the main deck and
drive the air through washers into the
ventilation ducts which distribute it
to all parts of the vessel. To prevent
as far as possible the heating of the
air in the ship, great expenditures
have been made on the insulation of
engine and boiler casings and the un-
derside of the decks and at other
parts of the structure which might
communicate heat.
"The requirements as to drinking
water are very strict and necessitate
Is piping distilled water all over the
ship. Raw water is carried in steel
tanks of about 36,000 gallons ca-
pacity and there are tanks of 8,000
gallons capacity for sterilized water.
The costly Violet Ray system is used
for sterilizing and this is supplement-
ed by the chlorine treatment similar
to that employed at times by the city
water works. The tanks are thor-
oughly cleaned at frequent intervals.
Representatives of the United States
public health service test the purity
of the water at frequent intervals and
their work is supplemented by in-
spectors from the local health depart-
ments in cities like Detroit. Cleveland
and Chicago.
"No kitchen in the country is kept
as ,spiv and span as the galleys on
shipboard and the food supplied both
passengers and crew is the best that
money can buy, well cooked and of-
fered in wide variety. All food han-
dlers on the ship, under an order of
the United States public health serv-
ice, are examined at hte local Marine
Hospital to make sure they are free
from any communicable disease, and
if their state of health does not sat-
isfy the public health doctors they
are discharged at once.
"No other form of transportation
safeguards the health of its patrons
like the steamboat lines and tourists
on the Great Lakes are in no danger
of contracting typhoid fever and
other ills frequently suffered by va
cationists who do not investigate the
water supply and endanger their
health by drinking contaminated wa-
ter and partaking of food the prepa-
ration of which is not safeguarded
by the United States public health
department."
Nig
...17
fej t. , /7 .1;
ELECTION OF JEWISH
SENATOR INVALIDATED
---
BUCHAREST.--(J. T. A.)—The
election of Elijah Mendelsohn to the
Roumanian Senate was declared in-
valid. The decision was taken by a
vote of 130 against 25. Rabbi Zirel-
son, representing Bessarabia, in the
. Senate, took part in the discussion.
The election of Mr. Mendelohn to
the Senate by the Federation df Rou-
manian Chambers of Commerce, de-
feating the candidate of ('rime Min-
ister General Averescu, caused indig-
nation in various governmental
circles. It was stated that the minis-
ter of trade intended to dissolve the
Chamber of Commerce.
Mr. Mendelsohn is the chairman of
the Zionist Organization in Jassy.
74;trir.
1 . 1 1 1 1 1 _, 111
1 1 ! doll
71,1 11111111iVlitl
1.i:; ;141
or itumire, riMPAirtii
taiid
11 re :: I
4
'1 4
$ ,./ 1
nits is the talent built to mike the New Ese•
possible Totally new end different methods of
body construction require •lec•! nhalttnrrY
thioughout Here are the biggest batter/ Of Mee
stemping presses sod the biggest enamel baking
Plant in the world
conveyor. It Is the
nee are mow. than 5 mllea
lergeo body plant In the world devoted to th• pro
du. Don of 4 single body
iiP #140 1 ..teeW•
•
'
CiSfPl• •
The New ESS
With All-Steel, Bolted and Riveted
Clear Vision Body
$795
F. 0. B. Detroit, Plus
War Excise Tax
Many of these advantages you will recog-
nize at a glance. But you will have a higher
appreciation of their meaning when you
know that a plant of 18 acres which, with
equipment, approximated a cost of
'10,000,000, was first built and that special
machinery had to be designed, to make
possible this New Coach now on display.
Again Essex "6" offers in the design and
construction of the New Coach as radical
an improvement as was the original
Coach itself.
Standard equipment includes:
Automatic Windshield Cleaner,
Rear View Mirror,Transmission
Lock Ibuilcinb Radiator Shot•
tars, Moto•Meter, Combination
Stop and Tail Light
It is all steel, bolted and riveted, and so
rigid that squeaks, rattles and distortions,
arc as unlikely as in a steel building. Doors
are so hung that a man may hang on an
open door while the car is being driven over
rough roads, without springing it out of true.
CENTRAL DETROIT
CASS MOTOR SALES
3632 Woodward. at Brad,
..CRESSY
.
AUTO SALES
6 527 J•ffe.son Ave. East
METROPOLITAN AUTO SALES
1440.44 Michigan Are.
ports
MOTOR SALES
Cass at Pearl...
TRIANGLE MOTOR SALES
2064 Casual Are.
EASTERN DETROIT
BEGIN BROS. MOTOR SALES
10039 Kercheval A..
RUND MOTOR SALES
1927 Meek Aso.
And it is so designed and constructed as to
permit the use in a totally new manlier
of a high baked enamel, most lustrous and
lasting finish. This has made possible new
combinations ill finish that will please
your eve.
There has been constant improvement in
the chassis from the first Essex shipped.
Every week has seen some betterment. But
only by the accumulation of the resources,
the information, experience, and the skill
that have resulted from the purchase of
350,000 Essex "Sixes" in a short period of
time, was it possible to erect the plants, to
perfect the machinery, to create the designs
that have resulted in this car which we ask
you to inspect and to drive as the best
looking, best value, best Essex ever built.
NORTHWESTERN DETROIT
RAYNAL BROS.
5103 Chalmers A...
FAIRVIEW MOTOR SALES
12740 Jefferson Are. Eoet.
GROSSE POINTE MOTOR CO.
14037 East Jefferson Ave.
WESTERN DETROIT
TEAGAN MOTOR SALES
36311 Gr•Sli River Ave.
BARNES-MEHNERT
1436 Lewadale Ave.
HENRY MOTOR SALES
3711 Mode... Airs.
STRENG MOTOR CAR COMPANY
11310 Twelfth St
BILLINGHURST MOTOR SALES
40S0 Grand Riese Ave.
DEGAW MOTOR SALES
3034 Fedoill
NORTHEASTERN DETROIT
KAISER MOTOR SALES CO
7735 Harmer Are.
CLEMENTS SALES AND SERVICE
7023 Gretiet
A. • R. TATE MOTOR SALES
11920 Greed Are.
KERO • SCHOENHERR
7 Md. Rd. anal Va. Dyke Ave.
NORTHERN DETROIT
HARWITTI COMPANY
11661 Woodward Are.
BAILEY MOTOR SALES CO.
St.
16326 Jobs
R.
RIVER ROUc.2.., MICH.
IDEAL GARAGE AND SALES
14210 W. Jeffers.. A...
ROYAL OAK, MICH.
JOHN B. MALBURG
10011 Meta it.
FORDSON, MICH.
DEARBORN, MICH
THE ROY WOOD MOTOR SALES
220431 Meleg. Awe.
HAMTRAMCK, MICH.
POTTS MOTOR SALES
11362 ha. Campau A...
FERNDALE, MICH.
HODGES MOTOR SALE(
Co.
REDFORD, MICH.
MAASH11 SUNDERLAND SALES
WYANDOTTE, MICH.
CO.
ROTHFUSS MOTOR SALES
11745 Michigan Ave.
CARVER-COON MOTOR SALES
FARMINGTON, MICH.
HALFWAY, MICH.
LAKE DRIVE.GARAGE.
AARON DeROY MOTOR CAR CO.
Whohnele end Retail Salesrooms, Woodward •t Garfield.
Parts and Service, 481 C••field Are. West
Telephone Glendale 9520-8.
EASTWOOD GARAGE