-1 """'ImommiliWIRMPRI111•10111=111•11 ■
7
TL IEEfi leg**
PAM TOUR
R. W. Grand Lecturer Frank 0. Gil-'
PHIBETA FRATERNITY
PERFECTION LODGE
bert will hold a school of instructions'
SPONSORS
Perfection Lodge. No. 486 , F. and at 6 p. m. Visitors welcome.
C. K. SANDORI, Secretary.
al. M., will hold a special communi-
1 The Upsiien chapter of the Phi Beta
By Order of—
cation Wednesday. Jan. 26, at 1 p.
Jericho Lodge, No. 4:•) , independ- 1 fraternity soil hid its \Amur I71.‘,1:
CHARLES RUBINER, W. II.
K. A. degree. Banquet at 6:30.
ant Order of Odd Fellows, will mitiate!on Saturday eve-- c. Feb. 19. in the
'a class of Ili° candidates on Tuesday . Crystal balln....m. , f the Etia.k-Cadillac
et.enirg
.
Jan 25 , at Ionic Temp, • Hotel.
Grand River and Chcpe place.
The large 69 , 4 to receive the de-
trrees on that e.ening is the outcome
,f • special membership campaign con-
ducted by Jericho Lodge in honor • f
l'ast Grand Maurice Bordelove .,••
the talcable services he has rend•oe:
•
the lodge and the order in the past
stoen y;ars as a member of Jericho
Lodge. Registration Of candidate,
•• ,
will begin at I o*clia.k in the afterr.•• • .
followed by a banquet at 6:30 0 .;:os
iren, a,siszam, ary
'after which the degrees will uotn-
• • • .- •
.
excellent entertao
menet,.
par-
The second degree will seer conferred, be by some w-.1:
formers ani 7 - •-7 :7 fe-1 nal enter-
by
Jericho
Ledge's
n
',ads
steond
'
The Howell Company has increased its assets dur-
degree staff, and Cie third degree will :a:nen.
ing the past five years as follows:
Fiaqi
.7 7'
Mayor and Y.,
be exemplified by the degree staff of
- a:- • :- among
d Mrs. Fraso
n
Washington Lodge, No. 54. Bothdi and
$226,499.45
Dec. 31, 1922
toe
patrons
and
these degree teams won high honors
375,945.95
the list ••-f :•• - •te or
Dec. 31, 1923
The following
in degree work at state and rational)
. 565,225.96
conventions. An exhibition drill will the dance committee. &Ber Tio-ker,
Dec. 31, 1924
Jack Ketiti, Frank Weiner, Ben Fel-
follow
the
work
by
Canton
Jericho,
No.'
704,152.41
Dec. 31, 1925
lowitz, George Axelrod. Max Klay-
50, Patriarchs Militant.
840,845.24
Dec. 31, 1926
The membership drive was con.' man, Oscar Swartz, Herman Stein,
ducted under the leadership of Jr.seph . Edward Weiner, Allan Aymoti. Her-
The company wrote and renewed during the year
.1 Hirschman P. G assisted by Ben.: man Cohen. Le- t-ard Goldman. Be^.
1926 the largest number of policies of any company
Jules ztrosky,
Arthor
jamb FinkelsteM, P. G.; David Gott.'
Fein and Mike
in the state and settled 16.573 claims. The com-
lieb, Samuel Z. HInehman, Benjamin Fred Weiner, Wa.
Keller, William Hacker and Harry D. Dryer.
JERICHO LODGE TO
HONOR M. BORDELOVE
4;
WINTER FROLIC
Automobile Insurance Company
Makes Good Record for 1926
State-Wide Service
pany has an active agency and adjusting force in
every county of Michigan. which brings the service
home to the owner of the car. The company is
now closing its twelfth season of success, and the
fact that its assets have increased each year shows
the confidence the people have in the company.
Anyone not insured would do well to call on the
local agent
D. W. FRISBEE
Smith.
ARRANGE MEETING AT
BRUSH TALMUD TORAH
BROWN'S
or write to
Most Remarkable
Fur Suing,
in Yuri,
210 Barley Ave.
THE CITIZENS' MUTUAL AUTO-
MOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY
Mich. gun Theater
Howell, Michigan
INIMI
Wde.
I
A mass meeting will be held Sun.
day. Jan. 2.3, at 2,30 p. m., in the
Brush street Talmud Torah. branch
. , .f the United Hebrew Schools, corner
Brush at Minnesota (Six Mile road).
A very interesting and instructive
lecture on Jewish education will he
delivered. A special playlet in He-
brew will be presented by the pupils
of the United Hebrew Schools. One
of J. L. Peretz's sketches will be read
and • musical program arranged.
There is no admission charge, and
there will be no solicitation of funds.
Ready money doth great cures.
HELEN MORRIS RECITAL
SONS-DAUGHTERS
AT STATLER, JAN. 31
WILL JOIN ELDERS
—
Uodeert•wdoss to Mark Celebration
at Sltaaner Zenlek-
w :: be :heir fathers ' guests
S:
%via companion with
and t
thee mothers at the celebration
:mark the observance of
adech
father and son week at Shaarey Ze-
de. Synagogue Sunday evening. Feb. '
2e. The theme of get-together and
mutual understanding will be sound-.
fathers and mothers of
ed when
s- aaro y
-. >reak bread with their
,-r. the initial event
ch:idren a.
N • s feast fr o m
4 the e , ri
.:s• i; .•-•••• will the
the banqoeit -
supper be. Zs: aono:esti-re Sunday
evening repast. for the distinctive-
ness of the evening will be realized
when the underlying idea of father
and son and mother and daughter
week will be formulated. The pro-
gram wiIi net by this token. pattern
after a philosophic treatise or a sym-
posium arranged by learned savants
but will be one in which thoughtful
parents and keen-minded children
will be happy to participate.
In the making of the program
HELEN HENSCHEL MORRIS
every element in the congregation
will have a hand. The hoard of trus-
the
tees. the Ladies Auxiliary and the Arthur Schnabel. herself one of
Young People's Society are repre- city's most representative pianists,
Statler Ho-
will
give
a
recital
at
the
sented on the comm.:ttee planning the
. tel on Monday evening. Jan. 31. This
celebration.
will mark the second solo appearance
of Miss Morris since her return from
Berlin. the meanwhile having been
CANTOR RUTMAN WILL
in succomful recitals in the mu-
CONDUCT AT EMANUEL . spent
ciao) centers of the East. The young
artist has chosen a very representa-
o f New York tive program, one which is well cal-
Cantor . A.
City is to be the guest of the Temple
culated to show her complete com-
Emanuel, at Taylor and Woodrow
, mand of all schools of music, her
Wilson avenues, on Friday evening
thorough understanding of the classic
and Saturday morning, Jan. 28 and
masters as well as the most modern
29. Cantor Rutman is to sing at both composers. The selections follow:
the services. He is well known in the
t.
Motart
city of Detroit, as some years ago he rano.. and sosaia. C Y,nur
Matto
was cantor at the Beth Jacob Syna-
gogue. All those who have heard him
ALgio
know how fine a cantor he is. Admis-
Ailegro A••41
11
sion for both services is to be $1.
1
a. Intermesso. or 117, Nu. t.
Orals..
To ask is no sin and to be refused .
r a• Nucor
b. Nia r. -• •
1. 51a,
no calamity.
ENGINEERING
LEADERSHIP
in Every Price Class
FOUR GREAT
NEW CARS!
The WHIPPET Six—the Surprise
of the Show-5 765 to $925. A
car combining all of the engineering
advances of the Whippet with greater
length, greater power, greater speed,
greater liveliness. At a price so low that
only the treat popularity of the Whippet
line makes it possible.
With twenty-two body types
ranging in price from
'625 to '2295
The WHIPPET—Internationally
Famous—Now $625 to $755.
I
4-wheel brakes throughout .. .
clear vision corner posts . . .
chassis low to the ground for
greater safety . . . engine effi-
ciency that excels in each price
class . . . greater fuel economy
a .. roomier interiors and finer
and more beautiful coachwork.
f
I
T HREE years of intensive engineer-
', ing along the most advanced lines,
now culminate in this great achieve-
ment, which places the entire line of
Willys -Knight and Overland Whippet
can in a position of outstanding
leadership in value ...
Measure these cars by the great
standards of efficiency, economy,
beauty, speed, power and endurance
and you will be impressed by their
superiority in every one of these
vital features.
Famous for "30 miles on a gallon"—low
gravity center. Light, smart, powerful,
extremely roomy. The only light car
that provides the necessary safety of
4 - wheel brakes as national standard
equipment. S'mwn in six distinctive,
beautiful body styles. At new reduced
prices, now more than ever the leader
in light car values!
The WILLYS-
KNIGHT Great
Six- 51850 to
5 2295—A car
established an enviable following among
the leaders of American business Lust
social life. Now more beautiful—more
powerful—more luxurious—a car that
has more miles of carefree service theft
any automobile of its distinguished
class. With an engine that grows
smoother, quieter, more efficient with
every mile of service.
The "70 " WILLYS-KNIGHT Six
$1295 to 51495. With new beauty
of interior detail—new refinements of
coachwork—smoother operation—great
power and speed—a cm o delightful
to drive that thousands of its owners
are recruited chiefly from friends and
relatives of other owners.
See these four great new cars at the
Automobile Show. Compare them point
for point, unit for unit, with the v‘lues
others offer. Then you will realize what
Willys-Overland's Engineering Leader-
ship means to you.
I
whose great dig-
nity and distinc-
tion has already
On display at the Detroit
Automobile Show, Spaces
D-12, D-13, D-14, D-16.
Prices f, o. b. factory.
Prices and specifications
subject to change without
notice. Willys - Overland,
Inc., Toledo, Ohio. Willys-
Overland Sales Co., Ltd.,
Toronto, Canada.
WILLYS-KNIGHT SIXES
hippet SIXES.
FOURS
WILLYS.CVERLAND, INC.
4400 Woodward A..
GWa. 1937 and 7411
HIGHLANDER MOTOR SALES
17537 Woodward A•ir.
Loailellow 1400
PIDLEY MOTOR SALES
4371 W..%
11101
44.1 51.
Coder 0304
WILLYS-OVERLAND, INC.
30.96 Caaapean
Arllagtoa 4143
THORNTON MOTOR SALES
4364 West W
10.•Inu1 1644
WYANDOTTE OVERLAND SALES
Walnut 51 and Riddle, Wyandotte
rho.. 1097
THE PARK GARAGE
033 Lodyard at Second Blvd.
Glyn. 9457
C. K. MILLER & CO.
We., Mich.
91ten. Way. 93
DEARBORN GARAGE
Doaittorn, Mich.
Doart.rn 400
GARRY SMITH, INC.
11735 Grand Rover A,..
Walnut 0015
WILLYS.OVERLAND, INC.
11740 lined River
Garfield 7604
THE MOORE MOTOR
7744 Twallth St.
CO.
Emem• 1114
MOTOR SALES CORP.
10457 Grata. A.
Liaco1a 11364
Miss Helen Hensc . : -.el Morris, a for-
men pupil of the great pianist, Leo-
pold Godowsky, and more recently of
NORTHVILLE SALES & SERVICE.
114 So. Church 51.. Northville, Mich.
Pb... 46
WILLYS-OVERLAND, INC.
laltAS East Jeff
Ave.
Len. 3063
PALMER WOODS SALES
19144 Woallward•I 7.51i1e Rd.
Arl. 5000
LIVERNOIS MOTOR SALES
4570 Michigan A.
Lalayett, 5060
GOULAIT & M,FARLANE
17339 Rodleod Ave.
Roil.. 767
5!.•
E.
h W.
k
Packard Increases Power.
There are two outstanding develop-
ments at the Automobile Show this
year. First, the refinement of me-
chanical details,'especially as regards
four-wheel brakes and increased per-
formance; second, bright colors.
Early this summer Packard an-
nounced • 40 per cent increase in
power in both the Packard six and
Packard eight, which gave speeds of
75 milts an hour for the Packard six
sedan and 80 miles an hour for the
Packard eight. Broad concrete high-
ways in many parts of the United
States are making increased speed in
the open country possible, but the
greater power is perhaps noticed
more in acceleration through heavy
traffic and at the many stop streets
and traffic lights.
The Packard exhibit at the Auto-
mobile Show will include two custom
bodies, a Dietrich sedan serline and
a Dietrich all-weather cabriolet, the
latter in Egyptian maroon with vet.
million stripe, and a Packard eight
sedan limousine in Dupont's Gettys-
burg blue and Merrimac biers.. In
the Packard sin line there will be
club sedan in Ditzler's chicadee green
and drake green; a 'seven-passenger
sedan in Ditzler's Algerian blue; a
brilliant runabout with Burbank top,
finished in pewee green and bobolink
yellow, and a five-passenger sedan in
Ditzler's amb•to green with stripe of
swan white.
Wir•er Wind) .. Chopin
m
.11•...:1:45.
Dodge 1926 Production,
Dodge Brothers, Inc., last year sold
to dealers 331,770 passenger cars and
trucks, making 1926 the biggest year
in its history. The gain over 1925,
which was the company's best previous
year, is 27.6 per cent. The 1926 rec-
ord is remarkable, as it surpasses the
huge output of 259,967 cars and trucks
in 1925 by 71,797 units and was made
without the sales impetus which many
companies gain from the frequent in-
troduction of new models.
Despite factory production and ship-
mods by Dodge Brothers, Inc., of a
record number of passenger cars and
trucks in 1926, stocks in dealers' hands
and in transit, December 31, were sub-
stantially smaller than at the close of
the previous year.
CARD OF THANKS
Mrs. B. Rosenberg and family wish
ACHAD HA'AM MASS
to express their sincere thanks and
gratitude
to their neighbors, friends
MEET HELD AT U. H. S.
and relatives for their many kind-
nesses shown them during their re-
A large meeting in memory ofj cent bereavement. Special thanks is
•Ached Ha'am was held last Sunday, given to Rabbi A. Ashinsky.
Jan. 16, in the auditorium of the Phil-
adelphia-Byron Hebrew School. A ca-
Knocking over a gamekeeper is not
. pacity audience filled the hall long be- knocking over a man—it is crushing
fore the hour set for the opening.
a principle.
The chairman, Bernard Isaacs,
opened the meeting with a few ammo
priate remark , about Achad Ha'ani
• and his influence. The first speaker
was I. Iii•seni••ric who gave an vial , -
' orate address on Achad Ha'am and his
i principal ideas. The next speaker was
Aaron D. Nlarkson, who spoke in He-
: brew on Achad Ha'am as the uncom-
promising Jewish Nate nalist.
The last speaker was Rabbi A, M.
JHershman, who touched on many
I phases of Achad F1116711'9 philosophy,
and especially on Zionism as con-
ceived by him.
The meeting was concluded by the
recital of the "El Mole Rachamin" be
Cantor H. Milkowsky.
Hupp Makes Record.
Two cars built to a brilliant success
that insures even greater accomplish-
ments in 1927 is the record achieved by
the Hupp Motor Corporation in 1926.
The Ilutimobile eight came first, is-
suing two years ago from a new plant
hr e thtmci
at ncan ringani.t1
es
norhiniagilYels“el.uiPIPt
rt L;
became the world's largest selling
'straight eight. a position it continued
to strengthen throughout ION.
Late in 1925 came the Hupmohile
six. It set a new high first year rec-
ord for all cars selling above $1,000
by hanging up a figure of 42,000 cars
built and sold in its first 12 months--
• 10,000 above the previous high mark.
I
Hupp factory executives recently
gave out figures that showed 1920
was the greatest v
the company
!had ever known. equally from the
standpoints of number
cars pro-
duced and sold, total volume of busi-
ness, and owner satisfaction. To this
, they added that 1927 plans, already
'made at thy request of their distribu-
, tors and dealers, call for at least 50
' per cent more Ilupmobiles than were
built during that record 1926.
A good dog never barks at the
weather.
ADDISON
1927
GF
reR
atO
esL
t
S how
In Addison History
Home Cooked Meals
That's what every one says after
trying one of Pohl's delicious
meals. Our own distinctive man-
ner of preparing our foods is
bound to satisfy and make you a
regular patron.
POHL'S
"Uptown's Most Beautiful
Restaurant."
8939 TWELFTH STREET
Garfield 6884
PRIVATE MUSIC COURSES
VIOLIN — PIANO — CELLO
9034 TWELFTH STREET
Empire 0360
ONLY SERIOUS STUDENTS NEED APPLY
■
"Perhaps one of the most striking features of
our new Palestine is that ravenous 1..ager for art,
especially dramatic art, which has ways been Jew.
ish territory.
"Some people criticize this and object to it
What need is there for a theater! And why spend
on art the money that could be used for
land!
These people crave for something else than
material
life. Their work is necessary, they accomplish it
joyfully—but they want to find their rest in some
superior emotion. You do not we the Palestine
workers at night in saloons; they listen to Beet.
hoven and Warner, or sit on the beach and watch
the foam playing at their feet. That their first
yearning is for books and music does not mean that
they will abandon their work or do it worse than
others; it simply means that they wish to be cln-
oleic being, whose mind is as developed as their
muscles."
MAXA NORDAU,
On the Palestine Theatre after a recent visit.