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September 19, 1930 - Image 34

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1930-09-19

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAGE SIXTEEN

MEM,TRonl iwisnat Roxicu

■■ ••11,

WOMMMIMMWM.

The Following Firms Extend Heartiest Greetings to Ally
Detroit Jewry On the Occasion of the New Year

?

HARRISON
RADIATOR CORP.

JOHN L. FULLER CO.

4444 Second Avenue

Boilers and Radiation

JOHN I. FULLER, Pres.

Columbia 4444

cl 0 ,41

sa

JOHNSON OPTICAL CO.

HOME LIFE INSURANCE
CO. OF N. Y.

GEORGE 0. JOHNSTON, Pros.

VA M. VAN SICKLE, Gen. Mgr.

Cadillac 2030

1712 Union Trust Bldg.
Cherry 4570

DETROIT ELECTROTYPE
CO., INC.

MELVILLE II. KENNEDY

Provident Mutual Life
Insurance Co.

NATHANIEl. REESE

Fitzroy 4330

1959 East Jefferson Avenue

3012 Book Tower Randolph 6011

EAGLE FURNITURE
EXCHANGE

GEO. W. DRENNAN

+k),i

LOUIS PLEASE, Prop.

zC):

2983 Grand River Ave.

Glendale 4439

Penobscot Bldg.

LYNN B. EMERY, INC.

STATIONERS AND PRINTERS

3150 Cus Ave.

Cadillac 3784

Cadillac 0897

College of the City of
Detroit

. WILFORD L. COFFEY, Dean .

T THE DAWN of the New Jewish
Loa' Year 5691 we greet the Jews of De-
Di ii'
troit and Michigan and join with
ri
I
them in prayer for strengthening of bonds
of good fellowship and brotherhood among
all peoples of the earth. The past year has
seen the beginning of a new era of peace
among all peoples. Israel, whose mission
has always been peace, naturally stands in
the center of such renewed world idealism.
The Jewish New Year affords an oppor-
tunity for an exchange of sentiments for
the s t r e n t h ening of this spirit of the
brotherhood and good will among men.
In this spirit we greet the Jewish commun-
ity with our sincerest wishes for a Happy
New Year.

GIRARD LIFE
INSURANCE CO.

Less Tolerance and More Understanding

Standard Brands, Inc.
Fleischman's

CHARLES E. VARNEN:

GROV1 P. RUSH, Mgr.

District Manager

BLOOMINGTON
LIMESTONE CO.

THE UNION PAPER &
TWINE CO.

GLENN II. BURCH, Mgr.

A..1. 1101.'SI:, \Linage,.

PIONEER DENTAL
LABORATORY

SOUTHWESTERN
MOTOR SALES

.37

II 11:IlY G. R OCKE Y

6373 West Fort St.

NATIONAL SLIDE
CORP.

STEVENS
BEVERAGE CO.

LORING II. IlYDE, l'res.

2634 Riopelle

Michigan Cooperage Co.,
Inc.

a. ii.i.1 A m

EASTLAWN
SANATORIUM

1 tl)

)1( KENZIE, Pies.

\ RC 11111.1 1,1) B. \V ICKIIA)1
Pre.ident

By GEORGE R. HARDIE, Dean, Long Island University, New York.

BOULEVARD
MATERNITY
HOSPITAL

GRINNELL CO., INC.

MRS. EmMA J. PEAREN

First National Bank Bldg.
Cadillac 5117

AMERICAN SLICING
MACHINE CO.

GRAND RAPIDS STORE
EQUIPMENT CORP.

AUTOMATIC SPRINKLERS

W. G. ASMITS, Detroit Mgr.

GEORCE J. COOPER, Mgr.

JOHN II. KELLY, Dist. Mgr.

Cadillac 9855

DENNEN'S BOOK SHOP

CHAS. R. DENNEN, Prop.

JOHN D. BUSCH &
SONS, INC.

Sheet Metal and Roofing Products

839 East Fort Street
Randolph 7850
Randolph 7859

CLARENCE J.
CHANDLER & SONS

MOTOR TIRE &
VULCANIZING

FISK
TIME TO RE-TIRE

Wholesale Eggs

2600 Grand River Avenue

Glendale 3514

DETROIT GRANITE CO.

of Iht

Portraits of Distinction

Monroe Calculating
Machine Co.

U. S. RUBBER CO.

Lafayette 0800

6670 East Jefferson Ave.

1832 West Fort St.

Mechanical Sales Co.

Every piling* 111311 and Wolnan is
trying to cultivate executive ability
nowadays, realizing that it is most-
ly richly rewarded lip modern busi-
?less, but it is a question whether
or not there might be grave danger
in so much executive ability. It
too often results in the using of
groups or individuals to one's n ttn

end.

If Ave are to bong about complete
racial and religious equality, we
might almost better confine our-
selves to learning the ethics of liv-
ing together, to finding out how to
give and take and how to cultivate
decency and good 111111111erS, a (Tr-
tain amount of gentleness and re -
straint, consideration and under-
standing. This. instead of scram-
bling for the top over the heads

630 Insuronc• Exchange Bldg.

A. I' Y.

THE RANSON &
RANDOLPH CO.

B. F. STURTEVANT CO.

THE NATIONAL CASH
REGISTER CO.

M. A. \MANE, Sales Agent

W. E. MOSS & CO.

R. J. COUGL1N

Members Detroit Stock Exchange

IDMAN.

0101,40

r

ALLEN S. CURTIS
& SONS

2359 First National Bank Bldg.
Cherry 4068

2316 UNION TRUST BLDG.

REPUBLIC BOX &
BARREL CO.

BURTON ABSTRACT &
TITLE CO.

Randolph 5515

PAINTERS

WILLIAM II. Mills. Cen. Mgr.

4548 Larchmont

HAMEL BROS. CO ., INC.

GUSTAVE HAMEL

Mfgrs. of Better Sausage

2635 Roulo St.

Cedar 3666

Garfield 9016

ANDERSON'S
STEEL PROCESS

PILLSBURY FLOUR
MILLS CO.

Steel Treaters, Tool and Die
Hardening, Carbonizing

DoUGLAS ANDERSON, Mgr.

2842 West Grand Blvd.

2459 RIOPELLE

Mounteer & Mounteer

CARLYLE E. 110UNTEER, C. P. A.

HAROLD C. MOUNTEER

2224 First National Bank Building

Randolph 0356

.‘ •

JAMES S. RICHARDS, Pres.

LaFrance Republic Sales
Corporation

and religions are concerned.
Ott the it of the Jewish peo-
ple, there have been commendable

:

advances and expressions of good-
xvill. The greetings extended at
holiday times by Jewish ortraniza-
Gills to the Federated Council of
Churches of Christ in America have
been 1110:4 gratefully received by,
the ('Firistian public. Jewish philan-
thropists have been most generous
in their gifts of money to Christian
religious and social service organi-
zations and to arts and sciences
which all may enjoy. Although they
were not so intended, these gifts
are redounding to the benefit of the
Jewish p(•eple fur they have made
a deep and favorable impression.
The money has not been ill spent
if it does nothing more than create
good will. It is doubtful that
t'hristian benefactions to Jewish in-
stitutions have been as generous
or as well intended.—(The Jewish
Advocate).

A. II. S1MENTON, Mgr.

GRAND LAUNDRY

DUPARQUET, HUOT &
MONEUSE CO.

EIOVAltD

IIELBIG,

MASSACHUSETTS
LAUNDRY CO.

TR.\ NK L. W.\ 1/11.\ \I, Pre , .

MORAN BROKERAGE
CO.

II. S. MALCOMSON

PATRICK MORAN

DETROIT CONDIMENT
CO.

THE STATLER HOTEL

. . 4 +

\%M. KLARR
:Managing Director

P1111.11' 13. SCHNUR, Prop.

3

A. 0. DUNK AND
ASSOCIATES

540 Piquette

Northway 5470

W. J. BURTON

---

COMMONWEALTH
STAMPING CO.

J. GUSTAVE ANDERSON. Prop.

DUNCAN-SMITH

INC.

WAITER J. DUNCAN, Pre.ident

HERBERT 111•11.ER , See -Tres..

Lafayette 5355

WARD BAKING CO.

It

JACKSON, Mgr.

1 -

WILLIAM FORMYN

CAPPER & CAPPER

AMERICAN FRUIT
GROWERS, INC.

.4

C. M. RASP, Manager

5670 Federal Ave.

JOHN GREGORY, Mgr,

FEDERAL MOTOR
TRUCK CO.

CONTINENTAL
BAKING CO.

PRATT PRINTING CO.

DETROIT BR \ NCII

ALLEN S. ITIrris

PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

INTERSTATE
MOTOR FREIGHT
CORPORATION

VENDORS OF CIGARETTES

5901 Fourth Avenue

RANDOLPH 5134

and shoulders of others to gratify
personal :inns, might better be the
real objective of education.
The interracial situation is not
discouraging. Civilization's history
has heel], f1,111 the start, a success-
ion 14 broken barriers. Surely, no
one can believe, in spite of not and
then a discouraging throwback,
that we have as many racial and
religious antagonisms today as WC
once suffered. In AIM - rim- 4 at least,
we do not bold \chide tribes in bond-
age because they fail to conform to
our religious LiPtYS. \Ve have nn
inquisitions and we de not throw
people to the lions. Sometimes, it
may seem that we have net pro-
gressed so very far from the (lark
ages, but surely the advance has
111,1.1 steadily upward where races

ress in Leadership. Particularly,
in educational circles, wo hear a
great dial of this word. We must
train young people to be leaders.
‘Ve must look for and encourage
qualities of executive ability. The
world unquestionably needs leaders
of the right type and it is the pro-
per function of our universities to
train them, but the I/01,111111'
of the %vont is likely to include
too much of dominance. As long
as one individual forces his per-
sonality 111111 views on another, we
Will 104 have the true interpreta-
tion of Leadership, and, similarly,
When One group of people is sub-
jugating or forcing its leadership
upon another, %se caninit have ra-
eial or religious eglutlity. NV,. want
Leadership, it is true, but certainly
not the bigoted religious dominance
of a Cromwell, or the intense na-
tionalism of at \Tinian) Hohen-
zollern.

:4 -

Footwear Salesmen

RALPH G. BICKEL

Two words are being used with
great frequency lately in the pub-
lie press and other media of popu-
lar expression. Both of theta have
bevorne associated in the public
mind with education and the liber-
ality of modern thought. Yet, un-
til we cease to stress, or at least
re-define, these two words are shall
probably' full short of one of the
ultimate ideals of education which
is the breaking down of racial and
religious barriers.
One of these wools is Tolerance.
We heard a great deal of it dur-
ing the last political campaign,
when see were told that all high-
minded, educated people should
learn to tolerate and should espec-
ially cultivate Tolerance towards
the other man's race and religion.
But Tolerance was nut exactly, or
at least should not have been, the
word these political writers and
and orators intended to select. It
implies that there is something to
tolerate; that one group of people
should look down and learn to
snide with kindly indulgence upon
the mistakes or misfortunes of an-
other group.
Perhaps there has been a little
too much tolerating in the attempts
of the different races and religions
to understand one another, and too I
much of an attitude of patronage
for perfect democracy. Education
must teach us not merely to look
over barriers, but to disolve them
utterly, and, until we have grown
out of the confines of narrow mi.,
Conalisms and religious restric-
tions, We are not enjoying the full I
benefits of education.
The second of the two words we I
lire in danger of stressing to ex-1

Northway 1535

HEYWOOD
WAKEFIELD CO.

A. E. NETT, Mgr.

350 E. Congress

Randolph 9800

AMERICAN BLOWER
CORPORATION

6000 Russell Street

5780 FEDERAL

LA. 4800

DETROIT TOMATO CO.

SAMUEL I.. VETALE, Pres.

Empire 6160

FRED G. ACKLEY CO.

6440 W. Fort St.

Cedar 2052

Cadillac 2669

FRED C. ACKLEY, Mgr.

BUICK MOTOR
COMPANY

(Detroit Branch)

MEHLENBACHER
FENCE CO.

JAMES DICKSON, JR., Mgr.

Clarence A. Carter Co.

Wholesale Fruits

GEO. W. CARR, State Rep.

2310 Cu. Ave.

2 Pll) GRAND RIVER . \ VE.

CHARLES L FEZ'S

AMERICAN LIFE
INSURANCE CO.

CLARENCE L. AYRES, Pres.

MONARCH
MANUFACTURING CO.

HENRY F.

YOE, Pres.

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