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April 10, 1931 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1931-04-10

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

- ▪

Algal= latish PerlaVeal Cotter

CLIFTON AMUR • CINCINNATI 10, OHIO

SEMET-SOLVAY COKE

gives more heat-

TON

H. Levenson
Coal Co.

Member of the De troit Coal Exchange

2816 ST. ANTOINE STREET

Established

Cadillac 4006

JOIN IN GREETING A NOTED PIONEER
AND LEADER!
Come to the Tea in honor of

Chana Chizik

Palestine Woman Leader and Pioneer

HOTEL STATLER
Wednesday, April 15, 2 p. m.

Mrs. Chirik will meals, and there will be ■ musical program.

15 YEARS EXPERIENCE ASSURES
YOU PERFECT RUG CLEANING

When you send your rug here for cleaning it receives the
care of experts. They ■ are dusted, renovated, purified, steam
dried and are returned to you looking fresh and new.
Special attention given Oriental 99 x 12
9 •"'"
and Chinese rugs
27554 RUG CLEANED FREE 1

$2.75

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PHONE MADISON 1936

MICHIGAN BELL
TELEPHONE CO.

A

telephone

is a business and

social necessity

In the home of nearly every ambitious man

you will find a telephone. For those men

and their families know that a telephone

is a business and social asset.

I—A telephone enables a man to keep in
close touch with his business or work.

2—It enables a family to rent spare rooms

more easily.

3—In emergencies, such as fire, sickness
or accident, aid can be summoned
immediately, by telephone.

4—For keeping in touch with friends and
relatives, a telephone is an unequalled

convenience.

You can hate a telephone for
as little as 8% cents a day.

FIVE MINUTES

Just let us give you a five-minute (lemon-
stration and you will be convinced that the
Ford is the biggest money's worth in auto-
mobile history. We are always glad to
show you the superiorities of the Ford with-
out obligatng you in any way.

GINSBERG

Motor

Sales

Sales

Service

We have • selection of guaranteed used ears for sale.
We Will Accept Any Make of Car in Trade

S832.46 VAN DYKE (4 blocks north of Harper)
WHITTIER 8020-8021
OPEN SUNDAYS

at

ntonlEnisri

- -

ALLIED CAMPAIGN
ZIONIST CONGRESS
AT BASLE JUNE 29
I WILL BE HEADED
BY AARON DE ROY' (Continued from Page One)

,

Continued from Page One)

ily, need immediate relief if they
are to survive the present emerd
gency. Surely, those of us who
are more fortunate can not sit by
quietly and observe human trag-
edy nonchalantly. In the present
emergency we must again adopt
the old principle that people be di-
vided between givers and receiv-
ers of charity, and the vast num-
ber who are fortunate enough to
have been spared the troubles suf-
fered by the 5,000 and more who
are affected, should give liberally,
promptly and as befits a charitable
people to this worthy cause.
"I was moved to accept this pos-
ition of responsibility also by the
plight in which our existing agen-
cies have been placed as a result
of the depression. The Jewish Old
Folks' Home is in a terrible plight,
and the community is responsible

deserving
to the old folks who are

the problems to be decided by the
congress will be the official Zionist
attitude towards the British gov-
ernment in connection with the
Whits, Paper, Zionist stand towards
the Arabs, the financial status of
the movement, and internal Zion-
ist relations.
J. E. Mills Laborite, complained
in the House of Commons that the
Palestine government writes its
communications to the Arabs in
Arabic but uses English in com-
munications to the Jews. 51r. Mills
asked Dr. Drummond Shiels, un-
der-secretary for the Colonies,
whether the British officials in Pal-
estine had passed examinations in
Hebrew and Arabic.
Dr. Shiels was unable to say the
number of officials that had passed
such examinations but promised to
investigate their conduct with re-
gard to official correspondence.

of all the kindness that can begiv-
en aged people, but who are threat.

Denies Negotiations.

JERUSALEM.—(J. T. A.)—"I
ens' with want unless we come have had no negotiations with the

forward with immediate relief.
other local agencies need our im-
mediate assistance. We must not
failthem in this hour of tragedy.
"And I am moved also by the
• plight of our millions of fellow-
Jews overseas, who continue to suf-
r as a result of the difficulties
created by the war and who have
been economically ruined by the
horrors that accompanied the world
conflict. On all sides we see hands
stretched out to us in a plea for
aid. We must respond, and I feel
• confident that this benevolent com-
munity will respond."
' Mr. Deltoy has for years been

PAGE FIVE

wilcg,

FRAM REPLIES TO

CUBAN RABBI

IContinucel from }'age One.)

place, to say nothing of becoming
members," says Rabbi Eppstein.

Rejoinder by Fram.

In a rejoinder to Rabbi Eppstein's
criticisms of his observations on
Cohan Jewry, Rabbi Frain said:
snail oe
. gum a ne uric,
and perfunctory remark which I
made about the Jewish Center in
HON:11M shall lead to an investiga-
tion of its work, with is consequent
advancement of its effectiveness.
p,rsonally, made no pretense of
making a social survey or investi-
gation. If Rabbi Eppstein's state-
ment that thousandes of Jews in
Cuba are in immediate danger of
starvation is correct, then certain- i
ly the relief of Cuban Jewry should
be given a prominent place in our I
foreign relief campaigns.
"I do not quite understand why
Rabbi Eppstein objects to my pre-
diction of a ha p • future for Cuba.
Call is not the only country in the
world today which is in a state of
depression. It is true, the fact that
t confine itself to one industry
namely, the
• sugar industry, has re-
duced Cuba to a more perilous eco-
nomic condition than countries with
more diversified industries. The
impression that there are better
times ahead for Cuba came from
an informal conference held by
members of the Committee on Cul-
tured Relations with Latin Amer-
ica in the Ambassadorial Mansion.
Before this committee, which con-
sisted of Dr. Ernest Gruelling, for-
merly managing editor of "The Na-
tion," Dr. Chester Lloyd Jones,
head of the Department of Com-
merce and Administration at the
University of Wisconsin, Mr. Ilu-

der a wise economic policy Cuba

present slough of despair.

"There is an international sugar
cartel being formed which prom-
ises to stabilize the price of sugar
on the world market. This ought
in the very near future to have the
effect of restoring a measure of
prosperity to the island.
"It is not true, as Rabbi Eppstein
. of the
sugar industry in Cuba is to
blamed upon "American politics."
The collapse of sugar is a world-
wide phenomenon involving every
sugar-producing area on the plan-
et. There is no need of blaming
A fa rill111 politics for the over-pro-
duction of sugar. American poli-
tics has enough of a burden to bear.
It should nut be indiscriminately
blamed for all the ills of the world.

Do you dread the spring house Cleaning sea-
Then you are old-fashioned. Modern,
up-to-date women let Forest Cleaners clean
their rugs, drapes, upholstering, slip covers,
curtains. carpets and furniture. Not only do
they thus save themselves hours of drudgery but
their household articles are completely restored
by Forest's cleaning methods anti look a thou-
sand times better than they would if cleaned any
Other way.

,on?

Punt, fur scarfs, for coals repaired,
yla.,ed, dratted and stared by Forest

MEN'S SUITS OR TOPCOATS $1
CLEANED AND RESHAPED

"1

do not understad what Rabbi
Eppstein means when he says that
people belong to the ('enter only
because they wish to send their
their children to its school or to use
its clinic. As far as I know, such
are the only reasons why anybody
belongs to a Center anywhere.
Centers, like all toiler institutions,
live upon the services they render.

"I also find a slight contradic-
tion in Rabbi Eppstein picture of
an utterly miserable! Cuban Jewry,
that the •
greatest
and his statement
danger of this Jewry is assimilation
in the 'Cuban Melting Pot.' If
there is a tendency on the part of
Cuba to assimilate, does not that
indicate a certain at-homeness in
Cuba, a certain degree of adapts-
lion to it, which must also include
an economic adaptation?
Assimi-
lation is always a by-product of
economic adjustment. It is this
very tendency to merge into the
Cuban Melting Pot which while it
seems to menace the existence of
the Jewish community also pro-
vides the hope for its preservation
Ile is president of the Aaron De- ceive him. Dr. Weizmann said that bert herring, executive director of in the only sense in which preser-
and i is a the , visit was cancelled because the committee, Dr. Jacob Billikopf vation is worth while. It would he
Roy Motor
ar (Company
C C
director of the Union Trust Corn- Emir Abdullah had another sm- and myself, Ambassador Guggen- unfortunate to maintain a Hebrew
. puny and the Michigan Industrial ointment and could not receive heim outlined the economic situa- culture in Cuba at the expense of
Bank. Ile is a member of the him at the time suggested.
tion of Cuba and showed how un- making the Jews an alien body even
Downtown Club, the Standard Club
Speaking in the headquarters of
of Chicago, and the Friars Club of the Keren Ilayesod, Dr. Weizmann

Arabs and all rumors to that effect
are intelligent anticipation," Dr.
Chaim Weizmanndeclared here at
a press conference. Simultaneous-
ly the Zionist leader dismissed as
fantastic Shawket Ali's alleged
statement in which he quoted Dr.
Weizmann to the effect that Jews
would penetrate all Arabia. Dr.
Weizmann said he had merely ex-
pressed the hope that the influ-
ence of the Jews would radiate
through the entire East.
Dr. Weizmann also utilized the
press conference to deny that the
government had prohibited his
scheduled visit to Transjordania or
active in many banking and auto- that Emir Abdullah, the ruler of
mobile enterprises and in sports. that country, had refused to re-

Why Tire Yourself
with Spring Cleaning?

could in time redeem itself from its

reiterated his previous statement
that the second part of the nego-
itations between the Jewish Agency
and the British government would
begin on April 13. The corres-
p
pondent of the Jewish Telegraphic
, C lub of Detroit, and Croatan Conn- Agency learns that the British ne-
try Club of Virginia Beach, Vir- gotiators will be the British ne-
1 ginia. He is a member of the cafe Craigie Mason Aitchison;

Hate Cleaned
and Blocked

75

,

Ties Cleaned and
S1 50
d,1 Dan. for... 1
P

LADIES'

DRESSES, SUITS or COATS
CLEANED AND RESTORED

[(DEB T

$1 50

.1 up

Ladies' Hats Cleaned and Reshaped, $1.00

CLEANERS

DYERS',

533.547 FOREST AVE E

COlurnbia 4200

I n that small Republic. What is
needed is a Jewish education which
an keep pace with the assimilative
forces and produce a Jew who is a
'titian citizen of Jewish faith and
culture.
"If Rabbi Eppstein, who is on

ice, and he need have no occasion
then to resent the prealction that
sad as the lot of the Cuban Jews
may be now, there are better times
ahead for them."

Death bath no other ill except the

the scene in Cuba, will continue to thought of dying.
Love is a thing that sharpens all
call the attention of the Jews of
America to the immediate and our wits.
pressing needs of Cuban Jewry, he
'Tis death to wait for that which
will be performing a valuable serv- never comes,

New York City. Ile is also a mem-
bey of the following yacht clubs:
Detroit Yach Club, Bayview Yacht
Club, International Yach and Coun-
try Club of Amhersthurg, Ontario,
Chicago Yach Club, Cadillac Yacht

Presenting the

Board of Commerce and the Union Alaleolm MacDonald, son of Prem-
League Club. Mr. DeRoy is also ier MacDonald, and one represent-
' quite active in Masonic circles, be- alive each from the Colonial and

ing a thirty-second degree Mason and Foreign Offices and the Chan-
and a member of the Mecca Shrine, cellery of the Exchequer.
As chairman for Michigan of the
First Contracts Signed.
I National Farm School at Doyles-
Representatives of all the Emek
town, Pennsylvania, Mr. DeRoy
has shown a deep interest in the settlements witnessed the historic
movement to interest young men ceremony at Mar Ezekiel this
in studying farming. .week when Dr. Weizmann, in be-
half of the Jewish Agency, and
Leib Jaffe, 011 behalf of the Keren
Ilayesod, the Agency's principal
fianancial instrumentality, signed
the first contracts with the settlers
on the Jewish National Fund's
lands for the repayment of ad-
(Continued from Page One)
winces made to the colonists by the
not he surprising if the nalance was Keren Ilayesod. The payments
finally tipped against bins by Ms will be made beginning in 1035 and
preaching of race hate as particu- will be stretched out over a period
larly directed against the Jews," ending in 1985.
says the Times editorial. "Sooner
Wills Library to Zion.
or later it was bound to bite in on
German conscience and German
VIENNA.— (J. T. A.) — An
pride that to permit the ugly head enormous collection of rare liter-
of anti-Semitism to raise itself in ary items, thousands of Bible
the country was to injure and de- prints, innumerable Christian
grade the German name before the books and manuscripts and a valu-
world. Anti-Semitism has become able library are bequeathed to an
so emphatically the utterance of unnamed Palestine museum by the
unhappy and illiterate peasant late Rev. Dr. William llechler,
masses seeking an outlet, or the re- l'rotestant clergyman who was a
source of unpopular dynasties and close collaborator of Dr. Theodor
regimes looking for a scapegoat, Ilerzl, founder of political Zionism,
that the German people cannot re- in the latter's efforts to obtain a
main patient with the Hitler-Frick' charter for a Jewish state in Pal-
incitements without seeming to re- estine.
move itself from the list of ad-
The will of Dr. }Lechler, who
vanced countries and writing it- died in London, Feb. 2, was made
self down among the low-culture public here by the family of Leo
nations."
Weiss in whose possession it has
been. A curious bequest, which is
Dreyfus Play ■ t Bataklan Theater. also to go to the Palestine museum,
PARIS.—Despite threats by the is a coach that was once the prop-
royalists to use "modern weapons" erty of Sir Moses Montefiore, fa-
to prevent it, the play "The Drey- mous Anglo-Jewish philanthropist.
fus Affair," will be reopened in a
Dr. Ilechler's will asks that his
few days at the Bataklan Theater, collection be chronically sorted and
according to an announcement by placed in the unnamed museum.
Jacques Richepin, author of the The testament concludes with a
French version of the play.
prophecy of the early arrival of
The play was discontinued last the Messiah "who will reign in
Sunday at the Ambigu Theater -Jerusalem for a thousand years as
when the manager of that house the King of Kings." The will was
told Mr. Richepin that he feared signed on Passover 1900 with the
further rioting such as that which attorney's confirmation saying that
marred the play's performances. Dr. Ifechler was chaplain to Her
While the royalists were making Brittonic Majesty's embassy in
new threats the Union of War Vet- Vienna.
eran Pacifists took steps to protect
It was Dr. Hechler who arranged
the performances of the play. A the famous interview between Dr.
number of deputies in the French Ilerzl and Kaiser Wilhelm II when
parliament are also forming a both of them were in Palestine ,.
group for the protection of free The interview was a r r a nges1
theatrical expression.
through the Grand Duke of Baden
to whose children Dr. Ilechler had
FRIED IS ONLY DOING
been tutor,

NEW CHEVROLET SIX

in twelve attraelive models

HITLERITES LOSE
THURINGIA POWER;
DR. FRICK BEATEN

RESEARCH AT VATICAN

RO51E.—Naftali Fried, the Jew-
ish Hebrew student and bibliophile
from Czecho-Slovakia, who last
i week was reported in a news this-
! patch from Prague to have been
' appointed librarian of the Vati-
can's Hebrew library, authorized
the Jewish Telgraphic Agency to
state that this report was incur-
rect. While Mr. Fried is doing re-
search work among the Hebrew
literary treasures of the Vatican,
' he declared that he had received no
appointment from the Vatican to
do this work as official librarian.
Mr. Fried informed the Jewish
Telegraphic Agency that he was a
student at the Frankfort Rabbini-
cal Seminary and had accompan-
ies' Dr. Aaron Emanuel Frieman,
famous Frankfort Hebrew savant
and librarian, to Rome to assist the
latter in some researches among
the Hebrew manuscripts and hooks
of the Vatican library for which
special permission had been grant-
ed by the Holy See.
When Dr. Freiman returned to
Frankfort recently he left Mr.
Fried to continue the work of pre-
paring copies of various manu-
scripts. It was this that gave rise
to the Prague report that Fried
had been named librarian of the
Vatican's Hebrew manuscript col-
lection.
Mr. Fried also said that it was
not true that the Vatican had made
arrangements to provide him with
a kosher kitchen while carrying on
his work there.

Judea Life Asset. Mount.
Assets of the Judea Life Insur-
ance Company of which Louis Lip-
sky is president, totalled $790,103
at the end of 1930 as compared
with $550,338 at the end of 1920, I
an increase of $239,675, according
to the annual report of the cons- ,
pany to the state insurance depart-
ment. As of January 1, 1931 the
company had $13,404,751 in insur-
ance in force. The capital and
surplus of the company on Jana-
ary 1, 1931 amounted to S261.50s
as agiunst $209,099 a year ago..
gain of $55,408,

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n.
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FIVE-PASSENGER COITE—A new and dIs-
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ide ramble seat. I in! .
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STANDAR') ROAISSTER —A quality mr
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deck. Top boot standard. l'rice
'

'635

a-ja

The Yeshiva College, New York.
receently joined the Liberal Arts
College movement, it was an-
nounced by Dr. B, Revel, presi-
dent of the Yeshiva college fac-
ulty. The Liberal Arts College
movement is an organization of
sonic 200 purely cultural colleges,
among which are the oldest and
best known in the country. Its
aini is to foster the recognition of
the value of culture in this age of
greatest emphasis on applied
knowledge. The affiliation of the
Yeshiva College with the college
movement marks the first con-
certed effort of Jewish centers of,
learning in this country to advance
the cause of culture, making the
Jewish spirit more active and
more vital in the world culture of
today.
The Yeshiva College is the first
college of liberal arts and sciences
J. Bernard Senie, of Byron's in in Jewry which aims at • harmoni-
I the Fisher building, will speak to ous presentation of general cul-
the Saturday Luncheon Club at the ture, Jewish learning and spiritual
Phoenix Club on April 18. His influence, which are the basis of

SENIE TO OUTLINE
THE SPRING NOVELS1

subject will be "An Outline of the the

Jewish contribution

to man•

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Yeshiva College Joints Lib-
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Movement.

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See your dealer below

MACK•GRATIOT CO.
3151 Grat let Ave.
MUNROE • FRENCH, INC.
3010 Fenkell Ave.
TUCKER-JORDAN CHEVROLET SALES, INC.
14259 Mack A•e.
KESSLER SALES S SERVICE CO.
3830 W. Verner I-Lghway. at W. Grand Blvd.
HIGHLAND CHEVROLET CO.
12597 Woodward Ave.
STRENG CHEVROLET. INC.
5510 Twelfth Street
MICHIGAN CHEVROLET SALES CO.
6640 hfichigs. Ave.
BIELMAN•TAUBE MOTOR SALE
1100 Grati•t Ave.

CHEVROLET RETAIL STORE
Gee oat M•ters Bldg.
GRATIOT CHEVROLET CO.
12068 Gratiet Avenu• •
DICK CHAMBERS, INC.
14612 Grand River Ave.
OTTEN-NICOLAI, INC.
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CONNELL CHEVROLET CO.
11502-20 lee. Campers
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LLOYD CHEVROLET
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CENTRAL CHEVROLET CO.
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BARKES CHEVROLET CO.
63 West Sera-Mile Road
ROYAL OAK SALES INC.
200 South Manx St,
Royal Oak, Mob.

man

HANLEY DAWSON, INC.
4801 Third A,.., at Hancoh
JOHNSON CHEVROLET
Ferndale, Mich.
CARPENTER CHEVROLET CO.
W•yne, Mich.
BERKLEY CHEVROLET, INC.
Berkley, Mich.
C. • R. CHEVROLET CO.
Cyst...line, Mich.
WOTRING CHEVROLET CO.
Dearbers. Mich.
MEROLLIS CHEVROLET SALES
1315 Gratiet Ave, Resmilly
ROBERTS CHEVROLET CO.
16425 Hamilton Ave.

ALSO DEALERS IN CHEVROLET SIX-CYLINDER TRUCKS, $355 to $695, f,
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