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May 06, 1932 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1932-05-06

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

-

PAGE EIGHT

TnEVErRordiwisnffiRomaz

and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

JACKSON NOTES ALLIED JEWISH CAMPAIGN OPENS SUNDAY NIGHT

The Sisterhood fo Beth Israel Cony..
gallon held it. last regular meeting Wed-
nesday, April 27. A luncheon will be
given at the Jackson City Club. May 20.
The president and three members will
attend the state Sisterhood Convention
at Grand Rapids,

(Continued from Page One.)

chairman of the steering commit-
tee.
May S the congregation will celebrate The most important element in
Captains of the special gifts
Mother's Day.
the campaign at this time is that committees are Joseph H. Ehrlich,
Mr. and Mrs. Bernie Drach of Chlcago. we reach every potential contribu- Joseph Hartman, Nate S. Shapero,
who have been visiting in the city, have tor. Once all our prospects are
Mrs. Henry Wineman and Edwin
returned borne.
covered by our loyal army of A. Wolf. Maurice J. Caplan and
Rabbi Folkman's lecture Friday eve- workers, I know we will emerge
Maurice
Aronson are co-chairmen
ning was on the topic "Spinoza."
triumphant."
of the general solicitations divi-
Mrs. Rosa M. Cohen will attend the
sion.
Mr.
Wineman's
Appeal.
homecoming at Ann Arbor, May 6, 7, 8.
Mrs Henry Wineman and
Henry Wineman, chairman of
Mrs. Augusta Lervek has returned from
the board of directors of the Jew- Mrs. Joseph H. Ehrlich are co-
Florida where she spent the winter.
ish Welfare Federation of Detroit, chairmen of the special women's
which is directing the campaign, division selected for the drive.
also issued a last minute appeal in Abraham Jacobs is treasurer and
Herman Radner associate treas-
which he declares:
"Only those whose hearts have urer of the campaign.
Vice-presidents of the campaign
become hardened will dare tell us
indifferently: 'Am I my brother's are: Fred M. Butzel, Adolph
keeper?' Each one of us is re- Finsterwald, Rabbi Moses Fischer,
sponsible to the community and Dr. Leo M. Franklin, Samuel T.
to the welfare of the mats of peo- Gilbert, Harry S. Grant, Miss
ple who are now suffering in the Edith Ileavenrich, Dr. A. M. Hersh-
community. Each one of us is his man, Mrs. Albert Kahn, Hon.
brother's keeper, and the present Harry B. Keidan, Meyer L. Pren-
community crisis adds an addi- tia, Mrs. Edwin M. Rosenthal, Nor-
tional burden upon us by virtue of man Schwartz, D. W. Simons, Sem-
the increasing horde of those who i uel Summerfield and Mrs. Andrew
Wineman.
Watch for this label when are in need of relief.
you purchase your BEEF-
Maurice A. Enggass and Wil-
"There is no question but what
ENETTE or Delicatessen the individuals in our Jewish com- liam Friedman were co-chairmen
of
a special prospects committee
munity po all the means
products.
necessary to make the present which rated more than 5,000 pros-
This assures you the best in
pective
donors to the drive.
I campaign a financial
s uccess.
quality sold in Detroit. Our However hard pressed we may
Judge Charles Rubiner dead.
be,
products are made here in De- we must in the present critical the speakers' bureau, with Dr.
troit under supervision for time exert ourselves to the limit, Alvin D. liersch and Lewis J.
Kasbruth. No chemicals or and we must, if necessary, make Weitzman as vice-chairmen, Ber-
coloring but only the beat of sacrifices in order that the desti• nard Isaacs, chairman of the Yid-
materi•ls are used.
tote may be assured food, and that dish speakers' bureau, and Miss
the existence of our important in- Elizabeth Finley, -secretary. Nate
S. Shapero is chairman of the pub-
stitutions be guaranteed."
licity committee. Samuel H. Ru-
Dr. Slaweon's Appeal.
biner is chairman of the workers'
Dr. John Slawson, executive committee.
Four Important Committee.
director
of
the
Jewish
Welfare
2380 Twentieth Street
Federation, who is directing the
Chosen.
Lafayette 2908
campaign, issued this statement:
The appointment of four impor-
"This year it is no longer ■ tant committees completed the
Privilege to give. It is a duty. campaign machinery.
year to give to the Allied
Mr. DeRoy announced the selec-
ROY B. CARLIN • This
Jewish Campaign means even tion of en executive committee,
INCOME TAX SPECIALIST
more than the expression of tom- with Clarence H. Enggass as chair-
Exclusive income tax work for passion, and ■ sympathetic re- man. Assisting Mr. Enggass on
the past 12 years.
sponse for those who are in the this committee are:
Practioner before Treasury De- receiving group. It is no longer
Rabbi Ezekiel Aishickin, Jacob Albert.
penmen'. I act as your repre- that. For unless there is a stem. Milton M. Alexander, Sidney J. Allen.
Bass, Joseph Bernstein. Julius Bing.
sentative In all income tax ming of the misery which has Louie
Mrs. Morrie 11. Blumberg, Mrs. Douglas
C.11601.
Brown, Justice Henry 111. nutlet. Her-
wrought such havoc in the live* I.
man
Cohen,
Richard Cohn, Sol M. Cole,
1217 PENOBSCOT BLDG.
and homes of millions of men, wo- Mrs. Sol M Cole, Ira Copeland, Arthur
Phones—Office, Cherry 0142.
Darmstader, Mr.. Ralph Davidson, Mrs.
men and children in the United 0.
Aaron DeRoy, Anthony Deutsch. David
Rea., Lenox 9698.
States, the spectre of sickness and S. Diamond. Samuel M. Epstein, Mrs.
Farbstein. Max II. Finkelstein,
the wolves of hunger 'will engulf. Harry
Mrs. Adolph Finsterwald, Roy R. Fisher,
"We must now not only give up Morris Fishman, Rabbi Leon Fram, Mrs.
Harry td
a luxury eci that others might have Frank,
rrer!kivaSar
Think of It!
• necessity, but we must even give b rt, Marvin IL Gingola, Mr.. Fred
e A.
Mrs, Samuel R. Glogower, Mn,.
up a necessity so that others might Ginsburg.
Maurice Goldenberg. Nathaniel /I. Gold-
have ■ greater necessity. Giving stick, John A. Heavenrleh, Me.. John A.
More Ilimelhoch, Dr. Mur-
is • mental attitude and not a Heavenrich,
'Reitman. Mre. Writs Kahn, H. L.
of wealth, and unless ray
Katt, Julian H. Krolik, Aaron Kurland,
On Michigan's Best Golf condition
this mental attitude is exercised A. J. Lenin, Isadore Levin, Jacob Levin,
Levin, Mrs. Henry Levitt, Max
to thd fullest possible extent Theodore
Courses
Lieberman, Louis H.Luckoff, Herman
within the 10 days of the Allied Marko, Mrs. Max May, Mrs. Leopold D.
Mayer, Jacob Mazer, William Mazer,
HAWTHORNE VALLEY Jewish Campaign, we will all go Henry
A. Meyer,, Robert J. Newman.
under. Our system, will disinte- Mrs. Meyer L. l'rentie, Mrs. Harry 11.
Two Plants:
Prenelauer, Mrs. Oscar C. Robinson, Ed-
grate. Please remember, no per- win
M Rosenthal, Edward E. Rothman,
son has ever gone bankrupt as a Isaac Sheller, Judge Charles C. Simons.
W. Warren Ave at Gulley Rd.
Harry R. Solomon, Abe Srere,
W. Warren at Merriment Road result of giving to philanthropy. A. Stearns. Morris Steinberg, Louis Stoll
We have been accused of being a Mrs. M. B. Sulzberger, Peter Vase, Mrs.
30 minutes from City Hall
11. W•rner, Melville S. Welt,
nation of gamblers, and if gamb- Herbert
Andrew Wineman, Harry L. Winston,
was ever justified, it is now Maurice 11. Zackheim and David S. Zernon.
Sundays $1.50 Sundays ling
by giving to the utmost and gamb-
An important committee which
Early Morning and Late After- ling on the future—by demon- will function during the drive,
noon Rates
strating philanthropic sportsman- preparing programs for the noon-
ship, that sportsmanship of which day luncheons during which work-
America is so proud, especially ers will oubmit their reports, is
when exhibited In adversity."
headed by Sylvan S. Grosner, with
Daily luncheons of workers will Mrs. Sidney J. Allen and Mrs.
be held at Hotel Statler beginning Walter Laib as associate chair-
Monday to hear reports on the men, Mrs. Mayer B. Sulzberger as
campaign's progress.
chairman of radio programs, and
Huts
Mrs. Joseph II. Ehrlich as chair-
,
,
Campaign Machinery.
man of arrangements. Assisting
The entire campaign machinery them on the program committee
has been completed. Aaron DeRoy are the following:
......11[ 4A
is general chairman. Henry Wine-
Milton W. Alexander, Mr. Morton F.
,
,
man and Israel Ilimelhoch are co- Ashner, Mrs. Edward A. Atlas. Mrs.
thee we
Z. Brown, Mrs. Burton CI•mmte,
chairmen of the special gifts com- Harry
mlek All
REFIETS ON
Ralph Cole, Mrs. Sol M. Cole, Arthur G.
mittee. Clarence II. Enggass is Darmstader, Dr. Robert S. Draws, Mervin
N oonsuw.
'i "It 'llULOVA WATONU

Gunsberg

Packing Co.

sl - GOLF-al

WATCH REPAIRING

1

0 •

..,.•••.....

Children's corner

BANQUET AT HOTEL STATLER; RABBI M. S. LAZARON AND
MAYOR MURPHY TO DELIVER THE PRINCIPAL ADDRESSES

R. Gingold, Mrs. Samuel R. Clog ower,

31 Column for Our Boys and Girls

rarc'oba lo4; u'll'oewa (rd'id
is"lal beriMISm'erN".
Kates, rues. A. Mac Kahn, Mrs. David J.
Levy,
A fd
Mrs. M or.
Mn
Meyer..
Gus 'D. Newman. Mr.. . Robert J . Islawrn
Gerald
mour Sim one,
:11 rr::
.r.8e71.11% Sey
1n'
1
Victor Well, ' Nrs. Lewis J.weitzman and
Mrs. Henry Wineman.

By UNCLE JUDAH

The finance and audit committee
is headed by Jesse F. Hirschman
as chairman, with William B. Isen.
berg as associate chairman. As-
sisting them are Louis M. Bloom-
berg, Robert E. Clinton, Charles
K. Harris, Albert Kreekum, Louis
J. Newman, Marx P. Rosenthaler,
Joseph L. Staub and David P.
Zack.
Mother's Day Appeal.
Pointing out that the great need
today is not for candy but for
bread and flour, the women's divi-
sion of the Allied Jewish Campaign
issued an appeal last night urging
gifts in honor or memory of the
mothers to this fund which em-
braces the most important Jewish
relief agencies locally and nation-
ally.
Winners in Poster Contest.
Jean Crossett, student at the
Detroit School of Fine and Ap.
plied Arts, of which Robert A.
Hertzberg is the director, was
awarded first prize in the poster
contest conducted by the Allied
Jewish Campaign. More than 500
contestants competed for the three
prizes offered.
Second prize was won by Norma
Coate, student of the School of

DEAR BOYS AND GIRLS:

This Sunday will be observed as Mother's Day. I suppose every
one of you has planned to buy a gift for mother. Some will buy
candy, others flowers. I know that some of you will try to do a good
deed on this day in mother's honor, and some of you may even plant
trees in Palestine es lasting tributes to this day.
But it wasn't so many years ago when we did not have a special
Mother's Day to serve as a time for honoring our mothers. Did the
boys and girls, and the men and women, at that time, pay less honor
to mother? Not at all. Where there is honor and honesty every day
in the year is Mother's Day.
And another thing: Many years ago it wasn't considered neces-
sary—especially among Jews—ot buy gifts for mother in order to
honor and to love her. And mother didn't expect it. If you knew
your Hebrew lesson, if you were diligent and honest and loyal to your
people, it was the greatest honor for mother.
Are mothers different today? Of course not. Just show prog-
ress in Ilebrew and public school, be firm in your convictions and loyal
to your people, and no better tribute will be asked for. Are we, all
sons and daughters, different? I believe that the difference is rather
forced by outward conditions. There are too many things to tempt
us, too many attractions to draw us away from our people and our
traditions. And as a result of the influences of the things around us,
we not only yield in the things we do, in the thoughts we think,
in the ideals we have; but we also borrow from those around us in
the customs we practice and in the new traditions which rule our
lives. And so we do what our neighbors do: we offer gifts, we buy
flowers and candy.
This is fine. There is nothing more beautiful than to present
flowers or candy to those we love. But flowers die and candies are
consumed. They do not last forever. And Jewish tradition has
taught us to strive for the lasting things. Scholarship is lasting.
Beautiful ideals are lasting. The good things that you do to others
will last in the memory of those who derive benefits from them. And
when mother knows about these benefits she will be happy and proud.
Do you see the difference that I am describing? It is this differ-
ence which dominates Jewish tradition. But unfortunately it is not
always being lived up to. And what I wish to impress upon you is
that to honor mother it isn't always necessary to purchase a material
thing which does not last. Mother will be more honored when you
achieve something for yourself and through this achievement do some-
thing for others.
I am printing some more Mother's Day material in this column.
I hope you enjoy it. And I certainly hope all of you make mother
happy not only on this day, but every day in the year.
YOUR UNCLE JUDAH.

Society of Fine Arts, of which
Edmund Curry is director. Third
prize went to Herbert 0. Mickley,
student of the Detroit School of
Fine and Applied Art. •
Judges in the contest were

Clyde Burroughs, chairman; Jo-
seph L. Kraemer of the Detroit
News and Reginald 0. Bennett and
Jay Boorsma.
Mrs. David B. Werbe was in
charge of the poster contest for
the Allied Jewish Campaign.
Rabbi Lasoron's Career.
Among the many activities of
Rabbi Lazaron, visiting speaker at
ANSWER TO LAST WEEK'S
GOOD MORNING
the dinner Sunday night, are:
RIDDLE
It was only a glad "Good Morning,"
Chairman of the Baltimore 1931
The answer to the riddle which
As she passed along the way;
Allied Jewish Campaign; member appeared in last week's column is: But it spread the morning's glory
of the Chaplains' Association of PEACE.
Over the livelong day.
the United States army; member
of the executive committee of the
League of Nations Association,
member of the executive commit-
tee of Foreign Policy Association;
member of the executive commit-
tee of the Maryland League for
Crippled Children; member of the
Maternal Welfare Committee,
member of the National Council
Zionist Organizations of America,
honorary vice-chairman Jewish
Agency for Palestine; major of
the United States army; member
of the advisory board of the Child
Study Association; vice-president
of the Alliance Israelite Univer-
selle.
Rabbi Lazaron is a graduate of
Hebrew Union College and of the
University of Cincinnati. He is a
past president of the Civitan Club
of Baltimore, and a member of the
Central Conference of American
Rabbis. He is the author of
"Side Arms," "Religious Services
for Jewish Youth," Consolations of
Our Faith," and - "Seed of Abra-
ham: 10 Jews of the Ages."
He is a frequent contributor to
Jewish magazines and periodicals,
and at the invitation of the United
States Secretary of War was one
of the four chaplains officiating at
the burial of the unknown soldier
at Arlington Cemetery, represent-
ing the Jewish people of America
on that occasion.

CHILD AND MOTHER

"WE CLEAN—
Where Others Fail"

By Eugene Field

me

0

Mother-m y•love, if you'll give
your hand,
And go where 1 ask you to wander,
I will lead you away to • beautifu'an-
The dreamland that's waiting out
yonder.
We'll walk in • s eet- oste garden
w
out
p
there
Wheremoonlight
moo
and etarlight are
streaming
And the flowers and birds are filling the
•ir
With fragrance and music of dreaming.

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No lineations or car to
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There'll be no little bres
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Nor patching of stockings to vex you.
Fur
rock you away en a silver•dew
stream,
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And nrotre". shall know of our beautiful
dream
But you and your own little dude,

An
lam on,tirg. gi
In the bosom
often.
And the wide-awake stars shall sing In
my sled
A song which our dreaming shall
sof ten.
So Mother-my-love, let me take your
dear hand,
And avray through the starlight we'll
wander-
AWAY through the mist to the beautiful
land-
The dreamland that's waiting out
yonder.

snztl,e.dmy,n. so

DINE and DANCE

at

Marshall's

Special Orchestra Saturday and
Sunday Evenings.
No Cover Charge
Finest Full Course Dinner in
Detroit at 60 cents
We Cater to Weddings, Lunch-
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WE DELIVER

LEFT AND RIGHT
A Warsaw rabbi who was elected
to the Polish parliament joined the
Socialists, the party of the Left.
When someone asked his reason he
wittily replied: "I have joined the
Left because we Jeyis have no
rights."

10346 50 Dexter Blvd.

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At Collingwood
Hemlock 9844

NOTICE
to Our Subscribers!

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tion of notices, tell your lawyer or the court that you
want all notices published in

The Detroit

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Euclid 5088

CYRUS SULZBERGER HEBREW 'U' CALLED
DIES IN 74TH YEAR AGENCY IN AIDING
NEAR EAST'S PEACE
(Continued from Page One.)

managed the successful campaign
of George McAneny for president
of the borough of Manhattan in
1910.
For many years Mr. Sulzberger
was president of the United He-
brew Charities, and when he
asked that he be relieved of his
duties he admitted that for years
he had devoted nearly all of his
spare time to the work of the
cause.
As a member of Mayor Mitchel's
Committee on Unemployment
which was headed by Elbert H.
Gary, the services of Mr. Sulz-
berger were drafted for his special
information on relief. lie was re-
garded by former Ambassador
Oscar Straus and those associated
with him on the committee as be-
ing equipped to an extraordinary
degree for the important public
duty to which he had been called
by Mayor Mitchel.
Mr. Sulzberger's views on char-
ity, expressed by him at the sec-
ond national conference of Jewish
charities, held in Detroit in 1902,
have frequently been quoted as an
epitome of the goal of Jewish phi-
lanthropy in America. On that oc-
casion he said:
"When a man comes to a relief
organization for assistance, it is
far better to give him such assist-
ance as shall never permit him to
come back than it is to give him
such dole as causes him to return
to us after • short period, and
again after that. Because, in the
matter of taking relief, the second
application Is so much easier than
the first and the third correspond-
ingly easier than the second; and
while our desire is only in the
clouds at the present time, our
hope is that some day when a man
comes to us we shall be in a po-
sition to give him such relief as
to put him permanently on his
feet."
Held Distinguished Poets.
Mr. Sulzberger, among other of-

(Continued from Page One.)

possessed a faculty of over 60 mem-

bers, and a student body of over
200, representing practically every
Jewish community in the world. He
said that the first degrees ever to
be granted by a Jewish university
anywhere had been given by the
Hebrew University in January to
11 young men and two young wo-
men who had received the degree of
M. A. Ile announced that the de-
gree of Ph. D., would be awarded
by the Hebrew University within
another two years.
A gift of $5,600 from Mrs. Dora
Monness Shapiro, towards the com-
pletion of the Physics Building of

had been, as a result of the con-
flict, to be deprived of their
REV. JACOB I. SKLAR
homes and their means of liveli-
rthrtmit'. Ladles am;
hood. In this connection he
Bwt r.11• ■ •
served aa secretary of the Ameri-
MOHEL
can Jewish Relief Committee and
Retommeeded by the
as a member of the executive com-
city.
mittee of the Joint Distribution
neat Plmelelene.
Committee.
IRIS liwohreed Am.
Although not a Zionist, Mr.
Passe Trinity 26426
Sulzberger recognized the cultural
value of the movement to the
.................
American Jew. After a visit to
Palestine he threw himself actively
Rev. Samuel
into the campaign to raise funds
(Mogilevsky)
for the Hebrew University of
whose American advisory council
he became a member.
As president of the Jewish Agri-
MOHEL
cultural and Industrial Aid So-
s
Graeluat• el the Joey
ciety,
an offshoot of the Baron de
ish Maternit y Hospital
Hirsch Fund, Mr. Sulzberger de-
at New Yoh.
voted his efforts toward encourag-
‘, 670 Westminster A..
ing immigrants who wished to se-
Hemlock 11464
tle upon the land.
Mr. Sulzberger was credited
111.1
t5' . 1.11111.11..111111111
with being the mainspring of the
movement that led to the raising
of an adequate fund for the final
Rev. Cantor
completion of the Jewish Encyclo-
David Golden
pedia.
Detroit's Favorite
As a founder of the American
MOHIL
Hebrew, a weekly publication, Mr.
Wedding Career
Sulzberger was among those hon-
sift Performed
of
fices, had occupied the position of ored on the fiftieth anniversary
Honr and by
that periodical at a dinner in the
chairman
of
the
Bureau
of
Jewish
Appolatmost
Hotel Plaza on Nov. 21, 1929.

MOGILL

2220 Clainewet
Euclid 5400

REV. Jr SILVERMAN

Moiled Specialist

as Yausw

anew
Mem" Illos•weed

61 1
Rbrelanme

AWN

Olodiso~
isoslki 10667

Social Research; director of the
Jewish Publication Society of
America; a member of the execu-
tive committee of the American
Jewish Committee; trustee and ex-
associate treasurer of Federation
of Jewish Philanthropic Societies;
secretary of the American Jewish
Relief Committee and president
of the New York City Conference

of Charities and Correction.
Deeply interested in the wel-

fare of his co-religionists in Eu-
rope after the World War, Mr.

Sulzberger joined in many activi-
ties and served on many boards
which helped to alleviate the lot
of the Jews whose misfortune it

Aa a member of the Chamber
of Commerce and the American
Economic Association, Mr. Sul:,
berger served on various commit-
tees to which he contributed his
mature experience as a business
man. He was a member of the
City, Harmonic and Century Coun-
try Clubs.
He was vice-president of Tem-
ple Israel of Harlem for many
years and was also affiliated with
Temple Shearith
The funeral service at Mr. Sul:-
berger's residence Monday morn-
ing were private. Dr. David de
Sola Pool officiated.

the Einstein Institute of Mathe-
matics and Physics, was also an-
nounced over the radio.
A message from Dr. iblagnes,
cabled from Mt. Scopus, read: "Pal-
estine is the center of the awaken-
ing Near East, and Jerusalem, the
holy city, is the heart of this land
now awakening from its sleep of
many centuries. If there were no
university in Jerusalem, I feel it
would be important to create one.
It is almost a misfortune that one
was not created two generations
ago. If this were done, perhaps
some of the suffering endured by
the peoples living here might have
been avoided."
Ile said that the Arabs and Jews
created and share a common cul-
ture in Asia and South Africa over
a period lasting many centuries and
that Islam is derived from Judaism
in a large measure.
"What could be more natural
than that the new university at
Jerusalem should devote itself and
be concerned with an intensive
study of Arabic and Islamic cul-
ture? Although the Hebrew Uni-
versity is but 'even years old," said
Dr. Magnes, "it may be said that it
offers without exaggeration, un-
equalled opportunities for the in-
vestigation of the Islamic and
Arabic mind. There is no univers-
ity in America, in Europe or in the
whole Arabic world with similar
facilities."
Mr. Warburg, who was the first
chairman of the American Advis-
ory Committee, founded on the oc-
casion of the opening of the uni-
versity in 1925, spoke from New

Yo"rkh
There is a grave danger," said
Mr. Warburg, before the program
was switched to London, "that in
time like these the needs of cul-
tural and educational institutions
will be overlooked.
"It should be • matter of grati-
fication to us," Mr. Warburg point-
ed out, "as Americans, to know
that the Ilebrew University has
been largely supported by contri-
butions from this country. It is
inspiring to know that in Palestine
there is being extended the help-
ing hand of science to all who may
need help irrespective of their race
or religion. "

Detroit Gathering in Honor of
University'. Anniversary.
More than 100 members of the
executive committees of the Zionist
Organization of Detroit, the two
chapters of Hadassah and the So-
ciety of Friends of the Hebrew
University, gathered at Hotel Stet-
ter at noon Sunday to listen in on

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fine, modern, six-cylinder engine underneath is
one of the chief reasons why Chevrolet continues
to be America's largest-selling automobile! For
that engine is a six—and only a six, as Chev-
rolet builds it, combines both built-in amooth.
ness and maximum economy. That engine is
mechanically Bound! Three and a half years of
continuous improving, refining, and testing have
made it as nearly perfect as it can be That

Hebrew University.

Following the broadcast, a num-
ber of leaders met at luncheon, over
which Fred M. Butzel presided.
Brief talks were delivered by Mrs.
Harry L. Jackson, Mrs. Joseph H.
Ehrlich, Mr. Ehrlich and Simon
Shetzer.

engine is thoroughly proved—Its basic design
and construction have been tested and proved
by billions of miles of service. That engine k
up-to-date in every respect—It develops 60
horsepower—delivers a speed of from 65 to 70
!hilts an hour—and accelerates from a standstill to
35 miles an hour in less than 7 seconds. Its advan-
tages are yours for as little as $445—Due to
new reduced prices, the new Chevrolet Six now
sells for one of the very lowest prices in the market.

CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN. DIVISION OF GENERAL MOTORS

CHEVROLET SIX

All prkve f. a b. riot. Michigan.
Special equipment extra.
Low
Mamma prime and eery 0. M.
A. C. terms

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HOMER CHEVROLET. Inc
6640 MAI,. Avenue.
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
3725 Grand River Ammo
MACK.GRATIOT CO.
3141 Gratiot Am.
-
,E.-
MUNROE • FRENCH, INC.
.....
3010 Feeltsil
TUCKER-JORDAN CHEVROLET SALES, INC.
142S11 Mack Aw.
-
KESSLER SALES I; SERVICE CO.
: 31110 W. Verner Highway, at W. Grand Blvd.
FT..
HIGHLAND CHEVROLET CO.
125177 Wiseleard Ave.
C. W. HILL! CHEVROLET SAW
i -.:
Northville, Michigan
I .'.--
--
DOWN RIVER CHEVROLET CO.
' M
Wyandotte, Wald.
HOWARD CHEVROLET CO., lee.
I ma
reston. Midas.

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the international broadcast in hon- O.

or of the seventh anniversary of the

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0

GALLAGHER CHEVROLET CO.
Mt. Claim., Michigan

BIELMAN.TAUBE MOTOR SALE!
6100 Gratiet Alva
FABER CHEVROLET INC.
11134 Dexter Blvd. at Burlingame
CHEVROLET RETAIL STORE
General Motors BM
GRATIOT CHEVROLET CO.
124611 Gratiet Avenue
DICK CHAMBERS, INC.
14312 Grand River Ave.
OTTEN.NICOLAL INC.
13G/1 an Ave.
CONNELL CHEVROLET CO.
11502.20 Jos. Camp.
ROBERTS CHEVROLET CO.
16423 Hannah Ave.
MEROLLLS CHEVROLET SALES
1315 Grebes Am. Rometrille
STRENG CHEVROLET, INC.
6310 Twelfth Street
CARPENTER CHEVROLET CO.
Wayne, Mick.

EASTERN CHEVROLET CO.
WALTER WRIGHT
14400 E. Jefferstia, at Aeltlaad
Flat TE R
DITTMER•KINGAN
CHEVROLET SAW
P/yesoulk MkIsigan
Dearbome, Mich. E. J. ALLISON
MONK CHEVROLET CO.
JORDAN CHEVROLET, INC.
Beilyilla, Michigan
Birmingham, Mick.
LLOYD CHEVROLET SAl23
GINN CHEVROLET, lac
6201 Grand River A..
6256 Grand River Ave.
BERKLEY CHEVROLET, INC.
COLLINS CHEVROLET CO.
Berkley, Mk ► .
10354 West Jefferson Ave.

JOHNSON CHEVROLET
Ferndale, Mich.
HANLEY DAWSON, INC.
4601 Thud Ave, at Hancock

WOTRING CHEVROLET CO.
Dearlenz, Mich.
ffl
FARMINGTON MOTOR SALE-.1 --
=

ROYAL OAK SALES, INC.

WARREN In
CH
rE
""
VRM
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IT
ig"'
SALF-S
Warren. Michigan

Royal Oak, Mich.
BARKES
w, CHEV
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I.E. 16.4
7 CO.
W

CAERE;CHEVROLET SALES
Rachman, Michigan
BARNEY.HABEL AUTO CO.
Poetise, Michigan

CENTRAL CHEVROLET CO.
2237 E. Jefferson Am.

C. 11 R. CHEVROLET CO.
Coaterliee, Mick.

200 South Maim St,

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