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May 19, 1933 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1933-05-19

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

lite)erRortingstiCH RONICLE

and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

vs.

To be sure that you purchase
the best DELICATESSEN,
SALAMI, FRANKFURTERS—
watch for this label!

TZ

THE CRISIS DEMANDS UNITY!

I Continued from ling, One t

TENTH ANNIVERSARY OF FIRST
GRADUATING CLASS OF UNI-
TED HEBREW SCHOOLS.

Is t

11 ,

11 . 1'

IS

protest movements as well as by our fail- (Continued from l'reccding Page
ure to unIt• on a corntlion platform for relief action. The
h,.
g
lend.
\
ts
time has arri% ad for our leaders all(' their respecti\ - • or-
o rat
ganizations to forget their dillerences and to come do \vii
to brass tacks. The time has arrived for a common under-
standing of the existing problem.
'rwo rour.es of action are demanded at this lime:
I. An unaniwo , o.., itat-h coiee must demand Ire in 11111'
giovernMent that it It\ i• up to the traelitions and pre,•eil, ti' -
'rii
established for it by previous Pr'esidents :Old ad e
tions, null that the •nUed States ,dlici;dly combmiii
German atrocities. Inn' only hope for the cessation
the existing atrocities i< that the voice of the civilized an "rid
\vitt be heard in it mighty protest against the indignitie- 81 tilt IN ail 11N1 , ( I 1 ,
nt
heaped upon th e Jetis in Germany by It barbaric go....c!.
!tient. II is high time that the Christian world had -1, , "
easily absolved of respon-doht:
t'liristiattit;.• is not lo
in the present crisi. Too long have the non-Je \v.. of

MICHIGAN BELL
TELEPHONE CO.



11 .1 ki.HWValliZ( . (1

1

outs u In mine “ultsberg's Ro•hee ielautf
sot so he sure th41 sou are using the
orod.1 end other
itusher
Ihdrod front the
. ,,,, .iftrf. lured
hest meat arodurts shish are deliserrd
Int this hest
,i..roseepers ire. dads
defu.iiessen prodml In.. , sour drillAlld.

Guosherg's Delicatessen

Gunsberg

Packing Co.

2380 Twentieth Street

w or ld tifild.lieti :if:, 1

watched the crur

i l l

y

11 , 11 t11 N I

1,1

ion

. 1•11,
an 4.111ft11 111•111111' 1 , 11 1111' scaffold 11f bigotry and nal 1

Christi:wit y's only possible eflansie of :atonement is that
it will compel the Hitler government to cease enslaving a

of its Je\visli citizens.
2. But cure \ve are through protesting we are charged
\vitt, an even more serious responsibility. In expressing
LEAGUE OF WOMEN our
outraged feelings tee must not forget the plight of the
GIVES JURY PANEL sufferers in the present crisis. Insofar as the Jews in (;er-
\V„,„,,,•, many are concerned, one of two things is possible. Either
Tht .
loch 31, - , Edith the Je %vs remain in Germany or they avill be forced to leave
L:oni.atic1,,
so o n - the country they called their Fatherland.
And lure is
II. as enrich 1, president,
eug at jury panel discussion, where tragedy is rea•e;ded in all its horrible aspects. The
31,•day, :flay '29, at 111 "15 a. tn.,
,laws ill Germany are doomed to a status of degradation
ci Temple Beth El.
Fred NI. Butzel will be the chair- comparable to the position of l'olish Jewry. 'the process
,;
;
already completed. appears Met
if
• :in .1' the day, and will be as- o f 1
" num b er o f P n ,"""`
table
u n
de r conditions w 'hiell permitted ale planting of
h
lw
,
to
Worn,
\Vi
t.social service
hate and prejudice against Jew.,
fat itipatt. in the discussion the bitterest seed; of
p
correct
hat Should lie the Scope of Es - im the Wildest voice raised in protest. will not
Philanthropy in Detroit?"bi.
m os wrong. The damage has been done. Noav it is Jesvry's
.1,
Sena Itolonson is chair-
31,
lin/Vide the cure,
responslInin

gala,. vox

t that

was

rank-

nd
i' you

if you
iantz's

ab ou t

.thing
a llyhon

jeet-

1, say,

Jingly

dorm-
'ported
d with

KELVINATOR CORPORATION

n,

LJ

rill

Nir.

ft!

In

AI

it

II I, y, rth

I ,

1 :11 \

he had tills, told.

besides that he had I
n quirk wit. At eximmats
thin there wore II IWIlyst (111(1
the program comminim.
i sought tie extra,
the followint:
s
A'I' \1'11,1, be our people's reply to the crying info .rmation from hint by In.
Mr•-• Das id S. llonnord.
problemof the Jets- tens ling not to understand ,pus
demand for the solution of the problem
\I s Oscar Itolinison. 311s. Shines w
It is predicted that 300,000 Jews "'ha t it salts they were expect'
Lit Nvantlerers?
Si r • . Samuel 31. nrlek.t1
Invarially ht sou' 1
t."
Ala allant Cooper,
X3 ill be hireed to leave (lermarly. Alillions tire trapped
th I em: 'kV
on
'N'''it,u'"I'ilr
1 luncheon 51 ; 1 , 1 !" II ""
Poland tifider like Unfavorably conditions, Similar condi-
sif(Iti' ,fec't " , I i's t h o n. .
for *mill reservitay , n -
t ions prevail in Rumania. Latvia and Lithuania. The prole- zieh , par klepen at curt tsu a coo
e pros.
1 ears ;gassed.
The studios
,,,ay be made through th
Million of gran Mated Hebrew School, grad,
delfts of any one of the I''2 .1c.in - le xi is tine of emigration and colonization.
i, ;
, 1. ur
provided with homes and with mans of ate d Ili•liresv Hi g h s c hoo l, an d
l' \VS must be prod
.':It ions which compri, II.
, evc It graduated a college and en-
, I' through Mrs. David Hub,. living under decent economic conditions.
.
't1 II profession.
Hs final'•
IL:1,11mo of the luncheon COT,
\\ill our leaders unite on a common platform for the I''''
ret urinal to visit the old
,,,,ti,e, Elmhurst 1 . 112S,
-elution au this problem?
• :I go in. 111' ..ittw Mr . m ar k,, e.
.
A bright ray of hope emanates front the East. Pales-, wim, was in the hall between bell-,
sag . ; ously engleged in oinversii•
tine is beckoning to the refugees. From the Executive 14
. lie happened by Nadi Li,
the Jewish Agency for Palestine comes the following ;, Ian teacher's eye, which lighted

:
l
a pp ea
up at once, as ale. Nlarksori
(Continued from Page One.)
TO THE JEWS IN ALL COUNTRIES
eur
turning.pnint in the his.,

The rents in
dein to the Hebrew University in
.115 aflmis our brethren in this count,

PeePle Who , is lusiuu
. tIds hyur of their distress we feel hilted
Jerusalem? It is because we have
.,

but concerns all of
than es er.
w e share their anguish. we
with the Jess of
compromised. In the last 211 years
loch they are bearing their trials se are
•tt
admire the courage
Jews gave S150,000,0011 to noisier.
shich they ere upholding the Jewish name and
profoundly touched by the
..• su l that they sill ualiantly defend their full e„1
its W I honor. and we are
sities. and all the efforts of 3Iagnes
the country to which they hale devoted
man. and all their eeerwm.
and Warburg and Weizmann were
their he, meritsmai° gen. ations.
These feelings of fraternal solidarity. and the conselousnens of our being untted
sufficient to gather only $2,000,000
dennite action.
o re nod expression as Fpredilv as posslble
by a common destiny
for the Hebrew University.
RennomIc rein! mr ■ Allres for the Jest in Germany mu. be taken In hand on

111 . '1111W

te i .,15,

. ■

,

World

t

-t

II

II

"A ith us, teleplu ,,, i ,, g

then k tent to

if 1,Ie

SW'Ittld I 11g.

n IS

Rev

r1

tan

the.'

in

Y 51g -At! , to

and

I Is,

I, the question mi,'
st
n
minds
(hest
se
. . 1111-
I ,,
that is chazacteristic of
t h e I. is ish people: 'Mrhertifori ,
o
Will these Sant,' Ynalna:-
stet who are now only 13 and 11
■■ at- "Id -will they continue ti
eatiy the Hebrew banner? III. will
y 'wet the arms Oaf hit,.
(If course, the
tnisial them?
speakers of the graduation spolo.
proclaiming
assurance,
with
youngsters as the standard-
th o e se
hearers, as the future Ilebraists,
They
it , the future teas-hairs.
spoke so because they hoped that
le.
true.
But
I what they said would

'I ,

I.

hfo near m

Detr oit

the first method used in

card is at spare for a telephone 1111'111)er, " reports

I

II 1111111,1i

II

!hell

.
"II

1 , 1i,1

IN

• ball to work. On e‘ery application
calling stoat

Oa I

01

`411111 1 1

1111 . ( 1 1111l1111 1 1 1, 11f

"DUI

ow

COMPROMISING BY
JEWS IS DEPLORED

BY TELEPHONE

i•li

lilt ,

1 -11111\ 1' ,11111

,t1

:in,

I

How Si
d line .t.
Fin
II, '1, k din al IN Si

,1 I I I

,‘ :is kn.*,

nn

'

II

'

I .0

CALLS ADDITIONAL WORKERS

of
I ICI.E BY 1 111.CIIIN
I
rIII. , ur
.1
Which li,

1.'ini
s
t.IT

ti, I.

k

I. it oh

•iml
volt h our

IVY Gills( lake

relive 1.1 I. w lilt' Me /about

Us."

STATEMENT BY SHUR
Herz] Shur made this stat•-
ment:
"It i= the ".entinient of each
that the Ilebiew Schools
;let it an invaluahle and all-in-
1.s:rating force Ichich tends to
bring all of us together in as uni-
ted body. It In the Hebrew
Sehools which imbued as with
the spirit of Judaism, and if,
after years of departure we are
still impregnated with an insat-
iable desire for Jewish learning
and manifest an interest in Jew-
ish lir-olden, expressing a laoli-
ne, to aid in their solution, We
feel that fur all this we are in-
' &Med to urn lidriVed institution

an Oficial of KO% Motor Corporation. "Hight

more people on the payroll than at
t during the I9 years we base been Ian
'Ha in e s, 'Many of those re-employed were called

now Nee 111151'

any t.

to the job by telephone."

*

*

*

Other things being equal, applicants or former

phone usually

are

called

workers are needed.

Our Classified Ads Pay

Thousands of Jewish families are already destitute and

Ime is
•ffect:
Nazi*
r dad
lt us
erenre
muelx

osser"
"Oh,

y sent

or man

n the
limn

tall in
Fascist

ho



by

s Jew
ac for
tear-
y hint
that

, rayer

had.
1. ath

ors

In RA

full
d it is
thing,
s t wdl
s long
calling
de of
bissnm
in the
• poet:
sh e

1i:

ea

111 , fig

Ben

no one

prerle

I your

I ke
sin and
hsnor ,
ty and

prayer
!argue

rid

• large scale immediatels
"We remained a minority that
many thooand*171. be faced by • similar late in the next few weeks. Thousands of
The Jewish communities of
is being beaten, not a protesting
1 , 111111 , CS are collecting in various countries of Europe
these countries are doing their 'Amos( to rend.' fIrst•aid 1n their brethren she hese
minority. What outraged ate is
been bereft 01 their homes but ssstematic and united endeators on the part Wus
not that Feuchtwanger was told to
all sill be needed in order to provide for the (enure.
am hour of yur history Ere, I•ael
s
most more than ever el,1111111110 our
In this trntion
write in Hebrew, but that Feucht-
,
and C0113t1ILIte the central het. of the Jews cif all countmes
printtpal atte
manger could not reply, 'Yes, I
Once again. as has so often happened in our history. a Jewish community
that number some hundreds of thousands lInde the foundations of Re met.),
will write in Hebrew.' It is a re-
shattered Thou ands and tens of thousands ale cympelled to wander forth Germany
flection on Judaism that the mod-
has become a 1,1111- Ipal 1,111(1 1. of the distress enteiled by Jewish emtgration True.
the neighboring rountries hale fir the present imlnu era • number of fort:sea hut
ern writers in Germany could not
the host of emigrants to be expected from Germany is faced. Jewish emigration
accept Hitler's challenge and de-
whole Oa the fateful question Whither ,
as
Whilst the Fort Furore , . C011ntries in the Middle Ages. and the overseas rountrlea
clare that they would write in
held their gates open for Jewish immigration, se are
in the Nineteenth C,
Hebrew, that they would create
Palestine with
that is almost ■ u.pletele closed to ue
s
n os ronfronted t,
its constantly Increasing merit,'
,ore and indust— a
another Bible which a Luther
its !deathly inaressit
(,alai WIT greatest hope

monnrra , ,t,
fur the absorptien .". s
would some day translate into

1
, 1,:der it their
Je.
1,11
A,'
.1

1,
11,f
The lead.•
German and give to the German
n • .
duty at
r
P M- . • • • •1.e fundamental
Pahl of the 1.... •
people their religion.
ar m
'
-..•
et
y
"We have not taught one per

rrable
of cud boy's and girls to read
the
and write and understand their
;
.
111111/P a- le,
language. This is the tragedy, the
of
Germane J ea r
Sirpi
compromise we h ave made."
with the '
ccord
on
The Zionist Contribution.
I ruite
substm
eq
,„,
I will all their ry.
Rabbi Goldman declared that
e
on elf mande far
the Zionist group recognized the
of all constr., u
!Olt
1111%1. we
problem. "The Zionist group sa,
gran. a: d settlt lurid of
that a pimple must have a center
lislo We tell ipen all
el the istablishinent
for its life and thought," he stud.
in Our great sort
h
"They began to lay the founda-
tion in Palestine. Today the Ger-
1101 CIF TfIF trite 1 , 11 Ant R eV FOR rat
f
man refugee direct, his face to
Other lands are beginning to speak to its in terins of
Palestine---not only to be helped
ning their doors for the settlement of the thousand ,
t
reot
in a physical way, but to lo pr...
h spiritual of Jewish reftiges.s. Certainly', we dare not abandon the
vided with a balm for hi-
humiliations, hope that all avenues of escape are closed to Us, that all

"It is in Palestine that thy. Jew , faith s liifile
;
, ,
is being healed and restored. It 1-
do become futile when the
f a i th and
D M faandhope
there that the protesting minions' .
, leaders refuse to agree and 10 work in harmony in behalf
is true to itself."
Unless Mir spokesMen
Rabbi Goldman declared in , if their sorely-stricken people.
remain ,
opening his address that 211 x :ea' unite. the Jew ish position throughout the world w ill reain
ago, when he was a student a
s. And if our leaders insist upon
helple s s.
ope l ess and helple
the Jewish Theological Seminary. h
making of Israel's home a household divided against itself.
Rabbi A. M. Hershman was al.;
really revered as fa scholar, and I then we are doomed to despair.
was t
Congregatiiin Shaarey T.
Perhttps Jewry is to be forced to choose new 1 ■ •:1,1 , 1. - .
recognized as a fortress of tok- i Perhaps the tragic hour will bring the desired leader-h[p.
boast Judaism in the middl e w,,,,,. i
Until the ideal l e adership appears on the .11 s'.0-11
He expressed regret that Rabbi I
Hershman was not present at thy I scamp, the (let-nand throughout Jewry must be for UNIT)
dinner.
present trying crisis.
Si Sh he Toastmaster. i in the
Shetzi.r, who was chair- ' 1
to a large extend on the d'
m an of the
cilmmitter which ar- 1
.....• that Jewish education is rot
ranged for the donor dinner, was
n uniting our people. The lead6
10TH
the toastmaster. In brief intro-
' ' -, y'f our approaching Emergeney
ductory remarks he declared it a
3. o .1 Campaign are fully cogni7 -
(Continued front Page One.)
cause for self-congratulation that
iiii i of this fact and have th erefore
Shaarey Ziali.k is able to continue
its activities and to enlarge its1 and ill English which will be given in• Initial part of the l'. II. S.'S ye71 es
when as a souvenir to the guests. This ly expenditures in its budget.
spheres of work, at a tine'
other congregations are unable to publication, which is. dedicated to "The survival of our people
PRY their rabbis and cantors. the memory of the late Aaron D. throughout the ages in exile has
"Shaarey &nick has a noble herb Marlsson, the teacher of the first unquestionably proven that 'He
therefore hopes graduating class, will contain a that keeputh Israel loth neither
tage, and we are
tut for the tut ore," he declared. number of literary articles and slumber or sleep.' The result of
the coming campaign will I ant
Mrs. Joseph II. Ehrlich, co-chairs '('nit'h"""'"'n1l
material,
i i ot 1 lo late Mr. Mark- confident prove that neither do the
A Is •I n,
man of the dinner committee, pre-
by
the
Alumni
,Jew's
of Detroit 'slumber of sleep.'
,1,71.11
son a CI • • ,
sented a check for $2,505 to Isaac
ith this thought in mind I extend
Shetzer, this sum being the pro-
sincerest
inrs,• er : fst
trri
ll5;.ni be
Resi'rvati.•. 1., tbs• dinner must m}'
ceeds of the event. Mrs. Ehrlich
the tint ' g nr'sailtu "at t in h g
..
be in not lat.. Ilion Monday,
spoke in behalf of the forthcom-
of this
, plan to attend this ' .18 '''' as well as to the Jews
ing Emergency Allied Jewish Cam- 22. Those who
o mmunity who have made this as
affair should make their reserva- c , ag
paign and pointed to the signifi-
ai„Tis immediately' by tailing the well as many other graduating
cance of this Shaarey Zeilek event,
classes possib l e."
the schools, Madison s:',7.5.
which brought to light the power- I IL,. 01
Form Branch Auxiliary.
Statement by Pregerson.
ful loyalty of members to their
Aaron M. Pregerson, as chair- In the Pinball school, headed by
congregation.
man of the board o f education ..1 Michael Michlin, an iirganization
Isaac S h e t z e r, responding. the schools, made the following which will co-operate with the
thanked the members for their co-
statement on the oci-asion of this Woman's Auxiliary of the tinned
operation, and said that he was
Hebrew Sclusils is now being iir-
celebrat ion:
given renewed confidence to face
"The tenth anniversary of the ganized. A meeting at which the I
the problems of the future.
first graduating do, of the I'. 11. foundation for this organization
The musical program of the S. taking place on Thursday, May was laid was held at the home of
evening was featured by a group '25, is an appropriate time not only Mrs. M. Weksler, the past presi-
of dent of the Woman's Auxiliary,
of songs by the Shaarey Zedek
to evaluate the a c complishment ,
quintet, led by Cantor Jacob Son- our Hebrew Schools in the past but where tentative plan* for the or-
enklar and composed of Israel als. to concentrate and thing id ganization were formulated,
The Fenkell branch is serving not
Hertz, Joseph Cantor, Aaron Sil- wa -4 nd means how to be able
nly as a school for that lisation
herblatt, Morris Shatzen and liar- In 'carry on the modern system of Holy
ry Cohen. Cantor Soncnklar als o - Jewish 'education that has ben in- but is also used as a center where
- hi.' meet
appeared
as accompanied
soloist. Mrs. Abra
ham Cooper,
by Miss troduced into this community by people of the neighbor
from time to time; where mother's
S. in the future.
enough that in a period of meetings are held under the Russ
llarriett J. Ingeoll,
ably ren• the "True
U.
lagers
dere,' two solos for which she re- unusual economic difficulties such plc, of the Jewish Centers; where
served prolonged applause. Ben as we are living through at present moth , r: clubs gather for their
Art of th e Moscow 11ahimah ren- it is our first duty to render immetl- functions, and where groups cents ,
dered several impersonations. iate relief to fetal the hungry and together narious studies. In ad-
Rabbi Max Arzt of Scranton, shelter th e homeless. This, however, dition to the regular t la=snionis,
Fa., who remained in Detroit for is but our first and not the only this se hoot ha• alsat are.lniodatvms
the dinn er , having come here to duty. We should also Mar in mind r parties, weddings, and other
speak at the services last Friday that 'Man cannot live on bread function: which require kitchen
evening, gave the invocation. alone,' that the life of Judaism de- and other teeilities.

U. H. S. GRADUATES' !.,,i'
ANNIVERSARY I

TIIE' DETROIT

EDISON COMPANY

GENIRAL

orricla

AVENUE
2000 SECOND

DETROIT, MICHIGAN

f

by tele-
brat when

employees within easy reach

May 15, 1933

TO THE CUSTOMERS OF
THE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY
This is the seventh of this series of weekly letters addressed to our
500,000 customers in 29 cities, 58 villages and 130 townships in the south-

eastern corner of the State of Michigan:
The Detroit Edison Company is the largest taxpayer in the district.
We are all taxpayers, directly or indirectly, so we're all in the same boat.
You customers pay our taxes. There is no other way of our earning them. During
the last twenty-five years, our annual tax bill has jumped more than fifty-
In 1932, we paid out $5,699,000• in taxes. That's a lot of money oven
fold.
n good times -- and its more than we paid in 1929 when we were selling much
ricity. In 1920, a little over 5 cents of every dollar we earned
i
aid out for taxes, but its been climbing steadily until last paid
year our
when
more elect
dollars in wages we The biggest
was p
it jumped to almost 13 cents. For every two one dollar in taxesl
operating employes last year, we had to pay
share of our total tax bill went into the coffers of the city government of
Detroit. Last year we paid 4% of the total taxes assessed by Detroit. This
was over 7.5% of the total taxes actually collected by the City during 19321
Now about rates. The price of electric service to our customers is
lower than ever before, and is well below arily
the average
the other
entire of our
reduced cost
one for
or the
United States, Since 1921 wo have volunt ving to our custom ers of almost
volun-
m thirty-three times, resulting in a total sa
rates
60 illion dollars in the last 11 years. Just before the "crash," we
tarily reduced our rates TWICE WITHIN TWELVE MONTHS (1928 - 1929)• By these
two rate reductions alone, o ur customers have been saved seven millidn dollars
on
addition there have also been rate adjustments, not
In
in
the as
last
four years.
filed
reductions,
that have been to our customers' advantage and which

1914, the prices of other
amount to thousands of dollars more.
While our rates have been dropping after
commodities, including everything we have to buy for our business, were sky-
rocketing steeply upward. Today, after four years of dull times, the cost of
living is still 20% higher than its pre-War cost. What about electricity?
The average cost of Detroit Edison household electricity today is 30% LOWER

THAN BEFORE
THE WAR.
The Edison
Company has faith in the future of the aria it serves. The
same men who builded the greatness of our industries are most of them still
with us -- as able as ever. The Great Lakes region is the
richest
industrial
ley.
And above
al l l
, chem ica
territory in the world, not excluding the famel
we have -- in our automobile, metal-working. e e•trical appliance of expert
and other plants in Detroit and Southeastern Michigan -- a body
workmen which is the greatest resource any community ever had

President

1

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