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September 18, 1936 - Image 19

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1936-09-18

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

ram !apish periodical Cotter

CLIFTON AVINUZ - CINCINNATI 10, 0100

mEDerRor rjo visn eiRONIGIA

September 18, 1936

.A NEW YEAR'S MESSAGE

The Officers of the

,,,„„,.,„,h.,1 from

Ladies Aux. of Cong. B'nai David

MRS. J. WEINGARDEN, President

MRS. R. NEEDLE, Vice-President

MRS. P. ROTTENBERG, Treasurer

MRS. SAM ZACK, Secretary

Wish their fellow members of the Auxiliary and the officers
and members of the Congregation also the entire Jewish
Community a most Happy and Prosperous New Year

,

4

—YOU ACTUALLY TUNE

FOREIGN STATIONS B NAME !



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PAGE FIVE

and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

-

-.

1,

S ee and Hear

the New 1937

,

p H I LC 0

In Your Own
Home FREE!

c TbP missing important over-

' seas broadcasts! The new
Philco Foreign Tuning System,
working with the Philco High -
Efficiency Aerial and Philco
Color Dial, tunes foreign sta.
tions by name — and doubles
foreign reception! We'll at -
nnge a home demonstration at
whatever time you wish. Call ,
write or phone — today.

--

II

PHILCO 610.1*

A streamlined Console of un•
matched value! New features—
modern hand-rubbed e .., di n
ya ,
cabinet. Less aerial ...*317

vv1 1 u'ith Phil ,. IfibEffi.
e -

•°S4d

cito t y 'brio, to boor. ',vault tot•
tiro rtroptioo.

LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE —EASY TERMS

We Also Carry a Complete Line of Fine Quality
Furniture, Rugs ,Lamps and Odd Pieces
at Lowest Prices

._

L'SHONO TOVO TIKOSEVU

To our many friends and patrons we extend
sincere wishes for a Happy New Year!

Op•n Sunday Till 5 P. M.

SHECTER FURNITURE 1

8925 TWELFTH STREET

Between Taylor and H•selwood

Ter
yl 6.2030

-

Editorial page, see. I)
I

the second of the great Jewries of
history.
The German Jewish tragedy
moves on to its fateful end. What
horror of injustice is to be an-
flounced and perhaps enacted at
this year's Parteitag will shortly
he seen. As the civilized peoples
face the dastardly part played by
Nazism in the Spanish uprising,
they begin to see that they are
three years too late in meeting the
Hitler challenge to civilization, it
may forever be too late ! Never to
be forgotten was the valedictory
to his task by the High Commis-
James G. MacDonald,
sioner,
which constitutes the greatest in-
dietment yet framed because of the
very moderation of its tone and
the nobleness of its appeal to man-
kind. A gleam of comfort visible
in the founding of the Council for
German Jewry with three dis-
tinguishecl English Jews taking
the lead, Sir Herbert Samuel, Lord
Bearsted and Simon Marks, an
undertaking unmarred by the
threatened establishment of a
bank, which would have destroyed
the anti-Nazi boycott and have
become instrumental in conserving
German Jewish fortunes rather
than saving German Jewry.
Many Jews may expect the
writer to lapse into threnody over
happenings in Palestine through-
out the past four months. Lamen-
table in truth what the Arabs
have done or sought to do! Still
more lamentable what British and
Palestine governments have suf-
fered them to do! But beyond all
praise has been the bearing and
conduct of the Jewish population
of Palestine. Never was provoca-
tion more loftily met! It is as
though the Yishub had resolved
that the more ignoble the chal-
lenge, the nobler should be the re -
sponse! Nevermore let it be said
that Jews have regained their
ancient patrimony without paying
the price! For no price is harder
to pay than that of perfect self -
discipline and self-restraint under
ceaseless and savage attack, That
lesson, hardest of all, Jews have
learned, and we, their fellow-
Jews, have been placed under still
deeper obligation by our, for the
p art, younge.
er brothers and
most
sisters
m Pal estin
For these have
shown the world that Nationalism
may b kept free from the strain
of violence and the shame of
bloody reprisal. As one and the
same time. the Yishub has lifted
the unsullied banner of nationalist
re-awakening and the standard of
peace through justice rather than
the savagery of reprisal under
direct provocation.
But our solemn pride in Jewish
achievement does not lessen the
guilt of Arab attackers and slay-
era, nor the guilt of the Palestine
government. The latter is not the
guilt of assent to Arab violence
nor yet of complicity in Arab
crime. But the guilt of failure with
merciful promptness of suppress
Arab revolt and the guilt of fail-
are to defend Jews in the only
way in which Jews can accept de-
fense, by permiting their youth
to defend themselves, all they hold
dear, all they have toiled and
sacrificed to upbuild. If it be not
too late, may one not express the

r hope that Britain will

not again
' lightly surrender pride and pre-
cious pr estige ? England's honor.
able fa ilure in Ethiopia is no
reason for inviting moral disaster
in Palestine. Perhaps it must be
said for the thousandth time that
any curtailment or reduction of
Jewish immigration into Palestine
before or during or after the Royal
Commission's inquiry will and
must be viewed by Arab, Jew, and
all the world as a bonus awarded
to the doers of violence, as penalty
for those who refuse to meet
wrong with wrong and answer
hurt with hurt. Should there be
any suspension, it will be the duty
of men and nations to rise up into
protest as the world protested
against Britian's ignominous sur-
render in the form of the Passfield
White Paper at the time of the
last Arab-Jewish crisis. Surely,
Britain will not thus recompense
violence and penalize loyalty and
self-restraint! We cannot beleive
that the Mandatory Power will
thus stoop to conciliate terrorism
through surrender of the unte r-
rorized!

o
Surely, the chiefest distinction
of the Jewish year came through
the rise of a Jew to the Premier-
ship of France! Ig rumor be cor-
rect, Leon Blum was adjured by
Jews Of all political parties in
France, save his own, to decline
the post of Premier on the gound
that any evil that might befall
Fence
g his leadership
durin
would be sure to redound to the
disadvantage of all French Jewry,
Rightfully scorning these charac-
teristic counsels of timidity, Blum
accepted the office of President
of the Council and became the
first Jew in history to be called
to the Prime Ministership of his
country. His first public utter-
ante made reference to his Jewish
ancestry and what it owed to the
liberating genius that is Fence.
Within a few months he has
q u i e t I y and unsensationally
wrought wonders in and for his
country. Jews who prize freedom
may well rejoice in the truth that
in this testing hour of human lib-
erty, with Spain as the coveted
prize and goal of every furtherer
of reaction, Leon Blum, while in-
yoking and safeguarding neutral-

sty,
may be counted upon not to
permit freedowlawlesslytob
permit freedom lawlessly to be
verwhelmet! by those sinister
;orces which would destroy de-
mocracy everywhere. May he as
Jew serve as exemplar to his fel-
low-Jews and inspire them to un-
dertake dithe most unpopular task
of stanng guard against the le-
giona of despotism to whom war
and anti-Semitism are chiefly
weapons in the onslaught upon
human
hopes
of f freedom
and ha-
h
h
f
d
h
man ideals of democracy!
Upon one great and historic
event in Jewish life during 5696
I shall dwell, the first session of
the World Jewish Congress in Ge•
neva, August, 1936.
I forbear,
for I am a part, however alight, of
its life. History will determine
how necessary and valuable has
been the World Jewish Congress.
The writer is of the number of
those Jews who may say of them-
selves that we have sought out
our brothers and that we feel en-
niched by the experience of meet-
ing on terms of equality and con-
Rash Hashanah GrardIngs
mon counsel with Jews of many
lands who, together with us, seek
UNION TIRE STORES
the welfare of Israel and shall,
v iten ; Rosenthal A.::, Al Rosenthal .
through aclo
common no counsel
uinn se jlusaiddce p;obr-
o t
o t a
our
people.
When
the
day of jus-
Cad. 2442 — Cad. 37341
lice for the Jew shall have come,
_ it will be because men everywhere
will have sought peace through
justice and brotherhood through
a
freedom.

,

t

.4

MRS. RAE HORRELL

many friends for the Denver insti-

tution and secured financial sup-
port in Detroit. Due to her ill-
ness, Mrs. Horrell has been un•
able to contact many of the sup-
porters of the institution, but she
now urges them to send their gifts
direct to the National Home for
Jewish Children, 19th and Julian
Sts., Denver, Colo. Her friends
may also see her or call her at her
home, 318 Josephine, telephone
Tr. 2-6281.
The National Home for Jewish
Children seeks as one of its
achievements the saving of child-
hood from the horrible sufferings
of tuberculosis.
S caking before the National
Conference of Jewish Social Serv-
ice held at Denver, June 7-10,
1925, an eminent research author-
ity said: "The open consumptive,
in distinction to the closed, can be
a menace to his fellowmen, and
especially the extremely suscep-
tible child, because the case dis-
charges highly virulent living and
infectious tubercle bacilli. I
d
P !' "
dition to the careless spitting
habit, the case may unknowingly
discharge the b a c i 1 I i during
coughing and sneezing, or may
contaminate his hands by contact
with the mouth or nose discharges
and thus pass on the disease."

',

i

,)

:

1

Architecture of Synagogues

5697

1936

Kay Corsetiere

CORSELETTES

Le Shono Tovo Tilcosevu ...

Wishing Youi
A
Happy New Year!

GIRDLES

BRASSIERES

blade to Order

207 Metropolit ■■ Bldg.

CHerry 2633

33 John R. St.

,

---

Rosh Hashonah Greetings

,

4,1



LOU'S MARKET

/

Fresh V
bles
Kept in Refrigeration

W. Deliver

OP
A,
, 6 8

12031 LINWOOD AVE.

ra Pa

TQwnsend 8.4653

Ji •

LOUIS SALLE

1936

1873

In the book "Jewish Ceremonial
Institutions and Customs" Rabbi
William Rosenau writes: "The ar-
chitecture of synagogues is not ac-
cording to any fixed plan. All sorts
of designs have been followed, the
Moorish predominating and the
Gothic having been carefully avoid-
ed. It should be noted also that at
present many a synagogue has
been patterned after Greek archi-
tectural models. Israel Abrahams,
commenting on the architecture of
the synagogue, nays: 'as to the
shape of synagogues, no special
form can be called Jewish. A fa-
mous authority of the last century
maintained that no Jewish law, old
or new, restricted the fancyf
0-
synagogue architects in this re-
sped. He himself, authorized the
choice of an octagonal form, and
this shape is now rather popular
on the continent ... The Temple
courts—which were used for pray-
er meetings — were oblong or
square, but there was at one time
a prevalent notion in England that
synagogues were round.'"

W—
Q.
O. What is Kidma?—S. C.
A. The Kidma is a recently
formed organization
zation in Palestine
aiming at uniting the constructive
and progressive elements of the
General Zionist Party without at
the same time forming a new
party.

MIIIIIIII111111111111111111211111MINIIIIIIIPMINMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

Le Shono Toru .P

EF.

Rosh Hashonah Greetings

PALMERLEE RADIO
SALE and SERVICE

Enjoy 1937 with the ■new

PHILCO
Spread band dial—Foreign reception
Easy terms—Goodwill allowance

8045 Linwood

• ,

4 U 4 I

.

Coming Year Be Blessed
with Happiness, Good Health and

That the

,

Prosperity to 'You All Is the Wish of

'

1

IF•

Euclid 8045

LOUIS SULTAN

CHEVROLET CO., Inc.

MAX LEBOW, Sales Manager

COOLIDGE GLASS AND PAINT CO.

19,0119 4,

1

1/ 19 1

Itt s

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Mal L•onald

TO. 2-23441

ea ♦

SAFETY
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SERVICE
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5132 GRAND RIVER AVE

SERVICE
PARTS

GArfield 4436

,

Statue of Religious Liberty, Fa ,
mount Park, Philadelphia

---
the committee in charge. Two thou-
sand persons are expected to at-
tend .
In 1636 Roger Williams was ban-
lobed from the Massachusetts Bay
Colony because of his militant and
vigorous battle in behalf of re-
ligtous liberty. The ban was re-
cently lifted by the modern state
of Massachusetts after remaining
on the books for 300 years.
Roger Williams was a Baptist,
and present day Baptists have been
commemorating this year his fight
for religious liberty. B'nai B'rith's
celebration will be the first by a
Jewish
organization.
The ceremonies will take place
at the foot of the Statute of Re-
ligious Liberty, which was pre-
rented to Philadel phia by Bnal

B'rith on behalf of American Jew-
ry in 1876, the centennial year of
the Constitution of the United
States. The well known Statute
was executed at that time by Sir
Moses
Ezekiel, famous Jewish
sculptor, who was • member of
B'nai B'rith.
H
Alfred M. Cohen, presdent
president
of the order, will speak on behalf
of Jews, and Catholics and Pro-
testants will be represented by
prominent members of those faiths
The presiding officer of the day
will be an outstanding leader of
Philadelphia Jewry. B'nai B'rith's
District No.
3 h as al
h ad
re endorsed
y sed
the project,
as have many
I3 t
y Phila.
de l phia Jewish leaden.
del
rs.
Part of the program will be
broadcast over • radio hookup, and
will be in the nature of a goodwill
demonstration by Catholics, Pro-
testants and Jews.
B'nal B'rith lodges from ninny
surrounding cities and many other
Jewish and Christian organizations
will be represented at the affair,

_
Douglas Gregory, manager of the
Proviseetown Playhouse doesn't
like Jews ... He fired a Jew from
the cut of his company solely be-

cause of his race ...

I I
I

Q. Is there a nurses' training
school in Palestine? What are the
requirements for entrance?—R. K. i
A. The Hadassah Nurses' Train- I
ing School is the only Jewish school '
for nurses in Palestine. Required
ments are: minimum age 19, per-
feet health, and pleasing persona
lity. High school education and at
least one year at college. A fun-1
damental knowledge of Latin, I
damen
knowledge of Hebrew and • antis-
factory completion of Hebrew
B
Board of Education examination.

Q. Is there a Hebrew short-
hand?—D. P.
- A.
David Malmon, a Jerusalem
clerk, Invented a system of Hebrew
shorthand in 1924. The system is
widely used both in Palestine and
elsewhere
ere, both in b ',Mess and at
.
f ' t-
.
Hebrew sessions of conventions.
""
Maimon is •the official Hebrew
stenographer of the World Zionist
Congress.

Q. What stand does Jewish law
take on money lending?—B.M.
A. According to Jewish law
usury is looked upon with disfavor.
"A usurer is comparable to a mar-
derer," says a Talmudis Rabbi,
" "for the cries of both are NI uall Y.
irremediable." The Jewtsh Code 1
provides that a usurer is forbidden
the right to act as • witness.

Roo!,

Ils.honah

Crestioss

L. Gor dner Furs

,

,

i

that are using the word Jay
or Jay's es all or part of
their business name. We are4 ,
• changing our name because we feel that i
, the individuality and distinctiveness of I
our service
d
an quality merits a name !
that is also individual.
i
• i

41.

,

i
!

1

.

'

•1
is

,

i

i

C

• 1

ect , . 1
This change of name shall in no way a ffted
. i the policy under which we have oipera
: ' this fine CUSTOM HAT SHOP, Or, men.

,


Pktclet

41

1



Fitting the
head is

Fitting the

lace is


omperatira

e-si'

akin'

1244 WASHINGTON ILO..
FORMERL/f JAYS'



L!...01tess.P_C-4.14%..T.Z4PJtS.P7-41"..9.,.......,.., ,_a

BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY AND
PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR TO
ALL WINDSOR JEWRY



'

FitzGerald I MacDonald & Compan y

CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS

ARTHUR S. FITZGERALD, Chartered drccountant, also
Fellow, Michigan Assn. of Certified Public Account•nt.;
Member American Soc. of Certified Public Accountants.

HAMISH R. MACDONALD, Chartered Accountant, also Cer•
rifled Public Accountant, State of Michigan.

OFFICES:

Windsor

Detroit

307 CANADA BLDG.
,
TELEPHONE, DIAL 3.3519



819 PENOBSCOT BLDG.
WINDSOR, ONT.

Rosh Hashonah Greetings

Arnald's Drug Stores

PHONE US—WE DELIVER

Prescription Specialists — Quick Service

Ouellette at Giles
Phone 3-1023

Ottawa at Victoria Road

Phone 4.1076

Windsor, Ont.

SEASON'S GREETINGS TO ALL

Ottawa Electr ic Co. •

ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS

Supplies • Accessories • Fixtures • Electrical Appliances

1816 OTTAWA E.

PHONE 3.4348

SEASON'S GREETINGS TO ALL

L. A. Young Industries of Canada

LIMITED

1025 McDOUGALL STREET

,

WINDSen, ONT.

GOOD FURS COST LESS IN CANADA

L. P. Lazare & Co.

FAMOUS GUARANTEED FURS

Restyling and Repairs at Factory Prices

14 Chatham St. E.

Phone 3-2418

WINDSOR, ONT.

Greetings and Best Vitthes to All

Campbell Auto Finance
Co., Ltd





AUTO LOANS and REFINANCE

OFFICES IN LONDON, HAMILTON, OTTAWA, TORONTO

304 DOUGLAS BLOCK, Wya ■ dett• sal Ouellette Area.
4.1104
WINDSOR, ONT.

Puss

Rosh Hashonah Greetings!

Ba
■ y Your Winter's Fuel at

LOWEST PRICES

— from —

Click Coal & Coke

Ltd. ,



Rosh Hashonah Greetings!

The Northwest
Fur Co.

K■ ovr ■ from Coast to Coast

for Quality sad Service

FUR COATS

FINE FURS
Repairing and Remodeling
Cold Storage

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nose 3-5612

3-7862
WINDSOR, ONT.

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P1141110

4
1
1

I

1

THE ORACLE

iskjpgising.,e.
-
.

et

Il

. - A

; There shall be only one DISRAEL, Ltd.

Q.

What is the difference be
tween a Moshavah and Kvutuh
in Palestine?—J. L.
A. A Moshavah is a co-operative
colony in which each family keeps
the profit of the land on which It
works. However, all contribute to
common expenses such as school,
physician, etc. There Is co opera
tive buying and selling of merchan-
dire and products. A Kvutzah is a
communist colony in which all
things are held in common—the
profits, the expenses, the land,
buildings, and daily life.

t

OPi t es ifi HERE are 37 firms in Detroit I

'

Father, urging him to study
medicine and remain in Eurispe,
drew a contrast between the ease
and culture of life on the Con-
tinent and the rough-and-tumble
character of America. But Louis'
contact with German discipline
made him hanker for the freer
air back home, the spacioinness,
the free-swinging years he re-
re-
membered.
lie had been hap-
pier there. Nostalgia as much as
freedom settled the question, al-
though analysts with • weakness
for the dramatic may put a sure
finger on such surging influences
as the parental migration follow-
ing the frustrated revolutions of
'48 and the march of Union so!.
diers past the front door in '61.
Louis simply wanted to get back.
As for medicine, he had not the
slightest taste for it.
For as
long as he could remember he
wanted to be a lawyer. His uncle
belonged to the profession and
so did the young men who used
to court his sisters.
H e went back and with $200
borrowed from his brother, Al,
who had already returned and
gone into business, he entered
Harvard Law School in '75.

'

s

;

_ s ; .,g.
ng
nging

CINCINNATI, Ohio—The first
Jewish celebration of the official
lifting of the 300-year old ban
against Roger Williams will be
held by B'nai B'rith in Phillip
delphia on Oct. 25. The Supreme
Lodge of the Order is sponsoring
the event, and the Philadelphia
Council of B'nai B'rith Lodges is

2

. ,

i to D srael i Ltd.. '. 1
Jays

s

Dresden proved a continuation
pf the Louisville tradition.' At
the end
. .. of two years the faculty
offered him a prize for diligence
and good conduct, and he selected
a book called Charakterbilde 1016
take ,, Kunstgeschichte. He did not
,,,,,`
i 1
`` °'"
, religion or penman-
ship.

Celebrate' Official
Lifting of the Ban
on Roger Williams

_

.

'Announcing a change
of firm name from

s

A Prise-Winner
In 1872 business reverses be.
gan to appear in father's ledger
like s e i s m o g r a phis warnings.
Uncle Lewis advised a trip to
Europe. They sailed, and in Eur-
ope spent a good deal of time in
i
Vienna; much to the delight of
father, who still loved the gal -
lantry and courtliness of Euro-
peen social life. They wintered
in Italy.
To the boys the trip
was geography come to life.
Patches on the map and foreign
place-names acquired the vivid-
ness which only experience im-
parts. While the rest of the fem.
by r emained in Vienna with rela-
tines , Fanny being ill, Louis tray-
elect alone to Dresden in '73 to
resume his schooling. There he
found the Annenrealschule, a
three-story stone structure re-
sembling a hospital more than
anything else. He looked it over,
front and back, before making
up his mind. Inside, the rector,
Herr Job,
firml y informed that
he must produce a birth certifl-
cats and a vaccination certificate.
Lours caught his eye and argued:
"The fact that I am here is proof
of my birth, and you may look
at my arm for evidence that I
was vaccinated." Rector Job, an
easy victim of the self-confident
manner of the slender boy, was a
genial soul with a weakness for
American ways, and not typical
of the sternly ordered adminie-
tratlon.



STYLEPARK HATS ... in the Custom Fitted Manner

,

At the Male High School 5
signified excellence and 6 "with-
lie earned 6 in al-
out fault."
most every subject;
j
occasionally
he was weak in languages, getting
6.9 in Latin, 5.9 in Greek, 5.95
in French, 5.7 in German. They
gave him a gold medal for, "pre -
eminence in all his studies."
Fourteen years old, he was the
youngest ever to receive a diplo-
ma.
The excitement was too
much for him; when his turn
came to make a speech at the
exercises he lost his voice. Once
out in the school yard he pitched
into a fight with a bigger boy—
all over a girl named Emma.

,

.

'''

mooed.' rmm mitmiat pose, see. I)

was read
read y to battle over a dis-
crepancy of 40 cents.

Mrs. Rae Horrell of 318 Jose-
hine St made a statement this
P week in . which she thanked the
1
.
-
many Detroiters who help support
th National
the
N i l H f for Jewish
J
Children at Denver, Colo.
Mrs. Horrell has been connect-
ed with this institution since 1932
and through her previous work
with various organizations made

Rosh Hashonah Greetings

to You All

rz c-akrz "teen a-vteezcsarszcseeza ■ ron

THE BEGINNING
Home for Children
Donors are Thanked
OF A LAWYER

439 OUELLETTE AVE.

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