A merica Iol a PaloSeal Cotter

CUI'TON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle

November I, 1940

7

MIS

The Free-Thinking Business Man Is For

Franklin D. Roosevelt

and

Henry A. Wallace

For President and Vice-President

FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT

We, a group of Detroit business
men and industrialists. arc for the
election of Franklin D. Roosevelt
for President and Henry A. Wallace
for Vice-President of the United
States.

We strongly endorse the candidacy
of these great statesmen because we
feel that this is not a time to change
leadership.

This is a time of crisis for the
entire world. In such a critical per-
iod for mankind. it is a sacred duty
to retain in office men who have
been tried and who have been found
to act wisely in dealing with the na-
tion's problem.

1

In his historic address at Madison
Square Garden last Monday evening.
President Roosevelt rendered a great
service when he condemned his op-
ponents because theirs is—". . . the
same record of timidity, weakness
and shortsightedness which governed
the policy of the confused, reaction-
ary governments in France and Eng-
land before the war.

Harry Schumer
Morris Schaver
William Hordes
Alex Nichamin
Johnny Isaacs
Joe Greenbaum
Henry Cove

-41111111111111milmatigiast

"That fact was discovered too late
in France.

"It was discovered just in time in
Great Britain.

"Pray God that having discovered
it over here we won't forget it
either."

We, the undersigned business men
of Detroit, hereby appeal to our fel-
low citizens of Michigan not to dis-
cover the truth too late, and. having
learned the lesson of France and
Munich, NEVER TO FORGET IT.

In that great address last Mon-
day evening. President Roosevelt
again evidenced his strong adherence
to a policy of tolerance, based on a
deep-rooted religious feeling. In that
address he said:

"We, who walk in the ways of
peace and freedom and light, have
seen the tragedies enacted in one
free land after another.

"We have not been blind to the
causes, or to the consequences, of
these tragedies.

Wm. Klafer
Jacob Soberman
Leo Gold
Joseph Sandler
Edward Feldman
S. P. Baker
Harris W. Wienner

"We guard ourselves against all
evils—spiritual as well as material
—which may beset us. We guard
against the forces of anti-Christian
aggression, which may attack us
from without, and the forces of ig-
norance and fear which may cor-
rupt us from within.
"We shall continue to go for-
ward in firm faith. We shall continue
to go forward in peace."
We endorse this deep-rooted spir-
itual plea for peace and for justice.
We stand with President Roosevelt
in his appeal for human rights, for
peace. for tolerance, for good will
among men, for the rejection of those
destructive ideas which differentiate
the dictatorships from the democ-
racies.
On the basis of this important
test in the present crisis, we urge an
overwhelming vote in favor of Presi-
dent Roosevelt and his running-mate,
the Hon. Henry A. Wallace.
To defend and preserve democracy.
RE-ELECT PRESIDENT ROOSE-
VELT.

Maurice Garelik
Arnold Gross
David Porvin
Irving Hermelin
Charles C. Jacoby
Cy Feinberg
David I. Berris

Sam Satt
Bryant Buchanan
Max Lieberman
Jack Schumer
Samuel Schumer
Joseph Schumer

