THE JEWISH NEWS Fr ► iay, May 31, t946 Hospital at Denver To Cost $2,500,000 A nation-wide drive to raise $2,500,00 for a program of mod- ernization and enlargement of the National Jewish Hospital at Denver will be launched with a campaign in Denver for $250,000 from June 10 to 20. The program calls for the demolition of five buildings which have been in daily use for more than forty years, for the erection of a new seven-story medical center on their site, for the modernization of existing facilities and for the extension of the Hospital's four fold program of free treatment, rehabilitation a n d education. Realization of these plans will effect a doubling of the bed ca- pacity of the Denver institution in order, to permit the admission of many tuberculosis patients under the traditional policy set forth in the Hospital motto:"None May Enter Who Can Pay—None Can Pay Who Enter." Page Seventeen Palestine Soldiers Arrive In London For Victory Parade LONDON (JTA)—The Pales- tine contingent which will par- ticipate in the Victory Parade here June 8 has arrived in Lon- don. They were greeted by repre- sentatives of the Jewish Agency. The Palestine Regiments are represented by eight Jews and eight Arabs, commanded by Lieut. Jacob Granovsky, son of the head of the JNF. The police contingent contains four Jews, while one Jew is also in the unit of - the Transjordan Frontier Force. .......... ......... ... ..... Y OU began a wholly new way of life on June 4th, 1896. On that day, Henry Ford drove a small, sulky-wheeled vehicle down Bagley Avenue, Detroit . . . without a horse. A two-cylinder gasoline engine powered that early vehicle ... the first practical Ford car. It was the first demonstration of an idea destined to contribute immeasurably to a better way of life, for you and all the world: Give the public thrifty, personal transportation. Give them cars. Atillions of cars, at prices millions can afford. And in so doing, create a new industry, with millions of jobs for the people who make those cars and the people connected with their use. For fifty years, the Ford Idea has been growing. It has expanded into a giant industry, bringing freedom to the average family and linking the country together. To make this idea come true, a new manu- facturing system had to be developed. For you couldn't make enough cars for everybody .. . at lower and lower cost . . . if you built them by hand. So new machines were designed, and the Assembly Line was invented. With the assembly line, production shot up, manu- facturing costs went down, and Mass Piodtic- lion beCame a reality. This was the first big step toward fulfilment of the Ford Idea. To- five dollars a day minimum wage. Now, Ford employees earn an average of $1.39 per hour. Directly and indirectly, millions benefit by the Ford Idea. Nearly half a million people work in the automobile industry. Another three-quarters of a million supply materials and parts. Five and a half million more, in such service occupations as filling stations, taxi and trucking businesses, road-building, roadside stands, have work because of the automobile. Jobs and wages for millions— created by a single idea, in just 50 years. Machines alone do not, and cannot, give us efficient mass-production. That is a matter of men and machines. And so the problems of human relations in industry—of getting along together, of teamwork towards a common goal—rank foremost in our American life. 7aete rlie Paleic day, Ford-pioneered mass production methods help make virtually everything you use. With mass production came more jobs. In 1904, there were 118 Ford employees. Today, there are 125,000. Wages went up, too. In 1904, the average Ford wage was 15 cents an The record of fifty years of automotive progress is clear. The results of applying research, engi- neering and production skills in terms of more and better products can be seen everywhere. For the future, we of the Ford Motor Company , pledge our resources and our abilities to the development of ever-better products, at ever- greater value. We look forward with confidence to the equitable solution of the human relatiOns 'y --- iii problems that are restricting the great productive capacity of our nation today. And we believe that the effective continuation of the Ford Idea— tested and tried through fifty years of Ford progress—can and will result in even greater progress in the years that lie before us. Sawa, Caee/ - We at the Ford Motor Company know our welfare depends on how well the public accepts the automobiles we make. If we can continue to make the kind of cars people want, with higher and higher value for their owners, we will have the security and opportunity that come with public approval. More cars will be sold, more jobs will be made, higher wages will be paid. That is the Ford Idea. It has worked for a long time. We think it is just as vital . and productive for the future as it has been in the past. No product is so good it can't be made better. And no wage is too high that is earned. 'ect.cQ hour. Then, in 1914, Ford inaugurated the • President FORD MOTOR COMPANY 1896 . OUT FRONT THEN OUT FRONT NOW . . 1946