* 14: ." . • . ``. • —..• ••. • • CLOTHES page 7 Comerica Securities, a subsidiary of Comerica Bank, is a full-service brokerage and investment firm offering the following products and services to its clients. Mutual Funds Annuities Short- and Long-Term Investments Municipal Bonds Corporate Bonds Stocks re. I Comencas ecurities 0 Our investment consultants are committed to meeting your financial needs. r. 4 • ti P WE LISTEN. WE UNDERSTAND. WE MAKE IT WORK. S' • For more information regarding the above products and services, call Dan Banish Comerica Securities 29201 Telegraph Southfield, Michigan 48034 810-948-2902 • Comerica Securities, Inc. is a registered Broker/Dealer, Member NASD, SIPC. The securities listed above are not insured by the FDIC and are not guaranteed by Comerica Bank. Securities are subject to risks that may cause their value to fluctuate, including possible loss of principal. Annuities are offered through Access Insurance Services, Inc., an affiliate of Comerica Bank. * - ;21, s; MARKET FACT he Jewish News reaches the Detroit area's most investment-oriented audience more efficiently than any other local publication. Crain's Detroit Business Detroit Monthly Observer & Eccentric Papers Don't Read Regularly 80% 68% 72% Source: 1993 Simmons-Jewish News Study BS THE JEWISH NEWS Eretz Yisrael brought their skills ly left that position and opened a with them, so that by the late hosiery and ladies notion shop, 1930s the nation was home to which he continued expanding some 250 clothing-manufactur- and expanding and expanding. Eventually the store, which ing plants. Less than 30 years lat- er, Israel's textile business had opened as a small shop in down- become the country's second lead- town Detroit, went the way of ing industry, following foodstuffs. other successful businesses and And clothing was the second- became a ladies ready-to-wear largest export, with diamonds in chain. he sewing machines stand first place. in line, like a row of sol- In the United States, too, im- diers waiting for order. migrants put their business acu- They're on green ta- men into action. This was especially true of German Jews, bles, with deep-brown, wooden who settled here during the mid chairs behind. On the floor are - 19th century and early part of large bolts of blue, pink and brown fabric, with cut scraps the 20th century. Assimilated, hard-working and strewn about like large confetti. ambitious, they often opened There's a shelf with zippers in col- their businesses and made their ors like "mulberry" and "amber" homes in large metropolitan ar- and "mint." At first glance, the Bassono- eas. This was part of a pattern be- gun in eastern Europe, where va factory seems like something Jews were least likely to en- you might see in a film about counter anti-Semitism in cities turn-of-the-century America, because the population was more where immigrants who barely speak a word of English are pro- sophisticated and educated. These early German-Jewish ducing black suits and stylish immigrants to the United States dresses. Even a number of the quickly found success in the gar- workers at Bassonova are new to ment industry, where they often this country, or else they are the employed other Jews, including children of immigrants. None are new immigrants. Typical was Ly- Jewish. Despite its Old World aura, the man Gustavus Bloomingdale. Born in New York in 1841, Lyman Bloom- ingdale's was the son of German-Jewish im- migrants. His first store, which he ran with his brother, Joseph, sold women's hoopskirts. Later, Ly- man expanded the business and opened the first Blooming- dale's in 1886, on the Cy Lisnov: A stitch in time. same New York City factory is anything but antique. site where it stands today. Jewish success in the clothing The sewing machines are com- industry proved true in Detroit puterized to close a seam within as well, where by the mid-1920s an instant. With the release of a the city was home to such busi- pedal, the seamstress can cut nesses as the Alaska Knitting thread. A high-priced automatic Mills Co., the Acme Mills Co. and seamer, complete with an electric Textile Industries Inc., the Peo- eye, can sew together two pieces ple's Outfitting Co. and B. Siegel of fabric in a matter of seconds. Cy Lisnov got his start in the and Co., among others. Often, these stores were run business in the 1950s after he by some of Detroit's most promi- came back from the war and a nent families, like Henry Wine- friend got him a job as a sales rep man and his brother, Andrew, in ladies ready-to-wear. "You couldn't name one thing who operated the People's Out- in this industry that I knew when fitting Co. Mr. Wineman was active in I got into this business," he says. Buyers would take a look at a numerous Jewish communal or- ganizations, including the Fed- pair of pants and ask, "Is this 100 eration (of which he was percent flannel?" Mr. Lisnov would answer hon- president), the Jewish Commu- nity Center, the Jewish Home for estly, "I don't know." Most of the buyers were sym- Aged, the Allied Jewish Cam- paign (where he served as chair- pathetic to a returning vet like man from 1925-1930), Temple himself, Mr. Lisnov says. They Beth El, the Jewish National would say, "Yes, it is 100 percent Fund and Sinai Hospital. He also flannel," and then Mr. Lisnov would know exactly what to say was a leading Zionist. Among those who got started at the next stop. He came to Detroit in 1954, in the early days was Milton Petrie, an Indianapolis native opening his first store at 1425 who started out in Detroit doing Broadway, just off Woodward, in a six-story building. The business advertising for J.L. Hudson's. The late Mr. Petrie eventual- was called Crown Cloak. do C:\