9 THE JEWISH CHRONICLE :: Local and State News :: Y UNITED JEWISH CHARI TIES DOING SPLENDID WORK. It is doubtful whether the Jew- ish community of Detroit fully 'realizes the splendid work done by the (fnited Jewish Charities in relieving need and suffering among the Jewish poor and sick of this city. During the month of Febru- ary, 1916, the United Jewish Charities had 221 applicants for relief and 36 children were hoarded out. Labor conditions have been very satisfactory and there is practically no relief given on ac- count of unemployment. There, is great difficulty experienced in finding good hoarding homes for neglect4 and deficient children. There are now 11 children in the home owned by the United Jew- ish Charities on Tiendrie avenue. Only this week homes had to he found for a baby six weeks old whose mother was neglect- ing it ; for a baby of three months and a :child four years old whose Mother has deserted; and a home for three children ranging from ten months to nine years, whose mother had been sent to the psy- chopathic ward at Ann Arbor. Tt is impossible to place any feeble minded children at Lapeer as the institution there has a waiting list of over 200. There is an excellent, private home for feebleminded children in a sub- urb q Detroit kept by a wo- man who is herself the mother of a feeble minded child and therefore t ► as become quite ex- pert in the treatment of this kind of child, and at this home the United Jewish Charities have hoarded quite a number of chil- dren of mental deficiency. Al- though the problem of caring for mentat deficients is quite an item in the program pf the United Jewish Chariti(s, the number of such cases is not out of proportion to the growth of the community. Such children can, of course, never he given for adoption and ultimately must be withdrawn from community life. The: Jewish Fresh Air Society has had an unusually large num- ber of hospital and pre-natal cases. There is a great need for more volunteers. The society will be very grateful for the names of ladies who are willing to assist in this very important branch of the • visiting work. Any one interested should call Miss Louise Goldstone. Main 3710, for further information. Herr Leopold Vadasz, attor- ney-general of Hungary and member of the cabinet, has been awarded the Commander's Cross of the Leopold Order. This is the highest order in Hungary ever obtained by a Jew. DETROIT JEWS ARE RE- SPONDING NOBLY. From all indications the $100,- 000 mark which the Detroit com- mittee for the relief of the Jews in the war zone has set before it hill not only he reached,- but far exceeded. At a luncheon held by the members of the com- mittee at the Board of Com- merce on last Monday, Mr. David A. Brown, the active head of the relief work and chairman of the committee, announced that without having made 'any effort to secure subscriptions, and with the final whirlwind campaign for contributions still on the pro- gram, Ile has received the sum of $25,000 in voluntary contribu- tions. "If this sum, fully one-quarter of the total we are striving for, has.,•already been reached," .said Mr. Brown, "what will he the result of the entire campaign, with our trump cards, the per- sonal canvass and the big mass meeting, still to be played? We sincerely hope that' when the doors of Arcadia Hall shall have been thrown open for the mass meeting on April 4th, we will find that Detroit Jews have al- ready subscribed $100,000." SAGINAW JEWS GIVE AT THE RATE OF $100 A MINUTE FOR JEW- ISH RELIEF FUND. A foundation of $1,200 for the fund to be raised in Saginaw to assist in the relief of the Jews in the war zone was raised Friday evening at a meeting of the Jews of the city held in Forester's Temple. The address of Rabbi Franklin of Detroit, who was the speaker, drew so vivid a picture of the sufferings of the Jews in the war zone that only 12 min- utes was required to raise the $1,200. He stated that there are at present 8,000,000 Jews in Eu- rope whose only hope lies in the generosity of their American brothers. The .campaign in Saginaw is but a part of a nationwide cam- paign which has been started to raise money for the relief of the sufferers and similar campaigns are being organized in many of the large cities of the country. In Detroit it is hoped to raise $100,000 and the active work of soliciting this amount will begin Monday. The local campaign will be vig- orously pushed and Max Heaven- rich has been appointed to re- ceive contributions to the fund. YOUNG PEOPLE'S HEBREW SOCIETY OF SAGINAW HAS OPEN MEETING. Before a large and appreciative audience which filled the audi- torium of Forester's Temple, the Young People's Hebrew Society of Saginaw, on the evening of Maich 28, staged an open meet- ing, which was thoroughly suc- cessful. The feature of the even- ing was a debate on the Literary Test Bill, between Miss Hilda Goldman and Robert L. Seitner.. The speakers displayed a wide knowledge of the subject and did 'ample justice to their re- spective sides. The program fol- lows: Opening Address —"Achieve- ments of Our Society" Daniel B. Jacobs Rena Thal Solo Violin Obligato Edward Oppenheim The Jew in Socialism Minnie Gluck Beth Levine Piano Solo Debate—"Resolved, That the Literary Test is a Detriment to the Progress of the Peo- ple of the U. S." Affirmative ...Hilda Goldman Negative ...Robert L. Seitner Closing Remarks —"Duty of A little over three and a the Young People in a Jew- quarter million is the total of ish Community". A. D. Phillipe contributions and pledges toward the 1916 relief fund, according to the latest report of Mr. Felix M. Warburg, treasurer of the Amer- AND SUPPLILS ican Jewish relief committee, 52 William street. The exact fig- ures are: In cash, $2,587,610.69; ESTO leso in pledges, $663,840.08, making a 6 W 000wto? ° total sum of $3,251,450.77. UNIVERSITY MENORAH SO- CIETY TO GIVE SMOKER. The annual smoker of the Uni- versity of Michigan Menorah So- ciety will be,held on Wednesday evening,. April 5. Prof.. David Friday of the economics depart- ment will be the chief speaker. Addresses will also he given by Prof. T. Leo Shorfman of the eco- nomics department, Harry Rab- inowitz and Sylvan Grosner of Detroit. The entertainment will be furnished hy .Abraham J. Gor- netzky of Detroit, composer of last year's Michigan Union Op- era "All That Glitters" and this year's opera "Tres Rouge" and Hilliard Goldstick of Detroit. Mr. Samuel M. Levin, instruc- tor in American and European history at the Detroit Central High School will deliver 'an ad- dress before the University of Michigan Menorah Society on Sunday evening, April 2nd; :on "The Personality of Juda P. Beniamin." Mr. Levin. who was graduated in 1912, is the founder of University of Michigan Menorah Society and is its hon- orary president. D LACK WE ARE GLAD, I t will be of interest to • our readers to learn that the first subscription secured by the local committee for the relief of the Jewish war sufferers has come to it through the "Jewish Chron- icle." Miss Sadie Messinger of Alma, Michigan, has the proud distinction of having been the first donor to the $100,000 fund which the local committee is seeking to obtain. On March 11 th Miss Messinger wrote to the headquarters of the commit- tee, enclosing her check, and stating that she had read the ap- peal made for the Jewish war sufferers in the columns of the Jewish Chronicle. San Francisco has raised three hundred thousand dollars for the benefit of the Jewish war suffer- ers. Charlie Chaplin will hereafter be exclusively shown on Mutual films. The contracts, it is as- serted, provide a bonus of $100,- 000 for Chaplin, $10,000 a week salary and a percentage of the business. Chaplin is a Jew, his real name being Charles Caplan. ' Lou Tellegen, who was re- cently married to Geraldine Far- rar, is Jewish. His real name is Isidor Louis Bernard Edmund Van Dammelen, which he peti- tioned the New York supreme court Jan. 8 last to have changed to Louis Tellegen. He said he has used the name Tellegen since he was 17. He is near 32. 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Wanted! Solicitors for the JEWISH CHRON- ICLE. High School Boys and Girls or Students attending theUniversity. Good salary and commis- sion. APPLY at CHRONICLE of- fice, 701 Penobscot Building, on Monday and Tuesday after- noons, between four and five o'clock. 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 ■ 111111111111111111111111111111111111