THE JEWISH CHRONICLE

10

YOURS. IN HASTE

CADILLAC

3 0 1

ott
Aartru
GER-s

010

04,

3 0 1

LIMOUSINES

TOURING CARS

TAXICABS

CADILLAC

Private Appearing Cars For All Occasions

Broadway Taxicab & Messenger Co.

262 RANDOLPH STREET

ABE T. HERTZBERG General Manager

Give MORE than your Share

Phone Cherry 3132

J. Caplan, Pres.

MONROE SHEET METAL
AND ROOFING COMPANY

220 Monroe Avenue

Manufacturers of Galvanized Iron and Copper Cornices,
Metal Skylights, Ventilators, and all kinds of sheet
metal work.

Roofers of Tile, Slate, Composition-Metal and Metal
Shingles

Experts in Heating and Ventilating Ducts of all de-
scriptions.

A ROLL OF HONOR
1 ■ 1

The following Jews, stirred by the appeal of their brethren
in Europe, have pledged themselves to give 10 per cent of the
total relief funds raised in their respective communities in 1917.

NATION.

J U LI US ROSENWALD

STATES.

GOV. SIMON BAMBERGER
GOV. MOSES ALEXANDER.
BEN SELLING
ADOLPH OCHS
S. R. TRAVIS.
E. M. CHASE

CITIES.

JULIUS FREUD FAMILY
HARRY GRUBINSKY
MORRIS LEVY
L. B. FINKELSTEIN .
JACOB EPSTEIN
M. G. MICHAEL
I. H. NAKDIMEN
J. G. JOSEPH Buffalo,
I. W. and B. BERNHEIM
M. GARDNER
FALK BROS.
I. FRIEDMAN
LEOPOLD ADLER
DANIEL ROTHSCHILD
D. R. AND I. R. TRAVIS
MR. and MRS. JACOB FISH
MR. and MRS. ISIDORE WOLFF
MR. and MRS. SAMUEL ROSOFF
JACOB DITTENHOEFER
SIMON W. ROSENDALE
M. BROWNSTEIN
GUSTAVE A. EFFROYMSON.
SAMUEL E. RAUH
ISAAC WEINSTEIN
J. R. EINSTEIN
S. S. BLOCH
DAVIDSON BROS.
JACOB MEYER
C. M. GUGGENHEIMER
•ELIX FULD
RALPH BROS.
JOSEPH FAMILY
MARK LIVINGSTON ESTATE
POLLACK FAMILY
ISAAC H. RUBIN

Chicago, Ill.

Utah
Idaho
Oregon
Tennessee
Oklahoma
New Hampshire

Detroit, Mich.
Kalamazoo, Mich.
Omaha, Neb.
Wellsboro, Pa.
Baltimore, Md.
Athens, Ga.
Ft. Smith, Ark.
N. Y.
Louisville, Ky.
Rome, N. Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Massena, N. Y.
Savannah, Ga.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Kansas City, Mo.
Peekskill, N. Y.
Peekskill, N. Y.
Peekskill, N. Y.
St. Paul, Minn.
Albany, N. Y.
Lewiston, Me.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Waterbury, Conn.
Kittanning, Pa.
Wheeling, W. Va
Sioux City, Iowa
Riverhead, L. I.
Lynchburg, Va.
Newark, N. J.
Easton, Pa.
Cincinnati, Ohio
Bloomington, Ill.
Cincinnati, Ohio
Minneapolis, Minn.

Why Give More
Than Your Share
(Continual from Parr 6)

GIVE MORE THAN YOUR SHARE

Compliments of

MAX JACOB & SONS

Wholesale Dealers

in

New and Second-Hand Bottles

527-537 Beaubien St., Detroit.

Cherry 6222.

came into the yard a ragged Jew with
his wife. They carried in their arms a
little baby, and as he ran through the
courtyard, he cried out: "Essen far'n,
essen far'n kind." The child was
swollen in face, swollen in finger,
swollen at the feet, and that father
and mother knew that if that child
could but have three square meals at
that place known as a hospital that
child's swelling would be reduced.
Three square meals will reduce the
swelling of a baby suffering from hun-
ger. Dr. Goldflamm of Warsaw tells
me upon the authority of his medical
reputation that in his clinic during the
past year there has not been a Jewish
child up to four years of age who
could walk. Sonic of the children
have forgotten, have unlearned how
to walk. They have become rachitic
from milder-nourishment, from being
fed once a day this warm potato soup
and this hunk of bread.
In the Talmud Torah I found boys
playing. Logically, they should not
play — starving children. But you
found boys in groups of two and three
and four playing. To be sure, the
play was not boisterous or loud, but
still they were playing, and I found
myself wondering if ever little boys
played upon their deathbed, and I re-
member what a father said to me: "I
worked hard all my life, and I have
never felt envy of any other man, but
now I am filled with envy every
morning when my children cry out to
me for bread and milk, and I cannot

give it to them, and I know that there
are others, however few they be, who
know it."
"America—Have You Forgotten Us?"
Do you know that when I asked
people if they had eaten bread, they
were not excited at all: "Ach, bread!
We didn't have bread yesterday, to-
day we may have it, tomorrow we
shall try," a dead, dull grey misery,
and hopelessness, and resignation to
the misery of the day itself. But as
soon as America was talked about,
America, then men got excited, then
women threw up their arms, then you
heard their voices cry out, then chil-
dren began to tug at the skirts of
their mothers, and young men began
to tremble at the chin: "America.
Will they think of us? Have they for-
gotten us?" And, Jews of America,
thank you for one thing. I thank you
for giving me the opportunity of say-
ing this one word to the Jews there:
"The fathers, the brothers, the sisters
and husbands have not forgotten."
What Will You Do?
I ask you men and women to help.
We come to you for $10,000,000. Last
year we asked for $5,000,000, and you
gave it. This year we ask for $10,-
000,000, and we must get it, too. Will
you pour your hearts out as you
poured them out before? Come, let
us walk in the light of the Lord;
come, let us walk in the long line of
Jewish helpfulness on behalf of the
long line of Jewish misery. Will you.
help?

