THE JEWISH CHRONICLE MICHIGAN'S JEWISH HOME PUBLICATION VOL III. NO. 16. Soldier-Student Day at Temple Beth El Sunday Young People's Society to Give Banquet and Enter- tainment in Evening— Plana for "Big Time." DETROIT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1918. Per Year, $1.50; Copy, 5 Cents. O Ye of Hapless Hour and HOOVER SETS PRICE CHIEF RABBI OF SERBIA NEW YORK JEWS AID I BRITISH OFFICIALS ON MISSION IN U. S. FOR MATZOTL-I CATHOLIC FUND DRIVE Day.* ENCOURAGE WORK OF JEWISH COMMISSION By J. DE CH EV ETT E. Stops Attempts at Profiteering ye of hapless hour and day, Whose path hest with fears, Undaunted fought your people's fray And shared its joys and tears. 0, ye w ho stt mined the crushing tide With seething streams of blood. And never swerve] from duty's side Through storms and surging flood. by $15,000 Contributed at Meeting Bakers—Fixes Maximum Price at Called by Will,.,,, Fos —Rabbi I4c per Pound. Joseph Silverman Takes Part. The United States Food Ahminietra- tion has announced that time .price of matzoth for the country had been fixed by agreement with the trade at from 13 New York.—The Catholic drive to raise $2,500,000 in the Archdiocese here for the New. York Catholic War build received an earnest support in the shape of a substantial contribu- tion and a promise of further support from the Jews of New York City at a meeting at the Vv'aldorf-Astoria last week. A total of $15,350 was con- tributed by those present and further promises of aid given. The meeting was called by Mr. William Fox, who did such wonderful Work in the Jewish 11'ar Relief cam- paign last December Among tlo pledges which were received at this meeting were the following: 1Villiam Fox, $5,000; Louis Marshall, $1,000; Jacob Wertheini, $2,000; Franklin Si- mon, $500; Henry Ittleson, $500; Judge NI. H. Grossman, $1,000; S. Kamport & Co., $1,000; Colonel II. A. Guiniburg. $500; Henry Vugelstein, $500; L. I,. Firuski, $500; Schland & Co., $250; Harry Alexander, $100; 11 Itorgenicht, $100; G. A. and S. E. Rogers, $504); Hyman Cohen A Suns, $250; Commercial Investment Trust Company, $250; S. R. Travis, $1,000; Andor & Sun, $100; Alfred Kohn, $100; M. Lindner. $100; B. II. Schnur & (fo., $100. 'I' he IMO-Sectarian character of the drive will be demonstrated in the opening meeting, not only by the of- ficial participation of the Secretary of the Navy, but by the inclusion, among the speakers of the Rev. Dr, 'William T. Manning, rector of Trin- ity Church, and Dr. Joseph Silverman, rabbi of the Temple Emanu-El. Car- dinal Farley will be Honorary Chair- man. to 14 cents a pound. This scale NAM apply to matzoth sold in plain cartons. ye walked through blighting When fancy cartons are used the priivs will apply also to packages containing tire, from ten to twelve ounces. This state- .Aml filled your chalice brim \Vali endless sorrows, bleak and dire, ment concerning the decisions has been issued: And torments gaunt and grim. What promises to be the most im- "During the Passover festival, which portant patriotic event of the local Jess - o ye', behold the hour Brans nigh is ushered in on the evening of March ish community held su far is the special \Alien life lieginsr=swiew; 27 and lasts until the evening of April service and entertainment for Soldiers 4, orthodox Jews are permitted to .eat and Students at the Temple lied' El on Amidst a sob, a tear, a sigh, our hopes shall soon come true. no bread whatever except matzoth, an Sunday, March 24. The entire day will unleavened bread made of water and be devoted to the young men in our' armies and navies and in the colleges Your dream -the East—the heart's wheat flour. On receipt of complaint, desire, that makers and sellers of matzoth were and universities. The hitherto annual The prolipbets' lay and lore planning to take advantage of the ritual Student Day of Temple Beth El has Is your domain, you may aspire requirements by demanding unheard-Of this year been changed to include the prices for the prescribed bread, the Food As in the days of yore. hundreds of young men who formerly Administration requested the Federal came as students and who will come on Sunday attired in the uniform of the .\ star Mains forth, the word ring, Food Board of New York to investi- gate costs of manufacture. (rile. - U. S. military forces. The past calls you again; "As a result of its investigation the Besides a large delegation of Jewish So raise the banner white and blue-- Federal Food Board recommended that soldiers who will come to the city from Yon have not fought in vain. the maximum retail price of matzoth Camp Custer, there will he many men should not be greater than 13 to 14 cents at present stationed at Selfridge Field l'nfild your banner white and blue, per pound, the range of price depend- and Fort Wayne, as well as several A flag of hope and rest: ing on quantity purchased, and whether hundred Jewish students front the Uni the bread is baked in square ur circular versity of Michigan and the Michigan Proclaim the dawn of Freedom true. A home fur the oppressed. form, the latter costing slightly more to Agricultural College. 'Head before the latd anniversary of the handle'. This price includes the price of Special Services. flask:dal, Zit ))) i ) t Society. ordinary containers or carton. The A varied and interesting program has. board found that matzoth are also been carefully worked out beginning packed in expensive boxes for fancy with a special service at the Temple in INTER-ALLIED LABOR trade. Such cartons contain ten to the morning at which Rabbi Leo MI twelve ounces, and it has recommended CONFERENCE FAVORS Franklin will preach a patriotic sermon! PALESTINE FOR JEWS that they be sold at a price not exceed- to the young people under the title of j ing that asked for a pound of matzoth Each To Ills Own Standard.". The in ordinary pasteboard cartons. Last month the litter-Allied Labor splendid choir of the congregation has arranged an appropriate musical pro- Conference which met at London to fge.:C.OX•X • X•X•X•X•D X KOX•X•X• X eMsX.X.X.• X •X•X•:•::::C o MsZer/4;. gram for the occasion. Following the formulate the terms which would be ac- services the soldiers and students from ceptable to labor as a basis for conclud- out-of-town will be entertained at din- ing peace. adopted the following point p ner at the homes of the members of the concerning the Jewish people and A PASSOVER STORY Palestine: cong regal ion. SPECIAL SERVICE AND SERMON IN MORNING King George Grants Audience to Dr. Chaim Weitzman. — Gen. Smuts and Balfour Co -operate.— Start tation of Palestine on Pesuch. His Majesty, King George of Lug- laud, m ail audience which he granted recently to Dr. tilaiin Weitzman, presi- dent of the English Zionist Federation, expressed his gratitude to the Zionists for the useful work which they have been doing during the war, especially with regard to the rehabilitation of Palestine. ii lieu by Underwood and Cutler. N. ) RABBI ISAAC ALCALAY. The audience was granted on the eve of the departure from London on March 7, of the Jewish Commission which will have full charge of the reconstruction of the !Icily Land in the laying of the foundation of the new Jewish State. This Commission, the first Jewish ad- ministration of Palestine in 2,000 years, will be functioning nut later than March 27, the eve of the Passover, which is the festival in celebration of JeWISII from Egyptian bondage. The audience lasted over one half an hour, and King George expressed his full Rabbi Isaac Alcalay, vvitti occupies the distinguished position of Chief sympathy with the Zionist Movement, Rabbi of the Serbian Jews, is at pres- ent on a political mission to America and his best wishes for the complete success of all of the plans of the Jewish on behalf of his government. lie was born in Belgrade in 1882 and is de- Commission, with which he is thoroughly fam iliar. scended from a family of Sephardic The Jewish Commission was also re- Rabbonim, being a grandson of Rabbi Zchor Le Abraham, of Safed, and ceived by Gen. Smuts, of the British Rabbi Muses David Alcalay, of Bel- Afar Cabinet, who had just returned from Palestine. lie gave the (:onimis- Rabbi Akalay attended the Normal sion a most encouraging report about and Middle Schools and received his conditions, and informed it that he had early Hebrew training in Belgrade prepared the way for its activities. Gen. under Rabbi Israel II. Jaranow. Later Smuts expressed himself in most en- he went to \lemma, received the de- thusiastic terms about the country and gree of 1'11. I). in 1906 and in 1908 the its Jewish future. It goes armed with degree of Rabbi from the 1'ienna credentials from the Rt. lion. Arthur Rabbinical College, at that time un- J. Balfour, and other members of the der the direction of Rabbis Schwartz cabinet, and with complete sanction of and Sholoin. The same year he was its plans for beginning the construction elected Rabbi at Belgrade where lie of the great Hebrew university, which has continued ever since. Ile suc- will be One of the first works under- ceeded Rabbi Berenfeld as Chief taken by the Commission. It is being Rabbi of Belgrade, a position WIIICII accompanied by Aaron Aaronsolin, the was It-ft open for a period of 20 years discoverer of dry wheat, who is charged until a successor could be found from with the responsibility of developing the the Alcalay family. In 1910 he was agricultural resources of the country. already—and in this one Joey, Manteic elected Chief Rabbi of all the Jews of James de Rothschild is a member of the sends a kiss. She don't say nothing, Serbia. Commission. but I know she knows how my heart hurts for you — and in this one l'a gives you a good shake by the hand. 'Come PALESTINE FUND MAY back already and be my /lidos,: he says, REACH $1,500,000. 'I should have ten daughters fur ten Aideists like you'—and in this one, Joey, With the Jewish Governmental Com- is a little piece of bread if you're hun- mission functioning in Palestine by the gry, and in this some water when your end of this month, the Zionists are mouth is burning like my eyes are now planning to carry the Restoration Fund Over $160,000 Contributed by Memo. —and in this—and this—and this," she of $1,000,000 well over the top during bees of Garment Trade Unions— knitted furiously, "a piece of my heart." the Passover holidays which begin. um Set Aside Washington's Birth. But it's hard to knit when your back !starch 28, Sermons will Ile preached aches :out your fingers are cramped with day a. "Relief Day." in nearly every synagogue in the United guiding an endless mass of white stuff States emphasizing the fact that the age through a whirring machine the long long hope of the Jewish people for a New York. -First reports from the day through; harder, too, when all un- speedy restoration to its homeland is International Ladies' Garment Work- (miring hand disappeared within the near realization. The Zionist societies ers' Union show that over $150,000 bag and (bragged forth an unfinished throughout the country are arranging was contributed by the members of sock. "Am I different from every- mass-meetings and celebrations in honor the union 01) Washington's birthday, body?" the needles clicked loudly and of the first Jewish administration of the when every member of the union negatively. "Is it my Jase's fault that, Holy Land in- 7,000-zsais. pledged his day's wages to a man sits in a big of and tears up the Jew- The List financial statement issued by ish War Relief Fund. 'this union my Joe's letters because maybe he don't veil good? Could Joe help if he's the Palestine Restoration Fund C011i• alone has enrolled 62,000 members, here only five years and couldn't go to !flitter reported that $950,000 have al- and equal amounts are expected from school like all itneriemierst Anyhow, ready been pledged, and it is anticipated other needle trades unions. he don't write on the 'Questions' he got that the special drive during the Pass- When the campaign for $5,900,00) four people living on him when his over holidays will easily rake the total for Jew ish war relief was on in New of $1,500000. ),I6eros are dead already." York City in December, the Jewish working men and women contributed The that chest expanded, grey eyes flashed indignation and pride, slim more than their share to the, fund, Lingers worked the shapeless wool with but they did not stop at that. They a speed and accuracy that amazed 4,11- declared they would designate a day lookers. on which all the workers would COO- "In this here stitch, Joey," she whis• tribute the entire wage for that day. perell under her breath, "is a big, big February 22 was the date chosen. The kiss from Laudie. You remember the Fuel Administration bad already is- baby Joe, You know always you take sued its "landless and workless" days him on your lap when you come. You for holidays as a matter of furl con- should see hint now; five teeth he's got servation, but at the request of the bidden eyes blur with unshed tears and garment workers, Dr. Garfield, the frenzied imagination transforms the Fuel Administrator, granted a special hall of yarn to a bomb being hurled at diapensation to the Jewish workers your loved one and every needle a bay- in recognition of their magnanimous onet ready to pierce the heart of one act of humanity, dearer to you than life, This noble act of the working class Rosalie dropped her knitting. This of New York has been set down as was the hardest hour of the day when, the most notable incident of the en. weary with the day's toil, completely lire campaign for $10,000,000 for the alone amidst a humanity that surged "The Goblet Quaffed" Banquet by Young People. "The conference demands for the Jews in all countries the same elemen- tary rights of freedom. religion, edu- cation, residence and trade, and equal citizenship that ought to be extended to all the inhabitants of every nation. It further expresses the opinion that Pal- estine should be set free from the harsh and impressive government of the Turk in order that this country may form a free state under international guarantee, to which such of the Jewish people as desired to do so, may return and work out their own salvation free from in- terference by those of alien race or re- ligion." The afternoon will he devoted to mo- tor drives or visits to points of interest in the city. In the evening the young men will be the exclusive guests of the Young People's Society of Temple Beth El, and a most enjoyable evening is in store for them. At 6 p in. a supper will he served in the Banquet Hall of the Temple, all arrangements for which are in the hands of the young women of the Young People's under the direction of Miss Dorothy Weinstein, chairman. The supper will serve to make the strangers personally acquainted with the young people in the city and is only a prelude to the wonderful entertainment that will take place in the large auditorium of the JEWISH WOMEN SEND HELP TO RUSSIAN Temple at 8 o'clock, to which the public is cordially invited. PRISONERS IN GERMANY The evening meeting will be a cheer- ful and rousing one such as to make the most fastidious student appreciator of "a good time" feel content and en- thusiastic. A patriotic note will per- meate every feature. The guests of the evening will file into the auditorium led by Mr. Emanuel Wodic, an honored member of the congregation, and one Of the oldest veterans of the civil war in Detroit. Despite his more than 80 years of age, Mr. Wmlic can be relied on to inspire contemporary youth with his martial spirit and bearing. Varied Entertainment. In order to make the meeting enliven- ing and "snappy," the committee in charge will exercise a strict censorship on long speeches, promising the audi- ence that they will not be required to concentrate their attention on any liter- :try feature longer than five minutes. In addition to three short addresses, the entertainment will, consist of a group of numbers by members of the Young People's Society, the Student Congrega- tion at Ann Arbor, and the delegation from Camp Custer. The latter promise to create a sensation with their quar- tette organized by Rev. E. J. Drachmae, representative of the Jewish Welfare !board at Camp Custer, Among the many interesting numbers by local talent will be a rendition of patriotic songs by Sam Mandell, the "singing sailor," who has become fam- ous in Detroit among young and old, and who is said to have put the "riot" in a patriotic meeting at the Elk's Tem- ple last week by causing his audience of several thousand men to go wild with enthusiasm. Besides his many song successes, Sam will sing a new song written by Miss Phyllis Zuckerman, a member of the Young People's, en- titled "My Sailor Man." Other enter- tainers include Mr. Maurice Wolner, violinist; Miss Tillie Garvett, pianists; Mrs. Pearl Lowenthal, vocalist, The meeting will close with a Liberty Pageant, the nature of which is not dis- closed. The committee in charge urges all patriotic Jewish citizens of Detroit to co-operate to the best of their ability and resources in making the first Sol- diers and Students Day of Temple Beth FA „ By MISS KATE FRIEDMANN DRAB little figure with a big slitting bag and an innate a•pt- ess at dodging crowds darted hrough streams of tired human- ity homeward bound. Grey eyes dis- tended, hat awry, jostled by unkindly' elbows, she wormed her way through the crowdedjnorm, dropped her sacrifice in the gaping, pay-as-you-enter and breathlessly, pounced upon the bit of remaining space. Sitting rigidly upright in the cramped space that was her portion Rosalie Morris unbuttoned the imitation fox at her throat and heaved a little sigh of thankfulness. She wouldn't have to wait then until she reached home. A little hand delved into a big bag and brought out a latest edition still damp from the press. Petrograd.—Within the past half This was a daily ritual she had gone year Jewish women in l'etrograd have sent large sums of money to Russian through for two months now. (here prisoners in Germany. Reports fol- low one another stating the terrible need and loneliness of the prisoners. The women are exerting all their powers to alleviate as much as pos- It sible the suffering of these men in- terned in the various districts of 1. Germany. WITH THE COLORS. WITH THE COLORS. Mile Nate Friedmann. always that sharp intaking of breath, a convulsive working of the free hand, a moment when her heats stood still while anxious eyes scanned glaring headlines that, finding no mention of Him amongst the heroes of the world- war would focus unwillingly , and fear- and swayed about her in unending num- fully on the censored column fraught bers, she battled with the print spectres, Times there were when a little self- with pain and sorrow for loved ones. admonishing would Luny up her lagging If there'd only be a word of assur- spirits, but somehow today, though she ance, of hope, or the other--but this reminded herself sharply and repeat- dread uncertainty', the feeling that per- edly of Faimie's hired hall and of haps that very minute lie was lying, Celia's shell-splintered Dave, it was of mortally wounded on a foreign battle- no avail. She succumbed weakly to field, alone, forgotten. She could see memories, bitter-sweet the parched lips shape then•elves to It seemed but yesterday, a rarely murmur her name. And then reason beautiful December day. It was Satur- would return, the paper drop to the day, the .lay that was still .S.Imbes (or floor, the clenched fist relax. them. Liberalism had found no re- "Ach, what a big fool you are," she sponse in the heart of her father. Israel would admonish herself sternly with a Morris was a "Franc e'' l'ehude of the smile of self-assurance that didn't old-world Orthodoxy, A Russian reach her eyes at all. "Look at Fannie, .Yrhoteider he haul emigrated to this didn't she get a ring already and hire blessed land, penniless, with five hungry a hall, and then—goof I he vvas drafted mouths to feed. Friends' help enabled away. And Celia, didn't she see in the him to open a tiny tailor•shop in a side- paper with her own eyes that Dave got street of the Ghetto. this inherent a shot from a shell. And what? Noth- courtesy, his honesty, his word that was ing! Didn't she come to the shop like never broken kept him off the rocks. always with her head stuck higher and His little shop grew and prospered. The a red nose?" The little head tossed wolf was far from the door, yet as from oils LIEUT. HAROLD ROSENFIELD. NEW YORK WORKERS GIVE DAY'S WAGES TO RELIEF FUND Mr. Rosenfield recently won his commission as second lieutenant in the aviation section of the signal corps. He enlisted as a private and won promotion through competitive examination and by force of his na- tive and technical ability. He is now stationed at San Antonio, Texas, and expects to leave•for France soon. Mr. Rosenfield is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Rosenfield, 995 Second ave- nue. He is a graduate of the Depart- ment of Engineering of the Univer- sity of Michigan, class of 1912, and defiantly. A heavy black ringlet shyly El an event that will live long in the memory of the young men who will soon be at the front in the great Cause was engaged with several prominent protesting was brushed impatiently un- der the close-fitting turban, An en- of Democracy, Liberty and Humanity. local firma in engineering work. the begnning, every Friday evening at (Continued on Page 1.) relief of the stricken Jews in the war- devastated counties of Europe, and has done more than anything else to solidify a fraternal Jewish conscious- ness among the MUSICS amt Classy', Itenjamin Schlesinger, Preaident the garment union, states that money is still pouring In, and that a final HENRY S. LOVE. report of the entire amount will not be issued for some little Mr, Line enlisted in the army sev- eral months ago and was assigned to A CONFERENCE OP THE the ordnance division of the army by POALE-ZION IN AUSTRIA reason of his technical knowledge ac- quire,' from his wide experience in the Copenhagen. --Through leather industry as purchasing agent Lemberg of the Pingree Shoe Co. Me, Love is the brother of David I). Love and Rose Love, who reside at 430 l'in• rue avenue. Ile is stationed at Camp Merritt, New Jersey. comes the news that the Austrian Poale-Zionist organisation has decid- ed to call a general party conference of all Poste - lionist societies in Aus- tria and Galicia—the conference which is to fie held these days In Mr. I. R. Michael died at Shang. Krakau will be of vital Interest, he• hai, China, last month, where he had cause this will be the first Pottle. resided many years, at the age of 6 2. Zionist gathering of Austrian 11114 lie was one of the founders of the Galician Poale-Zionlsts since the Shanghai Stock Exchange. commencement of the wee.