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June 21, 1918 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Jewish Chronicle, 1918-06-21

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

7:711•1•03772=l ,

PAGE SIX

THE JEWISH CHRONICLE

INVESTIGATING RUSSIAN
MASSACRES.

BANKS

Will Not Be Open

Tuesday, June 25, 1918

Charter Election Day

A LEGAL HOLIDAY

1

yuner.ourArindrowArArAongurararAiroir .1

Washington.--.\s far as could be III
ascertained here no report has reached 114
the Russian Division of the State De- i 1 11
partnient regarding Jewish massacres
c l reports are exect-
ussia. Offiia
in ! any minute. It is rumored in ne
ed
pws- )tilirAPrAllindirAlKlinirillr,drillr-OrdlirirdirdaralragrAlraliralgri‘
paper circles here that an official in-
quiry concerning this matter has been
NURSING PROFESSION
scot to Ambassador Francis.
AN IDEAL VOCATION FOR

LOCAL ACTIVITIES

KADIMAH ZION SOCIETY THE
CLOSES YEAR WITH
OUTING AND BANQUETI

JEWS GET DEGREES.

JEWISH GIRLS

(('ontinued from page 3 )
Over 100 Attend Festivities at Mt. i
Washington.—Th e honorary 1
14: ree
of Doctor of Letters was conferred Clemens—J. H. Ehrlich Re-Elect- struction, comprising a course of lee-
upon NH. Auberbach, Jewish lawyer
ed President—Delegates Named
t„t,i r Igil;.. ':::i"t h
t ".1j7t.
, ).r 3..1)lY
i',,„s,ja"i ii ,°t' dt Y s.
' alia
src,-.
and author of New Viol:. who deliv-
for Pittsburgh Convention.
general medicine, first aid to the in-
ered the chief address at the gradua-
jured, and many other subjects given
tion exercises of the lieorge Wash-
by physicians and surgeons. Nlinithly.
ington l'iti,•rsit). The honorary de-
Closing its most successull year the
semi-annual ani•ahintial examinations
g . aster of Arts was conferred
kadimali /ion Society held its last arc conducted, and special prizes
upon Alor)iliam Lisner. a local Jewish meeting oil
Sunday, June 16, celebrat- a wa rd e d t o tel m u m s .
merchant. and a director of the UM- Mg
the occasion by an outing and
ersit
Varied Opportunities.
banquet at Elkins" Hotel at Mt.

Let me express
this word of
warning:

llcut-

The Jewish Chronicle
$2.00 Per Year

To the Voters of Michigan :

At a conference of Michigan Democrats held at Lansing, Michigan,
June 12, 1918, the following resolution was unanimously adopted:

These are days of stress and peril. The great Democracy which we
love has buckled on its armor to give battle to autocracy. Notwithstanding
that the genius of our people is the genius of peace; notwithstanding that
our national tradition:: are traditions of peace, yet the time came to us
when no longer, either with self respect or security, could we refrain from
casting our lot with the heroic nations who held at bay the German oppres-
sor in order to make safe our own liberty as well as that of all free peoples.
Each wind that conies across the Atlantic ocean bears to our shores the
crash of conflict. We know that in that awful cataclysm a million of our
blood—our sons and brothers--yea also, on sisters and daughters as min-
istering angels Of Merry, are engaged.
To the nation of which rte are a part, to the great Republic which has
been our mother, to these men and women of our blood who have dared
the trackless deep, perchance, to give for us "the last full measure of de-
votion"—to all these we owe a solemn responsibility, a supreme duty so to
act that their labor and sacrifice shall not be in vain.
We are gathered here today, nominally as Democrats, but, above all
and before all, as Americans. This is a Win-the-War conference. While
the peculiar forms of American political action, established through long
years of peace, tend to compel the expression of political thought and pur-
pose through party media, yet, whatever the form, the spirit of this and
every other conference held this year, and for the duration of the War,
must and shall be uncompromisingly American.

‘Ve declare these to Ile our convictions and principh!s, of political action:

1. The foremost—yea, the sole duty of this nation is to win the war;

hence, the foremost—yea, the sole duty of every loyal American is to help
our nation to ti-in the war.
2. Woodrow Wilson, President of the United States, is Commander-
in-Chief of the forces of the United States engaged in winning the war.
This war must be fought and won, not only in the trenches of Picardy
and Flanders, not only upon the treacherous seas, where lurk the Prussian
assassins, but with every industrial, financial, commercial and agricultural
power of the nation; in the factory, where are forgcd the tools of war; in
the banks and counting houses where are mobilized the money resources of
our people; on the railroads, in the nine:, on the broad acres of waving
grain—in all these this war is being waged and must be won.
Of all these forces, in all these fields of the Pmerican national power,
Woodrow Wilson is the Commander-in-Chief, duly thereto appointed by
the free choice of the American people. They are his soldiers and sailors
as truly as the boys who wear the khaki or the navy blue.
We therefore declare unswerving, loyalty to our President and Com-
mander-in-Chief, Woodrow Wilson. The united forces of our nation should
stand behind hint; whoso seeks by carping, fault-finding, for selfish ends, to
divide the national unity, to drive a wedge between the nation and its
Commander-in-Chief, is as much a foe of America as the German propa-
gandist who seeks to poison the well-springs of our national thought with
disloyalty, doubt or discouragement.
We send loyal and loving gyrating to Woodrow Wilson, seeing in his
masterful leadership the way to victory and to the security of ourselves and
all free peoples.
3. Any man or men Nvho seek by ford or deed, or even by inaction,
to weaken the purpose of our people to win this war; any man or men
who put obstructions in the way of our winning this war; any man or men
who fawn upon or cater to those who do not want our nation to win this
war, or who seek the votes of such traitors,—him and them we denounce
as guilty of moral, if not legal. treason, to the American Republic. We
exhort our fello•-Democrats to nominate no man for even the pettiest
office in the commonwealth who it not whole-heartedly, openly, and unre-
servedly for the defeat of Germany by the United States in this war.
- 4. The system of political action under which the operate rewires
that, at this crisis, we must enter upon a federal election for United States .
Senators and Members of Congress.
row Wilson, in endorsing for re-election Senator Nelson, Republican, of
row Wilson in endorsing for re-election Senator Nelson, Republican, of
Minnesota, because he has loyally and without captious fault-finding sup-
ported the war policy of the nation, we commend to our Democratic
brethren of Michigan the nomination at the primary election of Henry
Ford, of Dearborn, Michigan, as our candidate for United States Senator.
Mr. Ford has loyally, unswervingly and without stint of his purse or per-
tonal effort, supported the war policy of the nation and of the Commander-
in-Chief, Woodrow Wilson. We invite and respectfully. urge Mr. Ford tc
, come, and be, it candidate at our primary election for Senator, although
be
he is not within our party fold.
To the end that partisan discord Os to national affairs may be reduced
to a•ininimum, we invite our Republican brethren likewise to endorse our
primary election nomination of Mr. Ford as United States Senator. Let
the personal ambitions of their contesting candidates be laid away for the
duration of the war; and let unity of political action as to our nomination
of Mr. Ford as United States Senator express the unity of national action
which should bind its together, regardless of patty affiliation, in one great
American army under Woodrow Wilson, to win the \vat.

Resolved, 'that this declaration of our piditical purpose be forwarded

ens,
.kfter graduation the held of activity
Fully 100 men and ■ voinen at-
te fled and participated entlinsias- is unlimited.
continue private
orally in the program of the clay. nursing. others becom e paid nurses in
hospitals.
and
a
Ilia cordial spirit pre,alent has height-
number become
secretaries to prominent physicians.
" lett 1"a'unteh as the tesittal was Of late a fie
out
has arisen.
("' the eve of t"e /4,"" t l' i "" 1st
and that is social service work.
"" ve " ti ' ffl which take ' P a ice 1" Pitts-
Exery modern hospital and other
burgh beginning Sunday, June LI.
institutions conduct such .
rile members of the society aim , charitable
bur.. and grnrraih only nurses,
their friends gathered at the Shaarev
t.t„ d doing that
work. 'the position
t edek ' ll "s )) g u '' at !' rush
' ll a " )) \Vitti'
is that oi prominence. and phi's op 1
at 3 o'clock in the alto -0 °)w'
1 )°" 1
!
portimity
to
study
social problems
411 automobiles had been pro,
d for
grime, phases.
and the entire party proceeded to NIt.'
Th,„
has railed
Clemens by motor. 'rile final meet-
into activity thousand, of those noble
the "rgattizati" ""`
%corkers, and the country is beginning
amidst appropriately pleasant
Stir- to face a nursing crisis. Many years
rmindings at Elkin' s
Garden. J. iI. will pass before this acute shortage
Ehrlich, president of the societv, in Timm., will be over. It would %yell
acted as chairman. In the absence inhoot.r eve ry yo„„g. „),„an
who is
Of
the secretary, Meyer C.rosslier.1 planning a career for herself,
Louis \Vine acted in his .1,101.
Nli•.t parents desiring to give their (laugh-
Ehrlich made sit impressik e
address.' ter. a useful and well-paying mores- •
in which he reviewed the work of the sion
ith endless opportunities, to
past year and Congratulated vier) si
rionsly consider t he IIIIrSillg pro-
member 1.f the organization for his . iession.
intense devotion to the cause of tit tii-
istn.
He predicted a still greater
ky. Dickinson. ifi . the slut,
future .f for the
hair
Socit.i) and
f or Zi onism.
His remarks were has maintained loin several years that
punctuated at frequent intervals by Michigan's biggest dog show should
applause. evidencing the high esteem be held in connection with the State
P a ir ..nd the dogs judged for chain-
l i it tr.rIschicli he is held by all the
points during the same week
w ten the annual awards are made in
Delegates to Convention Elected.

The suits we are
now selling for
$15 will cost at
least $10 more
next Fall.

Largest Exclusive Clothier

Corner Monroe
and Randolph

Branch: '39-101 Michigan

Rev. H. D. Bass

Cantor of the
Mogen Abraham Congregation

Specialist at B'rith Milaths

711C1C

Wedding
other 11441i-class live stock. Few peo-
Ceremonies
Delegates to represent the society
Performed.
ple, outside the regular dog fanciers,
at the Pittsburgh convention were
realise the magnitude of the event.
selected as follows: J. II. Ehrlich, There will be from 501) to
6111) dugs
Morris H. Zacklienn and David R. SI10 ■
Ottlee and
%ii. loll Will sec breeds of whiell
Stocker. A spirited discussion took
Residence
you have only read and some of which
place after the reading of a letter
you have never read or even heard.
from the Provisional Zionist Cononit-
You will see dogs that weigh less than
tee in which it was proposed that three pounds, Pomeranians, York-
the present form of the Zionist move-
shires and the hairlcss Chillnialutas of
PHONE
ment in America be changed from
of and Mitts that weigh nearly
RIDGE ;1W
the present system of individual so-
as much as you do, massive St. lier-
cieties to the more efficient district nor& from
the high Alps. tall, long,
system, such as prevails in the large
thin and aristocratic Borzois from the
national, political and social move-
bleak steppes of Itussia, heavy-boned
ments of the day. The debate on
powerful I real Danes from the es-
ttl
this subject displayed the wide
tate: of titled Europeans. German and
know ledge and deep interest in w hich
Belgian police dogs that look more
the members treat the Zionist move-
wolfish than a real wolf. and meat-
meat.
Elie following made stirrim.) hers o f
breed that has mot mil
speeches on the reOrganization pro- it se lf th e mos t s ,m ni im,
,if any drag )
posal: NI. H. Zackheim, ,Nlas
Lieber- during the present war being used be
man and Louis Cohane.
all
the
war
armies.
Mr.
Dickinson
Id- eat applause greeted the report
n ow \forking on
a plan to have a
of Jacob Afiller, chairman of the re- special exhibit of war work by these
cruiting committee for the Judaea', police dogs, awards being made on
Battalions in the Palestine eaniPaigil. the merit
of their showing in this de-
He announced that so far 130 Jewish partinent of their training. You
tr ill
young men had enlisted in the British see dogs beautiful to look upon and
army for service in Palestine and
dogs that will appeal to you as being
that more than twice this number had 'queer" specimens.
volunteered. but for various reasons
Mt can bring your own dog
and
could not meet the military require- should bring him
'Pile fact that he 1
nitro , . He predicted that before the
may not have a pedigree or that vou
w ar It as oxen Detroit would probably
arc nut sure about it makes no dif-
be represented in the armies lighting
ference for a dog does not have to be ,
for Palestine by over 1,1001 men. The
pedigreed and registered to make him
showing of Detroit so far exceeds
eligible for competition in a cham-
that of Chicago and St. Louis.
pionship show. .Nlso, do not think
Many Speak at Banquet.
that he stands no chance of winning
A banquet
hem ill the k tittittet because
t c
he does not happen to have
CariSWOIUJ t. aenet. mniaiii4eity,-ri heater
hall of the hotel following the meet- a pedigree as long as your arm for
.d\
t griea.
: e t iIsts ; !ft. ..-.
St1111 :.'trerrY
the ei(floan o:•cilticgd rae!
sp oo led With appropriate remarks: was purchased at a dog pound (i4n t'S)330/CVLIe443*-271
Jacob
Miller, J. II. Ehrlich, NI. H. England for the sum of 60 cents (in
zuckticim,
column. ntir money), and I have seen toy dogs
1
Louis wine.
Ehr_ and terriers that were bought on the'
A. Klein.
•-•
lick, Rabbi :1. NI. Hershman received ' street or in animal stores for almost 'J
JE
a most enthusiastic tribute as he was nothing, beat dogs that cost their
called on to speak. Rabbi Hershman owners small fortunes. Remember
is recognized as the leading intlitence that dogs are not judged on their
iu the Zionist movement in Detroit. pedigree but on what they are
and the members of the Kadiniall So-
ciety are united in their eagerlicsi
do him the honor he rightfully de-
serves for his untiring efforts to popu-
arize the movement in this city.
In the election for officer' for the
next season. \Ir. Jos. II. Ehrlich was
honored by re'-election to the office
of President of the ,"cirrus. ()tiler
officers elected are, Louis Stoll, vice-
president; David R. Stocker, secre-
tor), and A. J. Koffman. treasurer
The meeting dispersed after a fervent
rendition of the Zionist song 'Hatik- '
I all" by all present.

212 Warren
Ave. E.

"Meet Friedberg—

Wear Diamonds"

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r13=XEIXEIXt -M33*-
-

Board Walk

COLISEUM 25
AMUSEMENTS

IT'S A
amemint
CIRCUS

Rank,' will not he oven Tuesday,1
June 25th, MS. Charter election day,!
a legal holiday.

to Woodrow Wilson, to cheer him in his arduous burden-bearing of the

leadership of this nation and of the world's democracies.

Resolved, further, That this declaration of our political purpose be for-
warded to Mr. Henry Ford in the hope that it may anneal to his judgment
as a helpful step in winning the war.

Resolved. further, That this declaration of our political purpose be for-
warded to the Republican State Central Committee in the hope that it may
move them to subordinate pa rtyism to patriotism for the duration of the
war and to use their good offices in effecting an endorsement by their fel-
low-Republicans of our primary election nomination of Henry Ford foe
United States Senator from Michigan.

Lansing, Michigan, June 14, 1918.

DOG SHOW AT STATE FAIR.

For the lint time in its history • 'lie
Michigan State Fair mill. this vear
include a registered ■ 10g show . IT
cense(' by the Anurican Kennel I lit , ,
among its exhibits. Dogs will M.
judged on three days of the Fair, Sep
tember 5, 6 and 7. to IT held in De-
trait. .\ itglist 30 to September 11.
This news should cause much re-
joicing among the exhibitor: as well
as the visitors to the State Fair. The
show will not he a Detroit or a Michi•
Ban affair alone but a national event
and will mean competition for Amer-
ican championships in more than 50
different breeds. Secretary-Manager

Jefferson at Belle Isle Bridge

Ste. Claire Kosher Restaurant

HOME COOKING

Ste Claire Hotel Dining Room

Randolph and Monroe

We Cater for Private Parties

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