PAGE FOUR
THE JEWISH CHRONICLE
' THE JEWISH CHRONICLE
Issued Ever) Friday by The Jewish Chronicle Publishing
ANTON KAUFMAN
•
•
•
•
•
A few of these misguided leaders have sprung from Jewish parentage
but the hulk of the Jews in Russia are loyal to the interpretation of
President
freedom, of justice and of humanity for which the Allies hate come
Company
-
to stand.
MICHIGAN'S JEWISH HOME PUBLICATION
Offices 307-308 Peter Smith Building.
The United Drive For Welfare Work.
Phone: Cherry 3381.
.1ccoriling to the decision of l'r•sident \Vilson, a joint campaign for
RABBI LEO M. FRANKLIN,
Editorial Contributor
funds in behalf of the seven recognized societies doing \Velfare \Vork
All correspondence to insure publication must be sent in so as to reach this among
\ merican soldiers at home and merseas, is to be
undertaken
(luring the week beginning Nimember I Ith. During this drive. the 'tett
*Mee Tuesday evening of each week.
Subsc-iption in Advance
pie
$2.00 per year
of this country will be asked to contribute the vast sum of
more 111:111
for \Velfare \\ ark. to be okitled in accord;piec with their
The Jewish Chronicle invites correspondence on subjects of nterest to the
Jewish people, but disclaims responsibility for an indorsement
of the views special nerds among the Voting Men's Christian \ ssociation, the Young
expressed by the waters.
\Vonien's Christian .\ ssociatiom, the National Catholic \Vat- Council,
$ I ;11,0110,01M
including the work of the Knights of Columbus and special n ar activi-
Entered as second-class matter March 3, 1916, at the Postofflee at Detroit,
Mich., under the Act of March 3. 1879.
ties of women, the Jewish \Velfare Board, the .\ merican Library \ sso-
ciation , the \Var Camp Community
Set - % ice and the Salvation
mm
The Feast of Tabernacles
Detroit and \Vii) - ne County having already contributed their Imola
violence to sacred Jewish tradition, we can to these causes through our great Patriotic Fund drive, will in all 1'kt-ti-
nt-ter quite escape the feeling that after the inspiring I
lniv Days of the hood not be called upon to share in this new campaign but the cities of
first weeks of
Suc co th is bound to represent an anti
- climax in our Nlichigan outside of \\ ;Lyn,. Count y Sill be e‘peeted to
till 111(1 11 . full
spiritual lives. Faith awakened by the symbolic Shofar's blast on
Rosh share.
Ilashono and de% eloped increasingly during the penitential period.
/My those oho bane h a d th e p r i v il ege of coming into close contact
reaches its sublimest heights at the inspiring service of .1tomenient. It
with the \Veifare work conducted in the camps a n d Cattle/11111CM, 0t this
seems a pity that when the soul of the Jew has been thus lifted to the country and seeing
at first hand what it means to nor men 111 the service,
very heights, it should b e abruptly let down by a religious
celebration, can appreciate to the full. how important it is to give to this \\
elfare
the impelling motives of which no longer deeply stir us. ••he Jew, no work
their enthusiastic and loyal support. There is no single element
longer an agricultural people, is not particularly impressed by a I largest entering
into the discipline of the ramp 111;k1 inemis more to the morale
1\ ithout
desire to d o
Festival at this season of the year and its character as a festival of of the soldiers than the work of these \Velfare agencies. That the funds
Thanksgiving loses its appeal in the light of the national • hanksgiving
for the support of this work should he gathered in a single Ibis(' is
1)ay of November. The symbols of th e festival are not such as stir the
eminently proper. \\Toile each of the various organizations has a par-
imagination or thrill the
spirit. .\ rtiticial stimulus is needed and forced ticular work to do and while in certain respects each touches only a
interpretations of the message of the festival
are necessary to give it a specific grotty Iif men, no sharp lines of demarcation belt% yeti group and
semblance of vitality.
group or class and class are ever drawn. Indeed, nothing k more grati-
We say all this with a degree of sadn ess because it see ms a pity that lying to
the obsener in camp than the splendid spirit of co - operation
a festival that once had meaning and message to our topic should have th a t obtain s
between these serious organizations.
lost its power to inspire them. Rut we !Mist face the situation frankly'
It is therefore to be most earnestly hoped that all classes of the people
and ono:of two courses must be followed: either we must have the emir- w ill come 10, ;i ll y toor w a r
d when the (Irk e begins in No\ ember soul coll -
age to drop from our religious calendar a celebration whose message and
tr ibute t„ thi s f un d all amount that will keep Michigan in the from( rank
whose symbolism butt' become obsolete for us or what is infinitely to of patriotic states.
lie preferred, we must so change the character of our celebration as to
revitalize its suggestions for a generation for whom in its present form
it t has lost its appeal.
Woman in the Synagogue.
• Succoth, as a matter of fact, does not stand singly in this situation
lost its hold upon large numbers of our people hail it not been given a been justified in
our
in.ighboringit
c..y
•I ' o
has once
mort
I
I
..ansmg
scheme
word Onnes
new content in conformity with ille spiritual needs of a new generation. that services for the high Holy 1)ays were ably and
inspiringly
atn -
be perfectly frank, the confirmation service has saved Shabuoth for ducted by a woman- NIrs.',race Stillman Joseph.
. the Jew. This service aptly voices the sentiment that, as according to
!or years, Lansing has had a rather small Jewish community an d
tradition, Israel put itself under the y.olc• of I iod's law on that day, so because ,If differing siewpoints II" to Jewish life and practice, it has
the children III modern times consecrate themselves to the observance of seemed impossible to maintain a regularly organized congregation there
that law on this' occasion of their Confirmation. Ilut Shabuoth revivified It seems, however, that \ Irs, Joseph is likely to succeed in harmonizing
as it
now is,
occurs at a most unfortunate season.
the different factions,
Its celebration lit -
tingly represents a climax to the congregational activities of the year.
"Jephthah's D a u g h t e r" .Is .
M igh t
e
Sohn to
y Restore oPfictZue
rebiofidOelic;
Semitic Tribal Life With
Music Native to Gilead and
Hebron.
Minnie Edelstein in Musical America.
.
In accomplishing this stupendous
task, Iles Idelsolin has received the
advice and encouragement of Eliezer
fien•Je-linda, the noted Hebrew' Pi ll '.
o.og.s.. 15.10 .s now in this C
■ 1 11111 1.
ul. orki iftig mi l Iii ;s great dictionar
y of IL
I ion.„. langu age
that he began aln, •
thirty-five years ago. There a
l- . •
.), ,,,..ve
volumes,
five are
C. 1 11111111 , 1, ,t,
he is now winking on the sixth.
To return to Mr. I 141,01111'S opera.
I km:
\loraliani /chi Idelsoloi. a musical 1 je,,,i,
thaw,
d„aglity,-. \Iv
opera.
" says mc. Idelsohn. "is
.c holer and composer, has devoted
founded upon the Biblical son ..1
en Years of concentrated effort ill the
ide a in l'
land. of his forefathers, Palestine.
writing of the text was to give a
where he is a resident, to the collec-
iiii.-
lure of the Ilk and works of the Is.
non of ancient Ilehrew folk mei°.
melites
, in their earliest t..1011. It I-
dies.
'omitted to portray primitive life in
Dow it is possible to Irate, at this its earliest Oriental-Semitic form, and
late date, the primitive themes of so
at the same nine to pri sent tlic iiii
ancient a race as the Jews is most in- Glen, of the ideals of the Later Pro-
teresting.
Mims; monotheism of the abstract
The impetus of the Zionist move- God. Out of the God of Hate and of
ment has brought Jews from every W ar , th e G o d o f j ust i ce, a ethic, I i
corner of
the earth to Palestine, love (or mankind. develops.
Where Olt y hope. s11111C day, 10 101114 "The piece,
on the one hand, p.a.-
up a nation that will surpass even trays the tribal
life of the old s en n i ,..,
the ancient glory of their race. On the other, it dwells
upon the
People from the most remote parts awakenin g
of the spiritual-lo the dc-
of the world, speaking different Ian- feat of the mystical. the fantastic-'
guages , haying
often contrasting of th e Kingdom of Ileav
■ Ii. Further-
mo d,., o
f living, of different nation- more, it depicts the everlasting battle
alines, in fact. having nothing in cons- between the existing culture, the
nion but their religion and their am- numb dogmas and the reforms of th.•
bition to found a nation, were brought spiritual prophets, which ristbs.l
,
together. There Were peOple front stns, t o st ,„-„,,,,,,,, the
I
emir, Iii, ,
Bukhara, England, Arabia. from Rus- mankind. It gives the charact. aisn .
sia, Roumania and Austria, from of the psychology of the I sraehlic
.
South America and even from Afri- j at , e „,.„ph. in their alici ,,,, ,‘ ,,,,,,,,
can colonies.
which, in later epochs. di (eloped their
\\'llat
interested
the
musical peculiar i,h,,,,-„, I I, ,c.,
scholar .and analyst strangely, how-
Mr. Idelsohn has colh•ci, Il about a
ever, was o n• f ac t that, with all the thousand specimens .If
Oriental and
differences of language. history, ens- .
lewish folk melodies and composi•
tom and nativity that distinguished li on , of 1 I, U r i c ,. At
the request,
these Peolde, thy calltatiou , the
1- of the Vienna and Berlin :icadeinics,
played in their religious services were I, 1,a, given ,,,,
,,
a 1 1,„,, ,I, ,.( 1 i. f them,
■ , t ,
In these last times, .\ merican w,nnan have mooed that there ;ire fen
among .111e Jewish festivals. Shabuoth, too, would unquestionably have worthy places in which they may not serve. This claim
First Jewish Opera With Hebrew
Folk Music Planned by Tireless
Expert After Years of Study and
Collection of 1,000 Folk Songs
On the high Holy Days, she read appropriate sermons published
the same. "Prue, the nuances
mar in phonographic form.
have differed, but the basic themes Ill the opera there are fi
∎ c d ,
formed the basis of \Ir. Idelsohn's ex- The main roles consist of
a h., it..
std
I11110nm, work of ri - a bass, two tenors,
an alto. a 11101
search, for the furtherance of which soprano, and a mezzo-soprano. Much
he
has r. ceived pecuniary assist- dress
dressis laid , Ill 1111. rendition. which
auto from the \ worn, l.ioerninent, o , a , j 1„. pure l y urienitti.
a.., well a , f rom so w n Ilcrinan Jewish
In the orchestration strings and
societies.
woodwind arc used prominently.
"Jephthah's Daughter."
Brass instruments arc used in only
To cap the climax of this Ile. ctl- two of the' acts.
The harp is also
tensivC
lean task. however, he Ilan dons' ,o111, used, 10 winch IS :11111.1 111C I
)rieitial
thing which is absolutely unique. Ile hi. the Hebrew Nedel I something
Jew. But unforttmately, immediately after Shabuoth, congregations lablris and the Union of .\in•rican Hebrew Congregations for the use
lt•gin to limit their work, services ar e reduced in number and simplified, of congregations in the smaller cities unable to maintain an ordained
has written a timely Iewisli opera. like the Shofar or rain's horn) and
based upon the folk themes that he Hfizatzara, as well as the 'Pot s
with
has collected. \\lien it is produced bell attachment. The INN
and Kinor
it will be found that the work, ill are used only as decorations. \ I uch
every aspect, including music, seen- stress is laid tin the dances, which
1Ciligious schotols are closed. Congregational philanthropies lessen their rabbi.
guy, costumes, plot, language, has an, are partly tribal. partly folk dances,
activities or eliminate them altogether. In a word, th e magnifi c en t in-
Th e innovation in Lansing is very greatly to the credit of the coin-
spiration of the confirmati on ce remony i s th u s ho s t upon the great 'nuttily and to the splendid woman %vim has mulct-taken the task of
majority,
congregational leadership there.
absolutely historic basis. and all rniental.
It rounds out in a splendid and inspiring manner the s pirit u al life o f th e through the joint coo-operation of the Central Conference of .\ mericar
Now, Succoth comes just at the beginning of the congregational
year. 1)ttring the period of the high lloly 1)ays, little extra synagogal
work is undertaken.
The Religious School usually. opens
on
the Sunday
preceding or following Succoth. \•Ity not then make Succoth like
Shabuoth—at children's day in the synagogue, utilizing its traditional
message to awak e n the sluggish spirits Of the children that tluring their ,,ailalot /of
i
the chief of the Iloishe
vacation period have been all too far away from the synagogue al „,
kl is also a Jewess, is certainly ;
the influences of the Religious School. Some attempt hits been m(de,
notably by 1)r. Philipson in Cincinnati, to revive the Succoth Festival
George
e Creel, Roos velt,
and Other Non-Jews Etc.
again and the experiment has loco) markedly successful. \Ve commend
this suggestion to
elnigregation.
:mil rabbis throughout the land.
.\s it
is today, in moil cases, Succoth is hut a bare skeleton of the inspiring
religious institution that onc e it was.
1 ,,ven though it lie recess:
t.i.,,, N
,,,.:(1 1:,,t,, n,s,,,,t
i
aelciy,irs,,,i,:as,tpti(tttriit,l e,:::., s ti iir,,i,..:, .t:1::
. gt ir,c,e;:sit ,st .
so, 1',1,1.11s.i..ai rt , wa.iglio.bae N
r1 1.1 1. 5den\d,),errkedh.1‘1,oi,"ii.,
'
Jews and that the original name of regulating usurious interest charg•,.
the fancily was
as Rosenfelt. ill tki• District of Columbia.
Such attempts to draw people of
iii,
chairman of that Committe •
The Jews of America, and for that matter of the world, Inic a delft eminence into our fold outside of was and is today the irascffile lien
making us appear ridiculous, has also Johnson, of Kentucky, a man who ha.
of gratitude to \Ir. ..\. J. Sack, director of the Russian Information making
,,,,,,i/i y , ev il as p ec
t. It furnishes made himself notorious 1111 tICCOUIR 0
Bureau in the United States, for calling attention in the public
press to a justification for our enemies to his temper and abuse o
f his (Twin
rut injusti ce that has been worked against the Jens
and as It result of blame us for the evil deeds of those ents, and with whom the Senate con
Petrograd, under dale September Ist, in which the machinations of the
Holsheviki are set
forth at length, attention is called to the fact that,
t hrei. J ew; tr eeti py import ant positions in t lie so-called Soodet got ern
ment, a fact that is likely to be misconstrued and to give the Impression
that all the lefiders of this malign government aft' Jews.
\bsolute
who do not happen to be Jews but ferees have lately declined to twit°
whose names or appearance are sug- nate in connection with the
Hen
gest i ve of Jew isliness.
Regulation Hill.
nothing could be farther from the truth. The I a ct of
Dora Caplan, Jewess.
,.
,
i il ii .aici t, ,,,tinei rki,.. its,, ,, :ri l ),, , ,i 11,-defined- .
clinal
Nia,1 ) - people intert•sted in the usury
le ..:Isla tuin appeared: among then
unmet- of pawnbrokers. I he
.."1:;:kc a..111:111 '
of the pawnbrokers 'NY:is
°riling, of Vvashington
alg
i 'cel:::-1,.i. i: g ill, . l h,\e ssg
orci.:tt ed n ';'‘'
r\ :s g
s.a th ' i li l'g- the 1.'
...olini,
pawl:Milker. As he spoke
pre, the easy Or religious affiliations 1,:hi,:isg.„.,,
, a l,i l ytinw:It .,. :.
..i,:ui
f),
ru . ::.., 1 jel
i .isnn
s,„ by
,,f il„,„ w h o are t
y „ ra bh.
i(
„,i,„„ d •
the matter-is, as has been shown at great length by .N1r. Sack, that the in the public press, but to empliasi.e . ' hi ,..
),,ttpetit, that there • al.,- f,,,,.
vast majority of the Jews in l tissia are and lime been from the begin -
:
fling. ardejlt supporters o f till' \ In c ,' 51111 ,5,. E icii animig the leaders t
tile movement Opinliiiell ill ' Holslievikism
the race or religious affiliation of col 1
iris and notorious
Character,
if Ill ∎ . j ' . "'h pawnbrokers in \Vashillitton
happen to belong to our people. 'anal that Horning happens not to be
al
one of them. On the contrary, he is
are nil lity prominent J•n s. 'lite
Phis ,..,„ h e ,,„.„ „„ d
..,I
article by Mr. Sack is of s'Iliwiellt importance to the 1(1% isli cause to 1 moos' olole. ()illy the other day. the 't`;ra.:r:cite.',1.,,",a very g"" Call'"I'ft and
•hurch member but the
I Pr.,. carried 1 di•D del. .
justify Its ill quoting from it 21 it'llglil. .\ mong other thing,. Ile sal , : '
\ '''''''' 1 "
'
- - '
-
. It Inch referred to Dora Ca
.iiii. plan,
i, , ,,,
the
keenwitted
i ., , ,
,.
lidinson naturally sup-
,.
•
Ii, di...
l i o biat 1 s et) It:IW 1110
ttlittpttrtitti.: thr pool...moil d••• ■ ••II: of Lettole
1 01:et 11111,1
1110
,ipposiog the 11,,Ishevik aditintior
dliont the toolillr Jai, t hr
..a . 1 . „ I So ..• 1
. t.' he a jeW and took it for granted
we ll known lewish lalro part, 'Lund.' took oich d ilr,11 8. oand that Idinitir hotorli saol • ''' '''
. •t R • - 1 t .
w
with-
''' ' ' - ‘ 'd I ' - ' s " ni "'"" .
o It is,ta
ttltt
l u ti t ill s , be ' ,.,;15. sera than ,,,,
once that '
once
hand i s m en wino. Mao the I At, 4 C011011101011a1 - 11rIllth rats, '
i Nothing at ail was no iitione,I about
:„. ai e::,,,Iii: in:II:I:I: mg t„ defend
- The re is and
n
a Mott, liranili ot Ru..1 .11, ",hors
",hors... NI,11 the O" 111 Itits.sa didn't 1114.4. ' 1,,,y brie
a le„ kh g i r t .
.lia t e ....It )1 tutittlis.
it,' 0 tha ■ N nslr 'Metal id reivoltuoinam part, ni It tiso,1 III the
d
ranks of which the Jens dol mit wise h e great cause .,I• Rossi:C
s l i l wi t i
Then the dispatch ve ,rrtit,,,,,,t1 1: sI t„a„t,e,
"In the ranks of the 1..inoitio ninal-Dentocrats
t
we rind mch Imo,. a. loll., Prof
lieroenoein and SIttlttberK: ilt the ranks 84 thr 5,wialisa Itevolotioni.t. ne Om! t ;reshot, that Lenin,. • , Iii 4. ils ,
a
im:
t
r
engt?;:fi
l jtIl' iwisit II enaliaum
Gott and Nlinor: In 1h...ill. of the Firicial Democrats. Detitioh and Aselroil. All of th
e r aldnd wt-ohe'llii :ecrt
e m 1 ∎ the name of Ia. , Katnenoff. a dew
werr and arr liosistan itiertots
to tar highest sense or doe word.
blame is placed upon it that doe
.
..
ni ta,,,d, 1 flr I reolion I , . 111C “111.4. of Russia • Itherty All of
alid
'INPII"'“'I "1 andlifilttlef•III-Iass of 'Frotzkv.
them.
fs ■ rpi
g
ho
died
licit..
those
the world*. conduit opened. 14.111 op the Antes' cause
it further mentioned a few other
wish II their authonty as A cause of liberty and democracy.
high officials of the Soviet govern - . 1 It . is eminently proper for tiss n't 'ot
"The dispatch. white mentioning that trouts. Kanoincs and Fiverdlov ate Ir., tries not
7. wor d what
mention that Dora Kapl a n. also 01.0
Lennie and was rsecittrd lir the Itoldimild 1. . dew
we dill in
111,111 ill Russia as hying Jews and the past
li i ors not mrtiiion that Isaenloo. whose real name is
and
gate. one of the bidders .4 n u. d rew th
what we are doing now
e conclusion that this will'
SoetalisaRevrillittonints of the left, who watt ekettlited 10 the liorihrstki.
A1111 Maria
nd
but
we
ought
strictly
to
maintain
our
nor., for the assassinittom of the German Ambassador von Mieliaild w a s a r ew . A
n d a , ) ere much intensify the anti-Semitic . iclo
far at we C8 11 judge from the name, the i tt ong 1114 11 NI , a.A.,,inAird
ignitteit‘Y
self.respect
Field Marshal son
when
feeling ill Russia.
it
EichOrn NINO was A 1 , w•
to attaching
attaching people to Our-
- The presence of Aeyfcal Ir., A,,,,, use trader. of I/le
Itolshrvild win inded !mi used
It need not lie stated that not much iSeleeS who do not
by reactionaries to stir up snitSennti e propaganda. Tens of thousand. of Inmi ce, r ea.,,,,
belong to us o r to
laves probably will he the poment for the mania grandmsa of Ile Trout"
lot e is lost in this country ior the,
Hut it .hoold ,, , ,
claiming credit for persons or deeds
,, :
, I
be stated before the ritrilired Fmk]. an the name of jostler. that (herr arr
I,
right at tarty against the 11,,Ititimikt as a danger to deniticracy and that the Jews not Jess who " . ”`"e 1.1 "' 1111" I'M ''''' Cal ''' n i ' when credit i t s ti n o , tit
as a ',vie Surely
- After the Nlarill Reioltiods, the Jews took a Not
.(raking
deans
e stool.
warm...a .d
e r■
belon
The facts set down in this article should be disseminated far
and
wide for there IS danger that the report that the Bolshevik film ement
is under Jewish leadership may react upon the Jews not only in Russia
but of other countries to their great hurt. The truth should be known.
not regarded as an ordinarV milkA.I.,- humilityand
d b leH seif.effacrnient
r. nisirJictice too
Ike'sra'esoikilintir'yu - t. more as a martyr for hut, On the other band. we should not
To ekktintit tit. in one breath, upon be aggressive and loud and claim
the singular activity of the Jews credit for all greatness and virtue
among the liolsheriki and at the same until we appear as the laughing stock
time to suppress the fact that the 1 in the ptiLlic eye.
\rlhur Brisbane in the Ilia at:a
Herald-Examiner writes:
Dora Kaplan, the t onto: Jew,
who
sh o t
the
Russi a n
dictaa. , .
ing pictures in a thousand shapes.
There is alwat s A D ora Kaplan
Worker,
— -
In Congress, Too.
(Continued From Page One./
Arthur Brisbane
Studies Mystery
of Dora Kaplan
Temple Emanu-El by Comrade Lennie, will soon be presented to • o , •
in Mercy, a Y. M. C. A. in netespapers. magazines and Ilk,-
Ca, Of malice. But, as stated,
is only ion. of a multitilde of suet
illitstrations.
change its character to do so, let Its do what in his lies to restore it to its lines that Theodore Roosevelt. who
Several years ago, there was :
was then President and in the zenith public hearing before the House Dis
former place of honor in the synagogal calendar.
of his popularity, was descended from triet Committee 4 , 11 11Ie
question 0
which great suffering might easily Is- worked to vast numbers of our
co-religionists. Ile calls attention to the fact that in as dispatch from
Field Portrait of Ilead of Wealthy
clear
to daily came out in sensational !lead-
The Jews and the Bolshevihi.
Famous Rabbi Enelow Is
Stretcher-Bearer, Helps
Unload 70 Ambulances
"GOOD DAY'S WORK,"
hi 1111,11 anvas in the
ready 1.1 come out.
PARTNERS DECLARE
slce,e of offl•.
■
I'Lrr ec a t ai, 1 -1c :o-" :I aSittl.
fr1 cals. bi l lea away beneath the arm
torimiol::„. .\ 'm ighty, Eve. the lady rib.,
SONII-A\ liEltE IN I I: \NCH.- was to come Lahr and make all the
wihm 1 51,,, ,o,hausied I I, I, I, e
■
ts liireentich
stl* • es 1a
after r a
ered to be Rabbi II.
IL Endow of Te mple
hiAh
%Ttle.
it
New York city, it meal--
her of the Overseas Commission of
the 1e. wish \Velfare Illiard.
e'llia1171,
ttis7vs:-tsus"-iw
could hall,
11(.111 Was 1111,0\
e t
.1 11e
la
Woman of Mystery.
first little romance narIIll'
,he
always carried with In r
Dr. Endow, who is rabbi of one of lookout,' cigarettes, prolialilv for lir]
the largest and richest congregations own
list ill easy she Lim tired of in
of ..sonerlea, has been emptying and
The near red of the
i'lgafell1 l
loading cars
wounded men at a tiat „ i .1 ,1 s0 1, , , :tdisaosil. ) :Ii tl il
i.,•km(a:ki til . deadly,
base hospital at file front.
He had offend his sertice•
W11111101 Napoleon. It is said had m
iesitation when I offinte•rs Were
called a ring that he wore, lint nrolnIld,
and had toiled unsparingly until late didn't. He told O'Meara at St. HI
al
night. en:: "Had I intended mind,. I
t-r t
l
o
ng
to lodge ileorge Samuels of Oak- It is interesting that one Cr
,y in-
land, Cal., IN as ille first to w
rist. of Dr. telligent, radical young 1 ew
of
Enclow's experience.
certain type, now a prisoner ill Prli•-
Ile said:
tnililtyleah' lint Suciali.uc
"Volunticrs were called for at the reai
s . ori i ' ttil (Ma ll'-
And altuNler
ideas.
\. to help bring in the yowl:. .1,,,ess of a higher intellectiad
wounded. \\ bile tramping up to the type
Clitleavors to give him his
hospital I noticed a man ahead of me port to the happy Miming ground.
in uniform and asked him to join
"11411 he gladly did. \Ve went in and
\‘'.\ SHINGTON.--Ira Nelson \tor-
reported to the military authorities for xis, United Slates
Nlinister to Sweden.
work and the 0 1)1Cer jn charge set Its snivel
ill 1111, country on .‘tigu•I
2.1.
lu carrying the wounded out of the \Ir. Morris had made a trip to die
ambulances. western Lat1' frultt, where he saw
- \Ve worked
pretty hard and emp- the .\ merican soldiers in action. On
tied sev enty carloads. Both of us per-
spired to 'heat the hand.' Then we gill- the Swedish people first hand
were put to loading again after they !information what America is (loin.,
were through the operating room. and in the war. He will to this to combo
worked till relieved by a detail of sal- the stron
g German propaganda he -
" \V
ty tired. and ltiv
'll:leer:n.e
uere migh
in Swede" with a I 4."
1 asked one to have a soft drink , Allies. \inerica and the other
with him. for it was ton late to get The minister left Sweden a month
anything to tat. \\idle
drinking a ago and spent several weeks at the
sort of
soda they hate here he told western battle front. lie also made
me he was Rabbi Endow of Temple a bri e f v i s it t o th e It
a li an front.
Emann -
E1 of New York. lie is, "I wanted to sec this thing with
here on Jewish Welfare
vvork, and he my own eyes," he said. "so that I
says that it Was a mighty good work
could convey to the Swedish people ,
we both did that day."
as far as lay within my power, a first
Dr. Enelow has 'teen in France all hand account of the tremendous
summer. studying conditions and forces at work in the allied cause.
formulating plans for the extension 'The triR great!) exceeded my expecta-
Jewlidi welfare work oscrseas.
• tions"