vimericam ifewish periodical eatter
CLIFTON ATENU1 • CiNCINNATI 20, OHIO
THE DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE
MICHIGAN'S JEWISH HOME PUBLICATION
Per Year, $2.00; Copy, 5 Cents
DETROIT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 1919.
VOL VI. NO. 10.
RABBI OF
EULOGIZES OSCAR I NEW CHIEF
FRANCE IS ELECTED
HAMMERSTEIN AT '
TEMPLE FUNERAL'sniosrtoryt,
'Detroit Boy's Last Resting Place in France.
SHAAREY ZEDEK ANNEXES
ACRE TO NEW CEMETERY
uzair A,
PROMINENT JEWS
OF NATION CALLED
TO AID BRETHREN
An additional acre of land adjoin-
ing the gate and entrance, and situ-
ated so that it overlooks the beautiful
landscape below, has been annexed to
Congregation Shaarey Zedek's spa.
cirrus new cemetery, Clover Hill Park,
is M. Israel Levi, one of the rabbis
— - -
at \Voodward avenue and the Fifteen-
— -
of Paris. The present incumbent,
Nide Road. It was found that the ex- Summoned by Felix Warburg to
Rabbi Silverman of Temple who is 63 years old, graduated from
tra acre would enhatiace the cemetery
Consider Further Relief for Jews
l'aris Seminary in 1879 and was
in its physical appearance, as well as
Ernanu-El Honors Memory 0 t - the
in Europe in Present Extreme
appointed assistant rabbi in 1882. Ten
in its utility value.
Great Impresario Who Died years later he was appointed proles-
Crisis.
The formal consecration of Clover
sor
of
Jewish
history
at
the
Rabbit)-
Last Week.
Hill Park Cemetery, which took place
- _
ical Seminary, and in 1890 he was
Sunday, July 6, was a revelation to the TO HOLD CONFERENCE IN
lecturer on Rabbinic liter-
WAS FAMOUS AS HEAD OF appointed
hundreds who thronged its artistically NEW YORK SUNDAY, AUG. 10
slue at t
Eci1e hra
des
laid-out grounds. The landscape pre-
MANHATTAN GRAND OPERA
Paris.
l.teTi"is
sents a pretty picture to the eye with
-- -
of the foremost Jewish scholars of
for
its shrubs and blooming bushes and Will Prepare Budget to
Ile was closely identified
Came to America in 1865— the day.
Future Needs—To Organize All
fine, wide driveways. The most mod-
Introduced Modern French with the management of the Revue
ern methods will be used in conduct-
Relief—David A. Brown Repre-
Etudes Juices and was a very
Music-Drama Here—Friend of 'le`
ing this new cemetery. Perpetual
sents Detroit.
frequent contributor to its columns.
maintenance
will
be
guaranteed
and
Students.
He is best known fur his edition of
discrimination will not figure in fam-
-- •
the newly discovered text of Ben
New. York:—Several score of lead-
ily lot prices. The opening of Clover
New York: The funeral of Os- sira, of which a class room edition
Hill Park Cemetery is filling a real ing Jews from all parts of the
car Hammerstein was held in the was issued in the "Semitic Study
country
will meet here Sunday, Aug-
Temple I•mann-El, on Monday last. Series," edited by Drs. Richard Gott-
need in the community.
ust 10, at the invitation of Felix M.
The temple was filled to capacity, and lied and ,turns Jastrow. M. Levi is
Warburg, the Wall street banker and
the congregation comprised men a son-in-law of the late Grand Rabbit
chairman of the joint distribution
and women of theatrical and operatic of France, NI. Zadoc Kahn.
committee
of the Jewish Relief Funds,
prominence. as well as hundreds of
to consider the present extreme crisis
the general public. The services,
of
Jewry
abroad
as outlined by re-
which were simple in character, in-
A Mogen David, reverentially painted on a crude pine board, the
cently returned investigators and to
cluded two selections by the tenor,
folds of the Stars and Stripes, the flag for which he fought and died,
determine upon a definite, unified pro-
John N1cCormack, one of the well-
melting into the blue and white of Israel's symbol, and over all a
gram in which all sections of Ameri-
known old Hebrew hymns, sung in
wreath of poppies and wild flowers, carefully wrought, by fingers
New York, Aug. 6.—The Transmis- can Jewry shall join to save the race
English, and "The Lost Chord." by
sion Bureau of the Joint Distribution in Europe from destruction.
that
trembled—these
tokens
differentiate
Grave
No.
221,
the
last
Sullivan. The Rev. Dr. Joseph Silver-
The conference will extend over a
resting place of Nathau Ilarry Lamport, the first of our Jewish boys Committee of Jewish Relief Funds
man, the rabbi of Temple Emanti-El,
London, Aug. 4.--A Bolshevik wire- tip die in France, from the countless hundreds of unnamed graves at has sent abroad this year to relatives period of two or three days, with ses-
delivered the funeral sermon.
of people in America, nearly half a sions in the morning, afternoon and
less
dispatch
from
Moscow
reports
After a selection from the Scrip-
St. Nazaire, France.
million dollars in individual remit- evening.
tures and a brief prayer by Rabbi Sil- the shooting of Gen. Gregorieff, the
The picture reproduced above is the most treasured relic of the tances and has located thousands
Invitations have gone to all mem-
verman, Mr. McCormack sang, and Russian commander who captured
front whom parents, children, or bers of the joint distribution commit-
the funeral address followed. Dr. Sil- Odessa early in July, and whose war brought back from France last Sunday by Al Curtis, the last of
brothers
and
sisters
on
this
side
have
tee and to many other prominent men
troops are reported to have carried four brothers to return from France. It was Mr. Curtis who dec-
verman said in part:
hail no word since the beginning of who are interested its the work of this
out a massacre in the Jewish quarter
Rabbi's Eulogy.
orated the grave of his comrade and brother. I larry Lamport was the war. The semi-annual report organization and of the American
of Odessa recently.
killed at Paimbeauf, France. on September 3, 1918, in an aeroplane front January 1, to June 311, places the Jewish committee, the funds of which
"The public career of ()scar Ham-
Gen. Nlaksno, commander of the
merstein is well known. lie has left Ukranian insurgent forces. was his accident. Ile was in the medical service, attached to the aviation total of remittances handled in this are turned over to the joint distribu-
his impress on several walks of life; assailant.
section of the A. E. F. Ile is the late son of Mrs. Ethel Lamport, period at $467,877.28. The average tion committee.
he touched the world at many points.
single remittance is about $25. Po-
These Will Attend.
950 John R. street.
Beginning life in this country at the
land, Lithuania, Galicia, and Czecho-
Polish
— Semi -official
bottom of the ladder, he finally real- sources have received reports that
slovakia are the chief regions to
Among those who have been asked
which private funds have been sent.
by Mr. Warburg to attend are Louis
r . , ized that his natural inclination was Gen. Gregorieff's troops, which are
No charge is made for this service, Marshall, Jacob Schiff, Felix M. War-
in the direction of music and the op- occupying Odessa, surrounded the
era. He sought to educate the public Jewish quarter and began a massacre
the cost of operation being borne out burg, Nathan Straus and Henry Nfor-
to the best in art. and was ready to which lasted three days and nights.
I'aris, July 19.—Renard Richards, of the relief funds of the American genthau, all of New York city; Mayer
NEW YORK.—Colonel H. A.
sacrifice his own.fortunes if necessary
Russian soldiers of Gregorieff's
Secretary of the Delegation front the Jewish Relief Conunittee and its co- Sulzberger, Dr. Cyrus Adler, Jacob D.
to achieve this purpose. This int- command, it is stated, carried out the Guinzberg, Chairman of the Campaign American Jewish Congress to the operative organizations. Receipts Lit, Philadelphia; Mrs. Janet Harris,
presario was a tnan of strong person- massacre. The Jews of Ukraine and Committee of the $100)0,000 United Peace Conference, who left Paris to- from abroad are returned to America Bradford, Pa.; A. Leo Weil, Pitts-
ality, of irresistible individuality. lie Bessarabia have proclaimed a mourn- Building Fund Campaign for Feder- day to sail for America on the Lor- through the bureau after they have burgh; David A. Brown, Detroit; Mrs.
ated Jewish Institutions, announced
been signed by the recipients, many Abram Simon, Fulton Brylowski, Col-
rarely took advice; he always give it. ing period of 14 days.
yesterday at a meeting of industrial raine, expressed much satisfaction of whom live in districts where no onel Herbert H. Lehman, Washing-
He counseled his counselors and • ad-
Gen. Gregorieff entered Odessa re-
With the work done in Paris for the
leathers
of
this
city
at
the
Bankers'
was
intensely
He
vised his advisers.
cently after severe fighting and was
protection of Jewish rights and the mail can be sent. These signatures ton, D. C.; Colonel Harry Cutler,
democratic, loving humanity and be- quoted as saying that he was ready Club, that $2,000,000 had already been furtherance of the interests of the show that the person to whom the re- l'rovidence, R. I.; J. Walter Freiberg,
subscribed
to
the
fund.
Of
this
Harry Friedenwald, Julius Levy, Bal-
friending the unfortunate.
to Join the Allies in a combined at-
other minorities involved in the Peace mittance goes is still aliVe.
"Oscar Hammerstein has become tack on the liolsheviki if the latter mount, $1,041,000 had been contrib-
Felix M. Warburg, chairman of the timore, hid.; Louis Topkis, Wilming-
settlement.
part of the history of this metropolis began an offensive on the Dniester uted up to last Friday by the direc-
When asked for his opinion of the Joint Distribution Committee, issued ton, Del.; Dr. Emil G. Hirsch, Julian
tors and officers of Federated Institu.
a statement today calling attention to W. Mack, Samuel Philipson, Julius
and will be remembered for many a river.
tions and the remainder came from results achieved, Mr. Richards said the fact that this bureau, which is Rosenwald, Albert D. Lasker, Chi-
day. The story of the theatrical and
Cecil B. Harmsworth, British under
that, thanks to enlightened public
practically the only channel of com- cago; Joseph Michaels, Rochester, N.
operatic life of this city—aye, of this secretary for foreign affairs, said in individual donations.
Since the $1,041,000 already receiv- opinion and the determination of the
country—cannot be written without the House of Commons on July 8,
munication between this country and Y.; J. G. Joseph, Rabbi Louis Kopald,
ed represents about one-third of the Allies to stand by the principles en-
an important record of Oscar Ham- that Gen. Gregorieff was stated to he $5,000,000 quota assigned to directors unciated in the course of the war, the many sections of Europe, is open to Buffalo, N. Y.; Louis E. Kirstein, Bos-
everyone who desires to send funds ton; Colonel Isaac M. Ullman, New
merstein. His friends loved him for strongly anti-Jewish in his sympath-
,
of institutions, who are being can- Committee on Jewish Relations
his intrinsic worth; his foes honored ies. The under secretary said many vassed by a committee headed by Ja- which was made up of delegates from to long-lost relatives abroad. Checks Haven, Conn.; Colonel Moses Schoen-
hint for his rugged strength. 1l ay his Jews had lost their lives in the course cob H. Schiff, and since only 500 out different countries, had reason to he should be made out to Arthur Leh- berg, St. Louis; A. C. Wurmster, Kan-
memory be an emulation for the ideal of the operations between the Russian of a possible 1,500 directors had been gratified by the recognition which man, treasurer, and be sent to 98 Sec- sas City, Mo.; Colonel Harris Wein-
in net that rises supreme over the Soviet forces and those of Gen. Greg- asked to contribute, the committee had already been given. and the as ond avenue, together with the full stock, NI ortimer Fleishhacker, San
dross of materialism."
orieff, who was in command of a believe that the total amount willote surances that were held forth with native and last known address of the Francisco; Louis Isaacs, Los Angeles;
Edward N. Calisch, Richmond, Va.;
Prominent Pallbearers.
('kranian anti-Bolshevik army.
attained. This sum, it was said, does regard to the protection and mainten- payee.
Joseph H. Schanfield, Minneapolis;
The honorary pallbearers were I.ee
not include gifts previously announc- ance in their rights of all minorities.
Nat Stone, Milwaukee; Marion Tra-
Naturally, he said. the delegates RABBIS TO ISSUE BOOK
ed of $150,000 from George Blumen-
Shubert Ah r ,t,in E. Erlanger Nf , rk LOUIS MARSHALL JOINS
OF CONSOLATION vis, Tulsa, Okla.; Samuel E. Radii, In- •
thal, President of Mt. Sinai Hos- front America played the dominant
Klaw, David Belasco, George Al. Co-
dianapolis; Felix Fuld, Newark, N. J.;
role
in
the
committee,
and
American
ham Al Woods, William A. Brady, J. IN "MUTINY" ON TOURAINE pital, and $150,000 front Jacob H.
Dr. Boris Borger, Cincinnati.
Jewry has reason to be proud of the
At the request of the Executive
J. shubert, Morris Gest. l'ercy G.
Schiff
which
h
w
A subscription of $80,000 from Na- work done and the manner in
- Committee of the National Federa-
1-lye H. Andrews, and
To Consider New Activities.
New York—Louis Marshall tells
enn
it
was
represented
here
by
such
Henry Rosenberg. Homer E. Will- the following rather adventurous in- than Hofheimer, a leader in the auto-
The purpose of the conference, as
cident
which
occurred
on
the
French
mobile
and
hardware
industry
and
di-
rent
leaders
in
Jewish
affairs
as
judge
lion
of
Temple
Sisterhoods
the
Ex-
iatns was the organist.
officially outlined are to survey condi-
As a tribute to the memory of Oscar Liner Touraine while at Havre on rector of the Home for the Aged and Julian Mack, Louis Marshall, Colonel ecutive Committee of the Central
Infirm. was announced by Colonel Harry Cutler, Dr. Stephen S. Wise, Conference
of American
has tions abroad as they exist at present;
ng Consol
to issue
"A Book i Rabbis
of
Hammerstein, Hugo Riesenfeld, di-
d
12. ship was advertised to sail on Guinzberg. He also reported the do- and others of note.
al to prepare a tentative budget which
c
Bibli
iba-
i
containing
The
, r , " " tontatt
rector of the Rirvoli and the Rialto, July
compre_ ti on and Prayer
Mr. Richard said that the efforts to and Rabbinical reflections of a cheer- will cover if possible the whole future
ordered the flag on the Rialto at half- July 12, but when the passengers nation of $50.000 front Louis Mar-
activities on behalf of the Jews
ry
character.
staff• and at 11 o'clock. the hour of gathered in the dining saloons, Cap- shah', who first learned of the United organize Jews on a broad,
and publication
consolato of this book , which abroad, and to take up plans for rais-
the funeral of Mr. Hammerstein, a fain Bordeaux informed us that the Building Fund Campaign at a dinner pensive basis for this work had been ing ne
members ing further funds.
bugler sounded the call of "Taps" crew h ail struc k j us t a few hours he- given in his honor last Monday night. fully justified. Other problems r -
The aim, it is stated, is so to or-
to be soed,
mail
solved, however. during has been authorized by the
from the roof of the impresario's old
re.
insisting
on
going
to
Paris
on
when
New
York
Jewry
welcomed
mained
h■
of a need
Bastile Day. Captain Bordeaux said hint on his return front France, where the period of reconstruction, he add- of the Conference through
a which ganize the relief work that every ad-
theater.
Ant-
vantage
may be taken of facilitating
outgrowth
he was Chairman of the American ed, and it behooved the Jews of An vote,
the been
long
felt by the women of
has is
sa il until J ul y
Life History.
the
the vessel Would not
uld have to get off Jewish Delegation to the Peace Co"- erica to continue to manifest their
he congregations affiliated with - the these efforts by co-operating with
Oscar Hammerstein, operatic im- 15 and that we woad
interest in and give their support to
onal Federation
empie :s is- relief organizations established by
Federation in 1 Temple
England,
France
or
other
countries.
presario, inventor and theater builder, until then, as he could not give us ference.
the Jews itt Eastern Europe who National
oo s.
te
The commissioners who went
died on Augnst 1 in New York city, accommodations.
had suffered so grievously during the
FORBIDS
Rev. Dr. Leo M. Franklin, of De-
" \Ye knew that the hotels ashore POLICE CHIEF
at the age of seventy-two years, after
troit,
President of the Central Con- abroad for the committee and are
war.
ANTI-JEWISH ATTACKS
a long illness. .5 remarkable figure in were filled to capacity. I addressed
now
hack in this country, will attend
ference of American Rabbis, has ap-
the passengers, both in the ca tin an d
the operatic world, he had i
pointed a committee with instruc- the meeeting. These men and wo-
ANNIVERSARY
OF
DEATH
quarters,
and
learned
that
it
NVarsaw
—"Die
chief
of
police
hay-
men made a first-hand investigation
of the work for a period of ten years. steerage
OF "HADASSAH KAPLAN" tions to present the material for the of conditions throughout eastern Eu-
ors
le whole of P o-
't y over the
but was planning to resume his activ- was the sense of everybody that we in g au th
book to the Autumn meeting of the
hies in February next--his contract slonild stay aboard the Touraine, de- land issued an order to the police
Conference Executives. The action rope, the Balkans and Palestine. It
NEW YORK.—August 3rd marked
with the NI etropolitan Opera Conn- spite Captain Bordeaux' announce- chiefs of every city, town and village,
will assure a speedy compilation of is their direct information that is to
in the new Polish republic, calling the second anniversary of the sad
pang expiring then—when Ile was ment.
the book and the early appearance of furnish the basis for the relief budgets.
'
again attacked by the serious illness 1 "I communicated this sentiment to t o their attention to the decision of the death of Rose Kaplan, one of the
Among these commissioners are Jacob
the volume.
he had been suffering from for years., Captain Bordeaux. In spite of the Polish Government not to permit any first nurses sent from this country
Billikopf, of Kansas City; Bernard
to establish a system of district nurs-
His greatest service to this country fact that there were in the steerage further attacks upon Jews.
Horvvich, of Chicago, and Isidore
The order issued by the chief of ing in Jerusalem. She was sent un-
The officers of the Central Confer-
his introduction to the music- I many women and children who did
was . world of New York of what not hare the means to subsist ashore, police calls for the instruction ce of all der the auspices of "Iladassah," ence of American Rabbis have been Hershfield, of New "fork.
loving
Reposes Confirmed.
though lodgings were found, police officers to notify police and which has for its watchword: "Heal- notified by the executors of the will
might he called intimate music-drama, even
ch school Captain Bordeaux insisted that we military headquarters as soon as any ing to the Daughter of My People." of the late Isidor Cohen, of Sacra-
The reports of critical conditions
French
le tnnmern I,
that of
Rose Kaplan, or "Hadassah Kap- mento, Cal., that according to his brought back by these representatives
which had been greatly neglected by leave the ship. Otherwise, he said. disturbance either by Polish soldiers
the older companies, and the vogue we would be ejected. He threatened or by civilians, having the nature of lan," as she was called in Jerusalem, will the sum of $250 has been be- are confirmed in a recent statement
anti-Jewish demonstrations. begin. was untiring in her service to the queathed to the Conference. This
he established must be continued. the use of force. lie defied hint.
given out by the American Red Cross.
"Ile went ashore and returned with The police are also instructed that men, women and children ailing in is the first time that the value of the
This statement was contained in a
His like does not exist today. The
unique and important place he filled twenty uniformed gendarmes. With they are to use all means to suppress body and downcast in spirit. Through Conference to the community at large dispatch from Frank NV. America, one
attacks
upon
Jews
and
that
they
will
her
efforts.
backed
by
the
splendid
has
been
thus
recognized
by
a
lay-
in the musical world cannot he filled the aid of sixty-seven army officers
of the orgrization's agents in War-
we beat them off. Bleeding noses and he held personally responsible for women of "Hadassah," clinics for wo- man, and will probably direct the at-
by any man at the present age.
skinned knuckles were the only cas- carrying out this order.
men and children were established tention of others to the beneficent saw.
"The American Red Cross Party,"
Greatest Impresario.
'taffies. The gendarmes did not re-
in the Holy Land. The battle against work which is being dime by this
writes Mr. America, "visited scores
Traconta, that widespread affliction body.
Oscar Hammerstein was one of the mil. They had had enough."
RABBI CHARLES J. FREUND
of cities. towns and villages, from big
of the eyes. was valiantly fought by
most remarkable figures in musical
FROM TEMPLE
towns like Brest-Litovsk and Bielos-
her and her associates. Weak and
and theatrical life in this city for
tok to the smaller villages like Ka-
RAPIDS
JUDGE
BRANDEIS
ENDS
APPOINTED
COUNSEL
EMANUEL,
GRAND
were JEW
children
many years, his chief claim to fame ,
under-nourished
mien-Kaszyrski, where there was not
—
PALESTINE JOURNEY
Grand Rapids,
Mich.—Rabbi Chas. brought back to health through this
OF U. S. SHIPPING BOARD j a single doctor for 3,000,000 inhabit-
being hiss s venture in grand opera in
_
J. Freund who has been rabbi of service. Pre-natal and post-natal care
Manhattan Opera House in West .
-
and not a house where at least
I
,
file reports each
as introduced.
Thirty-fourth
Thirty-fourth street, where for a per-
New York.—Justice Louis D. Bran- T
Hyman, law- one was not down with typhus, tu-
le Emanuel of this city for the year glow with the m any invaluable
PORN.—Mark
NEW ORK.—Mark
of four years he presented opera
deis, United States supreme court. past three years, has tendered his services rendered by this splendid wo- yer, anti-trust prosecutor and assns- berculosis or smallpox.
with outstanding casts, produced op-
Hughes in the air
has completed a tour of Palestine and resignation to the congregation.
Everywhere.
Famine and Di
eras which were practically unknown now is en route to Paris, according Rabbi Frond came to Grand Rapids. man, truly bringing "healing to the cant to Charles E.
craft investigation, has been appoint-I
Metropolitan
here in opposition to the
—nue people were subsisting on a
here
by
the
Zionist
from
Harrisburg,
Pa.
Previous
to
daughter
of
my
people."
to news received
ed general counsel for the United
Company, and attained a reputation
an awful black sub-
organization of America. The Jew- that time he served in the ul it f
TO BAR States Shipping Board. Mr. Hyman sort of bread.
as an impresario which will long be ish colonies were reported in a "flour- con
o RABBI
p d i) s alt
made of bark from oak trees,
!
gregations
in To I e d o an
•
in
remembered by the music-lovers of ishing condition." Lake Cit Rabbi Freund stated 1 that succeeds Sherman L. Whipple, of tits- . stance, chaff and heather, but contain-
CLEVELAND.—Rabbi Liebowitz, ton, who resigned to return to private acorns,
y.
New York. His operatic career ended
ing no particle of flour. In some vil-
The American jurist, who is bon- Ile intended to devote himself to oth-
practice.
in 1910, when he sold out all his in-
i head of the Congregation B'nai Ja-
lages this so-called bread was made a
orary head of the Zionist movement er fields of endeavor.
cob, has been admitted to the Ohio
terests to the Metropolitan Company in this country, accompanied by
little more palatable with potato peel-
hi Li b ow
itz , who is 45
PISGAH LODGE NOTICE.
bar. Rabbi
for something over a million dollars. Jacob De Ilaas, executive secretary,
ings.
PERSHING CITES RABBI
years old. came to America in 1906.
with an agreement not to engage in and Professor Alfred Zimmern, of
"We passed from village to village
opera for a period of ten years. This the University of Wales, a former
The next regular meeting of Pisgah and everywhere found famine and dis-
Grand
time would have been up in February
Rabbi
Appointed
ma-
St.
Louis.—Captain
Elkan
C.
Voor-
r-
ease.
Many villages were absolutely
Lodge,
No.
34,
Independent
Order
of
he was planning another sea British foreign undersecretary,
ne xt and
ed Jaffa. Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and sanger, formerly Rabbi in this city,
Chaplain of N. Y. Masons B'naI Brith will take place at the uninhabited. There was not a living
more than 20 Jewish colonies in Ju- who is now chief of all Jewish Wel-
so n to begin then in this city.
thing
in them except the inevitable
New York—Rabbi Elias Margolis, lodge rooms, 25 Broadway, on Monday
fare Board activities in Paris, has
carrion crow, and we wondered why
dea, Galilee and Samaria.
Came Here in 1665.
evening,
August
11th
at
7:30
p.
m.
of
Temple
Emanuel.
Mt.
Vernon,
N.
It was as if a
he hovered there.
Arrival of the visitors. it was said, been cited in a proclamation by Gen-
Born in Berlin in 1847, Oscar Ham-
The DetrInt Jesish Chronicle is the offirjal
Y., has been appointed grand chap-
merstein came to this country in 1865, was the signal for a public holiday eral Pershing for exceptional meri-
blight had passed over these places.
laesl area. of Pisgah Lodge.
lain of Masons of New York state.
torious services.
I in most of the cities and towns.
(Continued oil Page 4.)
Even before the death of the late
!Grand Rabbit, NI. Alfred Levi, which
'occurred last week, the Central Con-
eell,e,ettee,11
grrec
Care
J. D. C. TRANSMISSION
BUREAU SENDS BIG
SUM TO RELATIVES
RUSSIAN GENERAL WHO
MASSACRED JEWS IN
ODESSA IS KILLED
PRAISES WORK DONE
N. Y. BUILDING FUND
IN PARIS .FOR JEWS
REACHES $2,000,000
ADMITTED