PACE TWO 11-1E DETROIT JEWISH CHItONICLI. A NEW YEAR'S MESSAGE. Iffinimillilinimeminimmilinusimmilisomminimillinit BY DR. K. KOHLER, ILEil il l1111111111111111f1MLITIE11111111 Cincinnati, OhioJ THE KNICKERBOCKER SHOP Judaism is a religion of optimism, of hope. This is voiced in our reck- oning of the days and years, and especially in our New Year's celebra- tion. 5-•1: — As we begin the day with the even- = ing and end it with the setting sun of the following day, so do we celebrate =a' the New Year, not in midwinter when Realization:— That the wonderful values we have given you in the past have not been forgotten. withering vegetation tell that out of decay and desolation the new life is to sprout forth, since all cosmic exit, I tence is a constant regeneration. 1 So when God appeared to Moses in the thornbush which burned but was not consumed—the pielure of Israel's destiny—Ile reveals Himself not in the attributes of power and wisdom, of justice and goodness, but in the mysterious words: "F.hyek Asher Ellyeh" (I shall he wherever I amto lie—ever ready to help). Those words are interpreted by the Rabbis: "I shall be with you in the imminent trial (in Egypt) and I shall be with you in any coming trial." The James Roach Co. . Thus Israel at the very start was told of the successive trials he was to undergo in all the lands and ages, and at the same time assured of God's continual protection and help. inSPeCtiOn. Of our New Fall Garments, now on display, styled to the taste of the most critical, will reveal to you the season's finest selections. Argumentation: Lower Prices, because of Sample Gar- ments— DR. KAUFMAN KOHLER the fall of frost and snow covers the earth, nor in spring when the seeds of the soil have left their prison house to take part in nature's resurrection, but when the falling leaf and the Eighth floor rent— Small Overhead Expense— DECORATORS At no. time dill we need this divine assufance•as much as in these days of sad disappointment and woeful per- plexity. What a fall from the top- most heights of hopeful human civi- lization to the abyss of misery and barbarism And above all, what ter- rible change in the lot of the Jew Do we not believe the millennium to be near, and Judaism and Jews every-1 where to be recognized as the equal to all creeds and all fellow-citizens? And today we have been plunged into the darkest middle ages with all their fanaticism and brutality. Hence so many have lapsed into despair. aban- doning all faith and turning Judaism into a godless secularism. Therefore the message of the New Year should be: "1 shall ever be there to redeem and to help." God reigns forever in the Heavens, and all will be well on earth for the Jew and for humanity if we only keep firm in our faith and our hope. D. K. K0111.4,12. • 25 Canfield West Glendale 5240 TWO JEWISH MARTYRS. CONSISTING OF By DR. STEPHEN S. WISE Coats, Suits, Dresses,Waists T HE days of martyrdom in Israel are not ended, On July 5, 1920, I rofessor Israel Friedlander of the Jewish Theological Seminary and Rabbi Bernard Cantor of the Free S •nagogue. New York, were together with an old man of seventy-five, slain b • Bolsevist soldiers in Ukrainian ti 00 of Yarmolinc, which the latter II id just entered. l'rofessor Friedlander was one of tl e outstanding scholars of Jewish li e, the historian of Polish Jewry. Rabbi Cantor was less than thirty, one of the younger associates in the rabbinate of the Free Synagogue. [ "Individual designs only" THE KNICKERBOCKER SHOP grave. Ile was to return to Lemberg to claim a fair bride he had W011, and to bring her home, Like a thief in the night came tire Bolshevist soldiers I and slew Professor Friedlander, gen- tleman and scholar, Rabbi Cantor, generous and high-hearted, and their aged comrade. The chauffeur alone) survived to tell that Rabbi Cantor jumped from the motor car smiling' and facing the soldiers without fear and shadow of flinching. He had said a day or two earlier while ill: "1 would not want to die in bed now, but I would like to die in such a way as would help the cause 1 serve." —AT 1 c "Let's Dine at the Lotus" 213 Woodward Avenue 84 Traugott-Schmidt Bldg. 1 111111111111111 111U11111111111111111!II!111111!1!IIIII!;!III!IIIIIIII!IUIIIII!1!II!III!III!!II!IIII!111111!IIIIIIIIIIIII!II!IIIIII!1!II!1!1!III IIIUII =0 . Such a suggestion will be greeted with enthusiasm. 0 0 Unsurpassed ! It's an ideal spot for tired shoppers to wile away a restful hour. 0 It may be anything from "running in for lunch" to a formal dinner. Juicy broiled steaks and chops — deliciouis mushrooms and chow mein, toothsome pastries and preserves have made the Lotus popular. Let it be helpful in the entertainment of your out-of-town friends. Pastora La Resta Count Royal j 'ai deffictg every afternoon and evening 0 Cigars PROF. ISRAEL FRIEDLANDER DR. BERNARD CANTOR Both men had gone to East Euro- A nut he added: "But men cann/ pean Jewry to serve with the Over- iot kill le, for I love them and seas Unit of the Joint Distribution eel it." So he met th mey must Committee, the American agency of im, smiling into the) m who slew O relief to the Jaws of war-wracked hot him dead, star faces as they Europe. , (ling defenceless efore them. Professor Friedlander, leaving wife and six little ones behind him, had Profesor rendered important Service in connec- 'antor weer' rirdlander and Rabbi tion with the wide-ranging in activi- Vhat rabbis and teachers. lies of the Unit in the old Poland, the 1'haj •-; ey taught they wrought. Ukraine and Galicia. Rabbi Cantor their Iv, rilmtnemird their had by his singular charm of matinv,,, "cc, obeyed and Verily the O and the grace of his spirit won/,r stricken and of Eastern hearts of all with whom he r the Europe, air t ,•ery army, O ' to contact. He was on hit• ,,,me in- scourged hi inment, may ney. He had made a 1,1e , ;,,11 last jour- cry: ilous I! • ! !!I. how long? to visit otter again .our in order And the •! d t hnstendont the town of Pros' , tie suffering of puts astute thi Christless- ham, so hardly.' :throw which had ness, until the world heeds the com- soldiery,—one ,t the hands of the mand of him, ffic c Id, r brother in the Jews slain, „ thousand and more spirit of Jesus, who emu:minded "And Icing in one common no man shall slay his hrutherl" U San Telmo Cigars Mfg. Co. A NEW YEAR'S THOUGHT. Melrose 1920 BY RABBI TOBIAS SCHANFARBER Wuhington Boulevard at Grand River American- ' Chinese . Lotus Cafe T Cuisine George Y. Hill Manager Jewish Students---- Attention!! Chicago, III. DETROIT, MICH. 0 =04)=Ipi===01=0 201=01==0:)=00 • netg tau How beautiful upon the moun- eill us are the feet of Him that bring- .1 I good tid,ngs that announceth , •I ace." (Nahum 11. I.) It must have been with some ch thought as this of the Prophet ahum's that you have called upon , iur contributors fur a few ward, of couragement in these unsettled nes. •Th, world is sick and tired of the irk things that it has been hearing Id the inhuman filings it has been •eing It is eager to hear of world care and world harmony. It is not lily eager to hear of them, but it is esirous of seeing them fully realized the actions of men and in the ten- encies of governments. And yet it far from easy to write in an opti- Aistic vein in the face of the con- :sued beligerency of the world. You re right in speaking of the times as 'unsettled." They are worse than hat. They are topsy turvy. We are ustified in speaking of the present •onditions in the language of Levi urn Sissi of Talmudic days who said. •I see a world turned upside down." \oone knows what is going to hap- pen next. There is not a single de- partment of human life and endeavor .n which this restlessness and dis- satisfaction does not obtain. Verily the "times are out of joint" and well might we exclaim with Hamlet, "0 cursed spite that I was ever born to set it right." NVe all had hoped with the cessa- tion of the world war a new era would dawn for humanity but the era has not vet dawned. New wars have come to plague us and the end is far from in sight. The industrial world is in the worst plight that it has ever been. The spirit of bolshevism is spreading like a wild fire. This Bolshevistic , spirit is invading the home of rtlig. I ion. The beautiful spirit manifested by all religions toward one another during the great world conflagration has been all but dissipated. Racial antipathies, religious prejudices, na- tional jealousies are rampant. Anti- Semitism is On th e incoase. Judo- phobia is beginning show itself vven in this countr • su • 2 we thought such a thing impossible. And yet looking these ronduion, squarely in the face we dare not bps, , ollr hope. A pessimistic attitude 1.,11 gel us no- whither. It will only make things worse. We must have faith in the ultimate triumph of illy good and the true. We must lase faith in the san- ity and the rationality of the uni- verse. 1Ve must believe that God rules and that Ile. in Ills own time and in His own way,in w. .ring about the better day and the better time. It is always the darkest hour that is the hour before the dawn. The period through which we are now pass.ng may simply indicate the growing pains of ;he bitter civiliza- tion that is about to come It was common belief with the rabbis of old that tremendous portents in heaven and earth would precrilt. the conung of the millen4I dawn. Surely we have had such tremendous portents. Perhaps they presage the tow era for humanity. The better day must come. The world would amt he worth preserving If the prevent disastrous conditions were to continue. Out of the hellfire through which use have been pasing. humanity will come forth cleansed and purified. In look- ing forward to the future, let us turn with our faces toward the Easy After the night the morning is sure to come May the New Year he the harbing, r of these good tidings. May it at nounce peace In all the world. TOBIAS SCHANFARBER . Rabbi Kehilath Anshr Mayriv. Chicago, III We Want 100 Young Men and Women of Detroit and Other Michigan Cities At Once ERE is a wonderful opportunity for young men and young women to earn their tuition and "pin" money while attending school or college in the State of Michigan. The CHRONICLE has positionse awaiting one hundred students in Detroit and other cities in the State of Michigan, to solicit subscriptions. We are planning a thor- ough canvass of the entire State. If you are ambitious, en- ergetic and resourceful, here is your opportunity. T NY ma nor woman, upo nfurnishinig satisfactory references, can obtain complete charge of our sub- scription campaigns in the following cities: Battle Creek, Grand Rapids, Jackson, Kalamazoo, Lansing, Flint, Bay City, Saginaw, Pontiac and Port Huron. Don't delay. Answer at once. Write or call Mr. L. A. Werbe, Circula- tion Manager. The Detroit Jewish Chronicle Detroit, Michigan