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BILIAIK01

PAGE FOUR

;A 1SHMKOMMil

Baptist," was not the full measure of the Jewish congregation's gener-
osity. A second congregation desirous of obtaining the property made
a proposition to pay $85,000 for it, an advance of $10,000 over the
sum offered by the negro congregation. Although the option given to
Our
t;
MICIIIGAN'S JEWISH HOME PUBLICATION
the last named congregation had expired, Congregation Anshe Mayriv
Published Weekly by The Jewish Chronicle Publishing Co., Inc.
Cont•npurarics
of its own accord extended the option at a clear loss to itself of $10,000.
Joseph J. Cummins, President.
This action is indeed worthy of appreciation but to us it occasions
Fettered as second-class matter March 3, 1916, at the Postoffice at Detroit, no great surprise. We cannot understand a Jewish congregation true
Mich., under the Act of March 3, 1879.
to its inherited ideals, taking any other attitude than that which was "THE JEW AND THE
taken. It is interesting, however, that the action should be subject DEARBORN INDEPENDENT"
General Offices and Publication Building
matter for appreciative comment at the hands of a Christian contem- )''rani Senator James K. ‘'arsbinuas
850 High Street West
porary. Perhaps it may be explained by the fact that the Jew has so Weekly, l'uknalled In Jackson, Miss.
Cable
Address:
Telephones:
often and especially in recent times, been painted as a money grabber A friend was kind enough to send
Chronicle not only without idealism but even without honor. To charges such as rite a copy of the Dearborn Inde-
Glendale 8326
pendent, Mr. Henry Ford's paper,
LONDON OFFICE
this, the life of the Jew ought always be a sufficient answer.

*DEMON EIVISII

ics'Aua.aunciar=i_
eri
I tr

Intl!

which contains an installment of
Ford's foolish tirade against the Jew.
I read the criticism of the Jew with
$3.00
Per
Teal
interest. While the article was full of
Subscription, In Advance
falsehoods,
it was well written and
The Chicago Rabbinical Association at its meeting held on Feb
To Insure publication, all correspondence and news matter must reach this 7th, stirred to action by conditions which have been repeatedly reporter' bowed a degree of information not
possessed by Henry Ford. Ford has
office by Tuesday evening of each week.
in this column, unanimously adopted the following resolutions in regard' no information. The suggestion that
Editorial ContrIbutm to the issuance of permits for fermented wine for sacramental purposes the Jew wants to control America and
RABBI LEO M. FRANKLIN
"Whereas, it is a well established fact that according to the Jewisl 'make this country a New Jerusalem";
The Jewish Chronicle Invites correspondence on subjects of interest to the ritual law, unfermented
is so ridiculous that a man of sense
wine may be used on all occasions for "sacra
would not have permitted such a,
Jewish people, but disclaims responsibility for an Indorsement of the view
mental
purposes.,"
and
thing to be published in his paper.
expressed by the writers.
Whereas, in the spirit of the laws of our country, the Central My judgment is that these articles are
by some little, sharp rather
Adar 24, 5681 Conference of American Rabbis has recommended the use of under written
March 4, 1921.
well informed "apostate Jew," who is
mented wine for all religious purposes.
working solely for Henry Ford's
Therefore, Be It Resolved, that we, the members of the Chicago money—a shameful prostitution of
Rabbinical Association, refuse to sign any and all requests for the use money raised by the sale of a Tin
Lizzie.
The announcement that Dr. Kaufman Kohler, l'resident of the of fermented wine for "sacramental purposes."
It is funny to see to what extremes
These resolutions are timely and to the point. We believe Ilia' certain
Hebrew Union College, has definitely decided to retire from his high
stupid, ignorant men will go
office at the end of the present school semester, will arouse mingled similar resolutions should be adopted by all rabbinical groups in tin for notoriety. One would naturally
country
and
that
in
their
spirit,
every
rabbi
should
act.
Concerted
action
suppose that a man capable cif con-
feelings of gladness and sadness in the hearts of his pupils, his col-
structing a Ford car would rather
leagues, and his friends. We shall be glad that his withdrawal from in this matter on the part of midi's, Orthodox and Reform, would gd - ' avoid the sensational and the nolo! ,
far
to
preventing
a
scandal
which
is
almost
inevitable
unless
decisive
active service at the head of the College will give Dr. Kohler that merited
ions. !tut Mr. Eond seems to be a
leisure necessary to the pursuit of his literary labors, for Dr. Kohler action is quickly taken to prevent it. And the only one sure way tc sort of grotesque fool who when ne
prevent
it,
is
for
the
rabbis
not
to
avail
themselves
of
the
privilege
give'
discards his overalls and gets out of
stands out beyond question among the foremost living Jewish scholars
his factory leaves all sense behind.
of our time. He is by nature the student. His published works and them by the government to sign permits for the purchase of wine for . Ile knows nothing of the racial his-
so-called sacramental purposes.
especially his great book on "Jewish Theology" attest this fact beyond
tory of the Jew; in fact 11 r. Ford does
not know anything, about the history
the peradventure of doubt. Relieved from the routine duties of the
of his own country or any other
presidency, we may well expect that Dr. Kohler will further enrich our
country. He is as ignorant as the av-
Jewish literature with contributions from his pen. God grant him many
erage Nlississippi cornfield negro, and
years of useful activity!
I doubt if he knows train reading
whether the Nazarene was crucified '
And yet rejoicing as we do in the fine opportunity for a sort of
or killed by Colonel Lamar Fontaine
service highly congenial to a scholar of his type, we cannot but feel a
in the Battle of the 1Vilderness. It is
deep sense of regret that advancing age makes it necessary for Dr.
he case of a good mechanic chang-
MUSIC OF ORIENT
Kohler to retire from the active management of the affairs of the
loc. from a useful man to a pernicious,
college. Upon the death of the beloved founder of the college—Isaac
TO FEATURE PLAY Si osational fraud. The truth is there'
is no better man or woman beneath
- --
M. Wise—there were many of us who had sat at the feet of this master
die stars than will be found among
who felt that his place as teacher and administrator could never be The Moral Duty the Tuberculosis Cantor A. Minkowsky Preparing New the Jews. They are kind fathers, de-
Compositions for Play of United
Patient Owes to His Neighbor.
adequately filled by another. It is no idle tribute, therefore, to Dr.
voted mothers and friends, whose loy-
Hebrew
Schools.
Wra
,sacelsily
Oci ton Jewish
alty knows no variableness or shadow
Kaufman Kohler to say that during the years of his occupancy of the , hrontric
hy Ihr Mannonkl•s Medical
of turning. Really they arc the chosen
exalted office of the presidency of the college, he has won the whole- SocicOk
For the first time in the history of
The greatest danger to the com- Detroit, Were will be presented a people of God,
hearted respect and love not only of his pupils who have been privileged
to come into intimate contact with him day by day, but as well of the munity are those suffering with pul- Biblical play in the original Hebrew. A DEVICE OF CORRUPTION.
monary tuberculosis, more popularly
older Alumni of the college who have found in him a true friend and known as consumption in the lungs. on Sunday evening, March 27, at
1N1-1t York American)
Orchestra Hall. 'clue play, "Saul and
an exalted leader.
The sputum, or any of the excretions David," is to he given under the ass
John Spargo, speaking the other
The question of a successor to Dr. Kohler naturally now presses of the body, contain the germs which pees of the United Hebrew School night in Boston 011 the anti-Jewish
Detroit, of which B. Isaacs Is st• campaign, said one thing which is
to the front. And those charged with the high responsibility of filling cause the disease. When a person
suffering with pulmonary tuberculosis
and worth repeating:
the place will be called upon to use the utmost wisdom and courage in expectorates, say on the sidewalk, that p rintendint, and the cast is to lit true
"Everywhere throughout the cen-
nade up of the pupils of the variour
making their choice. The Hebrew Union College is the heart of Judaism person is consciously or unconscious- Hebrew schools in the city.
turies anti-Semitism, when it has ap-
in America and the man chosen to stand at its head must be one equipped ly, according to the degree of his ig-
peared, has been closely interwined
with every other corrupt reactionary
with ripe scholarship, with excellent executive ability, and with the gift norance, the cause of disseminating
the disease among the people in which
and brutalizing force."
of a rich personality. Ile must understand the psychology of leadership. he moves, and when guilty of such
Wliereever you find Jew-baiting you
Ile most know what thoughts are stirring the thinkers among the people dissemination, he can even be stig-
will find sonic powerful minority en-
who sit in our pews and what sort of men arc needed to inspire and to matized as a murderer.
joying unjust privileges which the
\Viten the sputum dries. and is
mass of the people are beginning to
instruct these people and what sort of training must be given them to
ground into dust, every gust of wind
question and challenge, and for which
fit them adequately for their task.
carries the very fine particles which
the privileged class is beginning to
He must be a man who shall know men as well as books. He are laden with germs far from being
entertain serious fears,
must be one at home in Jewish literature and lore but at the same time, dead, into the air, to he breathed into
Almost always at such a juncture,
when it is possible, this privileged,
he must be a man deeply touched by the American spirit. Ile must the lungs of unsuspecting individuals.
These germs soon find one person
class
raises a line and cry against the;
remember that he shall stand at the head of an institution that is to where the soil is rich for their growth
Jews.
train religious leaders for American Jews and that niece book knowledge and development. If the person is in
In the middle ages the exactions of
excellent physical trim, that is to say,
willnot suffice to prepare them for this very responsible duty.
the kings and barons were blamed on I
the Jewish money. lenders. In modern
There are not many men who can measure lip to these requirements. that his resistance is above par, then
natural protective forces of the
time, a corrupt and treasonable
But it would be a confession of great poverty to say that there arc none. the
body will promptly destroy and throw
French military cabal brought inset);
Indeed, we believe that there are such men to be found esen among off these germs, without the person
the most hideous charge that can lie
the graduates of the Hebrew, Union College. Frankly, we fed that die being conscious that anything has
made against a soldier against the
011 the contrary, the per-
Jew, Captain Dreyfus. 111 Russia a
man to be placed at the head of the College should be one who as student. Happened.
:o n that collates these dried germs
weak Czar and his drunken grand
has passed through its halls and whose love for the iiwittilion as w ell as 'lay
have in some way undermined
!dukes, the corruption of whose goy-
for the larger cause of Israel may not be doubted.
It's health, and there are a thousand
, eminent kept the Russian people in'
Whoever the man shall be whom those charged with the selection ;Iasi. in which this is being done every
I ignorance, poverty and misery, had
shall decide upon, he may be sure of the whole-hearted loyalty and co- dav, and his ill health may in some
; to have Jews to blame to divert from
wav
be
associated
with
an
hereditary
themselves the wrath of an ignorant
operation of the Alumni body of the Hebrew Union College, To make tendency to the disease. and he read-
Population.
less than this pledge would be to stamp the graduates of the college as ily succumbs to the tuberculosis that
7o-day Polish landlords arc trying
unappreciative of the inspiration that has been laid upon them by Isaac he would otherwise have escaped. In
to preserve an economic system which
CANTOR A. MINKOWSKY.
M. Wise and by Kaufman Kohler. With such co-operation, the Presi- this latter case then we have supplied
has been destroyed by the people of
really two essentials for the pro-
The outstanding feature of this Ile other countries on all sides of them.
dent to be chosen will be able to continue the splendid traditions of his the
duet,/11 of the disease, namely, the brew play will be the Oriental He They foment war between the Polish
honored predecessors and to carry the college to ever-growing heights nersou who is proper soil, and the brew
music that has neer prepare(' manses and the Jews. This account,
of usefulness. With the, college in a position to attain its maximum vied,' germ to grow thereon.
Inc the occasion. The music prepare( largely for the war against Russia.
lu time with both of these factors for this play is very much unlike 111C
of efficiency, it is fair to say that a generation of spiritual leaders will
That these Jewish outbreaks are not
go forth from its halls who shall leave upon the lives and the hearts eliminated, tuberculosis should he- late Jewish music that has borrowe• spontaneous or natural, arc not based
come a rare or even extinct disease, so inoch of the modern composition upon real grievances, is proved by
of their people, a growing influence for good.
and we are giving to posterity man- and has by (irtne of that necome He- the fact that wherever there is no
kind's greatest Messing. when we of brew only by outward technique ant. reactionary privileged class there is
today start to develop a virile. healthy coloring.
net Jew baiting.
roce of people on the tine hand. and
Russia under the Czar was shame-
Cantor .\ .11inko•sky, of (hi
snuff, and eradicate the organism( ihaarey Zed, k congregation, is de Ics, in its Jewish progroms. But Jew-
Stop the cry of martyrdom! This is a word which with all earnest- of d-s,,,se on the other hand. This
-citing a great deal of time at presen ish programs ceased entirely as soon
ness and with the deepest sincerity, we would speak to our colleagues the whole problem. the whole scheme n filling the needs of the Helier,. as an end was made of the Czar and
f nave tncdirine , wherein lies ;onnounity for a purely Ilelirev the system of the landowners who
in the pulpit and to our writers in the press. Although the Jew has o the
axiom I lint am, 011111:11 of prevention music, which will for the first time b squeezed out of the peasants the
suffered many times beyond the measure of endurance, it would seem. is worth a pound of cure.
-ling during tl.e Hebrew play ot money needed to support the ruling
and although in every land and in all centuries, he has been the victim
\larch 27. Cantor Nlinkowsey na autocracy and aristonacy in idleness
of oppression and of persecution . , be is not in any true sense the martyr JEWISH HOME INMATES
'liken the religious aspect as his back; or waste.
that most persons writing about him would picture him to be.
ARE WEDDING GUESTS mould, and based his melodies or The Jews are not the only victims
various religious customs and core of those N•ho raise fake cries against
Martyrdom, even though it carry with it heroic suffering in a noble
others in other to divert attention
cause, implies failure, and the Jew has not been a failure at any period Couple That Never Had a Qum, monies.
Cantor Nlinkowsky, at one tie( from themselves. The practice is as
ref Celebrate Anniversary 2
of history. A people that has left its mark upon civilization as has the
old
as the Bible, Early Christians
president of the Cantors' Associatioi
Months After Arriving
Jew—a fact that is conceded and held against us even by our enemies—
of America, caw to this country im suffered from it even more than the
Jews.
The privileged classes sought
Here.
is not a failure. A people whose laws arc basic to every code by which
' 1914. He was graduated from the Inc
perial Conservatory of Music in Mos to keep the people absorbed in strifes,
civilized man is guided, is not a failure. A people whose sacred books
internal
or external, so that they
NEW 1 t
o• mil, after cow, where lie was a prize student
are the inspiration of the churches of all denominations, whose psalms their arrival in America, Me
and Mrs. ; statolying under the direction of Chia should not have time to think of
are sung in every tongue, and the words of whose prophets are text Hirsch N. Shapiro. who I, e with their kowsky, Arensky and Safonoff.
their own economic condition.
words for the preacher of every faith, is not a failure. A people that son Sam at 718 East 175th street, the
In the music Cantor Minkowsk•
has been the spiritual teacher of mankind and that has led uncounted Bronx, celebrated their golden wed- •composed for die Hebrew play, ti ROTHSCHILDS TO REBUILD
anniversary last week. They en laid emphasis on the nines of tin POLISH LOCOMOTIVE SHOPS
multitudes to the scalers of righteousness is not a failure. A people ding
tertained at dinner 100 inmates of the
whose sons and daughters have made the best possible use of every Home of the Sons and Daughters of bugle on the Hebrew New \'car, a ,
as the variations of toe flehrev
LONDON—The Rothschilds of
opportunity, however limited, that has been given them for intellectual Israel and a few score of friends, and well
tool when it goes out in deep lone
Germany, have informed'
achievement and for moral accomplishment, is not a failure. A people, they were married again. according to Pies and supplications over the tragc Frankfort.
he
Polish government that they are
custom. The dinner was hi-1,1 dies of the past. and the hilarity ane
in short, that in the face of unequalled opportunity, has gone from Jewish
in the institution, 232 East Tenth the enthusiasm for the hopes of the irepared to rebuild their locomotive
strength to strength and despite slander and malignment has won the street.
shops in Poland, according to a War-
future. these embodied in the trail;
aw dispatch to the London Tim,
respect and the esteem of the thinking men of every time and every
Th,. SllapitOS. (MCC is, ;dilly resi- tional interpretation of the "ilalletu
last prior to the war the Rothschild ,
dents of Brody, Austria, were brought jab:'
nation, is not a failure.
'-ad completed the largest railway en -
to
New
York
hp
their
son
after
they
This cry of martyrdom about the Jew therefore, is ill tinted and
Addition al features of the play wit' :Me shop in Poland, right outside of
had lost all their possessions in anti-
unseemly. Let the Jew regard himself as he is. a triiiiiiphant and in a Seni'lic uprisings. They' reviewed he the sceneries, costumes and pas \Varsaw. During 1915 the Russian
Loral
amusements that are aimed 0 irtnies completely destroyed it, The
spiritual sense, a conquering people. Our O•11 SOnS and daughters arc these experiences at the ditto( r and
take the audience back to primitive
tired, as vvell.tli•y may l e, of hearing themselves described! as martyrs dspite their 'seventy pars each par times. More than 150 children will Rol lisehilds now offer to rebuild it
scut to hand over to the Polish gov-
to a great cause. They do not like to fink themselves with a cause that tieipated in the (1:1111.(1 that followed.
participate in the play.
rnm rat after 15 years if they will be
Never in their tifiy years of mar-
The coaching of the play is directed iiirmi led to build and repair locomo-
has failed and is failing. If we understand psychological processes at ried
life had the Shapiro., had a quar- nc
. se manager of the
all, we will see that our cause mill be heightened and strengthened when rel, they said. fluoughout his ca-
w i ut- ivies and other railroad materials for
Theater, M. Honigman. By roar. the Russian government.
we cease to key the story of the Jew to the minor scale as though it reer as a banker and distiller. Mr Sha- dish
tesy of the Recreation Commission o'
were always a dirge or lamentation. Chi the contrary. let us sing it piro relied entirely on his wife's ad- the city of Detroit. Miss Lillian Levin
and was always misuccessful when director of recreation of the Jewist
forth as a song of victory and high achievement. Again then we say, vice
he fatied 10 do so. They liked Amer• Institute. Hight street east, has rem
"Stop the cry of martyrdom!"
tea, and were only sorry they had not tiered all her services to the perfec
immigrated sooner.
lion of the various fancy dances em
Attending the "siniclia" were Judge bodied in the operetta.
.1aron J. Lev v. .1111erman Louis Zeli-
V
nee. Rabbis St. Z. Margolies, David
The current sunder of "The Baptist." a Chicago weekly publication , Frankel and Abraham Gerlanter, who 50,000 JEWS FACE
-
officiated
at
the
wedding
ceremony
devoted as its name implies, to the interests of the Baptist Church.
VIENNA EXPULSIOr
publishes in its current issue, a splendid appreciation of the action of and many others.
The celebration was given at the
the Congregation Anshe Mayriv of Chicago, of which Rabbi Tobias son's
PARIS.—It was learned that there
expense. Besides he gave his
Schanfarber is the minister. It seems that when this congregation parents a check fnr $2.000 and donat- are 50.000 Jews in 1'ictina who are
decided to dispose of its magnificent place of worship at the corner (id $250 to the Daughters of Israe' officially registered as aliens and are
with expulsion. The ex-
of Indiana Avenue and 33rd Street, a business house offered to pay, ;low, and $1 4 0 In the Home of the threatened
pulsion. if effected, would resemble
for the property the sum of $75.000 in cash, giving to the congregation r)aughters of Jacob.
the historic expulsion of the Jews
from Spain. The matter of these ex-
the ridgh t to use for its own purposes, its pew's, carpets, organ, etc., IEWS GIVF MIT.1 IAN
pulsions is now before the meeting
value conservatively at about $25,000.
TO PLEBISCITE FUND of the Council of the League of Na
In the meantime, a negro congregation hearing that the property
lions, and Austria's contentions are
Vl'ARS1W—The Polisk pf shi ssit• defended by the local representative
was for sale, offered the same in cash and the Jewish congregation
accepted this offer but gave gratis to the negro congregation all the ^ ommission for Unner-Silesia enl Eichcff, and the Austrian Minister
"'"" LEADING
members of the lewist• Tarnocsy, the author of the expulsion
equipment which, had the property gone for business purposes, would ' , fed from Association
of this cite movement. who came nere for that
have reverted to its original owners. But this, according to The see million marks within two diva .
purpose.

14 STRATFORD PLACE
LONDON, E. C. 2, ENGLAND

a.st

Timely Resolutions

NATURE AND THE POET

• ■ •• ■ ••-•

My Rabbi was Nature—she set me to learn,

She taught me to sing and she taught me to play;

She taught me to think and to feel, day by day,

And all that is beautiful, swift to discern,

The heart must be fresh, and the brain clear and steady,

The scales and the measure be waiting and ready,

And I, after all, have become—why you know it ;

A poet, my brothers, a poor Jewish poet.

S. FRUG.

Dr. Kohler's Retirement

HEILTH TA\Lii$

The Cry of Martyrdom

A Generous Attitude

I

C

j•fiSC71
' +1 4475
81"
GiAS.
s EP -

-
Cardinal Gibbons, on the eve of the birthday of Washington,
sends this thought to the American people; "I fear no enemy with-
out. The enemy I fear is he who, forgetting human nature and the
history of Europe, would raise the question of another's religious
belief and introduce strife and discord into the life of our cowry."
0
One of the boldest expressions uttered in years, through the
medium of a widely circulated journal, on the subject of church de-
cadence, is found in the article of William T. Ellis, who in the "Sat-
urday Evening Post" touches the subject of the present-day church
on the "raw." He thinks the church must be very "weak in the
knees" if it confesses that it cannot compete with "the comic sup-
plement, the golf course and the automobile."
0
Underneath it all there runs the current of criticism that the
church has become too professionalized, too much of the seeking
after "wholesale" rather than "retail" business. Too many "engi-
neers" who attempt to herd millions into church-going. And the
lack of vitalizing messages that answer the spiritual yearnings found
in the heart of the average normal person is characteristic of the
pulpit today. There is too much attention given to cigarette smok-
ing, short skirts, movies and not enough to great problems and is-
sues that are rocking the world to its very foundations.

Mr. Ellis is right. There are oo T many "professional" leaders
who are busying themselves with blue laws and doing everything
to give the world the impression that religionists want to deprive
persons of all the sunshine there is in life. And that is why the
real religionists, the big-minded spiritual men and women realize how
utterly futile and how mischievous are these efforts to clamp the lid
down so tightly on Sundays that the most natural, normal, innocent
and healthful exercises and recreations are to be prohibited.

Religion has not failed, but the church has in its interpretation
of religion. And these hectic movements looking toward the re-
vival of church attendances through enormously financed advertis-
ing campaigns are resultless. Persons are sufficiently interested in
religion, in religious problems, in questions of the here and the here.
after to seek eagerly from all sources capable of giving it to them,
information that will help them in striving to answer those ques•
tions. Consider the multitude of unorthodox religious meetings of
all kinds held in halls and the crowds attracted, and you will un-
derstand that interest in religion is not dead.
O
The pulpit is too superficial, too shallow. It deals with surface
manifestations instead of fundamentals. Spencer i n his "First
Principles" points out that religion is not a priestly invention to de-
lude mankind, but that it is universal, so deeply seated in the minds
of every kind of people on the face of the globe that it is either a
special, directly-created faculty, or it has grown out of accumulated
human experiences. But it is present nevertheless, and, while cer•
tain theological conceptions may be proven false, yet the religious
instinct itself remains untouched and must be respected as one of
the greatest of all forces that influences the life of mankind. But
the thirst for religious inspiration and guidance cannot be satisfied
with such froth as the church and synagogue give out today.

Last May Rabbi Coffee, of Toledo, told me that Ford was launch-
ing a series of attacks against the Jews because he felt that the in-
ternational bankers were responsible for wars, and, inasmuch as
most of the international bankers are Jews, he wanted to warn the
world against this enormous Jewish power and to prevent its being
used for the continuance of war, Last Saturday Henry Ford, in the
first interview given out since he began to run amuck in his paper,
virtually corroborates the statement.

But unfortunately Mr. Ford, in his anxiety to combat what tie
believed was an enemy of peace—international banking cliques—
was led far astray, and men in his employ, either afraid of their jobs
or because they are sycophants and want to please their master.
began to hire every man they could lay their hands on who might
dig up a nasty story against individual Jews. So while Ford in his
sublime ignorance may assert that he is not anti-Semitic, that his
campaign is not anti-Semitic, the facts are, as has been pointed out
repeatedly, he has been duped and made as big a fool of as any man
in modern history.

One of the most fascinating autobiographies I ever read was that
of Prince Kropotkin, who died a few weeks ago. His "Memoirs of
a Revolutionist" is the story of a great and interesting life. But it
would be very educational to those who, through their ignorance
of Russian history, have imbedded in their heads the thought that
the only revolutionists Russia ever had were discontented Jew,.
I recommend Kropotkin as an interesting writer.

Now I wonder if it isn't time that we lifted this thought out
of Ruskin's "Sesame and Lilies" and gave it tight once more: "And.
indeed, if there were to be any difference between a girl's education
and a boy's, I should say that of the two the girl should be the
earlier led, as her intellect ripens faster, into deep and serious sub-
jects; and that her range of literature should be not more, but less.
frivolous, calculated to add the qualities of patience and seriousness
to her natural poignancy of thought and quickness of wit. I enter
not now into any question of choice of books; only be sure that her
books are not heaped up in her lap as they fall out of the package
of the circulating library, wet with the lam and lightest spray of the
fountain of folly."
O
The immigration problem threatens to become the most acute
now before the American people. The latest suggestion, and one I
am sure will be adopted sooner or later, is to take the whole mat-
ter entirely out of the realm of politics by authorizing a federal
commission with full power to act.' Requisitions will be sent to our
consular agents in Europe that certain men are needed for certain
occupations. Their work is ready for them before they come. One
hundred thousand a year shall be allowed to enter the country. No
more promiscuous segregation will be allowed; in other words. it
will be strictly an economic problem.
_ - -

snit`

irMU) FUEL et,SUPPLY

BUILDING SUPPLIES & COAL

IT FOR TODAY OR TOMORROW
BUT
,
BUILD FOR THE AGES.- -
""' •
(3.°
••••
WITHN
VIKLI SUPPLIES
ARCHITECTS SPECIFY THEM - BEST BUILDERS USE THEM

