,Americor Yavisk &risk-cal eater CLIIITON AV11401 - CLICIMINATI 30, OM PAGE FIVE ETROMF451 ROT4IGIL INSPIRING SERVICES LANSING LITERARY URGES JEWS GUIDE CONTEST IS WON BY MARK CONFIRMATION ANCIENT HERITAGE (Continued from Page 1) M. A. C. JEWISH BOY FOR OWN BENEFIT while Bernice Solomon gave the chin- H. E. Segelin Awarded Prise for ing prayer. Essay on "Tennyson and Evo- The Temple Choir, assisted by Mr. lution." should come this other interest which Edmund Lichtenstein, violinist, and upposed to be ready to serve? s po we are LANSING.—The winners of the Mrs. Elsa Ruegger Lichtenstein, 'eel- From any other state? If so, we would not have sought allegiance annual Lawson literary contest which list, rendered a beautiful musical that in recent years closed the last of April have been an- program. Solos Mrs. by Miss Yemeni. Rohrer, contralto; Charles Wel- . here. . there has been, even amongst those nounced. The first prize of $25 was awarded ker, and u duet by 11 r. se 1.. whose education and position should have kept them scornfully above to II. E. Segelin for an essay entitled Becker and Mr. William Howland at- pave delightful intermissions. and race-hatred, a resat- , .Tennyson and Evolution." The sec- forded "Judaism's Three Demands," an in- to sion from the old high standard of I and prize was won by B. V. Halstead I for an essay entitled "The American spiring sermon addressee! fair play and broad-minded tolerance. the class of confirmants, directgi was lyven , • loss, however, not ours. • by Rabbi Leo M. h ranklin. Tha We have proved in the past that we "In this hour, my deur boys and possess a strength of character which girls, the command comes to you to the politician neither owns nor un- be thrice holy," Dr. Franklin de- derstands. Why should we bother clared. about the accusations of such men,. "There are those who, asked where- who are not even worthy of the tra- in the tent of righteousness lies, ditions which they have received from • would answer, 'in doing righteous-, ness.' And yet in this hour, an hour their fathers? the most supreme and sacred in your Denser from Within. young lives, I would stress this "Indeed, I am not sure that we thought. While your doing righteous- shall not benefit by making enemies ness is a part of righteousness, it is ' I of this kind. As I have told you, our the least part. Because it is very danger comes from within. Nothing much easier and very much simpler can turn the wheel of time back- to do the things that all men can see wards, and this present generation than to do them out of pure and up- has gone too far in license and selfish- right holiness. ness to be brought back by persua- "Greater than to do right is to will sion to the path of self-sacrifice. Per- the thing that is right, to aspire to secution might bring them back. I that which is right and good and do not wish it—but it makes us real- pure. And yet there is a higher step ize our destiny when we are driven in even than desire and aspiration and upon ourselves and see how little we striving to do right. It is to be holy, can rely upon professions of friend- to be right, to be clean throughout ship when the times are unfavorable.' life. We live on this earth by God's provi-I "To Will the Right." dence alone. The Galuth is not a' (Continued from Page 1) "To do right in the sight of God mere freak of nature, as our young and man is sometimes difficult. There people will find out very soon if they are all sorts of temptations that stand are not careful. And then perhaps in our way to lure us from the path they also will seek to become those of righteousness. We are told that who tend the lamp and keep its light H. E. SEGELIN. sin lieth at the door and unto us is shining in the time of darkness. ideal." The judges selected for this its desire but we must be holy. There. "Liberal Jud•ism." A l - • were Prof. Milton Simn • so !' are those who through strength of "I am sometimes asked whether I contest i P rof. S. F. character are able to put emp do not think that what is called Lib- of Kalamazoo College, ich of the University of Michi- behind them, but some there are who ill help to bridge the Giner . eral Judaism w ourselves and our Kan, d an things that are good, but they do gulf between Thomas M. Johnson of Gen- do ern them grudgingly. They do them neighbors. On the contrary, I re- eva, New York, correspondent for the. .. it as the first and nearest step New York Times and a contributor to sometimes even unwillingly. They do sintegration, and this the Outlook. This contest was es- them sometimes with a mental reserv- gard to compl ete from di the religious but from tablished by a friend and classmate ation. „ There. are those who do the things George E. not only Wh at is as a memoria l to the general point of view. Lawson that men call good, just to win the What '82, who died F ebruary 15, 1916. this easy way of being a Jew? Mr. Segelin is a Junior in the applause and the flattery of those does it mean? In times of ease, you do not need its consolation; when Science. department of the College, w o look upon them. I know of y that their h who give charity onl comes, nothing is there. It and is very prominent in the religious ple trouble comes, is not for the Jews to seek a religious and educational activities of the Jew- names may be written large because of their gifts. They do good but assimilation with those who have fol. ash community in Lnasing. While a lowed the teaching of our great re- student he nevertheless finds time to they do not do it in the way that ligious leaders, the men from whom teach and direct a Sunday School of makes for righteousness because back not only the Christian religion 40 children in Lansing, which has motive. If we wish be a holy we sprang, but the Stoic code, the civiliz- proved highly successful. of their good there is to only selfish Mr. Segelin is a graduate of the must put the thought of self behind ing genius of Ilelenism, and the great us, and that which we do we must do moral strength which made Rome Baron De Hirsch Agricultural School; powerful in the past and still a power while he was there he edited the for virtue's sake. "We must wish to be right. We today wherever her law lives in the school paper, the "Record." must wish to be holy and that wish customs of modern nations. We have ni the last analysis means that we , our message yet. We do not need must seek to realize the greatest and a common platform to deliver it, for noblest possibilities of our own lives. all nations do not stand on the same Urges Useful Service. spiritual level. It is the Jewish ideal you who are bright and clever; a which has always sought to put the men of things the earth been endowed by your I bridle upon the of earth, are and not ready — you, who have Maker with unusual gifts, must real- Present Fine Program at Shaarey M e that such gifts are only trusts. shown Zedek on Occasion of Annual Na. We must not let our interests center for the bridle. The war has tional Young Judaea Day. how strong and vital still is every in- in ourselves. We must convert these stinct of barbarism among the na- eve _ gifts into means of useful service: lions. How, then, should we, whose, "Power must be used not to crush Detroit Young Judaea Monday pride has always been that we were apart it from the barbarians, find any- ning scored another triumph with those who are weaker, but it must be used to lift up those who are thing to gain from the sacrifice or the entertainment presented at the Shaarey Zek on te h occasion of weaker, if possible, to our own level. ed i a Day, aimed And those best endowed must always curtailmnt of what we contr ' National Young Judae the world's spiritual progress? bute to , as a day of propaganda for Young be unusually considerate of those who Rejects the Rich. Judaea among the parents and are less endowed. No man lives unto e Rive to . • of Young Judaea. ea alone, I b e , h IT e himself ir hold fast to the r e I , mends "We most b es t . Three very interesting plays, two tiie other, desire, th must that has been reserved for us. recitations Jew dialogues, numerous "Be the thing you aspire. Let vir- I am asked whether an English featur: lure become a part of your being- dances and musical selections interest- should take part in public life, I give So live that that which is unclean in ification. If ed the program. The most my answer with a q ANS a thought, in word, in act, shall be his services are required, then let him ing number on the program P g and Sammy hateful to your spirit. be. But if he seeks to make public dialogue "The Professor .• " acted by Sam Firestone "Let every woman be to you as Judaism his chief . i1 iintzes, life at the cost of Abe Torgow of the Knights of Ju- your two mother, your own si ster. aim, he will fail and fall. They ta lk Let every boy and man be to you as about our rich men; but I would dsea. The three plays presented were your own brother. Let nothing un make them a present of all our rich in ollatikvah," "The Broomstick Bri- clean soil your hands and dim the men, for it is only a generation advance. In 30 years they will be gade" and "Day Off the Exile." glory of your souls." , liat ik vu ho was presented by a group ' Rabbi Hershman'• Sermon. lost to us; and we shall have gained members of the Daughters of the nothing from them, except the legend of - ew that 'the Jews are rich, whilest in White and Blue. The cast consisted In his "The y Old N I , i address, morn- delive'red Monday fact we are the most poverty-stricken of Anna Sloniovitz as Ilatikvah, Lany . Covenant," nation in the world. To us pinto-, Drapkin, Lottie Davidov and Emma , ing before a large congregation at I , the Shaarey Zedek, Rabbi A. M. ev i,. cracy is a meaningless term, for we L Hershman declared that "the old that , tho give no respect to wealth, even good is better than the new that Gi v e Paleatine Play. , Jews is se of us who most enjoy it. In- "The Broomstick Brigade," a com. promises to be good." deed, democracy is a kind of fault Rabbi Ilershman declared that he with us. We recognize one aristoc-, is play in two acts, was presented ns opposed to an American Judaism racy alone, the aristocracy of Intel- , by a cast composed of members of " stu th Zion , M accabees of Jud- st as he was opposed to a Russian lect. That is why the Shammas has the Tikvas e Bar K ex•hba Judaeans . '. j Judaism. Judaism, he said, should be and , always been as good as the Parnass. , This play had its setting in Pales- broad enough to appeal to all Jews If modern Jews lose this conception I , aea tine a and dealt with the strike of the the world over. What Rabbi Bergh- of aristocracy, they lose everything, school children in Palestine in 1914 , , man advocated was an American Is- and they will only maintain it by a! return to the old reverence for piety' against the study of German as op- el. Urges Hebrew Study. and respect for the laws laid down posed to Ilebrew. Anna Bookstein, ra Teaching Jewish fundamentals to 1 Fannie Blondy, Rose Goldfaden, Mar- , the young from their very infancy . to "I guide us." know we are accused of ostenta-, garet Lefton and Clara Labret of San the was particularly advocated by Rabbi [ion, a fault which is common to all Tikvas Zion; Arthur Wendell, Ilershman. He declared that the Jew- oppressed nations that wish to make Silverstein and Simon Pomeranz ish ritual services must in the main sure of themselves and gain the race of the Maccabees of Judaea and Ab- conducted in Hebrew, and there-, ognition of the world; of separatism, ie Goldstein of the liar Kochba play. Jo- , be fore urged that the young be taught which is characteristic of small na- &leans made up the cast of this "Day Off the Exile," a Shabuoth I theyrew leb from their very youth and the so tionalities, as you see in the Scotch- will be able to understand man when he gees abroad. We are play, was acted by a cast composedl , of members of the Young Judaea pi I rayers. p aea even accused of beingprejudiced Dramatic , Young Jud I Concerning the exclusion of He- and the D efenders of ?the' brew from services in reform tern- against the nations round about . But cart Club Club • hollowing we re that is a false accuse White and Blue. plea, Rabbi Hershman said it was due proud that God has chosen us for a the players: Anna Aronson, Eva Le- knot to the reform movement but to So- the fact that Hebrew had fallen into definite purpose. But Ile has chosen vine, Dorothy Rabinowitz, every nation for some purpose. No; ble, Hyman Cohen, Sam Blondy, Mor- misuse. The thing to do now, in or- as the real prejudice is against us, ris Krause, Philip Silverstein, Rebec- der to restore Hebrew to the ritual, long as we are amphibians. We must ca Silver, Yetta Dworkin, Lola Wein- said Rabbi Hershman, is to place E ve. • M arcus frankly recognize that we cannot en- berg, Anna Anna Maxman, brew back into popular use and then joy the blessings of this world and and Gertrude Lipniek, llyman Co-' it will be restored to the service. et l the joy of the world to come. hen, as the "Devil" was the star of Rabbi Hersman Sunday morning stick to our own life that we have this play. spoke on the topic "First Fruits" to led in the past, or let us come back one of the largest crowds that ever Sinai Dialogue. to the past. Our fetters are not fet- Rose Bloody and Nettie Clasky of packed the Shaarey Zedek. ters at all; they are more like the rails on which the train of life is to the B'Nos Yisroel appeared in a dia- logue, "At the Mount of Sinai," run if its journey is to be accom- Lipshitz appeared in the plished as it was intended. Let our Anna "Dance of Hope," which was accom- young people reflect that by impos- — ing the limitations of Jewish sacrifice panied by the singing of "Eli, Eli," I by Diana Gorelick. Both are mem- LONDON—A dispatch receivedd upon themselves, they not only se- hers of the Glories of Zion. A num- here from Johannesburg, Sou cure their own benefit, but the bene- ber of fine selections were given by rice, says a strong force of police, fit of others. Let them reflect whether armed with machine guns, is concen- contempt is not the worst of all, and the Young Judaea Orchestra. , Recitations were given by Mollie trating in the Queesntown district realize that they will be despised in- Cohen, in Hebrew, and Ida Weiner, where a large number of blacks, as- stead of being hated if they cease to of the Roses of Zion; Anna Levine,' serting that they belong to one of the be Jews in the true sense. And let of the Glories of Zion, and Mollie lost tribes of Israel, have seized large them remember furthermore that of Price of the Forget-Me-Nots of Zion. estates and committed a number to there are others only too anxious it Samuel Heyman, President of the crimes against the European popula- : up our heritage and bear take Young Judaea Council of Detroit, tion. away." These blacks, the dis patch asserts, acted as chairman and outlined th e - declare that they are w aiting for a of Young Judaea and the pur y to Pal estine , a nd , DETROIT LODGE, No. 55, K. OF P. need poses of the organization. Mr. He- divine call to return activ ities are in 11 a ealed f or g reate r that their present interest in Young Judaea by the par- preparation for this. Will members please notify theyma aspic it Keeper of Records and Seals o f th e ents of Young new addresses as he isdesirous Distribute Prises. making a new mailing list and for In the course of the evening, prizes that purpose, it is necessary to have were distributed to seven of Detroit's1 WARSAW.—In answer to an in- correct addreases of all members. Young Judaeans for the best essays, terpellation by the Jewish deputies in Nathan S. Shellfish, Keeper of Record and Seals, written by them in a recent essay : the Seim who demanded that the na- Knights of Pythias Castle, contest. Hyman Cohen of the Defend- turalization law be put into effect in 3153 Casiavenue. ers of the White and Blue, won the accordance with the Treaty of Ver- en- prize for the best essay in the sthe sailles, Skolski, Minister of the In- ior division, Mary Markofsky, of trior, repeated the well-known inter - Tikvas Zion, Mary Friedenberg pretation of "domicile" as meaning the Forget-me-nots of Zion, and Max "permanent residence." Jewish depu- Wein of the Knights of Judaea were ties thereupon questioned the Prime The Tau Sigma Delta Sorroity will awarded prizes for the best essays of Foreign Af- bold its first open air meeting Tues- and short stories in the intermediate Minister and Minister fairs. The latter voiced his agree- day, June 21, at 6:30 P. M., on the division; Anna Backe, Ida Weiner, ment, giving a definition which arbi- Belle Isle Boat. The business of the of the Roses of Zion and Mamie Al. trarily disregards the clauses in the sorority will be held on the boat and len of the B'Nos Yisroel were award- , Versailles Treaty on the naturalize. the remainder of the evening spent ed , prizes for beat essays in the jun- I tion of minority. on the island. All members are ur- ior division. ged to attend. 4 ? rf Glob 3furititurr Furniture of distinction and individuality. Wonderful values made possible by factory connections. Detroit Nurniture glpaps Warren and Riopelle JUDAEANS DELIGHT SHABUOTH AUDIENCE WITH THREE PLAYS p - By Automobile, Via Woodward Avenue East on Warren to Rio- pelle Street. By Street Car, Via WO011Yara Menus and Crosstown Cars, Last to Riopelle Street. Walk 'Iwo Blocks North. Melrose 1320. 0000000000000C0003CON 00 N1 CDA enemmunnunummununmnotmin guannnor clurtnitairc) If you have never known the values pre- sented at Pringle's--come in and see this display of summer furniture — which in- cludes reed, fibre and "old hickory." Quality stands out pre-eminently in this large and varied line—and here you will find the cheapest that is good to the best that is made. We also have a large assortment of porch swings in both wood and canvas, porch vases, and refrigerators, at 1-4 off the regular prices. Unde the test of careful comparison— our prices invariably prove exceptionally reasonable. "LOST TRIBE OF ISRAEL" 1 SEIZES AFRICAN ESTATES ed al 4 ,icy *ne 1: • Pringle Furniture Co. 431 Gratiot Avenue VERSAILES MINORITY CLAUSE DISREGARDED One and One Half Block from Broadway. Siety•Five Display Siaty•Fi•• Display TAU SIGMA DELTA For Your For Your Inspection Inspection 5' Rooms Are Open Rooms Are Open