A merica ffewisk Periodical Curter CLIFTON AVINUI - CINCINNATI 10, OHIO PAGE NINE Tit PLTROIT AN - 1511(11 ItONICLC — — (Copyright, 1921. By Judith Ish-Eishor.) A YOUNG FOLKS' PAGE CONDUCTED BY JUDITH ISII-KISHOR. Select Dancing Nightly you got any red ribbon?" she asked, hopefully. "Not a bit." "Well, I won't he the only one with- Particular People Pref.! out a silk flag" cried Rivkah, "I can "In our colonial period the Jews tell you that." took part in the upbuilding of this the Palais "All right," shrugged her sister, country, they became citizens, and "why don't you use your new silk Strictly censored Highest helped In the development of foreign hair ribbon if you're so crazy about and domestic trade. During the Rev- standard a flag? Now get out of here. I've got olutionary period they aided the cause Ilag4 Hissammea Bowls Orehoetrn. of liberty by serving in the Continen- to get the baby asleep." parlor in- t p Rivkah walked f rom the tal army, and by contributing large to her own little bed mail, and stood "1 sums of money to the empty treasury for a moment, thinking, thinking' of the infant Republic. During the hard. At last she drew out a box con- Civil War, thousands fought in the taining her handkerchiefs and a gold armies and mingled their blood with pin that belonged to her mother.' the soil for which they fought— Neatly folded beneath the handker- While the Jews of the United States chiefs lay a piece of crimson ribbon, who now number more than a million shiny and silky. Rivkah had worn it have remained loyal to their faith only the month before, for perfect and to their race, they have become attendance at Hebrew school. She an inseparable part of the great army I owned no other ribbons for Sadie con- of American citizenship, prepared ti sidered them nonsense, and had her make all sacrifice for their country ' fasten her curls with a shell burette. either in war or peace, and strivin She had wanted to wear the ribbons for good government and for the up , at the pageant tomorrow. She knew! • holding of the principles embodied i n she would'nt have a new dress, but our Constitution.' she felt heat she would be sufficiently "dressed up" with the ribbon wound The Flag That Rivkah Made. about her glossy head. "I can't fin- ish the flag unless I get some red silk A Fourth of July Story by E. E. tonight " mused Rivkah, "but I did Levinger. want to look stylish tomorrow and I Itikvah sat behind the kitchen ta- never had such pretty ribbons before. ble, her feet tucked under her, her I know I couldn't get a nice one with brows frowning, her tongue sticking Sadie's dime." She fingered the silk- Marble and Granite out a little as she carefully cut out en lengths. "I want to look stylish her sixteenth white silk star and laid tomorrow" she repeated. But when I saw Rivkah at the it with fifteen others in one of her brother-in-law's cigar boxes. • Rik- pageant, carrying her silk flag with 684 Winder St. Cadillac 48 vah's sewing clam at the Settlement all the other American girls, she wore had been chosen to give a flag drill her old barette, instead of red rib- The only Jewish Monument Disler in the Fourth of July pageant which bons in her hair. M Detroit. • was to be presented in the park; and RIDDLE BOX the teacher, Miss Braun, had suggest- ed that each little girl make her own _ I am not going to print the answer flag. "Don't you think that a flag you make yourself will mean more?" to last week's puzzle yet, but shall CLEANER CLEANERS she had asked, and when the girls had give you a chance to write me if you Glendale 4845. chorussed, "Yes, teacher!" Rachel's have guessed the answer. And then METROPOLITAN voice had shrilled above the rest. I shall print your names in the Sab- Angel. CLEANERS & DYERS, Inc. "I don't see how you can love the bath Remember, too, to work on the DM- American flag so much, when you're Good Work—Good Service. A Jew, and you were'nt even born in Ronal Puzzle. I'm waiting to see how We Call For and this country," said Mamie, a red- many bright youngsters will solve it 3873 Grand River Ave. haired, lively little girl who usually and send me the right sort of letter walked home from the club with about it. Meanwhile, let's try this Sec. ad Treas. ALBERT B. WEISS, Itivkah. "Buried Name" Puzzle. Each of these Rivkah opened her mouth to speak Fentences contains a name mention- Palais de Danse THE JEWS IN AMERICA What Theodore Roosevelt He. Said About Them. LIBERTY SIX $1595 WITH CORD TIRES Miss Detroit Cigar $455 Less Than the Price of 8c Each MONUMENTS Reduced Prices Srptrosbrr • 1920 5-P•es.Tour.$2050 Roadster .. 2050 Sport Car .. 2140 2900 Coupe. • Sedan .... 2950 Henry t h e Hatter USED CARS Wanted Famous WAYNE BATHS Front St., between Second and Sulphur Mineral Third. Water, the genie as Mt. Clemens But in Detroit These waters are a never.failing remedy for Rheumatism, Nervous- ness, Eczema and all other forms of skin diseases. In such painful troubles as Neuritis and Sciatica We use, In connection with the mineral baths, Electrio-Theraphy, administered by experts, the com- bination treatment giving almost insta,4 relief. Open Day and Night for Ladles and Gentlemen $1.00 Mineral Bath $1.50 Turkish Bath 60c Lodging Take Woodward Car Marked "Through," get off at Second and Jefferson Telephone Cherry 4784 Maloney-Campbell Realty Co., Inc. 604 FREE PRESS BLDG. General Real Estate, insurance, Choice Homes, Two-Flats, In- vestments and Store Property PHONE CHERRY 1195. ft.G.D'Usx THE A-I MILD HAVANA CIGAR Edmund G. Lewis JEWISH FUNERAL DIRECTOR Chapel and Office 7739 JOHN R. Complete Motor Equipment Market 2114 Nortbway 21.75-11 /sly • 1921 5.Pass.Tour.$1595 1595 floadater Sport Car .. 1675 Coupe.... 2100 2495 Sedan ITH CORD TIRES WITH CORD TIRES All pctw t. o. Dorm IIY is the Liberty Six acknowl- eration, power, economy and endur- ance, with any automobile in America edged to be a great car and a within $1000 more than its price. wonderful value? The answer is easy. Look at its remarkable new Liberty If you are going to buy an automo- Triple Head Motor, 53 h.p., a distinct bile, be sure you inspect the Liberty engineering advance. Look at its per- Six with its wonderful new Liberty fected Pressure Lubricating System, Triple Head Motor. This is "the Car with Special Oil Regulator. Look at its with a Reason for every Why." Come sensational Dry Gas Vaporizer and in or phone for a man. No obligations Special Manifold. Look at its wonder- at all. ful flexibility of 2 to GO miles on high. If you are thinking of a closed car, Look at its record of service. No Lib- keep this in mind. Liberty built its erty Six has yet given out. Look at its reputation upon its smart closed cars. fuel and oil economy. Averages 18 At the new prices, we offer you the miles to the gallon of gas and 800 miles biggest closed car value in the country. per gallon of oil. These are facts that See these cars. Compare the value. establish proof beyond question. The Judge for yourself. Liberty "ENGINEERING FIRST" Policy has made them possible. "Among those who have known it intimate. At the present price of $1595, which ly, the Liberty Six has always been voted includes cord tires, we claim that the the one big, outstanding value among cen- Liberty Six is absolutely the best auto- tral class cars. At the new prices we be- mobile value in America. We will lieve it smashes all value-per-dollar rec- match it in engineering, in workman- ords REGARDLESS OF CLASS." WALTER J. JUDD. ship, in performance, in speed, aced- Miller-Judd Company LIBERTY DISTRIBUTORS. 4846-4854 Woodward at Warren people of Asia Minor, is taught in the garden patches which are (lug back of the dormitory. playing with dolls at your age," was it the thng for the white stripes NEAR EAST RELIEF and the stars. And greatest sur- HELPS MANY JEWISH prise of all, Mrs. Smithers, the lady in the next flat, had asked Itivkah ORPHANS WITH WORK , to look after her baby one afternoon and had given her a bright dime the next day. Itivkah had hurried to the NEW YORE.—The action of the nearest notions store three blocks, Council of Jewish Women of the ' away, to buy a yard and .a half of , State of New Jersey at its recent con- Rome eve. beautiful red ribbon. The ference at Atlantic City in endorsnig ning she sat in the kitchen, busily I the work of the Near East Relief cutting out the flag for the pageant calls attention to the Jewish work next day. She had been afraid to be- which is being done by this organize- gin it before all the materials lay in lion in Constantinople and other cen- her work-box; but they were all there tars. While the initial object of the now, the blue silk tie, the old white Near East was to rescue the Ar- handkerchief, and the beautiful red menians and Syrians who had been ribbon she had purchased that after- exiled and imprisoned by the Turks noon. She lifted the lid to see, then ,during the war, its field of operations jumped to her feet. "Why, I didn't put it in my work box," she exclaimed, has considerably widened since then. "just as I came back from the store, Wherever there is destitution and Sadie told me the baby was crying helplessness there have the American and I had to pick it up. And then workers extended their aid rgardless made me go out in the yard and of religious or national differences. she call Morris and Sidney in for supper. In Constantinople the Near East I think I left it on the table in the Relief is managing and partially' parlor; it ought to he there yet," and financing the Ilaskuey orphanage,! she hurried into the fornt mom, where hundreds of little Jewish or-. Classes in shoemaking, carpenter- ing, tailoring and weaving provide the furnishings not only for the or- phanage itself, but produce articles for sale in the markets of Constan- tinople. By the time the boy or girl is old enough to be sent out into the world alone, he will be well fitted to support himself without help from anyone. where Sadie sat trying to rock the Phans are being housed and fed and fretful baby to sleep. educated. These little waifs had been "Be quiet." She frowned at the lit- living in Turkish homes, where their tae girl who dropped a magazine from condition, according to the American the table in her haste to find the tiny workers, was that of little slaves. parcel she had left there. "I've al- They had been rescued from the gut.' most got her to sleep. Well, what ten by the Jewish committee in Con- , are you looking for?" as Itivkah turn- stantinople and then boarded out to col a frightened face towards her. these various homes with the eXpecta-! "I can't find my ribbon," gasped lion that they would receive good care and kind treatment . It was Itivkah, "the ribbon for my flag." "Where did you put itl—Well, pica merely a source of profiteering for ought to know better than to leave the Turks, however. They accepted things on the table. I suppose one of the pay that covered the children's' the boys found it. You know they keep and then proceeded to delegate have their hands in everything." Ric- to them all of the drudgery of the kah dashed into the little bedroom off household. Children Overworked. the parlor, where her two nephews slept. When the American relief workers "Sidney! Morris!" she cried excit- organized their social service work in edly, "did you see s my ribbon?" Sid- Constantinople, these were among, icy was already asleep, but Morris the first cases that they took up. Not turned on his , pillow tee say drowsily, only were the children overworked ,.• —Oh, yes,—S1 and I end i • "What ribbon?—Oh, ba dl y treated, but they had been took it and tied it on the cane papa neglected in every way. No school- brought us from the fair grounds." ing had been given them; all tales of hygiene and health had been dis- He pointed to a little wooden cane regarded. They were very like little' on the wall, and Itivkah gasped sera crumpled bow of crimson ribbon dumb animals—and sick animals at dangling from the crook. "blot you can hove it back if you want it and that. Nearly every child had ,skin dis- h's yours," he ended generously as ease of some sort or other and many in the pillow ready were afflicted •th trachoma, the he buried his nose to go to sleep again. Rivkah pulled frightful eye affection, from which the bowfrom the cane angrily, and 25 per cent of the children rescued went into the parlor. She could see . by the Near East Relief are suffering. at a glance that it was hopeless. Iler The first task of the orphanage direc- nephews' careless fingers had knotted tors was to give each child a thorough and torn the cheap silk, it would be scouring and then to turn to the impossible to use it again. scientific treatment of his various ail- "I don't see why little you ribbon," are making Sad- mints. • Since the formal opening of such fuss I'll over a you a dime and , the orphanage a steady increase in ie ld a her. give Coca can get some more tomorrow." equipment has made it possible to "But the pageant's first thing in the multiply the services which are being: a prime mornig!" wailed Rivkah. "Give me rendered. Education is now the money now and I'll see if the factor in the work with the children. Children Taught Trade. 1 1 In Haskuey, as in every orphanage'. store's open." long " Nonsense! It's been closed - established by the Near East Relief, It's after eight now. Tomor the children are instructed in some ro a w you take your dime and buy . trade, so that they will at the first flag before you be go a to home-made the park." one,"' possible moment become self-sup- "It has to got my porting. Farming, which is the oc-; Rivkah declared, "and I've Have'nt cupation of the large majority of thei out and everything! stars cut t September 1920, W Manuel Urbach and then closed it again. She knew ed in the Bible:— 1. Isaac is a better boy than Na- she couldn't explain to Mamie just why she felt a lump in her throat hum, although he is younger. when she looked up at the great flag2. l'ull the car out of the rut, how floating from the pole in the school can we go if you don't? 3. 1 have no pen at hand now; She was the only Jewish girl Detroit's Exclusive Hatter yard. in the club, the only little girl who I will, write tomorrow. 4. Put the Talesim on that white had not been born in America, and Library Park Hotel Bldg. yet she felt more of an American chair, please. t. You should all be obedient to than any of them, whenever she re- membered the day when her mother your parents. Gratiot at Library. and she had first seen the flag at El- SIM OUR AMERICA mti lis Island—Itivkah's mother was dead , now, and the child hail been sent from A new world, with great portals far New York to Ila rristown, to live with outflung, her married sister Sadie. Sadie was }bolding a hope more sweet than kind enough to Rivkah, but she was time had sung, too busy with her own three little To which the Jew, of life's high children and her housework to he in- quest a part, terested in her sister's plans and A pilgrim came, the Torah in his hopes. heart. The flag had to be silk, Rivkah told A land of promise and fulfillment herself firmly, but she hated to ask too, Sadie for the money. Still, it looked as though Rivkah would really get Where on a sudden, olden dreams came true— her flag after all. Mamie had made Here grew we part of an ennobled her field out to a big blue silk tie be- state, — brother, and she — WE PAY SPOT CASH longing to her older Gave and won honor, sat among the had plenty left, had given Rivkah great, ALKON AUTO SALES and Mabel generous squares of the And saw unfolding to our happy , pretty material for their flags. An 01 Palmer W., near Woodward view old white silk handkerchief that Sad- ie had once tossed Rivkah saying, The day long-prayed for by the pat- ient Jew! "You can use it for doll dresses, Felix N. Gerson. Break That Cold at the though you ought to be ashamed WITII CORD TIRES CREATES JEWISH BUREAU ARRESTS ARAB BOATMEN DR. BOGEN HANDLING STRIKE WARSAW.—The affairs of the RIGA.—The executive committee of the Third Internationale, now meeting in Moscow, has opened a bu- reau there which is to conduct propa- ganda among the Jewish proletariat in Russia. All questions dealing with Jews In the country are to be re- ferred first to this bureau before the Third Internationale is to consider them. JERUSALEM. —The Government has ordered the arrest of a large num- ber of Arab boatmen who have con- sstently refused to go out with their anchored in the Jaffa harbor, and land Jewish tourists and passengers. As a protest against the Govern- ment's action in the arrest of the boatmen, many of the Arab shops were closed yesterday. strike of Joint Distribution relief officers in Warsaw have been placed in the hands of Dr. Bogen. The strike•, it now appears, broke out as a result of the attempt on the part of 'Joint" directors to refuse a bonus previously granted the officials to cover the increased coat of Iiivng. "A Car That Never Wears Out" Of course, that can not be literally true. But be- cause of the ease with which adjustments can be made and replacements installed, the Hudson Super-Six has virtually a perpetual life. Hudson Super- Six No Super-Six seems ever to have become wholly disabled through wear. In fact, in various parts of the country men make a business of buying up old Hudsons and restoring them. You would be sur- prised at the slight cost necessary to put a Super- Six in good condition. No special skill not found in the average repair shop is required. And the fact that Hudson body lines have been so consistently expressive of good taste, makes them acceptable when more extreme types have become "Old Fashioned." Because of these facts you will find Hudsons six years old that are nearing a hundred thousand miles of service. THE BEMB-ROBINSON COMPANY Sales Dept. 444 E. Jefferson Ave. Main 3786. Branch, 61 Charlotte Ave. Cadillac 53. OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAYS Members D. D. D. 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