r 44: fi PAGE FIVB McDcritorgkwisst t RUN lcI.0 The Awakening of the Soul rte aameranne m Translated from the Yiddish of I. L. Perot* by Jeannette Dainoff. Slumsey, I wantlo tell you a secret, but father must not know it. Did you ask me why? Because father loves me less.. . . No, mother, I regret my words, he does not love me less, but his love is different. as I used to do . . . . something keeps toe back, oft I feel like running towards him, but I cannot. Do you think I love father less . . Oh, no, I love father dearly, and each Slew Fur day I learn to love hint more and Chokers for Ile is a father, ass he is strict. . . . more . . . when he conies near me Spring are Father has a beard, a father's face my heart beats with joy, my heart included in in not to be patted like a mother's throbs with happiness and hope, now Buy our final velvety face . . . and his eyes are he will take me by the hand and press Direct me to his heart so closely. . clearance different, so vary different. from For you I have no thrills you at really the When you look at me, you have wonderful Makers. such smiling, yet tearful, you have always love me, you have always savings. such kind-hearted eyes you are spare time for me, you embrace and kiss me every minute of the day, you a mother and a friend in one. . . . cannot hide my secret from you . . . . are always mine. . . . Father is so busy. . . . with your eyes you seem to draw it Manufacturers Yes, I understand, he wants me to out from my heart. . . . be rich. Retailers — Wholesalers Father looks differently at me, al- Are you, mumsey, anxious to know ways thoughtful, as if indifferent. 660 Michigan Avenue the secret? . . . I am shy. No, mother, he is so very different. For a mother you say there should When I was a child, mumsey, not he any bashfulness, yes, that is used to have less fear of father. I remember how I used to climb up on true . . . . but do you know? Mum- sey, sit down on this chair facing the his lap, muss up his hair, bend his lips one over the other, and if he window . . . . that's the way. EXCELLENT INVESTMENT Ah, mother dear, how beautifully tried to make an angry grimace, I would close his eyes and now I the sun is setting, how wonderfully Fine block of stores — car line it is spreading its crimson rays on cannot do it. street and a good corners—sepa- Once, mumsey dear, when I was' your gentle pale face. . . . rate steam plants, basement. etc. Ah, mother, how beautiful, how ill, I awoke and found both you and All Well Leased. father near my bed . . . . you were gently beautiful you are. Price Right for Quick Sale. Wait . . . . now I will sit down be- standing quietly and weeping so heartily . . . . and father's face was low, so that when telling my story CAPITOL REALTY you will not see my face . . . . on so dreadful.. . . I saw in his eyes his INVESTMENT COMPANY anger at God; for fear I closed my this footstool I will sit down and peep Main 30 1018 Majestic Bldg. • through the window. . . . eyes again. s . No . . . . not this way.. . Since then I cannot approach father I will rest my head on your lap.... I will close my eyes and you, you put your hand on my forehead.. . . Is it not too heavy for you, mother dear, to keep me on your lap? No? Beeman's Evening School teaches you in 60 days. Afternoon and Your child is sixteen years old, and evening classes. Diplomas awarded. Positions guaranteed. has such a small light head, and I alone.. . . Do not weep, mother. God Telephone Garfield 5010 Room 200 A did not neglect me. He did not give me much of a physique . .hut many other valu- Divsiion of Grxtral Meter: Corporatiox able' you . father . . . . I days and nights with wonderful dreams and today . . . such a secret. Now I do not see . . . . with my eyes closed I will try to tell. It seems as simple, yet it is so hard.. . . Only Our Cozy Balcony is fitted purposely for After-Theater Parties. the weaving of a few beautiful rays, Wholesome and Delicious Foods at Reasonable Prices. and yet it weighs so heavily on my heart . . . . like a stone . • . not Will Serve Real Passover Meals All Week. a common stone . . . . but a ruby or 2134 Woodward an emerald spreading its wonderful "Open Day and Night." rays. .ew.w.wh.o..wkwL w0000000moo.w. Listen, mother. No, just wait. I cannot start it so simply. Do you hear me, mother, yesterday you gave me a few coins do you remem- ber? I have not spent them, yet I miss one. I miss the big piece. . . . Have I lost it? No . . . . indeed Standard of the World Main 4216 101 JOHN R ST. not, you gave me this money for the poor people, for the poor children whom I met during my walk. . . . I will not lose poor people's money. Did I give it to anyone? Surely, surely. To a beggar? Perhaps, I do not know, perhaps you will he able to No mother, I cannot describe those tell me. . . Yesterday the sunset was beautiful eyes . . . . all night. . . . This, mother dear, is my secret too . . . . and perhaps more beauti- By I. L. PERETZ . . . Are you smiling? ful.. . . 1425 Broadway, between John R. and Grand River. Do not laugh, mother, those eyes I You taught me to observe and I ob- . Cadillac 4758 "Get up!" The 13-year-old brow is puckered serve things that perhaps others of will never forget, never . . . . Mum- with anguish, the child-face pale with Bashe obeys. Special Orders Taken for Banquets and Parties. my age do not see . . . . and that is sey. . . . Grandmother has risen to her feet Mother . . . . may I walk and dread, tear after tear falls from the Under personal supervision of Rabbi J. I,. Levine. why I walk alone . . . and I walked and taken up the stick which she pre- innocent eyes. Only last Friday, just High Class Meals at Reasonable Prices, Also Delicatessen. on the outskirts of the city . . . . watch the Prayer House? . . . a week ago, she was as happy ,so full viously had flung away. —Jewish Gazette. near the shore . . . . where the "How many candles have you?" she SAMUEL KRAEMER k CO. of glee. It was the "short Friday." houses try to rise one above the other, Proprietor of Kraemer's Pennsylvania Hotel, Mt. Clemens. Grandmother had awakened her a ask ,, s ‘‘ .. hy, those in the rear rise higher and eight," is the trembling re- little earlier than usual, she had spent higher, they too want to peep at the the day in preparation for the Sab- Ply- world . . . . and the sun setting, "Leave one out!" bath. looks at them, spreads its last rays, Ilashe does not move. In the late afternoon she had wash- By B. G. MORRIS bids them farewell, caresses them.... "Put one away!" screams grand- ed herself, plaited her long hair, sing- Slowly dusk is coming on, the sky ing and dancing the while, dressed, mother, angrily. takes on its deep colors, soon myriads Who dares do all that may become a and gone with grandmother to the Bashe trembles like a leaf, but does man, of stars will appear . . . . and while syngaogue—and they had lighted each not move. watching, I reached the narrow street, And dares do more, he is a man in- her candles. Bashe's first candle— The old woman has gone to the deed. the street that is near the lake, not God bless grandmother! Her second table herself, undone the packet of candles, taken out one, and tied the far from the Prayer House. —God bless Tatishe, and let him find I came nearer to the place. During Who hath not known ill fortune, lots of work and make heaps of rest tgoether again. She pushes them the day the synagogue looks dreadful Never knew himself or his own vir- money, and not sigh any more and into Bashes hands: "Come along!" tues, with its broken windowpanes . . . . say that the times are bad. Her third Bashe follows her automatically, and across, on the hill, stands the —God bless Marnishe, and make her neither has thought to fasten the door cloister with its silver cross topping Ambition is the germ strong. behind her. Bashe does not know her- From which all growth of nobleness the sky and laughs. And then--for the little sisters, and self how she reached the platform proceeds. At dusk the synagogue has a dif- the little brothers, a candle each. with her candles. ferent appearance. For the first time It lasted till people began to come "Light them one at a time, for I saw it thus. A soft loving dark-blue Who stabs my name, would stab my in for the prayers. whom I shall tell you. Repeat my person too, haze enveloped it . . . . the broken How she loves the synagogue! how words. Say: God bless Mamishe and H were not looking like empty Did not the hangman's axe lie in the grant her long life!" way? she loves candle-blessing. sockets, but deep and earnestly they Bashe shakes as with the ague: the looked out at the world. . . She has lived with grandma for first candle has alwyas been father's. Oh, mother, if I were rich. What None pities him that's in the snare, two whole years. Your beautiful Draperies, Curtains, Overhangings, Oriental and "Repeat!" screams grandmother. would I do? I would rebuild the syna- And warned before, would not be- She does not want to go home Bashe does so. ware. Domestic Rugs, etc., dry-cleaned by us gives them the appearance gogue. I want it to be high, too; it (there is no candle blessing there, it "The second: God make ('haimle a must also have a golden roof and is not the cantons), unless it were just good Jew!" crystal windows, it must also reach Great minds like heaven, are pleased to see her mother, to clasp her father Little Bashe shakes more and more in doing good, the sky.. . . once round the neck and play awhile —her limbs are giving way beneath Listen, mother, I often think it is Though the ungrateful subjects of with his black, silky beard, and to her—she does not hear her father's We clean Upholstered Furniture and Covers, also dye Rugs to their favors. not necessary to have a Prayer House. have a game with the little ones. name. Her heart thumps, her temples Grandmother must not be left alone. match decorations. God is everywhere . . . wherever a Are barren in return. She is always so good to her; she has throb, her eyes burn. tear falls He sees it, wherever one Grandmother has no pity on her-- We are experts in dry-cleaning your most expensive garments. raises his eyes to Him and pleads and A still and quiet conscience is a peace taught her to bless the candles. Pashe loves grandmother, and bless- she screams louder every time: moans He hears it, but if there is a Above all earthly indignities. "Repeat, repeat what I say!" Call Melrose 6570 ing the candles, too. She longs for it Prayer House, it must be big and Bashe is lighting the last candle. Curses like arrows, shoot upright, the whole week through, she counts beautiful. "Say: God bless Sarah!" commands While I was thinking of all this I And oftentimes on our heaa do light.. the days. But this is a miserable grandmother. Friday. suddenly heard someone weeping. No—she will not say that—where is In the morning everything was the When you are at thepiano, you Time well employed, is Satan's dead- father? No, she cannot say it—her liest foe, same as usual. often draw such mournful sounds 533.537 East Forest Avenue She had "made Sabbath," grand- whole being is in revolt against her from the chords and I thought that It leaves no opening for the lurking fiends. mother had sat there and watched her wicked grandmother—no, no, no! this weeping came from the Prayer "Repeat, repeat!" screams grand- happily. They had dressed them- House; there in a dark corner its How poor are they who do not have selves, and grandmother had taken mother with increasing violence. soul sits enveloped in a dark fog Bashe refuses to obey—the last patience! her stick. Then, as ill-luck would . . . . and weeps and mourns. . . . light MUST be father's. What wound did ever heal but by have it, there came the postman. She weeps because the sun shames She begins: "God bless fa—" degrees. Grandmother read the letter, threw her. The sun so beautiful and radi- "Ilush," in a terrible voice. "Hush, herself on the bed, and there she has ant sheds myriads of beams on the The purest treasure mortal times af- lain for two hours with her face to hush! Your father is no longer a church tower and for her she sends Jew. Ile has become an official!" ford, the wall. only one pale ray as if it were an Is spotless reputation, that away, She is black as coal, her eyes are aim; and then stealthily glides away. Men are but guilded loam or painted shut; one hand holds the letter; she But it was not the soul from the JERUSALEM DENOUNCES clay. foams at the mouth. I Prayer House weeping. NORTHCLIFF'S VISITORS No one is to come near her; no one It was a little girl .. . . she Ion on Cowards die many times before their is to be sent for. the sand and was searching for line- LONDON. —J. T. A.) — An em- death, Ilashe is pushed away, and when- thing and sobbing bitterly. The valiant never taste of death but ever she tries to open the door, her phatic protest has been issued by rep- When I looked at her I saw her resentatives of 32 extreme orthodox once. grandmother hears and screams, shabby dress; it was like a black spot organizations denouncing the delega- "No!" ta the sand, and a pair of torn 'Ti, education forms the tender mind, Bashe stands by the bed and can- tion which Israel de Haan, the Hol- ' shoes.. . . Just as the twig is bent, the tree's in- not make it out. Her heart heats land journalist, introduced to Lord ' Something else I noticed, mother clined. wildly. God only known what they Northcliffe during the latter's visit to dear, I feel no abashed. . . . It makes have written frcm home. Perhaps— Jerusalem, proposing changes in the I me feel so joyful . . . just think The man who pauses in his honesty, Palestine Mandate designed to weak. perhaps.. . . of It . . . . real red hair, like a Wants little of the villian. She cannot think what has hap- en the influence of the Zionist Or- flame. . . . pened. She drops cn to her knees and ganization. Included among these "Why do you cry, girlie?" I asked. If there be a crime of deeper dye, clutches convulsively at grand- organizations are all the Halukah "What are you looking for?" Do you Than all the guilty train of human mother's hand: renters, and virtually all organize hear me, mumsey? vices, "Granny, granny, what is it? Speak Lions forming what is known as the Her mother gave her some money 'Tis ingratitude. to me! Tell me—what is it? Granny, Council of the Ashkenazim, the rival ' and sent her to buy something, but I think I shall die of fright." She of toe legally constituted Wand Ha- s: me one passing pushed her, the All are not just because they do no spoke involuntarily. ir. Than roundly denounced, de Haan cots fell in the sand—that is why she wrong, Grandmother has turned toward seems to be complete isolated, and Was weeping. But he will not wrong me when he her; she moves her lips; opens her his demands unsupported by nay I asked her, "a small coin or a part of the Jewish community, may, eyes, gives her one look, and large?" "A large," was the reply, Ile is the truly just. A dispatch to the London Times "Die!" she says in a hard voice, with at turning around. and turns her face once more to the from its Jerusalem correspondent "I will help you look for it." I wall. "And there wasn't his like!" isays that the Ashkenazic Council has bent, down, pretending to search in JEWISH GENIUS LAUDED she adds. "Die, Basile, die!" appealed to the Leatrub of Nations to ' the . . "Here it is!" Bashe is silent. A blackness passes amend the mandate In accordance e leaped for joy to her feet, with LONDON.—(J. C. B.)—The Brit- before her eyes and her head falls on with the suggestions of the Agudath a oss of her head she pushed her ish press is booming the Jewish sculp- grandmother's feet. Within her all is Israel on the alleged ground that st eaks of flame-like hair back, and tor, Clicenstein, who is exhibiting his dark and cold. She has ceased to "orthouox Jewry cannot rely on Zion- w aid not weep. works here. They declare that his puzzle herself, she is nearly uncon- ist control." This report obviously 'Si matter what I would lose, I work is amazing and nothing is com- scious. refers to action taken previous to the a. if from a cloud, there peeped out parable to it. The general opinion Is And in this way another half-hour signing of the protest, in which the , a mall marble face . . . and eyes, that he is a genius and master of pure goes by. Ashkenazic Council is reported te in titer dear, such eyes.. . She hears her grandmother's voice: have joined. form. H. & B. MARKS Motoring to a town two hundred miles distant, or even farther, in a day or week-end, is mere child's play for the owner of a Cadillac. His car's complete dependability, and its wonderful riding and driving ease, make such trips not only an unal- loyed pleasure but actually a period of delightful rest and rejuvenation. 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