,Amaktut ffewish Perla - cal Cada
CLIFTON AVINU1 • CINC/IINATI 20, OHIO
PAGE SEVEN
PEPETRotT, JarisA (Annum
Inn* 140 El
Notes
I+. JOSEP14-=
c.
ANV
h e ]
‘‘,I1
H o d
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■■■■■■■■•■■■•■■■■■■■■■■■•■■•■■■ 710110).\
Our Birthday
Offering to Men
/4/.1 to /447
I"Does the Bible Need Revision?"
Our Birthday
Offering to Men
EDER
0
WOODWARD AVE
' The important question implied in
i the above title will be answered by
lecture at the
dvise/ Roy Harrill; president of the American Economic League, Rabbi Franklin in his
We a
services next Sunday morn-
who ,, no w preparing to tour the country for Henry Ford for President, regular
Mg,
This
is
the
last
regular
Sunday
that n., one but an American can be elected to the Presidency. Henry Ford,
an American. America is not merely a service of the year, and it is hoped
g.i born in America, is not ■
thoo
that
a
large
congregation
will
attend.
territory, but an ideal as well. This nation will never agree to
p I, , , of
its chief executibe • man who is intolerant, • breeder of hate and a
W. A A
it ever sinks to that level, then it will have turned its back upon Shabuoth and Confirmation:
fanatic. If
thing for which America stands. God save the country from such
The services for the festival of
arery
Shabuoth will be held in the temple
a fate I
on Monday morning, May 21, at 10
•-...-.-----
On this occasion the con-
o 'clock.
Three Jews whose names have been prominent for years in Anierican tirrnants and their parents are ex-
M•yer Sulsberger of Philadelphia, Louis H. Levin of Baltimore and
peeted to attend the services in a
J aw ,
Seelenfrund of Chic•go, died within a few days of each other. Each h
°1 1 Y.
A. 11 way rendered great service to the cause of the Jew in this country.
O n Sunday May 27, this year's
ia his
........... ___
„._
Keay weight, 1921.
.0 1
- 11 ■ 11001111
\
Br Chu. H. .1•••es ► .1
a lti morean , submitted t h e R a ndom
Jacob Epstein, the well known B
f Hil a i re [t e n or on th e l ec t ur e plat-
referring to the appearance o
Thought
country under C•tholic auspices, to Archbishop Curley, the
• this
or
Archbishop
of Baltimore. The item in question criticised the Catholic or-
ganizetions of the United States for having exploited a notorious anti-
time when individuals end or7anis•tiona were
Semite, particularly at ■
working overtime to create prejudice against the Jew in this country. I
did not believe that the Knight. of Columbus or any other Catholic group
had brought Belloc here because of his anti-Semitism but the fact that he '
published- • book against the Jews seemed to me sufficient reason
I
I
0
I
class of 50 boys and girls will be con-
firmed in the temple. The services
on this day will begin at 10 o'clock.
The temple will be opened one-half
hour before the time announced or
the beginning of the services. Par.
cols and friends of the contirmants
are advised to be in their seats early
be
as the capacity of the temple will
taxed on that day.
b ad j us t
the Catholics should not have promoted his tour at this time.
--- .--...-•
0
0
0
0
—
About Confirmation Presents:
In order to minimize the social
features of confirmation, it has been
decided by the members of the con-
tirmation class of this year, with the
•
"I have never met Mr. Belloc and no arrangements have been
sanction of their parents, that friends
made to have him lecture in this city. All I know Is that he is con-
1 who desire to remember them in a
sidereal one of the most brilliant writers and most versatile charm.-
. material way in honor of their con-
ters in the English world of letters today.
tirmation be requested to send no in-
remember hearing of something he wrote about the Jews, but
dividual gifts of any kits, but instead
"I
never read it and consequently I am not in a position to dis cuss
to contribute to a fund for the por-
am
sure
that
it I imagine, however, that it is all frgotten, and I
chase of a permanent memento of the
of any kind would be resp onsible for giv-
class of 1923 for the temple.
n°
n Catholic o
ing any aid whatsover to Mr. Belloc in any campaign against the
Those desiring to send such gifts
by Catholic people."
in cash will kindly send their checks
jot ish people. Such work is not llone
--I•-••••• —
previous to confirmation, to the
churchman treasurer of the confirmation .class,
That letter is one that I would expect from a high-minded
care Temple Beth El, specifying the
such as Michael J. Curley. The archbishop of Baltimore is known through-
country for his broad-minded and liberal attitude in relation to his child or children of the class for
out the
an insult to even •“44..t that he whom it is sent.
fi
The archbishop's reply to Mr. Epstein is as follows:
in n
I Line
h "dr
1 , 0.4
ccIot
o 1,3•
Law.
and
t the
What
erect:
sand.
Lord
bey."
the
ig tq,
4, on
r the
spot
the
shall
rest.
tath-
even
7 the
each
mon
tiled
the
shall
;rise'
Sea,
I NO.
BITS
one
aid,
be-
tted
ink-
)110e
me,
lain
Iun-
nor
.hat
its
••at
Cho
un-
to
'It
rah
tifIS
his-
On
its
ne,
ern
on
ah.
he-
lve
ley
by
1st
he
alt
en
of
Is:
Im
el'
of
Ye
he
is
to
so
ill
in
to
in
S.
IT
0
If
h
3,
0
It
fellow men of all creed• and it would be •
would be guilty of doing anything to promote prejudice against the Jews
Religious School:
or any other group. I am very glad that Mr. Epstein wrote to him •nd the Closing of the
On Sunday, May 20, there will be
archbishop'. reply will undoubtedly have the effect of making organizations
little more careful in arranging their lecture programs. Belloc is all that the usual regular sessions of the Re-
On the following
•
the archbishop says •nd ust because he is so brilliant • manis •Il the more , ligious School.
reon why his attack on the Jews was so uncalled for.
as
ublica tion
ibute to
c
at I will
• p paper that
I c• n only say th
soy
ill not encourage any /r man or
that is •nti-C•tholic; th•t I w
against those who do not agree with them religiously, or
promotes hatred ■
are not of them racially.
And we have a right to expect the same
ac
who •
attitude from others towards us.
........-•-
Sunday, May 27, which is Confirma-
tion Day, there will be no session of
the Sun will y
the Re ligious School. On 3, there
after that, namely, June
be closing exercises for the year.
Pare nts and children should take note
h
of this scedule.
The prize opportunities of the Birthday Sale to men. Suits like
these in quality anti style could not be sold for $23 is we had followed
the usual method in buying them and had paid the usual prices.
Single, double breasted sport Norfolk models. Every wanted ma-
so much
terial, pattern and color. Plenty of the smart pencil stripes
in demand.
m
Temple
Youn g People's
Club A nnouncem ent:
Exit King Tut•Ankh•Amen, enter the Codex Huntingtonianus Palimpses-
tut! Sounds something like Diplodocus, but it isn't. In place of the mum-
On M ;ednesday evening, May 23,
miffed Pharaoh the center of the stage
is now occupied by • mummified ,
st
e ns to arouse even more of • hold its annual meeting and electionn
manuscript. And this new discovery t h eeee
earthing of the tomb of Pharaoh. I do not believe, however, that the din
covert' will have quite as much effect upon feminine fashions, which is
something to be deplored.
• ........______
A officers.
s The entire membershq
importani
should be - present on this
occasion.
The Young People's Club is els (
planning a "Trip to the Moon" ot
M"daY evening, June 18. A mot
detailed announcement will be mad
at an early date and in the meantim.
members of the society and congre
)-anon are urged to .make no oche
engagement for that evening.
Five years ago • gentl the
by a
her M. Hunt ;anion pla-red
eman
an ancientt Spanish manuscript on .
in the vaults of the Hispisnic Museum
to be alimpsest
writings
that are the earliest surviving
p
w hich
hich was claimed
from the King Jame
and wh ich disclos es marked
text of the
at "palimpsest"
to
explain
h that
"palimpsest" writings
l
version. Al t the outset it is well
mean nothing more or less than pchment
that have been written upon
•r
--------
twice, the earlier writing having been partially d to make room for the
leographer contends that he discovere d
a
D. r Buchan•n, • noted p
lr.
ate
nderneath" writing and that he believes it to be • Biblical text.
this "u
of his critics contend that the doctor has been seeing things; that
--
Some
t on Iv in the imagination.
he sees writing that, due to an eye-strain, exis
d tht those who have pinned their salvation
o ngressman Perlman Again Asks
■
It is quite easy to can drst•n
e
Fink, 14, Twice
aline
Pa
to the infallibility of the New Testament as it reads tod•y will be in •n C Stay for
parchment in the Spanish
Held Defective.
awkward position should it be proven that the parc
museum is in reality an earlier Biblic•I text than the one in use today.
More Topcoats
$14 and $24
The popular weaves. Smart tailoring. The season's best colors.
And many hundreds of coats front which to choose.
Special Entrance and Elevators at 1413 Woodward Avenue.
Frank & Seder—Men's Store—Third Floor.
. ................ .... ............
DEFENDS THE SHECHITA
LONDON.—(J. C. 13.)—The Chief
Rabbi, Dr. J. 11. Hertz, has a letter in
the Tintes, of April 30, on the slaugh-
• - ■ 11111.-111
NEW YORK.—Congressman Na- tering of animals bill, introduced by
Perlman announced that he Sir A. Shirley-Henn, 51. P. in the
Most ill-informed folk believe to this day that Leon Trotsky was a starve ' than D.
proposed to fight any attempt to de- House of Commons on Friday last. As
ing newspaper writer on the East Side of New York and that when the n
srt 14-year-old Pauline Fink of 101
Rossisin revolution broke out he jumped • steamer and when he arrived in
angin Street, a pupil in Public
Russia, because there was so much confusion and lack of leadership, that
School 47, who was declared mentally
P eople
Mr. Trotsky promptly grabbed the reins and became • power. And
■ gle rig•rets normal b)' experts at Bellevue and
are atilt wondering how this newspaper man, smoking innumer
Post Graduate hospitals and by a
and drinking unlimited cups of coffee in the coffee houses in New York,
special Immigration Board sitting in
with it in Russia. ' Washington. At a re-examination by
e ever "got away
--•-•••-•—
_
o board at Ellis Island on Wednesday
I have I•ard men say in all. seriousness that he lived for years in this
girl was certified
to be
e
. mentally
time worked for • furniture store in Pittsburgh. the
.
d
o
ne
at
e
country and that h
d a mind that was uncannily defective for the secon
Pauline Fink, who is deaf, is one of
Sir Paul Dukes told me that Trotsky p
mathematicol and I wondered. But in reading the story of his early life a large family of Polish children who
as printed in the Milan, Italy, Avanti, the official Socialist paper of that in November, 1920, arrived at Ellis Is-
■
city, one gets • new light on this astonishing character. In the first place, land with their mother to join the
he was the hoor pupil in the Scietific
School Pavlovskoe in Odessa., which father, Joseph Fink, already in this
s
n
even at that e•rly age one detects the country. Congressman Perlman said.
he entered at the age of 9. So
trend of his mind. When in the seventh grade he went to Nikolaev, where, Ile became interested in Pauline's
he says, "for the first time in my life I came in contact with advanced case and .eistained permission to have
idea" At the •ge of 17 he mae d •n unsuccessful the girl admitted temporarily under
circles •nd revolutionary s.
thematical faculty
bond. She was adulated to Public
attempt to be entered as a special student of the ma
School 47, a school for deaf mutes,
of the university.
---s-wee--.-- --
I attracted much attention by her
In 1898, when only 19 years of age, he was already in orison, having
Miss Euthema Cosgrove, one of her
been arrested in connection with the activities of the Labor Union of South progress.
the
m
radical organization. He spent two and • half years in prison ' teaches, when i t btR•ae time for
Russia, a
to Ellis Island, in No-
and he was exiled for four years to Siberia. He escaped in 1902 and forged girl fo r go back
vember, 1921, arranged to have her
a false passport bearing the name of Trotsky, by which he is known to this
examined by Dr. Menas S. Gregory,
He became active in the Social-Democratic Union of Siberia and later
day.
head of the Bellevue psyc'nopathic
became one of the editorial staff of the Iskra, • paper devoted to these -
ward, and others, who decided she
activities. On this paper worked Lenine. So Trotsky evidently knew him'
was normal. Later the girl was re-
before the revolution. The revolution of 1905 found him president
well
examined at Ellis Island and turned
the executive committee of the Workingmen's Council of Petrograd. Later
d
down, whereupon Miss Cosgrove, aid-
that year he was•gain sentenced to prison, where he spent his time writ- ' '
in
cal by Mr. Perlman, got Pauline exam-
I small books. He escaped in February, 1906. He went to Lo -
ing
, ined by a board in Washington which
and later to Vienna, continuing his radical work. When the war broke
be-
decided in her favor, the decision be-
don
1 mg upheld by a board of review,
out he escaped from Vienna• and went to Paris and he evidently won't
orable citixen of the republic, because he was expelled in 1916. And
Subsequently an order via. .s
de •
til the re•olution broke
rem ' d
for another examination at Ellis Is-
then he came to New York, where e
c omparatively brief period,
Mr. Perlrnan's
a
nut. He worked while in New York, which was
land last Wednesday.
iving
in
Russi•
he
org•nixed
the
a rr
y
mine ia
tl11 the newspapers.
suggestion that t e doctors
sit
United InternationalSoci•I-Democr•ts and then devoted his time to uniting
Washington
■ new light on I I amines the girl in
them with the Bolshevists. All this will tend to spread
with the local board was agreed to
'Erotary and dispel the fiction that he was an average radical newspaper '
three Washington
f lInstead of the
writer who just happened to fall into Russi•
at a time when anybody o
Mr. Perlman said, only
,
tars, however,
two went to Ellis Island. Commis-
ability could have seized great
power.
ordinary ability
....._____
isioner Todd informed . Mr. Perlman
d
Leon Lewis of the B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation League do icago, pre- that the vote of the . is .
n Ch
..vas 3 to 2, the two Washington doe-
to think very much of the paper Tolerance, published if T oerance,
the
l
o
in the girl's favor.
sumably •g•inst the Ku Klux Klan. The more I earn
■ tors voting
...
he most humane. It is moreover an
the bill is again to come before the
essential part of the Jewish religion,
House of Commons, the Chief Rabbi
writes, he desires to state that in its
any other method is prohibited to
present form cannot be acceptable to
Jews. Legislation interfering with
the Jewsih community or to men of
Schechita would therefore inflict cruel
good will of whatever creed. The Jew-
hardship on hundreds of thousands
ish method of slaughtering animals
of law-abiding citizens and would in
for food—Schechita—he continues, is
effect constitute a grievous religious
according to the testimony of Compe-
persecution.
tent 'experts, including Lord Lister, and
the meat from animals killed by
TAX FOR JEWS
URGED BY PAN GERMANS
SPECIAL
-
, show me that those prominent Chicago Jews were being
I listened, but what he said didn't make much of an imores.ion. Now I
like Tolerance, Colonel Mayfield's ,
.
VIENNA-1.1 . T . Al —The con-
•po g • Pep ears
ty
think he was right.
Weekly; the e•rnborn Independent •nd others of the same level oug
t ference of the Pan German Par
■ air in
Austria has just been completed here.
paid
not to be support d. Throw up windows! We need more fresh
A great amount of attention was
h• the delegates to the Jewish ques-
tion and it was decided to demand
Ernest Martin Hopkins, president of Dartmouth College, Whine to
that the government should impose
Arthur Gleason, as reported in the New Republic, said, among other things:
heavier taxation on Jewish hankers
and. Jewish capital as a whole, in or-
4, a week after
"In the autumn of 192'2 on an application of Oct.
der to relieve the burden of the Ger-
college had opened, and after we had rejected 1,000 applicants, we
man people in Austria.
accepted a Jew because he met our series of tests. No Jew has been
A protest was also made against
refused nor will be refused because he is a Jew. There has been no
the acceptance of East European
limitation by percentage nor by jockeying of tests. Dean Early Gor-
of
sews as residents in the city of Vien-
don Bill, director of admissions, pays no attention to the name
na.
the applicant, nor to the 'father's name,' nor to the 'desirable family
this country!
. Here's some more of it. (I am
It's good reading and sound
sorry I cannot publish it all, but if you want to read the soundest article
that has •ppeared in years on "How to Make • College," get the issue of
the New Republic of May 2.)
year, before we entered on the selective process system of
"Last
granting admissions, we had 12 Jew's in the freshman class. This
year, with our drastic method of choice, we have 11 Jews among the
2 per cent of the college community. The per-
freshmen. That is
small because we are a homogeneous college com-
centage of Jews is
hills and far away from
munity in a little country town well up in the
the centers of Jewish population. We disregard the racial question.
Racial generalizations are likely to be the cover for personal dislike.
Statistics of racial deinquency are dangerous. Our selective process
any sharply defined
does not permit our college to be dominated by
category; neither old-family New Englanders, nor the
group in any
The test is indi-
('h
sons of stockbrokers, nor American
sons
is a social
vidual in relation to a well-rounded college body, which
cross section of the country."
., ST SIDE EAST SIDE
w
%, 'E
B G I. Rivet and PI, /TV 1414.,, .,,1 Be
9•Michiaan land Junction gs.K„ch„,i sot La,
di,m ,d, n. .,..: .. n ..., .
hi.
nd ,,,,,A n d B
11 02 1 1 5 .2 c:1, w .s
S and Seward
II-Ta.ellth Sr.
H ' ida."^
2 6-
, ti ," ik . 1 B
I7W ■ rren Ave. and 101I1
I4•Wond•atd and Ale.- 28-0aland a" •, ^il."'''
29-Ikusae.1 and Lyman
IS-GI7ntln :and Oa limn 10-Weodward and Pluette
RESOURCES
OVER ONE HUNDRED MILLION
DOLLARS
wes•0220*'''''
STUDENTS FLEE VIENNA
---
VIENNA.—(. 1 . T. Al—Within the
last few weeks about 500 Jewish stu-
dents of the Medical Faculty of Vien-
na University have obtained transfer
certificates and have left for universi-
ties abroad.
The Rectorate of the University is
greatly concerned over this growing
movement among Jewish students, re-
sulting from the anti-Jewish distur-
bances and the numerus clausus agi-
tation. It is feared that the result
will be a severe financial crisis at the
University.
Blessed is he who meekly bears his
trials, of which every one has his
I share.—The Talmud.
"Little Old New York," the Rids
Johnson Young play of Manhattan in
its early days, will be the offering
of the Bonstelle company at the Gar-
rick Theater next week, affording un-
usual opportunities for character
work.
for Your Convenience
I Raker and Tventy-lhird 16-Canton and G,aliot
2-Cleirmount and Linwo.d 17-Chen and14111•aullee
3.Delray, 7870 Minion 18-Flacher an , I Grat:n.
19-Fore•t and Cadillac
4 Ferndale and Lawndale 20-Garfield and lioalt11
:I nd RE e r ne ki‘lt e,
G
1 4 . yk la, a ai 1 2 1 3 - lit:::::•
7 1 -.G
F o ar. * 5
7, e: r t and i 0
22-Harper and To...end
Bff•hira
6- Gd. 5,,,, and
I In
r•-•
, 1q 1 1
T.-
I
GARRICK THEATER
THE PEOPLES
STATE BANK
30 BRANCHES
.
loss I think of the Chicago brand. Shortly after the pa er was issued
e me t influence the Jews
gentleman called to see me and tried to persuad
. He tr ied
names
i
raw t their
.." fools
of.
whose names were used ■ s supporters to withd
.... ....... .... .......
...
∎ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ ∎
TO FIGHT DEPORTATION
BRITISH CHIEF RABBI
OF DEAF JEWISH GIRL
connection.'"
•
With the Aid of Six Makers from Whom We Buy
Clothing Year In and Year Out, We Are Presenting
These Fine Suits as Birthday "Gifu.' to Our Men
Customers.