fittlikwortikwun
PAGE EIGHT
Miss Jean Goldenberg of 643 Put-
nam avenue was the guest the past
week of Miss Lisette Freund, at the
summer home of the latter's parents,
Dr. 11111 Mrs. Hugo Freund, at Walnut
Lake.
C7L i
.drld
•4>orsortai
The Misses Rose and Helen Rosen-
berg of 1170 Collingwood avenue
have left for an extended visit to
Chicago, Colorado, Salt Lake City
and Yellowstone Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Milfred 0. ('hatlin
Men. Eda Herman of Cincinnati (Faye Hoffman)) have returned from
and her children, Mr. and Mrs. Claude their honeymoon and are residing at
The Young Women's Hebrew As-
Deutsch of Cleveland, were visitors Hotel Addison.
sociation announces that vacancies
city the past week.
are open at the "Y" camp for the in the
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Fishman and'
'week of Sept. 2 to 9. Those desir-
Gottilie Guttenberg of 32104 West
Gamily have returned home after
ing to err, II are urged to register at
the summer vacation at Ce-
510•1111illg
Foriid
avenue
is
visiting
his
mother,.
once at the clubhouse, 89 Rowena,
Mrs. G. Guttenberg, at her summer dar Point, where they were guests at
we 10 caning Glendale 7971.
the Breakers Hotel.
home at Long Lake, Mich.
---
Mr. and Mrs. Lou Fienman of 246
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Weiss of di 12
Perri avenue celebrated their ninth
Mrs. Sol M. Lehmann (Jeanette
wedding anniversary on Sunday, July Schultz) of New York is visiting West Fort street have returned from
a
Week
' s stay at Buffalo and Niagara
IV. 'Many friends and out-of-town friends and relatives in this city.
Falls.
guests were in attendance.
-- • -
Let) Michelson and daughter,
Lillian, are spending two weeks at
the Breakers Hotel, Cedar Point,
Ohio,
Mils Dorothy Bornstein of 738
Miss Jeanette Gomberg, who has
been spending the past two weeks • DAY CAMPS IN PALESTINE.
with her parents in Duluth, will r,'•
turn to the city on Sunday and will
make her home with Mr. and Mrs. Told by Mis• Landsman, Hadassah's
Jack Wolfson of 1995 Taylor avenue.
Public Health Nurse.
RON ICU:
canon is made, and I enter. "Good
Yom toy," I say, standing at the
New
Greetings
The practice of sending New Year's Greetings to friends
and relatives through the local Jewish paper is general through-
out the country. Its advantage over the old individual mailing
card is evident in the saving of time, expense and worry over
forgetting a friend.
Greeting Cards in THE DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE
will take this form:
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Jacobs and Family
4960 West Pine Boulevard
Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends
for it happy and I'rosperous New Year.
MAIL THE COUPON BELOW NOT LATER THAN
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4.
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle,
850 West High Street,
Detroit, Mich.
Gentlemen:—
Enclosed find $1.00, for which please insert my New Year's
Greeting Card in your Rosh H••Shisnah (5684) Number.
West Euclid avenue will leave on
Aug. 11 for an indefinite May at Ni-
Miss Helen Kleinsmith of 1698
The Day ('atop has been started for
NAME
West Philadelphia avenue has return.' the undernourished children, and this
ed after spending three weeks in work will go on until October at any
Cleveland.
ADDRESS
rote. Day Camp idea—after all the
children had been examined twice and
Mrs. L Kleinsmith and daughter, it WAS discovered that out of about
Rae, of West Philadelphia avenue 700 children eight were found with
have left for Oxley Beach, Canada,' { mositive tuberculosis, about 80 to 90
where they will spend two weeks:
undernourished and the balance quite
tonna', it was decided that the posi-
Leon Goldsmith and family are t ive T. 11. cases would he sent to Seed
for the summer months and the un-
By RABBI DR. JACOB SONDERLING
Mni. Harold N. Selling (Evelyn summering at Cedar Point, Ohio,
Schultz)
z) of Chicago Is the house
dernourished would all he gathered
Mrs. Ben S. Meyerfeld of Coning- and cared for the whole day in some
(The author of the diary from which the
guest of her mother here.
March 30, 1916.
d
extracts are taken served four
wood avenhe will have on a Euro- PP layground. Mr. Andursky very kind- follo m wing
Today at the railway station in
earuringhe
the Word W
a s Je w ish chan•
pean trip in the near future.
ly permitted them to have the use of rein with the German armlem on the Russia
Radzwilizki 1 saw a tragic picture.
some ground in Schnellers, among the front. Ile ham recorded with a rare insight
the sufferingm •nti herolomm Early in the day a train arrived from
Rabbi and Sirs. Louis Wolsey and pines opposite Achvia. There, in a • r m arm
o r the ly„, iy i. n y e „„i„ r i, my ,
the oat
children or Cleveland were in the little hut, the kitchen was arranged, e.o.m... cataitrophes which ever of mtruck
an Poland. Hundreds of Jews—young,
city on their way from Saginaw, shower bath arrangeda tent arranged innocent people might between the foreign old. They were taken from the streets
foe told the foe that wore the uniform of in Warsaw and deported forcibly to
where they visited their parents.
for the nurse, a special hut arranged their own gov ernment. Dr. 1:underling. who
for sun baths. Two teachers were em-
em- is one of the leading German Reform rabbis, Kurland, where they must build roads.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schweitzer ployed, the school furniture loaned b y land ranks am one of the foremost orators of Here, now, is the breakfast hour. In
• present in the United Sao,
announce the Bar Mitzvah of their the school department. The grounds Cermany, in at
long lines they pass by the soldiers
where he is viiiting the /larger Jewish tOtil•
son, Abraham, on Sunday, Aug. 12, were cleaned up and the children come munition in the interest of the Karen flare- who hand out the rations. To each
at their home, 963 Alexandrine.
man a piece of bread with a slice of
every morning at 7 R. m. to have
bacon. I stand in a corner and look,
breakfast. After breakfast the nurse
March 15, 1916.
Mr. and Mrs. George L. Edloff of examines the children for contagion,
and look. Old and young, as soon a s
Today I wandered through the des- they have passed the soldiers, throne
Virginia park have returned from an temperatures are taken, and off to les-
extended motor trip through Wiscon- sons under the pine trees. At 10 a. m. olate streets of the ruined little village away the bacon and eat the hard, dry
sin and Illinois,
bread and honey and milk is served of Schaoli in Lithuania. Ruined in- bread. And those few who do not,
and lessons resumed until lunch at
Mrs. M. Justin Meyer (Rose Ed- 12:30 p. m. From 1 to 3 p. m. all
, lee Crean Molds of all dispels and
them for dinnera or parties. French
loff) of Forest, Ohio, is visiting Mr. children sleep under the pines, on pil-
at American creamy specially pre-
and Mrs. George 1.. Edloff of Virginia low and straw mats; 3 p. m. tempera-
pared as order. Place your order
park.
with an now.
tures taken, all medical treatments
carried out by the nurse, play hours
Mrs. Sam Oanns and daughters, (under supervision) until supper at
Celia and Rose, of 541 East Palmer 5:30 p. m. Then another hour for rest
avenue have returned from a delight- and off for home—to bed,
7231 MACK AVENUE
ful stay in Atlantic City.
9314 WOODWARD
The older girls have work assigned
Melrose 8712
to them in the following manner:
Miss Caroline Goodman, daughter There are about 711 children attending
of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Goodman of this open air school. At meal time
'976 East Grand boulevard, was a there are six tables, each table with
member of the class that was gradu- from 10 to 13 children. At each table
ated from the Detroit Teachers' Col- there ate two older girls, who have
lege on Friday. Miss Goodman will charge of the younger children. Onel
spend the remainder of the saintlier of the girls sets the table and the
at her parents' home at Cass Lake.
other washes the dishes. Every week
the work is alternated.
• Mrs. Joseph Gelman and children,
These girls must also see that the
Edward and Norman. of 1028 Theo- children take their nourishment prop-
dore street left for Los Angeles, Cal., erly, and behave, etc. The teeth are
where they will make their future brushed after each meal. Table man-
home.
ners are taught. Knife and fork prop-I
used (imagine some of these kid-
Mr. and Mrs. L. Bielfield of Ha- dies never saw a fork). Each child
zelwood avenue have returned from gets a thorough bath once a week, ,1
a delightful visit to Cedar Point, be- given by the nurse and the older girls.
ing guests at the Breakers.
The coals are wholesome and simple
and ample for these growing children.
Miss Belle Cohen of 519 Medbury The children are weighed every week,'
boulevard is visiting with her sister and the gain is very gratifying so far. I
Om the Ocean Front
and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Jack The mothers are expected to send the I
American and European Plane.
Dubell of Chicago, Ill.
children dressed in clean clothes; if ,
New Hydriatic Baths.
not the kiddies are sent home for a
Golf Privileges and Garage.
Mr, and Mrs. Simon Miller of Phil- clean up. If anyone is naughty they
Bathing From Hotel.
adelphia, who toured to Detroit, were are dismissed for the day and, believe
I the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leon me, they return on the following day
JOEL HILLMAN, President.
Weinberg of 1522 Monterey avenue .full of good resolutions.
agara Falls, New York, Atlantic City,
Philadelphia and Rochester, N. Y.
---- —
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Vallit and Mr.
and Mrs. Nathan Silberstein are en-
joying • motor trip through the East,
stopping in New York and Atlantic
City and returning by way of the
Berksbire Hills in a fortnight.
FROM AN ARMY CHAPLAIN'S DIARY
LOUIE ICE CREAM
and
FRENCH PASTRIES
BOULEVARD
FRENCH PASTRY
—;e51
WNLVE° 0 51° HEAD
NCTC)E C&[a
THE BUICK MOTOR COMPANY
Announces the appointment of the
BEMB-ROBINSON CO.
444 East Jefferson Avenue
I
iP
As authorized Buick dealers in the city of Detroit, effective
August 1st.
Commencing today, the Bemb-Robinson Company has on dis-
play in its salesrooms a showing of the new 1924 Buicks and pro-
vides another opportunity for viewing these entirely new and
distinctly advanced mc_Iels.
BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FLINT, MICHIGAN
Division of General Motors Corporation
Pioneer Builders of Valve - in - Head Motor Cars
Branches in All Prnicipal Cities—Dealers Everywhere
threshold. The host, a man with a
long white beard, comes towards me
with the quiet dignity of a Patriarch.
He offers his hand in welcome "Sho-
lom Aleichem'.' No question is asked,
no surprise is shown. For them I am
not a stranger, a German officer, I
am a Jew, and that is sufficient.
A place at the table is assigned to
me and I join the family around the
festite board. Perhaps a score of pea
pie are gathered in the small room,
and while we talk we discuss, of
course, the hard times. How diffic
ult
it must have been to get wheat for
Matzos, and in our conversathin I use
inadvertently the expression "Kamcho
de-paocho." The old man looks up.
"Are you perhaps the Rabbi of the
army?" he asks, and when I admit
my identity he hands me at once his
own big cup. "Slake Kiddush," And
I, the stranger—no, not the stranger,
the brother, conduct the Seder, sleep
afterwards on the couch on which I
am sitting, and the next mourning
when I leave, little Esther, who is but
six years old, but has already all the
hospitable instincts of a true Jewish
woman, sighs: "How sorry I would
he if the Rabbi would not come and
stay with us on Shavuos."
Truly we are a people, nay, we are
one people. Dispersed among the na-
tions everywhere different, and yet in
spite of all outward differences, one
in spirit. That is the lesson i learned
in those hours.'
Often I ask those to whom I speak:
"What is it that sustains you in these
terrible days? You have suffered so
fearfully, you are so broken and so
beaten, how is it that you have still
the courage to live on?"
And the answer is always the same.
"Le shono habo Biruscho layjm."
"These is Zion. Some day we will he
in 'Zion. Zion is our hope." What a
wonderful, what an inspiring faith!
A faith not engendered by the dis-
illusionments of a frustrated assimila-
tion, a faith not built up painfully by
historic deducion, but a living faith,
the faith of simple people who believe
what they pray, and pray what they
believe. Zion is the star that bright-
ens the night of their sorrow, Zion the
anodyne that alleviates their pain,
Zion the fairy-tale that delights their
children, Zion the dream that consoles
the aged. And if they die the old,
without having actually seen the
Promised Land, believe and trust nev-
ertheless that they have not hoped in
vain, that the promise will hold good
for heir children.
If every Jew could come here and
see what I have seen, no further Zion-
ist propaganda would he necessary.
So much spirituality, so much dignity,
on much antique grandeur can not,
must not, perish in the night of the
Golus. If the Jew could preserve his
individuality, his distinct personality,
his ideals and his aspirations under
all the persecution of an alien and un-
friendly world, what may not he-
come of 111111 in his own country, in
his own hr nom? Woit new type of
Jew may not the future bring! Oh,
that peace were here at last, and that
at the fateful moment, when the map
of the world will be drawn anew,
someone would stand up and say:
"The Jew too shall now have this
country. The Jew, too, shall now have
his homeland." Oh, that someone
would stand up and say, and not only
say it in words but also in deeds:
"Zion for the Jew, and the Jew for
Zion."
PAVILION FOR WOMEN
MAKES FRIENDS FOR
DENVER'S SANATORIUM
The Jewish Consumptives' Relief
DR. SONDERLING WITH A GROUP 01• CHEDER BOYS AND THEIR Society, in spite of its original' cep-
a&
of $1.10 nineteen years ago, has
.• I
REBI ON THE RUSSIAN WAR FRONT IN 1916.
achieved the distinction of being the
deed, ruined beyond hope of repair. those few who, vanquished by the un- largest Jewish institution of its kind
' Not one stone is left upon the other. endurable pangs of hunger, force the in the world. This is chiefly dole 'o
Before the Russians evacuated that forbidden food down their parched the great popularity of the Sanatori-
doomed little place they tired every throats, they are perhaps even more um amongst American Jewry. A very
single house, and wherever I look now tragic. What they must have suf- marked example of this was the re-
'I see nothing but dust and ashes, fered to overcome their inherited fear ception accorded recently to Dr.
ashes and dust. Where may they be and disgust! Poor, unhappy brethren! George Eisler', the representative of
who once lived there? Lived and I suffer with them, for them.
the institution at Portland, Maine.
loved, and suffered and mayhap hated,
And i remember another picture. A Despite prevailing conditions the Jew-
and who are now gone without leav- Seder with Russian prisoners of war. ish community of Portland contrib-
ing any trace of their existence? Real-
Whatever I could, I have gathered uted to the Sanatorium commensurate
ly without any trace? is there no together to prepare a real feast fur with its importance Rod its activities
voice that will speak for them and of them, to give them for once a true in behalf of Jews afflicted with the
them even out of ruins of their de- Yom-tov. Even wine was there. Each dreadful white plague.
stroyed homes?
In• Eisler's services have PreVe(I
man had half a bottle standing before
I look nearer, try to find traces in him. But m y spread was neglected; to be of great value to the institution.
Due
to his eloqpence as an orator, his
they
hardly
touched
the
food,
hardly
one heap of ashes, then in another,
and soon I detect a strange difference nipped at their glasses. "Why don't ability to make and to hold friends
and
to
his devotion to' the intereoto
you
eat?"
I
ask.
"You
needn't
he
in these various desolate ruins. There,
to my right, nothing but broken bits afraid. It is absolutely kosher." "We those who suffer, he has created an in-
tense
interest
in the Sanatorium. The
of household goods, smouldering
Denver Sanatorium, which is the only
chaiio, something that may have been
institution
accepting
eases in all
, a table, the poor remains of a bed.
stages, from the first day of its ex-
Nothing to give a clue of those who
istence
has
on
its
record
a great num-
lived their life at this place. And
ber of people returned to normal,
there to niy left bits of paper, printed
self-supporting
life
from
utter hope-
pages, books... I pick these pages up
lessness. It is today one of the most
and I see they are covered with He-
popular
national
Jewish
institutions
brew letters. I stand, then, before a
in the countrys
Jewish house. And 1 search further
Dr.
Eisler
is
at
present
on
a tour in
and further and I find again and
the State of Washington in behalf of
again the same phenomenon. Where-
the
Sanatorium.
ever I See nothing but the ruins of
Dr. Eisler's tour is of particular
merely nuiterial possessions I am cer-
importance at this time, so it is di-
tain to stand before a non-Jewish
root,' toward the improvement of an
house, wherever I detect leaves of
old shortcoming of the institution. Due
books, the desire for the more intangis
hle possessions of an intellectual, not
to say a spiritual world, I have also
found a truly Jewish house.
And now, of course, I try to recon-
struct out of these hits of printed
hooks the character, the personality
of those who once cherished thy°
pages. Here for instance I hold a
page of a Talniud-Tractat —a scholar
lived here; there again I find the re-
mains of a Midras•h—a poet must
ha ve dreamed at this place. Among
these ruins are the last leaves of a
Zuena-Ree n - a frail old woman
spoke here her last prayer and waited
for the end that came with terror and
fire; in another heap I see the covers
of a printer--a little child has halt-
ingly learned the first letters and
spelled patiently the first words at
: this place. The People of the Book
- never until now did I understand
how deeply true, how gloriously justi-
tied, that name is for Israel.
to lack of arcominodelionn, space for
women is inadequate to such an ex-
tent that, at present, a dresciftilly
long waiting list of women are wait-
ing for admission. The new special
building for one hundred female pa-
tients which the Nineteenth Conven-
tion has decided to erect, depends upon
the generous response of American
Jewry.
It is therefore expected that Wash-
ington Jewry will feel the prio,siro
need of this improvement and wit O ac-
cord Dr. George Eisler the reception
due him as a personality and due the
Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society
(Denver Sanatorium) as an institu-
tion.
DR. JACOB SONDERLING
know, we know," comes he answer,
"but it is too beautiful today, and we
are too happy. We can not eat. The
joy is so great, it burdens our heart."
How goes the saying: "Sian two
Again and again that same experi- I
ence is repeated. At the front I wan-I not live by bread alone." 0 great,
der through one of the trenches. Me. noble soul of my people, it is here that
foot stumbled over something hard in I recognize you fully!
the snow. I bend down, search, and
I find an "Een Jaakow." At this
Pessach, 1916.
place of death and destruction Jews
I sit at the railway station of Ra-
were once reading, dreaming, living.
kischki. Tonight I shall be in Oknista
What a tremendous, what a signifi- to give a Seder to my comrades there,
cant difference! If • Jewish house but it is impossible to reach my desti-
burns down a bit of paper is stn, a nation. The roads are a sea of mud.
witness of the lives that were lived I can not even use an aeroplane, No
there. And out of such silent wit- landing would be possible. So I wan-
nesses, out of such burned bits of pa- der towards the little village—a short
per we reconstruct the past; the past distance of one and a half mile, but
which, 'than reconstructed, becomes it takes me three hours to make it.
history. The history of an eternal peo- Yet I don't give up. I must sit tonight
ple that can never quite die, can at a Seder-table.
never be quite forgotten. And if an-
other, a non-Jewish house becomes
the victim of flames, it is utterly de-
stroyed.' Nothing is left. Everything
is gone and forgotten, forgotten and
gone... Boruch shelo ossani goi!
It is deep dusk when I arrive. I
stand in the middle of a strange
street; in the various houses the lights
have just been kindled, and I look
around and choose on a house where
I want to be a guest tonight. My de-
.
MONTGOMERY MERCHANT
STRICKEN IN NEW YORK
NEW YORK.—(j, T. A.)—Adolph
Nachman, 63 years old, owner of a
large specialty store in Montgomery,
Ala., and a familiar figure to New
York merchants for some years, died
of heart attack in his room in the Ho-
tel Collingwood, 45 W. 35th street.
Mr. Nachman has been buying in
New York for forty years, usually
making about four trips a year. He
arrived there from the south with his
wife shortly before.
Just before she descended, Mrs.
Nachman said, to send a telegram to
the family in Montgomery about their
safe arrival. Her husband apparently
was in excellent spirits and had been
making plans for an interesting stay
in New York. A few minutes later
Mrs. Nachman found her husband ly-
ing on the couch. Realizing what she
knew must be the trouble, she called
the house physician. lie pronounced
Mr. Nachman dead,
Mrs. Nachman, with the body, re-
turned on a midnight train for Mont-
gomery.
'ARA,' tURGEOISIE'
SCORED AT EXHIBIT
Attended With N ■i fisow
Festivity.
1
Idgeuom Affair in
MOSCOW—(J. T. A.l—The
ing of the Idgescom's exhibition
le.
was attended with much festivit.
representatives of institutions, pub-
lic schools, factories and many J ew .
ish writers hying among th , ■ se pres.
ant and speaking.
The present position of the Idges•
cam was characterized as a victory
over the "American bourgeoisie" by
Merezhin, a leading communist. "In.
stead of the American bourgeoisie
dictating conditions as they did three
years ago, we are now doing the dic-
tating through the force of public
opinion of the American Jewish pro-
letariat enlisted in our behalf."
Jewish press of America and Po-
land was attacked and ridiculed by
Litvakoff, another communist, for its
attitude toward the Soviets.
M. Rashkes, who until lately was
head of the New York Bureau of
the Idgescom, characterized America
as a "land which could help but does
not want to." Ile sharply assailed
the American relief organizations.
The American working masses, he
said, wanted to help those suffering
most, but the American Relief Ad-
ministration sent the money every_
where, giving the smallest portion to
Ukraine and White Russia because
they were supposed to be more
friendly to the Soviets than the other
regions, although the suffering was
most intense there, Sir. Rashkes con-
cluded.
The exhibition includes a display
of the work of 168 schools adminis-
tered by the Iidgescom. There is a
section showing the destruction
wrought by the pogroms and another
depicting the reconstructive achieve-
ments of the new period. The exhi-
bition will be brought to America in
a few months.
AGED RABBI BEATEN
BY POLISH OFFICER
WARSAW.—(J. T. A.)—The Jew-
ish Sejni Club has submitted an inter-
pellation demanding action by *the
War Minister and the Minister of in-
terior against a polite army captain,
Swieezkowski, who on July 22 brutally
attacked the 72-year-all Rabbi Syl-
mum of the township of Chrnielnik,
East Galicia. The aged and infirm
rabbi was walking down the street
when the army officer, without any
provocation, seized the rabbi by his
heard, knueked and kicked him until
he lay virtually unconscious in the
street.
When the rabbi managed to finally
get up the sittiser drew his revolver
1111(1 threatened tr shoot him if he dal
not go straight home and keep silent
about the matter.
The rabbi's cries attracted a
crowd, among whom was also a pffise
sergeant. Instead of arresting the of-
ficer, he urged him to "finish his
'work." The otrrcer then proceeded o
maltreat the old rabbi again. '..:e
Jews of the community are h: :Hy
wrought up over the affair and ,he
Sejm interpellation demands stringy rat
punishment of both the army officer
and polite officer.
• FORD ROADSTER
1921--Mecisanically it i
Pro cla im
:have.
new field roi l , , back cur-
lain, mind tire,. There
no rea •011 for
waiting nn the D. S. D when tint can
boy this can for $130.00. Ternt..
REO
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