v imericam 5cwisk Periodical Cada cunem smug - CINCINNATI 30, OHIO Zi_tufl fn no t rfili o n (lino s t c ..r. VISITS EAST SIDE HOME AND IS PUT IN TOUCH WITH SISTER IN MOSCOW Young Judaea Club Notes PAGE THREE THE TRAVELER 4)REPARES FOR BUSY By ETHEL TAUROG SOCIAL SEASON FOR LOCAL B'NAI B'R1TH NEW YORK— (J. T. A.)—Thanks It was raining heavily, and a howl-' to a casual visit to his old home resi- ing wind rattled the windows and Samuel S. un the East Side, Julius Kunel des' , doors of the Hausman flat. . enter", r onma was able to learn the whereabouts of "Some people art. lucky," grumbled . „ . been seeking his sister, whom he had Mogen David Club. Mrs. Hausman to her husband. ter IS years. "There's my cousin Pearl in Florida Moscow, Kuners si:Aer, who IiveS in The Mogen David Club, at a meet. for the winter, and she gut married meat ter ti l I had somehow obtained her brother's ing held Thursday evening at the the same time we were. Her bus- 1.1 old-time Orchard street address, from North End Community Clinic, elect.' band wasn't making so much like you which Kunel had MOVNI eight years ed the following new officers: Meyer did that time, and she borrowed from Ago. Rosen, president; Louis('utter, vice- me my wedding dress for her wed- The sister sent the address rto the president; Irving Shevitz, secretary; ding. Joint Iii‘tributien Committee, who Louis Ilonieman, treasurer; Nathan "Well, ain't you got Florida right wrote Kura] at his old address. The Ginsburg, sergeant-at-aims; Sam S. here?" queried her husband, go...1 Janitor, not knowing Kunel's present below, Jewish National Fund treas. humoredly. "Here's your fruil," hi whereabouts, was on the point of send- urer and handball captain; N. Susser, pointed to a bowl of fruit on the ing it bark. By a queer coincidence, reporter; Nathan Cooper, indoor table, "and there's your garden," bl Kunel happened to he on the East Sida baseball captain and eheer leader: indicated a huge rubber plant, "and i' and decided to take a look at his old The evening's program was fea- the janit r should get a notion, it iv ii I home. Due to that visit Kunel is now toured by a discussion as to whether be hotter here than in Florida." in communication with his sister. synagogues are justified in charging , "Q -ure, for you it's too not yet," for seats at services during Rosh Ila- re ,,hed his spouse bitterly. . Shanah and Toni Kippur. . were the kind of a person like on . lilt, chairman of the io, e of l'isgah J. , ,. . .nouces t.1 Some Interesting Facts About Our August Furniture Sale " NATIONAL LEADERS TO AID JUDAISM NEW YORK.—(,1. T. A.)---A na- tional conference of leading Jews, to consider the condition of Judaism in this country, especially the Jewish Theologieal Seminary and its allied ,,titutions, is to be held in New York ,, on Oct. 7, it was announced yester- day. The call for the meeting has been prominent Jews. sent to Those who have signed the call are Louis Marshall, President of the American Jewish Committee; Dr. Cyrus Adler, President of the Jewish Thrailogical Seminary; Felix War- burg, chairman of the American Jew- ish Joint Distribution Committee; Judge Irving Lehman, President Jew- ish Welfare Board; David A. Brown of Detroit, chairman of the National Appeal for Jewish ‘Var Sufferers; the Rev. Dr. Louis M. Epstein, President of the Rabbinical Assembly; the Rev. Dr. Elias L. Solomon, President of the United Synagogue of America; Rabbi Max Drub, chairman of the Jewish Theological Seminary Fund; Jacoh Billikopf, executive director of the Federation of Jewish Charities of Philadelphia; David M. Bressler, chairman of the New York War Suf- M. Strook, ferers Campaign; Sol Henry A. Dix of New York, and Sol Rosenbloom of Pittsburg. rAto II I r cousin Pearl's husband that want• ( things, you oatld boas- them, tn. I never saw such a ',mown like y so in Knights of Judaea. my life. A soon shouldn't want to co The program of the Knights of Ju- the world. Always he is in the st .r, divot at the meeting held on Tuesday or in the house. !etude go by the evening was featured a by • review of ocean, in the mountains in the sum Palestine conditions by Abe 'rorgaw. nwr, in the warm climates in the win- Others who participated in the pro- ter, they travel, they see things, and gram were Abe Lang, Julius Ka- you--nothing." hatzky, William Lankin, Jacob Ku- "You don't know in how many dushin, Sam Goldstein, Sam Fire. different countries I travel. I tell you Motive, Joe Safran, Nathan Zack. I am always traveling, and I don't A debate on the question, "Re- have to run for trains, or take a solved, that nationalism and not anti- chance on getting where to sleep, or Semitism is the cause of Zionism," being overcharged for what I eat, and will be held this Tuesday evening. best of all, I don't take no chances of SAMUEL S. SIAM. William Lankin and Joe Satrap still being disappointed." who, rharg,.. of "You," she said with the chagrin ~agar uphold the affirmative and Abe Lang of a woman who fails to understand ' and Arthur Rabinowitz the negative. 11 r. Stahl, he will prepare for the 1.1.r husband, "you with your jokes. first annual fast Pie,elents' Night, I'm going to the 1110%1(.5." With pleasure," he said cheer- t " beheld " fl M"ndaYevens ng, (kl• Tiffereth Zion. fully. All past presidents of Pisgah Lodge NI ta k e are urged to communicate with Mr. The Tiffereth Zion celebrated the. "Bernice," she called. " Stahl immediately, that their names first anniversary of the club's exist- Bernice along." be placed on the list of the evening's once Saturday evening at an interest- "Leave her alone," pleaded Mr. guests. Mr. Stahl can be reached ing affair held at the home of Fan- Hausman. "She's in the kitchen talk- nie l'habensky, 3366 St. Antoine ing to father. She needs younger critter at Glendale 1324 or at the Wind B ' rith lace, Brush and Adams. street. Florence Horowitz acted as cotnpany than us." • Sirs. Hausman shrugged her shout- chairman and welcomed the guests. The history of the club was given by tiers. "Honest, you would think he Miss Chab•nsky. Anna Tachna gave was a child her age, the way them two was just like the room in his own the club prophecy. Mass singing of sit and talk together all the time. I house. Even the children who tvere Young Judaea songs and dancing wonder what they find to talk about." I playing on the floor were no diffrent ' She walked down the short corridor fr o m his awn children. He shrugged i and stood in the entrance, listening. his shoulders. Then he baked up and I She shrugged her shoulders in a puz- saw a woman sitting un a chair, pluck- zled fashion, and went off to the mov- ing a goose, and this Wiii an, this wo- man resembled his wife. I ies "Ile •muttered it few wo ds of greet- And in a large cane rocker near the radiator sat the grandfather, the 4,4111w, and to his amazemen the woman began to scold in the tho nigh mau- 1 Mr. Ilausnuin, AS he was known in Ithe neighborhood. Perched on his lap tier of his OWII wife. lie loo ed around concluded the •program. a queer sat a little seven-year-old girl with in amazement. 'Isn't t (ter blue-black bobbed hair, and lerge,iworld!' he exclaimedi -* cop save their strength and money and I shining black eyes. "When I'm big I'm going to India stay at hone instead of traveling. and Japan and Arabia and every- Everything is the same', all towns are The wholehearted approval every• where bestowed on the good Maxwell is deeply significant of the remarkable progress this car has made in popular favor. Its progress in public regard is absolutely with. out a parallel in automotive history. John H. Thompson Auto Company 4446 C.. Avenue Glendale 9310 The Good MAXWELL $885 "Is it true, grandfather!" asked "I want to where everything is pretty, and where"—she sought for the little girl. "Is all the world the words to express her vague desire— same? The old grandfather smiled enig- "everything is different. See, grand- pa, like in India, where they ride on elephants and they have woods with tigers and wolves and everything, like in the park, only lots of them, like in a circus. And in Japan they wear such pretty clothes, all colors, and big paper umbrellas, and in Arabia where you rub a lamp and you get anything you want." The old man nodded his head wisely. "Blumele, and in these lands don't you think a little girl has to brush her hair, and drink a whole glass of milk, and pick up the play- things from the floor. Some travel- ers even say that the people in all the world are not very different. And that reminds me of a story." The old man stroked his long white beard reflective- ly. "I will tell you a story, Blumele, of a man who made a very queer Hirney." File little girl snuggled up closely to the old man and looked at him ex- pectantly. "In a little town," hegan the grand- father, "there lived a merchant who l-ad a wife and seven children. The 'roman complained that she had to toke care of the house and the store, . 'MIS(' the man was net a business man. Ile always sat with a blink in his hand and read and read. When someone came into the et te• and asked for sugar he would I. 1! th• hook with one hand and wi'h th• of in give he customer salt. T' e -ustomer would 0. b. Detroit Noe Ste.1Wheela Included e ___;Five-ras n g e r Touring olammommzsm.;mommimigiumm BIG MOVING SALE OF USED TRUCKS Last week's bargains are all sold—but as we must move our used truck department Sept. 1, we are slashing prices right and left on the re- maining stock. Come early to get the choice buys. 1. Clydesdale 5 ton dump truck. This truck has been thoroughly rebuilt in every detail. As a used truck you cannot buy a better job. We sold a duplicate of this truck for $ $2,250. Sale price on this truck is – y 2. G. M. C. 5 ton stake body truck, has been thoroughly rebuilt. Price $2,250 Sale price 3. Federal 5 ton dump truck, absolutely rebuilt first class. Regular price $2,250 $ 1 Sale price Federal 3Y, ton long wheelbase, 16 foot 4. stake body, all rebuilt. Regular price $900 $1,250. Sale price 5. Packard 6 1 .. ton dump truck, in wonderful mechanical condition. Regular price $800 $1,200. Sale price 6. Federal 2 ton rebuilt stake body $500 truck. Price $650. Sale price SEE THESE BARGAINS 1 600 $1 800 900 You can take one of these trucks and make money hauling right from the start. Your investment is low and the trucks are in good condition. Come and see them any time today, tonight or Monday night. Thompson Auto Co. 4762 WOODWARD AVENUE 426 BENTON AT BRUSH I where, Grandpa," said the little girl. the same, all houses are the same, all "So far, Illumele?" asked grand- women arc the same, and all women scold the same.'" father, smiling. Glendale 4690 Cadillac 6983 say that he didnt want salt; he want- ed sugar. Then the man would look up from the Bork for a moment and give the customer flour. The customer, if he was a hasty person, would throw the flour on the floor and go to an- other store where the owner did not read all the time. So the man's wife had to he in the store all the time. She liked to be the storekeeper, but she would act as if she didn't like it and scold her husband a great deal. "Once there was a fair in another city. The woman wanted to buy a cow, so she thought that it would be better to send her husband than to leave him in the store and go herself. I The man was glad, for he had never traveled, and now he would have a chance to see the world. "As the city was not very far away, the man decided to make the journey en foot, and because he didn't know the way his wife took him to the end of their little town and showed him the road to follow. 'You walk straight ahead,' she said, 'until you see houses. That will be the city, Then go up to a Jew and ask him if he can recom- mend you to an honest and plena house where you can spend the night. The next morning you will go to the fair.' She gave him much good advice and many orders, and he departed on his tourney. "Ile walked and walked until he be- came tired. Then he seated himself under a tree to rest and took a little nap. Presently he awoke and roused himself to continue his journey. In- stead of walking ahead, he took the read leading back to his own little town. "At last he saw houses. But these houses looked very familiar to him. 'All houses arc built alike,' he thought. A man was approaching. He gazed at the man somewhat bewildered, for he looked like Res Sander, whom he knew well. But, then, how could Reb Sander be In the strange city? That was impossible! He addressed the man very shyly and asked him to be kind enough and recommend an honest and pious family with whom he could find a night's lodging. The man who looked like Reb Sander stared at him and smiled. He led the merchant to a house and left him there to stare bewildered at an exact reproduction of his own house. 'Evidently,' thought the merchant, 'all towns are the same, and no doubt the whole world is the same. Here in this strange city is a house exactly like mine. They are as alike as two peas in • pod.' "Ile knocked at the door timidly Someone opened the door, and look, the room, even to the smallest detail, matically.—Olebrew Standard.) Historian of Utopias Compares Herzl's Workable Ideal With Zionist Program. I I NupI 1 1 1 1 / 1 J, !i :1 I s 1 II Ill( all II nlui;rIC it 'I 1; , 1 : it , 1 4 : 1 11 XI kf Moll I, yI II ) ' f• g4, I 7 4441 ° Do You Know? M11 ■ 1111M ■ 1 That this sale has broken all our previous records for business? That last week was the biggest Summer period in our history? That more than half of our business was done with old customers? That, in many cases, the savings range as high as 50 per cent? That we urge fullest comparison of reserve purchases, subject to such comparison? values, Lewis Mumford, author of "The Story of Utopias," writes in the cur- hnd rent Menorah Journal: Among all the utopias that were formulated in the nineteenth century, that which was conceived by a Jew, far the sake of feal,izIng Jewish as- pirations, was the nearest to reality; that is to say, the nearest to actual achievement. In fact, this Jewish "The Standard" Gives You a Year to Pay utopia is so closely bound up with daily events and its fate still hangs so uncertainly in the balance that in a little survey I recently made of his- toric utopias it seemed scarcely pru- dent to put it alongside the more purely literary and philosophic essays that have been hequethed to us from the time of Plato onwards. It is customary, I believe, to regard the pamphlet entitled "The Jewish State" as Herzl's capital contribution to Zionism, and to look upon his Uto- pia, Altneuland (published in 1901) a fanciful and scarcely necessary popularization, in more graphic form, of the ideas that were definitive.y set forward in 1896. I confess that a cursory reading gave men the some impression. When one compares the prospectus and the utopia proper a little more carefully, however, one discovers that the second essay repre- sents a real development in Herzl's thought, and that in Altneuland he grapples with the difficulties of Zion- ism in a much bolder fashion than he did in the original effort. The Zionist movement, it seems to me, has East European Jews Sought ing in comparison with the possibili- the Carriole, the new model has ties and hopes that exist within us. ated interest way beyond all expects- been following broadly along the road The four million Jews of Poland are tions. Notwithstanding improvements Palestine and Found Kin paved by the pamphlet wiithout suf- exceptional in that they live primi- and in spite of price raises by other ficiently grasping the fact that Alt- the World Over. tively and create folk-songs as if a makes at this time, Nash Motors has neuland implicitly suggests certain secluded tribe, and at the same time made no increase in price. new departure; and that, in essential Attractive in design, the new Nash I. M. Neuman, political editor of the they are refined and saturated with an respects, The Jewish State and Alt- ancient culture, polished in intellect Carriole provides passenger Tenacity Nader 'taint (Warsaw) and Warsaw neuland are in conflict. What brings Ilerzl's utopia so correspondent of the Menorah Jour- and tried in battle. This mixture of for five adults, and yet it is priced measurably within view of the Prom- nal, writes in the current issue of the primitiveness and refined culth•ition near to open-car standards. In front should create wonders for us and for are two deeply upholstered parlor car ised Land is that it begins with the Menorah Journal: The Jewry of Eastern Europe the world. So we believe. chairs and in the rear a comfortable Here and Now, and accepts some of the restrictions of thie‘premise. The sought Palestine, and in the meantime seat for three. A specially designed desirable and the actual, the prag- —thanks to Palestine—it found its Fireworks to Show Smyrna's beading on the radiator shell aids the trimness of its appearance. matic and the ideal, are in Ilerzl's estranged brothers in France, Ger- Burning at State Fair. thought pretty completely fused. In many and America. Rousseau's phrase, he has taken men We seek Palestine; and in the mean- Another great fireworks feature has as t', ey are and institutions as they time Jewish life in the synagogue as might be; and without for a second well as in the Art salon, in the athletic been obtained for the $5,000,000 Mich- flying off into the realm of mere club as well as in the trade school, igan Stae Fair, which will be held nhantasv, he manager to co-ordinate strives fervidly to revive, to reassert in Detroit from Aug. 21 to Sept. 9, Secretary-Manager George W. Dick- into • significant plan a whole host of itself anew. To wish to be bound is already to inson has announced. spiral improvements which, for lack This monster pyrotechnic spectacle of such coherence, have nowhere be in fetters; to wish resusitation is 'riven society an adequate plan. already to he resuscitated. There now will be known as the "Burning of List Upon Request Herzl's best was not an abstract good, I stirs within the Polish, nay the East Smyrna," being a vivid re-enactment 431 Griswold St. realizable only in the mind, or, as I European Jews, a long awaited in multi-colored roaring flames of the great tragedy that not so long ago the saying goes, on paper; it was abundance. Maio 2963 Detroit I do not mean only the institutions held the attention of the world. the best possible at a given moment, This demnnatraion will be held in in a given place. In short, the gap r we have already created, though their between Ilerzl's utopia — the ideal mere enumeration is imposing enough. the race track inclosure the first three In the darkest period of the war, days of the fair. From then on the nlan itself and the Zionist utopia— the realized or at lead realizable and after, while in the labors of re- great spectacle "India" will be held construction, we have created a Jew- daily until the end of the exposition. community—was a very small one. "India" combines from history and To have arrived at such a clear anil ish Art Exhibition, the only perma- definite conception of a new organic nent Jewish art exhibition in the legend a medley of entrancing scenes, SAYS: polity was a singular achievement. world. Over two hundred artists pre- mystic ceremonies and thrilling epi- See new prices on the Perhaps Herz] did net realize its im- sented twelve hundred paintings and sodes of that great wonderland of the Willys-Knight, models. portance; perhaps he did not see how works of sculpture. Such an exhibi- Orient. Included in the spectacle, which oc- thoroughly his plans for a scientific- tion is becoming a factor in our life. The Overland can be A Culture League, with a masterly cupies over 500 feet of scenic space, ally designed polity in Altneuland bought for $191.00 down, were at odds with the notions out- chorus of 150 voices, and a publishing will be seen the Durbar of Delhi, In- lined in The Jewish State. If Herzl house with publications in Yiddish dian Suttee, Pageant of State, re- balance one year. himself did not see this great dis- about Dr. Einstein, Bible criticism, ligious ceremonial of Ramazan and the mutiny and destruction of Delhi. parity and did not follow out its im- and art albums and music. The Stybel Publication Society, is- plicatior,s—a fact party accounted for perhaps by his early death—it is not suing imposing translations in lie- NEW NASH CARRIOLE altogether surprising that those who brew of all that is best in world litera- MEETS HEAVY DEMAND were immersed in the Zionistic move- ture. A Jewish Art Theater, that has ment did not observe it either. At Demand for the new Nash Carriole, any rate, the piece of original think- achieved a truly European triumph toned in deep maroon and black, is 2861 Gratiot Avenue ing which makes Altneuland • ells , with The Dibbuk and other plays. A Marionette Theater. tinctive contribution to politics, by even greater than had been antici- At Jos. Campau Three seminaries for teachers In pated. Dealers who have received ship- suggesting the experience of forme of Melrose 6943 political coeperati-n and government Warsaw alone;and numberless group* ments of this five-passenger enclosed Residences Northway 2787.M outside the framework of the national and clubs. family car, report to the factory that This concrete achievement is with- great as was the previous demand for state, has remained unnoticed. That this is by all odds our greatest August Furniture Sale? Robinson Cohen Co Main Store---HIGH at HASTINGS Hamilton at Philadelphia Warren W. at McGraw Oakman Blvd. at Davison Open Monday, Wednesday and Saturday Evenings. era- Keane, Higbie & Co. MUNICIPAL BONDS Mort Gittleman all Lemcke Motor Sales Co.