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April 11, 1924 - Image 1

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1924-04-11

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

5CWI$Ji periodical CeNter

All Jewish News

MI Jewish Views

WITHOUT BIAS

CLIFTON AflNUI • CINCINNATI 20, 01110

ONICL E

IfEbETROIT LWISR.

THE ONLY JEWISH NEWSPAPER PRINTED IN MICHIGAN

9-3-0-0

Per Year, $3.00; Per Copy, 10 Cents

DETROIT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1924

VOL. XV, NO. 3er"?.0

Telephone
GLENDALE

Educator MASONS BEGIN WORK
LAIRS
. skim jAns , Recent Arrival. 1 ,, Q , WILL SEND FALASHA ' Noted Rabbi and Scholar I DENVER SANATORIUM, Rochester
Heads New School IN NEW YORK STATE
Wins Writing Prize YOUTHS TO EUROPE Comes on School Mission DEVELOPS A NOTABLE
Isidor Rosenberg is Named
?. W H. A DIRECTOR
TO AID PALESTINE
Principal of School to be
TREATMENT
METHOD
TO GET EDUCATION
Dedicated.
IS LEAVING DETROIT

0

9

A

Years in America.

- --

Spent Nearly Three Years as
NEW YORK.--Isaac Shapiro, 18
Head of Local Or-
years old, who came to this country
little more than three years ago and
ganization.

who attends the East Side Evening
High School, recently was the win-

MEMBERSHIP NUMBERS
ner of the weekly prize offered by
NEARLY A THOUSAND the New York World for the best

Plans for Training of Abyssin-
ian Jews Formulated
By Experts.
---
BEST YOUNG MEN ARE
PRIMED FOR SERVICE
- — -
Funds Raised at Passover Will
Give Stimulus to Efforts
Proposed.

Rebuilding of the Holy Land

irtiele on the news of the week.
is Deemed Basis of
Considers Time Ripe For Es- Shapiro's article dealt With the bonus
World Peace.
bill now before the House of Repre-
tablishment of Jewish
sentatives.
NEW YORK.--For the first time in
Center.
The winner works all day as clerk
the history of their order, Masons
NEW YORK.—Glowing reports of
in an uptown clothing house and goes
have organized to support, morally
Mrs. Sadie C. Jacobs, for nearly to school at night. Ile will be gratin- the progress of the schools conducted
and financially, the movement for the
three years social director of the a t e d in unr more term, provided he in Abyssinia under American Jewish
rehabilitation of Palestine as a Jew-
Young Women's Hebrew Association, does not have to quit his studies in auspices for the education of the Fa-
ish national homeland. Eighty mas-
will have Sunday for Baltimore, the meantime. Ile is preparing to lasha Jews have come from Dr.
Jacques
Faithivitch,
the
director
of
where she will make her none. She take a general cultural course in City
resigned two months ago. She will I College of New York, later specializ- I the schools. Ile reports that the Fa-
be accompanied by her little dough- ing in political economy and interim- lasha communities are being organ-
ized under the leadership of their
tional law.
te r, B ess ie.
Since 1920, when he came to the priests and learned men and that,
Mrs. Jacob's coming to Detroit in
States from Roumania with with the all of small subsidies, they
United
July, 1921, marked the beginning of
the Young Women's Hebrew Associa- I his father, Simon, he has learned to are carrying on instruction in Jude-
lion in this city. From a handful of use English with a precision and with ism and the traditions which these
women the mem- a pure accent seldom found among people have maintained for over
interests young
bership of the association has grown' native Americans. He has also 2,000 years.
.
hone in European countries and Pal- nit n is
after the one in the Kirby Center,
To Strengthen Religion.
i
to nearly 1,000. The work carried , learned to read Spanish.
-ti e is one of the leading figures solutely at rest at all times in order which has achieved success.
It is the belief of Dr. Faitlovitch
'
Likes Liter•ture and Dram..
on in the house of the Jewish Won,- •
Dr. David Rebelsky, professor in
"I like literature and drama al- , and his co-workers that this program
an's Club at 89 Rowena street long
Odessa University, who visited De-
the 50,-
, of education will strengthen problems
conomics a
has outgrown the capacity of the, most as well as e
troit last week, inspected the kinder-
to do national law," he said. " nd inter- , ', 000 Falashas against the
attainments, he is said to com- taken Merely. The patient is given
b n
e Ids keyx p rpersa: es d e d BS:
building and activities having
aorrtken,:arrIiter,i R c a
'Man and Superman,' by Shaw, is I that have recently confronted them. verse great religious zeal with secular such minute and consistent attention
with large groups are conducted in
Si
work
e lived in I.
Fdf
o r hun
re d s o years thy
Then Anato l
e I
.
the
book
I
like
best
Ile has that he is afforded maximum oppor-
high or d es-
ewish
world
scholarship
of
a
various public centers .
faction
at
hearing
youngsters of 4
y
J
of th
France and Ibsen. There is another 1 entire ignorance
f Abyssinia and regarded been described as poet, author, man i tunity to regain his health. Some of
it and 5 conducting conversations in
Program a Varied.
remarkable book that no one seems ou t s ide o
• d ' the t i t
'
m
-
to
know'
about.
It
is
The
Autobi-
themselves
as
the
sole
remnant
of
an-
of
affairs,
and
a
firm
believer
in
an
The association's program e
braces sewing and millinery classes, ography of a Prize Fighter,' by Jim I cient Israel. The work of the Ameri- , eventual unfoldment of a great Jew-
courses in literature, an art class„ rely. It made a great impression on ' can Pro-Falasha Committee has been lish culture in the ancient land of Is-
aesthetic dancing groups, dramatic ,,,,,
I very effective in counteracting the in- I rad. Ile expects to remain in the
In
fluence of the aggressive activities of United States several months.
circles, weekly (lances and gymnas- ,
"O'Neill isn't a one-cent piece tom- I
pared
to
some
of
the
European
ilra-
the Christian missionaries under Rev. his work here he is assisted by two
tics. The monthly meetings for the •
distinguished E u r o p e a n scholars,
i
members at large carry out interest- mati , ts, but it seems to me he is for i Flail. Several of the ablest pupils at
lag programs of a cultural nature. above , all other Americans in his Addis
Abeba and the interior schoolslRabbis Shapiro and Epstein.
,
, will be provided with scholarships in
on ublishes a monthly
The organ ization
European
centers of education, and
magazine called the A Knot.
Shapiro's article was the best sub-
Designer of Lincoln Penny
s
Mrs. Jacobs in 1922 and 1923 di- 'tinted during the week. The con- , also in Palestine. The young men
Modeled Many Famous
who
reveal
qualities of leadership are I
t is limited to students at the high
s Of the as-
rt.( e
as teachers, physicians
Americana.
being
sociation. The summer work is firm- schools of the Greater City.
ts,
and instructors in technical pursuits,
, and to give him every chance to de-
ly established and plans are now be-
eventually
to
return
to
their
native
NEW
YORK.—Victor
David Bren
velop his strength and resistance to
ing made for the 1921 camp season.
manimurof.
gticitr li an hit shhea preoogr
ncr, medalist and sculptor, designer
J a-
Before coming to
of the Lincoln penny, died April 5 in
Most Advsnced Step.
cobs was director of the Community OS
ties . These pupils will be educated Census of 1890 is Needed to
The treatment is re garded as the the Monteliore Hospital, where he had
Center of Dorchester, Mass., and
Avoid Danger of Dia-
in Florence, Vienna, Jerusalem,Lon- •
most advanced step in the care of been a patient since Feb. 13. He is
ii
prior to that was connected with the
don, Neuchatel (Switzerland) and in I
crimination.
tuberculosis patients who have passed survived by his widow, Anna Reeb
Jewish Children's Bureau of Balti-
more. General regret has been ex-
pressed at Mrs. Jacobs' leaving.
Sla
In reviewing the work during her
r
peal now being made by the Amen- Europeans
who have cause to p otest of the National Jewish Hospital for meat house at 186 Chrystie street;
Call for Earnest Work
stay in Detroit, Mrs. Jacobs said:
can Pro-Falasha Committee for $30,-
r 1 against the 1890 census as discrimi- Consumptives to provide the treat- hie mother, a siste , Miriam, and
by All Israel.
000
during
the
Passover
week—April
-
"I keenly regret leaving the Be.
inatory,
but
rather the Northweste rn meat for every patient it is caring 'three brothers, Morris, Samuel and
_
-
troit
Young
Women's
Ilebrew
Asia-
Micha e l, a sculptor in Paris.
eiation.
In less
than three
years
Jew- , NEW YORK.—"I have been most . 19 to 25—will be devoted to this re-, European nationalities who could for
Jew-
That an immigrant artist should
The National Jewish Hospital is
ash womanhood in this city has indi- I hopefully impressed with the definite bilious and educational program, one - claim that the 1910 census provided
for the immigration bill, now before one of the largest institutions for I have modeled
le
one of the famous
sated in no uncertain terms that it islaigns of economic and industrial int- of h most
interesting now being
nlo by world Jewr . Rabbi J. the Senate, discriminated against tubercular patients in the world. It heads of I.i ol n has been spoken of
intent upon developing a center forprovement
in Palestine," is the state- carried
went
coins of New York, Y director of • them, was the argument featured in was organized 25 years ago and has as significant of the spirit of America
made by Oscar Straus, Amer. • M
ewish ideals and I
the cultivation of Jewish
nner spent his life in in!
rabbis has
throughout
the United
character among the young members can philanthropist and statesman, in • re appeal,
already been
assured a three-hour speech by Senator Reed treated more than 5,000 patients of I which Brenner
of Pennsylvania.
Bre Brenner was born In
1
' all races and creeds.
of the community. The recommends-' an interview, healed summary of •Y
Senator Reed, who is the chairman
Shavely, Russia, in 1871, and as a
lion by the recently completed sue- which has just been received in New States that Saturday, April 19, will
be set aside as F alasha Sabbath for of the Senate sub-committee on ins•
!boy of 13 learned seal cutting on the
vey that an adequate center be erect- ! York.
h
migration, declared that originally,
bench beside his father. Ile was 19
°The chief hope of the country lies the purposes of thish ,a1Meol•
l
o A
rd was made, not only because the
This appeal as ten endorsed
by
-i
by
'
for
the
sake
of
expediency,
he
fay.
when he landed in New York, almost
investigators sensed the absence of in these economic and industrial a m -
fenrietnere_ f merican f . 1 ored the 1890 census, but that he '
the. Central tcoenti
, penniless. For a time living came
em-
a properly conceived plan of Jewish I provements, so that it can find
. d Synagogue o ' abandoned his support of it in favor
aand h
I
hard. Ile had to peddle matches on
educational and recreational work, plop-tient for the right kind of immi- Rabbis
Council
. T he sections of the branchess
of the 1910 census because of the
I the street and his first week's labor
k
most li ely to Americ
'
, gran s.
but because the existence of
h .1% ome
and
Jews
the
made
by
prot
sts
as an engraver brought only $4.60.
mane
kw Association, furnish the material for reconstruc- of Jewis
le
Young Women's It eh e
While working in an Essex street shop
P ' , Italiay ns in ord er to show them that
bere, was thin is one that comes here animated of the National Federation of 's A
Temple
,Women. , League I no discrimination was intended. Ile Professor Heinrich Finkelstein, as a die-cutter and engraver of
with its 1,000 eager hiem
evidence that the Jew(sh young wont- by the determination to make the Sisterhoods and Synagogue
of America , was not, however, satisfied with the
the United the
badges he executed a tiny head of
I
Children's
Specialist,
en of Detroit wish to have a tom- needed sacrifices, namely the Jews, ' of
generously to the appeal 1910 census, because it discriminated
Beethoven as a pendant for a badge
"The reconstruction of the Jewish rt•sponded
Lectures H ere.
munity center equal to the require-
against
the
Nordics,
and
to
prove
his
for a singing society. This caught
homeland can net fail to benefit the in 1923.
meats of the situation.
point the Senator placed upon the
ew
rfs ausr of t in hg e
e
the attent
attention
,
entire
population
of
Palestine.
The
At
the
invitation
of
the
Detroit
I
walls
of
the
Senate
chamber
charts
Started Center Movement.
a n d :in .
i source funds and energy necessary for
iliowing the immigration into Amer- I Pedriatic Society, Dr. Heinrich Fin- American Numismatic Society jew
•f
t I m
r ei m
s ;lei e ° n::
n
fili
s r o of
"Whereas in most cities a Y. W. reconstruction should be sought from
Ikelstein,
professor
of
pedriatics
in
thel
60 years.
or
-
ica
for
the
past
50
W
orth-while
few
.
11. A. is organized long after a Y. i , all Jews having the historic con-
I University of Berlin and head of the i
ll y
lver smiths and occasionall
Method of Computing.
M. II. A. has been in existence, in , • science of our people and desiring to
vi's hospi
it was the Y. IA'. H. A.
ile argued that the proper basis I Fredrichs Haus children
aid the upbuilding of the ancestral
t
Detroit
ro

DIES IN NEW YORK

E

,

ES Ir;ddetrormir
PBUILDING OF ZION ,

NOTED PEDIATRICIAN '
VISITS IN DETROIT

H ONORED FOR WORK
AS TRADE ARBITER,

'

the Cullum medal that the American
Geographic Society gave to Nansen
and Peary.

lecture d

Studies His Art in Paris.
But in 1898 he turned his back on

MRS. JOHNSON'S LECTURE
IS EAGERLY AWAITED

PUBLICATION

Chamber of Commerce of the sae
economic reconstruction of of New York. The particular box in
!
Palestine, so it may become a refuge
• •

''The

Interest in

yar d.

group under the 1910 census was
"the American type, mixture of all
Much interest is being manifested
under Professor Finkleatein in Berlin.
only 40 per cent. Reed declared that
races, conqueror and child of a new by mothers and persons affiliated with
Of Varied Attainments.
Inasmuch as the Nordic was the pre-
lirofessor Finklestein is not only continent and a new political order." educatienni activities in the lecture
dominating racial stock of American
Emerson, William M. Everts, John to be given by Mrs. Marietta Johnson,
'
a noted duntor, who will talk on
"The Social Life of the Child," under
the ausp•es of the Sisterhood of Tem-
ple Beth El in the chapel Monday aft-
er:e'en, April 14. Mrs. Johnson's
school at Fairhope. Ala., was inaugu-
rated in 1907 with six pupils in a
littl,. cottage. it now has a campus
of 10 acres and, in connection with
the Edge wood school in Greenwich,
Conn., requires an outlay of $40,000
a year. Mrs. Johnson is an advocate
of a system of education requiring no

TO DISCUSS ALPHABET

n

OM

office.

literature of the Jews. T at the
ish l'ublication Society has not fully
encompassed this need may be
ascribed to want of support, although
its condition at the end of this year
is somewhat better than( at the be-
ginning of last year.
Salter Ease', in Year Book.

The average

hildren

toned tasks, no

grades, marks,

,

VETERANS
HELPS WAR TT

IN GE

,

"The Year Book for next year will
contain as a leading article an essay
by Dr. Mordecai Suites of New York, ;
dealing with the contributions made'
by the Yiddish press to the Ameri-
canization of our immigrant popula-1
red m can
tton. Curiously enough, by internal,
evidences and citations, Dr. Saltes ,
will demonstrate that the love of ,
country of the new settlers is indeed
all of 100 per cent.
"Professor Schechter's 'Studies in
Judaism; third series, is in the press

and will be published soon.

The society has disposed of the
fourth reprint of its New Translation
of the Bible and we are now sending
through the press the 100,000th copy
of our sacred book. As there are
about 600,000 Jewish families in the
land, the slogan 'A Jewish Bible in

Every Jewish Home,' which we are
broadcasting, is still to be heard and
answered by • considerable number

at here

Noted Educator's Talk
Here I. Keen.

The first night of Passover, Friday
evening, April 18, will be observed
with a community seder at the Coven-
ant Club under the auspices of Pisgah
Lodge No. 34, I. 0. B. B. The lodge
is making arrangements to accommo-
hundred children
date all Jews desiring to celebrate care of shout one
seder as a community. Persons de- whose parents have died of tubercu-
ked losis or are sick and unable to take
siring to attend the seder are asked
to make reservations for themselves, care of them, because of that disease.
to
families and friends not later than Five hundred children have already
good
Tuesday, April 15, by notifying Jo- been educated and brought up to
womanhood under the
seph L. Staub, acting secretary of manhood and
this
institution.
The
chil-
of
Pisgah Lodge, 406 East Adams ave- care
nue. Hagadahs for all who attend dren in the home come from different

amounting to more than$5,000 were
made at the meeting. Adolph Freund,
who is the oldest member of the
lodge and who spent the winter in
Florida, wired a contribuiton of $250.
The next concert in the series ar-
ranged by Pisgah Lodge for the pa-
tients of the Detroit Municipal 'Tu-
berculosis Sanatorium at Northville
will be given April 16. Wilford Gold-
and a meal in keeping with the event parts of the country, but most of
man Is in charge of the concert.
them are from the east.
will be provided.

PAPERS

The Jewish Welfare Board, through
its constituent societies, is co-opera-
ting with the National Americanism
Commission of the American Legion
and the Bureau of Naturalization, in
locating war veterans who, having
made application for naturalization
papers while in training camps and
abroad now stand naturalized, but
who have not called for their final pa-
pers. About 18,000 men who served
ma-
honorably in the army, nary
rine corps of the United States during
tie world war made such applications

which were accepted.
The constituent societies have been
requested by the Jewish Welfare
Board to give publicity to these facts,
and to have such men write to the
Bureau of Naturalization, Washing-
ton, D. C., giving their names, ad-
dresses and the training camps or out-
fits with which they were connected
when they applied for naturalization
papers. The Bureau of Naturalisa-
tion will immediately, on receipt of
this information, send these men their
final papers.

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