A merica ffewisk Periodical eater CLIFTON AT1NU1 • CINCINNATI 10, OHIO PAGE MEW:. MelkFttoixfr , - nneppviat: SKYLARK AND NIGHTINGALE 14. 6011 4 041445 By LOUIS GOLDING GIAS 1+. (JOSEPH-- 1 tends r be- roust Unity nt to at on In the soon SO me- in the agent tion is par- to 'm- id his The bit of imper- of the to his mes a od so- in his re than natural soirkers Ile is train- taking solve nerican of chil- taking sort of It de- i on is a workers sped an unal life upon the ey think s oup and e iousness i half of 1 ity seems man as he family has been trice the e scheme ively dis- DIVERTS PRESENTS TO NOBLE CAUSES se as pos- I arrange- er-minded • ous social ion life. the well- sublimest :ople who d, nodal- chant in- Iwark of tendency supercede smacks so sal. I order will to solidify le unity of parents to and oppor- nd training sage in chit- areas and mental in- inform the he country ?lief in the h to society men strives individual- are to be obliterated. Louis Singer, who, to say the least, is • hopeful di•idual, intends to build • Jewish club house in every large city in the gales." "Splendid," exclaimed the gentle- United States. Mr. Singer's heart beat. in sympathy with those stranded man enthusiastically. "That's the lad tired bminess men who go to New York and who are forced to while •way for the country." The gentleman was the weary hours in hotels and such like. He wants to make them "comfy," an emissary from the Jewish Travel- bring them in contact with their fellow Jews—and give them an opportunity Ass ociation, whi"chn sent lers' r Co unty cks the to play, say pinochle, at least, with kindred spirits. But why tell the story dese vi a "home i to ng Ja when Mr. Singer can tell it so much better than I can? - _...._ "Thousands of Jews from all over the United States visit New York every day. Some come on pleasure trips, and a good many for to hotels. They have no friends here. They business. They go would like very much to find someone to associate themselves with while they are here. I am confident before the year is over we shall have completed plans to build a five-story club house either on Fifth have avenue or Park avenue where Jews from all over the country will find hospitality. A number of prosperous business men of Jewish faith are expected to co-operate in pledging sufficient funds to insure the cons traction of a club house which will embrace the features of a metropolitan hotel. I know something I could tell Mr. Singer, but I am not going to. el One of our readers sends me this very interesting item from the Hamil- ton Evening Journal of Hamilton, Ohio: "The announcement that hereafter the Sunday evening services of the congregation of the First Methodist Episcopal Church will he held in the Jewish temple is a wonderful exemplification of the spirit religious. Ile seeks the power is re lon. o of true religion. er and greater than himself. Various avenues are open that is high for him to travel. All do not travel the same route and many differ faith is essentially the same. pirit of bu rete in their opnions, th underlying i no matter how it finds its expression, is ha t the This real s shown by the fact that the doors of a Jewish temple are thrown open to a Christian congregation in its hour of misfortune. Such a spirit can but , ell better things for mankind." 1RY LONDON A.) — Ed- it chief sec- Iamuel, has al represen- government flies in Lon- dine will he ntil recently Y y Sir Herbert formerly sec- Commission s several years He took his seat timorously. lie was wearing a very clean, waterproof collar and a large how of orange silk; whereon all the other little boys promptly determined to hate him. As the town slipped by, Jack realized with a little throb of alarm how all his landmarks were slipping away— the domineering ,absurd chimney of h e the police station, th e . gas works. In the open country a .Suddenly, desolation gripped him. . with no warning, he burst into tears. The hate of the other little boys was promptly converted into ineffable con- tempt. --Judge Da- ) nicipal court, ge representa - Jewry on the campaign for r the Zionist that the suc- neland in l'al- se of the noir- the Jewish plo- ..: d "Judaism can Id force if tho be built." to Zion, scion ten, that . we V i i just. wait, replace, ven, grace place. ROL. I Zangwill.) Ovn'5Ps.SVO' The refusal of Dr. Stephen S. Wise to accept personal gifts from his many friends and admirers who de- sired to do something concrete in honor of his fiftieth birthday was the inspiration for a number of contribu- tions to causes in which he is inter- ested. Among these was a check from the pupils of th ereligious classes of the Central and Free Synagogues. to be used for the relief of poor children in America or Europe. Dr. Wise an- nounced that he would divide this fund between the poor children of Germany and Palestine. Another was a gift by the Socia l Service Board and the volunteer staff of the social service department o f the Central and Free Synagogues o f $100 a year, to be awarded annuall y as a prize by the Jewish Institute o f Religion for the best piece of socia l service work ,done throughout th e preceding year. Found Lectureship. The faculty of the Jewish Institut e of Religidn founded the Stephen 9 Wise lectureship under the auspice of the Intercollegiate Menorah So ciety, which will enable the lecture r a member of the faculty, to delive lectures in various colleges and un i versities from year to year. The students of the institut founded the Stenhen S. Wine fe I- lowship. The fellowship will be i n the amount of $500, which the st dents have guaranteed annually f o r the next 10 years. The Stephen S. Wise scholarsh was founded by the women's organiz- ation of the Central and Free Syna- gogues. The scholarship, amounting to $250, will be awarded annually to a meritorious student of the Jewish Institute of Religion. Dr. Wise himself founded two scholarships at the institute. one in honor of his mother, Sabine de Fischer, and the other in honor of Mrs. Wise. the latter to he known as, the Louise l'iaterman Wise scholar- ship. These scholarships make pos- sible the award to two students of $250 each annually. Now it is true, his first two or though not he e days i n the c ountry, ected, had th e threcisely pre were full of delights and mysteries. blahs, who don't know the difference between creed and religion. Though he saw no pomegranates ..____.-..--e----- growing, the sight of gorse filled his Robert Benchley, the dramatic editor of Life, has the are faculty of son eyes with answering gold. Though detecting sham regardless of how heavily veiled. So we find Mr. Benchley ,, in actual practice he found it imps- telling what he thinks of all the excitement that is agitating our twentieth Bible to discriminate between the Sky- century civilisation over • white girl kissing the hand of a Negro. Suppose lark and Nightingale (he knew that both belonged to the "country"), he we read it together: followed with chuckles and delig ht "This might not be a bad place to take up the subject of that staid pomp of the hen surrounded lip strange sense of chivalry which prompts certain knights to bridle with her fluffy retinue of offspring as she rage at the thought of a white woman's acting on the same stage clucked through the hen-run of the with a colored man. The proposed production of Eugene O'Neill's Jewish Travelers' Country Home. at 'All God's Chillun Got Wings' has called forth flaming protests The discovery of the scent of threatened insult to Nordic purity which would be involved in mendowsweet sent him jumping with the ding-ma n, showing a Caucasian leading-lady married to an African lea delight. (The other little boys avoid- on sc even though the moral of the play, if it has any, is that miegenati ' ed. He could jump uninterruptedly.) ' The chatter of a squirrel startled hint does not work. "Passing over the obvious solution that the matter be left to the first, then made him chatter in glee- much CONFERENCE PROPOSED has her honor quiteo as protests ful emulation. But a blight bit at white y i nvolve d, who presu bly puzzling fact that n FOR RECONSTRUCTION ere imsathe one else, th the roots of his ecstasy. Ile was lone- any ladas at heart are ever received against a white actress' playing on the stare with ly. Ile had never known loneliness a white actor who may be degenerate, criminal or unclean. If there NEW YORK.— (J. T. A.) — Ar- ' before—though he had known tooth- of our white woman- is such a jealous watch to be kept over the honor ache frequently. There were distinct- rangements are being perfected be-, hood, we should not limit it to cases of diverse pigmentation. Our ly comparable phenomena in both tween the leaders and supporters of watchword should be eternal vigilance. diseases. Of course he wasn't home- the "Ott" in New York and Chicago, "There is some sort of parallel to be drawn between the type of sick. How could he he home- for the holding, in the near future, of mind which reads an insult to his race in social contact with other ski( when here the ambition of no a conference to consider ways and races and the type of mind which refused to recognize sauerkraut many years was gratified at. last? means of carrying on the reconstruc- during the war until it had been renamed 'liberty cabbage.' It And yet even school, stuffy as it was, tion work in Rennie, now that the usually occurs in those whose sole activity in behalf of the honor of gleamed fa roff like a homely light Joint Distribution Committee has their country or the integrity of their womanhood consists in just to a bark floundering in strange seas. withdrawn from that region. The such agitations. It must spring from some subconscious sense of Even old Reli Shalom, who always "Oct' is an organization whose pur- inferiority which calls for a loud booming on a basedrum which has tweaked his none. And Yankey Spi- pose is to promote agriculture anti ser who would stuff his pocket with productive trade among the Jewish no relation to the band. '_ nuts even though he thought hint a population in Russia, and is one of . Another evidence of • Jew pointing the way to Christiana to do "Chris- to be reading all those unhal- the insist important factors in Jewish tian charity." Ralph Schugar is an undertaker in Pittsburgh. The other goy books. And then Momma, with reconstruction work. s found at the entrance of • local cemetery. lowed A temporary committee has been day th e h od, o f an Went wa note reading: "Please bury my baby. Put ■ her s pectacles slipping from her nose, formed under the chairmanship of Dr. A humming over the frying pan. Pin ned to the clothing was ou!" With the note was a $10 bill. Persons cannot be The cleanly cosmos of the Coon- Julius Goldman, who was formerly cross--God hi e . y brought European Director of the Joint Dis- buried decently in this civilized age for $10. The cost of dying is as high dining-room try home the cost of living. So the coroner either had to cremate the body of the m pugen tly the sublime tribution Committee. The committee a. a dvertised the ba ck to hi disarray of meals at home. Every- includes, in addition to the European child, or more money would have to be forthcoming. So he per. and a Jew, Ralph Schugar, responded. This Jew thing was scrupulously kosher, but delegation, Dr. Lin Bramson and dr. story i n th e newspa ■ cross and he it profit creplach and lack- A. Singalowsky, the following who arranged for • funeral, ...singed for • grave, arranged for l what shall c arry those who wished to •ttend the funer they gain a chilly rectitude are actively interested in the work: arranged for au t om obiles to c ivilization and this is a• shin, if and lose their own soul? The chaste Cyrus Sulzberger, Dr. Lee K. Frankel, I of this unknown child. Yes, we have • Christian e David Bressler, Dr. Nathan Kress, country, and we are now busily engaged in admitting only Nor- igidly Chri a ti an (bat Mr. Schugr is not • Nordic. lo died potatoes fr splendid callin much Samuel Heller, II. C. Vladeck, L. rely dins. You may be interested to know , potat oes baked schmaltz. He would stand in the Budin, Herman Bernstein, M. Iler- ' --------- man, henry Alsberg, II. Lieberman. action in Bessaabia, accoding of garden that fronted the Country p Full support to the movement has ed H one and abutted uon a railway RUSSO•ROUMANIAN PARLEY the statement issued by Ranscanu. in roared also been promised by Dr. Stephen , eankment, where the trains nib BREAKS ON BESSARABIA I by, swift for his home town; he S. Wise, Judge Otto Rosalsky, Leon . _ would stand longingly following the Kamaiky, Mrs. Alexander Kohut, Ber- w ANIMAL CRUELTY LAW as it curved through the gap nard Semel, Morris Rothenberg, VIENNA.—J. T. A.)—The expect- MAY AFFECT SCHECHITA train in the hills, and he would passion- Judge Jacob Panken, John I,. Bern- ed breakup of the Russo-Roumanian — conference occurred today, before tic- LONDON.—(. J T. A.)—The ex- ately determine he was not homesick. stein, Adolph Held and many others. ement for the pre- As the train hurtled by it seemed to tual negotiations had even begun, i bulb and take RIGHTS OF AMERICANS over the Bessarabian question. The ponents of the mov his heart like a ached when Roumania' vention of cruelty to animals in Eng- uproot as r e impasse w TO BE PROTESTED IN SYR A demanded as a preliminary to start- land have called a large mess meet- it bodily away. So he stood one day in the garden A.) WA SHINGTN.— ing the conference the recognition of ing for April 7th. They intend at thin meeting to urge the British gov- alone, wet-eyed, seeing dimly the re- providing equal di d a treat y with France prow leaving Bessarabia the status s quo, Russian Representative, ernment to pans a law calling for ceding banner of smoke. ls in- rs. rights for American nationals and terri- be hind him. Mwas window kos her. Th e at L matron, terests in Syria and ebanon her Krestinsky, insisted that the Bessara- more humane methods in killing tap tz the the strictl y Ma, . animals. "there. She beckoned to hini. tory under League mandate to France, bian question be decided by ■ P The leader of this movement, Lady s ilti ng has been concluded and will be signed Cite. Rascanu, the head of the Rou- Hamilton,, is known as an opponent of He came to her sheepishly, "Well, Jackie, and what's wrong in Par is y A mbassado r Merrick and has left Vienna the Jewish Shechita. She has been by pleni potenti ary. he F renc t of with us?" maniac delegation, Difficulty arose over the position' for Paris and Rome in order to in- successful in gaining the support "Oh, please, nuffink, Matron." influential members of the tell of the Pandard Oil company's prop- "Now, just wipe your eyes and form the French and Italian govern- tnents on the situation following the three parties in parliament, and sew- me real honest, there's • dear little arty In Palestine, according to state- c ommon-sense and a better The man who wrote that editorial has more understanding of what religion is than all the Blue Nose Blue Sunday Blab- ISM A ZIONISM asten country. Everything was arranged. Jack entered the train a little : dubiously. Ile had seen trains from a courteous distance hitherto, crash- ing over urban viaducts, but at such close quarters they seemed a little sinister, animals almost, with saucer- and dragon-like breath. He was , one of a group of similar little boys, each holding in one hand a railway ticket and in the other a shirt, socks and handkerchief, wrapped round in a ospran rge. el which was already deem- p breakingoff of the conference. Rou- era( of them have promised immediate Russian arm- the coming meeting. mania fears to address boy." Boys' Clothing Boys' Clothing "Oh, please, nuffink, Matron." Little Jack Levine was born in a "Tell me, Jackie, are you home- great town where he cuuld never see the blue sky for smoke; where all the sick?" A flied of color surged across Jack's trees had so consistent a coating of cheeks. Ile valiantly stifled a lump ' . soot that if you held a leaf between in his throat, lifted his head, and de-' BY Chao It .1.6.0.1 ICalsywrIght, 1921. ' finger and thumb tiny impressions elated, "Please, Matron, my corn on on both the observe and re- my little toe 'urts like anyf ink." I am in receipt of a letter from M. B. Silverstone, manager of the Key-I remained the leaf. Yet as soon as he stone General Insurance Agency of Johnstown, Pa., saying that his agency vese of N ightly a forlorn little figure fol- chayder, had finished with school and f boo since November, 1918, has represented the Inter•State Businesa Men'. Acci• ks, lowed the mob of lads up the im- great reader o dent Association of Des Moines, Iowa, hot he adds: "We were never •ware Jack was a peccable stairs of the Country Home chiefly those which described hills, of the fact that we had in this office a company that wa anti-Semitic in to the dormitory. Nightly when Mrs. birds and cows. The only hills he feeling." The reason for this expression is found in the appended linen actually knew were accumulations of Katz passed by on her wny to her room and opened the door and received by Mr. Silverstone. ' slushy cloy heaped round the brick own -•- ■ 111.-• lifted the high lamp to see all was furnaces; and his only cows were the well in the dormitory, the rest of the My Dear Sir: kosher fragments displayed on world was soundly asleep, but it was I wish you to know that we appreciate the efforts you ore making butt.hers' slabs. Among birds Jack two deceptive eyelids (•ims! over towards writing business for our association, but we site that you knew sparrows, and, of course, edibles Jack's thoroughly wide-awake eyes. write a good ninny foreigners in the course of your work, I wish in like chickens and ducks. But Jack For every midnight he had a secret the future you would not write Kike Jews, Greeks, Italians, Lithu- hod imagination enough to clothe hills rite to perform. Then when the anians and similar class of foreigners, but hold your line of work with heather and grass, and to set whole globe was wraped in slumber to Americans with American 11£11111 , A. This in absolutely necessary , cows drowsily munching among green --matron, the hostile little boys, the for a big success with our association in the future. • . I wish meadows. As for flowers, he had met three cats under the kitchen fender— you would adhere very closely to these instructions in the future. dandelion, will mustard, and daisies then the midnight niail came mag- "(Signed) ERNEST W. BROWN, Sec.-Treas." on the "hills." Ile had seen atrocious nificently shouting its way home. parallelograms of tulips in the public Very quietly Jack slipped from his What shall we Bay of Mr. Brown? What shall we say of his company? But his inward eye, which The only instructions that he has omitted is that those business men he parks. of his solitude, opened sheets, crept tip-toe to a low chest by the window, knelt there, and his eyes be white, Gentile. Proteatant—then he would have a 100 per was the bliss upon meadows where innumerable writes should Ku Klux Klan policy for hia company. Mr. Brown has rendered one flowers swayed at evening and little wistfully pursued the procession of cent the giant across the night. Ile had un fortunately do not great many men who gnomes of flowers peeped service at least, he h. saved a heard the voice of a friend when the .. American names from bothering Mr. Brown, or Mr. Brown's also- blur-eyed front the banks and white trumphets po sse.. engine whistled, giving him cheery elation, or any of Mr. Brown's agents, for any insurance. This saves time, flowers made silent music from assurance of home. Ile could en- stationery, postage, postage, aggravation. There are any number of excellent schools of hedgerow's. .1 the vision his mother, the day's work where men of Mr. Brown'. type may learn the primary rudiments of bust them- Many crowded years done, sitting by her kitchen fire, while nes., and he seems to be in need of such a fundamental education. All these I t - Ile at- i selves on Jack's shoulders. his father droned on contentedly of into executive positions. We ask that o f hors the awesome things t ained at length sitting things come from putting office those great dead days in Russia, when our exchanges please advise their readers that Mr. Brown doesn't want any' e d lish on a poage , eleven . Ile was piety walked like a wind, and Zion metal chair in the hearth at home, seemed a day's journey round the "Kike Jews" on his fiat of risks. — his eyes gled to a book on wild life, corner. That was before the blows The solemn visaged gentleman with the Puritanic side-whisker. clears . rawling on sofas and the shouting snit the stricken His elders were his throat •nd calls on the Nordics to sing "America," after which he blows the c haracteris- world. She was talking of her Jackie i i and cha irs discuss nose vigorously and announces that he has discovered • valuable con-i of their senility. A tic inanities an even now. What kuggel should she his to pro-Nordic im migration literature that will serve the cause of distin- end, gentlem tribution make for his homecoming? Ile waited Revolution sitting at theiheavy a gold watch chain. He the 100 percenters nobly if the Daughter of the by till the red glow won utterly gone in telling her neighbor what her gre.. guished . a chair but no formal in- from the night and the far clank deist f r a moment wa4 given rig grandfather did at Brandywine (for that matter such names, even thoug troduction to Jock, who was too was hushed; he waved his hand along they are of Revolution•ry origin, should not he mentioned publicly, as they much interested in skylarks to be con- the railway lines away with the mid- are too suggesti•e in this dry age), he will be pleased to read the st•te• cerned. night mail, away and away home, went. Adjusting his spectacles, he proceeds: I "Little man," a caressing voice until at last he crept back to bed, I flowed into the greenwood where Jack repeating firmly he was not home- "It is an incontrovertible truth that the civil institutions of the ' was wandering, "and would the Lit- sick, not a bit, 0, no, not a hit. United States of America have been seriously affected, and that they I toe Man like to have a fortnight in So the fortnight passed at length, now stand in imminent peril from the rapid and enormous increase and Jack came hack to the town. !the count ry?" • in the body of residents of foreign birth imbued with foreign feel- The Li ttle Man looked up with Younger boys in chayder looked up fogs and of an ignorant and immoral character." shining, doubtful eyes. But, of course, at him, for the halo of experience now of those grown-up jokes. transfigured him. Ile returned with the K. K. K. applaud hilariously. There are cries of it was o quavered doubtfully. h i go The D. A. "Ye-e-es," zest to his books on wild life, losing "Send it on to Washington!" "That's the idea; keep out the cheap foreigner. "Then come and stand by my knee himself in contemplation upon the who are corrupting our Sabbath and corrupting our youth and corrupting d like t o ways of the skylark and nightingale. and tell me ,lust why you' an ■ with the purified whiskers makes I go!" The gold chain heaved amiably. our tuition.us astounding discovery. The statement he has just read was from a report Jack advanced. Jack entered into ofmting of the Native Americ•n National Convention, held in Phila. meeting a chaotic disquisition on the flight of 1845! Seventy.nine years ago! The meeting i. hurriedly skylarks, and little boys must never 4, 1phia de • pinch eggs, and red berries grow on adjourned. adjour ----s-sse-s------ honks, and "oh, I'd love to see where Dr. Wise Refuses Gift Made on His We are moving ahead and at the same time closer together. Social lines in- pomegranates grows and nightin- Birthday. ment of .'ecretary Hughes. and and Furnishings Furnishings WOODWARD Ail Sixth Floor. Sixth Flo', EASTER CLOTHING 701? "REAL" BOM n:1' TWO -PANTS SUITS "Skolny" and Other Famous Makes 17.9 to 242 . We take great pride in our stocks of boys' clothing because these stocks represent the result of months of careful study of boys' cloth- ing needs in point of service and style. Suits that combine high qualities with low cost. Suits that are tailored with as much care and thought as men's clothing. Materials are sturdy, all-wool, fashioned in smart, youthful models that boys like. 14. 95 "Jackie Coogan" 2-Pant 12 .48 to S arts and T op coats These are suits for the little fellows "3 to 10 yrs." who wear real mannish-looking clothes—in light color, grays, tans and powdered blue. Top- coats are of imported fabric and beautiful plaids in light spring shades. In recommending these suits to mothers of this city we do so with confidence that they are the best and most satisfactory cloth- ing values at the prices, and we back up this great faith with an iron-clad guarantee with each and every suit. Among the newest styles to select from are English models, plain or yoke back models. Single or double breasted. Some with golf knickers. Here you will find, too, the very newest colors, including powder blue, (111 gray and sand tan. Complete range of sizes in each model, ranging from 7 to 18 years. Frank & Seder—Boys' Clothing and Furnishings—Sixth Floor. Ask Your Doctor About This New Prophylactic Treatment COME knowledge of the incidence of Goiter in the Great Lakes region may be gathered from the recent work of Dr. Levin, of Lake Linden, Mich., in which he found 1,146 Goiters in 1,783 persons. Enlargement of the thyroid was found in 22 per cent of children examined under one year of age, the percentage advancing rapidly toward puberty, in both sexes, it being much more steady in the female. The per- centage of total Goiters in the period from 10 to 15 years was 94 in girls, while that of the boys averaged about 68 per cent. In families with four or more children, the family record being complete, it was found that the presence of Goiter in both parents resulted in many Goiters among the children. lournal • • aura. 1M. The medical pro- fession is now con- cerned more than ever before in the prevention of Goi- ter. And out of all the discussions that have been held, the surveys, experi- mental work, study a n d investigation, has developed the wonderfully simple idea that endemic Goiter (enlarge- ment of the thy- roid, due to a defi- ciency of Iodine in the Gland) can be treated and pre, ULKEYs IODINE LT vented most effectively by the use of Table Salt. to which a definite amount of IODINE his been added. For the benefit of the public health we were requested by medical authorities to produce such a silt for general distri- bution. MULKEY'S IODINE SALT is our compliance with that request. This is our regular high-grade Table Salt. The small quantity of Iodine put in it does not chanze the appearance or taste, and it is to be used on the table and for cooking, just like ordinary salt. Mulkey's Iodine Salt sells at the regu- lar price of free-running Table Salt. IF YOUR GROCER CANNOT SUPPLY YOU, please roll ts. up (Cedar 2175) and we will tell you where to get Mulkey's Iodine Salt, MAIL ORDERS FILLED Until dealers everywhere throughout the State have MULKEY'S IODINE SALT in stock, we will till mail orders; a ease o/ 24 twe-lb. cartons, shipped by express, charges collect, open receipt ol $3.50. Write for our pamphlet on Goiter Mulkey Salt CO. Detroit, Mich.