PAGE FIVE
jErGISslisliERrIs'irgTDINE,As
Vrtib
(r
PASSES RESOLUTION
ON LEOPOLD DEATH
(Continued from Page 1)
tell which is not forthcom'ng." The Pisgah Lodge Recalls Service3
•
'/stunts iirvithization is a little insti -
Former Chief Performed
I lition, quite apart front the commun.
to Community.
By Chas. H Josephs)
(Copywright, 1921.
Hy; people only know it exists in so
1
r years I have been trying to get in the class of the wealthy. Now, far as they read the newspapers; it
At. a meeting „Of i l: 1":„gah 1," , ige• No-
effect here. For this it is
Fo
has had n
R.
un expected publication Of the income tax reports. my ambition
' 1 ",",'” "ov• "1,', a re '''''
elm- llot to be Warned, because, seriously, 31 ' '• 0•
mitt
ha,h,„t, t hy'
throuRin
iihieved. I find by using my own income tax as a basi. „p,1
the amounts paid by sonic of the other wealthy men, that I there its tin one to impress. Anglo- lotion present.' by a comee con.
. 'JewrY survives On its past, it has no siting Of Adolph Freund, Julius Deu-
w i n g t With
,.:'!,,d in the group of the richest ewe in the United States. Com
iresent, and it can have no pretense telbaum and Aaron Drooek
was
g r a/ iii
Sinclair Of the famous oil company is a pamper—he I
unanimously adopted as a tribute to
, B
d th
of a future, To this I pleadeat
pare d 1 • • . , lay
e214! A little publicity now and then k good for the worst we had our assimilators in the United , Lester J. Leopold, it past president Of
WI "•
States but that the Jews of America the ledge, who died in New York Nov.
-----i;
of men
had decided, as far as I could see. "to
great loss, lamentable and sor-
sends me a clipping from the Jewish Daily Forward. the play cricket' in this Palestinian mat- 2. ":\
The resolution reads as follows:
lieve roomful, has befallen Our membership.
A F` `c
Yiddish daily, which seems to take exception
to my
n in
hove to say
is ftwit
that io
Senator
ter; and that I could hardly b e
ork
big N„
we, his brethren, but no le,
All I h
that the English Jews—who must be Not onlY
Bette-Hun garian petition matter.
•
of Illen, Women and chit
the I ," F • introduced the anti-Semitic petition in the l'iiit.'d States Senate, m „,,,.,I b y rertain codes of honor ' a wide cirele
•
affected by Ow death
'f,•
,
ha Fell
published and circulated; that I had a copy of it in my own , Known tO sport sown-- were so mori- ' dren are tleeply
W:1s
that it 1
bund
that
they
could
not
be
brought
.
of
a
highly
esteemed
eit ken •and coin-
hat the excerpts published in this column were selected by me per-
Lester
J.
1,eopold
is
hands:
b o y. La Follette "pulled a bone" that's all. t.• respond if a serious effort was 1111111111 Worker.
c A not by my
ana lly o•
aiying he k an anti-Semite. And wheu men in political life make made to interest them. To this my no more. In the prime of life, his co-
Wu:
/ am n
mis ta k: t heY have to pay the price. That's the way the game is played. informant—and he is the best in- .reer came to a sudden cud. Ile
turned ever imbued with the exalted precepts
a miserable, contemptible petition and the only possible excuse I formed Jew in England
round and said: "Of course you can- of our order --with the noblest of ho-
II WS'
" Follette is that he didn't read it.
charity. How many
''r
I
a
f
—_______:,
have
.
not understand that - we are •played Man Virtu"--
ee Synagogue a few OW; but We are, and we will fade were recipients of his benefactions,
he Present at the service in the Fr
1111011C knows; not did he.
I h ft eened to
'Rabbi Stephen S. Wise in a sermon attacked "Garyism.' away unless some in•av leader from
"The widows, the oritluins. the
,,,,, When
y And
ea r y I r.•member quite clearly the 'excitement that sermon produced. There our „ w „ stuck arise,. Some resent
t aged and the indigent received his
MY memory serves no' (laud, G. M o nt e fmre's a n s w e r th a
uere J , , i o resignations from the congregation. if
he
is
an
Eng
li
hman
wholly
and
only
assistance
without stint. No hour
reading Dr. Wise's ,, e rnion delivered
too early, none too late, no effort
of that 0C1 1 11 , 1 0 11 by
u ''' ,11, I am reminded
election in xvIlich he nttacked President Coolidge sevorel)'• religious!) , a follower of Judaism; but wash
Cl111,,V befOre
far
as
the
maiorde
of
us
are
con-
too
strenuous
for him to afford sue-
ur
i
ng
th
e
address.
ou
t
d
Alld :IS
the
congregation wa lk e d
not posses-ad if large
A doaell Inembers of the
, of the officers ce rn e d that is what we want to be- eor. Though
he dispensed his means with
rig
•
,.
there arc S.VerIll resignations already in the hand
ll
d
so
a
n
wealth,
l
ves.
A
ourse
{
person
.
a
l
ma
I
t'nee Synagogue. But this will not influence Dr. M ise to refrain l ow ,.
a lavish hand to bring relief to those
of th e
for Paristine appeals to only
toil
what he thinks from the pulpit.
in need. Nay, even his health he
a small and by no means popular
from - ,it•' , :g.
—::
would sacrifice when called to to good
I wi-h that creeks wouldn't hurtles nay mail with their literature (?1. group who themselves are more often
I get letters than n o t sucked into the realm of lo- to his fellow men.
fanatic in all the world is a religiou, fanatie.
"Thus we knew hint and honored
•
The W111-1
converted to Catludicism and fr o m Jews who have become cal affair. alpl tht.refore cannot do hint; thus he was
rt
as known and hono•l
from Pr-testa
I
—aeionallv
from
a
Christian
who
has
become
justice
to
their
Palestinian
enthusi-
• . • ,
' . '
convre:•1 to frontatholics who have become Protestants. Those fellows are ;i sm. To See how flat we art.. take far and wide.
To
have
faults
is
human.
Lester
a Jew, and from
t that th e l a rg e
I,..•,.r writers. And they seem to have all the time in the world on note of the f ac
st single Leopld
had them as we all have
o
eager
with a flood •if pamphlets, booklets, English contribution to the Keren
their baols. This week I WEIS hi/III/red
th,, Ilayesod came front a Zionist who is them, but his nobility of heart, his
azines, as well as letters, all trying to shim me
innate kindness and consideration for
marked ...spies of mag
many religious, wars not a...tutu.' !tartlet- 11 ;0 ' 1 Y rich. But
li g ht. Now I can begin to see why thereave been ,so s some erazy religiou , that is not disti"otively " Parestinian the welfare of others overshadowed
in the eorld. There used to be a chap in Brooklyn with
his
apparent shortcomings.
o
ok
at
the
response
t
o
ions who was one of my readiest of ready-letter writers. But I hatjen't difficulty. L
"Ile will be missed alining us for
u will 1
not
bably in a lunatic asylum, writing our own charity anneals a nd y o
his geniality, his sincerity, his bleat.
OVPT a year. Ile's Pro
d
from
him
in
,
r
heard
see th a t we are not equal to any situ-
y, en- ism, Ile will be mourned by very,
letters to himself.
: ation demanding courage, ene.22-
i very, many for his charity, his self-
the election is over, most of us will keep right on running thusiasni and liberality."
Now that
Undismayed. I turned to quite an- , denial, his probity.
around trying to collect the living the world owes us, while others sit in the
"Let us remeber Lester Leopold as
other man, one who has made serioust
grandstand and applaud our efforts.
sacrifices for 'Palestine, though not I we knew hint—an ardent lien B'rith.
Jew', a loyal American, a
through organization channels. Said a staunch
and noble
Higher education in Roumania! 'The police have discovered a vast stu -
s of , true friend, withal a good
rganization whose program is one of murder of certain government he; "You cannot tempt the Jew
dent o
officials
and of heads of financial institutions. It has it strong anti-SemiticEngland to aid Palestine as lung as soul.
Peace
to
his
ashes.
"Resolved teat this tribute in mem-
plan in its platform. Several professors are said to be allied with the I the present uncertainty prevails as
movement. This is not idle gossip, but was sent to the New York Times f to the final attitude of the British ory Leopold,
of our departed
brother,
Lester
be inscribed
on our
roc-
e ar J.
its foreign correspondent in Bucharest. One thing seems certain--some :government.
in America
h
side of You
Palestinian
develop.
orris and that a copy thereof be trans.
by
good
colleg•s have not yet included the Ten Commandments in their courses the
milted to the members of his family,
b
eing
sent; we read lady the attacks
to all of whom we extend our heart-
of study.
made ,ot the Balfour Declaration and
felt sy mpathy."
on the High Commissioner's policy.
Heywood Broun, in his daily column in the New York World says:
As things have turned out, instead of
becoming a source of pride to us,
"Over there," said it Klan speaker last summer, pointing across
HOUGH ISSUES CALL
Palestine has become a cause of new
wn
the Hudson to the tall towers of the magical city, "is an alillend toJ
TO EFFECT LEAGUE
worriment to those Jew's in England
the United States at all. It is caeew
which doesn't belong in
who might do the thinking for the
OF FRIENDLY MINDS
York."
, community. We have not been called
in to play a part in the job of build-
(Continued on page 5.)
Continuing, Mr. Broun said:
' ing up the country, though we are
sometimes told what we will be per-
he asserted, is possible if all men live
Let us, then, sound throughout the world a summons and an
' mitted to do by men who have sig-
true to themselves and seek the com-
appeal to all Semitic settlements to send us recruits. And front Man-
, sally
failed to identify themselves
mon truth and a common humanity.
hattan, missionaries should proceed to bleeding Kansas and darkest
with the life of Anglo-Jewry. There-
f
Georgia. For if New York is different we are sitting pretty, and it
fore the tone is easily set by news- Among the guests of members o
is the rest of America which should be disturbed and take stock of
debates the club were Judge Edward Com-
paper attacks, parliamenum .
_,=
an,
:: and the doubts that come from Pales- mend of the Probate Court; Judge
itself.
Dingenran of the Circuit
Another Rothschild marriesohe
faith. At least I think so! If I tine itself. On that basis you can ex- Barry
out
r
e sof the correct me when I say that Kitty peel men to do no more than meager Court; Judge Ernest P.
F Lade of the
I would
like to hav Wolf girls" of Philadelphia, Who was married charity. Practically no one in this Circuit Court; Judge rank Murphy
nliqakell
Wolf,
one of
the "beautiful
Benjamin F.
the
other
day
to
Baron
Eugene
Rothschild,
third
son
of
the
late
Albert
community
seriously
thinks
of
Pales-
of
Recorder's
Court;
Baron R Comfort, principal of Cass Technical
Rothschild of the Austrian Rothechilds, is not a Jewess. Kathleen tine as a possible land of investment,
13.
Gripman,
vice
Rea
l;
choo
ssibili ties if Iligh nt
ws of such po attem
a
o f the Bank o f Detroit
e
Franciska von Wolf was first married . to . Spotswood,
descended from one no one ktno for no see ious
pt has presidS
divorce and they exis
I
b
•
Sweeny,
cashier
of
the
.
Si.
Donald
of the first English governors of trap
m ie
was married to Count Erwin von Schoenborn-Buehrem and was recently been made to counteract the oppoo- People's State Bank; James o)
whic h comes daily from the
li
president
of
the
Continental
Bank
i
divorced. Now the beautiful Kathleen is the bride of a Rothschild.
non-Jewish so u rces."
and Edward II. Fox, chief of &tee
--::
The next 1111111 to whom I put my
address delivered by Dr. Charles W. Eliot, president emeritus of
an
In
Harvard University, at Cambridge, on Oct. 12, on the subject, "Religion e qustion half challenged me. Ile tires.
A musical program arranged by So
tho u rht that the Jews of England had Elkine, a member of the Detroit Sym
for 51,alern Youth," he made this statenont .
done their share, if We allowed for phony Orchestra and of the club, wa
y taxat ion p re vailing
given by Stanislaw Shapiro, a firs
What might be our vision of punishment or reward in the future • ther heav
disc
utes We discussedd
few
Fo
violinist of the Detroit Symphony Or
atter, until I pointed out to him
chestra and a former pupil of Leopol i
few
that
forme
d
in
had be
Auer, and by Dr. Mark Gunzburg
And here is the way this great thinker, aged 90, answers the question that
d then Pa lestin e ex hibition pianist, of the Detroit Institute o
Iv it see
Jews
at Wembley, that I had called for Musical Arts. Mr. Shapiro was ac
he puts to himself:
.Palestinian wine at the exhibition din- companied by Professor Francis A
All religions have taught that the greater part of the human race
ing room only to find that while it was
5fayhew.
is going to extinction, transmigration, purgatory or hell fire, and a
available few had ordered it. In
Ilarry R. Solomon, head of th
small selected portion is going to something called heaven or paradise.
reply, he asked whether I had looked
Men's Club, presided.
For my own part, I have never seen any description of heaven which
closely at the model of King Solo-
was not intolerable. The common notion of the suffering human
mon's temple on exhibition there. I
Distribution of Detroit Mad e
being who has had a hard life and is dying, perhaps in tornient, is
told him I had ignored this model.
that heaven is going to give him rest from pain and agony, or rest
Jersey Ice Cream Placed
Ile, however, was determined to go
from hard labor and monotonous drudgery—that heaven is a place
and see it I suggested that the pro-
in Reputable Hands.
of rest. Now that is a most formidable idea. That heaven would be
" ducts of the colonies and some of the
, who knows what
maps
were
more
interesting.
Ile
place
of
rest
is
for
me,
and
for
any
other
man
The quality of the famous Detroit
a
joy In work is, simply intolerable, and not to he thought of at all.
strongly demurred. The interest in made Jersey ice cream has set a new
Thc ancient conceptions of reward anal punishment in the future
'Palestine was a question of what had standard of excellence and cleanliness
world will be abandonde. The new religion will change them abso-
once come forth from that country. for ice cream made for wholesale dis-
inIV• Neither reward nor punishment as heretofore conceived of is
Jews might he agriculturists, one can tribution.
We
to thought of any more For the future the new religion will,
imagine their doing second-rate work
Dealers selling this grade of ice
all
hope,
look
forward
to
another
life,
not
with
confidence
of
in that dirdction; but what interest cream may be depended upon to be
ma,
n :ledge, but as Pasteur looked forward to rejoining 'his daughter
could there be in Jewish labor any- high grade, conscientious merchants.
to believe, what
where, even in Palestine? We were as this quality product is only placed
in , , aother world. We may believe what we ' choose
r• e for a mo-
t think • nr
he people of the Torah and it Was in reputable stores.
We , Innnt help believing. M e must no
melt that we know anything about rewards or punishments in a fu-
our relations to that writing that
made up our interest in that land.
.
fur; life.
k
-e statements of Dr. Eliot may not meet with the approval of ortho- Meekly and gaintly I suggested that
I In-hmen, but they will be welcomed by the thoughtful liberals of that theory did not demand the ex-
fox T ,:
of the interpretens penditure of large sums. "Exactly,"
evert' ,o,h. There is too much cock-sureness on the part he'replied. All this front an English
of ,,,;, w ord. So me of them, like Mr. Bryan and Mr. Sunday, not only
are certain that most of us are going to hell. but they can describe it in Zionist of considerable standing. I put
etail. They are equally positive in their statements concerning heaven. Of the many others to whom
d
great mind and a great understanding soul such as Charles W. Eliot, my question I shall quote only two
But a
alto is a thinker and not a maudlin sentimentalist, is more humble and mein. en
One
active
Zionist
su m-
1 and
nigh
30 years.
had
so f is an
b e
re-
mar iz ed all for e information I
confess,-, that he cannot understand God or God's ways or purposes in has
ceived. He said all my informants
their catirety. That most be left to the Fundamentalists.
----../_.--
Tt• Jews, despite the long faces pulled by their enemies, still occupy an were
"All right.
these various forces," he said,
impemant position in the public life of England. Take the recent elections.
re some 30 Jews candidates for seats in Parliament and most of "are working against the develop-
There ..• • ,
d. But of significance, in view of the backhanded slaps of ment of a real pro-Palestinian move-
them •,,,,r, e l ec t e
bail and the Chestertons, is the fact that in some districts admittedly ment
country,
together
with
hich nne
withac w
er this
factor,
s oth in
the I.
It
alt
qua inteo
hiur informan ts are
domint ..al by Jews, the Jews were defeated by their non-Jewish opponents, tyo
,
is
this---the
organization
itself
is
all of cinch gives the lie direct that the Jews vote and think as Jews.
---::--
Greene] Plutarco Elias Calles must be a real fellow. The way this coon- moribund here. Of the
inner
work-
know
less
we
received the popular president-elect of Mexico seems to show that inns of the machine
! re ha,- ,.
h higher favor than most of his predecessors. So I am than you do in America. We are good
he is told i n muc
glad t. see that a deputation of rabbis called on him in New York to per- voting
for are
the spurred
organization
hen, we
to get
and fodder
for members or s omething;
express the appreciation of the Jewish people for
the fair and broad- sekim
o wol
wall"
nh
minded attitude he has taken towards the Jews of Mexico. The readers of but generally our contacts with the
so little effort
this eelumn will recall that relies is the one who has been suggesting and leadership are so few,
inviting the Jew's to settle in Mexico. And I have always believe.' that our . is made to arouse our enthusiasm,
leaders made a mistake in not accepting the opportunity to urge our brethren that I have difficulty in understanding
in fact, who are forced to emigrate, why any private individual should un-
in Europe who wanted to emigrate,
dertake the arduous task of visiting
to go to Mexcio.
I believe that General Calles really meant what he said when he assured Palestine. True, I would like to make
the d'-legation that Mexico would show no discrimination between rare and the trip myself, but we are so tether-
one
has
ever
in remember
recent years
specific-
Tehgion and that the Jews couli depend upon his friendliness. Anyone (tic
that
I do
not
that
any-
all here in England
'who has read the story of the dews in Mexico and of their present status, ally told any of
e.
Palestine"
ex- to go and Fee
will appreciate that Mexico has at all times treated its Jewish citizens cease
The final view is that of one who is
some Jews become so Nlexicanized that they
"3' a , all others. In fact
practically an official of the Zionist
to be Jews, at least religiously.
--- __—__ Organization in Palestine. Be said
a an looking towards the strength- nothing was to he expected from
enNig of the activities of that organic-. Anglo-Jewry in the near future be-
MILLER SETS FORTH
ation to the twenty-ninth convention, cause the London .Tewish Chronicle is
ACTIVITIES BEGUN
to be held in St. Louis Jan. the great gosple of Anglo-Jewry, and
the policy of the Jewi•h Chronicle is
which 111
BY DAVID A. BROWN 2 9 , '21 and 22.
, '
A telegram wishing hint a pleasant such in respect to the attitude of OP
journey was sent him by Charles British government and the High
I contnued from page 1.1
Shohl, president. of the union. The Commissioner that it is impossible to
create money-giving enthusiasm in
India, South Africa, Egypt, Palestine,
read:
Turk, y, Russia and most of the Eu- telegram
"The officers of the union and all England.
It is not my duty to define which of
ropean countries. Ile is planning to your friends extend hearty good
, is ca use and which
make a study of conditions in these wishes on your departure for re- t all of these factors
.
effect.
The opinione I have gathered
eerned
land: and to discuss with leaders the
thoroughly
se
fine service have much in common. Many of us
and recreation
"nhl"rns affecting the Jewish com-
that the'
Our grateful thanks for
with you. would welcome evidence
Inanities therein.
speed go
rendered
to our
wish you
Godspeed on your jour- statement that Anglo-Jewry will not
Mr. Brown has just completed a We
se in Palestine is
the
Jewis
at
tour across the continent in behalf
and a safe he l p
return
in
t in co this
view
ex hilarating trip nd
rrect. But caupresent
renewed
of the 1"nion of American Hebrew ney, an
good health a
holds the field.
Congregatione. lie is chairman of a
vigor."
Committee of 25 which is to submit
1ED
AG REAT SALE
WOODWARD AVE
of Men's, Women's Boys' and Girls'
Bath Robes
The Greatest Bath Robe Sale Ever Held in This Store -- 5,300
Robes, All of the Famous Lawrence Mills Blanket Cloth and the
World Famed Beacon Cloth—
This sale is being held so that hundreds may buy for personal use—for
gift-giving—so that both may save ill buying them. Times w.lien you need them
most, and priced so that everyone may enjoy their comfort and fine service.
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S
Women's
Sizes
38 to 52
'2.98
Men's
Sizes
36 to 46
Men's robes of soft, warm blanket cloth in woven jacquard patterns.
They have Byron collars that fit snugly to the neck. They are cut large and
full, and well finished in every detail. The seams are taped and reinforced.
Double side pockets. Girdle cords to math. Women's robes of best quality
Lawrence or Beacon's cloth in conventional patterns in light and (lark colors.
Made with large collars, pockets and tie cords at waist. Trimmed with rib-
bon, sateen and cord. Regular and ExTRA sizes. Men's robes on Third
Floor. Women's robes on Sixth Floor,
BOYS' AND GIRLS'
'2.48
Boys'
Sizes
6 to 14
Girls'
Sizes
8 to 14
Buys' robes of good heavy grade blanket cloth in floral and conventional
patterns. Perfectly made in every respect. Finished with sateen edges.
Seams are taped. Cut full. Shawl coffins. Pockets. Tie cords. Girls' robes
of heavy Lawrence cloth in pretty patterns and colors. All bound and fin-
ished with satin. Taped seams. Full collars and cuffs. Cord and tassel.
Pockets. Sizes S to 14. Generously cut. Girls robes on Sixth Floor. Boys'
robes on Third Floor.
INFANTS' BATH ROBES
Infants'
Sizes
1 to 2
'1.08
Tots'
Sizes
2 to 6
Infants' and tots' bath robes of heavy Lawrence cloth (used only in the
best grade of robes) in conventional patterns in good colors, tan and rose,
blue and tan, navy and red, tan and brown. All finished with silk cord and
tassel at neck and waist, and pockets. Edges finished with silk stitching. Sizes
2 to 6 years. Sale on Sixth Floor.
Extra Selling Space to Make Shopping Easy.
Mail and Telephone Orders Will Receive Immediate Attention.
.............
INSTITUTE NOTES
of the North End Branch of the Jew-
!ish Institute.
Citizenship:
Oakland Mothers Club:
The last opportunity to join the
The lint meeting of the Oakland
citizenship class this seasn,l will be
Mother- club season will be hold at
by enrolling Sunday morning, Nov.
the
Moore School, corner of Alger
If, at 9:30 o'clock at 579 East Phila-
and Cameron avenues, Saturday af-
delphia avenue, the new headquarters
"I CAN'T AFFORD
ANYTHING LESS
ONLY
PACKARD
CAN BUILD A
PACKARD
A SK
PI\
THE MAN
WHO OWNS
ONE
ternoon, Nov. 15, at 2:30 o'clock.
Dr. Benjamin Levine will deliver a
lecture in Yiddish on "The Conserva-
tion of !Motherhood." The talk will
hare a sevens' message for those ap-
proaching middle age.
Dancing of European and Ameri-
can folk dances will follow the meet-
ing.
Asf Ahe
The mere possession of a Packard
Six gives you a satisfaction that a
car of no other make can duplicate.
If you debate with yourself whether
you can afford to enjoy Packard
satisfaction remember this:
A judicious investment depends on
the factor of economy, and econ-
omy in motor cars involves long
nfe, high re-sale value and low
maintenance costs, as well as fuel
and tire mileage. Packard is eco-
nomical in all these respects.
When you have given all the facts
due consideration you will say, as
thousands of others say: "Only
Packard can build a Packard and
I can't afford anything less."
Packard Six and Packard Eight are both
furnished in ten body types, open and
enclosed. Patkard's extremely liberal
simelayment plan makes possible the
imine..iale enjoyment of a Packard —pia.
chafing out of income instead of capital.
PACKARD MOTOR CAR COMPANY
Detroit Branch
EFFERSON AT ST. ANTOINE WOODWARD AT BOULEVARD
1...pay 7123
W il l , 7000
PACKARD
SIX