A merico Amish &riotlied Carter

?AGE THREE

1► 11S ► I

The Neighborhood As a Logical Basis For',
Social Service In a Metropolitan Community

ma,

unit

11105.

OF THE UNITED JEWISH CHARITIES

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111101 , 0;1.7

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sembles that scheme somewhat insofar ,
as it possesses, first, the element of
territorial or geographical division; I
1second, expert service from the outside
and, third, neighborhood organization,
on
self-expression /11111 i011
inside. It is ice near an approach

tll 1IeMOCraCy ill SOCIal Sere lee in

?1n Event Such
As Comes Once
in a Lifetime!

tocratically supported philanthropy
will permit. It is not artificial, it dows
DOW structure upon the
111 t impose
MANAGING DIRECTOR
ilizes most, if no all, of what
„.
old; it ut does not
t rta
whose interests would be paramount exists; it
of political organization, although
eographic in Cincinnati. Briefly the e•nterprist•
der
supiwiur
to
national
alifflonvi"ts•
The neighborhood is a g
11 Ild
' • 1 in lioston who listen -
/
•
a 11U / 11
. a hip was organizeol i1,1 {111 1 OWS:
The great war provt ,(1 th is
concept. It connotes essential!)
osition of the phi,' w
too to my exp
For
the
purpose
of
making
a
false
prediction.
In
the
final
analysis
itetl area of territory. Ordinarily eni-
ill that city sand
workingmen did not act as the work- first it ails
three-year expeoriment and dt•nion-
placed, the term does not necessarily
me privately in his delightful
inter. sration, the organization selected
ing class-- as the proletariat; they t o
. istenee of comil
8
Sneaking
S1' ,11iCion,
imply the ex
In . Oleo Nlothaw
C • mins as Frenchnwn, as bro gue, "I have
monity.
lloton
District. The
1 ."
wli
I ,
lied it does imply sim ar
:, „1 I uh,t er ,.
, ( h ilt you m ho , ,,
o, t "
ea ts. c,,,,,
fe „ to ,
„ '• , Englishmen. The racial will to live” Is so.
untry it would imply more or
''''.
''
the
mayor
of
the
Cil
y
of
Boston
:":
.'
"Y
'
•
•
thin
;
,
the
in-
r01110
r
s
tronger
rionj,tr
the o
of
climate,
of
A
s
■
1
.
-
;
,1,
1 ,, I, B re as strong us
as o
of soil,
I
thou, as t 0 , ''' :1 1
" Ile shrewollo; discerned the p•ossibilitieo.
I e is s
o 1 ' .
011111111 1. 11 1
.
protluets, tof stri uc t uh,r,e doc f. tonumeoatoul
' M en wi ll (" hull
1 „, t i t ,„mt t og t h,
ti lion
agricultural
diviilual will ,their
lives for their coon-' „
l
fully giyt• up
•
a Certain S age" n
""'",*
'11.
•
"
•
1
'
1
t forces so organized for ob.too c t ly pol
'
homes, of
. 1. ,", of
I induMry
try
or
for
their
racial
group.
And
i
ed
no roll-
of
agricultural
,
""ni 1 " ,
But I hiorlo
font nil.
eelo n ment
SUriai am re litmus
t lee to ignore the power of Drool
;
is a Illi S1
;
own,
asp,rat,ons,
nor
do
I
cod.douic
,
lange
and
of
I
iiresident Wils•on (
g ua
mot,.
Ill'ig ht
tO rh1111(1 a 11
that group feel ng. l
" 1 '' " f
ion - thrill now. Then. is no alt o
impossibil-
c011..
d
ton
iz l
• ' • '''' i••• I reo•ognta
it his
in octrin
part of a city, though also not
behind the neighboorho , ot ,,,' ,11-1 , 1 , 1
' , ' ' I
on. The e of nat
any
coninuon
inter.
t
(initiati
et
011
which we propos, to csoal , 11.-lo
. h hal Ihr 110 . nght 1 al self-d
se ,,,,ly built mprehend a fair oleo_ 1 . . ,
o f whi,,h h t , o!
Itloc X uouneils. It 1 it y o f adjusting racial boun daries, centers
beinghere, and the first
being
es t:, would co
, .
t;hdei,31;1_
' • il it dts-trine from
preenting
of unif,o•mity in one or more tic
•" " " '"' l yii li l ll,,
applied in a prarticallho fashion, has rea dyteen opened.
linos -for example, in econontic oai
be
or 5°0
peak of a poor neighborloo, d, ,
settlement, not it C. O. S. district of-
us iN". s
or •I
of racial loyalty flood cohesion.
noiddled•lass neighborhood,
""
"s
•
fire.
it
a
social
unit
scht•nie,
so
inuch
Or
a
wealthy
neighborhood); in a state el
tea-
„
o
The " rl i ltrar Y, '•" 1 " ti,'"' "ftie,
1,,, a lt mot. l ows ,. for ,,,,,.„,1
estan osnment as i t i s t o neighborhood‘...,itot,re. All
-erI natives
tams lie d1PUll 1 I'll, 11 1111
social contentions and morals I we
con- sery i,„, and
of
new
motional
boundaries
ill
speak of it respectable neighborhood,
• 1•S ill 1.1,
people are its lt , gitio
fortuity with the theery of national the needs of the
red light district, or of a tender-1
1,11 . 11t, ill
1 1
It • font , (II the broad .
s a t a
•
tune c
self-determination
could
Tao
loin district) and so on.
at nt dhing
k that is human o-
, ot ily that i
tfi' ni t inti
bring all avail
Incidentolly I may say that though
"1,1,,:tti`i'isi.ti,Sei"(titii,"nr,:tilhas"'il,o,
noton /11 .t. .t ,A" . .. ' id I e 1 no d „ ttt s im. ,,t•
":„"i'i"Oxii'sliksilli,"ll,d 1 ,1n;,iii,inlhin:liii,",
i ns
the rich may sometimes need social
01 .
west, Litiluaniuns in the north, Galt- „1,1,,
nurses,
reere•
service as much or more than the poor,
the neighborinood, public !mil privat.
ltrollO
tl • south and likrainians in
. •
I
;others, social
naturally have in mind poor neigh-
at
1101re lit , to satisfy those needs. IL 4 ors
we
the oast; and it is proving
own al-
borhoods when we speak of the neigh-
: 11111 trade Ull
groups to create new resources of its
fault for Poland to hold these
borhood as the logical basis or unit for
1/.1 •
i
together than it ever was for Austria, though it may, for purposes of exper- I
,,,oincil, which has
or demonstration, undertake"
,
social service.
for example, to hold the Mao ars," invent
•111 neighborhood
some task or enterprise with the ex-1
,
1 assume the real test of the neigh-
full cold"
n „ veto, if
and Walla , hinn s
programs, ionolc up of the members
m,,ti on o f h ay i ng, it t ak e
( "filch'. routhallia" ,
ne
borhood is the neighborly feeling the
t e Alitor And Czecho-Slovakia tor-
. some'
ape • . 1 , tiv
of the citizens council and the otocu-
residents have toward their pun of
Verge of war more proven neemsa, y
tuitional council sitting together. .t.
, self
has been
on the of her Hungarian existing agency, public or private. It
the city. The boundary of the n ei g h-
I th•en
once because
,
be governed by matij,• con-
The two main features were the population in the southtoast, though represents a united effort of toll helme-
borhood may
forces inside and outside of the I
siderations , but whatever they may be,
, that tolenient ronstitutes only three per Illtint
t ) ,"n
it would be the lines within which the council of occupations outside
neighborhood. It is interested in tht-I
t e an4
cent of het. total population.
residents entertain a conscious or at - OW service from the outsi
ilure on the part of whole life of the people from before
-st•rvice t
id otow il of citizens, the self-Service
The senseless failure
least subconscious recognition that the I
ghborhood.
great onany wen intentiontal persons the cradle to the grave, and in their
f_A , Presio I , a the nei
/WV- It
territory is a distinct section of the',
In failed
for it was tol recognize tlw validity of cultural multifarious relationships.
chiefly
because
The s ocial unit
1
But its processes are practical, For
ioduc-
city.
e h...lend roas.ors but ,
011 family welfare
I do not
the time
i s likely example, it carries
rs helieve
into the that
concept
of neigh-, esseoloalle artificial, because it at- groull life in this country t has
h at pr
ted th develop
a to
kind
of organi- tal
spint u:
of intolerance
not
ilworporatto
to a make
the laughing stock of in- work. It dues this in a centralized
mo d en t e
the lees a ne igh-, temp
the
al organizations
ofngs
none
It
l fashion.
h word.
•
horh000l. It to
po ple throughoou t te
tellige
borhnul if the population shifts rap- I zation that "i
he melting-Pot theory is unscientific into common conference and makes
w.'i'l l as every social
ons ibility f o r
resp
of T
te scopto in-
east siole
l law. thtom partakelori
syt eilt'.i lt‘h!a1. 1.s the legitima
idly. The lower Ileh
is cerneY to n atura
ausnt
e ite ago
Ktv• 'lt..tvorCer.interest
% t i•,t,o,f l i iftl inee.a 1 bec
Not long
I had an occasion to the welfare of all the families in tonal
eliawich r\f'ilNIn
ll,Islil: l
York, eying with
if
tots
I
loug
h
oou nIToldhi
not political
of service or relief. Though its ti, Id
st talked of neighborhood in '
.
y ill ..
o , the mo
he logical outcome 44 voice the followin g sentiment:
is Jewish, it invites non-Jewish :igen-
h l'nited States, picturesque to the ' itself onl
organizato (1. 1.
•
Many people believe that Ameri-
a
t
• •es to 'take I art. This °poi door in-!
point of being romantic, has in
t
tha
that schism /loll
canism
requires
the
abandonnumt
t
last half-century virtually been the the citizens councils would have even-
slures, to use Wo'ilsonian language, "op-
en convetiants openly arrived at."
residence place of every foreign immi- tually constituted the electodate of the of group characteristics, group tall-
gunge, group traditions and goo oup
t element in the population, from whole city gowernment. They would
s , , Agencies and organizations heretofore
customs.
They would have
the I and
ro on I the outside, usually critical in their
n, Hungarian,
Russian
German to Irish, to Jew, to ta p , have elected the nutyor, the members
•
attitudes, are brought into the inside
••
Pole, to Slovak, to Balkan,
Ilid in
Mit
all ii,
to
to
and become constructive. The bane of
to Greek
Mediterram
an and Oriental ; and I of the common c
.Lavishand
other immigrants re
J
yet retains distinctly characteristic I judges, as well as all e other elective
linquish their distinctive culture and i all case work agencies, outside cam-
pattern.
patt
features that have obtainedd through- officers. The plan threatened the con-
, is transformed into a bhoss-
become
moulded
in
the
some
trod of the existing, city administrn•
•
Wouldn't this be throwing, away li transformed
p •
1 1
outs o
out all the movement o .
noon. Moreoveor,
some of the most precious heritages association
ing-enthusiastic
co-operation.
The
of untrained
volunteers
I
to other parts of the city. Someone democracy' for the conset•t•ativt. ele-
with trained professionals operates as
once well said that the lower east side ments. Such careful, fixed, peornia- of the past.
.
,-
Isn't it finer to interpret Ameri-
a process of soma servo
is not merely a district or an aggre- nent organization of the ptuople, do
Social service education, as it spreads,
canism as 11 great social and politi-
gation of people but a state of mind. vtoloping an imortoasingly inttolligent
promoten social thinking, a libenel
w to
cal symphony-a harmony of many
This also would apply to Greenwich knowlege
nd
judgmnt,
seend
a
d
rva-
public opinion and a tender public con-
different
groups
and
elements-just
ns and tile other conse
Village.
the pol iticia
science toward the injustices of social
dangerous
like a musical symphony which
is a
a
riether
.
Neighborhood State of Mind.
tist , element: to he
harmony
of
many
different
ins
ru-
and economic maladjustnotont.
purposes of smoial service, the change hoe the eleetoorate. to undergo.
moults-not
the
deadening
monotony
,
For
Party owetaniziotkol. such as it is, ex-
a nd uniformity of numberless tom- 1 The group judgment in these
case
more closely the neighborhood ap-
meetings takes the place of all individ- I
pressing itself only periodically, say
proaches being a state of mind, the
l ual and sometimes arbitrary judgment
• Al (once in ev- toms?
titute a logi- once
'
saac
oary • Wo
is much
For as the God of Abraham, I l be of the professional workers, who, how-
more
a Y na
rare.
env two or every ° our years, litit.ians
unit for sun 1 111 sert
Jacob said: "My house shal
cal, caret
and
po
a house of prayer for all peoples." - ever, form a very important element
, satisfactory to both
neighborhoo
wort
d state of mind may
ha the mere
,
in these groups. This helps the fam-
ano the cashed interests t n
,ny, 11,00, " I
I had or indiferent. It may be
ate which
The scriptural verse
ily no less than it helps the or.
111110511% l', 11 1 tit U
red light state of mind, Or a t ;woo
h aw d e- and not "pt•ople." Theo Lord Al - ganizations interested. The welfare
would
tilt ifty, God-fearing state of mind, or the social unit scheme permitte
d to go mighty evidently intendtod that 11(10- center, rtotleeted in the worktors, is the
1
The
10'01
1 veloped, had it
no particular state of Mind.
and had it pro:en itself able to go ides tor rues should not he permit- , general practitioner. The tendency in
spiritual content of a neighborhood is I /11
over the city. A
le(' to exist as such and to perpetu-
ser
tto 041111111 811
l "i' me " t• of 1-•'` dal service agen-
he dene
measure of the extent o f sowos
al 111111
ate and expand their particular oil- t cies
has Lien along functional lines of
much more manageable and
ck of olpir
party
v itoe it requires. A total la
flexible
and
can
be
better
lure.
organization
to
11
very
high degree,
nerd much more
ual content bespeaks a maximum
CllIl
iSSUe
Ill'W
In Eurnlw, ',art.-so:arty on the con. from general functional organizations
•
of social service.
"inn
tinent, and especially in central, east- like hospital clinies, child-caring agen•
The term "social service" must also
A issue
party
is
he defined. It may mean service rend. I s rilngthen it, an unpepular
can
ern and southern Europe, serial sari.- (otos, homes for the aged, to highly
nlation I l"' dropped or ignored. c lever slogan ice follows racial and religious lines specialized ag ., •ies in these various
the
npdoepd
ll
more
elliotildiall
a
end by one element in
id„ The family problem, usually
numbers
to
its
ranks.
L,
in-
nna
virtually exclusively. Thu charity int. li e
e
I can add largo.
to the other. It may b e int nded
., ,t „
pulse, if it did not spring largely out c nsisting of 1 , 1 "• than fine problem,
It is less rell•alsilliv in the sense that
f
elude the id ea of self-seeder
- (1:30 o'clock, when the lodge will, for
Vas
become the I stitimate province-
self.
I
ual
of the religious doctrine that alms-
the first time in its hstory, hold pub-
cafeteria
oor
service, toonception
huh the idea
of individ
co-operative he`10.nsiveness to it on the part o
its giving is a merit bringing salvnth'n i " -as alill ,,4 101 Intotrol to say legiti- channels have been provided. Is tin -
ran
'
tini
irials
t 'alined agencies I formation requirial of living and work lie installation of officers outside of
eli4"
,i• I I,
prey
•
action on the part of all the neighloors ' t""l'iliani•i'llio phi
to the soul of the one who practices it, win o,.
its own clubrooms.
Cultured German Jew. Strum, Quality
g
wit'•
tee
-,,
spocilic
problems.
1
Mg
conditions
in
the
neighborhood?
themselves for their own proteetion,, more readily be evaded. The mayor is
, I more independent of the party who was toertainly chiefly fostered by the d ea li n
re- I It will either be available or readily
The newly-elected officers to becom-
Not Quantity in Prayer.
Without
mo m
hristhan Cburch• This was also true each makioto; its • ',IR':
xei"outiote
Ili,
i
e
r
is
th
stalled
are:
Chancellor
commander,
comfort and happiness. In the {
to , flit , .. to c boloms, formula- 1 procured.
a hi nt t • han,
1 11 Ito 11011E4 ,1
l
gar, t o ..,1
of the synagogue which taught thati
the neighborhood then is merely .,'"h"rtl'
• • • • I ag e Il•V
What elTect such a method of bring- Samuel Raskin; vice-chancellor emu-
(J. T. A. )-A proposal
1
rector
wise
or
other-
BERLIN.-
(as ,
board may, as it has
.
'71 . 11
' ' •• " . ein -I 'et
"charity saveth from oleath."
I Jog service too the people and develop- mander,Herman Moss; prelate, for further change in the divine serv-
of trustees.
ting I dan
a •I• 1,1 for the operation
object 11101 ill 11111111,
11'11 with one an= ;
and central Europe, pi. wise, without -'1 - ' t •I
of the im•ehan- been defined, loe
a ra, , a a ing social service ntuong the people Charles Goldstein; master-at-arms, ices of the reform temples of Germany
.
„.,
way
one
In
'
'
a
h.
,"„
t
t,
me
.
as
• • ,,I agencies and
arrow nd
•
-
feud driers
a never conies to
norities in the population have not other. „
- of social welfare ngencies-involv hr
ad and n
William Abramsohn; inner guard, was brought up for discussion in an
all alTilir Where
g.1 in independent- will have'upon coommum N
only been expected to finance and staq.,,, , ;: , , d. who
a Part
can well be left to, your ininginatioo Samuel Maoloff; outer guard, I. anonymous article published in the or-
mv. if you will, efliciency methods
:
,y on ,be
pafient who presents several
u have a go, 41 tone and where they manage their own charities but are {v
coo-ordination
It will LPinteresting to know that the Klein; master of finance, William Ro- gan of the Verloand der National-
ow, of
e
ie you a llama., or per- vested with authority by the govern- maladies or symptoms. A strong plea
people of the East Boston district of senbtorg; keeper of records told stools, olt•utseher JutotIton. The proposal made
and elimination of duplication (envoi
, The social unit stints to tax their own people for this is being made these days for the re-es-
01.11 1- ,
their own accon1 and within one year Nathan Sellfish.
in the article advocates the substitu-
the agencies-a toleration or
, oef ..Ii
ubstitute
for
of
the
general
practition-
I, • "oil s
purpose. It is not surprising there- tablishment
of the establishment of the welfare
rnunity union Of welfare work proce....." loot
The affair, which will be a dinner- tion of the divine services now called
ornment. It was fore to find that philanthropy in the ear, the family physician, and the (hole-
' ''' "I' 'I'
center
rids.'
the
funds
in
the
neigh-
dance,
is
under
the
chairmanship
of
es Si the neighborhoml. Hut if flu
Gottesdienst by a Weihestunde, which
••
i•l' il I '
,,,tvh, to scare the Unittod States has also developed along gation to him of discretion to call in n
who stated that he would result in limiting the services
I•orhowd necessary to purchase the
tt ey s s„ i
Frank Henna 11,
tt•rin "s ocial service" romprehends, ;,- 1
- ailed it that. elf racial and religious lines, flourishing thespecialist in tin twet",
1 1 """ "." '
building
which
up
to
that
time
had
expects
this
to
be
the
largt•st
affair
well, the idea of co-operation on the
on all Jewish holidays, including Yong
War State Of
ighborhood center scheme of
•.
lteserva-
stroongly while immigration continued th e ne
loran rented and paid fur by the toyer given by t he lodge.
11
Kippur, to one hour and removing the-
part of the neighbors themselves, the,
I 1 0.11 5. 011111.151
family welfare no specialized organi only
strong,
hut
still
largely
following
such
Dons
may
he
procured
from
any
of
Federation
of
Charities.
1
it becoonies something bigger, soon,-
I
st a nola Mize(' prayers.
I' 1,1 plan was
. • that immigration has great. zation assumes the responsibility
. for
I the members. There will be dancing
.
—
In pleading for the acceptance of his
thing finer, if you please, a tangdolc•
wn
aceoro
,
I
sm. bol- ly diminished.
o
As time goes on there t ni rentment
c hes
of its
1 during dinner and throughout the proposal, thto author appeals on b1-halt
perhaps substantial approach to real "
role" tit.
a'
it Merr ier it line with the plan I
the character
ill
will Le some changes
of
the highly cultured Jews in Ger--
twit
scheme
f
democracy.
of social service rendered by sectarian of treatment adopted by the group to ,
I
ii pa , :
The officers and niembers of the ninny who lay greater stress in the
As a unit for the operation of a
,
Private philanthropy which it IS
oorganizations.
Is mass ',no.
lodge
wish
to
extend
to
the
manage-
single welfare agency or for co-opera
quality
than In the quantity of their
,
Unit..
_ ...—
non.sectarian,
So along recreational and education- I
Various Logo
unit a 5 a Whille, including
lion among several welfare agencies.
ent of the B o ok-Cadillac hotel their 4 Pea Vers.
"Ilandy" Adolph Freund officiated
-, o II Ile logical
will continue to be affeeted as it has in al lines the renter is a busy hive of I
.1
I .,,
ere
thanks
in
appreciation
o
•I
The
author
also urges the abolition
the neighborhood has been employed
but only to
of the
newly-eltort-
I I at the installation
A •
Ian years by the increasing assump-
pisgah
Lodge,
so. 3 ",. sinc
co•enttion received
•ity like any active community
for many years. In England f,,,
• tone part .iiii timeiiti; of,
ale other leg.
support and
' -
" nu
of th e see t coque sermon and asks for
no 5110h
nospousibility for social wet-.
,..'re
titer,
with
a
literary
club
e
members
also
ex-
of
Oen
stiii.
o•
from ther
:hem.
Th op thanks to the out- the introoductio n of a large numbe of
the parish has been the natural unit a I
the fun-
of the building, a practicing siro."1 1,4: I. O. IA li., last Monday evening in tend
hooartiest
a 11 Illi 11 i , .
or bons. Wink t he Verband r der
'al, for fare work nn the part of the
for religious and charitable
coounty and city everywhere through ' rh'ss in ani•thero . a donwsbic s• '' ' - ' the lodes rooms, .10fi Eitoot Adams ay, going, offic ors of the lodge for their crab
The Charity Organizatec.
b• social
nog With impressive ceremonies he
during their admioilNationalahleutseher Jutoden does not
Iril I loll.
the
country,
not
only
for
the
increased
kitdt "' • "
k
President.
-
1"
the
splendid
woi
identify
itself with nil the points of
m•did
lloiwing•
So , oty in tour largest eitioos or 12
• ,onage
e"'
of
-.11,.,1 the ; f o ,ictilirtiitiiii,nt; A. ,.
- 11,rosy am! a 1 1 ,, • '
Pali de. • l
,
le in the att
,i ;;,;;ii fir i,, it
the pronosal, it' organ says that the
Dation.
ne , ' of deP,Inb'ni,,, defectives
its work on a district basis. Toone
ino'P
hi to rgan int o ,- -
_ _—_ _
Seer,.
ii ,.,,,,,.,,,,. b oo t fi,r preventive work in oorhood mute., ' .,
III 11 0 •• • ..
rutnosal
is published in order to
A
If
rell
1{
r.
uccessful
of
,
, c, Iir , r,
Ball. the most s
,-
f health. moulds and ed•
l
Iv , oho , use of th•--
11'•.1.
F. , •another room.
, ,
P0lotical organizations in America
To Appear in "The crilite further d,scussion.
■ lolloo•rg; nssstont mooni-
,
,so 1,4rian p a l ' t,,,,1 1,, t h i , t , r is nil poor. ,-, for such tort 1-.1
ye;
Jane
Cowl
—
•nherlf;
wart
4
n,
''
most popular relief agency in IL
a ft ec
netted u; ;,-.,
.H. ,, I , i, . ,
Olt
,•,, my I„ ,,,,,, ,,, 1,,,
r;:;., g r,,ip, :,,,
i, ,,,; ,..„,,,,, .,.. (;,,„°,,,. cbooners• tee.,
Con-
...
Depths" and "Romeo and
, ountry, giving free coal in the wint o
January Orders Indicate and
being sowialization of government • , , , ,arters chieth " t the purp ,
,,
..,
free itao Ott the summer, dinnerbask, o .
, "be:, Adolph Freund, Herman Weiss o
the past door:tole, shirt
Juliet" at Garrick.
1110 with il - '• '
tinuance of Heavy Dem
Y
ed has, iluring
not
to !woe families on Thanksgiv it r l'a''
.1
Bernard
tiinsburg.
(al much of its burden on the poililib III•Il'ing frienni 1•- ' -siine• The 1.
o,
_____
For Nash Cars.
ected pre oitl ent th ey
10 ' Penni ,
n mull
01 sumptimus dinners to th.
The newl
The tendo.no•y, thtorefooro . •' ' too
.••••11113 find opo•o,.
help the
. n -
w-it-3F c o mm itte e ,
e
-I rani , a..thoritie,
in, I owl is t o L, gina limite d
of the neighborhood on CIII -,-- • • •
c-cointed thy-elfollo
, , ,, ,,etle , nv, :,
'
•
'
•
'
,logos
an
d
;
seetiorian
,,
,.
o
,
r
n
,
;:ori
,.
fo
e
g
14
o
.
,
.
.n
the
n
, •11
I oan,, A. C. Idtiorin; intellectual
January orders for SIIS, 11 cars now
ii.,eiew l . e, i.o.ty,
I• • ,I " . - I " - i • - •
oil without investigation , •
i • " -•
rohol,,,,•,tot , o o rmtn,o.o xf to olott,,,w
' 'he neighl"' I ' • ''
,Nselinx;,,,,nintrii T
gradually reii• ' - 'I ' ' '
' 'n ' ' 'I'' • •• •
Ill;',1;lil1,•nt,Nrii..t1.1111Nlinlr,,
on file l xt iir d total shopn° nts for any
'.nam
110100 to .l•Vade the county jar. •
'1,,n,'::,'„tkin.i'llr'I:ih':
I,
,..1,f
I ' ' ' ' ' ' . i' , I ,'..,., ,
, European stage select-. "The previo., .lanuary and Nash Motors
suite pristhls, considers the •
, 11. ,Oil ,
1 membership, Aaron J. Blumenau; f mono. by Ilans Mueller. who ranks enters 192A with every
If 'more and Illore u it 11 1
"'
'' '
•
.I.
t . .. indication of
°
., t .,,,I.A t.1 La k
i ;
b,,,,,I the logical unit for soeial
,, , o
t , ; t.
, I mei cultural iottorests of its groo,o.
Gomel': inot•ation, Max Depths.
he h eavy demand
• ' 1 t , pm , , t h,., „f ,•..unF.e, ill OM- Hock, George
ntertainment.
Jack
Langer
among
the notable dramatists cont
now ., - 1 o, ro inuanit Of f
Indeed, its governing body' I. 1 '
, ,;,,,o,
,,, o•o ' . to col in a motosure by t' ,
which
has
kept
its
plants busy night
e
.
with tither (woolen's. At the I to:awards;
neighborhood or district rot,
and Darold T. Rosenthal; social sere- leboling new prestige
to the request
By special
or since August
, h, whieh polite relief A
,notion
rim er
and
day
practically
tient
al
t
o•ater.
1•11fIrerned
1
i t on t. or anti sutra I ouitset we are 1.-pert
tion.
and f rst ...hen t he Nash advanced and
,
to
ff
io
.
•
•
gro.o,o.r
of tit twit Mi,.. Cowl will present "Rome°
, to ,
i with health problems. In conjunction , ice, Alfred Ross.
' •
.
. series
.
Settlement. ■ nd Neighborhoods.
WaS 'me
.etal
six
can were announced.
The
meetIng
tonev.
m
ar
and
the
enthusi-
Juliet"
at
Ibe
Wednesday
and
Satin.-
t
, t '
By this T do not mean to imply that with a neighborhood clinic, the health 1
e
Settlements, beginning with T
biggest
, matinees, supported by Rolla
.. December
pre:-
p,,, 1.ast
s
Was
. -
. day
of the
Nt„.
will he stinlivd, plans for meet- ; attended of the y y on . members
. ,
erary
in month
'Is re will not still remain, for a lon°1 need,
bee Hall in London, followed i'V ;'
h Motors, pass-
arm displayed b
the history
, . -
tooth.
11 i a • ing them will be evolved -- taking up i ant indicates a promi-ing future for ter: and her permanent rep .
115flos
1
I
3
nano,
prod
ano
Noiehloorhood Guild (looter the l'1,1
'•Ille ti ,
congoanY,
,. ,
"Th. lhopths" will he presented inK the best previous December-192
itecarinael iliifne(thnof. one task at a time -invoking 1 . 11-0per - 1
for Fertile° nlong t khe niza
dease of the Department .tht• organization. Aniong mpletion
the ice of
-by 22 3.10 per cent.
"'• O h m en() in New York. II 1
,I. ,
1 1 11 1 1 111
co
n
tg
o
n
t
i
n
ota
sn
1
I
•
's
the
n
i
sw
t
e
' • •
, I, Chicago, South End 11,
•
"We have every reason to look for-
•
• •;.•,• ;t 0,1
hi o
Ili,/ Ill Orli relief, ea
o nly pfrt,or, Ini tit„eudr.e1,%gaig
•
itiohhnou
It cu•o: mean.
auned
-1•1, ;Ind (others, also recoogi.• o .1
however.
that need.
private philanthropy of Health and other health agencies
s o, ;:..o rvir• yho ao
darn
end the
ward to an excellent period during the
I tot
• 1 1,
onork I i4(1, tit
:I1.11 than o
Thl
1 :I .
're neighborhood as the h(ogieal or
coming spring and summer months,"
I
of Jewish
•'
h
h
•
.
and
Brush
strm•ts,
which
will
be
o
en
the
New
York
engagement
in
the
It is a .
till be increasingly liberated to de, which ran
oral basis of their operation-AI, ' nolghloors tio o
said E. II. McCarty, general sales
basis,
SO, in
twill Nlueller play before long.
•
■ in a
itself not enly to spiritual or c •
probable that Miss Cowl will soon be manager of the Nash Motors Com-
natural sphere of influence.
Jewish. note
United
Schools,
informs- ,ready fur occupanc
total activities hot to experizeigntstion be studied
and Hebrew
in con ount
1
o
seen
in
a
production
of
Shakespeare's
to
the
number
I
months.
The
entertainment
commit.
The Chnrity Organization
pany."
prim a', - '
, 1, second- and demonstration along mane fine, local
hended only the first mentioned Io°.... rte
"Twelfth N IOW ."
tine will be gathe1,1 as
1110trh11011,
n ehsh. of
plans
for a Aus.
ball
horhood
which of
1 pdinted
children who as vet have not had nn Ices of are
the completing
lodge and the
Ladies:
namely, bringing service to the people. 1 The neigh's., o .. ,, 11!•-1 , f a To ,g
And the organization
partimilAr scheme
iliarY
\
o
be
held
at
the
Book-Cadillac
Hotel
such, enioy no vital bond.
especially through individuals and any. The il.•,loto
,
strongly emnhssized orPortunity for religious training.
will
- merely AS
1 7, the proceeds of which
All this invokes contact onth mum- be
agencies functioning in the neighbor Should the neighbors all be Irish, or
nr s MP ,
Or some ve
be used too furnish the new o home •
e xperimentation.
the
-aloe
of
social
110(1.
What is this scheme of neighhorhood herless neighbors
and furnishes the
The settlements started with the 1 all be Italians,
or all (Alio)
be Catholie:,
. re spectively
Negro, they
c o-operative action in
ncnt 1 all 1,‘
ignora
relationship. They may organization to which T refer? It is substance for
idea of uplifting the poor,
theory. It is a nlan that numerous way, Are school buildings
the
a primary
tly
I
corners
Of
t
I---,
four
tit
mere
and d own ot r ,od t len. It was disti
ins, thei not
was a innoigurated
in the Jewish ChAri- ' crowded and greater accomnuslaion
oor-
• scatter to
earth; but the loon-1 still remarish, Ital- tie, of Roston in 1917 and hen since necessary? These neighbors ean be
the idea of bringing service to
. _ _
ganizol too articulate their demands.
Rut as time went on the settlements continue t oo be respectively I
K. a p. to I nst•II Officers •t Public
AS its nen. 1
ian.
Cathodic
or
Negro.
Hut
neighbors
Are
alleys
dirty
and
neglected?
They
hoccome
firmly
established
gradually recognized the need and op-
Affair.
gener-
rimary Fond of race or merent form of organization.
n
the
be brought together to cleam
portunity of stimulating and
without this p
---
me away on the
Other High Quality Stationer).
Ar^ ran
s
Special Prices
lole elemt • n t s invad-
The elements of t his cheme
gion, whom theyov
ating neighborhood self-expression, religion,
a
The officers end members of the
, cese
s omething up. Are undesira
hhor- iner the territority? A widespread Knights of Pythias Loolge. No. 55, of
first in small groups of children, ado- o ther od e of Wo, olwarol avenue Even many. reeembling in part
at neig
uhlic opinion can quickly be gentor- Dt•troit are booking forward to the
lescents and adults, then in larger to have anything in common. n the of every known attempt
i
e
welfare pot
groups for neighborhood protection while they remain togethr
orean inition all of (bent Known feted and formulated. Are housing season's greatest event to be held in
they never find their hand
Group Gressure,
p
yet different from for social
ontain% an ale- I laws being violated!
the three ballroom% of the Book-
and welfare.
neighloorhowel•
1550 Woodward eA•enue
eighborhced interests as strong and
can easily be brought on the &lin. Cadillac Hotel. the main ballroom,
The type of organization which most
11 "district service," it c
a '
n terests. as their racial nr religious in. 5 meet
of the settlement. vet it is not
quoits directly or through the proper , the Crystal ballroom and the Italian
perfectly comprehended the two con- as vital
,
be
nthe
ttlement; it is a health center am
(eptions-first, social service to
of its function.. It I authorities. Is infoormation ? to The . Gardens, Sunday evening, Jan. 18, at
f
___r;,,. to industrial in- se
one
seminated among the ne hbors
People, and second, selficitpres.
. vet this is mil%
This. ton.
t•ci ated A lliViS is not social unit scheme, yet it IT-
n
the neighborhood- was the ill-fated terests. Karl Ma
,
Kr/Millie classes
social unit scheme conceived by Wil-
bur Phillips and his wife and tried out " ion of society into

By MORRIS D. WALDMAN

' the
h.: of
- woof.

•

CLITTON AMUR • CINCINNATI 30,'01110

America's Finest
Furniture . . . . at
Savings Up to 50%

HIGH - STREET - AT - HASTINGS

Open Every Evening

Take Free Bus From Woodward and High

GERMAN TEMPLES TO
SHORTEN SERVICES

NEW OFFICERS OF
PISGAH INSTALLED "'"g.

LODGE TO HOLD
DINNER DANCE

•

Stationery Sale

ONE-HALF REGULAR PRICE
ON ALL SOILED BOXES

Sheehan's Book Store

,

= ,

