•
t;
PAGE F,I(;I1T
1"; %MIMI (ARON RAZ
',
"Yes," said another girl, who bore
the features of, and in fact was, an
old maid. "Frieda isn't very young
any more. She can't keep on work-
ing much longer; she's sick already
and is always taking cod liver oil and
DANISH PASTRY
WE SUGGEST
medicines, and the doctor has told her
FRENCH PASTRY
Fancy Cookies and Mecca.
to stop work and go to the country
WEDDING CAKES
coons. Also Our Famous
for a rest. I'm sure he won't marry
BIRTHDAY CAKES
Tortes.
her if she loses her looks." And she
FANCY CAKES
concluded with one of her stock
phrases: "I know from experience."
"That's true, too," said Yetta. "I
knew of a case once where the fellow
asked the girl to wait for him. She
8830 TWELFTH STREET
waited six years, until she was about
30, and then he left her and married
Empire 6780
a spring-chicken. It should only hap-
--1
pen to our worst enemies. The best
man can't be trusted."
VIOANAVNIONNIAN%
"Why can't Yankele lend him the
VOCIONVIAIWOMICVMO
money?" asked she of the anaemic
features. "lie has money to burn
and he doesn't use it anyway. Yes,"
she added, turning to Yankele, "why
don't you lend him the money? He'll
pay it back. You can't take your
money with you when you die; there
won't be a single pocket in your
American pioneering history of the "Days eft' 4,9"
tails."
repeating themselves on the Prairies of Russia.
Yankele shrugged his shoulders.
Maybe," he answered, and went into
the house.
"He's a paskoodniak," sneered the
lady of uncertain age. "lie wouldn't
lend you a penny if you'ikdie. Crazy?
I should say not! Not wlen it comes
By S. J. ZEIGER
to money, anyway."
Came the darkness of the night—
"My little Iamb, my jewel, apple lives of misery with the grave as the the fertile hours in which the seed of
of my eye—how I love you! How goal.
genius sprouts to godly heights and
•
beautiful you are! I shall live only
flowers into the sublime music. But
for you; I shall live only to protect
In a large room of a tenement the night has also hours of pain and
you, to watch over you, to shield you house sat a young man of perhaps 25, sorrow, during which the soul of the
from harm. Your glory shall be my and with a lifelesis expression gazed sinner writhes in agony, lashed by the
glory; may all the pain and trouble into space. His fifi4-was long and scourge of remorse; hours of torture
and his eyes \ dull; but at for the lover whose passion is un-
I in store for you be shifted upon my angular
times they sparkled with the light of requited; hours in which great sacri-
shoulders instead, my crown!"
She was seated on the steps leading intelligence. His noce was long and fices are planned.
The hour of great sacrifice had
a fearful looking tenement house . pointed and his cheek-bones high and
GUARANTEED PURE AND FRESH, DELICIOUS I to
A child was in her arms; she was ca- colored with the flush of ill health. come to Yankele! He lay motionless
ressing it, uttering endearing words It remained for the mouth, however, in his bed. His eyes were wide open
as she pinched its fat little cheeks. to betray its owner as an idiot: the and gleamed in the darkness, like
Demand Them of Your Grocer.
She pressed the little body closer to lips were thick and ever parted; the burning coals fanned by the wind.
her and covered its tiny, red face lower lip was always moist and His throat was parched—he longed
with kisses—brutally, passionately. drooped until it touched the chin, for water; but he dared not rise for
The child, in terror, began to cry. She which, in turn, was so ill-defined, that fear of waking the other boarders.
caressed it again, lifted it over her it appeared to be part of the neck. He began to tremble. His lips moved,
head, then down again, till it squealed
The young man was Yankele. Af- but no sound came from them. Then,
ter the death of his mother, some with an effort he whispered: "No,
with joy.
MELROSE 6491 s
Passers-by smiled at the beautiful philanthropic neighbors had watched no; I cannot. God help me! I have
6475 GRATIOT AVE.
sight of mother love; for what in life over him for a time, but finding that not the strength. Oh, God, bear me
iWitMcWr is so sublime as love! Without its in- his supposed madness was of an en- up!"
9000c.VwcwcW0tWoWiNWMiWt
The next morning they found this
fluence the savage animal in us would tirely harmless nature, and what was
WkWeMIWM predominate; without it we would die, more, that he was industrious, they letter on Frieda's table:
ZNF as the parched flower dies for lack of had taught him cigar making, at
rii
Frieda Dear:—When you read
moisture. "I love you," says the which trade he soon became quite
this letter I shall be far away
mother to her child; "I love you," skilled. And so for seven years he
from
you. Do not grieve for me.
says the lover to his betrothed. And had been buffeted about and at last
I am going to a better and hap-
the wisdom of God manifests its pow- had landed up in a Jewish boarding
pier
life.
In the package you
er by this all-healing balsam spread house. He had no other pleasures but
will find some money. Accept it
work and the saving of money. His
upon the woes of life.
from
one
who loved you. My
She was a Jewish mothre — my state of mind had forced all his ener-
wishes must be carried out strict-
mother, your mother, and she was the gies into mechanical channels and he
ly.
It
will
be
a sin to disobey
wife of a factory worker. The child's was considered the fastest as well as
them. I wish you a happy life—
name was Jacob--Yankele she called the most valuable worker in the shop.
a far happier life than I have
him; and Yankele he remained till the
At times the veil which dimmed the
had. To you and all my friends
end of his short and miserable life.
mind of the young man was rent and
I say goodbye. YANKELE.
When Yankele was 3 years old he the brilliant light of reason pierced
fell from his crib and sustained in- the darkness of his existence. Then
Of the hunchback no trace was
juries which made him a hunchback he saw clearly the hopelessness of his
and clouded his mind to the semi-in- life—but not for long; for the merci- found. Through the open window
sane condition. It was only later that ful hand of God replaced the veil of of the tenement came the gleeful
this mental weakness was discovered. obscurity and his mind was again in shouts of the children on their way
to school and the noise of the passing
And ao year after year went by in the shadows.
elevated train. Pushcart peddlers
slow, painful succession. When the
It was a summer evening and Yan-
unfortunate lad reacher his eighth kele read a Yiddish newspaper by the shouting praise of their wares; the
year his father succumbed to the light of the setting sun. The evening squalling of babies; the playing of
white plague and the mothre, to sup- meal had just been concluded and the Musical instruments, it was the sym-
was gone.
port herself and her son, became a other boarders had gone their various phony of life. But • Yankele
•
shop worker. Ten years later her ways—all, with the exception of
It is today. On a bench in a down-
poor, overworked and undernourished Frieda, who had remained to wash a
body was laid by the side of her htis- waist for the morrow. She was stand- town park sits a mother and her child.
band. Blasted hopes, blasted lives— ing by the open kitchen window iron- The mother is Frieda. She fondles
the infant. It coos with contentment.
ing. Now and then a puff of wind
She devours it with her eyes, holds it
caressed her sensitive and mobile fea-
ere pas
tures and brought a grateful "Ah" to fast to her breast and whispers
sionately: "My child, my de—you
her lips. The mellow, subdued rays
are
my
all,
my
little
diamond.
Say
THE ROOSENHILL
of the departing sun placed a halo
that you are mine; tell me that you
over her head and she sang a mourn-
CLUB AND FARM
ful folk song with great feeling— love me, my little Yankele."
And Yankele kicked his tiny feet
with the feeling of her race.
and answered: "Da, da da, ada da
QUICK REPAIRS
MACK ROAD
"You are sad, Frieda; I can tell it
da."
by the way you sing," Yankele spoke
Yankele? He lives; he will live
Grosse Pointe Farms, Detroit
from the adjoining room.
Save half on your fuel bill. Let us put your heating
forever! Is it not true that the world
"How can one feel happy when one
oc.o
is round? And is it not true that
system in proper condition.
lives as I live?" Frieda answered. "It
life is as a circle? It never ends!
is work, eat and sleep—yes, just
BILL KONEN
work, eat and sleep all the time. I
"Let us appoint Rabbi Eleazar ben
guess it will continue so till I marry," Azariah," said the people when choos-
2446 CORTLAND
Phone Roseville 18-R-5
and she smiled.
ing
the head of the college, "for he is
Between Linwood and Twelfth.
"Well, why don't you marry then?"
CHOICE DINNERS
wise, rich and he is of the tenth gen-
"I can't get a young man; nobody
eration from Ezra."—Talmud.
Specialty in Party Service.
wants me," she answered jestingly.
The Jewish "Covered Wagon
os 11 7*5 1 pitill05r u ti nw .;
SEASON'S GREETINGS
New York Pastry Shop
R sh Hashonah
Greetings
5
5
A HAPPY AND
MOST
PROSPEROUS
NEW YEAR
TO OUR MANY
JEWISH FRIENDS
AND PATRONS.
YANKELE
AL KIEFER
VALLEY FARM EGGS
WHALING'S
Your Favorite Always
Men's Wear
617 WOODWARD AVENUE
Maple City Dairy
cosh Hashonah greetings
0,■■■■■■■■■■•■■■■■■•■■•‘■■■■
5686-1925
WE WISH THE JEWISH COMMUNITY OF
DETROIT A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS
NEW YEAR.
MICHIGAN
H. R. GRAHAM
Store Fixture Company
Plumbing and Heating
Hemlock 5624
Open the Whole Year.
WWI L7 I ■■■■7■• .\\I KW I .7 I MI h‘ ■ •••• MI . 7 k' ■ 1 IM7 ■ 16.1
-PeeevehoefeLITefiveezvi -eeeeeeLi,',--Tovv
000-000-000000-00-0-00
1340 000 001:101:10-00130**0000 30-000000000 00000 04 - 00000*000000
74aslional! 6rettins
1
NAT MARTIN and His "I'LL SAY SHE IS" Dance Orches-
tra of Fifteen Artists
FACTORIES: DETROIT AND MILFORD, MICHIGAN
Phones: Cadillac 4230 - 4231
6reetinp
Chas. Hopp 1
•
E
& Co.
15
0 Photographers
01
3
5
5
Cadillac Iron Works
0
d
Structural Steel, Ornamental Iron, Fire
Escapes, Iron Stairs, Builders' Steel
Supplies.
g 5
I
Featuring —
Show Rooms and General Offices:
1301 GRATIOT AVENUE
Nia■■•■■•■•■■■•■■■■•■■■■1 10 5
$
Oriole Terrace
LOW PRICES — EASY TERMS
Yankele laid his paper aside and
es p
s ar-
wen t in to the kitchen His e y
kled; his tell-tale lip no longer
5
We Wish You All a Very Happy New Year.
drooped and he breathed with effort;
he was transformed! lie stood quite
near her and in a tremulous voice be-
2
gan:
"I want you, Frieda. . . . I want
you because I love you. . . I will
make you happy.. . . Whatever you
say I shall do." lie was tremblnig I
with agitation and tried to take her
4
hand, but she shrank away from him.
"No, no," she said; "it can never § Wish You a Happy
be."
New Year.
MURRAY ALTMAN — Proprietors — JOS. SALTZMAN
"Why can't it be?" he asked, draw.
ing closer to her. "Say the word and
How long since you had a Photo
it shall be. You will have a home
taken? Resolve to have one
of your own; you will not have to
work any more. I have $900 in the • taken now. Call for appoint-
merit.
bank. With $900 one can do a whole
lot; we can open a business. We
FA
Main
1 4 4 9
shall be so happy." And then before ri
she could protect herself he' had
Blvd.
1540 Washington
taken her in his arms and pressed a
EDGEWOOD 4040
1971 GUOIN STREET
long and furious kiss upon her lips.
Opposite Hotel Sutler
In horror, Frieda broke away from
this repulsive, hunchbacked creature
who she now loathed and despised and
escaped into the parlor.
Iw~
Some one knocked on the door.
Best Wishes for a
Frieda composed herself; Yankele lit
a
a cigaret to soother his nerves and
HAPPY NEW YEAR
make vain attempts to read the news-
paper. A young man entered and
Our Best Wishes to You All for a Happy and
Frieda ran to meet him. Soon they
Prosperous New Year.
were conversing in most intimate
fashion and Yankele left the house
with a sinking heart, and the couple
remained alon e.
• • •
I I
It was Sunday afternoon. The
young people of the house were pre-
P. J. MILLER, Asst.
EDW. H. GOEBEL, Mgr.
paring to leave for the day; for the
East Siders, in summer, Sunday Is
Phone Glendale 3676
1458 CLINTON STREET
synonymous with Coney Island.
Frieda had already left with the
young man who had visited her after
Main 3133
the unpleasant affair with Yankele.
"Did you hear about Frieda and
her sweetheart?" a short stocky
1
Formerly Campbell & Halliday
young Jewess named Yeti*, with an
\\W
enormous bust and a shock of flaming
red hair, asked of a group around $ New Year's Greetings
her on the stoop.
No, they had not heard about
Frieda and her sweetheart. They
AUTO GLASS
gathered around her, Yankele among
them, and she seated herself.
Body and Fender Bumping Sedans Retrimmed
"You see," she began, "Frieda was
going to be married soon—maybe this
Winter Curtains
Seat Covers
month. But her sweetheart has a lot
Upholstering
Glass Enclosures
of trouble with his business; he owes
I I
8600 and they will close him up if
PROMPT SERVICE
he doesn't pay soon. So now they r
can't marry, and Frieda is heart- ,
Ic
SOFT DRINKS
broken. She loves him so."
3969-77 Grand River Avenue, Detroit
"That's too bad," put in an anae-
25
CONCORD
mic, dark-eyed daughter of Abraham. A 6 4
I I
"If I had the money I'd lend it to him 2
Lincoln 6481
myself; but I only make $9 a week,
sad one can't am much with pay Ilk. 110
5
We desire to express our sincere appreciation to our many Jewish friends
and patrons for their whole-hearted support in making "Oriole Terrace"
one of Detroit's leading institutions. We thank you and wish you a
Happy and Prosperous New Year.
Largest Manufacturers of Complete Store
Equipment in Michigan.
r;
✓
m.
Jacob Roth
METAL
1,
:■•■■•■■■•■■■■\■
And High Class Entertainment Direct from Broadway.
We
Special Dinner from 5:30 to 9 P. M. at $1.50. Then is no cover charge during din.
Music from 6 P. IN., with entertainment beginning at 6:45 P. M.
aer hour.
0
FOR RESERVATIONS CALL NORTHWAY 3861.
0404 0 00-0000 0 0-00000000-0000.000-0-0000 0 0 0000000000008
L
00000-00-0 1:0000000 0 0000 0-00
JOHN SCHEU
& SON
0 0' !
that"
skIllk 110 1.11 ■ 7 %71 ■ 406M lb ■■■ ■ ;
Campbell's Auto Trim Shop