100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

May 18, 1928 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1928-05-18

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

v 4mericaN 5cwisk Periodital - envier

CLIFTON AYINUZ • CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

PAGE THREE

RE erporF EWISil RR/MICK

COMMUNITY CHEST
PLAN ADOPTED AT
CINCINNATI MEET

(Continued From Page One).

the program of either the Nation-
al Conference of Jewish Social
Service, the National Association
of Jewish Community Center Sec-
retaries or the National Council
for Jewish Education, which met
concurrently during the past week
in this city.
As viewed by the delegates in at-
tendance at the conference here,
the program of the National Ap-
peals Information Service is the
most significant step in social and
educational endeavor among the
Jewish population in recent years.
Aside from the diminished cost
of soliciting funds through elimi-
nation of duplication, the program
will result in efficient administra-
tion for all constituent groups and
will co-ordinate the many special
plans of smaller organizations
which heretofore tended to conflict
with the program of larger federa-
tions.

Goldsmith Succeeds Waldman.

Samuel A. Goldsmith, executive
director of the Bureau of Jewish
Social Research, New York, was
elected president of the National
Conference of Jewish Social Serv-
ice to succeed Morris S. ‘N aldman
of Detroit, at its closing session
Sunday. The three vice-presidents
chosen were Dr. Samson Ilenderly

of New York, Herman Passaman-
eck of Pittsburgh and Mrs. M. C.!
Sloss of San Francisco.
Hyman Kalan of New York was,
named secretary and Ferdinand J
Bach of St. Louis, treasurer.
Mrs. Sigmund Herzog of Cleve.
land, Dr. I. M. Rubinow of Phila-
delphia and Dr. Boris D. Bogen of
Cincinnati were elected to the exe-
cutive board for three years.
The National Council fur Jewish
Education chose Dr. EOM- lad Ca-
meron of ( nicinnati as president;
Jamb D. Golub of Chicago as sec-
retary and Israel Abrams of Pitts-
burgh, treasurer.

ITALY MAY GUARANTEE
WORLD ZIONIST LOAN

JERUSALEM.— (J. T. A.)—
The Italian government will be
asked to guarantee the internation-
al loan which the World Zionist
Organization is seeking to obtain
under the auspices of the League
of Nutionas, it was learned here.
It was stated that the purpose of
Sr Alfred Mond's visit to Rome i s
t mienctonto
of
ni ra the Dal-
t ia llnOl g otaz n the
consent
o
n g tee n th de,
kon together with En la
France and Germany.

Education and
not charity
should receive the attention of Jew-
ish welfare workers and those in.
tvrested in the betterment of their
communities, were the opinions of
the presidents of the three national
Jewish welfare and educational
groups at the opening session of
the conference on May 0, which
drew about 000 delegates from ev-
ery' section of the United States.
William J. Stiroder, president of
the board of education of Cincin-
nati, was elffrirman of the misting,
whose participants were weleonted
by Maysr Murray Seasongood.
The principal add] asses were pre-
sented by the national heads of the
three conferences: Morris D.
Waloman of Detroit, president of
the National Conference of Jewish
Se•ial Service; Gilbert Harris, St.
Louis, president of National Ass,.

$300,000
,

OF FINE

ART LINENS

Will Be Sold at

Public Auction

Sale Starts 11:30 A. M. and 8 P. M.

MOSELEY El CO.

LINEN IMPORTERS

Established 10 Years

1528 Woodward

Across From Tuttle & Clark

SIMONIZ

Preserves - Beautifies
Protects -
Restores Faded Duco and Lacquer
Simoniz - Wash - Vacuum Clean
Chassis Painted - Too Dressed
Rust Spots Touched Up—Nickel Polished

Problem of Girl About to Wed.

It sems to be the biggest prob-
lem that fares the secretary and
..yel fa re worker of the Young
Wsiven's Hebrew Associations and
their allied communal societies, ac-
cording to the findings disclosed at
the opening session of the Nation-
al Association of Jewish Commun-
ity Center Secretaries by 11iss Ger-
trude Carnovsky of St. Louis.
"I might say to my brother col-
leagues," Miss Carnovsky declared
"that when in your prayers you
expres gratitude for not having
been born a woman you may as
well add another hosanna that you
were not made a director of wom-
en's activities, as our Eves are
truly the restless sex, and difficult
to satisfy.
"Home duties are responsible for
preventing a girl from getting the
full measure of her membership.
Accompanying this problem is that
of the almost married girl. The en-
gagement—and the display of the
ring serves as our first notification
of all impending resignation. A
new interest has crones' into her life
and she does not need the 'Y' any
longer. Then, too, a cleavage oc-
curs between the married and un-
married girls.
"Te unmarried girl resents the
air of superiority which her wed-
ded sister displays. The latter feels
her interests are different from the
others—she has got her man—that
she has, in a sense, become more
grown up than they, and she joins
the 'grown-up' groups which ab-
sorb her afternoon and leave her
evenings with her husband.

Glendale 8311

K. & M. GARAGES

U. S. Royal Cord Tire Dealers

COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE

OPEN DAY AND NIGHT

9136 Oakland
Hemlock 6478

YOUR

AUTO WASHED

AND CHAMOISED

On the Largest Conveyor System
Twelve-Minute
in Michigan.
Service. Save Money and Time.

MORRISON
Auto Laundry

and Greasing Palace, Inc.
3455 East Jefferson. Ave.

=
.-
-.
DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE
.:E.
=
v=-
511111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111;

sissp,000.

Congregation B'nai Jeshurun,
the second oldest Jewish Congr•
gation in New York, will celebrate
the completion of its Community
House by Dedication Exercises and

Mr. Waldman sounded the key-
note for virtually all other partic-
ipating groups by declaring that
the trend in American Jewish phil-
anthropy is toward diminishing
emphasis upon provision for de-
pendents and delinquents.
"This dies not mean," said Mr.
Waldman, "that Jewish communi-
ties will cease to deal with the
problems of disease and depend-
ency and delinquency. hospitals,
child care work and relief will con-
tinue to reflect the major items of
our budgets, but the items for the
pesitive elements in Jewish life
will grow larger.
"The adolescence of Jewish life
in America is virtually over and
with it the storm and stress that
Jews its natural accompaniment.
Israel in America has come of age,
and enters upon a new era con-
scious of strength and purpose and
imbued with a determination for
a place net as a nondescript but
as a Jew by the side of his non-
Jewish fellows in the march of civ-
ilization."

SIMONIZ SERVICE STATION

a

Cost

Waldismn Sounds Keynote.

Want Girls Married.

MURAD'S Shape

NEW YORK.—Gratification nt
the response In the national ora-
torical and biographical contests
of oung Judaea ItIld all appeal to
t he Anglo-Jewish press to help
make them even more successful
OSIC expressed in a statement by
Dr. Israel Goldstein, president of
Young Judaea.
"These contests time a vital sig.
officanee in leading Jewish youth
to familiarize themselves with Jew-
ish history and thought and to
stimulate their Hankie); alsng Je•-
ish lines. It will be seen that their
objectives are similar to the work
being done by the Anglo-Jewish
press of the country. and for that
reason. I ask the English-Jewish

press for their continued compera.

"The English press is helping to
insuld in large measure t he Jew.
ish life of the HOW generation. It
is doing a work, whose scope and
importance we hardly grasp, and
(Jectainly underestimate."
DK. ISRAEL GOLDSTEIN
"The Jewish editors of the coun-
a listaluet to be held Sunday eve-1 try in helping to make the contests
tang, May 20, at its newly rem this year the most successful in
Meted building, 204-271 West Young Judioot's history will than
Eigthy-ninth street.
ls• working along their general pol-
The ('ommunity House, which .. ry of furthering the cultural n(1.1
ad loins the rear of the synagogue. ' , vancentent of the Jew."
is a magnificent seven-story strut-
The first prize in the national l)r-
ture erected at a cost of 8850,000 jlt"eieal contest of Young Judaea
including the land, buildings and is a free trip to Palestine, offered
furnishings.
through the courtesy of Emanuel
The dedication exercises will
of the Palestine
consist of a religious service at 0 a l :Msl' fO n: rien
(*muttony. In
l ''t
l,' 't P a side Touring
o'clock in the evening, to be follow- addition, the winners of each of
ed by a banquet and dance.
the regional contests will receive
Among the speakers who will a free trip to the Young Judaea
participate, in addition to D r. I s- , retention, through
of
reuet "v
curl Goldstein, rabbi, and Charles
rs Archibald Bahamas.
W. Endel, president of the court.-
---
gation, will he Dr. Cyrus Adler,
Mogen Dovid Club.
Dr. Stephen S. \Vise, Sol ht.
:fit the last meeting of the Mogen
Stroock, Commissioner Louis I.
Harris, Samuel Blumberg and Dovid Club at the Westminster
Mrs. Louis Schlechter, president of and Delmar Talmud Torah, May
the sisterhood. The musical part 12, it was decided to aid the Na.
of the religious service will be Con- tional Fund Flower Day for Pales-
tine. The club also gave $10 to
ducted by Rev. Jacob Schwartz,
cantor of the congregation, togeth- the United Palestine Appeal.
The club is stimulating great in-
er with the B'nai Jeshurun choir,
The present synagogue of Con- terest in the National Oratorical
Contest.
gregation B'nai Jeshurun, was
The club again requests for
built 10 years ego when the con-
gregation moved to the West Side challenges to baseball games and
from its house of worship on Six- checker tournaments.
Questions of great concern and
ty-fifth street and Madison ave-
interesting reports from the De-
nue .
troit
Jewish Chronicle were din-
In November, 1925. the congre-
gation celebrated its one-hundredth cussed.
anniversary.

FOREIGN BORN WORKER
CENTER PLAYERS END FUND WILL BE HELPED
SUCCESSFUL SEASON BY CONCERT PROCEEDS

The Center Players of the Jew-
ish Centers Asociation ended a
succesful season with the produc-
tion on Sunday, May 13, Two un-
usual one-act plays were presented,
"The Slave with Two Faces," by
Mary Caroline Davis, and "Thank
You Doctor," by Gilbert Emery.
In the first play, Harold Horo-
witz very ably portrayed the title
role of "Life," while Sarah Hiller
and Dorothy Ilinunelson were both
excellent. The leading players
were ably supported by a large
cast consisting of David Weiner„
Sol Sniderman, Miriam LeVey,
Marvin Rosen, Zelden Cohen, Bess
Schmidt and Julian Grace.
A special scenic back drop for
the play was designed and painted
hp Henry Raskin, a member of the
players. Credit is given to Nathan
Bean and Julian Grace who assist-
ed in the production as stage man-
ager and business manager respec-
tively.
"Thank You Doctor" gained fav-
or with the audience. The roles
were handled by Edward Weiss,
Charles Stolarsky, Marvel Weiss-
wasser and Gertrude Cohen.
Musical numbers furnished by
the Junior Violin Trio of the De-
troit String Choir, supplemented
the production.
Arthur Mansbach, a memlaJr of
the hoard of directors of the Jew-
ish Centers, acted as chairman of
the evening.
The entire production was under
the able direction and supervision
of Mrs. Morton Steinberg, dramat-
ic director of the Jewish Centers
Association.

with ordinary cigarettes

Murad is oval in shape, ladle others are
round.

For an oval cigarette is a cooler cigarette
to smoke because it burns freely antl
requires less draft to burn.

They also found that the smoke is there-
fore cooled before it reaches the mouth.
Mural needs no artificial flavoring. The
fragrance is in its pure Turkish Tobacco.

MURAD

:TO

SHEKELL

MOVING CO.

Cadillac 6853

Checker Cabs Empire 7000

0



Distinctive Richness and Completeness-

The Wonderful

Orthophonic
Victrola

A COMPLIMENT

IN A DIFFERENT AND FINER ENCASE-
MENT THAN YOU HAVE EVER SEEN BEFORE

—and priced at only

'300

THINGS YOU OUGHT
TO KNOW

Can We Not Sea the Air?

Air is invisible because it has no
color whatsoever, and is trans-
parent. Sometimes, you may
imagine you see air, but really you
only see tiny particles floating
about where the light strikes them.
If you look towards hills far in
the distance, the air about them
appears blue. This is really the
sunlight which the little particles
of dust and other substances in the
sir reflect back to your eyes, and
which appear bluish to you. Pure
air being entirely gaseous must be
without color and perfectly trans-
parentt. Do you know that MU-
RAD is the one cigarette for the
man who knows tobacco? He ap-
preciates the fine flavor, the rare
fragrance of the world's best to-
bacco.

Eighteenth century line and ornamentation adapted
to harmonize perfectly with modern furnishings—and
embodying a number of new and very desirable fea-
tures .... top extends back beyond cabinet, permitting
instrument to set flush against the wall ......right, left
and back of top are stationary, giving space for vases
two "secret" drawers
or other decoration .
turn table covered with real leather in a new shade of
chrome-green ...... 12 Albums, with genuine leather
backs, in six different, rich blending color schemes .. .
open album compartments ...... and with all else, the
marvelous and matchless perfection of Orthophonic
reproduction! Make it a point to see and hear this new
musical creation soon. We know it will win your
enthusiastic admiration.

11 here To Go

Wednesday tine

Get Acquainted Party

GET YOUR
FREE
FAVORS

s P. M.

Miniature Redo Sets
Ta'king Dells
Imported Antique Ash Treys

"Robber Fos Trots"

.nd Other Popular D


irjs
c-.
is;

4r.

Ti
e
Midnight

Eastwood Park

GRINNELL BROS.

';•
.,,
c ....

Steinway Representatives

CRATIOT AT EIGHT-MILE RD.
Gretiot Care to the Gate.
Free Parkin, Sp.. tor Your Cu

1315 - 21 WOODWARD AVENUE

-

w

is :S

c s•
is?,

oi.

plet

"The lif:zical Center of Detroit"

cs,

arc

.

Let the
EGYPTIAN SERENADERS
11.1p Y11■1/ Get Acquainted

Don't you believe
that such a cigarette
is worth a few cents
more per box than
other cigarettes?

--

14 4
S- 11

The May 4 issue of The New 14:
Palestine does The Detroit Jew- C.
ish Chronicle honor by reprinting C.
its story of the opening of the
United Palestine Appeal Campaign ,
and the banquet in honor of Dr.I7:'
Chaim Weizmann, from our issue t.
of April 27.

Eastwood Park Ballroom

HONESTLY .
SPEAKING!

NOTE( In Central Europe and the Orient, everyone
who km cigarettes, smokes Turkish. They aro
neser troubled with roughing or throat irritation.
Try Mural today and see why for yourself. A few
puffs will ince you how cool and refreshing they
are. Altogether different from other cigarettes.

A group of creative (lancers
from the Detroit Denish•wn
School, of which Lillian A. Gran-
zow is director, will be the chief
feature at the international con- C t"
cert to be given by the newly
formed Detroit Council for the
Protection of Foreign-Born Work-
ers. The dancer:, will interpret 1:(;j
the cult of beauty through har-
mony and rhythm. Their first 4
number is to be an Oriental
Dance in colorful costumes out of
the Far East. The second num-
ber will be "Soaring Music Visual-
ization," with the Japanese De-
mon," a peasant dance, as the con-
cluding number.
A colored group will give selec-
tions from "Negro Spirituals."
The joint Lithuanian-South Slovak ..SSJ
choruses, directed by A. K. Eva-
deras, consisting of 100 voices, in
native costumes will sing "The
Song of the Volga Boatman." Sev-
eral other national groups will
portray the cultural life of the
foreign-born, in folk-songs and
dances.
The concert is to take place
Sunday, May 20, 8 p. m., at Mc-
Collester Hall, Forest and Cass
avenues; admission 50 cents. The
proceeds of the concert are to be
used to further the activities of 4;
the Detroit Council which is en- 14:
gaged in agitating for the defeat
of the proposed registration-depor-
tation bills now before congress.

Why

i ■ II• ■ 1111111

ompare

English Weeklies Moulding I
Jewish Life, Says Young
Judaea Head.

"Girls of .advanced age also are
sources of trouble for the member-
ship division of Jewish 'Y' organi-
zations.
"There is the problem of the
girls over 21, who are not quite
old enough to get their entire emo-
tional satisfaction out of giving
service. In the main, they are
ready for marriage and want it.
If they feel they are not meeting
at the 'Y' the type of individual
they want, they leave.
"I do not resent having the 'Y'
referred to as a happy hunting
ground or matrimonial bureau.
Why not? I only wish we did serve
to a greater extent as the medium
for bringing our boys and girls to-
gether in resultant happy unions.
A paradox, of course, we want
them married and lose their mem-
bership."
That the girls put on more
"lugs" than the boys was another
p ersonal point made by Miss Can-
n ovsky, who recalled the remark
et a Sarah Cohen that "she don't
l ike the class of people who go up
t o the 'Y'" although, as the speak-
e r said, "it is only within recent
y ears that Sarah's family has blos- National Fund Collections.
s omed out sufficiently to move into
better neighborhood. This, I am
The week of May 20-27 will be
s orry to say, is more true of the devoted by Senior and Junior Ila-
Sarahs than the Sammies."
dassah committees to collections
Urge Adult Education.
from National Fund boxes. All
Harry L. GluStsman of New families having these boxes in
York presided at a meeting of the their homes are asked to have
c enter secretaries at which Dr. Ar- them in readiness for collection
t hur E. Morgan spoke on adult ed- next week.
u cation. "The normal span of life
today," he said, "is 05 years. Be-
c ause of this and because individ- the average citizen who cannot at-
uals today have more leisure than tend regular universities.
i n former years, we must develop
Dr. John Slawson, newly elected
a program of adult education for director of the Detroit Welfare
adventure and fine living in ma- Federation, spoke on Jewish edu-
ture life."
cation as a Jewish social function.
At the same session Milton M. Ile advocated overcoming the feel-
Alexander of Detroit declared that ing of inferiority felt by many
the Jewish public must be educated Jews through proper training in
as to the work that is being done all forms of Hebrew and Jewish
by the Jewish social agencies. This culture. E. J. Londow of the Jew-
can best be done through a scien- ish Welfare Board and Dr. Isaac
tific use of the accepted media of B. Berkson of Palestine, led the
public information, he stated.
discussion.
At the educators meeting, Dr.
A quarter of a million Jews in
Samson Benderly explained the the United States are virtually lost
work of the Jewish home institute. to American Jewry, its ideals and
Correspondence course's are being aspirations, except for occasional
given to mothers to help them rear solicitations for some financial
their children in a proper manner. campaign to help their brethren in
Appropriate hooks were supplied Europe or Palestine, Dr. S. C.
to give the child a good foundation Kohn, who has just been named
for later Jewish study.
executive director of the Federa-
Philip L. Semen of Chicago led tion of Jewish Charities of Brook-
the secretaries in a symposium on lyn, declared.
adult education. Mr. Seman out-
If in these five cities Jewish
lined the various courses the Jew- cultural and communal effort were
ish people's institutions give for suddenly stopped," said Dr. Kohn,
"what cries of agony and desola-
tion of the spirit would follow.
How purses would open, and what
efforts and enterprises would be
Order your Vans from
begun to make such injustice short-
lived. Yet we are daily consigning
a quarter of a million Jews to slow
spiritual death.
"The conference should deter-
rsine the nature and extent of the
spread of the Jewish population of
Cut Rate
America and the desires and needs
MOVING and STORAGE of the small, unorganized groups.
It might be posible through joint
planning to develop a more well-
No fob too small or too large.
rounded program for cultural and
Give us a call.
educational effort."



CI id
Notes

Young
Judaea

est N. Y. Congregation to

ciation of Jewish Community Cen-
ter Secretaries, and Israel S. Chip-
kin, NOV York, president of the
National Council for Jewish Edu-
cation.

$12.50
COMPLETE
One-Day Service—Authorized

693 East Palmer
Northway 5926

Community House of Second Old.

Stress Question of Education.

AUCTION!

467 Selden, Near Cass

B'NAI JESHURUN TO
DEDICATE BUILDING

neOMMIlelenlee

A

Michigan, Ohio, Ontario and Detroit Branch Stores

"There Is a Grinnsell Store Near You"

:;-5 1 ,;
W:V.,
C•ifaqa*V(3j4W.:4Nin[4; f4W
0 WeVii ccS:

S'S

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan