ANICtiallf iewish Periodical Carter mirror.; ATINU1 • CINCINNATI 20, OHIO E bEntorFftwisn ifRoxicm • All Jewish News All Jewish Views WITHOUT BIAS TELEPHONE CADILLAC . 1-0-4-0 , THE ONLY ANGLO-JEWISH NEWSPAPER PRINTED IN MICHIGAN DETROIT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1929 VOL. XXVII. NO. 7 WISE, LIPSKY CLASH Named Counsel for 1 FIND ROYAL TOMBS ON JEWISH AGENCY Hoover Inaugural OF JEWISH KINGS ON RETURN TO U. S. - IN CITY OF DAVID Rabbi Charges Organization Ceased to Function After "Surrender." Will Address Joint Meeting of Men's Club and Sis- terhood of Beth El. Says Zionist Essentials Will Be Safeguarded by Cre- ative Life in Palestine. MAURICE D. ROSENBERG ORGANIZE WORKERS GOLDING THE NEXT 1 1 SPEAKER OF FORUM' to make such provision might well Brown, M. II. Zackheim and Rob- result in the Zionist Organization art Mamvil , and Philip Slornovitz, being brought face to face with representing the Zionist District of one of several equally intolerable Detroit; Mrs..1. II. Ehrlich, retire- alternatives: senting the Jewish National Fund; "Ill Zionists might be forced Jacob Levin, representing Miz- to endure the gravest infringement rosin; Miss Bessie Brenner, repre- upon the Zionist objective, rather senting Jr. liaddassah• Giulio Ronconi, well known than relinquish their participaton Mr. Cooper also appointed the Jewish baritone, who recently ar- in the Agency. following finance committee: Israel rived here from Italy to conduct a If Zionists came under Zither, chairman, Rudolph Zuie- series of concerts in this country, the necessity of withdrawal, the back, harry Cohen, A. J. Koffman will be featured in a concert at the non-Zionists might indeed claim and J . Burrows , Jewish Center this Sunday eve- the right to function as a sole Announcement will be made sing. Agency under the mandate. Mr. Ronconi, who is a former next week of the date of the open- (3) There might conceive!, v ing Chovev Zion from Bialistok, comes be a third not less abhorrent elm- highly recommended by Iladassah William R. Blumenthal, regional native—that of submission to the and other Jewish organizations of Council of the League of Nations director, is leaving on Monday for Los Angeles an 1 Chicago. Th e campaigning i n of the controversy between the Or" "eels' Michigan and Ohio cities for the Chicago Tribune, in announcing him as soloist for a radio concert, (Turn to Page Opposite Editorial.) U. P. A. had the following to say: It is a treat indeed to hear such a capable operatic baritone as Giulio Ronconi. So acromp- fished has hebecome with his rich, ccroymsetalincItt;ranravdi,cneallyh atfahrneohuzs OPERATIC BARITONE IN CONCERT SUNDAY AT JEWISH CENTER Fund For Building Houses For Poor J ews in Palestine is Left in Will is not necessary to tell opera- goers or those acquainted with the Estate Bequeathed to Jewish National Fund by the Late voices of the best known singers that Mr. Ronconi is among the Harry Miller of Chicago Forbids Profits on Rentals greatest and most expressive of in Buildings to Be Erected. baritones." for the erection of a building or buildings in Palestine for the ac- commodation of poor Jews. who are to be charged a minimal sum. This part of Mr. Miller's will reads: "Out of the money turned over to them by my executors and trus- tees the said Keren Kajemeth (Jewish National Fund) of Pales- tine construct a building or build- ings as they may we fit, in order to accommodate poor Jews of Pal- estine, they to charge as rent for said building or buildings an amount sufficient to pay 3 per cent interest on the capital invest- ed and to pay the necessary main- tenance of said building or build- ings, it being specifically under- stood and it is my desire that no profit shall be made out of the in- come received from said building or buildings. Said fund is to be known as 'Neches Zevi.'" PLAN JOINT SABBATH SERVICES AT MISHKAN ISRAEL CONGREGATION LOUIS GOLDING day, Jan. 13, at 3 p. m., at North- Sch ool. Mr. Golding was born in Man- chester, England, in 1895. Early in life he began writing. At the age of 9 he started a novel. While at Oxford University he was one of the editors of the "Oxford Book of Verse" and conducted the Queen's College Miscellany. While still at college he published a vol. ! ume of verse, "Sorrows of War," land a novel, "Forward From Baby- lon." Since then Louis Golding has succeeded in applying his bril- liant gift to poetry, essay and novel. Ile has written, in addition to the books mentioned, "The Day of Atonement," a novel steeped in the traditions of the Jewish peo- ple. Mr. Golding has traveled ex- tensively. The greater part of each year he spends traveling in far places, the scenes of which produce the background for his books. For example, he wrote the "Seacoast of Bohemia" in Capri. A tour from the Alps to Messina resulted in "Sunward." An ex- ploration of remote villages and remote islands produced "Sicilian Noon." After a long sojourn in Tunis and Bjerba (Homer's island of the Lotus-Eaters) he wrote Store of Ladies." The awe-inspir- ing mountains and waters of Tyrol form the background of "The Miracle Boy." He has also trav- eled extensively in Palestine. Mr. Golding's latest book is "Ancient Lands," which was pub- lished last fall. A new novel to be published this spring will be en- titled "The Prince of Somebody."' He has been hailed by Israel Zang- will as "the greatest poet our race has yet produced. Mr. Golding will speak on the subject "A Jewish Wanderer in I The Young Israel branch of the northwestern part of the city will hold services this Saturday morn- ing jointly with Congregation Mishkan Israel, at the latter syna- gogue on Blaine and Linwood. These point services are being supervised by Harry Schlussel, president of the Young Israel branch. Charles Gellman will con- duct the Schacharis service, and A. Subar the Mussaf. Addresses wit be delivered by Morris Fish- man, president of Mishkan Israel, and Rabbi Isaac Stollman, the syn- agogue's rabbi. A Sendah fill fol- low theservices. Yours Israel Israel holds hot Seu- ,dos at Mishkan Israel Synagogue every Saturday afternoon. Strange Lands." Jews and Medicine Topic of Ilis Talk David Bloch to be Welcomed At City Hall by Mayor Lodge on Jan. 18. 1. 2 ,; BAPTISTS OPPOSE CALENDAR REFORM Tolst oi," both as a tribute on h Tolstoi centenary which was ob- served i in 1928, and in connection with the Max Reinhardt produc- tion of Tolstoi's play, "Redemp- tion," to be given in Detroit the coming week. On Sunday, Jan. 20, Rabbi Fram will take as his subject, "Do We Need a New God?"—a reply to Prof. Harry Elmer Barnes and Will Durant. On Thursday, Jan. 3, Rabbi From addressed the businessmen's class for the study of religion at the Stotler Hotel on the subject, "This Believing World." Ile has been invited to deliver before the same class a series of lectures on the origin of religion. PARIS TAILOR GIVES 600,000 FRANCS FOR JEWISH COMMUNITY PARIS.—(J. T. A.)—The re- cently formed Paris community of Russian Jews resident in the French capital is in receipt of a donation of 600,000 francs to carry on its welfare and religious activities. The amount was donated by a Jewish tailor, Kopilovitz, who came from Russia 20 years ago. A CONVERT! Artist Embrace. Judaism Out of Conviction; Married to Jewell. 17 Year.. NEW YORK.—(J. T. A.)--- Peter J. Walter, New York painter, a Roman Catholic, em- braced Judaism last week. Mr. Walter, who is 38 years old, was born in Cologne, Germany, in a German Catholic family. He was admitted to the Jewish faith with the consent of Rabbi M. S. Margolis, dean of the Or- thodox rabbinate in the United States. Dr. Julius Bloom of 955 Walton avenue, the Bronx, officiated. The convert was named Abraham ben Abraham, in accordance with Jewish prac. tire. Although married to a Jew- $sh woman for the past 17 years, Abraham ben Abraham Walter will have to re-marry her three months after his en- try into the Jewish faith. Mr. and Mrs. Walter have two chit- eked, a girl 14 and a boy 10. They have been reared in the Jewish faith. None of their friends in New York knew that Mr. Walter was not a Jew. It was related that when Mr. Wal- ter was a young man, he was on a visit to Warsaw with his father, • prominent Cologne physician. It was then that he met and fell in love with the daughter of a Warsaw Jewish merchant. Soon after they married and left for the United States. "In spirit i have been • Jew for the past 17 years," Mr. Wal- ter stated. "I embraced Juda- ism out of conviction." MANI U GOVERNMENT ENDORSED BY JEWS IN N. Y. CONVENTION United Rumanian Jews Send Premier Message of Praise. Mayor David Bloch of Tel Aviv, the all-Jewish city of l'alestine will be honored by Detroit Jews on a three-day visit he is to make here, from Friday to Sunday, Jan IN to 20 inclusive. Upon his erica] in Detroit at 11 A. M. Friday, Mayor Bloch wil be welcomed to Detroit by Mayor John C. Lodge, at the City !tall. At 7 I'. M. Sunday, at Hotel Stotler, Mayor Bloch will be hon- ored at a banquet at which he will be the principal speaker. Baruch Zuckerman, well-known Jewish la- bor leader, will also be a guest and speaker at the banquet. BERLIN.—(J. T. A.)—The sig- The following special wireless ' nificance of the Sabbath in the dispatch to the New York Times faith and life of the Jewish people reveals interesting discoveries in was stressed at a mass meeting the excavations conducted by the held Sunday evening in the former Crowfoot expedition: Aids Palestine Worker.. , Prussian House of Lords under Important relics of Jerusalem as the auspices of the Berlin commit- Mayor Bloch's visit to this coun- it was in Christ's time have been tee which seeks to organize a Sab- try is being utilized for the cam- discovered in excavations just con- bath observance world federation. paign which was launched last cluded at Ophel, in the southeast A wide-flung plan, including legis- week for $300,000 for the Gewerk- corner of the Holy City. A num- lative and economic measures, to s cha f ten (Palestine workers') ber of ancient chambers, which aid Orthodox Jews in all countries, fund. His Detroit visit is intended were probably used as tombs for who are anxious to observe the t 0 assist the local drive. the Jewish kings, have been found Sabbath as prescribed, bin find it Mr. Bloch is one of the pioneer buried in a ridge between the tem- difficult because of the prevailing abor leaders in Palestine. His ple site, now the Mosque of Omar, commercial and industrial condi- deetion as mayor of the all-Jewish and the Pool of Siloam, the site of tions, was presented in a series of c. .ity conk with the triumph of the the earliest city of Jerusalem, addresses delivered. labor groups in the election three which David is supposed to have Advocacy of the five-day week years ago. captured from the Jebusites. was one of the features of the Reservations at the banquet may Fragments of pottery found in the plan. The credit he made by calling the Zionist of- DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN buried chambers date from the banks and similar organizations fice, 633 liarlum Tower, Cadillac time of the Jewish rulers, and from P. M. on Monday, Jan. 14, in the with aid which is expected to come 4038. the size and solidity of the rooms social hall of Temple Beth El, Dr. from American Jews was planned. • • • it seems altogether likely that Morris Fishbein of Chicago will be Prof. Weinberg of the Berlin Semi- DIZENGOFF IS AGAIN they were used to house or bury the speaker. nary presided. Addresses were de- CHOSEN TEL AVIV MAYOR the kings. Dr. Fishbein is a nationally livered by Rabbi Ezra Munk, Rab- TEL AVIV.—(J. T. A.)—Nine- These finds have been made by known figure, being the editor of bi Gutschaechter of Warsaw, Rab- ty-two per cent of those entitled to the expedition headed by John the Journal of the American Medi- bi Thal of Amsterdam, Emil participate in the municipal elec- Crowfoot, director of the British School of Archeology at Jeru- cal Association, Ilygeia and other Hirsch, German industrialist and tions cast their vote Jan. 1 in Tel salem, and the work has been magazines. Ile is also the author Mr. Rachmilewicz of Kovno. Aviv, the first all-Jewish city in Messages of concurrence were financed largely by Sir Charles of numerous books on the subject Palestine. The middle class par- Marston. of medicine, most popular of which read from Rabbi A. J. Kook, Rab- ties scored a victory over the lab- to the layman is "The Medical Fol- bi Chaim Sonnenfeld of Jerusalem, orites who were in power in the Previous Exploration.. lies." Ile has established a nation- Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzensky of municipal government for the last It is not the first of such at- for just after the war a al reputation as an after dinner Vilna, Dr. J. II. Hertz, Chief Rab- three years. tempts speaker, making his addresses un- bi of the British Empire, from the Meir Dizengoff, one of the French ' expedition made a fruit- Chassidic Rabbis of Gera Kalwar- dable founders of the city of Tel Aviv less search for the tombs of the derstan with wit and humor ija, Czortkow and the Lubawit- and former mayor, was again elect- kings. Still another attempt was filling them to the layman and wher Rebbe. Messages were also ed to this post at a meeting of the made in 1923 under the Palestine from a world of experience. The subject of Or. Fishbein's read from rabbinical bodies in new city council. Dizengoti with- Exploration Fund, and after two Switzerland, Lithuania, Vienna Irew from the post three years ago years' digging it was reported that address is "Fads and Quackery in and Prague' ein.e" which he describes as when the labor groups gained con- walls had been found on the east.rs', . . lesd.lu After the meeting the former t ay of the evolution of quack- trol of the city council. side of the hill overlooking the cry, particularly in the United Prussian House of Lords present- The labor groups elected five Valley of Kedron. The Crowfoot expedition, how- States, including a discussion of ed a unique picture when the par- members to the Council, the united ticipants scattered into the various ever, has had the most spectacular revolutionary quacks, osteopathy, corners to recite the evening pray- center party 4, the association of Polish Jews 2, the houseowners results of all, and has made im- chiropractic, the Abrams treat- er, Maoris, . ment and modern devices." group 2, the Mizrachi group I and pressive progress in unearthing This event is under the joint aus- the small traders group 1. the Jerusalem of Bible days. The i lees o f the an d the th Twenty-five Arab residents of archaeologists under Mr. Crowfoot p OHIO RABBI TO OCCUPY M Tel Aviv, including several Mos- aimed at finding traces of the den's Club of Temple Beth El. tombs of the kings of Judea, in- the respective chairmen of the pro- TEMPLE PULPIT SUNDAY lem women, also cast their votes. cluling the tomb of David, on gram committee being Mrs. Henry The Moslem women of Tel Aviv Rabbi David Alexander of were thus the first Moslem women Ophel Ridge itself. Last year, Myers and A. C. Lappin. • Akron, Ohio, will occupy the pulpit in the world to exercise their right they found a great gateway be-I of Temple Beth El Sunday morn- of franchise. tween two towers, built on rock ing, Jan. 13, and will speak on foundations, 35 iee t below the the subject "What the Sages Say." present se-rese. The walls, still " R afaii Siaetan u rdayranmior .. n.iirl ilg,spJeaani,t standing ;1' .e 20 feet high and the WASHINGTON, I). C.—Maur- Together with Dr. Wise came ice D. Rosenberg, lawyer, banker Samuel Rosensohn, New York at- and religious lay leader of this city, torney, and a leader of the Zionist has been named general counsel of opposition group, long affiliated' the Inaugural Committee for Pres- with the Mack-Brandeis party. ident-elect Herbert Hoover. Jacob Fishman, managing editor Mr Rosenber is a vice- resident of the Jewish Morning Journal, returned on the same steamer of the' executive g . board ofpthe ' Un- from Berlin, where he attended ion of American Hebrew Cong re- tu ssion as member of the Gen- gations and general counsel for the SC.. the Merchants and Manufacturers cent Council. Association. Oppose. Term. of Agreement. Lieutenant-Colonel U, S. Grant Dr. Wise, supplementing .pre- III, Inaugural Committee Chair- pared statement handed to news- man, made the appointment. papermen, declared that he was notopposed to the extension of the Jewish Agency in principle, but his fight was directed against the terms of the Marshall-Weiz- mann agreement. in his prepared statement, he charged that FOR U. P. A. DRIVE learned in Berlin "things sadden- Ile disillusioning." and ing charged that the Zionist leadership Chairman Cooper Appoints has relinquished what was cher- His 1929 Executive ished for more than a generation , Committee. as the Zionist ideal and that the Zionist Organization has "ceased to function in the interest of any Abraham Cooper, newly elected thing that may be called Zion- president of the Detroit l'alestine ism." His principle objection Appeal, Wednesday announced the was to that point in the Marshall. Weizmann agreement which deals with the contingency of a breach between the Zionists and the non-, Zionists in the extended Agency. This provision, he stated, is already' a matter of dispute. Louis Lipsky, in his statement, declared that the opposition has now little left to do in the way of obstruction after it has been over-' whelmingly defeated at the Berlin session. Noises and threats are to be expected, but the strength of the opposition is indicated by the Berlin vote. Most Zionists realize that the Zionist movement towers 27 feet thick, the south must inevitably go in the direction tower being 70 feet long. This is voted upon in Berlin, which will one of the oldest gates in Jeru- lend to the creation of a world salem and was identified by t h e Noted EnglIsh Novelist and union for the building of a Jewish German Professor Alt as the Val-I Lecturer to Address Meet- national home in l'alestine, he said. ley Gate mentioned in Nehemiah. ing This Sunday The attempt to hold the buileline Pool Dees to 200 B. C. of Palestine within the limitations It is now announced that the Louis Golding, the noted Eng- of the Zionist Organization is con- Crowfoot excavators have also lish poet and novelist„ will address, trary to the will of the Jewish found a large pool or cistern, dat- the Jewish open forum on Sun- people. The future should be left ing about 200 B. C., built against ISRAEL ZILBER to the free play of the competitive southern wall of the south forces in Jewish life, Mr. Li ps ky. Ch airma n U. P. A. Finance Com. the tower. Built into it they have dis- . mile, stated. covered a long wall of the same Dr. Wise'. Grievances. executive com- period. These walls were built on appointment of on "We are doing no more than mittee which will be in charge of a terrace of rock below the top of e execu ti ve upon th calling council the details for the 1929 campaign. the ridge. They were partially (k- not to violate the binding resolu- In addition to laineedf as chair- molished when Titus destroyed Je- lions adopted and re-adopted by man, Mr. Cooper announced the rusalem. These ruins caused the successive. Zionist congresses," Dr. personnel of the committee as fol- tilling up of the valley which di- \Vise stated. lows: Fred M. Butzel, honorary vided the Bridge of Ophel from "We forced upon the more or chairman; Ben B. Fenton, William Mount Zion. less surprised attention of the B. Isenberg, A. J. Koffman and Is- Above the walls was found a executive council the truth that it coal Zither, s ice-presidents; Morris street of the sixth century A. D.. would be faithless to fail to pro- Fishman, treasurer; Louis Dann, which led from the west wall of vide in unmistakable terms for the honorary treasurer; J. S. Souls, the Jewish Temple, called the contingency, however remote, of secretary; David Diamond, Joseph Wailing Wall, to the Pool of Si- H. Ehrlich. Julius Braun, Alvin I). Agency dissolution. "We made clear that the failure Hersch, Isaac Shetzer, Harry Z. (Turn to Page Opposite Editorial.) There are to be no profits from and only poor Jews are to be "ac- commodated" in the building or buildings to be erected in Pales- tine from a fund that has been be. queathed to the Jewish National Fund of Palestine by the late Harry Miller of Chicago, accord- ing to an announcement by Eman- uel Neumann, president of the Jewish National Fund of America. a subsidiary of the international organization whose purpose it is to buy land in Palestine in the name of the Jewish people . Mr. Willer, who died in Chicago on May 11, 1927, and whose es- tate is administered by Samuel Koenigsberg and Joseph Platt of that city, directs in his will that the residue of his estate after Cer- tain formilities have been com- plied with, is to be turned over to the Jewish National Fund of Pales- tine, which is to use the money BERLIN JEWS SEEK' Mayor of Tel Aviv TO FURTHER CAUSE To Be Guest Here OF JEWISH SABBATH Five Day Week Advocated Expedition Reports Discov- At the annual joint dinner meet- By Plan Presented at ing of the Men's Club and Sister- ery of Old Street in Jeru- Mass Meeting. hood of Temple Beth El, at 6:30 salem Excavations. PLAN MANY MEASURES UNEARTH HOUSES AND TO ASSIST OBSERVERS PRESERVED CHAMBERS Orthodox Leaders From Nu- New Discovered Street Leads merous Countries Send From Wailing Wall to Concurring Messages. Pool of Siloam. "UNION FOR PALESTINE JEWRY'S WILL"—LIPSKY NEW YORK.-1.1. T. A.)—A, duel of words, re-echoing the bat- tles at the Berlin session of the Zionist General Council, where the Marshall-Weizmann agreement was ratified by a majority of 39 to 5, took place between Dr. Ste- phen S. Wise, vice-president of the Zionist General Council, and Louis Lipsky, president of the Zionist Organization of America, when they returned to New York on board the steamer Berengaria. Dr. Morris Fishbein Speaks This Monday Per Year, $3.00; Per Copy, 10 Cents SEE HIM IN DEFENDER OF THEIR JUST RIGHTS Union of Political Factions To Aid Oppressed Mi- norities Urged. DR. PHILIP H. BROUDO "Medicine in Judaism" will be the topic of an address to be de- livered by Dr. Philip II. Broudo at the meeting of the Men's Club of the Shaarey Zedek on Wednes- day evening, nt the branch syna- gogue, Atkinson and Twelfth. Dr. Broudo will, in his address, deal with medical references in Hebrew literature and the Talmud, and will go back to Maimonides Praise. Mania Government. and other Jewish names prominent The past year has witnessed a in the history of medicine, in re-' viewing the Jew's part in the art great improvement in the treat- ment of Jews in Rumania, declared of healing. Solomon Sufrin, chairman of the organization's advisory board. Mr. Sufrin said that not only had the Rumanian government pledged it- self to the guarantee of equal rights for Jews, but the Greek Or- thodox Church through its highest dignitaries had commanded its priests to withhold their blessings Detroit B'nai B'rith Lodge and other offices of the church from all religious bodies which Holds Semi-Annual might enact violence or public dem- onstration against Jews. Elections. "The convention this year la the first one in which no word of con- Pisgah Lodge No. 34, I. 0. B. 13., demnation was uttered against the at the semi-annual election of offi- Rumanian government," Mr. Suf- cers held Monday evening chose rin said. "Both the present ad- ministration and the Bratianu gov- ernment which preceded it made solemn covenants with the public opinion of the world that anti-Jew- ish excesses will no longer be tol- erated in Rumania, and a sincere effort has been made to fulfill the promise. For this reason we wit- nessed a national election that was free from threats, oppression, ar- there was no anti-Jewish demon- stration on Dec. 10, the anniver- student riots were not held, and rests or violence. Anti-Semitic nary of the Oradia Mare disturb- ance." ELECT DEUTELBAUM PISGAH PRESIDENT Ash Release of Prisoner.. Seventh-Day Observer s Take Stand Similar to Jewish Groups. PITTSBURGH, Pa.—(J. T. A.) —The Seventh Day Baptists take a stand similar to that of the Jew- ish religious bodies in the United States in opposition to the proposed calendar reform, which would re- sult in making the Sabbath migra- tory. The mid-year meeting of the Commission of the Seventh Day Baptist Denomination, at the Fort l'itt Hotel, representing 8.000 mem- bers reaflirnied the resolutions passed at the general conference of the Seventh Day Baptists held in California last July, expressing to the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America "our most earnest opposition to the adoption of the proposed calendar, based upon the following reasons: (1). In all previous calendar re- visions the week has not been dis- turlast. in this weekly cycle the Sabbath has always held its right- ful place. The proposed simplified calendar with its "year day" and its "leap day" destroys the present sequence of the days of the week. (2). It makes it impossible for Sabbath keepers to he true to their convictions and at the same time carry on their normal educational, professional, business and indus- trial activities, since under the pro. posed calendar the Sabbath will fall upon different days of the week. (3). The proposed calen- dar, forcibly trampling upon the rights and consciences of others is, in fact, religious legislation which would inevitably lead to persecu- tion. As an illustration, consider the application of our compulsory school laws. proposed calendar, (1). The seeking to stabilize our holidays, destroys those sentiments that clus- ter shout definite days, such as our national holidays, birthdays. etc. (5). We feel that the Sabbath, re- ligious convictions and sentiment should not be held subservient to industrial needs. The Rev. Willard D. Burdick of Plainfield, N. J., general secretary was authorized to represent the Seventh Day Baptists at a hearing on the calendar reform to be held in Washington. If there is a see- end hearing. Rev. A. J. C. Bond of Plainfield, N. J. denominational leader in Sabbath promotion, will also attend. JULIUS DEUTELBAUM (Turn to Last Page.) (Turn to Page Opposite Editorial.) Boy Lost in Siberia at Age of 3 Joins Parents in Argentina After Nine Years Elijah Trachtenherz Will Leave Shortly from Tomsk, Siberia, for Villa Angelo, Argentina, to Join His Parents and to Celebrate His Bar Mitzvah. Very shortly from Tomsk, Siber- ia, a Jewish lad, Elijah Trachten- hers by name, will leave for Villa Angelo, Argentina. Ile is in his thirteenth year and is looking for- ward to celebrating his Bar Mitz- vah in the South American coun- try where his parents are. In 1919, when the mother of the child, the latter then 3 years old, was preparing to leave Tomsk for Argentine to join the husband and J Resolutions urging the release of 3,000 political prisoners in Ru- mania and urging the establish- ment of n union of Jewish political groups for the aid of oppressed mi- norities in Europe were passed by the convention. Other resolutions passed endorsed the Kellogg peace treaty, the new Yeshiva College and "Pact of Glory" arrived at be- tween the Zionists and anti-Zion- ists of America. The latter pact was called a rebirth of Jewry in the resolution Bennett F. Sie gelstein, president of the organization, asked the dele- gates to give all possible aid to Ru- mania's forthcoming effort to ob- tain a loan in the United States to stabilize its currency. All of the officers were re-elected. They are: Mr. Siegelstein, presi- dent; Abraham Hirsch, Paul R. Silberman, Peter Ferester, Leon Fischer, Samuel Kanter and Mor- ris Florea, vice-presidents; Haimi Haimowitz, treasurer; Herman Sevier, secretary: Leo Wolfson, chairman of the executive commit- tee, and Mr. Sufrin, chairman of the advisory hoard. Julius Deutelbaum president for the ensuing term to succeed Mor- ris Shatzen. Mandell Bernstein, Dr. Victor 'Smock and Rudolph Meyersohn were elected first, second and third vice-pn•sidents respectively. Phil- ip Ettinger was elected treasurer; lien Goldman, secretary; Morris Shatzen, monitor; Ben Rubenstein, assistant monitor; S. K. Slobin, warden; Isador Moskowitz, guard- ian. Adolph Freund, Bernard Gins- burg and Rabbi Harry Z. Gordon were re-elected trustees, and the following were elected delegates to the District Grand Lodge: Past- Presidents Adolph Freund, Aaron Droeck, Julius Deutelbaum, henry Si. Abramovitz, Bernard Ginsburg, Morris Shatzen, Samuel Stern- TO ORGANIZE JEWS AS berg, Jacob Miller and Albert NATIONAL MINORITY Ross. BUCHAREST.—(J. T. A.)—An Installation Jan. 21. address in Parliament dealing with Messrs. Freund, Droock, Deutel- the Jewish question in Rumania, !mum and Ginsburg were also elec- delivered by Minister of the Inter- ted delegates to the Constitutional ior N'ajda, attracted wide atten- Grand Lodge. tion in all parts of the country. last President Abramovitz w-as The Minister of the Interior presented with a gavel in token of stated that Rumania has for a long the lodge's appreciation for his time been laboring unjustifiably faithful services. Mr. Droock under the illusion of a "Jewish made the presentation. danger" and therefore all efforts Plans are being formulated for were made to curtail the rights of the formal installation of officers the Jews."We, however, are fear- on Monday, Jan. 21. Outstanding less. We recognize that the Jew- LECTURE ON PALESTINE father, the little Elijah became BEFORE K. OF C. FORUM sick and had to be removed to the The God-Will Forum of the Geeree F. Monaghan Council of the Knights of Columbus will be addressed on Wednesday evening by Philip Slomovitz, managing (el- ite!. of The Detroit Jewish Chrnn. isle and president of the Zionist District of Detroit, who will re- vie w the efforts made by Jews for the upbuilding of Palestine. NEW YORK.—The present ad- ministration in Rumania was en- dorsed by the United Rumanian Jews of America in a menage sent Sunday to the Prime Minister, Dr. Julius Mania, from the annual convention of the organization, held at the Pythian Temple, 135 West Seventieth street. The message to Dr. Manlu was as follows: "The United Rumanian Jews of America, in convention as- sembled, wish you a long and suc- cessful administration. We have good reason to feel that all Ru- manians, irrespective of race, creed or religion, will have their inalien- able constitutional rights fully pro- tected under your administration and that law and order will always prevail throughout the land." hospital. The mother had to go on a brief visit to Irkutsk before embarking on the long journey and when she was ready to return to Tomsk, the city had been occupied by the Red Army and she could not enter. The mother in despair fin- ally decided to leave for Argentine , herself. But the mother, as well as the father, refused to give up their child and so they turned to the He- brew Sheltering and Immigrant Aid Society. The Harbin office of flies was asked that the child be traced. Nine long years were spent in ascertaining the whereabouts of little Elijah. At last, Hies discov- ered that a Jewish couple, Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Imatanopsky, bad adopted the boy and had left for Novo-Siberia. The couple were traced, the child's parents compen- sated the Imatanopskys for rear- ing the child and sent the nem- sary transportation expenses and documents so that the child is now ready to leave for Argentine. The names and addresses of 5,850 children who were orphaned through pogroms and war, have now been made available, Abraham Herman, president of the Hebrew Sheltering and Immigrant Aid So- ciety (Hiss), 425 Lafayette street, New York, announces.