•

America Yewish Pedalled Carta

CLIFTON AYINU1 • CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

PAGE NINE

Rorr, /n ■ ISfl afROXICLE

,WIMMIewM1MW

BORIS D. BOGEN

First

and Foremost a Jew.

Ito HILDA KASSELL

NriTEr In "Born • Jew,"
before
his natimelg
Itogen, in collahorn-
dcs0
I Alfred Segal relates the his-
nos
., experlencre in connection with
undertakings fur the relie f
„f I, . eA Jew, both here and abroad,
,r. r contributed so suhstantiallg
xl,r
rtillinerit of a rich and useful
to rr•

hm

to read in it not the story of (one
Jew, but the soul of all Jews.

The book is a succession of dra-
matic and startling incidents riv-
aled only by the tragic events that
shadowed each. Ilr. Bogen during
the course of his career, not only
saw his brethren needlessly and
cruelly butchered in Polish po-
groms, but was the unhappy wit-
ness Of the most pathetic econom-
ical and spiritual depression that
weighed his people down after tlo-
drastic events of the World (Var.

Ile had mane to the aid of Israel

in distress when the cry for "bread"
was drowned by the moans of agony
suffered by Polish Jewry whose
bloodshed and torture by the hands
of Polish soldiers were every day
u'eurrence. s. The Polish Army had
retained the quaint habit of cele-
brating their victories by slaught-
ering and plundering the Jewish
vommunity. so that "it came to pass
in that unhappy time that the noise
of a window rattling, the cry of a
child in the street, a shout, made
the hearts of Jews cold."
Nor Were the pollee entirety ada-
mant. Hunting Ia man who had es-
milted from military service caused
them t o invade. the Jewish commun-
ity, and out of chaos that resulted,
Dr. Bogen could distinguish "a
Jew in a long coat running and
now and then turning his blood-
sire eked fare to his ellelllieS to ery
for their mercy; a lk'01111111 with all
infant, now felled by a stone, now
rising again to run; a whole fam-
ily, HOW battling 011e to the other
now scattered and trampled."
Dr. Bogen 1.1•1S himself a Russs
hut Jew, having been born to the
tradition of Russian atrocities, and
it Was in Moscow that he first
learned, only to have the lesson Fe-
pent," time and (One again, that
to be a .lew is to be a thing apart.
Special Rate for All-Expense The Itoson was not so bitter when
he first came to America as all im-
Tour to Bermuda.
migrant. 'Chen he lived on the low.
Arrangements can now be made
yr East Side of New Yolk intent
through The Detroit Jewish Chron-
mainly upon a livelihood for his
iicle for an all-expense tour to Ber-
flintily, at that time consisting of
muda from Detroit, via ‘Cashing-
only his wife mid child. Ile was in
ton and New York, at the special
succession n furniture polisher, as
rate of $177.110. The tour will be-
%veneer, and then a printer, but af-
gin Sunday, Aug. 17.
ter sonic years of study he lawame
During this bargain vacation of
a teacher in the Baron de Hirsch
14 days, four full days are spent
Trade Sehool.
at Bermuda. A full day is spent
From then on he began to make
in Washington, three days and two
nights in New York, and four days rapid strides in his chosen career.
at sea. The accommodations in- After being actively compote,' for
clude Pullmans on extra fare some years with the ambitious but
trains, rooms with bath at leading partially successful Woodbine Col-
hotels, motor trips in Washington ony, Dr. Bogen accepted the post
and New York, sightseeing trips of superintendent of the United
Jewish Charities in Cincinnati.
in Bermuda.
Additional information regard- However, it was not until he an-
ing this trip will be offered by the swered the call of the Joint Dis•
travel department of The Detroit tribution Committee to investigate
Jewish Chronicle, 525 Woodward monditions of Polish Jewry I hat his
true work really began.
avenue, Cadillac 1040,
His rentinescences are tolerant
and not without humor of the diffi-
WASH MGT011•71i111 YORK culties that beset his path. Ile
was ho go to Europe as a !Tore-
. sentative of American Jewry to
help
their unfortunate brethren in
ALI...EXPENSE TOUR
the war-stricken vomit ries, but
even
for it purpose as holotinitar-
and
not and as imperative as that there
DA Yti
Ill)
was no end of red tape which first
he must disentangle. There was
FROM DETROIT SUNDAYS
the question of official recognition
A real Dsration bargain with 4 full
tai s in Ilernnioht. Deluxe
ao•
rromm
and petty htillatS Had after at great
dam ns.
.s, Incl uding
uding Pullman on extra
deal of difficulties Dr. Bogen was
fare trains, rooms with loath •t lead.
• harts,eivhlieeinw trh , s. motor
permitted to join Herbert Hoover's
ton e- .Sail on S. S. - Vemulam" return
American Relief Committee when
MS. - Bermuda." Re.rers•tions
he was tolerated on sufferance
41 KO horixed tourists agents or Fur.
rather than accepted, with the stip-
Ilermulla
ulation that in order to feed the
W. G. ROCHE & CO.
Jews, he must feed the non-Jews
1714 Dune Bank Building
as well.
Even in his dealings with Jewry,
no matter in what country he hap-
pened to be in or how important
Believe
the need for distribution of food
was, he had always to stop to as-
It or Not
suage demands, individual or col-
lective, of the various factions of
Jewry the Orthodox, the Reform,
1 nm Still
the Zionists, the non-Zionists, the
Looking for
assimilists and the Poale Zions•
And if he fed and clothed the needy
Dissatisfied
.lows in one stricken town in the
( ustonier
Ukraine, some faction or another
in America would be sure to ques-
tion the wisdom of his actions.
lint perhaps the most amusing
The Streng Chevrolet Co.
for maybe it is pathetic?) incident
that Dr. Bogen relates was the
12th & Phil..
Empir e 4035
time when after considerable dif-
ficulty and delay he had managed
to offitain the permission /111,1 official
''auction of the authorities to dis-
■ AY. TOMORROW. EVERY
tribute (01 ,d amongst the starving
DAY IS SOMEONE'S
Jews of Poland, Fis hands were
BIRTHDAY
once more tied when n delegation
of rabbis which had visited hint,
Don't Forget to Say It Willi
Flowers
demanded to know whether the food
he WAS to distribute was accept-
Visit or Phone Us Today
tilde fur Passover use, since the
Flowers for All Occasions holidays were soon approaching.
So that before he could act unity
can supply you with the
proceed with his work, he had first
t quality in Detroit.
to cable to America to receive rab-
binical assurance that the hungry
Jews of Poland may partake of the
Tidal during the Passover week.
Since the committee was not per-
mitted to function as 11 separate
unit in the Ukraine and especially
Russia, Dr. Bogen's greatest
i II
difficulty in distributing food
.thiongst the Jews and non-lows
11742 Dexter Blvd.
was the problem of supplying the
Jew with his just share.
Hemlock 0926
"And are we to feed all of the
Ukraine! What about the East Uk- •
raine where the Cossacks live who
had no mercy for the Jews? Are
MANUEL URBACH
we to feed them also? demandedi
Jewry the world over.
Granite and Marble
But fear of the enemy wan
strongs'r in the heart of the Jew
than the hunger in his stomach and
if feeding the vulture would buy
peace for the Jew, then the vulture
Now in our New Location
must be fed.
7723 TWELFTH ST.
Of his relationship with the Com-
munist regime he writes with tact

"To be born it Clew is to be in an
everlasting alliance of brotherhood
with all other Jews however dis-
tant." Thus smoke Boris Bogen,
who out only said those lines bu
lived them as well. More than 40
years of his life were dedicated to
the relief of suffering humanity
a nd obeli on July 1, 1929 he died,
Jews the world over was not only
deprived o f a friend but an oilmen-
monit rich and useful life tame to
an othimely end. Dr. Bogen Was
00 ye.irs of age and at the time of
his death still had extensive plans
and even greater hopes of devot-
ing himself to the service of Jewry.
Neither his work nor his accom-
plishments have died with him, nor
will the record of his achievements
pass into oblivion, for he has left
behind him a document, at once
personal in that it reflects so inti-
mately the sober judgments and
tolerant outlook of the man himself,
and historic in its recounting of
mot-war conditions as effecting
larh Jews and Gentiles.
"Born a Jew," which has recent-
ly published by Macmillan, is
from all external indications the
story of a Jew, but few will fail

BERMUDA

S

—ABE MAX ,,,, With

GERALD C.

QUINN

Monuments

Euclid 7192

REX01

—The

RECALL COMMITTEE
ISSUES AN APPEAL

Urges Citizens to Vote "Yes"
at Election on
Tuesday.

PIANIST, PEDAGOGUE
GIVES RECITAL HERE

Manfred NI lk in, well known
pianist and pedagogue, gave a no•
cital on Tuesday evening at the

The a' i t iae II S cununittrn in
Charge Of the movement to recall

Mayor Bowles issued all appeal on
Thursday urging the citizens to
vote "Yes" at the election on
Tuesday', when it is to be deter-
mined Whether Mayor lioWleS is to
be recalled. The statement of the
monimititee reads:
"From the day of its induction
into the city hull, last January,
the present city administration h is
devoted practically all of its ef-
forts to the sinister building up of
a huge political machine that it
might continue the longer to re-
main in office.
"It has shamefully returned to
the spoils system from which De-
troit had been remarkably free in
recent years.
"By its attempts to destroy the
civil service regulations anti there-
by place its own political hench-
men in lucrative positions of re-
sponsibility, it has demoralized
the municipal departments to such
an extent that the taxpayers prob-
ably receive less value for their
dollar than during any previous
period in the city's history.
"The ludicrous bungling of the
municipal problems which con-
front this fourth city of America
has given the humorists and para-
graphers of out-of-town newspa-
pers unlimited material to display
their skill, but for Detroit, the city
hall comedy has a tragic side.
''If you are concerned about the
welfare of your city; if you wish
to see its progress unhampered; if
you desire to put an end to the
bungling turmoil from which De-
troit is suffering, you will go to
the polls on Tuesday, July 22, and
register your protest as a citizen
by voting "YES" fur the recall of
Mayor Charles Bowles and the Gil-
lespie regime."

and honesty. His reaction to their
educational enterprises are friend-
ly and sometimes even enthusias-
tic, though he treats some of their
political and religious discrimina-
tions with more critical asperity
than is his wont.
But his errand was not a polit-
ical one and whatever faculties
and resources he had to be concen-
trated to the distressing nerds
which he himself so graphically de-
scribes:
"We passed hunger on the road,
wandering in mobs, from the N'olge
district. Freight cars packed with
emancipated beings! Only their
eyes seemed to live, glowing with
the ravothus longing of hunger.
Their train which had crawled
these many miles in the search of
bread, had stopped. Sono' of its
freight was to be unloaded... The
trainmen walked over the forms of
the sick, carrying four dead men.
How well he had accomplished
what he had set out to do, it is
not for those of us who had re-
mained in America Fl judge. From
his own statement he said:
"For my part, I had no misgiv-
ings about the course we had taken.
We had come to bring relief to suf-
fering children, to the sink and
the hungry. We had done this, in
so far as conditions and resources
at our command permitted us, with
no concern for political exingencies
otr factional bitterness.... In any
case, the service Itself had enriched
me, leaving me fulfilled and con-
tent."
Always throughout his wander-
ings he found, and of this he was
more than ever convinced, that the
lew isa thing apart. segregated
and shunned, anti even he, on his
errand of mercy, was not spared
the humiliation of anti-Semitic dis-
crimination. More than once he
vas fumed, as so many Jews have
been before him, to make substan-
tial monetary contributions to gain
his purpose, as was the l'aS• with
Lord Mayor in London, who was
powerless until his pet philanthropy,
for the five sufferers in Salonika
was suddenly enriched, when lo, the
thews of Holland were miraculously
cpened.
Not infrequently Dr. Bogen was
told, and once by no less a person-
age than the former American am-
bassador to England, Walter 11.
Page, that the ambassador had a
great admiration for the Jews, and
indeed, some of his best friends
were Jews. To be born a Jew is
to hear this all one's life, "Some of
my best friends are Jews."
Thus his book is a series of an-
ecdotes, revealing throughout a
pageant of portraits, Jewish and
non-Jewish at once intimate and
personal, punctured by the percep-
tions of a keen mentality. Judah
L. Magnes, Felix Warburg, Israel.
Friedlander, Henry Morgenthau,
James Rothschild, all come in for
their share of subtle implications.
Nor do Herbert Hoover and Pade-
rewski escape.
At his death in Los Angeles,
which was so sudden and untimely,:
these self-same personages from
all parts of the world, whose lives
he had touched in Inc capacity or
another, gathered or sent their eu- •
lc,gies in appreciation for the noble
deeds of a noble man.
His accomplishments, though in-',

MANFRED MALKIN

studios of the renowned pianist,
Mabel Cues.
Mn, Malkin more than justified
the reputation that preceded him.
Ile is an artist of the foremost
rank, a thorough musician, virtu-
oso and poet. The leading critics
of New York are lavish in their
praise of him.
Sir. Malkin is conducting sum-
mer classes in Detroit, where he
hope, to establish himself perma-
nently.
- —

On

SECOND EDITION OF
JEWISH SONG BOOK

Lowe in "Good Intenfone
at Fox.

"Good Intentions," with Ed-
mund Lowe, Marguerite Churchill,
Regis Toomey, Owen Davis, Jr.,
Hale Hamilton, Earle Fox and
other well-known players, came
Friday to the Fox. The Fanchon
and Marco revue . is "Gyp, Gyp,
Gypsy," present an array of clever
entertainers headed by the Caligari
brothers.

"Holiday" Now at State.

The courage that marked Mary
Astor's determination to graduate
from "sweet young thing" roles to
more sophisticated characteriza-
tions was rewarded by her selec-
tion for one of the meatiest film
plums of the season, when Miss
Astor was chosen for the role of
"Julie" in "Holiday," the Philip
Barry stage success by lathe un-
der the direction of Edward 11.
Friffith.

William Powell at Fisher.

Greater Movie Season brings to
Fisher this %mad( William Pow-
ell in his latest talkie, "For the De-
fense," and the lavish Publix New
York stage spectacle, "The Blue

the

Moran

and Mack Stay Over
at Paramount.

Mora n and Niack, the famous
musical comedy and radio stars,
better known in the world of en-
tertainment as the Two Black
Crows, make their second starring
appearance on the talking screen in
the riotous comedy, "Anybody's
War," now at the Paramount The-
ater.

INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY
PRODUCES TWO NEW TRUCK MODELS

Department of Synagogue and
School Extension, Unload Ameri-
can Hebrew Congregations, Mer-
chants Building, Cincinnati, Ohio. j
The second edition is not merely'
GRAND RIVER AVE.
a reprint, but is a revision and en-
at West Grand Boulmrd
largement of the first edition, Sev-
(Opposite Northwestern Flight
eral new songs have been added,
including a special arrangement of
SUNDAY, MONDAY JULY 2041
the Kol Nitre melody.
All•Telking Thriller
Additional songs and hymns and
RICHARD
a morning service for the week-
BARTHELMESS
days arranged by Samuel S. Cohon,
professor of Jewish theology at
the Hebrew Union College, have
included for the special use
•been
NEW HARVESTER TRUCK
with CONSTANCE BENNETT
of religious schools and student
Continuo. 2 to II p. m., Sands,
Production has been started by
All spring leaves are of alloy congregations.
TOES., WED., JULY 22-23
•the International Harvester Com- steel, both front and rear springs
FANNIE BRICE in
being of semi-elliptic design, with
Since you know everything, and
pany on two new truck models,
quarter-elliptic rear springs in ad- I know nothing, tell me what I
"BE YOURSELF"
known as the special delivery dition.
Wheels are of the cast dreamed this m o rning.
with Robert Armstrong •nd• Harry
model AW-1, of three-quarter-ton spoke type.
The pressed steel
Green
capacity, and the model Al.-3, with channel frame has a deep center
Good housekeeping mikes a poor
Matinee Daily at 2 o
a rating of one and one-half tons. section, measuring five inches, with Will.
It is felt that these new addi- thickness of 5-32 inch and flange
tions will round out the Interna- width of 2'4 inches.
tional line more completely than in
Four-wheel brakes are employed.
the past, and enable the salt, or- the service brakes being of me- •
ganization to serve a much wider chanical self-energizing, internal
I field of denim].
expanding shoe type, fully en-
And our driver will pick up your wash and return it to you at
The three-quarter-ton AW-1 is closed, while the emergency brakes
it rery small cost.
built with a 13G-inch wheelbase. ion the rear wheels are of the in-
it is a 4-cylinder model with an ternal expanding type. Springs
head engine of 31i-inch bore and are of the semi-elliptic design both
I 4 '2-inch stroke, developing 30 front and rear, with quarter-Alp-
brake horsepower at 2,000 revolu- tic nuffithary rear springs, all
The Lillindry with a Better Service
tuns per minute. The motor has leaves being of alloy steel. Wheels
a three-point mounting with rub- are of the cast spoke type. Duals
2559 HILLGER AVENUE
Lenox 2241
her cushion rear supports. on the rear.

FERRY FIELD
THEA1RE

SON of the GODS

PHONE LENOX 2241

EAST END FAMILY LAUNDRY

Ferry Field Theater.
Richard Barthelniess in "Son

of
the Gods'' will appear at the Fell t
Fk.141 Theater, Grand River at We-,
Grand Boulevard, this Sunday told
Monday.
On Tuesday and Wednesday,
Fannie thrice in "Be Yourse-lf" kill
he the feature, "Roadhouse Nights"
will be shown on Thursday and Ft
day.
Talking comedies, SOUDII
and other pictures are added fea•
tures daily.

Dawn" at United
Artists Theater.

"Golden

TheNodern Jew

"Gulden Dawn," Warner Bros.
and Vitaphone natural color, musi-
cal romance is at United Artists
Theater. This brilliant screen ovi -
shin of one of the phenomenal sue-
misses of the stage marks a new ad-
vance in serer color and sound re-
production.

The Wise Wife.

Rabld Meir was vociferous
against evil doers and often prayed
to God, saying "Destroy the sin-
ners. lieruriah, his pious wife.
gently admonished him, sayino
"Rather pray that God destroy sin
and sinners will he no more."

Misery and remorse are the chil-
dren of revenge.

tangible, will live forever in the ns•-
ords of his book as for the volume
itself, it is not only a handbook of
Jewry about Jews, but should Ie
placed in the hands of every Gen-
tile fur a better understanding and
a more sympathetic appreciation of
the Jew as he really is.

(Copy right, IOM, J. T. A 1

HEBREW UNION COLLEGE FACULTY AND STUDENTS

HO

favors liberal ideas
values Jewish progress and advance
wishes to see the Jewish standard raised

wants a creditable Jewish paper - earnest, honest and fair
seeks for a better understanding between Jew and non-Jew,
and between Jew and lets
is interested in the Jewish world of scientists, of music, of
art and of drama, of literature, Philanthropy, of
Judaism's history in world achievements--

Complete

Washing Powder

s novw.sa.

REA

Se; s:xs.r ma
Weersortenerfor
Ali ficosenolo
alma"
w o s•
• Is•wwrows••w.

•
•

lierdll•g a shepherd. Vir- Intl, and the young j ot well as GERMANY PROHIBITS
a makes a search to learn how the old,
ANTI - SEMITIC PRAYER
The author reveals a deep study
Skilless tricked her father. The
Modern Story of the Desert struggle with Malpass, the retribu- in the workings of the derrick, with
I.EIPZIG.—(J. T. A.)—The an-
Marks Zane Grey's Twen• hive dent h of her fattier and Mal- the result stated. Ile hits told of
pass, her happy union with Clifton the mechanics of the derrick, the ti-Semitic "hate prayers" intro.
tieth Anniversary.
and the return of the intuit.' to the workmen who man it, the beams it dueed into the public schools of
-
Eurasia make la fare ending fur a lifts, the building it helps construct. Thuringia by the National Social-
111
,Joutl story.
And the explanations are all sim- ist minister of education, Dr. Wil-
ply and interestingly told.
a•
helm Frick, were declared uncon-
ad aim •ts..."4.
.5 s took tsai
This is a book forth while for stitutional and prohibited by the
Rhymes for the Young Folks
your child,—and for yourself.
State Tribunal here, the highest
in Germany.
Exactly 20 yens, after Harper's !ninth 11E1 , 111,1 5- I
II, Willinio All
rug fitt111. 1 he NI
JIlan Co.
published his "Hod doge of the Des-
This decision is a severe set-
A Valuable Book for Stu-
.
.
back
to the National Socialists in
ert." Zane Grey presenting as
dents of Child Problems.
witii his twentieth anniversary
Thuringia. The matter of the
The introduction to this revived
prayers
had been raised in the
note!, "The Shepherd of Guade- treasure of juvenile poems, by
PRE•S•I1001. CHILD AND Ins
Pos'rolto
it, Frank Ilt.w•ril Rich. Reichstag and protests from Jews
loupe." If you have read and liked Edna Turpin, tells the story of this
• rdson. M. D F. A. 1'. I'.. •rd Wini- and others who saw in them • vio-
his previous works you will surely publication:
fred Johnson Hearn. IL 14
Published
enj. y thisoone. If you haven't, you
"Last summer, when I Wan look-
by I/ P. Pritnarn's Sons. I We.t 15th lation of the German constitution
must not let this one go unread. ing over some old picture-books in
had also protested.
Street, New York.
(12.M101.
It r• an ideal 111011erll novel of the the Library of ('ingress, I pulled
NI. Butoke, president of the State
western desert and is 1111 egeelleht down from the shelf a thin little
This volume is of value to stu- Tribunal, explained that (he pray-
st , ty simply told by this genius of red book. I opened it and found dents of child training because its ers hurt the feelings of people
s!ory-teller.
—11 treasure! 'Rhymes for the authors not only know the medical holding different
convict ions he-
This is the story of Clifton For- Young Folk by Allingham, with reasons for the suggestions ad- rallSt. they contain anti-Semitic ut-
rest who returns broken in Ludy illustrations by Kate Greenaway, vanced, but have specialized in the terances which degrade the Jews
and spirit from the war; and of Helen Allingham, Caroline Pater- psychological and physiological re- by calling them "the people's be-
Virginia Lundeen whom he meets •on, Harry Furth,' Coro , as love- actions of the children to he trayers." SI. nutlike, whose posi-
on the boat, without knowing that ly as the pictures, pictures es trained in good posture. The re- tion is similar to the Chief Justice
sult is that they not only outline of the Supreme Court in the United
she was at childhood neighbor, again lovely- as the verses.
in the team homeward hound, and
"Sly immediate desire was to reasons for the development of States, pointed out in his derision
then at home where her identity is share this treasure trove with my :good posture., but they make valu- that the anti-Semitic spirit of the
revealed. The latter meeting is friends. and I took the book to the able suggestions on the advance- prayers in the schmils is trans-
however marked by tragedy. For Macmillan ('o. They Said at once ment of their theories and offer 11 ferred to the homes.
he learns that all old Forrest-Lun- that it most go into their Little number of exercises es n means of
In the course of his interroga-
de•n family feud resulted in his Library series. So here are the training.
tion on behalf of the Ftsieral gov-
A fairly thorough study is here ernment, M. Zweigert, state secre-
father's property being lust to poems and pictures brought to-
Lundeen oho, influenced by a half- gether fur your joy, in this little made of the physical defects of tary for constitutional and politi-
SIM(' children and their postural
breed, Skilless, joins in shady busi- book."
cal adult's, declared that the pray-
results. A comparison is made of ers poison the youth of Thuringia
nes- and acquires his neighbor's
estate.
An Instructive Volume for the old methods with the newer np- by accusing the Jews of treason and
pruach, and went(' authors are infringe on the constitution. M.
trionia falls in love with Clif-
Young and Old.
through with the arguments they Zweigert said that the Jews were
ton, but her hand is in turn bid
convince and enlighten the reader.
for by Slalpass who resorts to
not the traitors but Frick was a
How •o): DERRICK WORKS. Pictures
This volume has great value for traitor,
trickery to force her father to con-
I'I'eaI by Wilfred Junes. -rho Mac-
sent to the marriage. To escape
millan Co., New York surd Chteago. the mother, the teacher, the nurse
The noted theologian and teeter-
152).
and the student of child training.
from this marriage Virginia asks
er on Catholicism, Professor Eger,
It is interestingly illustrated.
Clifton to marry her secretly,.
The drawings in black and
testified that the prayers corrupt
When the secret leaks out it against a blue background, are
the sense I if higher devotion.
drives Clifton and Malpass ton bit- enough to fascinate the reader of
The prayers were introduced last
ter tight as a result of which the this very interesting book for chil-
Slay and were directed against "al-
latter is horsewhiples1 but the for- dren. But the volume hits an add-
iens to tour rave, the Jews, who de-
CINCINNATI.--The second edi- moralize. the German people." The
mer Wounded. When the parents ed value in that it instructs and
learn of the marriage they drive holds the interest of both the scien- tion of the Jewish Song Book, I prayers called on the "Lord to pro-
composed
and arranged by. A. Z. tect as from people of a
their children from their homes. tifically and unscientifically in-
foreign
Idelsohn, professor of Jewish mu- element,"
sh' and nturgy at the Hebrew j
U nion College, has been publi shed,
tfrri(b)nuituin:
ti

BOOK REVIEWS

Reads

A soap pow-
der—a

water soft-
ener and a
cleaner—

The Detroit Jewish Chronicle

ALL IN
ONE
"Well kept
hands reach
for

REXO"

READ in bulk is also used in
apartments, banks, hospitals,
Public
buildings and institu-
tions.

COPELAND

DEPENDABLE ELECTRIC
REFRIGERATION
12th St. at W. Grand Blvd. •Ene.11048

This picture shows members of the Hebrew Union Colter" Faculty and student body of the present
year. About one-half of the states in the Union, Canada and England are represented in 'he student body.

