A merica Apish Prrialical Cotter macs - CLIFTON CINCINNATI 30, OHIO PAGE ELEVEN MEDLTROIT EMSRPIRDNICLE THE OLD GUARD Wasn't Russia as great and glorl camel was still the motive power YEVSECTSIA LEADERS Hous a country as any defiled, for their wells, because to keep a LOSE RUSSIAN POSTS Christ-hating Jews wanted? Was camel was cheaper than to run new By JULIAN L. AVI•SIGLA not the great Nicola', the Little tangled motors and pumps. The MOSCOW. —(J. T. A.) —Over Father of this People, as amiable enterprise of these Jews had spur- "Le garde hieurf, nis and as princely a monarch as they red on the peasants to emulate their 200 Jewish leaders of the liquidat- ne se rend yeas f" could have, without aspiring to example. Many fellaheen in this ed Jewish section of the Commun-, It was in 1906. The Czarist have one of their own degraded and other parts of the Shephelah ist Party will lose their posts as government had been pursuing its] number upon a throne? Nonsense! (coastal plain) soon were able to supervisors of Jewish matters in policy of merciless extermination The meeting was being held for rev- rid themselves of the yoke of their 10 districts of Russia, states the Moscow Emes, formerly the organ of all revolutionary and firebrand olutionary purposes; they wanted feudal ties. And so did Jacob Spektor conic of the Jewish section of the part). , • 1. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■•■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■!, bodies. Revolutionaries were all to overthrow the noble government, The Jewish Communists are grad- • such who held secret meetings, ir- and used as a pretext a desire to into his own. Ibis boys now help respective of what these meetings return to Zion. Attention! For- him on the homestead and in his ually losing their dominating posi- tion in Jewish life in Russia in pleasant, thriving grove and mead- discussed or in whose interests they ward march! That should have been the end ows. Ile is older than he was in view of the decision of the Central were held. If you called a privy assembly, the mere fact that it had of Jacob Spektor and his friends. the care-free days when he first Communist l'arty to abolish the came to Palestine, to savour of the district centers fur national minori- not been permitted by the police It was but the beginning. In 1908, cholera broke out in the free, spacious nights under the ties. In connection with this re-or- was token that "its purposes were little penal settlement of Siberia ] stars or in the light of the moon ganization program it is also pos- not consonant with the welfare of • Communist the State." That was an end of it. to which Spektor and the 10 others to g,o walking through the groves. sible that the Jewish No trial, no travesty of justice: had been exiled. The Russian Yet he regrets not his age, nor the papers appearing in Odessa, Bei.- ditchev, Kiev and Vitebsk, which guards deemed discretion to be the passing of the years. It has been you were cast into dark, moist dun- v he would not change aro TIOW subsidized by the district goals until the word came from better part of authority; the next 1,iiith centers, may be compelled to dis- morning they were gone. Their any. some bureau that you were being There are many such as Jacob continue publication. sent to Siberia. Siberia spelt finis. little formality in locking up the prsioners overnight and concealing Spektor, all over the country, old is. EVIL OF IDLE GOSSIP Jacob Spektor was not a revolu- the keys proved a hindrance for a men and middle-aged, who swing tionary; he was a Zionist. In 1906 foodless and uaterless day or so, in their rockerchairs on wide he ions a student of 17 years, at- lad not an insurmountable obstacle. perches and tell pal stories of the A peasant with a troubled con- tending the gymnasia at Kiev. One of the Russian prisoners, a beginnings of contemporary agri- science went to a monk for ad- There were a number of students notorious brigand in his own pas- cultural Israel, of their adventures vice. Ile said he had circulated with Zionist inclinations at Kiev tures, picked the lock, and let the and of the early days of Karen a vile story about a friend, only at the time, and now and then they others out. There were about 1.11) Kayi•meth. They knew our mod- to learn afterwards that the story would hold a meeting to expound of them all told---.men and women. ern Yishub when it was young. was not true. "If you want to their cult. It mainly centered, at Of Spektor's original coterie of 11, ( . 1) in the Daganias or at kinner• make peace with your conscience," among the numerous and pros. that time among the youth, around eight remained. Fortunately it was summer when perous settlements of the En•k, or said the monk, "you must fill a the personality of a man named hag with chicken down go to ev- Theodor Ilerzl, deceased two years, the guards fled. TO reach civili- in the Judean colonies, they still ery dooryard in the village, THOMAS G. LONGSTAFF, Mgr. ' and who had unsuccessfully bilmbarded zation from that trackless waste lire an dwork —men drop in each one of them one Hof- European chancelleries with an ab- meant a journey of several monts, Guard. fy feather." The peasant (lid as since the fugitives dare not use the They saw the growth of Eretz. lie was told. Then be came back surd proposal to found a Jewish MT. CLEMENS, RIICH. State in the southern part of Syr- railways or the beaten roads. Near- Israel of our times, the evolution to the monk and announced he had ia. Jacob Spektor attended these by ran one of the great Siberian of the virile Chalutzpeasantry, done penance for his folly. "Not solo 0 06. ■■■ ••■■■•■■■ • ILIMMIWI_MW s MO private meetings because he, too, rivers, the Amur, linking: up with and the start of the National Land yet," replied the monk. "Tab( was convinced of the feasibility of the China coast. The fugitives had redemption—and they are seein • it yo ur hag , go the roma s no desire to enter Russia over the still! Most of them, like Jacob a Jewish State in Eretz-Israel. and gather up every feather that All this he tried to explain to ordinary frontiers, Most of them Spektor, encountered difficulties and you have dropped." "But the wind the gendarmes who surprised one knew their fate would be more hardships on their way to the land must have blown them all away," of these meetings on a cold winter's drastic than exile were they to re- of their desire, but they came—and said the peasant. "Yes, my son, night. The officers found it diffi- enter Russia so speedily. The ma- they are coming still! said the monk, "and so it is with cult to understand what the jority were headed for America. gossip. Words are easily drop- Three months or SO later they I tell you that as long as I can ped, but no matter how hard you Zhid wanted. A country? Pshah! reached a port on the China coast. conceive something better than may try, you can never get them Some had died oiroute, others had myself I cannot be easy unless I back again."—Albany Knicker- been left behind, many had given am striving to bring it into exist- bocker Press. up the long trek and stayed in the ence or clearing the way fur it.— I villages on the way. Thirty-seven Shaw GREETINGS ] Can you drive with one hand? were left, including Spektor 's eight. I asked the girl in a gentle voice. "We had the choice of going Be civil to all; sociable to many; "You bet I can," he answered across hi America," said Spektor, with few; friends to one; ] eagerly. a bronzed, sturdy man, telling me familiar ;]inne.mly to none.—Benjamin Frank- ] "Then have an apple," she said the tale as we sat out in the cool The Original sweetly. twilight of a Palestinian summer's Upholsterer day in one of the Judean colonies, "or of shipping for European I8 Years of Established Busi- ports. Zionists though they were. ness in Port Huron MT. CLEMENS six of my friends chose America; I hear from them still, they have Patronize the Original Uphol- prospered, one of them has bought sterer and Be Sttisfied an orange grove near Petah-Tik- end another-20 years after 335 ONTARIO STREET Phone 781-782 me—also wants to conic to Pales- Phone 1704 T. J. FINNEVEN, Pres. M. ROYCE, Vice-Pres. "loris and myself did not relish ti!el PORT HURON, MICII. COMPLETE EQUIPMENT the idea of America, so we shipped 45 South Gratiot Mt. Clemens, Mich as cabin-boys aboard a Norwegian LATHES, DRILLS, SHAPERS, MILLER, PRESSES sailing boat—we were both 19 at the time—which was homeward Jobbing and Repair Work New Year Greetings and bound. The Norwegians, a seafar- ing people, are at home on the Day and Night Service Best Wishes. oceans, Surprisingly enough, they Season's Greetings 308 North Avenue Phone Your Order 536 are not vicious or cruel like the usual run of sailing tars. We had MT. CLEMENS, MICH. quite a good time, taking it all round, although I didn't make a success of being assistant cook, and got into many a scrape on account the food I dished up." Tires, Tubes, Gas, Oils, of When the boat put in at Bey- Electrical Contractor and Dealer Since 1911 Batteries, Vulcanizing routh, in Syria, Spektor decided to decamp. His friend wanted to go on to one of the Black Sea ports, Phone 2040 there to try to reach his parents I still in Russia. He could not per- 614 Huron Avenue suade Jacob to go likewise. It was fairly simple to those days PORT HURON, MICH. 63 Macomb Street for a sailor to go ashore and lose Telephone 3 himself in a cosmopolitan port. • MT. CLEMENS, MICII. This Jacob did. The ship sailed • without him. Sombrely lie watched it veer out to sea. The Merchants of Port Huron Greet You With a Happy and le i Prosperous New Year MARSHALL'S BARBER SHOP Our Shop Is the Talk of the Town We Specialize in Scalp Massaging, Ladies, and Children's Haircutting Room 301 Federal Bank Bldg. Phone 4222 rol• HURON, MICH. • "If I were asked to sum up in one broad generalization the intel- l ectual tendency of Israel," wrote, Zangwill, "I should say it was a tendency to unification. The Unity of God, which is the decla- ration of the dying Israelite, is but the theological expression of this tendency. The Jewish mind runs I to unity by an instinct as harmoni- ousas the Greek's sense of art. It Is always impelled to a synthetic iwrception of the whole. This is Israel's contribution to the world, his vision of existence ... Unitas, Unitas, omnia Unitas!" Surely, then, it is a paradox of this paradoxical people of ours, that with this passion for unity it shows in all things so amazing a disposition ] to inter-fissiparous- ness! London Jewish World. • GREETINGS Season's Greetings MacTAGGART- HOFFMAN CO. MOVING Murphy Hotels and Clementine Mineral Baths STORAGE Each Load Insured Kodaks and Sporting Goods Telephones 974.J-3110 Piano Moving a Specialty 933 Military St. Phone 788 i 041 j 1 i A. W. Bradley & Son Book Sellers, Stationers A Happy and Prosperous New Year 1509 Washington PORT HURON, MICH. PI PORT HURON, MICH. MACHINE SHOP Phone 2733 1008 Third Street PORT IICRON, MICH. We Wish All Our Jewish Friends a Happy New Year MUNRO'S Schmekel Tire Shop Phone 2353-J PORT HURON, MICH. A Very Happy New Year to All GREETINGS 0. K. LAUNDRY COMPANY CALL Yellow Cab 727 Lapeer Ave. PHONE 279 PORT HURON, MICH. Phone 429 • 322 1/2 Huron Avenue I Season's Greetings PORT HURON MICH. My Best Wishes for a Happy New Year to All Home of Better Dry Cleaning Neal Peak Cleaning, Presing, Repair- ing, Rug and Furniture Cleaning. TRUCKING AND MOVING Phones 138, 3390 Our Prices Will Convince You We Can Give You Service at Low Cost 830 Seventh Street PORT HURON, LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE Careful Handling and Quick Service 353 River Street Phone 3309 PORT HURON, MICH. A Happy New Year to All MILLER'S • Super Service COAL - COKE REX MILLER, Prop. SOFT COAL, All Grades. HARD COAL, All Sizes. SOLVAY COKE Greasing, Oiling, Gasoline Service. Gabriel Snubbers 3 Racks, Compressed Air, W. J. MOSER Alemiting. No Waiting. Phone 287-F-2 2201 Pine Grove Avenue PORT HURON, MICH. AUTO SERVICE 1604 Stone St. Phone 4058 PORT HURON, MICH. ROY A. BRAZELL Season's Greetings to All My Jewish Friends ELECTRIC WIRING AND FIXTURES "The Light House of Port Huron" 1517 Court Street SEASON'S GREETINGS JAKE'S TIRE SHOP JAKE BUDINGER ALBERT FALK Tires, Tubes, Auto Acces- sories and Vulcanizing FUNERAL DIRECTOR 1208 Military LADY ASSISTANT 1003 Sixth Street Port Huron Spektor came to Palestine to- wards the end of 1908. It was a long way that he had travelled to reach the "bourne of his de- sires." Thousands of miles across the steppes to Siberia; two or more thousand miles further to China; and all around the Indies and up the Red Sea to Eretz-ls- rael. The journey took him two years and five months; but he reached his haven at last. Eretz-Israel in those days was a wilderness indeed. None of the luxuriant Emek had been won back by the Jewish National Fund from its desolation. The few Jewish col- onies were more partially or whol- ly supported by "the Baron:" the concept of a Jewish agricultural community was as yet embryo. Yet the spirit of settling in Pales- tine, later to be crystallized into modern, pulsating and practical Zionism, prevailed throughout. Jacob settled in a little Judean colony, the land for which had been A : . provided by the Jewish National Fund. It was ore of the newer pre- war settlements that marked the beginning of the great land pur- chases of the Fund. The Einek was yet to come. The Arab peasants in that dis- • trict were eager to sell part of their +1]: lands to the newcomer Jews. Bur- I dened with debts, for which they were paying usurious rates of in- terest to the effendies, it became a harder struggle as each year passed' for them to maintain their hold. "One of the leading Arab pas- ants," said Spektor, "told me, 'the Jews have energy and fresh spirit;', we are old and broken after all' these years of fighting for our liv- ing. Let many Jews come; the' fellaheen know that it is to their I benefit.'" That was, Spektor recalled, 22 years ago. The new colonists ap- plied themselves to their task with refreshing vigor. They planted small areas of orange-grows; bought cows and started dairies on a small scale; kept poultry and sold the produce in a larger, older colony near by. They struggled for their livelihood just as much as the Arab peasants, and in fact many had to work as hired labor- ers in the big groves of the wealth- ier colonists nearby. But it was worth it. And the land was theirs in perpetuity! "To come from the snow-steppes of Siberia, the vast uncharted wil- derness of Asiatic Russia, into bloom-laden and sunny Palestine, was a change too great to be de- scribed. How we enjoyed those nights under the cool Mars, and scents of F.retz-Israel borne on the fragrant breeze, and the howling of the lonely jackal in the distance; the dark, clustering vines and the I balmy smells of the almonds, what more could Jewish soul desire!" Little by little, they prospered. t Wiring, Fixtures, Fans, Motors, Radios and Supplies Park Hotel Our Best Wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year and Mineral Baths Seibert & Keil L. C. EWELL, Manager FINE FRUITS AND VEGETABLES GROCERIES MT. CLEMENS, MICH. Phone 900.901 A% Mt. Clemens, Mich. ._TI.1,ctal'isitTiTiZt71711 ■1 ;‹ .• SEASON'S GREETINGS is Rosh Hashonah Greetings to Our Many Friends Roseville Garage & Sales Co.. Burt Englebrecht DRAIN COMMISSIONER MACOMB COUNTY CHEVROLET Ti -TT qnMMMMENS_AIMSEISSEN' CHEVROLET SALES AND SERVICE Gratiot Ave., Opp. Gratiot Airport Rosh Hashonah Greetings QUALITY AT LOW COST PETER J. HOFBAUER, Prop. ROSEVILLE, MICH. Dr. R. W. Ulirich ..E.V".. -1=9.05100010100 "P11-1-AT'le OFFICE, 91 CASS AVENUE Season's Greetings MT. CLEMENS, MICH. Vel.LIV000.0001 -0000.9100001-1V. COMPLIMENTS Port Huron Syd. T. Thome A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR TO OUR JEWISH FRIENDS AND PATRONS "Our Repair Work Must Please" Phone 767 Authoried Ford Dealer HERBERT RONDO COAL AND COKE [ Motor Sales Co. Season's Greetings George C. Higgins • Mo unt Clemens HARRY E. KING Wishing All My Jewish Friends and Patrons a Happy and Prosperous New Year 728 Lapeer Avenue GREETINGS 0 ir rl., ■■■■■■•■■•■■■■■■■■■■•■•■■■■■■■•■■■■•■■■■ • Season's Greetings The Merchants of the Bath City Extend Hearty and Sincere New Year Greetings Phone! 401 Phone 2707 PORT HURON, MICH. Truth to tell, their Arab neighbors prospered with them, and gave ev- ery help to this new type of Jew, this agrarian folk who were the forerunners of the sturdy post-war Chalutzim. The peasants planted groves and orchards, albeit the 1 .?„, 4:4 .... • • . • a,,,x,,, ,T,..40,:,:vtkx,`,4,7:14717,v,T.?&Z,v,': The Season's Greetings Nk Eugene Beque roc Marie J. Behnke DEPUTY CLERK MT. CLEMENS, MICH. GRANITE AND MARBLE WORKS yi 4+ 4.4t WE MAKE JEWISH MONUMENTS 300 North Avenue Phone 959-J "-S I Mi• Mslft:I=T-TALUffeffastgfef4EMTA' c MT. CLEMENS, MICH. ~T~ 177_ 1 7 11 TTS171TTa311 1000'001"-P-1,-2.-