Merl /bit

rialitss

mos •amparsiker

ELECTED '
BY SERVICE GROUP;
PICK COMMITTEES

OFFICERS

MACCABEAN SPIRIT

(Continued from Preceding Page.)

saw the king en one of the highest
of elephants. The Nlaccal•an ran
under the elephant and jabbed his
Maurice J. Caplan was an - spear into the beast. The elephant
to
.ed
chairman
in
charge
of
pro-
fell upon Eleazer, and crushed him.
pen ,
Tor a trine, there was peace. Ju-
w, no. Mrs. henry Inman, re-
das
attempted to make an alliance
chairman
of
the
w
o
men's
sin—oiled
au diary, announced that her com- with the Humans. But soon he was
fighting
against the general Bac-
nor , is completely organized and
is ontaposed of the following: Mrs. chides. In that battle Judas, with
II:o ry Z. Brown, Mrs. Ralph David- a small band of soldiers, was sep-
son,. Mrs. Joseph II. Ehrlich, Mrs. arated train his army, and Was
Is.„•.,• Gilbert, Mrs. Fred A. Gins- killed.
Jonathan, his brother, took the
tan • tz, Mrs. Samuel It. GI•ngower,
yf Edith Ileavenrich, Mrs. Max In adirship; but bad times and fam-
ine
were to Conn' user the Jewish
).
Mrs.
Oscar
Robinson,
Mrs.
M: ,
En', in M. Rosenthal, Mrs. Charles armies, Jonathan and Simon tied
to
the
mountains, with their brother
A.
Smith
and
Mrs.
Sol
A.
Wolff.
A.
Crlix .1. Mahler, who was re-ap- John. John was sent out to seek
aid
of
the
Nabathites. On the way,
• u teri chairman in charge of cam.
p:r_a planning, has reorganized he was eaptured by the "children
of JainfirC and slain.
•emmittee to he composed of the
The two remaining brothers, Jon-
fo!'n , nving: Maurice .1. Caplan, Iler-
athan and Simon, waged many sue-
ins , Cohen, Joseph II. Ehrlich, crs
sful uunpaipu. At lire! as truce
Enggass, Adolph I in.
lig. once
was mad( with (hem; Jonathan
noorwald, II. J. I. Frank, Mrs.'
wits
mail, high priest. Jerusalem
Samuel R. Glogower, Julian Il.!
was given over to the Jews. But
,
R M roil, ,
• .
there was still contliet in the land,
L. Prentis, Nate S. Shaper'', Mil-
1<ing Demetrius, and the
ford Stern, Samuel Summerlield,
fit.•fider for the eroWn, the Se,Ond
e n .,
Melville S. Welt, Henry 1 V Mi
AntiochUS. itinatilan fIll'Int'd al-
Mrs.
Henry
Wineman.
fad
1, 4: :thee, was betrayed, and at last
Community Fund Report. •
captured liy the tyrant 'Fry-
Clarence II. Enggass, general ph, n, who held him for ransom, re-
chairman of the service group for ;usnl I, surrender him after the
the Community Fund drive, report- ens ul had been paid, and lated
id: "This year for the first time,
him.
and at the request at the Cemmun-
(lily Simon remained, of the live
ity Fund, our group had a distinct !it) tilers. Ile was now high priest.
representation on the C: minunity
King Demetrius recognized him
lend ( ampaign organization. Our as gosernor of the Jews, and treat-
quota was set for 1217,01)3 which ed w,th him. For many years, the
Ti presented an increase of (:1.' per Mac, an reign over the Jews was
cent over the previous year's gifts.
But new dynasties and
Our final results showed a net do- new illV ■ olcrs came into wrecked
civase of 11.6 per cent tinder 1020 Palest ine. King A ntiochus refused
(it: 12.21 per cent for the special gifts the presents of the high priest Si-
and IT per cent for the general di- own. Ile ordered the Jews to de-
liver Jerusalem, Jaffa, and Gaza to
vision."
Henry Wineman, chairman of him. Simon offered to pay tribute,
but
refused to surrender the land of
the collections comittee, reported
that his group consists of the fol- his people,
(Ince more the Jews were to he
lowing: Sidney I,, Alexander, Fred
Jeseph II. attack. (1. The aged priest iambi no
M. Butzel, Aaron
Enggass, longer lead the campaign. Ile
Ehrlich, Maurice A.
Adolph Finst).:rwald, Samuel Frank, called his sons, Judas and John,
William Friedman, Nate 51. Gross, t he generals for him. Yet Simon
I. Ilimelhoch, Robert J. NewIllall, himself went Out to visit the cities
Srere, Samuel Summertield, ill the country, to strengthen the
Isaac Shetzer, Rudolph Zuiebail Jewish defenses. NVith his sons
Mattathitis and Judas, he cant(' to
and Henry Silberman.
The following serve as a sub- •a little hold called Docus. The old
committee to discuss dispose of warrior-priest and his two sons
all individual ileC•Ullts which are were well ITeCiVl , 11, ii hanilln . t was
disputed as to amount or otherwise made for them, but in the midst of
in question: Sidney 1•. Alexander, 'the banquet lannIerms , and his men
chairman, Fred 51. Butzel, Nlaurice rose up and slew their guests.
So the last of the fire brothers
A. Enggass, Nate N. Cross, Isaac
died. But the end of the Nlaccabees
Shetzer and Rudolph Zuieback.
had
not yet CO1114'. IliS remaining
N. S. Shapero's Appointment.
Sill, John, carried on the struggle.
Einsterwaid, announcing the
And when foreign power at last
appointment of Nate S. Shapero as
succewled in stamping Iaat the line
chairman of the newly-created pub-
of the 51accahees, they could do
lic relations rmunitte, stated that
within); to destroy the Nlaccabean
in pre):ious years the Service Group
spirit, that still lives, and is remem-
has never had a public relations de-
bered every scar.
partment of its own but has instead
(Cent richt. Inn°, J. 'I A.)
transferred the entire burden of its
work upon the federation's educa-
tional publicity committee of which Halevy-Hazonnir Choral So-
Milford Stern is chairman. It \vas
ciety Concert, Dec. 25.
at 51):. Stern's suggestion that the
new committee has hero formed.
The Halevy•liazemir Cherid So-
51r. Stern, commenting on 51r.
Shapero's appointniont, said: "M r. eieh' will give its first appearance
Shapero brings the public.. relations •hf the season, Dec. 25, at the open-
committee touch that is invaluable ing dinner of the Geuverkschaften
in the way of his leadership, his campaign.
The sight reading class is open
ability for co-ordination, his ViSitql,
and his tremendous energy. I ‘cish In flew members. 'this class meets
to assure 51r. Shapero and his as- 'every' Thursday night at the head-
sociati, that the federation's (ski- thuarters of the Jewish National
ational publicity committee will be Workers Alliance, SI;79 Twelfth
always glad to co-operate with him street. The membership drive will
, continue until Pec. 15.
in any projects he may plan."

Continued from Page One.)

si

s i

s.

4i

ij

n;in

4)3

34

sF

7

ft;

4 v ;,

1;7

1.

1+

3+
+

4

4

PAGE FIVE

MEDerttoRkinstieiRONICLE

es

$16,800 RAISED BY
HADASSAH AT $25
DONORS LUNCHEON

NOMENCLATURE WELCOME PLANNED

FOR USSISHKIN BY
DETROIT LEADERS

(And 0i, What Nomenl)

By MRS. H. J. ROTHMAN

(Continued from Page One.)
(3385 Richton Ave., Detroit.)
triumph is proof of what can be The pride of thelterkowits household
accomplished when the women
tNO.
have the will to do a great work. SO to honor the darling. • party titer
threw.
Telegrams of greetings were
ia, t,:m
e,s . ,
a
e farina
They pi
then read by Mrs. Srere from Mrs.
utne the (aeons
and the Lattes.
Rose Jacobs, national president;
And lest they etinsidered he racially liar
Gertrude and Henry Wineman,
who wired from New York; Frieda They also nv Ova their neighbors OHara.
titian of Ann Arbor, Detroit
of the party dawned element and
Junior Hadassah, Mrs. M. A. Lip- The day clear.
sitz of Hollywood, Cal., Mrs. At the hmir •ppointed the guests dill
• PP ear.
Aimee Robinson, president of the
Wilrnatlene,
SheInerilene.
were
League of Jewish Women's Organ- If here Shirley
•nil
izations of Detroit ; Mabel Rabwin Iteverly, Rosalie. Aubrey and Floria.
of Los Angeles, Simon Shetzer,
Mary Jane. Barbara Jane, Joy. June .lid
president of the Zionist District of
Lorin,
Detroit, and others.
Mar v in tend Byron. Donald and Horace.
But sta.! thia svinehonir. euphonious
Mrs. Ehrlich Given Ovation.
Mrs. Ehrlich, who was the last Was nte'w
kids—Esther
' rr•d
speaker of the afternoon before
Joe.
the presentation of the feature
fantasy, was given an ovation penned as the Prophetess Deberah,
when
t 1 ••I by Mrs. Mrs. Louis Robinson, Mrs. , ey-
Srere. Mrs.
1
Ehrlich
the
asked
wear Frank, Saul E. Barnett, Mrs.
r
Ilarry Cohen and Mrs. Sol I erl-
in tribute to David Robinson, I
man its the leaders who helped
whose funeral took place that 51iss Szold in Iladassah's founding.
af te rn ram.
George Galvani was soloist in
Lauding the efforts of the Ha- the next scene, the theme of which
dassah workers, Mrs. Ehrlich de- was "Ify the Waters of Babylon."
clared in her inspiring address The cast of this scene was com-
that Iladassah women do their posed by Mrs. Ilarry Becker, Mrs.
share for every humanitarian ef- Harry Goldman, Miss Eiga Hersh.
fort, but that they refuse to be main, Mrs. 'Theodore Levin, Mrs.
deaf at the sonic time to the cry, Louis Tobin, 'Mrs. Julian S. Zemon
of those who arc 7,0110 miles and Vera Fay Dushkin.
away. "We are consecrated to
"The Jewish Spirit in Russia,"
the service of our fellow Jews and the Ovine of the fifth scene, was
fellow men," she said.
based an l'ilichowski's inortrair,
Mrs. Ehrlich added to the list "Daughters of Israel," and was
of those whose services helped depicted by Mesdames Milton 31.
make the luncheon a triumph the Alexander, Philip Illoonwarden,
names of Miss Jeanette Steinberg Oscar R. Blumberg, David S. Dia-
and Mrs. Philip Broudo. The pro- mond, Max Dushkin, John J. Gins-
distributed among the burg., :Milton Gordon, Maurice M.
g ram
guests was the gift of an anony- Lan la :Maurice ,N1lorse, Royal Op-
MOUS friend in memory of Rose penheim, Jacob S. Souls, Charles
Weinstein, she announced.
Smith and Frank Wetsman. The
A Gorgeous Fantasy.
vocal ensemble for "Kul Nitre"
Another triumph of the after- in this scene was composed by
noon was the presentation of the :Mesdames S. J. Allen, Harry Beck-
nine-scene fantasy, "Iladassah." er, Abraham Cooper, J. I,. Popkin,
which revealed the literary and
S Sauls, Bessie Silberstein, My-
dramatic abilities of its author, ron S. Steinberg and Miss Ruth
Miss Hattie Gittleman, former Rosenthal.
president of Detroit Iladassah and
Acting in the next scene, por-
an outstanding, leader in Detroit traying "The Jewish Spirit in Ru-
Jewish womanhood. The tableaux mania," were Jacob Keirlan, Ruth
were designed and staged by Mrs. Ehrlich, Nathalie Marwil, Oscar
David Werbe, and music was by an Colton, David Lipsitz, J1rs. Louis
instrumental trio, Nat Gruber, N. Halbstein, Marjerie Rosenthal,
Nicholas Garagusi and Dan II. Mrs. Mrs, Abraham Cooper sing-
Soper. Music of the fantasy was ing "The Lament."
under the direction of George
In the eighth scene, showing
"The Jewish Spirit in Poland," the
With Miss Sarah Berman as actors were Elconan II. Saulson,
Herald, the fantasy opened with a Allan Schmier, Alex Bernstein,
scene showing the Prophet Jere- Lester Koploy,
miah pleading for "the healing of
"The Jewish Spirit in Germany"
the (laughter of my people." Jacob was next portrayed, Mr. Calvert'
Keidan acted as Jeremiah and the singing "0 Lord Have :Mercy,"
women in the seen(' were Mrs. J. the actors being Miss Rose Lipsitz,
L. Polozker, Mrs. Edward Kraus Eliot Maginisohn, Miss Ruth Ro-
and Mrs. J. 0, Knipe!.
senthal, Mrs. II. Jacobs, Miss
The second scene pointed to the Golds Meyers, Mrs. Samuel R.
origin of the name Hadassah, the Weisman.
Hebrew term for Esther, and de-
In contrast to the sad scenes in
picted a scene from the Purim the European countries was the
story. Mrs. Sidney J. Allen, as glorious picture of the ninth and
Queen Esther, sang Handel's "Es- last scene, depicting "The Jewish
. ther." Elconan II. Saulson was Spirit in Palestine." Mrs. Charles
Mordecai and Esther's attendants Hamburger took the part of Ma-
were Fags Beth Weinstein and dam:1h; Mrs. Milton It. Petrie por-
:Ada Zolla.
trayed the mother holding a baby,
Depict Founding of Hadassah.
and Lucille Kavanau was the child
The third scene depicted the near Hadassah. Dancers were Mrs.
founding of Hadassah in 1912 in .1. Popkin, :Mrs. Abraham Fell-
the home of Mrs. Nathan Straus. man, Esther Imewenberg, Mrs.
Mrs. Ehrlich wrote the dialogue Myron S. Steinberg, Mrs. Miriam
for this scene. Mrs. Sidney Stone Rubenstein and Muriel Frank.
appeared as Mrs. Straus and Mrs.
The singing of "Ilatikvah" by
Morse M, Colton as Henrietta the vocal ensemble closed the pro-
Szold. Mrs, A. Ilarry Brodie up- gram.

REPORT M'DONALD
AGREES TO MODIFY
THE WHITE PAPER'

(Continued from Page One.)

(Continued from Page One.)

against us. The Simpson Report,

the White Paper, the Mufti, Shiels,

the British Colonial Office, all see
what our blind leaders could not

see. They try to put up land bars

votes in the last elections; T. I.. 13.
Guinness, candidate of the ( on-
servatives, polled 3,735, an in-
crease of 318 votes over the last
elections; N. Pellet, Communist
candidate running for the first
time, received 2,100 votes.

against us. And we cone to the

realization that with all of our ef-

Postpone Elections.

JERUSALEM.—(J. T. A.) —
fort, with the hundreds of millions
The Vaad Leunti to day again pos.
that we have expended, We have
ironed the elections of the Asefat
(wily six per cent of the area in Pid-
Haniveharim, the Jewish elected
estine in our possession."
assembly, from Dec. 15 to Jan. 15
Situation Not So Bad.
because of uncompleted negotia-
The 117 year-old leader expressed tions between (he Sephardic com-
himself fully, openly, without re- munity and the farmers over sepa-
card for 011n,Sit inn. " In 43 years rate ballots. The Asefat Hank,-
of Zionist work I will frankly say charim is the body which elects
I IlaVe never seen the situation so I the tooth Learnt which in turn is
had as it is now, 11'e have not only entitled to one representative on
the Arabs against as but also the the political committee of the
1::nglish, and the Jews."
World Zionist Organization,
f
t o
"I
Pray for Paper's End.
get visa from the authorities at
TEL AVIV.--(J. T. A.1—Di-
Washington," he said ironically.1
"But it was not so easy to get a vine assistance was invoked by the
viva from the authorities in New Orthodox Jews of this all-Jewish
Itch. Fur two yual'S I have been city to get the government to re-
flying to eon.. here," Ina, he im- scind the recently issued White pa-
plied, t h e Zionists were against it. per. Praying in rotating day and
"Nevertheless, I have faith, and night groups, a committee of Or-
I will keep up the struggle on all thodox Jews is sitting in the main
in fits, and I believe others will be synagogue here reciting psalms
with me And we ran still conquer, ! and praying that the \\'hitin Paper
but we must act at once. Every day be torn up.

1

You Can Save by Dry
Cleaning the FOREST Way

It is amazing how an old dress or suit can be
made to look like new by Forest's dry cleaning
methods. That old dress or suit or overcoat can
often be made to last another season by send-
ing it to Forest's experts.

Look over your old winter wardrobe

now and let Forest's courteous drivers

call for your apparel.

WOMEN'S FROCKS
AND SUITS

MEN'S SUITS

Cleaned and

Cleaned and $

Pramsed

i

Premed

$15°
and up

T CLEANERS
DYERS' ,
FORES I

533.547 FOREST AVE E

_

COlumbia 4200

is as a year.

Ask Farms for Pioneers.
Must Not Accept Bits.
CLEVELAND.- -1.1. T. :\.I --The
"If' we aceept the hits and leav- establishment of farms in the Uni-
ings offered us, tve lose everything. ted States for the training of
60 years, and put in Zionist pioneers was advecatial in
We labored
laboreddf
foundation for n national home a resolution adopted lit the tenth
We must put up the walls and the annual convention of the Zeire
, Zion.
isif. Or the St
Ure gees to ruin.
"First. let as set aside the fool-
Inbret of the session was devoted
ish suggestion that the Nlandate to it political debate in which Da-
may be taken away from Great vid Ilea-Gurion, Joseph Baratz,
I Chaim Greenberg and others par-
Britain. No nation, especially
land, gives away what it possesses. ticipated. Itnbbi Abby Itillel Sil-
We must wrnrk within that realiza- ver commended the Zeire Zion for
tion. 1Ve must get the British two-, the romanticism it has brought
plc b, force their government to be into Zionism with the chalutz
honest with us.
nnevement. A. Spier, nationnil sec-
Second, wo must secure Arab retary, read a report showing it
peace. In it way this is also a fool- slight increase in membership and
ish word, for how can we secure a gain in activities, particularly in
peace with people with whom we educational work, work for thin
have never quarreled?
Jewish National Fund and the Pal-
"M'e can gn, on with our struggle estine workers campaign.
only when we have the ground un-
der our feet. 11'e must have politi-
Einstein Hits Britain.
cal rights and land. They are the
NEW YORK.—(J.
A.)—The
hen, sides of one coin.
Jewish problem, which is more
"It nuns hard for Inc to
leave
lee Pal-
acute now than ever before, be-
estine. I don't speak of the diffi-
: cause of the tremendous growth of
culties of the journey. But to leave
anti-Semitism, can be solved only
Palestine for One hour is like a
through the establishment of II
man's leaving the house when his
Jewish National Dome in Pales-
child is sick.
tine, was the statement made by
Most Buy Land.
Prof, Albert Einstein, noted scien-
"But I am here. And I say, that tist, on the eve of his departure
all the material forces of the Amer- for the United States, in a cable
lean Jews must be gathered at once message received by the 7.ionist
Inc as stupendous effort. 1Ve must Organization of America and in-
buy land."
tended as a greeting to American
To the charges that the National
Fund still owned 16(1,000
cabean Festival, which will be held
of undeveloped land, he answered , at Nthilison Square Garden on Dec,
in detail, showing: that much of it,: 13 as "a demonstration of Zionist
such as the Wadi Ilawereth lands sentiment and solidarity," under
and the Haifa Bay lands, was ter- the auspices of the New York Zion-
ritory that had just been taken over ist region.
by the Jews, and has Irwindrained
At a testimonial dinner at Hotel
fir cleared for settlement. "We Astor, Sunday night, Louis Lipsky
have no land reserve," he said received his meet of praise for 30
flatly.
years of service in the Zionist
51r, Ussislikin was greted at the mavement. :Messages from col-
City hall in New York Im Thurs- leagues in all parts of the world
day afternoon by Mayer \Valker. and speeches by those present eon-
(inswing and singing crowds as- . tributed to the appreciation of his
, semlnled to give the veteran Zionist I efforts.
leader it rousing reception.
I The need of having a large and

and tells the people he is Swedish.
When he goes to a German corn-
' munity, he points to his name and
tells the people he is German.
When he appears before an Eng.
lish community, he points to his
name and tells the people he is
English."
Rol
Everybody smiled
as
I paused.
Then his eyes (lamed, and
1 making himself as aggressively
Jewish as he could, he flared out:
I"Ilut I don't have to tell you what
I ant."
The crowd screamed with de-
(Continued from Preceding Page). light. And meanwhile Sol keeps
on being re-elected.
interest, yet he is pedestaled above
--*-
all others in the world's esteem.
Certainly, the pronounced avowal
POLITICAL JIU JITSU
of his Jewishness has not harmed
Uncle Sol is a master of political
him,
jiu jitsu. As I understand, the se-

representative American delega-
tion at the World Zionist Congress,
which will meet at Carlsbad,
Czechoslovakia, beginning Feb. 18,
is the substance of u message is-
, sued by Robert Szold, chairman
of administration of thin Zionist
Organization of America, urging
'the participation of American
Jewry in the forthcoming elections
for the congress.

BY THE WAY

cret of that method of fighting Fs
to defeat your opponent by helping
your opponent along.
Sol had to fight not only the
"charge" that he was a Jew, but
also that he was a foreigner.
"Sure I am a foreigner" he told
the audiences he addressed, "and
you know we foreigners are ac-
cused of knowing how to hold on
to money, and by heavens we do.
Well, elect me state treasurer and
you bet nobody will be able to get
hold of the state money. No, we
foreigners know how to hold on to
money."
And once again he scored, using
WHEN UNCLE SOL CAM-
, the arguments of his opponents to
PAIGNS
elect
himself.
How does he capitalize its
15'01, have you ever heard Sol
And "Uncle Sol" never took
making a campaign speech? There any courses in psychology!
froenrIght, 1010, J. T. A./
was the time when "Uncle Sol"
was running for a state treasurer's
post against a man whose name, I
PERFECTION LODGE
believe, was Johnson.
Perfection Lodge No, 488, F. &
Sol was speaking before some
farmers in a small rural vicinity A.111, will hold a special communi-
some hundred miles north of Mil- lotion on Wednesday, Dec. 17, at
7 p. in. 51, M. Degree.
waukee.

THE CASE OF LEVITAN
Let me point to another sig-
nificant even if more modest illus-
tration, when compared with such
a Titan as Einstein.
My friend, Sol Levitan, state
treasurer of Mis«insin. Wise
"Uncle Sol," when he is a candi-
date for office instead of denying
his Jewishness, capitalizes it.
I do not mean that he seeks the
Jewish vote. On the face of it,
that could not elect him in such a
slate as Wisconsin, where the Jew-
ish vote is a minority significance.

"My friend, Johnson," began
1Sol, "when he goes to a Swedish
community, he points to his name

C. K. SANDORF, Secretary.,
By order of
DAVID ARKIN, W. M.

To Meet Today's Demand for Lower Living Costs

BOESKY BROS. REDUCE PRICES
AS S A RESULT of the increased purchasing power which our three stores
A gives us, we are happy to announce a substantial reduction in prices on

all our products. We believe that in making this announcement now ---
right at the time when there is an insistent demand for lower food costs we are
rendering a helping service- without reducing the quality, without subtract-
ing one ounce of weight, every item in our vast storehouse of inimitable
delicacies and foods is affected.

All

Sandwiches

Formerly 15c

Now

The Same High
Boesky Quality

TAKE A GLANCE AT THESE REDUCTIONS

Corned Beef
Fresh Salami .
.
Medium Salami
Hard Salami
Frankfurters
Knackwurst
Ring Sausage .
. .
Hungarian Frankf'rs
Thick bologni

formerly $1.00 per lb., now
formerly 45c per lb., now
formerly 60c per lb., now
formerly 75c per lb., now
formerly 35c per lb., now
formerly 35c per lb., now
formerly 35c per lb., now
formerly 35c per lb., now
formerly 35c per lb., now

88c
33c
50c
64c
29c
29c
29c
29c
29c

Kosher Beef Bacon formerly 60c per lb., now 50c
Rolled Beef ..
formerly 1.00 per lb., now 88c
Hot Pastrami
formerly 1.00 per lb., now 88c
Peppered Beef
formerly 1.00 per lb., now 88c
Smoked Liverwurst formerly 45c per lb., now 38c
Raw Corned Beef , formerly 55c per lb., now 47c
Raw Tongue
formerly 55c per lb., now 42c
Smoked Tongue
formerly 60c per lb., now 48c

REDUCTIONS ARE IN EFFECT AT ALL THREE BOESKY SHOPS

BRoc
BOESKY

Three
Q/0 Stores )

Twelfth Street at Hazelwood .
Library Market, Library and Gratiot .
Hastings Street at Farnsworth .

