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January 30, 1931 - Image 1

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1931-01-30

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

America ffewish Pertained Cotter

All Jewish News

All Jewish Views
WITHOUT BIAS

CLIFTON AVZNUS • CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

IfEbETROIT JLWIS#t HRONICLE

TELEPHONE

CADILLAC

1-0.4-0

THE ONLY ANGLO•JEWISH NEWSPAPER PRINTED IN MICHIGAN

VOL. XXXI. NO. 10

MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1931

Per Year, $3.00; Per Copy, 10 Cen t

U. A. H. C. PROTESTS Spirits Are Cheap
and Easy to Obtain
$2,500,000 DRI E ISIEWISH SOCIAL SERVICE BUREAU'S
V
CLEARING BUREAU
But
Palestine
Has
No
Liquor
Problem
AGAINST PROPOSED
RESPONSIBILITIES INCREASED BY
VOTED AT NATIONAL
WILL BE STARTED
DEMANDS
CREATED
BY
THE
CRISIS
REGISTRATION BILL
PALESTINE MEETING
FOR RELIEF WORT

Reform Convention Re-Elects
Ludwig Vogelstein as
President.
-- -
WILL REVISE PROGRAM
FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE

Alexander Addresses Coun-
cil; Stern Re-Elected on
Executive Board.

75

ke

PHILADELPHIA.— (J. T. A.)
—An emphatic protest against the
registration of aliens as proposed
by the ('able bill now. pending in
Congress, the election of officers to
the executive board and the pre-
sentation of a golden boring cup to
Ludwig Vogelstein, chairman of
the board, in honor of his avouch-
ing sixtieth birthday, marked the
closing session of the thirty-second
biennial council of the t'nion of
American Hebrew Congregations.
According to the resolution
adopted, the Union ''goes on record
as protesting against the Cable bill
as un-American and us changing
the administration of the criminal
laws of this country and as in-
jurious to the best interests of the
immigrant population which has
come here in search of a new' home
and freedom."
The resolution further declares
that "to force registration up on the
alien is to put him in the same cat-
egory with the criminal, while to
discriminate against a class as a
whole introduces a distinction be-
tween one part of the American
population and the other which only
serves to retard the process of as-
similation and Americanization and
is contrary to the Biblical injunc-
tion,"
New Executive Board.
Ben Altheimer, one of the faun.
ders of the Union, presented the
golden loving cup to Mr. Vogel-
stein.
The (Aiming persons were elect-
ed to the executive hard: Ca•I J.
Haffenburgh of Boston, Aaron
Straus of Baltimore, Nathaniel 11.
Lyons of Brooklyn, Harry Gottlieb
of Chicago, Bernard II. Sinks and
Eugene E. Wolf of Cleveland, and
Louis L. Haas of San Francisco.
Simeon M. Johnson of Cincinnati
was recommended as an honorary
member while the term of Mr.
Lyons, who succeeds Meier Stein-
brink, resigned, ends Jan. 1, 1933.
The other terms of new and re -
elected members end Jan. 1, 1931,
The renominated members are as
follows: Henry Beckman of Cin-
cinnati, Nlilford Stern of Detroit,
Isadore Wise of Hartford. Gustav
A. Efroyman of Indianapolis, Dr.
David W. Edelman of Los Angeles,
Al Saltzstein of Milwaukee, Jacob
L. Newman of Newark, Adolph S.
Ochs, Arthur Hays Sulzberger.
Roger W. Straus and Dr. Lee K.
Frankel, all of New York, Marcus
Aaron of Pittsburgh. Roscoe C. Nel-
son of Portland, Oregon, and Aaron
Waldheim of St. Louis.
Voielstein Re-Eelected.
Following the adjournment, the
executive Isar,' reconstituted itself
with the election of the following
officers: Ludwig Vogelstein, chair-
man; Julius Rosenwald, J. Marcus
Rauch, Maurice D. Rosenh•rg. and
Jamb Mack, vice-chairman; Rabbi
George Zepin, secretary; and Rale
loi Jacob D. Schwartz, assistant
see rut ry.
At the closing session of the con-
vention of the National Federation
of Temple Sisterhoods, the follow-
log officers were elected: Mrs. Ab-
ram Simon of Washington, honor-
ary president; Mrs. Maurice Stein-
feld Mf St, Louis, president; Mrs.
Henry Nathan of Buffs's, first
vise-president; Mrs. Adolph Rosen-
b•rg of Cincinnati, second vice-
lo resident; Mrs. Albert J. May of
New York, third vice-president;
Mrs. David Lefkowitz of Dallas.

JERUSALEM. — (J. 'I'. A.I —
The' report of the Wickersham
Commission in the United States
on prohibition has evoked the gen-
eral comment here that Palestine,
with all its troubles, appears to
be fortunate in that it has no
liquor problem although wine and
spirits are cheap and easy of tr-
es s and the country boasts of
having the second largest wine
cellars in the world.
Alcohtolis drinks are consumed
by Moslems, Christians and Jews
alike, but always in moderation
and hence drunkenness is com-
paratively unknown in the holy
Land. Saloons as they existed in
the United States before the enact-
ment of the eighteenth amend-
ment, are practically non-existent
here. The local wine-shops are
o•ne-room affairs with wide open
deers. Little drinking, however, is
dune on the premises.
Annual Consumption of Beer.
It is curious that all attenipts to
establish breweries have so far
proved unsuccessful, although Pal-
estine barley is being exported to
England and Germany for brewing
purposes. The annual consump-
tion of beer in Palestine, which is
largely imported from these two
countries, amounts to over 500,000
litres in a year.
In view of the fact that Pales-
tine is an important cultivator of
grapes for wine-making, wine-

AUGUST RETAINED
AS ADMINISTRATOR

Recognition of His Ability
Is Manifested in
Reappointment.

Recognition of the ability and
civic mindedness of Public Aolmin-
istrator Merman A. August is
manifested in his reappointmomt to
this MIST, announced in Lansing
on Wednesday.
Mr. August's reappointment had
another murk of public recognition

drinking here is popular.
Prior
to the establishment of the Jew-
ish colonies in the 'tills of the last
century the area under grape cul-
tivation was negligible and wine
was manufactured by a few mon-
asteries for ritual purposes only.
The rapid increase of wine-making
among the Jewish settlers resulted
in the establishment of wine eel-
lags at Petach Tikvah in 1889
with an annual output of 250,000
gallons.
An Important Market.
Three years later, Baron Ed-
mond de Rothschild of Paris estab.
lished the now-famous wine cellars
,of Rishon Le Zion and Zichron
Jacob, the two largest in the world,
which he afterward presented to
the Wine-Growers Association of
Palestine, a co-operative society
composed largely of the Jewish
grope-growers of the country.
Before the war the ',oral market
was negligible and nearly the en-
tire output of wine an,' cognac
was exported to the United States
and Russia, but since then, owing
to the increase of the European
population here, the local market
has become a substantial factor in
the consumption of spirits. It
should be borne in mind, however,
that many Moslems, particularly
the fellaheen, are total abstainers,
although light wines and beer arc
popular among the urban popula-
tion of all religious groups.

Holds Summons Served
In Synagogue Is Legal.

LONDON.— (J. T. A.) —A
summons served upon a Jew in
a synagogue on Saturday was
held to be legal by Judge Davies
in a local county court, after
Samuel Lindy, a traveling
sales m a n, had complained
against being served with a
summons in a synagogue during
the Sabbath services. The
judge maintained that the law
of England stipulated that sum-
monses could be served on all
(lays except the Sabbath, i, e.,
the Christian Sabbath, or Sun-
day. The judge agreed, how-
ever, that the bailiff should not
have served the summons in the
synagogue while people were
gathered there for worship in
the manner in which he did.

LAND RE CLAMATION

Expenditures for Relief Jump 100 Per Cent During the Past Year; Illustrations of Seri,.
ices Rendered by Jewish Welfare Federation's Agency Reveal How
Federation, Emergency Re-
Families Are Aided and Kept Intact During Emergencies.
lief, Other Groups, to
Cyrus Adler.
Co-Operate.
On Jan. 1, 1113 0, the Jewish
(g oinitt's Nom. : T he followina
Jish So- '
' QUICK AID IS ASKED
1 •[ interest on the part of the worker e r
r third In a s eries of a rtic le. A hich ni,
r family
i o t Service Bureau had 263 o pen '
cuss's. ne,..nber, 1930, saw 1,Isor r o,rl,
ula
The WORK IS PLANNED TO
in T.. (so rsa J rwi s in behalf of the children.
TO AVERT COLLAPSE!
i hronielr to illuatr•te how the ar1111, I mother Waft friend:), and co-opera-
AVOID DUPLICATION
this rise to 411 toloen family cases. alti(t•ted with the Jewi,h wor • , 1...,1. five 01111 WAA greatly
concerned
section
of
Detroit
aid
the
needy
end
tin
All-Day Conference Attend- , , This fact is cited as e vidence that enado s su i n the preaent enwrgeney attn. 1Illtlut lending whatever assistance
the family agency of the Jewish slots.
Records
to be Confidential ;
.curie
she could toward clearing up the
ed by 500 Zionists and
SS'elfare Federation has been la- • '''''" ".. 10 . `kwi 'h 5. "' i.l Sl.ry. '" difficulties. She showed consider-
Will be Burned at End
llorealt .er%ea 10 cosine sufferin
III
.
boring
under
the
load
of
an
in-
Non-Zionists.
the present economic crisis).
able insight as regards the prob.
of Emergency.

Revision of Passfield's White
Paper Predicted by Dr.

, crease in the number of cases.

'
Just what does this mean?
Worker Handicapped.
NEW PORK.—Asa result off
It Illeallg that while the Jewish
dish are jumped
negotiations between represents . s a ,.ad S i- se i
to 100 cases for De- lenTLhe worker prepared a tentative
se
Bureau expended evildoer, 1930.
lives of the
plan of treatment but was unable
Agency and ths
fur re
duri
during
British government, a satisfactory only $1,304.03or
too follow it up due to the tremen-
Service Illustration.
a a
lnuty,
1930, th e exp en
rliture
agreement for revision of
dous increase in emergency
o.
cases.
t''''' (to r r elief jami le d to $2.618.23 for
The following family situation The worker explains that the fam-
Passlield W bite Paper will be
reached, more than 50 delegates December, 1930, an increase of illustrates what a service case is ily lives in a section of the city
of Zionist and non-Zionist organ. over 100 per cent.
and explains how the worker as- which is very difficult to reach by
signed was hindered in her attempt street car. Each time the worker
izations were told Sunday at an
Service Cases Increased.
to effect a constructive adjust- visited the family an entire fore-
all-day meeting in the Hotel Hilt-
Thus, though the monthly cane ment•
noon. at which they voted too launch
noon was consumed. Because of
load has not quite doubled, the
The A family is composed of the rapid 'increase in the number
a campaign to raise $2,500,000 for amount of money expended month-
1111111,
woman,
and
four
children.
of
emergency cases—and every
Jewish reconstruction activities in • i y
for relief has. In view of these The family was referred to the case must be seen within the first
Palestine,
Dc emergency signs one might well bureau after one of the children 24 hours after referral—the work-
Amon the
w are
Cyrus Adler, provisional chairman ask how else th e increased case had broken into it candy store andyr found that it Was impossible to
of the American members of the ode affected the bureau. The rec. stolen some merchandise. It Was spend a full half-day with one
Jewish Agency; Dr. Stephen S. ds show that in January, 1930, found that this child had been out family.
\Vise, Federal Judge Julian W. 84 service cases which had been of the home for some time due to
As a result, the shin of treat-
Mack, Dr. Lee K. Frankel, Nathan previously cared for by the bu. his inability to get along with his meat is being helot in abeyance
Straus Jr„ James Marshall, Rabid reau had to be neglected for a father.
until it will be possible for the
David de Scala Pool, Robert Szoltl, month to take care of new emerg-
A second child had likewise been worker to devote to the family
uas
ces. It should be under- having
aount of time it requires,
of administration of the em
o, considerable difficulty with the amount
that these service
Zionist Organization of America;
Children in Families.
(-Roes were his father and on several occasions
Louis Lips ky,. president of the cases which had been given
en much had stolen money. .
Many cases are referred to the
A thirst boy bureau
Zionist Organization of America attention previously; they were is likewise showing delinquent
fur investigation and
Felix M. Warburg sent a message families where a successful adjust- tendencies and steals whenever a treatment by the Jewish Child
urging support of the campaign. moult was both possible and likely. favorable opportunity presents it- Care Council. Of 211 families re-
The funds are to be raised be-
Nevertheless, with the rapid in- self. The fourth child, a girl, has Carved to the bureau where there
tween now and July 1.
clement of emergency cases, a low mentality, steals, and is re-
was it question of placing the chil-
i
such needy ones had to be given garde,' as a problem child in dren elsewhere, in only two fami-
Prompt Aid Is Asked.
first
consideration.
As
the
crisis
school.
lies was outside placement found
The speakers said Jewish recoil- 'om
,c
worse, the number of
s- •-
seen
The worker found that the to la. the only solution.
cases
which
necessarily
had
to
father
refused
to
admit
that
any
in the remaining, 24 families, a(-
were in danger of immediate col-' is,
lapse unless the Jews in America be neglected increased. This fig- problem existed and resented any
(Turn to Last Page)
raised funds to ward off the dan-
ger.
Morris Rothenberg, chair-
nmn of the drive, said that despite
Joseph Baratz Speaks
the disappointtnents experienced in
recent
e, . , nittu
onatttlion
sit that
tuli i s not
o t he
In Detroit On Sunday.

H. MEYERS ELECTED!'
CENTER TREASURER

the most serious problem confront-
Joseph Baratz, noted Pales-
mg the Jews in Palestine and else-
tine labor leader and member
, where, but the imminent danger of
of the Jewish workers' delega-
the disintegration of much of the Mrs. Andrew Wineman and
tion to this country, will speak
hard-earned economic position
Mrs. J. H. Ehrlich Added
at Northern High School at
through lack of means.
7 p. on. this Sunday, under
to Board of Directors.
Referring to the negotiations
auspices of the Palestine
now going on between British rep-
Labor committee. Mr. Baratz
At the last meeting of the board
resentatives and the British gov-
Will
discuss the present situa-
of directors of the Jewish Centers
ernment, Dr. Adler said:
tion in Palestine.
Association, Henry Meyers was
Joseph
Berets was the found-
A document will be produced elected treasurer to fill the va-
er of the prosperous colony De-
which no doubt will mitigate the candy created by the death of the
effects of the White Paper and re-
genie and also was instrumental
move the fears which the Paper
in organizing the Palestine Jew-
created. I think I ant not violating.
ish Labor Federation. Ile also
any confidence when I say at least
was secretary of the Agricul-
this much.
tural Union in Palestine.
"Na Shadow of Tannins."
I
This Saturday night and all
"Somehow, Si far as the 7ritish
day Sunday the Palestine Labor
Committee, which sponsors the
government is concerned, a mains
will be worked out by which the
Gewerkschaften campaign, will
conduct a houseAtehlouse and
Jewish population now in Palestine
strowt canvass for funds to help
will have its security and rights
raise its quota.
established unitby which recog-
.
nition
s
tion be given that the tobli•
cations under the mandate are not
simply for the local situation but
to the Jewish people as a whole.

SOKOLOW GREETED
ON 70TH BIRTHDAY

Noted Zionist Leader Hon-
ored by Jews Through.
out the World.

---

Monday morning will see the
opening of a clearing exchange
fur families receiving relief In t
city of Detroit from Jewish
groups,
At a meeting attended last Tues-
day by Irwin Yarrows of the De-
troit Jewish Emergency Relief
Committee, Mrs. Rose M. Lipson
of the Jewish Social Service Bu-
reau, Mrs. Harry Shulman of the
Home Relief Society, Mrs. Roy
Zamsky of the Zedakah Club, Mrs.
J. Zuckerman of the Jewish WO.
men's European Welfare, and
Mrs.
Oscar Robinson of the League of
Jewish Women's Organisations,
ipnl g
anbsuw
recarue . made for such a
clear.

Official acceptance by the Jew-
ish Social Service Bureau of
the

plan for a central
clearing ex-
change has been held up pending
meeting of the board of direc-

a

tors of that organization,
To Avoid Duplication,
No relief of any kind will be
distributed from the office of
the
clearing bureau, which will be lo -
cated at 8679 Twelfth street. This
bureau is being created for the
sole purpose of helping the relief-
giving organizations to conduct
their work without duplication
of

eirN"o"• a dministration

p

enses
ex
fo
the cle aring bureau are
to come
out of funds contributed for re -
lief. The necessary expenses fo e
the maintenance of the bureau as p
to come from voluntary contribu-
tions.

Records to Be Destroyed.
The records of the clearing bu

reau are to be held strictly confl -

dentiul. The organizations con-
cerned have delegated
Samuel Lo-
vine, executive secretary of
the
Jewish Centers Association, to
be
In complete charge of

It was

the bureau .

further decided that at
LONDON.--(J. T. A.) — From
of therof
pre
sen t emergency
all parts of the world came con: all
the the
end rerortf
the clearing ex
gratulatory telegrams and cables change would be burned in
the
to Nahum Sokolow, veteran Zion- presence of representatives of each
the organizations concerned .
ist leader and chairman of the Zion. of
The L
gue of Jewish Women's ea
Organizations has been accepted
Communities Respond to Us-
as impartial chairman and is plan-
ning to conduct a fund-raising
sishkin Plan; National Con-
campaign among its members.
ference at Washington.
Form Food Clubs,
The Detroit Jewish Emergency'
Relief
Fund
has decided on a
NEW YORK, N. Y.—An elabor-
novel
scheme to raise funds for the
ate plan for American Jewry's
re.
lief
of
needy
and unemployed.
participation on a large scale in
n
Sposored by II. H. Prenzlbeing
the Palestine loond redemption and
auer,
a serie s of "food
clubs" are
reclamation work of the Jewish
formed, to be known as "potato
National Fund, the agency of the
club," "onion club," bread club,"
Zionist movement fur the acquisi-
etc., members of these
(Turn to Page Two.)
tion of land in Palestine, will be
HERMAN A. AUGUST
be responsible for the groups to
raising of
submitted and acted upon at the
funds. or the securing of
fund's
tuitional
conference,
which
when all the judges of the Probate
the
foods by which their groups are
Court endorse,' his retention in will be helot in Washington, I). C.,
known. Dr. David Kliger of
office. Judge F:rvin R. Palmer, nn Sunday, Feb. 8. Five hundred
11814
Dexter boulevard heads the com-
lienry S. Hulbert, Edward ()mo- delegates, representing every Zion-
Christian Zionist Calls on
mittee which is organizing these
nolith' and George Read were ist group and all National Fun,'
"Whence and Whither," an in-
Hoover, Hertzog, Mac-
clubs, and he is assisted by Barney
unanimous in their commenda- committees functioning in many terpretation of sonic early Bible
Barnett,
Miss Mildred Yarrows,
,
tions of Mr. August and his quali- communities throughout the coun- 'polio's, will be the subject of Dr.
Donald to Back Cause.
Mrs. Eva Pollack, Max Silverman
try, will attend the sessions, under Leo M. Franklin's sermon Sunday
HENRY MEYERS
fications for the position.
and
Assistant
District Attorney
Mr. August was first appointed the chairmanship of Emanuel Neu- morning, Feb. 1, at 10:45.
In a communication to The De-
late Joseph Selling, and Mrs. An-
George Stutz. Plans for the for-
Public Administrootor in 1927, and mann, president of the fund.
temple!
mation of these clubs will be corn.
On Sunday, Feb. S. the temple
!drew
Ih'ineman and Mrs. Joseph II.
drew
troit Jewish Chronicle, Captain
Despite the economic &Tres-
has since demonstrates) his ability
observe Scout Day. in the
te at a meeting this Saturday
pled
Temple. The Boy Scout troops in Ehrlich were added to the board William Stanley Shaw. founder of
eve ning at the Shaarey Zedek
(Turn to Page Opposite Editorial) (Turn to Page Opposite Editorial) the Temple will attend in a
b.udy.' of Td hireecotthesr officers of the Jewish the Celtic Alliance, with offices at
ranch. Interested individuals are
Centers Association are: Milford 4, Bloomsbury Square, W. C. I,
asked to attend this meeting or
London, England, and New York
Stern, president; Harry Schein
sommunicate with Dr. Kliger,
NAHUM SOKOLOW
man, vice-president, Samuel Le oflices at 136 Liberty street, states
leadquarters of the Emergency
that he has started a movement to ist Executive, ohs, wan 70 years Relief Fund are at 8420 Twelfth
vine, executive secretary.
The members of the board o f interest the leading English-spank. old Jan. 2:3. Message:, have been s tre-et, telephone Madison 4340.
(Turn to Page Opposite Editorial)
directors are: Milton NI. Alexan ing power', of the world to back received from Palestine, Ness' York. Ira H. II. Prenzlauer is the
der, Miss Emma Butte!, Fred M. the movement for the settlement of Rumania, the Zionist Executive an d l' managing director of this relief
' the Zionist organizations of many 1 e ffort.
Butzel, Mrs. Joseph
Ehrlich, Jews in Palestine.
Captain Shaw stated his pe s e countries.
I
Rabbi Leon Fram, Joseph B. Gay-
Hon on the "Restoration of the
1
1 1
-I 11'
lh
Despite his advanced age, Dr.
Jews"
in
the
following
communica.
Soktolow
still
maintains
his
robust
Isaacs, Judge Harry B. Keidan,
Fifty Old Men and Women Are Cared For in Building on Brush and Edmund Plac
e; R
e- Sol R. Levin, Henry Meyers, Bene- tam to President !lancer, copies of , physique, and it is possible that he
ports of Want Are Disproven by Facts; Chronicle Representative Finds
detsun Netzorg, Robert J. New.
(Turn to Page Opposite Editorial) (Turn to last Page)
Charges Against Home to be False.
man Emanuel Paperno, Nate S.
.
Shapero, John Slawson, Mrs. Jo.
seph M. Welt, Mrs. David 13.
For er Detroiter Given Ap -
m
ongregation to Celebrate
Mr. Lieberman's Statement.
e, Mrs. Andrew Wineman•
In a well kept-up building, on
lees served to prove that the So (v.
pointment by Califor-
Occasion at Banquet
Max Lieberman, treasurer of the cupants of the home are satisfied and Henry Wineman.
he southwestern corner of Brush
flies Governor.
o
lk
s
H
ome
,
t
o
h
old
F
m
is
a sea .
street and Edmund Place, is to be J ew
and happy over the treatment ac-
Sunday Evening.
an
heroic
piece
resentative
of
The
Chronicl
e
foun d evidence ,, f
who corded them. With everythino: of ALEXANDER TO SPEAK
LOS ANGELES
.—( J. T. A.1 —
been carried on ins pected the home, that the place. te hulsknogwtnt o s
Sunday,

118S
f
sk
hich
ta
ON
Feb.), Congregation
eir.
CANTOR S JEWISH
N ord was received that Governor o woe iv
neo11 ,•,i
. :r", .
B
k
as comfort
I li
their
for noose e to A quarter 0 f a cent ury
synagogue
RADIO FORUM SUNDAY Interesting Prog ram P ,.epare(I for Commencement Eger- t 'nal Moshe will celebrate the
Mimes Ralph, Jr., appointed Benja-
is cl
of loyal Detroit Jewish abl e e as
t as
possible
ran and
under existing in the building,
her
wentieth
anniversary
of its from-
by
a
group
a happy group
min .1. Scheinman judge of one of
circumstances.
cisest United Hebrew Schools to Observe Chamisho
• will be found by the visitor.
d anon. Appropriate ceremonies
the municipal courts of Los Ange-
Milton Alexander, p rominent Il e
m asking the occasion will begin
"The in
are well taken
Fifty old men and women—the
Osor
b'Shvat
in
All
Branches
on
Spokesmen for the Old Isslks
Monday.
at
les to fill one of several vacancies.
Jewish communal le
r,
er -,
id- Home also expressed the hope that I nn
in this
9 6 — are care 0. f and are neve denied any-
youngest 65, the
p. m. Nlembers of the congrega-
nn
.•;•heinman, a Harvard I.aw School
of the board id. gover hors
ti iin, Sisterhood and Young Pen-
M r.
I ,b
le erman
sae . it will
. 1 f or i n t s buil o l- t h ung,
' b e
housed and cant
possible ion the instotu- , of the Union Amera sin Ilt.forew
The graduation exercises of ths Zackheim, president of
graduate, and former assistant dis-
stens;
t
p h..., Auxiliary and their friends
of the Jewish Old Folks Home "Plenty of food, the best of care thou to build more modern guar
trict attorney, has been very ac-
-: Congregations, will be the speaker Hebrew' High School of the United pn.sentat Hs of flowers,
k der- Iv ill participate in the celebration.
fetrooit. These men and wo- and a home-like environment ters in the near future. The pres.lnext Sunday, Fels 1, over W.
tive for the past five years in the oi on r D
M. Hebrew Schools will be held Wed- nrten children. The singing will
Ainnviia,
At the banquet to be hi-Id that
men
are
no
dace
this
institution
on
a
par
with
ent
tie-up
financially,
they
ex.'
B.
C.,
on
Cantor's
Radio
Forum
',wish community, having recent-
be led by Rey.
Milkovsky. e% . ening the speakers will he Fred
titestonftlua. any
l
other of its kind, It is true plained, is due to the depression.' hour
t ti
noi n e. "
nesday evening, Feb. 1, at 8:30
'Y completed his term of office as public c institu
which is conducted ever •
Chamisho ()so. h'Shvat , which 51 . Butzel Rabbi I
suffering
afriend- that •
.

home reveals at once
president of the Los Angeles Lodge
e of the spokesmen expressed • Sunday from 1 to 1:30. Mr. Alex- o'clock, in the auditorium of the conies this year on Worley, Feb. T empty Beth El,
and Rabbi Moses
age of funds, but this prevails in the hope that it may be possible: antler will speak on the subject, Philadelphia-Byron school. The fol-
13'nai B'rith. He has also been ac- ly and home-like atmosphere has
2, will be celebrated in all the Fi ocher, spiritual leader of the con-
e all i ns tit u ti on , a t p resen
t, due to to build a new home in the near '"Contriliutons of Reform .lads. lowing boys and girls will receive branches of the United Hebrew
tive in other community philan- , heen created for them, with th
g regation.
best of care, best of food and with the depression."
future on the institution's site atlism." This address was delivered high school diplomas: Max Chom-
thropic affairs, especially in con-
Schools
in
the
usual
manner
by
in-

Statements Corroborated.
Sr onment which enables the
Linwood and Davidson
. by Mr. Alexander at the convention sky, lo•0 Gurko, Oscar Colton, dulging in the eating of Palestin. a Arrangements for the banquet
nection with the Hebrew }kale for an en% ■
nil program are in the hands of
The Chronicle representative
( folks too observe the Jewish
Officers end Founder..
the Aged and the Hebrew Free age1
1 , 4 the Union American Hebrew Freda Guile, Anna Zack, Celia ion fruit, singing of appropriate 1
religion and traditions within the found the statements of Mr. Lieb-
rs. Joseph Kornfield, Mrs. Joseph
Officers
of
the
home
are:
.Jacob
I
Loan Association.
Congregations last week in Phila. Fine, itzchnk Panush, Louis KO- songs and in general getting Sc- M
o
erman
and
Mr.
Levine
corrob
idler and Ernest Goodfriend. Fol-
home.
rat. Levine, president; Louis Dann, ' delphia and received nation-wide retz, Miriam
Nakelsky, Aaron quainted with things Palestinian. to
Went.
wing the banquet and program,
ed in the excellent condition in first vice-president ; David Oppen- . attention.
Deny
Reports
of
Reitman, Zelda Rosenthal and In !Male schools the celebration d
Former Detroiter.
slicing will conclude the evening.
The heads of the Jewish Old which the home la, kept up. An helm, second vice-president; Max,
Benjamin J. Scheinman, son of
The musical program will tea- Dora Hellman. Choomsky is presi- will he held in the assembly hall,
of whom have old building, with o ut th e late s
B'nai Mosho's History.
t Lieberman, treasurer; NI. Weiss.' tare Stanislaw Schapiro, first rite dent of the class and Gurko is where all classes will participate.
Mr. and Mrs. Israel Scheinman, Folks Home, some
During the first year of its exist-
formerly of Detroit, wax horn here devoted themselves to the interests modern conveniences which the wasser, superintendent; Ezra Kor-; linist of the Detroit Symphony Or- chairman of the commencement In other branches the celebration • en
s°, the congregation worshipped
(of
the
institution
since
its
founds-
leaders
crave
for
it,
it
is
neverthe•
man.
secretary.
and studied in Detroit public
l chestra, in a group of selections, exercise..
will be held in the different class. in a hall at Hastings and Adelaide
schools. He lived in Detroit until lion, managed, in the past, year, in less kept neat and is made corn-
The home is being taken rare of I with George Galvani, soloist of the
The program for the evening rooms.
st
reets. The sec year found
six years ago, when he moved to spite of the economic crisis, to fortable for the inmates. Those by a matron, four girls on the Temple Beth El.
follows:
The Woman's I.eague of the m embers in the Hannah Schloss
Los Angeles with his family. He keep the home functioning on a in charge explained that the slight. floors, and a janitor. A speoiall The Jewish news of the week will
Processional by graduates; open- United Hebrew Schools will cede- b
of
uncleanliness
uniting,
and the following year
Jacob
Levin
has
est
sign
is cook prepares the meals for the in. be broadcast by Philip Slomolvitz, ing remarks, by Len Gurko; Ile. !irate Chamisho Osor b'Shvat Mon.• t
received his A. B. degree from the normal basis.
an d was lone
hey rented quarters in a hall on
rniversity of Michigan and his served as president of the institu- promptly attended to
mates in accordance with the ilie.1 editor of The Detroit Jewish brew poem, interpretation and day afternoon, Fcb. 2. at 2:30 Ii
acting,.
near
Brewster.
chartered
May
ago
exterminated;
that
at
no
time
tart'
laws.
The
home
nurse
is
,
Chronicle.
Was
LL.B. from Harvard. During the tion since it
recitation by Anna Zack; violin o'clock, in the Philadelphia-Byron
In 1915 the congregation was
21, 1907.
has a shortage of funds affected always on duty, and special nurses I Aaron Kurland is chairman of solo. by Itzehok Panush; Hebrew School. Several sketches will
war, he was an ensign in the C.
be a: rung enough to purchase a mod-
Having
managed
to
carry
on
the
the
diet
in
the
home.
Navy. He is a brother of Harry
are occasionally sent by relatives ' the Jewish Radio Forum sponsored address on "The Bible," by Doro- presented by some at the kinder- es
t home on Eliot street near Best-
Following a thorough inspection of the inmates to care for them in i by Joseph Cantor of Cantor's Fur-
S. Scheinman, former assistant battles for the support of the insti.
thy lielman: class songs, by school garten children and other fine tea- in irs, which satisfied its purpose
Prosecuting attorney of Detroit, Onion in the face of economic diffi. of the home, The Detroit Jewish time of sickness,
niture Shop on Twelfth street.
chorus;
address, by Bernard tures will be part o: this unique un til the early part of 1917. when,
who is practicing law here with of- sullies, leaders of the Jewish Old Chronicle representative found The home was chartered on i On Sunday, Feb. 8, Joseph J. Isaacs; valedictory. by Oscar Col. program.
can der the leadership of the late
flees at 2421 F'iret National Bank Folks Home are indignant over these statements to be modest de - May 21, 1907, by Jacob Levine, Cummins, publisher of The Den, it ten; parchment ceremony. Freda
The $3 membership campaign 11
Building.
current reports. which found an scriPtions of the true conditions in Meyer Smith, Aaron Ackermln, Jewish Chronicle and the B'nai Guile, Akivah Drasnin; debate in that is being launched by the ti erman Eichner, the eongrega-
on. at that time embracing about
Both Benjamin J. and !lorry S. echo in an editorial in last week's the home, and the reports, as and the following leaders who have 1 B'rith Messenger of I.os Angeles, Hebrew. by Zelda Rosenthal and league has attracted many work- 71
I families, felt sufficiently strong
ficheinman are prominent in nu. 1 , 511P of The Chronicle, to the e f• echoed in last week's issue, to have since passed away:
Ilime Koff-laho is on a brief visit in Detroit Leo Gumbo; presentation of gift, Cr, and it is the belief of the corn. to erect a
synagogue at Garfield
firma' activities of 7A•ta Beta Tau I feet that the home is neglected for been circulated unfairly.
man. William Saulson, Hyman t froom Los Angeles, will be the by Celia Fine; greetings from mittee in charge that this cam. an
d Beaubien streets, to answer
want
of
funds
and
that
the
inmates
The
friendly
spirit
that
exists
Ileckelman,
Simon
Harris,
Louis
speaker
and
will
discus,
the
Fraternity, Judge Scheinman brings
ern- alumni and Woman's League; pres- coign will be a phenomenal sue• i religtous, educational and recrea-
the national secretary.
are suffenng as a resu
between the inmates and the lead- Goodman, Rabbi Judah L. Levin. ployment problem
entation of diplomas, by M. 11.;cess.
IT urn to Pace

SCHEINMAN CHOSEN
FOR L. A. JUDGESHIP

IN ZION IS PLANNED

FRANKLIN TO SPEAK
ON BIBLE LEGENDS

URGES POWERS TO
SUPPORT ZIONISM

JEWISH OLD FOLKS HOME OF DETROIT
CARRIES ON HEROIC PIECE OF WORK
IN SPITE OF ECONOMIC DEPRESSIO

B'NAI MOSHE MARKS
20111 ANNIVERSARY

Graduation of Hebrew High School
To Take 13 1ace Wednesday E vemng

Opposite Editorial)

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