▪ ▪ rimprivordEmsnetRONIGLE PAGE NINE sad THE LEGAL CHRONICLE DR. CARL FISHEL TO VISIT DETROIT IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIII IIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIillllllli llllllllllll lllllllillllllll ~ lllllllllillllllllillilllilllllllllil llllllil llllllllllll lllllllllllillllllll lllllllllllll llllllllilllllllllllil llllll ~ illnununununnnunnuuuuuuumummumnunuuuuuuuuuuuwunu Medical Director of Los Angeles Sanatorium to Address Detroit Workers. Detroit Auxiliary of Los Angeles Tubercular Sanatorium is to have as its guest Dr. Carl Fishel, medi- cal director of the sanatorium. Dr. Fishel, who is on tour to visit different institutions, will stop off for a short stay In Detroit to greet the Auxiliary for all it has done for the benefit of the Detroit pa- tients who are at present at the Duarte, Col., institution. A special meeting of the board of directors will be held Saturday night, May 21, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar l'aransky, 2502 West Buena Vista. The meeting will be addressed by Dr. Fishel and all board members are urged to at- tend. Complete arrangements for the tag week of the Auxiliary, begin- ning May 28, are reported success- ful by Mr. Weinberg, chairman, and Mr. Hyman, secretary of this proj- ect. Additional volunteer workers may call Sarah Pincus, Car. 03134. The next meeting of the Auxili- ary conference will be held Thurs- day evening, 527 Holbrook. Dele- gates of organizations and clubs are asked to be present. A GROUP OF THE KEYMEN OF DIVISIONS IN ALLIED CAMPAIGN /Mo t • GOOD FURNITURE IS NOT EXPENSIVE S WA; AN;), ,aak4.?;,;;Xt.Z.z,,toM • GEORGE STUTZ IRVING W. BLUMBERG hank o ROBERT MARWIL READIN' AND WRITIN' A Weekly Review of Books for the Jewish Reader. By BERNARD POSTAL. Although immigration has been a tremendous factor in the de- velopment of America in the past century, autobiographical stories by immigrants of their own role in America have been all too few. While American literature does have a number of sagas of Ameri- can life as seen by immigrants, most of these are of the from steerage to success' type., It is therefore with considerable pleas- ure that we turned to a different kind of immigrant's biography. "Laughing in the Jungle," by Louis Adamic (Harper & Broth- ers, $3). Most of thq immigrants who have written about America have found America too easy to conquer or too much to cope with and therefore they have been either disciples of the god success or bitter and dissillusioned idealists. Adamic's life, and therefore his book, are in neither of these cate- gories. "Laughing in the Jungle" is an unvarnished report of what the immigrant in the United States has to contend with. For the Confidence Awarded CHARLES E. FEINBERG MRS. SIDNEY J. ALLEN Lounge Chairs, Occasional Chairs, Lamps, Tables, Odd Sale Tags Remain 0 Rearrangement of all floors is necessary—new merchan- dise is arriving—Our Gratiot Store is reopened—all this is a task of great importance and does not permit of time to re-ticket all merchandise. Hence the sale tags remain on One of a Kind and Odd pieces until Saturday, May 21st—buy early. Outdoor Furniture MRS. HERBERT H. WARNER JAMES A. KATES The two Great PRINGLE Stores feature Outdoor Fur- niture in a blaze of color and new ideas--individual pieces for the laws—yacht--sea shore or Sunroorn—of course they are "Built-In" Quality construction, SAMUEL LEVINE Tubular steel frame In choice of black, green or orange finieh—adjuotable Beach or Lawn Chair "P "d "d" .ov e r- ti of _$15.00 TWO STORES PRINGLE FURNITURE COMPANY 2990 W. Grand Boulevard opp. Fisher Bldg and 43I Gratiot Ave. eA LOUIS BLUMBERG CHARLES AGREE PAUL L. BAERWALD RABBI JONAH B WISE. N.B.L. JAMES N GEORGE W GOLDSTEIN. ROSENBERG. NAUMBURG. f% e .*:€1 INt_4"./.4. 44.NYINAWAY.tY AY . fMktiW . AS. (4 . . ftWe(A. ii‘l42:11VSN'AANYAW.N VA 'AVAVN/. ..‘ JOSEPH BING Hebrew Union College Grad. 'THE GOLDEN MOUNTAIN uate Appointedjo Liver- A Review of Meyer Levin's Volume pool, England, Pulpit. of Chassidic Stories. Raphael II. Levine, Duluth, Minn., who will be ordained at the Hebrew Union College on May 28, has accepted an invitation to be By. Dr. Stephen S. Wise in "Opinion." the field, fed and comforted them, communed with them, and his soul was full of deepest compassion for them. Rabbi lenel sat In the midst of It: Ha soul ten triunity bathed In the divine Ore, Ile tout wsa filled with entacy Ile heard Rabbi Israel'. word. " Of rrrrr deed we do, a good •ngel is born. Of even' bad deed, • In all our deed. of our dally life we ser•e God as directly as though our deed. went prayers. When we eat, when we work. when we sing, when we wash ourselves, we •re praying to God. "Therefore we should live constantly In hishest Joy, for rrrrr thing that we do Is an offering to God.... "The lords catn• to On outside of the inoce.,..nhorrid ed In wonder at th• eon- , ors. They nid, 'There Is no way to come to the king?'" hod onset is Let it not be imagined that this bore. is a choice volume for juveniles alone. For "The Golden Mountain" will he read and re-read with infin- ite delight by young folk of eight to eighty. It is for the child-like spirit of the unaging. That is why, 200 years ester their first telling, these legends come to us with fresh- ness of beauty and irrestible ap- t ell. ! Sider Zd sti' 177teMded gleti ddenri peal. It amuses me to think of what trey. lead to the hitter - will be the reaction to this volume, Then Rabbi Israel added. "So we may find " of such as hold that Jewishness is "Tak•all • . yott p rale Rabbit solely law and wisdom and the pre. brae!, "and sell it for sold. 'rain all the d. nd, r,.. alor agmt .h; roa isions. Here is sheerest mysticism g.i,bid.n..2 .thr ma . . in all the lawless pamionatteness nearlyone, ter to yourself that he Is of of the divine quest. And we know Tfhedettftrizd. family. tVre away , that these legends are nothing more ;ensile of poor lad e= your Mind than a mid-eighteenth century- ha left in a this world, and when 1 ho ha•e sou crystallization of the Jew's never- n eed ;Pet, rs telt.. moos dying sense of the divine immed. then yourself. Cl,., and Ion those lacy. Here are psalmody and pro- to whom you are gi•ing...." But I warn the reader of this phecy translated into the folk-lore of them that see God and walk with that of "The Golden Mountain,' H. Him. L. Mencken will disprove; George From out of the riches of the Jean Nathan will rave; John Ers- book, ■ study of which has been kine may borrow, and the pulpit a most profitable delight, I cull ■ rationalists will baldly dissent. Nonetheless "The Golden Mointain" few passages: is a priceless gift, the unfolding of Rabbi Elven. nid to the boy, "Hy treasures too long hidden from child. know that the enerny sheath be with you. he Jews and Christians, who view Jud- be in the shadows of your dream. and In your thineflesh. for aism as law, as theology, as litera- he the other pert of yourself. There will be tie.r. when like • lightning- ture, but not as life. These are stroller you wilt pierce into hla farthest pages out of the book of Jewish life hWlnt ttt i l ace. and h• will fede fon /LS imperishable. lie. a th A voyage of re-discovery may become as thrilling as a voyage of discovery. Almost more thrill. ing, for literary and cultural re- discovery comes as a rule to the more mature and penetrating spirit. Meyer Levin's "The Golden Moun- tain" (published by Jonathan Cape and Robert Ballou, 129 East Forty- Sixth street, New York, $3.) will, I trust, give to many, many readers the joyous thrill of re-discovery of something beautiful and precious. Many of us have read and known something of the many Chassidic legends, more particularly since their utilization by two great story- tellers, Sholem Ankh and Israel Zangwill, in the painfully prosaic German versions of Chaim Bloch, and, above all, in their moving and atmospheric retelling by Martin Huber. But now the author—for here is creation as well as rendition—Mey- er Levin, has at last set down in a style unerringly adapted to the theme some of the best and best. RAPHAEL H. LEVINE known of the legends of Israel Baal rabbi of the Liberal Jewish Syna- Shem. This publication means the gogue of Liverpool, England. recovery of a priceless treasure. lie,. when ite will surrounri ere you alit with Il. of darknna and noll VII stand Before coming to the Hebrew The stories areas unique as is the of him they celebrate, the most Silva of dniedird lidurdretyn It e i n; Union College Mr. Levine studied life .74;`. °51.7 Greyhound Service Reduces , r ior. widely pervasive Jewish figure of 0 .1 I.% lidecz,re . cf000r .y Ion ; Cost; Affords Pleasure law at the University of Minne- the eighteenth century, Rabbi Is- vol of God. on Excellent Roads. sota, from which he was graduated rael. the Carpathian saint and won- your thul Is a imrt In Imre It was rind. "Before you Lit in 1926. While • student at the der-worker. These tales and leg- n,ohlir n Cod od e onwo, ha e ei ite ...y_e s n. Greyhound lines, at a reduced on. for with i n ends will survive Chassidism, Hebrew Union College, Mr. Levine which, though of incredible moment of the Innocent •ools of Thee cost for travel, affords an oppor- !earl.. throuich your life on earth. tunity for an enhanced vacation was for three years assistant edi- for some generations, will soon be- to tin not kor afraid of man and do not fear the enemy, for tin bititnt power Is In in the use of these lines because tor of the "Every Friday," • Cin.' come little more than • memory. rots ... of the wonderful sights afforded Very difficult to classify these cinnati Anglo-Jewish weekly. lie The desire for knotylede• earn• Into by the choice of roads. egends! They the quintess- hint, tied the Joy that was else. hire was also student rabbi of Rich- ence of the Jewish are UT Greyhound lines this year at:g- spirit, enshrined flowers •at! Went. in the faint it loneer ufficlent. Hi. mind mond. Incl., for two years. Ser.:, reat, as vacation trips, Washing- n legendary form. Easy enough end thi rsty, but hi thirst coo d'wasd d id be ton, where the bicentennial cele- During his One yearn at the col- to institute all sorts of compari- quenched elle those water. that ► 44' for sea deep I the destont wells bration is observed; Los Angeles, lege Mr. Levine was awarded sev- sons and contrasts. Indeed, they cooled of tenter,. and the Adre withle hire wee tend alone though for the Olympic games; Minnesota. related in ter. eral scholarships and also wrote a of the eon that burn. the sod does for its lakes; Thousand Islands, number of prize winning essays in t airs aspects to the older Indian taleal , set taints.... mak renerstioe ono Is thee. te Michigan lake resorts, Ozark the field of social studies. His a he Arthurian legends, the later, a la f ir tiormlehoet his lifetime tin rand le Mountains, Atlantic City, Denver graduation thesis dealt with "The nd despite all their wonder, the tint le lighted teen hoes . A nodle may eerer get dowl. Add and the Rockies, homelier tales of Anderson and as well as nu- s1 Economic Position of W omen merous other places ttqq which the Reflected in the Bible and Tal- t Grimm. Their uniqueness lies In f Kf ■ al I. (1.0 .. rvw”soe'.'tatve ":r:atno" Greyhound lines heir God-intoxication. The psalms! another esch um. OlemIntes tin take' nista. mud." tit Now, a. le stewed !peps. am! deeper re not fuller of God than there leg- late the pare "Ham of weadet, Mr. Levine's duties will begin I e nds, and conversely these are as non that was sheet 11. lane a uzi flee He about the middle of August. lie It rely the poetry of the heavenward I light who wIll rerango every af- .eel le *tram from will sail for England the latter; soaring soul. One thinks at time' reel He del set Mee • km* fee hk front amass lot to live tong. he read I: the Itleadastle• Wt part of July, accompanied by his of Francis of Multi, for Rabbi Is- rreallad, hovered sheet 51w wittro Ire sat s ot JOSEPH C. HYMAN. l', 1 [10N11,111 1111t :i'' 11191 1r - Pieces, etc. Helping the Jew to help himself is the major task of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee in its effort to rehabilitate millions of Jews in Eastern and Central Europe, who are now in desperate straits. In Poland alone the Comniittee reports that relief, medical and child care and social feconstructive activities are being carried on in 835 cities, towns and hamlets, having Jewish population of more than three hundred. An important part of the Committee's welfare program was the establishment of free loan societies in 1926. Since that time 759 such institutions have been organized, which in six years of existence have already extended loans totalling $9,800,000 to 873,000 borrowers. Last year 165,000 loans were made amountin to g almost $2,000600. As a result of these loans, hundreds of „thousands of heads of families were enabled "to get on their feet" and earn livelihoOds for themselves and dependents. The present financial crisis has created a serious situation among the Jews of Poland, causing much misery and suffering. Aid from American Jewry is urgently needed at this time and stens sr' 5^ , ^ - •"'—^ "^-t, r theleadership of Rabbi Jonah B. Wise, of New York City, to raise sufficient funds to permit the Committee to carry on its social welfare and economic program abroad at least on a minimum scale. The map printed along- sideAndicates the widespread development of the free loan activity in Poland alone, HERBERT H. LEN MAN. The Surplus Stock Disposal Sale has ended—thousands at- tended, purchased, and were convinced of the marvelous values offered--this tremendous selling has depleted our stocks in some lines—leaving in many instances "just one of a kind" in living - room, bedroom, and dining - room suites 0 — Map Showing Development of Free Loan Society Work of American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee in Poland and American Jewish Leaders Who Are Aiding in Effort to Rehabilitate Millions of Destitute Jews in Eastern and Central Europe FELIX M. WA RBU RG . Pringle Built-In Quality Furniture One of a Kind and Odd Pieces IttlINARD ISAACS Ladies Auxiliary of the Jew- ish National Fund. A meeting of the board of di- rectors of the Ladies' Auxiliary of the Jewish National Fund was held at the home of Mrs. Max Hayman, 3748 Wager avenue, on Wednesday, May 4, at which time members were organized to work for the Allied drive. Sirs. Elisa- beth Finley spoke in behalf of the Allied Jewish Campaign. Sirs. Max Weksler was appointed cap- tain of the auxiliary team. Mrs. Eli Sachse, chairman of the tree planting fund of the Jewish National Fund, appealed of mem- bers to plant trees in memory or in honor of mothers for Mother's Day. Two Golden Book inscriptions certificates were presented at the meeting, one to Mrs. E. Lefkowitz and one to the Ladies' Auxiliary of the Jewish National Fund. A Golden Book inscription costs 1100. The Ladies' Auxiliary takes this means of honoring members for their outstanding work and achievements. Many members have thus been honored in the past and many more names have been inscribed, whose certificates will arrive within the near future from Palestine. Mrs. H. Milkovsky is president of the Auxiliary. /44:4VV I ' / ,, tis