v ixen- ea Palish Periodeal Cotter CLOWN AVINUI • CINCINNATI 20, OHIO ifiEvEntonyErnsnORorna4 October 23, 1936 and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE Buy Fine Furniture WHOLESALE— Through your own dealer from the most complete selection in the country. • FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE WE ARE OPEN 'Mondays & Wednesdays till 9 p. m. America's foremost manu- facturers are represented on the floors of SCHOR'S Wholesale establishment. We wish to emphasize that the public may procure this fine furni- ture through any dealer of their own choice. SCH FUIVNITUIVE COMPANY 8926 Twelfth Street WHOLESALE ONLY Showroom Hours: 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. Daily MONDAYS and WEDNESDAYS TILL 9 P. M. r. Ruiurxi Pentant Rata 810 beautifully furnished outside rooms. All with private tub ond shower baths-at lowest possible rotes in down- town Detroit for perman- ent guests. You can live in luxurious comfort inexpensively. CADILLAC SQUARE AT BATES YUMMY Philomathic Misses Meeting for Maccabee Game TODAY L TOMORROW Alter hoer ALWAYS INI SAM! 0000 a_.9 atla „‘ THE „.. BEER IN THE GREEN BOTTLE ARGO FURNACE OIL LA 4500 In favor of the Maccabee-All- •tar soccer game, the Philomathic Debating Club did not hold its weekly meeting Sunday, Oct. 18. The program for the next meet- ing, to be held at 2 p. m., Sun- day, Oct. 25, will feature a debate on the subject: "Resolved, that the city of Detroit own and oper- ate an electric plant for the peo- ple of metropolitan Detroit." The , participants will be: Sam Hertz- ' berg and Murray Frosh, affirma- live: Norman Leemon and Morris Green. negative. An invitation is once more ex- tended to any Jewish young man between the ages of 14 and 21 who is interested in public speak- ing, to attend any weekly meet- ing, held Sundays at the Philadel- , phis-Byron Hebrew School. LECTURER TO SHOW NAZIS' OPERATIONS, cON , LITED FROM PAGE ONE) I studied conditions from every I angle. His +tory is frank, reveal-1 ing and straight from the shoul- der. Tickets for "Germany Under Hitler" are now on tale at the World Adventure office at the De- troit Institute of Arts Center Basketball Team to Begin Practice Oct. 26 Members of the Jewish Com- munity' Center's varsity basket• ball team will begin practice on Monday evening, Oct. 26, at 10 o'clock in the Center gymnasium. Sam Babcock, who has coached the Center team for a number of years, will again be the coach. Practice will be held every Monday and Wednesday at 10 p. m. Star players, good players and peornising players who are inter- vete(' are invited to the first prac- tice on Monday, Oct. 26, u Huns on the team are available. Two julets of Cellophane, net Director George Cukor spends:ONE but TWO, stand guard ever most of his time away from work: the freshness of the prom crop in his new two-acre garden. tobacco of 044 Gold Cigarette A REFORM JEW ON PARADE CONCLUDED from EDITORIAL. PAGE) the pageant of Israel that had been marching with Torah even from Sinai? I should have been conscious of all the sainted ghosts from Moses down, marching with me in these aisles, their fingers touching the silver crowns to make them tinkle as I marched. My soul should have been addressing them: "0 my fa- thers! Here am I still march- ing in the everlasting parade of Israel!" But, in fact, Israel was scarcely there. Israel's wife had come to the service of the Torah but Israel was at his business. Israel had no time for this. Instead of feeling as a marcher in an immense and mystical pageant I was like a straggler far from the tail-end of a parade. The cap- tains and kings had marched on and we eight Torah-bear- ers were like lost wanderers left over from Reform Judaism. Not that I could take to my- self any praise for being there: "Ah, Segal, you are one of the few of the faithful!" . . . No! I had come to carry the Torah as a favor to the rabbi. I had been invited and had consid- ered whether I ought to take time off for this, and finally had said, "Well, once a year I can afford it." So I was a supernumerary, like the boys on the street who are brought in to make the sem- blance of a parade on a stage; I and the seven other bearers of the Torah. Therefore, as I marched, my thoughts seemed enveloped in the twilight of Reform Judaism rather than in the dazzling glory of the Torah which had come down from Sinai even unto this day. My eyes con- templated the rows of pretty fall millinery and counted male heads of Israel .. . one .. two ... three .. 25 men of Israel in all! . . mostly old, bald heads that were retired and hadn't anything else to do this day. Had Reform Judaism become but the pastime of the ladies' hour? I was mindful of simi- lar procession in the Orthodox synagogues . . . Eager men carrying the scrolls with the zeal of torchbearers . .. Feet almost dancing with joy for the privilege of marching with Torah . . . Rapt Jews in the aisles bending to kiss the scrolls as they passed by. Upon the hands of the eight supernumeraries the weight of the law grew heavier at each step. Thank goodness, soon we would be back at the altar and could rest this load . . . How long the center aisle . . . In the orthodox synagogues they were marching seven times and considered it was a distance short enough to be al- lowed to march with Torah. "You," I mused, "have writ- ten about the imminent death of Orthodoxy, but today you seem like a pall-bearer ,of Reform and a hired.. pall-bearer at that . . . A stooge! . . . Consider: Which is the more vital . . . Orthodoxy or Reform?" We (the Reform Jews) had be- come symbolized in these eight stooges who at a signal from the rabbi had mounted the altar to go through their little part of Juda- ism. I could only feel sorry for the earnest rabbis who were leading this procession. They had been r0 zealous to give some warmth to the naked, chilly spirit of Re- form Judaism, to illuminate Re- form Jewish eyes with something of the drama of the Jewish story, to make Judaism more than the cold print of the Union prayer book. They had staged a lovely drama, what with children bear- ing fruits and flowers, what with fresh young voices singing, what with a blessing laid on each child's head; but Reform Jewry cared little enough. Reform Jewry was in the eight marching stooges. In the