Aliferkalf 7ewish Periodical Cotter

CLIFTON AVENUE • CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

r.

September 19. 1941

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle

3

Noah Nachbush's
Special Services
Concert Tuesday
For Non-Members
At Temple Beth El
The concert arranged in hon-

IF YOU PREPARE
YOUR FOODS
WITH

tAt

or of Noah Nachbush, the cele-
brated Yiddish stage artist who
was prominently identified with
the founding of the famous Vil-

Kos

Ifrtrftinf Muff Mil

A pure vegetable

shortening. For
cooking, baking and
frying all your meat
and dairy dishes.
Easy to digest; no
after-taste. No
smoke or unpleas-
ant odor when you
fry the NYAFAT
way.

Have you tried:
Weed Kosher Condensed Soups
Five Varieties

"A Spoonful Invites a Plateful"

1,

AT YOUR GROCER'S

Temple Israel
Opens Its Career
As a Congregation

With the opening words of the
service for Rosh Hashonah eve,
Temple Israel opens its career
as a congregation. It opens with
500 members who with their
families will fill the entire seat-
ing capacity of the auditorium
of' the Detroit Institute of Arts.
The services will begin Sun-
day evening, Sept. 21, at 8
o'clock.
Temple Israel will be one of
the first liberal congregations
of the middlewest to have a can-
tor lead in the chanting and in
the singing of the ritual serv-
ices. Cantor Robert S. Tulman
and the Temple Israel quartet,
led by Julius Chajes, made a
deep impression at the installa-
tion service.
Miss Marguerite Kozenn will
render special solos at each of
the Holy Day Services.
"Victory" will be the subject
of Rabbi Leon Fram's opening
sermon. His subject for the New
Year morning service which will
take place Monday morning,
Sept. 22, at 10 o'clock, will be,
"A New World".
In the course of this service,
the Temple's first scroll of the
Torah, a gift of Mrs. Alexander
Freeman, will be dedicated.
The enrollment of the relig-
ious school of Temple Israel
which meets at the Hampton
Public School on Warrington
Drive has reached 500.
The special children's service
for the High Holy Days will
take place in the Detroit Insti-
tute of Arts on the Day of
Atonement, Wednesday,. Oct. 1,
at 2 p. m. Rabbi Fram will tell
a Yom Kippur story and Can-
tor Tulman and the quartet will
sing songs of a special appeal,
to the children.
The executive committee of
Temple Israel will soon announce
the auditorium where regular
Friday evening services will be
held, and where Rabbi Fram will
continue his classes in adult Jew-
ish education.
The charter confirmation class
has already begun its sessions
and the charter high school grad-
uating class will be organized
next Sunday.
The young people's group of
Temple Israel held its organiza-
tion meeting at the Jewish Com-
munity Unter, last Sunday. Sev-
enty .young people registered as
&gilding members of the youth
group. It is planned that the
youth group members shall be
members of the congregation. An
attractive program of activities,
social, religious, educational and
communal, was proposed by the
organizing committee headed by
Robert Mazer.
Prayer books which will be
required by members for Holy
Days services are on sale in the
Temple office, 1006 Fox Bldg.

on the second day of Rosh
Hashonah, Tuesday, Sept. 23, at
10:30 a. m., he will preach on
"Human Impatience-Divine Pati-
ence: A Will to Believe".
Cantor Abraham Singer and
A separate service for non-
members, in the Brown Memo- his choir under the direction of
rial Chapel, will be an important
part of the observance of Rosh
Hashonah at Temple Beth El,
Woodward at Gladstone.
Dr. A. N. Franzblau, head of
the department of religious edu-
cation at Hebrew Union College,.
has been brought from Cincin-
nati to alternate with Dr. Leo
M. Franklin in conducting serv-
ices.
Rosh Hashonah services will
be held at 7:30 o'clock Sunday
evening and at 10 o'clock Mon-
day morning.
A special children's service
will be held at 2 p. m. Monday
in the Main Auditorium.
Persons desiring to attend may
make reservations at the office
of Temple Beth El.

Dan Frohman will conduct the
services beginning on Sunday
evening, Sept. 21, at 6:30 p. m.,
and on both days Rosh Hashonah,
Monday and Tuesday mornings.
Services in the morning of Holy
Days begin at 8 a. m.

Rabbi J. S. Sperka's
Holy Day Sermons

NOAH NACHBUSH

na roupe, will be held next
Tuesday evening at the Arbeiter
Ring Educational Center, 11535
Linwood Ave., at 8:30 p. m.
This event was arranged as a
farewell in honor of Mr. Nach-
bush, who is leaving for Los An-
geles, where he plans to continue
his work of propagating in-
creased efforts for greater Jewish
cultural work.
For tickets and information
regarding this concert, call UN.
1-8576.
The Vilna Troupe was born
in that renowned Jewish city in
Lithuania whose name it bears,
and its fame spread throughout
the world. Noah Nachbush earn-
ed unmeasured admiration from
theater lovers for his great share
in making the Vilna Troupe
famous. He i8 an artist of the
first rank. Whatever he does,
whether singing chasidic chants
or interpreting dramatic moments
in Jewish life, Nachbush fath-
oms depths that can only be
reached by an artist of a very
high caliber. He personifies Jew-
ish life in all of its phases with
its profound complexities and
mystic light.
Theater lovers throughout the
world have been thrilled by the
depth of Nachbush's understand-
ing of character and his portray-
al of Jewish life. Whether it
was in the ghetto of Vilna, or
in playful Vienna, or in critical
Berlin—Holland, Belgium, Amer-
ica—everywhere Nachbush called
forth an enthusiasm from his
audience that has rarely been
equalled by any performer.

Rabbi Joshua S. Sperka of
Congregation Bnai David, Elm-
hurst and 14th, will occupy the
pulpit and preach the sermons
during all services on the High
Holy Days.
The main sermons of Rosh
Hashonah, Yom Kippur and Suc-
coth form one coherent part.
"The Light-House in Darkness:
A Will to Know" will deal with
the Jewish concepts, value and
urgent need for education and
knowledge. "Human Impatience-
Divine Patience: A Will to Be-
lieve" will deal with the general
problem of faith in time of
crisis. "Watchman What of the
Night: A Will to do" will deal
with the world and Palestinian
situations and how we can help
materially and hasten morally
the "gehlah". "The Vitality of
Orthodoxy: A Will to Conse-
crate" will be a discussion on
values of a true faith and the
way for its preservation if we
are willing to make sacrifices for
the higher consecrated vision of
our eternal Ideal. "The Fallen
Sukah: A Will to Endure" will
deal with Survival values. On
the first day of Rosh Hashonah,
Monday, Sept. 22, at 10:30 a. m.,
Rabbi Sperka will preach the
sermon on "The Light-House In
Darkness: A Will to Know" and

wish all our friends and

patrons and all the Jewish

peoplea year of health,

happiness and prosperity

41ife-44-
ABusliEnzei

' 2

SOMETHING OW HAS BEEN ADDED

Commons Reassured on Treat-
ment of Germany's Jewish

Prisoners

LONDON (JPS-Palcor)—That
there has been no evidence of
discriminatory -Measures taken
against Jewish soldiers serving
with the British forces and tak-
en captive by the Germans was
the assurance given to the House
of Commons by Captain David
Margesson, British Secretary of
State for War.
Captain Margesson declared
further that "according to the
latest information in our posses-
sion all British prisoners cap-
tured in Greece and Crete are
soon to be moved into prison
camps in Germany".
The War Secretary's statement
followed a re-opening of the
question by Laborite Colonel
Josiah C. Wedgwood and was
of particular interest in view
of reports from certain other
quarters to the effect that par-
ticularly harsh treatment was
being meted out to the Jewish
war prisoners by the Nazis. The
Captain insisted emphatically
that "there is no evidence of
discrimination against any par-
ticular category of prisoner".

Let the motive be in the deed
and not in the event. Be not one
whose motive for action is the
hope of reward.—Kreeshna.

Cowardice asks, Is it safe?
Expediency asks, Is it politic?
Vanity asks, Is it popular? but
Conscience asks, Is it right?

Though a good motive cannot
However brilliant an action, it
sanctify a had action, a bad should not be estPemel great un-
motive will always vitiate a good less the result of a great and
good motive.---Rochefoucauld.
action.—Wililam Jay.

app hew eat

I wish to extend to our friends, the Jewish

people, and our Jewish customers of this

country, our best wishes for "A Happy and

Prosperous New Year." May the Almighty

God bless the Children of Israel with Good

Health_and Long-Life for many years to come.

M onfocturers of

KELLOGG 'S ALL-BRAN
KELLOGG'S WHEAT KRISPIES
KELLOGG'S CORN FLAKES
KELLOGG'S WHEAT KRUMBLES
KELLOGG'S RICE KRISPIES
KELLOGG'S SHREDDED WHEAT
KELLOGG'S PEP

ELL() GQ, OMPANY

MICHIGAN,

