October 23, 1942 BNAI BRITH (Continued from Page 1) called it home. In 1942 Bellefaire was home to 200 youngsters who were being prepared for adult independent lives through an ad- vanced program of education, vo- cational guidance and case work. Having shown the way in Cleve- land, Bnai Brith soon opened other institutions, in many sec- tions of the country. In this lim- ited space we are unable to rec- ord all Bnai Brith philanthropic institutions. Best known of all the Bnai Brith-created philanthropies is the National Jewish Hospital in Den- ver, whose opening in 1899 point- ed the way for the first time to the need for considering tubercu- losis as a national problem. America's pioneer institution for the free care on a nationwide non-sectarian basis of tubercu- losis sufferers, the National Jew- ish Hospital has treated 25,0(10 patients from every state in Hi , Union since it opened. Its motto —"None May Enter Who Can Pay—None May Pay Who Enter" —has been a beacon of hope to victims of the white plague. Widely known as America's fore- most inter-faith philantrophy, the National Jewish Hospital's re- search department and its pro- gram for children are interna- tionally famous, some of the most far-reaching contributions to the cure and treatment of tu- berculosis having been made by members of its staff. What Bnai Brith did for tuber- culosis sufferers through the Na- tional Jewish Hospital it dupli- cated for victims of arthritic and rheumatic diseases when it founded the Leo N. Levi Memor- ial Hospital, named for Leo N. Levi, a president of Supreme Lodge Bnai Brith, at Hot Springs, Ark.. in 1914. Since its opening the Leo N. Levi Memorial Hospital has treat- ed more than 120.000 men, wo- men and children of all races and creeds in its hospitals and clinics. Completely non-sectarian, it is the only free institution in the world for the care of those af- flicted with rheumatic ailments. Maintainance of these national and regional institutions—as well as support of others of a local character founded by or with the help of Bnai Brith in many parts of the country—remained a ma- jor concern of Bnai Brith. Since 1865, when Bnai Brith answered the first cry for aid from Jews abroad by contribut- ing to Sir Moses Montefioro's fund for epidemic victims in Palestine, Bnai Brith has spent an estimated $5,000,000 for the relief of pain and suffering in every corner of the globe without regard to race, creed or color. During that period, when Bnai Brith creedless giving first spread its name to the ends of the earth as an angel of mercy, it fur- nished relief to victims of the yellow fever epidemic in the South (1876; Baltimore Flood (1869) ; Chicago Fire (1871); Russian May Laws (1881) ; Charleston earthquake (1886) ; Dakota famine (1888); Johnstown Flood (1899); Galician pogroms (1900); Irish famine (1903); Kishinev pogrom (1905); Paris flood (1910); Constantinople fire (1911); Balkan Wars (1912-13); Turkish earthquake (1912) ; Ohio and Nebraska tornados (1913). Between 1914 and 1942 Bnai Brith came to the help of war sufferers in Poland, Galicia and Austria (1914-16); starving Jews in Palestine (1915) post war po- grom victims in Galicia and Po- land (1919); was prisoner in Siberia (1919); victims of Texas tidal wave (1919); European war orphans (1920-30) impoverished Jews of Austria, Rumania, Ger- many and Poland (1920-4) ; vic- tims of Pueblo flood (1921); vic- tims of Japanese earthquake (1923); victims of Ohio tornado (1925); victims of Damascus bombardment (1927); and Mis- sissipi floods (1927) ; Jews of Constantinople (1928) ; victims of Palestine riots (1929); victims of Mexican riots (1931) and Salon- Ica fire (1931); the victims of the Tiberias flood (1933); Pol- ish floods (1934); Southern Cali- fornia earthquake 11933); Polish riots (1937) : Chinese floo is (137); and Chilean earthquake (1939). Included maong the beneficiar- ies of Bnai Brith relief funds since 1933 were Bnai Brith ref- ugee aid committees in Poland, Palestine, England, Canada, Swit- zerland, Bulgaria, H IIla n d. France, Greece, Egypt, China and Czechoslovakia. This help was 5 DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle MURRAY D. VAN WAGONER— MICHIGAN'S WAR GOVERNOR A consolidated revenue depart- ment, saving $5,000,000 in its first year; Increased unemployment com- pensation, better administration of child labor laws, workmen's injury compensation, factory safe- ty laws, and laws protecting wom- en in war factories. With State tax revenues ex- pected to drop sharply next year, Governor Van agoner has out- lined a drastic consolidation pro- gram to preserve essential war bervices by ending government operating waste long entrenched by law. He has plans under way for evacuation of cities in the event of bombing, for day care of chil- then whose mothers may be called to war work, for continu- ing close State cooperation with President Roosevelt's war pro- duction program. Tuesday, Nov. 3, will answer the question of whether the voters intend to continue their present Democratic State war ad- ministration, and to strengthen it by removing the Republican Au- ditor and Attorney Generals and replace them with Democrats who will cooperate with the Governor. If Michigan's 107-year history is any indication, War Governor Van Wagoner's program will be approved by Democrats, Repub- licans and independent voterA alike. Satin Spread Week! Special Sale! "4„ le*". i':\Z;s • 101 0J .:0 Ihe Best ' ..' " Buy in the City --- IN LOUR SHADES GOV. MURRAY D . VAN WAGONER If Michigan follows unbroken tradition on Nov. 3, War Gov- ernor Murray D. Van Wagoner will be re-elected to a second term. The present war is the fourth for Michigan since becoming a State in 1835. In all past wars, the governor who held office be- fore war started was re-elected, voters evidently believing with Civil War President Lincoln that a national emergency is no time to remove an experienced chief executive who already is on the jeb. Austin Blair was Michigan's great Civil War Governor, taking office in 1861 and serving two terms. Hazen S. Pingree was Spanish-American War Governor, his two terms starting in 1898. Albert E. Sleeper's two terms started in 1917, covering the World War period. The record of the State's pre— ent War Governor, written in front-page stories by Michigan newspapers these last two years. shows that this first total war in history, and Michigan's vast war production importance, has put heavier burdens on Governor Van Wagoner than any former War Governor carried. In January, 1941, his first month in office, Governor Van Wagoner called the State's indus- trial, labor and business leaders into conference and launched the nation's first State inventory of military production facilities. The State government then sent Lhis inventory and State en- gineers, to Washington, to lay the basis for converting Michi- gan's 6,000 factories from peace to war work. Governor Van Wegoner him- self carried his plea for increased supplementary to the continuing assistance provided to its own members abroad as well as funds made available to responsible agencies operating in the refugee aid field. A hospital in China, a loan fund in Palestine, a chil- dren's school in Cuba, a kosher meat fund in Europe and Youth Aliyah were some of the refugee aid projects that enlisted Bnai Brith support. Since the beginning of World War II Bnai Brith has again been open-handed in extending aid to war victims and in cooper- ating with relief agencies. A separate article will relate the activities of the newly created Enai Brith War Service Depart- ment. Subsequent articles will also describe the defense program Bnai Brith Anti - Defamation League, student nrogram, Hillel Foundations, youth program .1. Z. A. and Vocational Guidance Service and other manifold activ• ities. war orders directly to President Roosevelt and top military pro- curement officials. Newspapers have quoted Michi- gan industrialists and labor lead- ers as crediting Van Wagoner's work for the fact that Michigan today has 96 per cent of its fac- tories in war work. The governor's labor mediation policies won the confidence of both management and labor. As a result, work interruptions declined steadily, and Michigan today is on or ahead of schedule in pro- ducing one-sixth of the nation's war orders. Governor Van Wagoner's civ- ilian .defense program was put under a Michigan World War hero, Lieut.-Col. Harold Furlong. The Army officially lists it as the best in the Midwest. It has more trained volunteers than the com- bined total of Illinois and Wis- consin, the other two States in the Sixth Defense Region. Newspaper stories also record other steps Governor Van Wag- oner took to put the State's house in order, to better meet war time strains; A long-standing $27,000,000 State deficit wiped out and re- placed by a $7,00,000 surplus— the first in 20 years; Record aid for schools and col- leges, crippled children, dependent mothers, and the aged; Idle state hospitals open and in full use; The first reduction in number of State employes seen in 12 years—a reduction which allowed the State to raise salaries of grossly under-paid employes A sound civil service system; The first non-political Stale purchasing department in history; • Rose Beige • Eggshell O Champagne • Blue PRICED AT $ 12 .95 and up Buy U. S. 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