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THESE ARE
THE AUTHENTIC
LAWS OF
MOSES
SIRE!

JOSIAH

HOW DISGRACEFULLY WE
HAVE NEGLECTED THIS
BOOK! I'LL DO SOME -
THING ABOUT 1 T
IMMEDIATELY!

THE YOUNG /ONG Of THE JEWS

CY DON CAMERON /IND

MONTGOMERY MULFORD

1943 fly M.G. GAINES

• SPEL 4. ED

. JOSIAS

FROM 2ND KINGS, CHAPTERS
22 AND 23 AND 2ND CHRONICLES,
CHAPTERS 34 THROUGH 36
IN THE,, KING JAMES AN D
JPS A VERSIONS OF THE BIBLE
FROM 4TH KINGS AND
2ND PARALIPOMENON
'N THE DOVAY VERSION

Ni THE DOVAY VERSION

I WILL PRESENT
THIS GREAT
DISCOVERY TO OUR
PEOPLE - BUT FIRST
WE MUST PRAY
AND ASK GOD'S

GUIDANCE'

I SHALL CALL THE CHIEF
MEN AND PRIESTS TO
GETHER., AND WITH GOD'S
GUIDANCE
WE WILL
KNOW
WHAT TO
DOI

I

HE PRIESTS
DECIDE

TO
CONSULT
A HOLY

IF WHAT YOU SAY 15 TRUE,
THE REAL LAWS MUST BE
PROCLAIMED TO THE PEOPLE
AND OBEYED! TELL KING JOSIAH
THAT THE JUDGMENTS AGAINST
THE DISOBEDIENT WILL NOT
FALL UPON HIM. HE IS TRYING
TO SERVE GOD FAITHFULLY!

TO MAKE THE EVENT IMPRESSIVE, JOSIAH
DECIDED TO RENEW THE CELEBRATION OF
THE PASSOVER FEAST, A CUSTOM LONG
NEGLECTED ---

SEND WORD TO ALL THE

PEOPLE IN JUDEA AND
ISRAEL TO COME TOGETHER
IN THE RESTORED TEMPLE
TO HEAR THE WORD
OF GOD !

AND
INSPIRED

WOMAN
NAMED
HULOAM

faimmilk%A.

• N EIGHT-DAY . CELEBRATION WAS HELD WITH
SINGING AND FESTIVITY BY MORE
THAN 30,000 PEOPLE , DURING WHICH TIME
JOSIAH READ FROM THE LOST BOOK ---

THE CELEBRATION INCLUDED GREAT FEASTS
FRAM THE KINGS ROYAL BOUNTY OF SUPPLIES.-- ,

THESE COMMANDMENTS ARE
THE SACRED woga45 OF
MOSES. LET Ug
PROMISE TO OBEY
THEM.!

THIS 15 THE HAPPIEST
DAY OF MY LIFE. TH E
OF GOO HAVE NOW
BEEN PUT TO WORK. OUR
NATION IS BEING UNITED
AS IN THE DAYS OF
DAVID !

Israel and Refrigeration .

Women's Division
Countrywide Tributes in
Memory of Dr. Leo Franklin Launches Season Engineers' Organ Describes
New Market for New Country

Tributes to the memory of Dr.
Leo M. Franklin continue to pour
in from all parts of the country.
Touching messages were re-
ceived by the family from He-
brew Union College, Dr. Frank-
lin's alma mater; Union of
American Hebrew Congregations
and Central Conference of
American Rabbis of which •Dr.
Abraham Feldman of Hartford,
Conn., is president.
H. C. L. Jackson, author of
the "Listening In on Detroit"
column in the. Detroit News,
published a tribute to Dr.
Franklin recalling when, in
1912, as a cub reporter on the
Detroit Jimunal, the late Rabb _ i
of Temple Beth El gave him a
hearty welcome and encour-
aged him in his work.
George W. Stark devoted his
entire "Town Talk" column on
Aug. 10 to a tribute to Dr.
Franklin. Mr. Stark reviewed the
history of the Interdenomina-
tional Thanksgiving Service and
showed how Rabbi Franklin had
inspired it from its very begin-
ning, 47 years ago when it first
was conducted in the Detroit
Opera House on Campus Mar.tius.
In the course of his. lengthy ar-
ticle, Mr. Stark wrote:
Our inter - denominational
- service was a lone pioneer 47'
years ago. Then and in the im-
mediate years thereafter it was
implemented by some great
names and by some great
voices. Besides those already,
mentioned, there would be the
Rev. Gains. Glenn Atkins, the
Rev. Joseph A. Vance and the
Rev. 'Lee • McCollester.
Generally, the Roman Cath-
olic -faith would be represent-
ed by an outstanding layman,
such as M. Hubert O'Brien.
Frank Murphy, • no*. justice of
the United States • Supreme
Court, frequently adorned the
occasion 'and, before him, an-
other Murphy, equally gifted
in a forensic direction, who
was no relative, the late Judge
Alfred J. Murphy.
* * *
It was no common occur-
rence, after the invocation had
been .pronotmced, for courtly
William C. Maybury, the
early - century Mayor, silk-
iiktatted and frock-coated, to
.pronounce some words, and
he, too, had a fluid gift with
them and so he gave grace _
and sanction to an early ex-
periment in human relations.

This could have been a suc-
cess or failure, for no one be-
for Dr. Franklin had previous-
ly thought of bringing the
practitioners of widely-varying
faiths into a common •bond of
worship and there was no prec-
edent to go by. There were
some misgivings. But there
need have been none, as it
worked out for the communi-
ty Thanksgiving service was a
success from the start.
More than 1,500 people nearly
filled TeMple Beth El's great
auditorium on Aug. 10 at the
funeral service which was con-
ducted by Dr. Franklin's succes-
sor as Rabbi of the congregation,
Dr. B. Benedict .Glazer and Dr.
Glazer's assistant, Rabbi Sidney
Akselrad.
Dr. A. M. Hershman, Rabbi
Emeritus of Congregation
Shaarey Zedek, . participated
in the service and paid tribute
to the departed rabbi. Dr.
Walton E. Cole spoke in behalf
of the Christian clergy with
whom Dr. Franklin worked in
behalf of . humanitarian causes
during his lifetime. Coming
from out-of-town to officiate in
the service were: Dr. Julian
Morgenstern, president emerit-
us of Hebrew Union College,
Cincinnati; Dr. Samuel H.
Goldenson, rabbi emeritus of
Temple Emanu-El, New York,
and Dr. Louis Wolsey, rabbi
emeritus • of . Temple Rodeph
Sholom, Philadelphia.
Active pallbearers were: Oscar
C. Robinson, Henry Freud, Leon-
ard T. Lewis, John A. Heaven-
rich, Lawrence E. Brown, Dr.
Charles Kennedy, Dr. Herbert I.
Kallet and Judge Charles C.
Simons of the U. S., Circuit Court
of Appeals.
Honorary pallbearers, members
of the ministers' Wranglers
Club in • which Dr. Franklin was
active, included the Rev. William
C. Hamm, the Rev. Berton S.
Levering, the Rev. Roger E.
Treat and the Rev. Martin - Stor-
gaard.
Dr. Franklin's survivors are
his wife, Hattie M.; a daughter,
Mrs. Stanley' Fleischaker; a son,
Leo I.; a granddaughter, Mary
Freda Einstein of Pittsburgh; a
grandson, John Franklin, and
two sisters, the Misses • Bluma
and Sophie Franklin of Cincin-
nati.

Sept. 22 Session to Feature
Hunter Survey Panel,
Annual Election

Launching their 1948-49 activ-
ities, members of the Women's
Division of the Jewish Welfare.
Federation will hold their annual
meeting Wednesday, .Sept. 22, at
the Detroit Institute of Arts.
The meeting, featuring election
of officers and a discussion of
the Hunter Survey, an examina-
tion of Detroit's child care, wel-
fare, health, and family services,
is being planned
by the program
committee, u n -
der the chair-
. manship of Mrs.
Leonard H. Wei-
ner.
All women
contributors t o
the Allied Jew-
ish Campaign
are members of
Mrs. Weiner the Division and
may vote at the Sept. 22 meeting
for officers and members of the
board of directors. The slate will
be presented by a nominating
committee, headed by Mrs. Fred
Ginsburg, assisted by Mesdames
Arthur Bloom, Joseph Falk, Saul
Ghteckman, William B. Isenberg,
John C. Hopp and Leo Mellen.
The Hunter Survey, which was
conducted under the sponsorship
of the 'Citizens' Survey Commit-
tee of Metropolitan Detroit, will
be analyzed by a panel of divi-
sion members. Moderator for this
"town meeting" will be Robert
1VtacCrae,_ 'executive director of
the Council of Social Agencies.
Because of the urgent need for
funds in Israel and in other parts
of the world where Allied Jew-
ish - Campaign causes work, the
division's collection committee is
setting up spe.cial stations so that
payments may be made conve 7
nient on 1948 pledges. Mrs.
Daniel Krouse heads arrange-
n-ierits for this collection:
The meeting will be .under the
chairmanship of Mrs.: Max R.
Frank, Division president. Reser-
vations are being taken at the
Jewish Welfare Federation office,
600 Owen Bldg., WO. 5-3939.

Engineers Working on Plan
For, Deep Harbor in Tel Aviv
TEL AVIV (JTA)—Work on a
deep harbor for Tel Aviv Will
begin within six months, Mayor
Israel. Rokach announced. He dis-
closed that engineers from the
United States had been working
on plans since March.

"The State of Israel is a going
concern and offers a market
which American refrigeration
manufacturers should culti-
vate," Refrigeration Engineering-
states in its. August issue.
The article in Refrigeration
Engineering appears in "Items'
of Comment," the editorial page,
under the heading "New Coun-
try — New Market." The mag-
azine , is the official publication
of the American Society of Re-
frigerating Engineers with offices
at 40 W. 40th St., New York 18.
Its editorial on Israel is as fol-
lows:
-"As this is written the second
Palestine truce has just been put
into effect and there is a reason-
able hope that a lasting peace
may permanently end the war-
fare between the State of Israel
and the Arab States. It is also a
probability that the State of
Israel will continue to exist as a
free nation in spite of the Arab
League and the temporizing of
some of the big powers. It is a
hopeful sign that as other coun-
tries lose their identity by throw-
ing in their lot with one or an-
other of the large nations, the
small State of Israel has come
into being — a free and demo-
cratic state. Let us give full
recognition to the heroic deeds
and sacrifices made by thousands
of people to bring this state into
reality.
"Although small in size and
having at the moment only a
population of 200,000, Israel is
growing fast and the temper of
its people will certainly produce
a dynamic industrial center. For
refrigeration engineers and the
refrigeration industry, generally,
Palestine has particular signifi-
cance. It is hot there — hot as
the mischief. It is also principal-
ly an agricultural country at this
time, -Many foodstuffs are export-
ed but the most important crop
is oranges. Before the war 15,-
000,000 cases of oranges were ex-
ported annually. It is estimated
that in a 'few years, with the ex-
tension of irrigation and high-
ways, this crop will be doubled.
Oranges need refrigeration for
storage and so do many other
Palestine crops. The modern city
of Tel-Aviv and the old city of
Haifa have extensive refrigera-
tion facilities but these will un-
doubtedly be expanded., Air con-
ditioning in the hot tempera-

tures of the near east is an obvi-
ous need, if -not necessity. All of
these factors point to Israel as a
growing market for refrigera-
tion equipment. The State of
Israel is, a going concern and of-
fers a market which American
refrigeration manuf a c t u rers
should cultivate."

JSG Institutes Intensive
Search for Membership
Through Youth Groups

The most intensive member-
ship drive in the history of the
Junior Service Group is under-
way for 1948-49. In an effort to
gain members and future leader-
ship for the JSG, the member-.
ship committee, chaired by Doris
Moss, has organized its own
speakers' bureau to solicit mem-
bers from every organization of
young Jewish adults in Detroit.
William Stone heads the or-
ganizational drive and Shirley
Jacobson will handle the speak-
ers' bureau assignments. Mem-
bership will prepare its own
sales-promotion publicity under
Arthur Schurgin, and Beverly
Goldfine is in charge of registra-
tions. Madeleine Levenberg and
Jeanne Carnick head the phone
squad.

Dr. Leo M. Franklin

A Tribute
By. MRS. WALTER FARBER

From a boundles reservoir
Of energy,
Of sincerity,
Of confidence
In all human atoms,
No matter the race
The color,
The creed,
His good deeds came forth.
For to him every being
Is*of priceless worth.
The sands of time
Can mark well
His achievements.
His loyalty.
His faith.
And above all .. .
A tribute simple—
A tribute great—
To all who touched his hand,
He was a friend.

I6--THE JEWISH NEWS

Friday, August 20, 1945

