The Texas Jewish Herald (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 28, 1929 Page: 8 of 8
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SIGHT
Painter, Reichman & Co.
Fire, LinhUtty, Bonding, AalontblU
INS U R A NC E
Room. 400-403
Public National Bank Bldg.
Of lie. Phon. Pro.ton 1787
THE JEWISH HERALD
»' ■
m
PRESTON
3000
TAXI
fOOkOfb ’8M
of
CAi. trOf?NtA
. MX WSlIlblMUI. tiunnnilAtnufi\
•momwrr foi /iitouraion}
r*MJsroH.rexA3' •
-+4-4+ + +++++++4'4' ++* + + * + + +++4'
2 DRIVE TO +
BOYSENS !
for Refreshments j
McKinney ave. J
♦ ♦♦+ + +++4’+*++++ ++4"f+**++ + +
CONGREGATIONAL
CONGREGATION BETH ISRAEL
Dr. H. Barn.ton. Rabbi
Sabbath Hervices, Friday 8 p. m.
Saturday 10 a. m.
At the evening service troop 27 of
the Boy Scouts will be the guests of
the Congregation and the address
will be on Law 12 “ A Scout Is Rev-
erent.
Morning Sermonette, Perpetual
Fire.
Musical program.
Organ Prelude—-Medley of Patrio-
tic Airs -- _____- —Ashntot
Ritual Service ---------... Rogers
Temple Quartet
Sisterhood Choir
Vocal Sdlo-r-Gloria.. Buzzi Peccia
Mrs. Abbye Freed
Organ Postlude—Jubilate Deo -
____ ___Silver
Mrs. Rising Shriner, Guest Organist
■ Mrs. J. F. Spencer, Director
CONGREGATION BETHEL
TAXI! Checker Cabs
PHONE fhlOl NO EXTRA
PRESTON vlall FARE
“You G.t tti. Moot yof Yoor Malta*”
ALL NEW DODGE CARS
Short Trie. (.Or, f*»r Hoar 11.50. in tho City
l.rt It. Moro Your Homoso
OZEAN LIN1E
The Comfortable Route to
Mexico, Cuba. England,
France and Cermany.
Regular Pa.oenger Sailingo Out
of Port Hou.ton or Galveoton.
NEXT SAILINGS!
Nord Friesland . . ■ .March 30
Rio Br.ro _ _ Arpril 13
Panuco Rio hjlay 15
Inoi
306 Cotton Exchange Building
HOUSTON, TEXAS
Preston 5845-—Pra.ton 4452
Wilkens & Biehl
ulre at
V
Rev, Louis Kushell, Cantor
Phone Fairfax 2696 •
M. S. Scheehtar, Teacher, H. 6987-W.
Services every Friday <• 8 p.m.
Every Saturday at 8:80 a. m.
Hebrew School dolly from 4 to 6
CONGREGATION ADATH
YESHURUN
Dr. Abraham 1. Scbecbter, Rabbi
Residence Phone: Fairfax 6619
Study Phone: Fairfax 6802
Rev. R. Kaplan, Cantor
Rabbi {Schechter’s subject for to-
day's services will be: Jews in Texas
as Result of Texas Independcnte.”
Kabbolas Shabbos services, Friday
at sundown.
Daily morning servidos, 6*90.
Daily Mincha servicea at sundown
Rabbi Abraham I. Sthechtcr will
have sis the topic of his sermon for
Friday evening, March 2b, "How (’-an
Judaism Survive in Our Modern
World?'"'
Rabbi H. J. Horowitz
Practical Mohel
1820 AVENUE G
G.Ivrston, If **l
Phon. 6419
Wedding. Solemnia.d
Prompt Attention Given
Out of-Town Calls
6200
ABORT CITY
TRIPS 1 OR 4
PAHflRNGRRfl
tt ctx; I
HOUR lt.l
CONGREGATION ADATH ISRAEL
1010 Ely.ian St., (Fifth Ward.)
Jacob Geller, Rabbi.
Phone 1'reston (1130.
Max (lelhtr, Associate Rabhi.
Phone Fairfax 6798.
Daily morning services at 0:3(1.
Daily evening services at (5:0(1,
Friday evening services at sundown.
Saturday morning services at 9:00,
Saturday evening services at b:30.
Saturday Sbalush Slides at <5:00.
CONGREGATION ADATH EMETH
Hou.toa and Washington
Services every morning at 6:30.
Every evening at gunet.
Friilay evening services at sun-
set, with Hebrew School choir, and
at H o’clock services under the aus-
pices, of the Sunday School faculty.
Services Saturday morning at 8:30.
Sunday school every Sunday morn-
ing at 10 a. m.
Teachers’ faculty meeting every
tithpr Wednesday at X p, lit.
Daily nfhool from 3 to 6:30 p. m.
The Sunday,School Faculty of the
Congregation Adath Emeth will hold
their regular Friday nigftt services
at 8 p. m. March 29th. The following
A Visit to David Brown Colony in Crimera
By Batty Ross
(All rights reserved)
V
’POOR
urne
G/CM
O/GLS"
7H/9EE.
YEARS
AGO i
/VOW GAGl
WOO/rf/NS
JJTW/SM
FABM/TKr
z>At/&urea&
JXAV/O A. BRO&M)
WHOM 70/S COIjON.
v •
Mv V- •' • <■ ib
ft
MWDA.mOWtf
When nearing the David Brown
Colony, situated in the Djoincoi dis-
trict Tif Crimea, ip Russia, it Was
only natural that 1 should think of
the man after whom the colony was,
named.
1 had known David Brown for
some time, but really never felt that
I knew him well until the opportun-
ity was,presented to spend a Friday
night at his home in lictro'it. I was
"covering" the Kord-Sapiro trial in
Detroit for a leading syndicate when
by chance 1 ran across Mr. Brown in
the lobby of my hotel. After learn-
ing my mission to his home city, he
extended an invitation to dine at his
home that night. ' » *
1 had often wondered a|fet hit
home life, but I’ had no conception
that on the never-to-he-forgotten Fri-
day night, I would find his pleasant
household his old mot'
charming young daughters,
a spiritual Sabbath atmosphere.
llis mother, like a true mother of
Israel, "bensched licht,” and his two
about anyone. Lubarsky idolizes
him. but silently, because he can't
talk English and Brown doesn’t know
Russian.*’
Evidently word had been passed
around , that a visitor had arrived in
the colony, ahd one by one the set-
tlers began streaming into the little
room. When they learned that I
brought greeting from David Brown,
and that 1 knew him well, they be-
gan plying me with rapid-fire ques-
tions.
“When Is he coming here.again?”
"What part of Russia is he from?"
"Is he really one man?”
"Does he know he’s in our prayers
every day?”
“Why is he so wonderful to us?”
"Padazdhytc, poshaltso!” (wait,
please!) I exclaimed, to stop the flow
___ ... of questions, and then we all sat
HI. iw’ “i tiown, the group of colonists and I,
ers, in such an(j taUjecj 0jj, y,,. man whose efforts
were helping make possible a new
life to thousands of bis brethren in
Russia, whose name, even in the re-
the cartloads of milk being delivered
to the city.
And because his house was near-
est, *and his two golden-haired daugh-
ters clung fast to my arm, I found
my first visit in the home, of Colo-
.nist Nechomofsky, until 1926, -of
Minsk.
He .was one of the original fifty
families who developed this 3,000-.
acre settlement, part of the 25.000-
acre tract settled in 1925.
His wife, a smiling-eyed woman
of about thirty-five, wfls working
away at a sewing machine, whose
whirring'ceased at our entrance. Her
aged mother who had been slicing
noodles in the kitchen, joined us.
“Is my drdss almost finished?”
eagerly asked the eight-year-old
dnughter as we entered the house.
Proudly the mother held up a red
and black checked garment she was
stitching on the -machine. .
“I was so lucky to get this matft^
rial,’* said the mother to me in Rus-
sian. “When I reached town the
shop was already crowded. About
fclfeb
i SAMPSON MACHINERY &l
SUPPLY CO.
•Buyer* and Satlara of
ALL KINDS OF
MACHINERY AND
SUPPLIES
Chartraa and Canal
Preston 4818-2101
!
AWNINGS
Repsdorph Tent & Awning Co.
402-1 Capitol ■ Fairfax 9108
Established 1878
IfB
Perfect Fender
and Body
Straightening
i than Ilka new, and
U to |0% on oar
Abe
program-has been arranged :
"Lachu Doidi”, led by Mr.
Schuman and congregation.
* Modern Judaism and its problems
by the Treasurer of the Faculty, Miss
Arina Seidler.
Sabbath, the Symbol of Liberty
and Faith, by Mr. M. Werlein, who
will be the principal speaker of the
evening.
‘‘Yrydal" led by Mr. Abe Schu-
man. and congregation.
CONGREGATION RODEFEI
SHOLOM
Corner Conli and Maury Straol
Friday evening services: Kabolas
Shaboth at sundown.
Saturday: Morning Service at 9
m. Mincha Service at 6 p. m.
BOARD OF JEWISH DEPUTIES
PREPARE FOR JEWISH
AGENCY CONFERENCE.
London, (JTA)—The Anglo-Jew-
ish conference on the extended Jew-
ish Agency will lie held in the form
of a public meeting at the Scala
Theatre on April 21st, it was an-
nounced at the monthly meeting of
the Board of Jewish Deputies held
yesterday.
Representatives of all shades of
opinion are expected to attend the
conference, Called to indicate British
Jewry's desire to cooperate in the
extended Jewish Agency. Lord Mdl-
chctt will be one of the leaders to
address the meeting, it was stated.
The situation of the Jewish popu-
lation in Roumanin was reported on
to the Board by Lucien Wolf, Secre-
tary of the Joint Foreign Commit-
The situation in Roumania is
quiet, Mr. W-olf declared. The gov-
ernment is providing for friendly re-
lations between the state and the
minorities.
Jewish organizations in various
countries will co-operate pn migration
and refugee problems without actu-
ally creating a permanent unified or-
ganization, Mr. Wolf reported. This
was agreed upon at a recent confer-
ence of Jewish societies interested in
emigration questions, held in Paris
under the chairmanship of Dr. Leo
Motzkini Representatives of various
Jewish organizations engaged in aid-
ing emigrants will meet In Geneva
whensver.it is deemed necessary, to
agree upon a common policy for mi-
grants' aid.
PALESTINE IMMIGRATION
FIGURES.
era Jews, entered the country, daring
of January, aeeording to
“Why don’t you do something that
the other visitors in Russia seemed
to' overlook?” he. suggested. ‘ "The
pioneer women and children of these
new Jewish colonies that have been
building up.rapidly during the past
few years are playing a dramatic and
romantic part in this Renaissance to
the soil. If you have the courage,
anti I believe you have, why don’t
you live with these people — Aork
with thepi on the soil, put up with
their hardships, suffer with them—
and then you will havcva story that
wffl stir the hearts of the men and
women of America 1”
As he paced up and down the floor,
trying to inspire me to do an unusual
piece of work, I saw the humanist in
him, the man who loved all men as
brothtn-s. pleading for tho world to
know this story which had never been
told before.
Time and time again I thought of
him, during my wanderings in Rus-
sia, in the manv days and weeks that
I lived with the colonists, carrying
out to the letter the suggestion
made to me In the midst of his fam-
ily circle on that eventful Friday
night. ... , *
“And don’t forget to visit £he
colony in the Crimea that the col-
onists so gracoiusly named after me,”,
he added. "I haven’t seen it since
the early stages, when the settlers
still lived 'In .dug-obts. I have kept
close touch with it since then and
know something of its development
Bring them a message of my deep
interest”
Though that was 8 year ago, his
last words came back to me at I
drove into the David Brown colony,
and was mat by the leader and his
little band of helpers. After they
made me comfortable, I delivered the
greetings from the man after whom
their colony was named.
■ “You know David Brown?” he
aaked in surprise.
Tee,” came my reply, “don’t
you?"
The leader shook hie heed. “When
he was in Russia, in 1988, I was atttl
in Kiev. Ne ona in this celony had
tha luck to mast hlat That’s why we
all wonder sboStthe god father of
in the
ity to man. . 'rush.” , I v*
Eagerly, in sib nee, these hardy). “But why the crowd?” I asked,
men and women listened to my rthera "The shops don’t often carry ma-
limited and sketchy word picture, terials like this. There’s too much
which started with, his early begin-'of a demand from fhe colonists, for
ning as a poor boy and his gradual: we’re not thinking yet of ctothea.
rise in the buainess world until he, But those of us who ran sew-—like
became orte of the giants 6f inauiflry, to pick up something when the store
at. the same time giving himself to'does carry it. I make everything my
every human cause, whether that of daughters wear, and also . my hus-
relief ’in Poland, famine in Russia or band’s shirts," she added.
Gbikn raiiof Cna (rnk niM,nn “Happy here?” her smile was the
daughters repeated, the Hebrew pray- motest provinces, brought a ray of j one-hundred fifty' people were jam-
ers after their grandmother, reveal-1 hope—the promise of man’s human-,med in. Some women fainted ' |
Ing David Brown in the. role of fath- =*-—— 1 ...
er, son, and brother in a way I wish
sftniehow could be known to the Jews
nl' -this country who think of this
man us a great dynamic force, a
great Innnanisl and miracle-worker,
and somewhat of a mystirn. ' This
.man, wlm lias traveled- to the far-
lliest corners of. the world, to every
scene of Jewish effort, who has
blended his .tears'with those of the
less fortunate* for whom he was giv-
ing much himself during these
many years, sitting at the head of
liis table;, not only was an attentive
host hut a loving pater familias.
Before dinner was over, the Brown
clan Imd begun to gather — their
usual Friday night custom, he told
me in an aside when all the chil-
dren. the in-laws, the grand-children
anti even the great grand-childrtn
came to pay their respects to his
aged mother.
When the conversation veered to
my next foreign jaunt—I had re-
cently returned from Palestine—I
told , them 1 was about to leave ft>c
Russia to interview the outstanding
men and women there, study some-
thing-of the country’s new political
philosophy, and visit some of the
new Russian colonies.
iviici in a ukiiiu, iuiiiitic in nupain ui
China, .relief for Irish sufferers, the
building of hospitals. Red Cross
work, raising funds for religious in-
stitutions, whether reform, orthodox
or ^uper-orthodox. This account
might have run otp endlessly, so va-
ried is the record; of his achftSVe-
ments, when a voice broke in:
"Skollko lett Herr Brown?” (How
old is Mr. Browh?)
I shrugged my shoulders, not
knowing exactly, but told them his
is the boundless energy 6f jyouth
combined with understanding of the
ages, and how the Jews of America
are amazed at the ease with which
he assumes the responsibilities snd
burdens which would wear out any
three average men
‘•Will ...... a—11 ki.
watches over us,”
looking about .the
began begging me to visit their
their homes. Then men ‘suggested
that T see tReir fields. The children
shyly spoke of their schoolhouse and
the colony leader insisted I visit their
cheese factory and their general com-
munity house, which includes post
office, medical and instruction sta-
tion ; and also their grocery store co-
operative, their meat market, and to knugu, biaumg ,» urreatuu, <
get up at three any mohning to see there seems no hope for' the futu:
answer. Suddenly her old mother
broke out in Yiddish accents; “I can’t
tell you hoto happy I am. It’s some-
thing more than a roof over my head
and .that I can face my last dsys
without tear Of hunger.”
“I’m beginning to believe again—
this life—^this colony—the miracle of
help from America—is bringing back
my faith in God.
“I almost lost my faith in God,”
she said brokenly, “when I saw my
own brother and the husband of my
youngest daughter killed before my
eyes. In one night six of my family
were slaughtered. I begged them to
bt.......
kill me, but they laughed and said
I was so old they didn’t want to
“Will you tell him about us?” they cheat the grave.” She wiped the
asked. When I assented, the women tears
1Mt
from her eyes. “But God
■— ” she said slowly
e sun-lit room and
the happy faces of her daughter and
grandchildren.
“We’re so much better off than
those families still in town,” rejoined
the colonist’s wife. “My two broth-
ers are still there and send distress-
ing news. Business is gone. Aifyone
caught trading is arrested, and
Active in Reform Judaism
Of course we had hard times here
at first, when about ten families1
lived in one house, before our homo*
were built, but ail that it forgotten
now.
“That doesn’t mean everyone here
still doesn’t work,” she quickly add*
ed, stitching away at the machine.
"F think the time is over when one
man worked for the entire family.
”1, for instance, get up every day
at 3 a. ra. to milk tho cows. Cows
are our treasure because we sell the
milk which brings us 100 roubles a
month. I deliver the milk to the col-
only co-operative and am hack horns
by 4 a. m. Then I sleep until eix—
unless it’s harvest time, when no one
sle.eps. Then I make up a lunch snd
take it to the fields for my husband
and son and their helpers.
“At six I go to the co-operativa
store for meat, make it kosher, put
on the soup, and by then it.’s time
to give the children breakfast In
the few hours before noon, while
dinner is cooking, I tidy up the
house and get in a little sewing. Soon
the children come home from school,
I give them ‘varmes’ (afternoon
meal-. Then, if I didn’t sleep from
4 to 6 a. m., I try to sleep from 4
to 6 p. m. Otherwise, I look after
the hens and the 36 geese. Then
sundown comes, which means milk-
ing the cows again and preparing
supper foT the entire family. After
clearing away the supper, I wash and
iron the children’s dresses and my
husband’s blouses to have them ready
in case he Bhould have to go to the
“I burn old corn-cobs in tny irbn,”
she said, smiling, because coal’s too
expensive. We try all kinds of make-*
shifts to keep from spending money.
See, the inside of our stove is lined
with bits of tile left from the roof.”
Mrs. Nechomofsky stopped sewing
and began fitting the checked dress
on her younger daughter. It was a
one-piece Bmock-like affair, and the
daughter’s eyes shown with glee as
her mother began marking off dis-
tances to sew on a row of red but-
tons.
Just then her husband, a wiry man
with dark eyes and an olive skin, en-
tered. He was breathless, as though
running at great speed. “They tqid
me you were here,” he exclaimed,
wringing my hand in introduction,
“arid that you are a friend of David
Brpwn’s. They are talking about
him all Over the colony. They real-
ize he is real now. They told me
to ask you more about him, so we
can carry out his' ideals.”
“What message can I bring him
from you?” I asked this man, typical
of the many in the pioneer group
who had named their new home after
America’s outstanding relief worker.
Tell him wo are content. Bread
we have;.fresh meat now and then,
fodder for the cattle, a roof over
our heads; then think of the Jews
in thecities. who hav^jiMhing to do,
nothing to eat, and nofning to look
forward to.
“We pay no taxes the first three
years here,” he continued, “and chil-
dren are' g(yen tuition free in the
schools in town, if they choose to go.
But my sixteen-year-old son workB
in the fields and wants to be a col-
onist himself some day. Already he
runs my entire farm—I do not' even
know my boundary lines. I’m the
colony carpenter who put doors and
windows in all the houses,” he add-
ed with pride. “There’s work enough
here to keep me buys, and I' pick
up a few roubles a day. My young
daughters go to school; my sistwc
who came hefe with me recently
married a colonist and is beginning
her own life.” ■ . .
Outside I met the sister coming up
the road with a group of other col-
onists. “So you’re, the first bride of
this colony," 1 remarked. "Did you
have a nice honeymoon?”
Her eyes danced with happiness.
“Well, I didn’t go. away or get any'
fine presents, but froip^-cooking and
sewing for my frother's family of
six, 1 now cook for only .one—-rtiy
husband. Don’t you think that’s
honeymoon enough?”
In the Mays that I worked and
lived with these people, learning to
know and understand and gradually
to love them and the spirit in which
they entered this new life. When'it
cams time for me to go on to Uk-
raine, and the' colony leader and his
little band escorted me to the car,
the entire population of the colony
clustered about, each one to shake
my hand and utter a shy “Dosva-
danya” (farewell),
“Do you think our colony is wor-
thy of Its name?” asked the leader.
"Wc must make it the outstanding
settlement in all Crimea!”
’•‘When is he coming to see us
again?” he wondered. "What a
change he’ll find,” he munnufed, his
:lanco taking in the nedl rows of
ouses, the school at the end of th4
Q^atl, the expanse of waving, golden
‘Tell him he’s in our prayers,”
said one of the old men.
But it was the bride who tugged
at my arm and whispered words that
have come back to me- many time*
since i felt that colony: "Tell him
we’re going to name him David—tho
name that has meant to ua under-
standing and love.”
JUDGE JOSIAH COHEN
These two Pittsburgh, Pa., resi-
dents have devotsd much of their
lives to lay-leadership in Reform Ju-
daism. Mrs. Joaiah Cohen has been
■erring for a number of years on
the executive board of’tbe National
federation of Temple Sisterhoods
lay-lea
Mrs. ^
for a
utlva
.<L, ________
and she originated the Isaac M. Wise
Sisterhood Memorial Fund Commit-
tee In 1827. 8ha will bo 80 yearn
old on
MRS. JOSIAH COHEN
Thanlugiving Doy, ia municipal
i nanugivtng Day, is municipal
court judge in Cleveland and a mam-
bar of the' executive board of tho
of American Hebrew Congre-
couple attended tha Hebrew
College’s first graduation ea-
st Cincinnati, Ohio, on Jafar
ere isos at Cincinnati, Ohio, on July
.1888. Judga Cohen aided Dr.
" "t|l4
and Mrs.
— ■■
Wise in founding tha Collei
Union. Both Judge as "
r m
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Goldberg, Edgar. The Texas Jewish Herald (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 28, 1929, newspaper, March 28, 1929; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1054567/m1/8/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .