The Texas Jewish Herald (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 8, 1923 Page: 4 of 8
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and thus contribute to the sanitation,
of all the
“His words, potent as they were
world, today held in the clutches of
Phone Preston 2410
1205 PRAIRIE AVENUE
0-
TEMPLE BETH ISRAEL
W. F. PULS
SISTERHOOD COLUMN |
Entered
$
Toxas, under the act of
Post Office at Houston,
March 3, 1879
.2RABBI DAVID (OLDBERC
Editorial Contributor
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good of humanity. ■
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Today we face that problem in
MASURY :
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. ed. A great deal of the credit due for
this unique service falls to Mrs, Sil-
creed’s hand is against his ‘neigh-
bor’s. The great democracy we have
world to describe its civilization as Christian. If it is meant that
" the achievements of Western civilization in the fields of science
of a new covenant. The bearer there-
of was a pupil of this’ revered master
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iiiiiiaLLIIlILIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIITIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMI1
! Subscription
i Foreign
of the Joint Distribution Committee
in an appeal for more funds to carry
on the work. "
THE COUNCIL SERVICE
The members of the Council who
attended last Saturday’s service had.
- : ,
THE TEXAS JEWISH HERALD
SX.A i
e
given by the Sisterhbod for the chil-
dren pf the Religious School, was
the costume dance last Saturday af-
ternoon at Concordia Club. ■ •
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happiness, and if we fail in getting
satisfaction on earth, it was because
we did not realize it was meant of
mankind to enjoy life even at the
sacrifice of our neighbor.
I was sorry that I had read that
THERE are so
children like which
one felt a natural inclination toward
a certain line of action, that line was
justified. The basis of our religious *
belief, self renunciation, was a sin;
few foods that |
are good for
Russia. Altogether, the amountcol- the moral re-sanitation
leeted by the Joint Distribution Com-
mittee has aggregated 58 millions.
These figures were made public by
James N. Rosenbergs vice chairman
ed. Mrs. W. W. Munzesheimer,, chair-
man, was assisted by Mrs. Max Na-
than and Miss Idale Sinsheimer. .
PURIM PARTY
One of the most enjoyable affairs
woman’s cause, we may with profit
recall the words he had addressed to
us at the Chicago Triennial on the
occasion of our twenty-fifth anni-
versary.
has fallen upon us like a bli
stroy what otherwise might — -_____
growth. Go ye Jewish women into
men into your homes, and rekindle
there the lights I Go ye into our syna-
gogues and help us to lay aside the
armour of cynic indifference which
Phenix Milk
for the little ones •
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each other and for the whole, but
each one in his relation to God is an
end in himself and before God, our
Father, each soul stands out alone.
To be free, is to be bound in fet-
ters of obligation to each other and
to God. To be free, is to have the
power of directing our lives and to
direct them wisely, so that they pro-
mote not only our well being, but
help to the general welfare of man-
kind.
Not long ago, I had an occasion
to read a treatise on free thought. A
man of intelligence said that in mat-
ters of mortality, people may prop-
e--
y
All communications for publication should reach this office
not later than 9 A. M. Wednesdays .
303 Mata
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I
$2.00 per Year
ih, $2.50perYear
"Favor la deceitful and beauty ia vain, but a woman that feareth the
Lord, she shall be praised.”
“Thirty years ago there went forth
from Sinai’s sanctuary the promise
I BUY PAINT BY NAME t
selfishness, and maddened by the
thirst for blood. Go ye Jewsih wo-
Teach me to master the great major
' chords,
Deftly applying all that Thou hast
taught;
—etors perceive the joy my task af-
Even when minor notes my hands
have sought:
Then, Master Teacher, true to Thine
own scheme,
Leave me, the pupil, to work out my ;
theme. 18,22 1 .K, ‘ {, -Z
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when uttered, are t
a message that can bear fruit in our
efforts today. This mighty sage, even
though he be gone from our midst,
shall in the history and progress of
the Council of Jewish Women, ever
be a living influence?’
-
■ • •
present day Judaism to hold many
of its children upon the women and
also said “woman’s place in religion
is the teaching of religion to the chil-
Ma
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»
2
BIBLE PASSAGES FOR
BEAUMONT SCHOOL USE
Beaumont, Texas, March 1.—Pas-
sages from 27 books of the Bible
" were approved by the board of edu-
cation Wednesday for reading in the
Beaumont schools. The passages
dren. And we Jewish women have a
task more difficult than any other
denomination. Living, as we do, in a
land where we are the hopeless min-
ority,' it is often hard to preserve
our heritage.”_______
WA I
W
I
; > —Alice Wilson Qldroyd
Above poem is my idea of man’s
freedom on earth.
them to ’ inscribe God’s precepts,
which he so eloquently proclaimed,
on the tables of their hearts.
"" - Galileo, who started out, not as a dissenter from Church doc-
gU trines, but only as a discoverer of scientific truths, is typical of.
the stand of the Church toward all efforts that led to the spread
giof our modern Western civilization. *
20 But even today, despite the fact that people in the Western
2, world live largely by the grace of scientific research and dis-
g coyery, we are witnessing a crusade of religious zealots against
298881- Gv4$42 A—An+-e —A.;.A4 :w4zgz K Aa._—____1 __•
OVER FIFTY MILLIONS SPENT
IN EUROPE RELIEF BY
“JOINT” .
New York, (J. C. B.)—A sum in
excess of 50 millions has been ex-
pended by the American Jewish
Joint Distribution Committee for re-
lief work in European countries. Of
this amount 13 millions have gone to
E.
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TWO CONVENTION NOTES
Mr. Moses Wiesenfeld of Balti-
more, Md., outlined the activities of
the mep’s organizations of that city.
He said, “We welcome the interest
the women of the Sisterhood are tak-
ing, but wo don’t want the men to
shirk their responsibility and lose
their divine heritage.” The clubs in
his city have adopted two slogans,
“Talk Temple, Think Temple,”- and
gig Cv •
g""
the satisfaction of seeing the entire
service, conducted by children of the
Beth Israel School and it went with- • America as never
out a hitch, no choir cue being miss-
a
I
THE HOAX OF “CHRISTIAN” CIVILIZATION .
By David Goldberg ’ ,
Albany, Feb. 28 (J. C. B.)— and yama ^yama boyS. Dancing form-
Henry A. Wise Wood, who, appear- ed the afternoon’s diversion, after
। which ice cream and cake Were serv-
[ The Texas Jewish Herald is supplied by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency
I (Jewish Correspondence Bureau) with cabled and telegraphic Jewish news,
1 . in addition to feature articles and correspondences from all important Jewish
centers. Inquiries regarding news items credited to this Agency will be gladly
L answered if addressed to Jewish Telegraphic Agency, 114 Fifth Avenue, New
e ... ' --;-----;--
as second class mat.or November 20th, 1'908, at the
Your Money
Our Motto: *
Give Service to the Limit
We realize the more service we
give o6r customers the mre our
business will grow. Service means
snkua
more than fitting shoes and say-
ing “Thank you?’ Buying iher-
chan disc—wisely and well and
keeping’ our customers' interest
always in mind—is SERVICE.
“Hammersmith's Custom” Shoes
are bought so that we can
that service.
verberg, our painstaking ‘and con-
^cientious Hebrew teacher. Those
participating in this service were
Otto Nachlas and Leon Finkelstein
Button*, Bala, Bluchers
Prices include war tax
in honor of the seventy-fifth birth- g
day of Nathan Straus. “Such a con- . k
tribution would have been a fine
tribute to a great citizen” declares W
young life which has just ebbed.
Likewise our 'sincere sympathy is
extended to Ophelia Levy of the
Sixth Grade, who mourns the loss of
her father, who entered into his
eternal rest on Sunday last, March
4th.
tragic lives of Uriel d’Costa and Benedict Spinoza furnish unmis-
takable proof of the position of the medieval Synagogue with
reference to independent thinking. These great mn were ex-
communicated because they would not conform to the rigid Or-
thodox code, although not a blemish could be found on their
—_—+—0———.—,
COMMITTEES APPROVE
“Meet Me in Temple Friday Night.”
Mrs; Joseph the restraint of human' liberty was
dent 01 lemple 1sterhOOd8, WAS the ii „q,„0 Ixy 0n A0-. ,
only woman speaker at the banquet ?U wrong. We are arbiters of our
given during the convention. She
placed the blame for the failure of
article. Unfortunately many people
unknowingly forget that God has
given them his choicest gift—-will
power—that greatest of blessings, so
that they may exert an influence of
good. They forget the life of service
fnr others means their own salvation.
They do not realize they have the
power to choose in, obedience to a di-
vinely illuminated conscience, which
God gawe us, instead of being an
object, submissive to our lower in-
stinct of passion.
Man is free only when he recog-
nizes the. brotherhood of man and
the Fatherhood of God—no consid-
eration of creed or race can cancel
the debt.
The Theme
heretofore enjoyed, “Love thy neigh-
bor us thyself,” seems to have given
place to “Every, man for himself.”
Man’s freedom does not come from
the individual’s happiness, but rath-
er from the happiness that that indi-
vidual exercises over the masses,
vision of God; when he can discern
vision of God: when he can descern
the good from evil; when his life,
poised as it were, between good and
. evil, capable alike of virtue and sin,
respects that great gift of God, will
TEMPLE BETH ISRAEL
Sabbath services Friday evening at
H and Saturday morning at 10. At
the evening service Mrs. Sol Schoen-
mann Will present her report of the
Sisterhood Convention, held recent-
ly in New York City. Morning set-.
monette; “The Saturday Sabbath.”
Man’s freedom on earth may be
summed up in two sentences, “Duty
to God,” “Duty to Man?’ Without
fleation. The supreme test of both is
for we nappineNN of mankind. ;
.o. -c.
.. 12ba 3-Mi 1 Ya 4 , w2/sih
5 The total expended in European
• relief'by the Joint Distribution om-
• mittee, the American Relief Admin-
• istration, the U. S. Government and
• other American agencies makes a "
: grand total of 850 millions.
S Mr; Rosenberg in his appeal de-
S nied a newspaper report that $1,500,
: 000 had been contributed to the
• American Jewish Relief Committee
woman, and by many of our teachers
she was taught—the aignifiruncc—of—
the freedom that had been proclaim-
ed by this newer interpretation of
womanhood’s function and rights.
“Among those who preached this
newer estimate of woman’s role was
Emil G. Hirsch. His masterful insight
into the truths of our religious heri-
tage, enabled him to voice them with
compelling diction and appeal. He
made them the foundation stones on
THE
-Texas Jewish Herald
- Published Weekly By
The Herald Printing Co.
EDGAR GOLDBERG, Editor and Publisher
Patience, O Master Teacher, guide
- my hands,..
Though, trembling, I placed them on . .
the keys;
' Attune my soul to meet Thy high
demands, . t
And faintly reproduce Thy harmon-
ies; 7
Then growing bolder, as the music
flows,
May I sound deeper tones and, learn-
ing still,
Find confidence, as when an artist
knows
That lights and colors blend to prove
hisskill. "
I
39 i
l
The grand march was indeed a col-
orful one, ballet dancers, Martha
and George Washingtons, Spanish
senoritas. Dutchgirls, being in evi-
dence, as well as,the harem girls
■W/-
eh.
were selected by a committee, of
F
3
Ems
Mrs. Gustave A. Saper, Chairman Publicity Committee Ea
COMMITTEE I .
Mrs. I. Friedlander Dr. Ray K. Daily |||
Dr. Henry Barnston Mrs. Miriam Browning
Mrs. J. Ehrenfeld Mra. Ad Koppel , ==
Mrs. T,Reiber ' E
1I!"TIIIMIIIIIIlnimum/mpmiIimm/mulImmu/IIImmIImmImlmlllllIllll/lhmimiul,
----- - P-ev—P 5 ye w „ g -- r -
“ ‘Go, then, ye Jewish women, and let the whole world learn
and proclaim through your lives and through you and from'you, that
through your loves the Jewish ideals, highest glory of a nation. is to be ex-
expressing “Love thy neighbor as E
thyself.”
Society is made up of many indi- E
viduals. We all work, must work, for E
• “ " ‘ 2
Duty is the law of our being and
whilst it may be true that we are
subject frombirth with traits of our
parents, environment plays a great
part in enobling our character.
Man’s freedom does not mean
worldly attainment for the individ-
ual, as they are futile and insecure;
it-is his power, the God given power,
to exercise that freedom for the
geeo
Sr-
4
ce '
fe; • 17
erly be a law unto themselves. If
8,'
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Hm
Li
-
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power. E
Will power exercises that fr the |
good of mankind, even though he |
may not enjoy all the happiness an 1
/adverse devision might have brought =
him? Man is only free when' he re- =
spects himself as he does others that |
will power to choose for his own well |
being, if it is in accordance with his |
neighbors, is only another way of =
CITY MARKET . 7
Stall Numbers 1 and 2 : ’
"9
their shops open on Sunday. : They
were fined $5 each by Magistrate
O’Neil who warned that the penalty
for a second offense would be heav-
ier. The magistrate did not admit: the
defendants’ plea that they kept their
, ’ places of business closed on Satur-
day. - , .
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3.
- . .
■
Mr. Rosenberg, “but unhappily no
such contribution was made/ The
funds of the J. D. C. are getting un-
comfortably low,” says Mr. Rosen-
berg in his appeal.
BROWNSVILLE MERCHANTS
FINED FOR DOING
BUSINESS ON SUNDAY
New York, Feb. 28 (J. C. B.) —•
Twelve small Jewish merchants of
Brownsville were arraigned in
Brooklyn for violating the Sunday
law, having been served with sum-
monses by policemen who found
of fhe Fourth Grade, ^Bennett Fink-
elstein, Frank Ladin, Bennie Koni-
koff and Joyce Dannenbaum of the
Fifth; Harry Gordon of the Seventh;
Jerome Levy and Joe Loewenstein
of the Eighth, and Melvin Davidson
ami Virginia Goldfield of the Ninth.
Both sermonettes went home to the
youthful congregation and were ac-
curately reproduced at general as-
sembly on Sunday - after the Tab-
__—
at recent legislative hearing that
Russian and Polish Jews are “dis-
loyal agitators,” was warmly scored
by Senator Downing here today.
“Wood is more in need than those
foreign born, of an Americanization
process that would clear his heart
and mind of the cobwebs of bigotry
and prejudice,” he said.
—----— o’——-———
COUNCIL OF JEWISH WOMEN
Asserts Hirsch Inspired Council’*
Founder
In the recent issue of “The Jew
ish woman,” there appears the-fol-
lowing tribute to the life of Emil G.
Hirsch, and its influence, on the
founders of the Council , of Jewish
Women’, by Estelle M. Stemberger,
its editor.
“When we praise God for having
permitted our women to be the pro
phets of a new day of Jewish woman-
hood, we must also express our grat-
itude for one of His choicest spirits,
the sainted Rabbi of Chicago’s Tem-
ple Siai. Judaism during the past
century offered a new vision of use-
fulness and service to the Jewish
F , , , j ,pp..,g. three members, of the board work-
L and philosophy were or arc in any way due to official Christi- jng with three local ministers, repre-
- anity, it is.contrary to what history has to say on the subject. seating the Methodist, Presbyterian
rf, • i 1 c ' 1 ,, ., , ci ' 1 and Jewish denominations. Other
There is no possible way of relating the theology of the Church ministers, including Protestant, Cath-
to our steam and electrical and radio appliances, or to the.dis- ' olic and Jew, were invited to submit
h coveries in the fields of medicine and biology, except negatively. Possmses,or th approval of the
On the other hand, there is abundance of evidence that the The plan for reading the passages
I Church has been consistently-inimical toward every attempt at AZatadnrterenbmathebebocdser°rrom
exploring the world scientifically or at arriving at an under- the exercises upon written- request
Standing of the world that would be contrary to the theology of of parents or guardians. Teachers
the Church, -n fact, the term “heresy is a Church term em- readings may be excused.
I ployed to describe the adverse attitude of official Christianity —o—-
toward those who surged out from beneath its tutelege to get a to become Americanized
editorial
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It would be difficult to conceive of a more flagrant disregard
1 for the use of appellations than the persistence of the Western
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BROKEN LINKS
The Sisterhood’s heart beats in
sympathy with Mrs. Maurice Epstein
(our greatly beloved Fifth Grade
teacher) and Mrs. Lawrence Lipper
in the death of their sister at Hugo,
Okla. May God give them the
strength and courage to bear their’
loss in the traditional Jewish spirit
with a note of gratitude for the
|
vision of the world not so circumscribed as is the world of
Genesis. This is true of the Synagogue as well, except that, the
Synagogue not having enjoyed temporal power, its hostility to-
ward the men-of science and philosophy was less harmful. The
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thoroughly enjoyed.
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A New Victor sensation,
and other new ones.
OUT TOMORROW
Thos.Goggan & Bro.
Houston TEXAS Galveston
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. personal conduct, and although, moreover, they were thinking
I and living God. Today their story fills us with astonishment
। and bewilderment. To shamelessly damn one who had volun-
r tarily returned to his God and fold, at the sacrifice of position
| and competence, or to give over to anathema so saintly a man
[“ as “the God intoxicated” Spinoza was, is beyond our compre-
hension today. Yet, that is what the Synagogue felt itself called
. upon to do I
And needless to say, the hand of the Church, which had enjoy-
p ed temporal power, lay even more heavily upon the heads of
those who dared challenge its official point of view. The Savo-
I narolas, the Luthers, the Zwinglis, the Calvins, and the Huses
„are numerous in Church history. As for the men of science,
p they were the particular target of the arrows of its clerics.
L Whosoever taught of a world greater than the flat little world
the Medieval Church was pronounced heretic and enemy of
L the people, and frequently paid with his life for it. The fate of
2nd Floor we
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them. But they will surely like E
Phenix Milk and there is no better |
food. It is pure wholesome and I “ ' >
d"pnonegaanyi2ss l . . I
Toaay |
’' 06
which many of Israel’s daughters
mSkas. gg. , — . built careers of devoted service. His
scientif1e endeavors, against scientific conceptions, and this cru- powerful convictions influenced
B22 sade is carried to a point where legislators are introducing bills ’
887 to expunge from text books on cosmography all statements that
L . are not in accord with the literalness of the account of creation
5b as recorded in the Book of Genesis. And the protagonists of
L these anti-civilization measures, from William Jennings Bryan
5 to the obscurantist in the Congress hall, claim that they exert
988 themselves thus in behalf of the Church! They are against evolu-
g 2 tion and for the restoration of the old flat little world, because
04 their Church theology, so they say, demands that of them. They
4 are harassed by the vision of the endlessness and infinity of the
88 universe and of God, a vision which the scientist has unfolded
913 before us, and would reduce the universe to the size of our earth,
83 and the lordship of God to the lordship of the earth. . . . Yet,
82 these people live off the fruits of evolution and scientific dis
282 covery-the things they condemn as heretical! They are not
; like the pietists of old who, despairing of the quality of the civi-
| liaztion of their day, retired into the woods or mountains, that
Afhey might not benefit by its fruits, and that, uninfluenced by
2285 the lure of it, they might preach an unmitigated God-Idea. Nor
db these anti-evolutionists and anti-civilizationists counsel the
^ abandonment of civilized habit, in the manner of the counsel
of Roussau or, Tolstoy; to the contrary, partaking freely and
5 E generously of the fruit of civilization, they condemn the tree
-igwof. At in theh of the Church. Is there a greater
your cities, into your counties, into ' fiOY
ybur states: go ye with the nation, #/ pi . . _, _ ,
J " "andirom yor, ffor Chicken Tamalesi
J McKinney avb. 4, ;;
alted in and through justice? ********************0+*e •
tent as they were ..2.2 .
still weighted with. ************************ ;
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:: FRYERS and HENS
3 GEESE and DUCKS
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CONVENTION DELEGATES
—Hannah G. Solomon, the mother At the regular business meeting of
and founder of the Council. Ip het the Sisterhood on Tuesday, Febru-
heart and soul, th words of Emil ary 27th, the following members
Hirsch passed through the crucible ' were elected as delegates to the
of woman’s yearning and aspiration- State Convention, .convening here on
They fell from her lips as a call to April, 12th and 13th: Mesdames W.
the Jewish women of America to W. Munzesheimer, L Simon, M. D.
unite in the spirit of harmony, for a Cohen, Joe Finger, Albert Chimene,
consecrated work in her community Alfred Alexander, I. L- Friedlander,
and’ country; Ad Koppel, Max Nathan and Sani
“The women of this generation Kaiser The alternates are Mesdames
can never forget that at Chicago, M.Bernheim, Robt. Brilling,, Bee
through the Columbian Exposition of Cohen, ke Freed, Leon Emmich, Ed-
1898, through the World’s Parlia- ward Hipper,Abe usshaum, Moise
ment of Religions, and through Emil Levy, N. D. Naman, and J. N. Hirsch.
G. Hirsch, as teacher and as head of ’ ----
the Jewish Religious Congresses, the MAN IS FREE
founder of the Council of Jewish.. -- - n
Women rained Hie inspiration that
called it into being. His words were
the seeds from which the Council of
Jewish Women burst into flower. *
“As we reflect upon his magnifi-
cent life and its immensurable gifts
to the advancement of the Jewish
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■
• ♦ ■——■— --------------------------:------------— — - *--------------------
- • Thu Jewish Hlerald invites correspondence on subjects of
2 interest to the- Jewish people, but diclaims responsibility
p • for.or indorsement of the views expressed by the writers.
S ' • ---------------------•--------------------------;------------------------------------3---------
.. 2 Subscribers should notify us of change of address, giving
! 2 ■ both old,and new address that we may. properly
I : direct their paper and facilitate its delivery.
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Goldberg, Edgar. The Texas Jewish Herald (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 8, 1923, newspaper, March 8, 1923; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1520623/m1/4/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .