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Selected List of w.im»mn a hiCstino icrruti | ju woLrr k.iNVKAirriJaiNii co. PIPE, VALVES. FITTINGS T«U*-Klbm Water Supply Syateaj till Wun Street P«»r*. CaU- SICK ROQM WUPPLIBI irua j. DUUII lUHQ. lUPPLI OO | ISOS CURTIS STRBBT ■■MtalUta la Fit flap Trania. AM. Salta eat Arab Supparta. laraMS Oat— j WBLDIIta—(Oir-ACMTTIJDNSI). 1 n» HAVENS SROI.MPOA IBPFIjT 00. Ka«kla« Wars aa4 Kapalrta* Iron Pipe and Fitting* Mi«a SITS 1118-30-31 Wnaaa St. j vn UCWIB JEWELBIW' XCPPIiT CO Wholesale Jewelars TOOLS “flJSSiJ'atraal Mala 4Stt Arapahoe Straae j CATERERS AND CONFECTIONED* ' BAI'R'S ~ I Established 1873. CATBRKXS AND CONFECTIONERS , Mala BS7-SSS IBIS-IBIS Curtis Street ! Tony Sarconi H. E. Wolff Sarconi Billiard Co. Commisions placed on Elections, Base Ball and all Sporting • Events 1642-1644 Welton Street Phone Main 3381—Denver BROCK-HAFFNER PRESS CO. Photo-Engraving. Printing. Binding I Specialists in Color Work 1400 ABAPAHOE STREET Phone. Main 6210 Frank Kirchhof Lumber Co. Building Material Supply House. Wants your Order and Inquiries 7th and Lawrence—Main 4697 The Capital City Shoe Repairing Co. Repairing done while you wait—Work called tor and delivered Phone Main 7377 1511 Champa St. j CANTON RESTAURANT IS3SM CI’RTIS STB. —Champa 684' Denver's Finest and most Elegant Chinese Cafe Chop Suey, Mandarin Style—Special at- ; teutiou to Parties. On Denver’s Great Wfhite Way 1 Telephone, Champa 5016 $ | Dr. H. E. Dveirin | I Dentist 1 ■ 611 Central Savings Bank | g Building j loth ami Arapahoe Streets. 3 CBKB»3C«BSa»C(CBKecaM»»B»»»3O^ —— Dr. Jay Saphro Dentist begH to announce that lie baa re h tuned lila practice after completing a po*t-*n»du»»te course in full upper and lower ARTIFICIAL DENTURE* Suite 008-005), Central Savings Bank Buildlug ” I Dr. Herman E. Kahn ! Dentist and Dental Surgery ! 519 Mack Block jj X-Ray Equipment \ Telephone, Champa 5586. r (OPTICAL PROTECTIVE CO,g OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN g Oculists’ Eyes Exam- § I 1628 Stout. Fitted. § A. B. YODIAN, OPTOMETRIST g jC6CB3»D6eB3OO»£C6CB36CB3CB3&£9XCBXC6C6a The De Sellem Fuel and Feed Co. Full weight and prompt delivery Coal, Coke, Grain and Hay 8468 Walnut Street. —Tel. Champa 926. r~ Management of Properly REAL ESTATE LOANS RENTALS SIMM Realty and Investment Co. 525 Seventeenth Street Champa 2515 Champa 5160 Denver, Colorado Store Your Coal Early East Side Branch. Main Office: 25th and Walhtit Phones, Main 305 and 2(10. South Side Branch: 91 So. Broad wu}’ — Phone, South 3110. THE ANDERSON-HARRING TON COAL COMPANY lligligrade Coal, Wood, Hay ind Grain Heela. Rex. (iorlmm. Canon City. Mait land. and Routt County Coal. Norton’s Auto Livery New Cadillas and Cole Limousines and Touring Cars —Competent Drivers I Champa 28 and 29. 526, 17th. St- j Firms Worthy of Your Patronage. Made Only In Denver b, THE MERCHANTS BISCUIT COMPANY THE EGGERT ICE CO. Price —Service —Satisfaction ARTESIAN AND NATURAL ICE Main 8095. Third and Walnut Streets Hungarian Flour Mills Hungarian Highest Patent Flour The Pioneer Feed and Flour House of the West Jewish Organizations and Professional Men Should know what the Jewish press writes about them The Jewish Press In All Languages Read and Clipped by Us * We are the first and only Jewish Clipping Service. For dippings from the Jewish press on any topic write to— CLIPPING DEPARTMENT 5 lieekman St New York ; International Jewish Press Bureau, Inc. • Telephone, Cordlandt 5450. The Cliff Van Ness Teaming: Co. i Teaming Work of All Hinds 1 MOVERS . Phone. Main 175 834 14th Street | ■■ M PATRONIZE OVR ADVERTISERS Mention the Jewish News wtasn pur i chasing from our advertisers. gg " - m 1 ,M 1 ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE YOU KNOW ME 432 Empire Bldg. Phone Main 7153. | 1374-1378 The New Method CLEANERS and DYERS 2009-11 Champa Street The Windsor Farm Dairy Co “Honest Milk from Clean Cows” Main 5136-5137 1855 Blake Street, Denver, Colorado. Open An Account With Us I Readers of the Jewish News have received a let ter from us, inviting them i to buy here qh a3O day open account,—and we trust that many will make them selves known and avail themselves of this more convenient arrangement. I i Cor. 15th and Larimer Sts. j Subscribe to the Jewish Xert s. The Phaeacians Starving and Begging (Continued from Page One.) lo town temporarily on business which was never prohibited, made a living on their “Selnltz.” One of them whose name was Engel was humorously call ed the “Scliutzengel” (Guardian An gel). So .at the time when the hoy Francis Joseph gladdened the hearts of the Vienna Jews by calling them a congregation, they already number ed. 4 loti souls, but lacking corporate rights for nearly two centuries, they ! were merely Vienna Jews who could , elect "Vcrtrcter” but could form no • congregation and have no “Vorsteber.” I It is easily imagined that such a large j number of Jews could not be without a synagog and a rabbi. The latter could easily lie supplied in a round about way. My own ancestor, great- , grandfather’s great grandfather. Jacob j T’.llezer ltrunschwig. who died us rabbi of Vienna in 172 b. was officially reg istered as family chaplain to the court j .lew. Samson Wertheimer (1058-1724.) •i relative of Oppenlieimer’s. first em ployed by him and afterwards becom ing independent. The last rabbi of the old school. laizar Horwltz (1804- 18(1.8), a great grandson of the famous IMiineas Itorwitz of Frankfurt a. M. • Haflaali >. was elected as a "Rlt uallenaufseher” (supervisor of kasli ititli), and Ids colleagues. Isaac Noah Manuhelmcr (1703-1805) who was the preacher of the congregation, was of ficially a • JUdigionslehrer” who gave occasional addresses In the synagog. With the building of n synagog the matter was more difficult. The Jews were, of course, all the time permitted to hold services in private houses where rooms might he set aside as Betetubo," but building a synagog would have been a recognition of a "Geraeinde.” and to this emperor Francis < 171J2-1835) a narrow minded autocrat, would never consent. Hut a Jew never gives up. The leading man in the cohgregotlon was Michael I lazin' jeweler, who thru his business was In • close contact with the highest circles' cf the residence and iirobaldy with j the aid of diamond rings, scarf pins ; and similar powerful argument)* won the ldgh-ups. and thru them the em peror, over. It is told that he had ; one of The rafters of the celling In the ••Bebstube*’ sawed so that the ceiling ■ began to settle. The, building inspec tor and the chief of police, being call ed ih. declared the place- dangerous, and reconi mended In view of the dif ficulty of procuring appropriate rent ed qtturters that “tlie Verterter of the Vienna Israelites” he given per mission to buy u piece of property and build a “Temple.” This permission was given under the condition that nothing in the architecture must show that this was a place of worship, and indeed the front where the offices a«ul , apartments fol - the use of the rabbi and cantor were located looks like an ordinary apartment house. The new synagog was dedicated on j ' the traditional day for such occasion, on the first day of Xisan. IS2«. and 1 with the new building new forms of worship came. They were of a very .nild nature. In America the services • would he considered rigjilly orthodox. | The changes consisted in eliminating i some Plyyutlm. In regular rtiuslc hut ■ without any instrument and wittli a I male choir, and in the inlroduct ion N i>V ! 1 lerman sermons with some prayers. | like the prayer for the government, in | the vernacular. Yet in those days even these changes were considered ! dangerous Innovations. Kulbl Lazar : Horwitz had scruples and he submit! ! ted them to his teacher. Moses Sofer. ' who declared there was n«> objection I to his attending the services when he ' had said his prayers before, and When the preacher delivered his “blas phemous sermons,” he should read some booh. The preacher was I. X Mannbclmer. and the cantor the cole- j l«rated pioneer of inoil'»ru slnagog music, Solomon Sulzer (1804-181 K).) So. 1 the “Stjadt-Tcmpel,” still existing in j the same place with the same order, of service's, became a historic instStu tion. The revolution of 1848 brought the j ! provisional constitution of April 25th. which abolished all discriminations on the ground of religion. The Jews, were now permitted to settle freely in Vienna. Reaction, however, set in ( very soon. The emperor dissolved the ’’Reichstag” and issued a constitution 1 of his own making. March 4. IN|P, ini which the principle of equality of tin* Jews was still maintained. This con- , j st'itution was suspended, I)cc. .It. 1851. j anil the freedom of residence of the i ! lews was therefore called in question, i The supreme court, however, decided I that it was not abrogated. Reaction I progressed lustily and an imperial or ] dor of Oct. 2, 1853 ruled tliut the Jews ! should nut have the right to hold | property 1 In places where they did not possess lids right before Jan. 1. islj». ' Tills, altlio not retro active, nrfoeted ) the future of the Vienna Jewish congre gation very considerably. Meantime | the number of Jews In Vienna hud THE DENVER JEWISH NEWS Good Clothe. Good Clothes NOW GOING ON SSfts £ OCoats Jgjlndications'' higher I ° rt Suits aOvercoats I next Season, tki s is a , Opportunity I M'*mlH!<F3s and *4O 4% I J S . f °’ c OATS | 0 I tea *45, s 5O and 55 91 50 1 MM • SUITS»O’COATS J| ■rj | sol SUITS..O’COATS i|| « | Exclusive — Stylish— ———■■■■._ , .. _.. _ rapidly increased, and this increase was not even checked by the imperial eider of Oct. 2, 1853, which affected only the right of holding property but not of residence. The census of INoO showed 10.(170 Jews. The need of an other synagog was evident. In spite ! of the order of 1853 the minister < ’ouiit Thun, a clerical of lihe blackest type, gave permission to build a new synagog in 1854, and even the old re striction that f.he building should not show its destination by its architecture, was (juiely dropped. The new tbmple was built outside of the old “City” in the district where the old ghetto was located in tin* seventeenth century, tho i not exactly on the same spot. It was dedicated June 15. 1858 and licrnme I one of the landmarks of the* city, being . c onsidered a model of beautiful Moor ! isli architecture. As preacher Adolph , Jellinck was elected who soon acquired fame as one of tiie leading preachers I <:f his age. After the death of Matm ' lieimer he was transferred to the old "Stadt-Teiupel” which, tho much smaller, owing to the aristocratic I nature of its worshipers was always j considered the cathedral synagog. and .•a .lellinek's death in 18t»3 Guedemann was equally transferred and officiated in Mannheimer's and Jellinek’s pulpktT rutij old age* shortly lie fore his death CAug. 5, HUS) compelled him to re-j lire*. io make room for ids successor,! 11. I*. Chajes, inaugurated two days J ■ fiefore Cuedeinann's death. 1 The Iwautiftil old Temple in the l l.oopoldstadt. was laid in ashes on tlie eve of the old emperor's bitrtlUlay, who » had granted the permit ot its erection. in the first year after his death. It • seems almost a symbol of the decay of ■ old Austria with its privileges, its Spanish court otlqUolftc and Its tinsels of titles, uniforms and decorations. Who could have foretold old Bieder innun that Vienna, growing t<» about » Imndred times the .lewMli population which it had in his jlays. would have to hep for the restoration of its Tem ple? The Mhlrash tells us that Pfovi > ilenee selected Jeremiah from Aimtoth (pun on poverty) to sitig dirges peed use it required one Idvd in poverty to sing: how dost thou sit solitary. INSIDIOUS ANTI-JEWISH PROPAGANDA ' The modern press Inis it way all its own to carry on :m liiHltllOtis propa ganda against those that have incurred its dlplenstiro, or the <lispleuslire of ■ those in control of affairs. No direct p reach men t, no editorial comment is necessary. The news columns are utilized, and tin* fertile imagination *»1 tin* scribes supplies the news, gives it the proper coloring, judiciously drops .1 word here and there, and the trick is done. That the Jew is the nrch-fieiul that , j lias let loose the peril of Bolshevism ( upon the world Ims become axiomatic with the gentlemen in control of our press. Nothing will convince them of the baselessness of this idea. Trotxky looms largo upou the journalistic horizon, uud Trotsky, ol course, meuiis all the Jews. What brutes these Jew ish Bolshoviki ore can best Ik* told in detached news Items. A girl, supposedly a leading spirit among the Russiau Bolshevists, is cap tured by the anti-Bolsheviks forces. Her guilt is detailed, consisting of in numerable brutal, cold-blooded iuur ders committed by her. But before the gruesome story Is concluded, a hint is dropped that she comes from the ghetto. It may interest the reader to know that the correspondent who sends out this poisoned item to the? world bears n Polish or rkrninlnn nnnie. The Jews in this and,other countries have not been silent regarding the many outrages perpetrated against their kinsfolk by Poles and Ukrainian re actionaries. Ilow can such Jewish plaints and protests be counteracted7 The press furnishes the means. An item about the brutalities of some Bol shevist. girl from the “gnetto” is at the present time worth more to our enemies than all the vaporings of all the Jew-haters here and abroad. It is the most damnable anti-Jcwisli prop aganda that has ever been devised.— is X. Deinard. in Am. Jewish World. SOMEBODY Homebody «1 itl si golden deed. Homebody proved si friend ill need. Homebody sung u beautiful souk. Homebody smiled I lie whole (lay long, Homebody thought “*Tis sweet to live,” Homebody said ’*l‘m glad to give,” Homebody fought a valiant Tight. Homebialy loved to shield the right. Was Unit “Homebody” you? NO JEWISH PROBLEM IN ITALY *\Vt» are fortunate in Italy,’ said King Victor of Italy, in a recent intcr view. ’in having no .lewisli problem. »Ve have no prejudice, n(*r haw 1 ever seen sinus of discrimination against them in any sphere of life. A man may become prominent in public service like our present Attorney General. I think you call it (the King's Kurdish is admirable), without our even ktiowihg lie is a Jew. and if wo do know it ; our opinion and our treatment of him i.re not in the least affected. We have only 40,000 of them in a population of over ;>T».000.000. They furnish perhaps | more than their share of distinguished men.’ A large group of Russian students, many of whom halve left. Universities in Russia to serve the National cause, i lulve arrived at Remit en route for Palestine.