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CANADIAN JEWISH REVIEW;
F. SIMPSON & SONS
736 Yonge Street (Just South of Bloor Street)
Headquarters for better table supplies
Telephones North 5180 to 5185
Fish
ALL FRESH,CAUGHT
Restigouchc salmon. Fresh cod steak or piece. Fresh haddock. ' Niagara whitefish. Georgian Bay salmon trout. Finnan haddie. Ciscoes. Salt cod. Kippers.
Shell oysters. Bulk oysters.
Poultry
Turkeys. Geese. Ducks.^ Milk-fed roasting chickens. Squab. Guinea hens.
Fruit and Vegetables
English hot house grapes. Florida grape fruit. Casaba melons. Limes. Mackintosh table apples. Snows. Northern spys.
Fancy table pears.
Large California budded walnuts. . New Brazils. New English cob nuts. Chestnuts. Almonds, etc. Fresh spinach. Brussel sprouts. Southern waxand green beans, Hothouse cucumbers. Hothouse tomatoes. Fresh mushrooms.
Grocery Specials
Crossed fish sardines, 15c tin.
* Goodwillies preserved raspberries, 40c jar.
Sliced pi|p^3ple, 45c tin.
10 pound tin clover honey, $2.
Campbell's tomato soup, 6 tins, $1.
Aylmer tomatoes, 6 tins, $1.
Laundry soaps, 14 bars, $1.
ABSOLUTE SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
Choice assortment of table ferns, palms and cut flowers
1859�Gotthard D^ts^h�1921
{ConUnutd from page 5) :
prince #eorge J|oteI
TORONTO
The finest accommodation in the
city for
Dances Banquets Receptions Bridge Parties Teas, etc.
The New Empire Room has a Maple and Walnut floor, 90 x 36 feet. Free of Pillars.
E. WINNETT THOMPSON Managing Director
y
college "feeds" and '.'shows.'' As a host,rhe wafc genial; One felt ,7> oneself ��sitting-at one's father's table. ; In his .presence he. nevery burdened you with his learning. He was a:man's man, * . ' . �
He was young with his boys. Frequently he out radie aled.tnem � in their own radicalism, whether in the (jomain of politickptv theology. He not merely read and studied everything, but he; alio--.�!-acquired new ideas. He affiliated with new movements and/thereby - ' set the example in his wide range of interests for his students, to' follow. . k . �� :'� :\
As he exemplified in his life, to be a Jew implied that one had ,v to be a citizen of the world, and Judaism as he preached and prac-; ticed it meant, not merely a passing acquaintance,, but familiarity, if not a friendship with the best minds of the world, as wTell as or! our own past. < ' x . ,;
Deutsch not merely lectured to his students,, but he frequently placed them after their ordination, and never a square peg in a � > round hole, for he knew his boys and knew the^ different pulpits� his range of friends and acquaintances was wide and his; recommendation carried weight. He "followed his boys up," visited them, wrote them often, advised and guided' them through that "sturm und drang" period of their novitiate.
In his passing away his boys have lost a father.
But his boys were not the only ones who will miss lujm. "V^hat about the hundreds of immigrant Jew7s of Cincinnati, where he lived for thirty years, who flocked to him in times of distress and trouble, as they did in the Old Country to the "Wonder Rabbi." When'nobody could do anything, Deutsch could be relied upon, and he never x failed them . With him they were at home. With him they could^ converse in Yiddish and tell "Maiselach." He spoke their language, though it was only in late years that he acquired it so thatthe could write and converse in it fluently. His Yiddish journalistic efforts wrere a labor of love. He was an ardent reader and admirer of Yid-. dish literature and literateurs, but he had no hope for its future, because the environment was inimical to its development and it was not grounded on a school system for the young. To the immigrant Jew, Deutsch was not a "Yahudi"�he was just a Jewish Jew. His~~ delight was to frequent the orthodox Shul on Shabbos and Yom Tov, and even on Tisha B'Ab, and to see him with his patriarchal N face, his big broad striped Talith over his head, shaking to and fro as he murmured the old prayers with the traditional Jewish melodies, was to imagine one of our own fathers, "Abraham, Isaac or Jacob," in worship.
His genuine interest in the welfare of his fellow-immigrants* more recent landing, led him after the Kisheniff progroms to establish several small colonies of Jewish farmers in the environs of Cincinnati. He fathered these refugees and to the last year of his death visited them regularly. His council and, encouragement carried them through their hardships and made them self-sustaining and independent. To their children Prof. Deutsch was grandpa.
His views on great public questions and Jewish movements were unique. Many people have set Deutsch down as a Zionist�and still others as an anti-Zionist. In truth, he was neither. He was certainly not a Zionist in the sense that Zionism is properly under- , stood. Philosophically, he was a Jewish Pessimist. He realized better than did anyone else how quickly the Jewish youth in all lands was becoming spiritually assimilated, and his heart broke to_ see our best flowers .flourishing in strange gardens and in foreign soil. He knew that Judaism, to develop and hold the young, must
{Continued on pagt 13)
THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE
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Capital Paid up $15,000,00$ Reserve Fund $15,000,000
Commercial Accounts
ITH 530 Branches and numerous correspondents, we are specially equipped to handle Commercial Accounts for making collections throughout the world.
Savings Accounts, large or smalt, are welcomed.
Market Branch,
T\ A. CHISHOLM, Mfcr.
Qu�en �t Unlrertity Branch,
. L. A. S. DACK, Mir.