66
150 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK JEWISH STATISTICS The statistics of Jews in the world rests largely upon estimates. In Russia, Austria-Hungary, Germany, and a few other countries, official figures are obtainable. In the main, however, the numbers given are based upon estimates repeated and added to by one statis- tical authority after another. In spite of the unsatisfactoriness of the method, it may be assumed that the numbers given are approximately correct. For the statistics given below various authorities have been consulted, among them the " Statesman's Year Book" for 1905, the English " Jewish Year Book" for 5665, " The Jewish Ency- clopedia," and the Alliance Israelite Universelle reports. Some of the statements rest upon the authority of competent individ- uals. A comparison with last year's statistics will show that for several countries the figures have been changed. In most cases, the change is due to the fact that the results of the census of 1900, 1901, and 1902 have only now become available. THE UNITED STATES As the census of the United States has, in accordance with the spirit of American institutions, taken no heed of the religious convictions of American citizens, whether native-born or natural- ized, all statements concerning the number of Jews living in this country are based upon estimate, though several of the estimates have been most conscientiously made. The Jewish population was estimated In 1818 by Mordecai M. Noah at 3,000 In 1824 by Solomon Etting at 6,000 In 1826 by Isaac C. Harby at 6,000 In 1840 by the American Almanac at 15,000 In 1848 by M. A. Berk at 50,000 In 1880 by Win. B. Hackenburg at 230,257 In 1888 by Isaac Markens at 400,000 In 1897 by David Sulzberger at 937,800 The following table by States is a modification of that given in the AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK for 5665, by reason of changes in the estimated populations of Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig- ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia."

JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    3

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

150 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

JEWISH STATISTICSThe statistics of Jews in the world rests largely upon estimates.

In Russia, Austria-Hungary, Germany, and a few other countries,official figures are obtainable. In the main, however, the numbersgiven are based upon estimates repeated and added to by one statis-tical authority after another. In spite of the unsatisfactorinessof the method, it may be assumed that the numbers given areapproximately correct.

For the statistics given below various authorities have beenconsulted, among them the " Statesman's Year Book" for 1905,the English " Jewish Year Book" for 5665, " The Jewish Ency-clopedia," and the Alliance Israelite Universelle reports. Someof the statements rest upon the authority of competent individ-uals. A comparison with last year's statistics will show that forseveral countries the figures have been changed. In most cases,the change is due to the fact that the results of the census of1900, 1901, and 1902 have only now become available.

THE UNITED STATESAs the census of the United States has, in accordance with the

spirit of American institutions, taken no heed of the religiousconvictions of American citizens, whether native-born or natural-ized, all statements concerning the number of Jews living in thiscountry are based upon estimate, though several of the estimateshave been most conscientiously made.

The Jewish population was estimatedIn 1818 by Mordecai M. Noah at 3,000In 1824 by Solomon Etting at 6,000In 1826 by Isaac C. Harby at 6,000In 1840 by the American Almanac at 15,000In 1848 by M. A. Berk at 50,000In 1880 by Win. B. Hackenburg at 230,257In 1888 by Isaac Markens at 400,000In 1897 by David Sulzberger at 937,800

The following table by States is a modification of that given inthe AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK for 5665, by reason of changesin the estimated populations of Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska,New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia."

Page 2: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

JEWISH STATISTICS 151

Alabama 7,000Arizona 2,000Arkansas 3,085California 28,000Colorado 5,800Connecticut 5,500N. and S. Dakota 3,500Delaware 928District of Columbia.. 3,500Florida 3,000Georgia 7,000Hawaiian Islands 100Idaho 300Illinois 100,000Indiana 25,000Iowa 5,000Kansas 3,000Kentucky 12,000Louisiana 12,000Maine 5,000Maryland 26,500Massachusetts 60,000Michigan 16,000Minnesota 13,000Mississippi 3,000Missouri 50,000Montana 2,500

The total Jewish immigration to the United States, throughthe ports of New York, Philadelphia, and Baltimore, from 1881to July 1, 1905, is stated to have been 945,843, although it is byno means certain that this number does not include Christiansfrom Russia and Austria. The immigation at the same portsfrom July 1, 1904, to June 30, 1905, was as follows:

Nebraska 3,800Nevada 300New Hampshire 1,000New Jersey 25,000New Mexico 800New York 750,000North Carolina 6,000Ohio 50,000Oklahoma 1,000Oregon 6,000Pennsylvania 100,000Philippine Islands 100Porto Rico 100Rhode Island 3,500South Carolina 2,500Tennessee 10,000Texas 15,000Utah 5,000Vermont 700Virginia 15,000Washington 2,800West Virginia 1,500Wisconsin 15,000Wyoming 1,000

Total 1,418,813

Port ofNew York

JulyAugust . .SeptemberOctober .NovemberDecemberJanuary .FebruaryMarch . .April . . .MayJune . . .

Aua-trians1,4481,6701,2721,2872,1701,8141,430

9921,437

905928

1,028

Eou-manlam

416391479226617357352240198198265302

Ena-sianB

9,4809,8496,7056,172

10,0158,4958,3473,9835,6124,1062,4856,091

Others165235238174145110119

851086648

686

Totals atNew York11,50912,1458,6947,859

12,94710,77610,2485,3007,3555,2753,7268,107

Fort ofPhiladel-

phiaTotals

1,082672

1,034754957

1,1051,127570536755277523

Port of TotalsBaltl- at threemore PortsTotals

49589660612850548021427936238688

647

13,08613,71310,3348,741

14,40912,36111,5896,1498,2536,4164,0919,277

16,381 4,041 81,340 2,179 103,941 9,392 5,086 118,419

Page 3: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

152 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

The total number of immigrants at each of these three ports forthe preceding year was: New York, 80,885; Philadelphia, 5310;Baltimore, 6606; in all, 92.801.1

THE BRITISH EMPIREEngland and Wales.. . 196,000Ireland 3,898Australasia 16,840Canada and British

Columbia 25,000Barbadoes 21Trinidad 31Jamaica 2,400India 18,228

South AfricaGibraltarMaltaAdenCyprusHong KongStraits Settlement

30,0003,000

1733,000

119143535

Total 299,388

GENERAL JEWISH STATISTICSUnited States 1,418,813British Empire 299,388Abyssinia (Fala-

shas) 120,000Argentine Republic... 22,500Austria-Hungary2 2,076,378Belgium 12,000Bosnia, Herzegovina.. 8,213Brazil 3,000China 300Costa Rica 43Cuba 4,000Denmark 3,476France 90,000

Algeria 63,000Tunis 62,540

Germany * 586,948Greece 5,792Italy 35,617Luxembourg 1,201Mexico 1,000

Morocco 109,712Netherlands 103,988Curagoa 103

Surinam 1,158Persia 49,500Peru 498Roumania 276,493Russia 5,215,805Servia 5,729Spain 402Sweden and Norway.. 3,402Switzerland 12,264Turkey4 463,686

Bulgaria 33,717Egypt 30,578Crete 1,150

Turkestan and Af-ghanistan 14,000

Venezuela 411

Total 11,136,8051 For a more detailed statement of Jewish Immigration into the United

States, see the AMERICAN JEWISH YKAB BOOK for 5660, pp. 283-284.1 851,378 in Hungary.• 392,322 in Prussia.* 78,000 in Palestine.

Page 4: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

BOOKS IN ENGLISH ON PALESTINE 153

ONE HUNDKED AVAILABLE BOOKS IN ENGLISHON PALESTINE.

As a result of the past twenty-five years' exploration inPalestine, practically the whole of the country, both east andwest of the Jordan, has been surveyed and mapped, trigo-nometrically as well as geologically, and the way has beencleared for the present task of investigators, that of excavat-ing the ruins of Biblical sites. Until the present centurythe only extended excavations, aside from those in connectionwith the walls at Jerusalem, had been made in the Philistinelowlands, or Shephelah, two of the five ruins excavated therebeing identified respectively as Lachish and Mareshah. Oneof the principal sites at present under investigation likewiselies in this district, namely, the ancient Gezer (Tell Jezer),where the Palestine Exploration Fund has been at work since1902. Explorers, however, are now turning their attentionto other regions also, and since April, 1903, extensive excava-tions have been under way in the southern part of the Plainof Jezreel (i. e. at Tell Mutesellim), in the region where laythe ancient Megiddo. This work is being done by the GermanPalestine Society. At Sidon excavations have been, and arebeing, made by the Turkish Government. The remainingarchaeological work now being prosecuted is concerned with thesuperficial examination of sites for future excavation, the sur-veying of a few not yet fully explored districts, and the gather-ing of inscriptions. The Princeton University Syrian expe-dition, for instance, set out in October, 1904, for a year's workin Eastern .Palestine and Northern Syria; and similar expedi-

Page 5: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

154 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

tions for minor investigations are being sent out by each ofthree schools existing in Jerusalem, the German (DasDeutsche Evangelische Institut), the American (School ofArchaeology), and the French (L'Ecole Biblique de St.Etienne).

Detailed reports of the work being done by the PalestineExploration Fund are given in the Palestine ExplorationFund Quarterly (London, Palest. Ex. Fund, $2.50), whichnotices also the work of other societies and expeditions. Theonly other journal in English devoted exclusively to thesubject of Oriental excavations is Biblia, a monthly journalpublished at Meriden, Conn. ($1 per year).

The following is a list of works in English, in part detailedand scientific, in part popular and impressionistic, dealingwith Palestine. The reader seeking to acquire a general andcomprehensive idea of the physical features of the land isrecommended to study one of the shorter text books or sum-maries, and then to read several of the popular illustratedworks of travel in connection with one of the guide-books.

WILLIAM POPPER

ADLEB, E. Jews in Many Lands. Philadelphia, 1905 (JewishPublication Society of America).

Includes sketches of scenes and life in Palestine; especially interestingfrom Jewish standpoint.ARMSTRONG, G. Names and Places in the Old and New Testament

and Apocrypha with their Modern Identification. London,1889. $1-50.

More than 1150 names of places in the Holy Land, Mesopotamia, Edom,Desert of Sinai, and Egypt.BADEKEE'S Palestine and Syria. Leipsic, 1898, 3d ed. (Badeker;

New York, Scribner) . $3.60.Prepared by Benziger. Popular and accurate resume's of Palestinian

geography, geology, flora, ana fauna, populations, manners, and customs,art, language, religions, and history, with identification of Biblical sites,and maps. Handy for reference as well as a guide-book.

Page 6: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

BOOKS IN ENGLISH ON PALESTINE 155

Buss, F. J. A Mound of Many Cities. London, 1894 (PalestineExploration Fund).

A detailed account of the excavation of Tell-el-Hesy.BLISS, F. J., and MACALISTEE, R. A. S. Excavations in Palestine

During the Years 1898-1900. London, 1902 (Palestine Explor-ation Fund). $12.50.*

BLISS, F. J. Excavations at Jerusalem 1894-97. London, 1898(Palestine Exploration Fund). $4.00.

The walls, western hill, Jewish and other pottery ; chronological bearings.BODDY, A. H. Days in Galilee and Scenes in Judea, together with

some Account of a Solitary Cycling Journey in SouthernPalestine. London, 1900. $2.00.

BONAK, H. A. Palestine for the Young. Oakland, Cal. (PacificPress). $1.00.

BUBTON, ISABEL. The Inner Life of Syria, Palestine, and the HolyLand. London, 1884, 4th ed.

Popular; treats especially Damascus, Palmyra, and Lebanon.BUTLEE, ELIZABETH. Letters from the Holy Land. New York,

1903 (Macmillan).

BTTTLEB, H. H. Publications of an American Archaeological Expe-dition to Syria in 1899-1900. II. Architecture and Other Arts.New York, 1904 (Century Co.). To be complete in five vol-umes. $20.00.

A monumental work.CHIPIEZ. See PEBEOT and CHIPIEZ.

CLEEMONT-GANNEAU, C. S. Archaeological Researches in Palestineduring 1878-74. London, 1896-99 (Palestine ExplorationFund). $36.00.

I. Jerusalem and neighborhood (Bethlehem, Bitter, Bmmaus, etc.).II. Jaffa, Jericho, Gezer, Samaria, Gaza.CONDEE, C. R. Heth and Moab. London, 1889 (Bentley; New

York, Macmillan). $2.25.Narrative of the expedition for the survey of eastern Palestine, and

results of the explorations and discoveries.CONDEE, C. R. Syrian Stone-Lore. New York, 1887 (Scribner and

Welford).Palestinian customs and civilization from the earliest times through the

Crusades as derived from architectural remains, independently of writtensources.

* All publications of the Palestine Exploration Fund are sold to membersat reduced prices.

Page 7: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

156 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

CONDER, C. R. Tent-Work in Palestine. London, 1889 (Bentley).$1-50.

General popular account of personal observations In western Palestine;sites, customs, the Fellahin, Bedouins, Jews, Russians, Germans, fertilityof the land.CONDEB, C. R. Palestine. London, 1891, 3d ed. (Philip; New

York, Dodd, Mead and Co.). ?1.25.Briefer than " Tent-Work " ; with Index of identified Bible sites.

CONDEB. See PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND.

COOK'S Tourists1 Handbook for Palestine and Syria. London, 1900(Simpkin). $2.00.

COOKE, ARTHUR W. Palestine in Geography and History. 2 vols.London, 1901 (Kelly). $1.25.

With topographical index.CURTIS, W. E. To-day in Syria and Palestine. New York, 1903

(Revell). $2.00.Popular description of Bible scenes, and account of customs and manners

of Mohammedans, Christians, Jews, Samaritans, with kodak illustrations,by a newspaper man.DAWSON, J. W. Egypt and Syria. New York, 1887, 2d ed. (Re-

vell). $1.20.Physical features In relation to Biblical history.

DE HAAS, F. S. Buried Cities Recovered. Philadelphia, 1884,revised ed. (Bradley).

Results of scientific researches as supporting authenticity of Bibleaccounts.DUCKWORTH, R. Through the Holy Land. New York, 1904 (Ra-

phael Tuck and Sons). $2.00.

FLINDERS-PETRIE, W. M. Syria and Egypt from the Tell el-Amarna Letters. New York, 1898 (Scribner). $1.00.

FULTON, J. Palestine, the Holy Land. Philadelphia, 1900(Coates). $3.00.

GEIKIE, C. The Holy Land and the Bible. 2 vols. New York,1899, new ed. (Cassell). $2.00.

With illustrations of Bible scenes by H. Harper.GLAISCHER, J. Meteorological Observations at Jerusalem. Lon-

don, 1905 (Palestine Exploration Fund). 60 cents.

GREENE, H. B. Wild Flowers from Palestine. Lowell, Mass.(Dumas). $1.50.

Page 8: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

BOOKS IN ENGLISH ON PALESTINE

HAGGARD, H. R. A Winter Pilgrimage; being an Account ofTravels through Palestine, Italy, and Cyprus. New York,1904, new ed. (Longmans, Green and Co.). $2.50.

HAMME, L. Ancient and Modern Palestine. 2 vols. New YoTk(Benziger Bros.). $3.50.

HABPER. Walks in Palestine. London, 1894, 2d ed.

HAEPKE, H. A. The Bible and Modern Discoveries. London, 1890(Palestine Exploration Fund). $1.75.

Biblical history retold In the light of modern scientific discoveries andpersonal observations; popular and readable.

HART. Some Account of the Fauna and Flora of Sinai, Petra,and Wadi Arabah. London, 1891 (Palestine ExplorationFund). $10.50.

HENDERSON, A. Palestine. London, no date, 3d ed. (Clark; NewYork, Macmillan). 75 cents.

Summary of historical geography at successive epochs, with topograph-ical index; a standard work.

HILPRECHT, H. V. Explorations in Bible Lands During the Nine-teenth Century. Philadelphia, 1903 (Holman). $3.00.

Pp. 579-622 contain a resume of Palestinian explorations, by Benziger.

HULL. Mount Se'ir, Sinai, and Western Palestine. London, 1885.Popular narrative of a scientific expedition.

HULL, E. The Geology of Palestine and Arabia Petrwa. London,1886 (Palestine Exploration Fund). $4.00.

JOHNSTONE, C. L. Christian and Jewish Pilgrims to the HolyLand. London, 1899 (Church Newspaper Co.). 75 cents.

KELMAN, J. The Holy Land. London, 1902 (Black; New York,Macmillan). $6.00.

With ninety full page illustrations, mostly in color, by John Fulleylove;travelling reminiscences and impressionist descriptions.

KITCHENER. See PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND.

Landscapes of the Bible and their Story: Illustrations of Places,Sites, and Cities in Egypt and the Holy Land, and Descrip-tions of the Scenes Depicted. Introduction by H. B. Tristram.New York, 1901 (Young). $1.00.

LEWIS, AGNES S. In the Shadow of Sinai. A Story of Travel andResearch from 1895-97. Cambridge, 1898 (McMillan andBowes). $1.00.

Page 9: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

158 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

LE STRANGE, GUY. Palestine under the Moslems. London, 1890(Watt, for the Palestine Exploration Fund). $4.00.

Geographical description of Palestine from 650 A. D. to 1500, accordingto the mediaeval geographers ; invaluable for students.

MACALISTEB, R. A. S. See BLISS, F. J.

MACCOTJN, T. The Holy Land in Geography and History. 2 vols.New York, 1899 (Revell). $2.00.

Progressive historical maps with brief descriptions; handy reference.MACDODGALL, JAMES. Geography of Palestine: Historical and

Descriptive, on a New and Competitive System, for YoungPeople in Schools and Families. Manchester, 1895.

MCGAEVET, J. W. Lands of the Bible: a Geographical and Topo-graphical Description of Palestine. Cincinnati, 1904 (Stand-ard Publishing Co.). $2.00.

MACGBEGOB, J. The Rob Roy on the Jordan, Nile, Red Sea, andGennesareth. London, 1886, 7th ed. (Murray) $2.00.

Account of a canoe cruise; detailed descriptions, primarily popular, butwith much valuable information ; a standard work.MACMILLAN'S Guide to Palestine and Egypt. New York, 1905, 3d

ed. (Macmillan). $3.25.

MACPHAIL, S. R. Historical Geography of the Holy Land. NewYork, 1903 (Scribner). 20 cents.

MASPEEO, G. Struggle of the Nations: Egypt, Syria, and Pales-tine. New York, 1902 (Appleton). $1.50.

MEBBILL, S. East of the Jordan. A Record of Travel and Obser-vation in the Countries of Moab, Gilead, and Bashan. NewYork, 1881 (Scribner). $2.50.

Journal of the expeditions (1875-77) of the American Palestine Ex-ploration Society. Descriptions, explorations, native life, and customs.Excellent.MILLEB, HELEN. Alone through Syria. London, 1891 (Kegan

Paul, Trench, Triibner, and Co.).A woman's six months' travels in Egypt and Syria, in the latter alone

and without tents.MILLEE, W, Least of all Lands. London, 1901, 2d ed. (Mac-

niven). 50 cents.Topography in relation to history, careful studies, and vivid descriptions.

MUBBAY'S Handbook for Travellers in Syria and Palestine. Lon-don, 1903 (Stanford; New York, Scribner). $7.20.

Page 10: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

BOOKS IN ENGLISH ON PALESTINE 159

NEIL, J. Palestine Explored, with a View to the Present NaturalFeatures and to the Prevailing Manners, Customs, and Collo-quial Expressions of the People which throw Light on theFigurative Language of the Bible. New York, 1882 (Ran-dolph).

OLIPHANT, L. The Land of Oilead, with Excursions in the Leb-anon. Edinburgh, 1880 (Blackwood). $5.00.

An important work.OLIPHANT, L. Haifa, or Life in Modern Palestine. Edinburgh,

1887, 2d ed. (Blackwood). $2.00.

PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND. The Survey of Western Palestine.London, 1881-84.

The starting point for all modern scientific exploration in Palestine,the authority for matters of scientific detail. The separate volumes areas follows:

WILSON, WARREN, CONDER, and others. Special Papers (onarchaeology, topography, manners, and customs). 1881.

CONDER and KITCHENER. Arabic and English Name Lists.with explanations by Palmer. 1881.

CONDER and KITCHENER. Memoirs (on topography, orogra-phy, hydrography, and archaeology). 1881-83.

WARREN and CONDER. Jerusalem. 1884. $7.50.Includes an account of all the discoveries made in Jerusalem between

1865 and 1884, with a brief history and an account of the monuments.TRISTRAM. The Flora and Fauna of Palestine. 1884.

$16.00.Very detailed, scientific catalogue; Hebrew, vernacular Arabic, and

scientific names.PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND. Survey of Eastern Palestine.

London, 1889. $16.00.PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND. Thirty Tears' Work in the Holy

Land. London, 1895, rev. ed. (Watt). $1.00.Popular record and summary of explorations from 1865 to 1895.

PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND. The City and the Land. London,1892 (Watt). $1.00.

Seven popular lectures on Ancient Jerusalem, the Future of Palestine,Natural History, General Work of the Society, the Hittltes, " Tell "Excavation, Modern Travel.PALMER, H. S. Sinai. New York, 1892, 2d ed. (Young).

Summary of geography and natural history.

Page 11: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

160 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

PATON, L. B. The Early History of Syria and Palestine. NewYork, 1901 (Scribner). $1.25.

PEECY, A. H. Moab, Ammon, and Gilead. London, 1897.

PETERS, J. B., and THIEBSCH, H. Tombs at Marissa. London,1905 (Palestine Exploration Fund). $10.50.

With colored plates, inscriptions in facsimile, descriptions, notes as toage, character, place In art, etc.

PEKEOT and CHIPIEZ. History of Ancient Art in Judma, Sardinia,and Syria. London, 1890.

POETEE, J. L. Giant Cities of Bashan, and Syria's Holy Places.New York (Nelson). $1.75.

POST, G. E. Flora of Syria, Palestine, and Sinai from the Taurusto Ras Muhammad and from the Mediterranean Sea to theSyrian Desert. Beirut, 1896. $5.00.

RAFFALOVICH I, and SACHS, M. E. Tiews from Palestine and itsJewish Colonies. Jerusalem, 1898.

Photographs, with German and English descriptive text.RENAN, J. E. Letters from the Holy Land. New York, 1904

(Doubleday, Page and Co.). $2.00.

REYNOLDS-BAXL, E. A. Jerusalem. New York, 1901 (Macmillan).$1.00.

Guide to Jerusalem, with excursions to Bethlehem, Hebron, Jericho,Dead Sea, etc.RITTEB, C. Comparative Geography of Palestine and the Sinaitic

Peninsula. New York (Appleton). $24.00.A standard reference work.

SACHS, M. E. See RAFFALOVICH, I.

SAUNDEBS, T. An Introduction to the Survey of Western Pales-tine, its Waterways, Plains, and Highlands.

SAYCE, A. H. The Races of the Old Testament. London, 1891(Religious Tract Society). 75 cents.

SAYCE, A. H. Patriarchal Palestine. New York (Nelson). $1.50.

SCHUMACHEB, G. The Jaulan. London, 1888. $1.50.Translated from the German ; description, index of geographical names;

very careful, authoritative.SCHUMACHEB, G. Across the Jordan. London (Watt, for the

Palestine Exploration Fund). $1.50.Valuable history of a short survey of the Hauran.

Page 12: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

BOOKS IN ENGLISH ON PALESTINE

SCHUMACHER, G. Abila, Pella, and northern Aglun {of the De-capolis). London (Palestine Exploration Fund). $1.50.

SMITH, GEORGE ADAM. Historical Geography of the Holy Land.London, 1898, 6th ed. $4.50.

The best general and reference work on Palestine proper, special atten-tion being paid also to eastern Palestine, and to comparative geography Inits relation to history. A critical work based on scientific researches sup-plemented by personal observation ; references to much of the literatureon the subject; readable.STANLEY, A. P. Sinai and Palestine. New York (Armstrong).

$4.50.The most vivid and readable description of Palestine in its relation to

Biblical history, though not constructed on modern scientific methods.With colored maps and a vocabulary of topographical terms.

STEWART, L. J. Land of Israel. New York, 1903, new ed.(Revell). $1.50.

Student's text book of physical and historical geography, based onresults of recent researches and giving author's personal impressions; avery excellent summary of the whole subject.STODDARD, CHARLES W. A Cruise under the Crescent. New York,

1898 (Rand, McNally).Popular impressions of scenes and life in Judsea, Damascus, and Beirut.

TEMPLE, SIR R. Palestine Illustrated. London, 1888 (Allen).$8.00.

Colored reproductions of 32 studies in oil colors, with descriptive text;principally Judsea.TERHUNE, A. P. Syria from the Saddle. New York, 1902 (Ben-

dett). $1.50.

THIERSCH, H. See PETERS, J. B.

THOMAS, MARGARET. TWO Years in Palestine and Syria. NewYork, 1900 (Scrlbner). $5.00.

With illustrations In color.THOMSON, W. M. The Land and the Book. 3 vols. New York,

1882-86 (Harper). $7.60.Palestine, Phoenicia, Syria, and eastern Palestine; scenes, manners, and

customs; a standard popular but accurate and detailed work.

TRISTRAM, H. B. Bible Places. London, 1897 (Society for thePromotion of Christian Knowledge). $1.25.

Topography, brief description of all Identified places, rivers, and moun-tains of the Bible, with modern names and historical references.TRISTRAM, H. B. The Natural History of the Bible. London, 1889,

8th ed.Physical geography, geology, and meteorology.

Page 13: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

162 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

TRISTRAM, H. B. The Land of Moat. New York (Harper).$2.50.

TRISTRAM, H. B. See PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND, and Land-scapes of the Bible, etc.

TRTJMBtrLL, H. C. Studies in Oriental Social Life, and Gleamsfrom the East on the Sacred Page. Philadelphia, 1894 (Wat-tles).

TBUMBULL, H. C. Kadesh-Barnea. New York, 1884 (Scribner).$3.00.

Studies of the Exodus and the southern boundary of Palestine.VAN LENNEP, HENRY J. Bible Lands: Their Modern Customs and

Manners Illustrative of Scripture. New York, 1876 (Harper).$5.00.

Physical features, flora, and fauna, ethnology, tent and village life,social and religious customs, arts, commerce, detailed descriptions with175 cuts and illustrations.WALLACE, A. The Desert and the Holy Land. London, 1882, 2d

ed. (Simpkin).WARNER, C. D. In the Levant. New York, 1892, 18th ed. (Hough-

ton). $2.00Modern (1875) travels in Jerusalem, Damascus, Lebanon, Baalbek.

WARREN. See PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND.

WELLS, J. Travel Pictures from Palestine. New York (Dodd).$3.00.

WILSON, SIR CHARLES. See PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND.

WILSON, EDWARD L. In Scripture Lands. New York, 1895, new,smaller ed. (Scribner). $1.20.

With 150 illustrations from original photographs, descriptions, Biblereferences.WILSON, W. Picturesque Palestine, Sinai, and Egypt. 2 vols.

New York, 1882-84, 2d ed. (Appleton).

Page 14: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

A SYLLABUS OF JEWISH HISTORY 163

A SYLLABUS OF JEWISH HISTOKY

In the following pages, the " History of the Jews," by Graetz,in the edition published by the JEWISH PUBLICATION SOCIETY OFAMERICA, is made the basis of a syllabus from which a studentwho has access to a complete set of the books published by thesame Society, can readily map out a course of topical Jewish read-ings supplementary to the " History."

•The syllabus does not exhaust all the possibilities of the Eng-lish-Jewish library issued by the Society. The scheme fails some-times to provide a place for the most suggestive chapters in abook. " The Child in Jewish Literature," in Dr. Schechter's" Studies in Judaism," and his chapters on " The Titles of Jew-ish Books," and " The History of Jewish Tradition," had to beomitted, as well as his " Introduction," for lack of a peg in the" History" to hang them on. The same applies to the greaterpart of Mr. Dembitz's " Services in Synagogue and Home." Toco-ordinate it with references to the " History," it would havehad to be split up into minute divisions. The most conspicuousomissions, the reader will discover for himself, are the " Ethicsof Judaism," by M. Lazarus, as fundamental in its field as theGraetz volumes are in theirs, and Liebman Adler's " SabbathHours."

On the other hand, the references to the " History " have beenleft equally incomplete to avoid a cumbersome and bewilderingaccumulation of figures. The Index Volume will show, for ex-ample, that Rabbi Meir appears on many pages of the secondvolume besides the one page (436) given in the syllabus. Thecompiler hopes that the student will be stimulated to round outfor himself the account of each topic as presented by the his-torian. In such earnest prosecution of his studies, he will findthe Index Volume a valuable aid.

Page 15: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

164 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

GRAETZ, HISTORY OF THE JEWS, VOL. I.From the Earliest Period to the Death of Simon the Maccabee

(135 B. C. E.)

GRAETZVOLUME I

PAGE 1-531

354-531

442-70

FICTION

CORRESPONDS TO

DUBNOW, Jewish History, pp. 46-86.

KARPELES, A Sketch of Jewish History,pp. 7-33.

KARPELES, Jewish Literature and OtherEssays, pp. 9-16, 106-10, 101-3, 249-53, 255.

DEMBITZ, Services in Synagogue and

Home, pp. 19-21.COHEN, Readings and Recitations, pp. 1-

177.

COHEN, Legends and Tales, pp. 13-230.

MAGNUS, Outlines of Jewish History, pp.1-24.

ZIRNDORF, Judith, and The Mother ofthe Seven Martyrs, in Some JewishWomen, pp. 5-23.

ILLUSTRATIVE FICTION :

I'ENDLETON, Lost Prince Almon (Story ofJoash of Judah).

I'ENDLETON, In Assyrian Tents (Story ofthe Assyrian Invasion).

LAZAERE, Beating Sea and Changeless

Bar, pp. 13-21 (Story of the Assy-rian Invasion).

GHABTZINDEX VOLUME

PAGE 90-100

Period Ito

Period XII

Page 16: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

A SYLLABUS OF JEWISH HISTORY 165

GRAETZ, HISTORY OF THE JEWS, VOL. II.

Prom the Reign of Hyrcanus to the Completion of the Babylonian Talmud(135 B. C. E. to COO C. E.)

GltAETZVOLUME II

PAGE 1-635

321-635

321-50 1

450-502 I531-635 J

47-56

93-104

216

235-6

240

346-8

3ol

355-6, 423-5

436

440-41

450-67

454-5, 512-18

554-7

583-5

585-91

FICTION

11

CORRESPONDS TO

DUBNOW, Jewish History, pp. 86-104.KARPELES, A Sketch of Jewish History,

pp. 33-45.MAGNTTS, Outlines of Jewish History, pp.

24-104.KARPELES, Jewish Literature and Other

Essays, 16-20, 110-15, 193-8, 229-34253-6.

DEMBITZ, Services in Synagogue andHome, pp. 21-49.

ABRAHAMS, Chapters on Jewish Litera-ture, pp. 19-67.

T KARPELES, The Talmud, in Jewish Llter-J ature and Other Essays, pp. 52-70.1 DARMESTETER, The Talmud.I DEUTSCH, The Talmud.

The following chapters in ZIRNDOBF,Some Jewish Women:

Queen Salome Alexandra, pp. 27-54,Mariamne, the Hasmonean, pp. 55-82.Helena, Queen and Proselyte, pp. 83-105.Berenice, pp. 106-17.Martha, Daughter of Boethus, pp. 121-38.Ima Shalom, pp. 139-51.Rachel, Rabbi Akiba's Wife, pp. 152-61.Rabbi Ishmael's Mother, pp. 184-92.Beruria, and Rabbi Melr's Pupil, pp. 162-

83.The Married Couple of Sidon, pp. 205-14.Rabbi Judah's Maid Servant, pp. 193-204.A Group of Xanthippes, pp. 215-22.Jalta, pp. 223-32.Abaji's Foster-Mother, pp. 233-42.The Two Chomas, pp. 243-52.

ILLUSTRATIVE FICTION :

LAZARRE, Beating Sea and ChangelessBar, pp. 25-46 (Story of the Macca-bsean War).

GRAETZIN'DEX VOLUME

PAGE 100-107Period XII

toPeriod XV

Page 17: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

166 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

GRABTZ, HISTORY OF THE JEWS, VOL. III.From the Completion of the Babylonian Talmud to the Banishment of the

Jews from England(500-1290)

GBABTZVOLUME I I I

PAGE 1-650

24-52, 494-521

90-495

297-630

116-17265-81321-43366-75

579, 637-40420

446-95, 522-45

531-6,557,598-609

FICTION

COItltESPONDS TO

DUBNOW, Jewish History, pp. 105-25.MAGNUS, Outlines of Jewish History, pp.

104-215.KARPELES, Jewish Literature and Other

Essays, pp. 21-41, 115-19, 198-216,234-5, 256-9.

DEMBITZ, Services in Synagogue andHome, pp. 50-5.

COHEN, Readings and Recitations, pp. 178-202.

PHILIPSON, Old European Jewries, pp. 5-45.

ABRAHAMS, Chapters on Jewish Litera-ture, pp. 68-141.

KARPELES, A Sketch of Jewish History,pp. 45-66.

ABRAHAMS, Jewish Life In the MiddleAges.

The following from NINA DAVIS,Songs of Exile:

Poems by KALIR, pp. 12-23.Poems by GABIROL, pp. 24-9.

Poems by JEHUDAH HALEVI, pp. 36-63.

Poems by ABRAHAM IBN EZRA, pp. 118-31.

Poem by MEI'R of Rothenburg, pp. 82-91.KABPELES, Jewish Troubadours and Min-

nesingers, in Jewish Literature andOther Essays, pp. 182-90.

f ABRAHAMS and YEI.LIN, Maimonides (AI Biography).

"I KARPELES, Moses Maimonides, in Jew-ish Literature and Other Essays,

I pp. 145-68.SCHECHTER, Nachmanldes, In Studies In

Judaism, pp. 99-141.

ILLUSTRATIVE FICTION :

MILLER, Under the Eagle's Wing (Storyof Maimonides).

GRAETZINDEX VOLUME

PAGE 107-116Period XV

toPeriod XVIII

Page 18: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

A SYLLABUS OF JEWISH HISTORY 167

GRAETZ, HISTORY OF THE JEWS, VOL. IV.From the Else of the Kabbala to the Permanent Settlement of the

Marranos in Holland(1290-1648)

GRAETZVOLUME IV CORRESPONDS TO

GRAETZINDEX VOLUME

PAOB 1-708

115

135, 225, 227

643

FICTION

DUBNOW, Jewish History, pp. 125-47.

KARPELES, A Sketch of Jewish History,pp. 66-84.

MAGNUS, Outlines of Jewish History, pp.215-34, 334-42.

PHILIPSON, Old European Jewries, pp.46-176.

ABRAHAMS, Jewish Life in the MiddleAges.

ABRAHAMS, Chapters on Jewish Litera-ture, pp. 144-245.

KARPELES, Jewish Literature and OtherEssays, pp. 41-6, 119-31, 216-28, L'."!.")-6, 259-71.

COHEN, Readings and Recitations, pp. 202-14.

KARPELES, Jewish Troubadours and Min-nesingers, in Jewish Literature andOther Essays, pp. 169-79.

SCHECHTER, A Jewish Boswell, in Studiesin Judaism, pp. 142-6.

KARPELES, A Jewish King In Poland, inJewish Literature and Other Essays,pp. 272-292.

ILLUSTRATIVE FICTION :

AGUILAR, Vale of Cedars (Story of theSpanish Inquisition).

LAZARRE, Beating Sea and ChangelessBar, pp. 49-91 (Story of the SpanishInquisition).

PAGE 116-123Period XVIII

toPeriod XIX

Page 19: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

168 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

GRAETZ, HISTORY OF TUB JEWS, VOL. V.From the Chmielnicki Persecution in Poland to the Present Time

(1048-1870)

GRAETZVOLUME V

PAGE 1-731

1-428

1-290

56-G4

86-109

87, 112-13, )233-45, 291- I373 \

118-66

291-373

326-7, 407-9

374-94

CORRESPONDS TO

DUBNOW, Jewish History, pp. 147-76.KABPELES, A Sketch of Jewish History,

pp. 84-109.MAGNUS, Outlines of Jewish History pp.

234-334, 342-67.KAEPELES, Jewish Literature and Other

Essays, pp. 46-51, 131-44, 236-48.COHEN, Readings and Recitations, pp.

214-31.PHILIFKON, Old European Jewries, pp.

46-176, 220-45.ABRAHAMS, Jewish Life in the Middle

Ages.ZANGWILL, Uriel Acosta, in Dreamers of

the Ghetto, pp. 68-114.ZANGWILL, The Maker of Lenses, in

Dreamers of the Ghetto, pp. 186-220.ABRAHAMS, Chapters on Jewish Liter-

ature, pp. 245-60.

ZANGWILL, The Turkish Messiah, inDreamers of the Ghetto, pp. 115-85.

KAHPELES, Jewish Society in the Time ofMendelssohn, in Jewish Literatureand Other Essays, pp. 293-317.

ZANGWILL, Maimon the Fool and Nathanthe Wise, in Dreamers of the Ghetto,pp. 289-334.

r SCHECHTER, The Chassidim, and RabbiElijah Wilna, Gaon, in Studies in

J Judaism, pp. 1-45, 73-98.ZANGWILL, The Master of the Name, in

[ Dreamers of the Ghetto, pp. 221-8.

GliAETZINDEX VOLI'Mr

TAGE 123-120

Period XX

Page 20: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

A SYLLABUS OF JEWISH HISTORY 169

GRAETZ, HISTORY OF THE JEWS, VOL. V. [Continued]From the Chmielnicki Persecution in Poland to the Present Time

(1648-1870)

GRAETZVOLUME V

PAGE 544-56

607-10, 617-22

620-1

664, 701-2

667-705

702

FICTION

CORRESPONDS TO

KARPELES, Heinrich Heine and Judaism,in Jewish Literature and OtherEssays, pp. 340-68.

ZANGWILL, From a Mattress Grave, inDreamers of the Ghetto, pp. 335-68.

SCHECHTER, Nachman Kroehmal and the" Perplexities of the Time," in Studiesin Judaism, pp. 46-72.

KARPELES, Leopold Zunz, in Jewish Lit-erature and Other Essays, pp. 318-39.

BIGART, The Alliance Israelite Univer-selle, in American Jewish Year Book,5661, pp. 45-65.

ZANGWILL, The People's Saviour (Las-salle), in Dreamers of the Ghetto, pp.369-423.

' WOLF, Uriah P. Levy, in AmericanJewish Year Book, 5663, pp. 42-5.

A Sketch of the History of the Jewsin the United States, in Ameri-can Jewish Year Book, 5663, pp.63-77.

PHILLIPS, Gershom Mendez Seixas, inAmerican Jewish Year Book, 5665,pp. 40-51.

ILLUSTRATIVE FICTION (the NineteenthCentury):

COOPER, Think and Thank (Story ofMontefiore).

ILIOWIZI, In the Pale.

SCHNABEL, Voegele's Marriage and OtherTales.

WOLFENSTEIN, Idyls of the Gass.

GRAETZINDEX VOLUME

PAGE 123-126Period XX

Page 21: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

170 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

HISTORY OF THE JEWS1870-1905

SUBJECTS

RUSSIA

Rou MANIA

BIOGRAPHY

TRAVELS

FICTION

QUESTIONS OF CONTEMPORANEOUS INTEREST

The Persecution of the Jews In Russia.

CYRUS ADLER, The Voice of America onKishineff.

DAVITT, Within the Pale.

The American Passport in Russia, InAmerican Jewish Year Book, 56C5, pp.283-305.

PHILIPSON, Old European Jewries, pp.177-219, 245-51.

SCHWARZFELD, The Jews of Roumanla,in American Jewish Year Book, 5662,pp. 25-87.

BLOCH, Memoir of Heinrich Graetz, IndexVolume of the "History of the Jews,"pp. 1-86.

ELKAN N. ADLER, Jews in Many Lands.

ILLUSTRATIVE FICTION :

GOLDSMITH, Rabhi and Priest.

GORDON, Sons of the Covenant.

GORDON, Strangers at the Gate.

LAZARRE, Beating Sea and ChangelessBar, pp. 95-133.

ZANGWILL, Children of the Ghetto.

ZANGWILL, They that Walk In Darkness.

SEE ALSO

AmericanJewish

Year Book5660-5665

Page 22: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

AMERICAN JEWISH BIBLIOGRAPHY

A LIST OF BOOKS AND AETICLES BY JEWS INTHE UNITED STATES

AUGUST, 1904, TO AUGUST, 1905

[The following list is an attempt to record the literary outputof the Jews in the United States in certain limited directions. Itaims to include books, magazine articles, and notable newspaperarticles written by American Jews, whether on Jewish or on othersubjects, together with articles in the American magazines byJews of other countries. The articles are all distinguished bya dagger. Strictly scientific and professional work, as in medi-cine, mathematics, chemistry, philology, etc., or relating to thetechnic of the arts and crafts, has not been drawn within the pur-view of the list. Also articles published in the Jewish press ofthe United States have not been noted. The latter are indirectlymade accessible to the inquirer by the complete " List of JewishPeriodicals Appearing in the United States," printed on pp.181-8.][ADLEB, CYRUS] Editor. The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth.

Extracted textually from the Gospels in Greek, Latin, French,and English, by Thomas Jefferson. Washington: Govern*ment Printing Office, 1904.

|ADLER, CYRUS. The Jefferson Bible. The Cosmopolitan, Janu-ary, 1905.

[ADLEB, CYRUS, and SZOLD, HENRIETTA] Editors. The AmericanJewish Year Book 5665. Philadelphia: The Jewish Publica-tion Society of America, 1904. (Sixth issue.)

ADLEB, ELKAN NATHAN. Jews in Many Lands. Philadelphia:The Jewish Publication Society of America, 1905.

f ADLER, FELIX. Child Labor in the United States and Its Attend-ant Evils. Annals of the American Academy of Political andSocial Science, May, 1905.

ADLEB, FELIX. Marriage and Divorce. New York: McClure,Phillips, and Company, 1905.

ADLER, FELIX. The Religion of Duty. New York: McClure, Phil-lips, and Company, 1905.

f ADLER, JACOB P. The Jew of the Drama. Broadway Magazine,August, 1905.

Page 23: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

172 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

ALEXANDER, LOUIS A. National Questions. Part I. New York,1905.

In Hebrew.AMERICAN JEWISH HISTORICAL SOCIETY. Publications Number 12.

1904.AMRAM, DAVID WERNER. Leading Cases in the Bible. Philadel-

phia: Julius H. Greenstone, 1905.ANONYMOUS. Sefer ha-Kundes. Kearny, N. J., 1905.

Author supposed to be Bphralm Deinard.ANSPACHER, LOUIS K. Tristan and Isolde. A Tragedy. New

York: Brentano, 1904.

ARONSTAM, N. E. The Jewish Dietary Laws from a ScientificStandpoint.

Reprint from " The Medical Age," February 25, 1904.|BAKER, EDWARD M. Judaism and the American Spirit. The

Arena, August, 1904.

BAUM, SOLOMON. Song and Prayers for the Sabbath Eve. NewYork, 1905.

fBELAsco, DAVID. Advice to the Girl with Dramatic Ambitions.Woman's Home Companion, October, 1904.

•J-BELASCO, DAVID. Presentation of the National Drama. Harper'sWeekly, December 3, 1904.

|BELASCO, DAVID. The Theatrical Syndicate. The Cosmopolitan,December, 1904.

|BERKOWITZ, HENRY. The Moral Training of the Young Amongthe Jews. International Journal of Ethics, January, 1905.

BERKOWITZ, HENRY. Sweet Songs and Bitter Philosophy of OmarKhayyam. In memory of Simon Adler Stern. Philadelphia,1905.

f BERNARD, SAM. What Makes a Man Funny? The Theatre, Au-gust, 1905.

f R , CHARLES S. A Week in Philanthropy at the JewishChautauqua Assembly. Charities, August 20, 1904.

BERNHEIMER, CHARLES S. The Russian Jew in the United States.Philadelphia: The John C. Winston Company, 1905.

BLONDHEIM, D. S. See M. USSISCHKIN.

Page 24: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

AMERICAN JEWISH BIBLIOGRAPHY 173

BLOOMFIEXD, MAURICE. Cerberus, the Dog of Hades. Chicago:The Open Court Publishing Company, 1905.

fBoAS, FBANZ. Mythologies of the Indians. International Quar-terly, July, 1905.

fBBANDES, G. M. C. Contrast between the Scandinavian Countriesand the United States. The World's Work, December, 1904.

|BBANDES, GEOEGE MORRIS COHEN. Ernest Renan as a Dramatist.International Quarterly, October, 1904.

BRUDNO, EZRA S. The Little Conscript. New York: Doubleday,Page, and Company, 1905.

CAHAN, A. The White Terror and the Red. New York: A. S.Barnes and Company, 1905.

•J-CAHAN, A. The Russian Revolutionists. The World's Work,September, 1904.

fCAHAN, A. The Turmoil in Russia. The World's Work, April,1905.

EDWARD N. The Dream of a Jewish Nation. TheBooklovers' Magazine, April, 1905.

CENTRAL CONFERENCE OF AMERICAN RABBIS. Views on the Synod.Baltimore, 1905.

CENTRAL CONFERENCE OF AMERICAN RABBIS. Year Book. VolumeXIV, 1904—5664.

fCOHEN, ALFRED J. (ALAN DALE, pseud.). A Summering ActorAbroad. The Cosmopolitan, July, 1905.

COHEN, ISABEL E. Legends and Tales. Philadelphia: The Jew-ish Publication Society of America, 1904.

COWEN, MRS. PHILIP. The Seder Service. English translation.Third revised edition. New York, 1905.

fDAVis, PHILLIP. Making Americans of Russian Jews. The Out-look, July 8, 1905.

fDE CASSEBES. BENJAMIN. Gorky: Hamlet Awakened. The Critic,April, 1905.

DEINARD, EPHRAIM. See ANONYMOUS. Sefer ha-Kundes.DUBNOW, S. M. Die Orundlagen des Nationaljudentums. Auto-

risierte Uebersetzung aus dem Russischen, von I. Friedldnder.Berlin: Jiidischer Verlag, 1905.

12

Page 25: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

174 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

FHIEDENWALD, HERBERT. The Declaration of Independence. AnInterpretation and an Analysis. New York and London:The Macmillan Company, 1904.

FRIEDLAENDER, ISRAEL. See DUBNOW, S. M.; GINZBERG, ASHER.

, ISAAC KAHN. Our Inland Migrations. The World'sWork, September, 1904.

fFROHMAN, CHARLES. New Phases of Theatre Management. Har-per's Weekly, December 31, 1904.

|FROHMAN, DANIEL. Tendencies of the American Stage. The Cos-mopolitan, November, 1904.

, DANIEL. The Manager's View of the Stage. Harper'sWeekly, December 24, 1904.

GANZ, HUGO. The Land of Riddles. Translated by HermanRosen thai. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1904.

GERSON, EMILY GOLDSMITH. The Picture Screen. Philadelphia:George W. Jacobs and Company, 1904.

GIN'ZBERG, ASHER (AHAD HAAM). Pinsker and His Brochure.Translated by Henrietta Szold. 1905.

GLAZER, SIMON. The Jews of Iowa. Des Moines, la., 1905.GOLDMAN, M. The Hebrew Album of Prominent Israelites of

America. New York, 5665.Hebrew and English.

, JOSEPHINE C. Holiday Faces. Charities, November26. 1904.

, JOSEPHINE C. Street Labor and Juvenile Delinquency.Political Science Quarterly, September, 1904.

fGuMPLowicz, LUDWIG. Austrian Appreciation of Lester F. Ward.American Journal of Sociology, March, 1905.

f , ISAAC. Cables of a Large Suspension Bridge. Cassier'sMagazine, May, 1905.

HARRIS, MAURICE H. A Thousand Years of Jewish History: Fromthe Days of Alexander the Great to the Moslem Conquest ofSpain. New York, 1904.

Maps of Palestine and the Diaspora.+HABBY, MYBIAM. The Conquest of Jerusalem. Tales, August,

1905.

Page 26: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

AMERICAN JEWISH BIBLIOGRAPHY 175

HEELPBIN, ANGELO. The Tower of Pelce. New Studies of theGreat Volcano of Martinique. Philadelphia: The J. B. Lip-pincott Company, 1905.

•(•HIRSCH, EMIL G. Child Labor from the Employer's Point ofView. Annals of the American Academy of Political andSocial Science, May, 1905.

HOLIDAY SERMONS. See UNION OF AMERICAN HEBREW CONGREGA-TIONS.

•(•HOLLANDER, JACOB H. The Development of Ricardo's Theory ofValue. Quarterly Journal of Economics, August, 1904.

•(•HOLLANDER, JACOB H. The American Economic Association atChicago. The Nation, January 19,1905.

•(•HOLLANDER, JACOB H. The Political Economist and the Public.North American Review, February, 1905.

HOURWICH, ISAAC A. The Case of Russia. New York: Fox, Duf-fleld, and Co., 1905.Part author with four other writers.

IMBER, NAPHTALI HERZ. Ha-Eos. The Hebrew Translation ofthe Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam. New York, 1905.

Introduction by Joseph Jacobs and a poem by George Alexander Kohut.flsBAELS, CHARLES HENRY. John Rogers: Sculptor. Architectural

Record, November, 1904.•(•ISRAELS, CHARLES H. Socialism and the Architect. Architec-

tural Record, April, 1905.JACOBSON, JANIE. For Liberty. A play for Chanukah. New

York, 1905.JACOBSON, JANIE. Joseph and His Brethren. New York, 1905.

+JASTROW, JOSEPH. A New Form of Stereoscope. Science, April28, 1905.

fjASTBOw, JOSEPH. The Endowment of Learning. The Dial, May16, 1905.

, JOSEPH. The Natural History of Adolescence. PopularScience Monthly, March, 1905.

, MORRIS. Muensterberg on the Philosophy of American-ism. The Dial, March 1, 1905.

J-JASTHOW, MORRIS. The Babylonian Creation Story. Science, May26, 1905.

Page 27: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

176 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

•(•JASTBOW, MORRIS. The Tower of Babel. Independent, April 13,1905.

•(•JELLINEK, GEORGE. Parliamentary Obstruction. Political ScienceQuarterly, December, 1904.

JEWISH ENCYCLOPEDIA, THE. New York: Funk and WagnallsCompany, 1904, 1905.

Vol. VIII, Leon-Moravia ; Vol. IX, Morawczyk-PMlippson ; Vol. X, Philip-son-Samoscz.•J-KALISH, BERTHA. Yiddish Stage Training. Broadway Maga-

zine, August, 1905.KRAUSKOPF, JOSEPH, and MILLER, RUSSELL KING. The Service

Hymnal with an Introductory Service. Text compiled byRabbi Joseph Krauskopf, D. D. Music compiled by RussellKing Miller. Philadelphia: Congregation Keneseth Israel,1904.

fKRAusz, SIGMUND. Ancient and Modern Counterfeiters. NewEngland Magazine, March, 1905.

fKBAUSz, SIGMUND. Maurus Jokai. Lamp, September, 1904.•(•KRAUSZ, SIGMUND. Oriental Railways. New England Magazine,

February, 1905.•{•KRAUSZ, SIGMUND. Peculiar Traits of Russian Character. New

England Magazine, January, 1905.fKRAusz, SIGMUND. The Situation in San Domingo. The Out-

look, September 17, 1904.LAZARRE, JACOB. Beating Sea and Changeless Bar. Philadelphia:

The Jewish Publication Society of America, 1905.|LEE, SIDNEY. Books in Relation to National Efficiency. Lamp,

December, 1904.•(•LEVY, MABTHA WASHINGTON. The American Jewess. Twentieth

Century Home, February, 1905.LIPSKY, Louis. The Three Worthies of Brebendefka. A Story

of the Riots in Russia. Adapted from the Yiddish of Mor-decai Spector. New York: The Judsean Press, 1905.

|LOEB, JACQUES. Chemical Fertilization of Sea-urchins' Eggs.Scientific American Supplement, May 20, 1905.

fLovEMAN, ROBERT. Poems. Harper's Magazine, September, Octo-ber, November, and December, 1904, and January, 1905; Mc-Clure's Magazine, November, 1904; and Woman's Home Com-panion, February, 1905.

Page 28: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

AMERICAN JEWISH BIBLIOGRAPHY

fLow, A. MAURICE. American Affairs. National Review, Febru-ary-March, 1905. »

fLow, A. MAURICE. Commerce and Labor. Harper's Weekly,March 4, 1905.

fLow, A. MAURICE. Foreign Affairs. The Forum, 1904-1905.MAGNUS, HUGO. Superstition in Medicine. Translated from the

German by Julius Salinger. New York: Funk and WagnallsCompany, 1905.

fMARGOLis, MAX LEOPOLD. Judaism in the Days of Jesus. Amer-ican Journal of Theology, April, 1904.

fMELs, EDGAR. The Most Extravagant Girl in History. Ladies'Home Journal, November, 1904.

MENDES, H. PEREIRA. Jewish Religion Ethically Presented. NewYork, 5665-1905.

fMETER, ANNIE NATHAN. Collecting American Paintings. TheWorld's Work, July, 1905.

fMEYER, ANNIE NATHAN. Comparative Exhibit of American andForeign Art. Harper's Weekly, December 3, 1904.

fMiCHELSON, MIRIAM. An Old Bachelor of Arts. Ladies' HomeJournal, June, 1905.

fMiCHELSON, MIRIAM. A Pagan and a Puritan. Century, August,1904.

fMiCHELSON, MIRIAM. May Haggerty's Knight. The Reader Mag-azine, December, 1904.

fMiCHELSON, MIRIAM. Merry, Merry Zingara. Century, Septem-ber, 1904.

fMiCHELSON, MIRIAM. The Ready Letter-Writer. Century, Octo-ber, 1904.

fMoRAwnz, CHARLES. Obstacles to Reform in Turkey. NorthAmerican Review, August, 1904.

MOSES, ISAAC S. The Sabbath-School Hymnal. A collection ofSongs, Services, and Responsive Readings for the School,Synagogue, and Home. Sixth revised and enlarged edition.New York: The Bloch Publishing Company, 1904.

fMoss, MART. A Plea for Bores. The Bookman, August, 1905.fMoss, MARY. Machine-Made Human Beings. Atlantic Monthly,

August, 1904.

Page 29: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

178 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

fMoss, MARY. Marooned. Lipplncott's Magazine, August, 1904.

fMoss, MAKY. Routed at Brandywine. The Reader Magazine,January, 1905.

fMoss, MARY. Significant Tendencies in Current Fiction. Atlan-tic Monthly, May, 1905.

fNoRDAU, MAX SIMON. The Little Girl in the Big Ship. The Cos-mopolitan, August, 1905.

fPEixoTTO, ERNEST C. Erasmus, and Reade's Cloister and theHearth. Scribner's Magazine, January, 1905.

RAPPAPORT, A. S. A Primer of Philosophy. New York: E. P.Dutton and Company, 1905.

|RAPPAPORT, A. S. 7s Russia on the Eve of a Revolution? Fort-nightly Review, February, 1905.

|REICH, EMU,. Hopes for our Co-operation with Germany. TheWorld's Work, December, 1904.

fREicH, EMIL. The Present State of Europe. International Quar-terly, January, 1905.

fREis, NANNIE A. Status of the Russian Jew in America. Way-side Tales, November, 1904.

fRicHMAN, JULIA. The Immigrant Child. Evening Post, NewYork, July 12, 1905.

, JULIA. What Can Be Done in a Graded School for theBackward Child? Charities, November 5, 1904.

ROSENAU, WILLIAM. Seder Haggadah. Translated and edited.New York: The Bloch Publishing Company, 1905.

, HERMAN. Herzl, Leader of Modern Zionism. Re-view of Reviews, August, 1904.

fRosENTHAL, HERMAN. Prince Mirsky, Russia's New Minister ofthe Interior. Review of Reviews, November, 1904.

fRosENTHAL, HERMAN. English Spelling of Russian Words. Re-view of Reviews, January, 1905.

ROSENTHAL, HERMAN. See GANZ, HUQO.

fRowE, LEO S. The Reorganization of Local Government in CubaAnnals of the American Academy of Political and SocialScience, March, 1905.

Page 30: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

AMERICAN JEWISH BIBLIOGRAPHY 179

fRuBiNow, I. M. Compulsory State Insurance of WorJcingmen.Annals of the American Academy of Political and SocialScience, September, 1904.

, I. M. Compulsory Insurance in Germany and Europe.Chautauquan, March, 1905.

|SACHS, JULIUS. Modern Languages in Secondary Schools. Edu-cational Review, February, 1905.

SALINGER, JULIUS. See MAGNUS, HUGO.

fScHEBMAN, RITA. Spring Song (Poem). The Reader Magazine,May, 1905.

SCHLESINGEE, MRS. NATHAN. A Cross of Conscience. Drama.San Francisco, 1905.

fScHNEiDEEMAN, ROSE. The Cap-Maker's Story. Independent,April 27, 1905.

fSELIGMAN, ALFRED LINCOLN. Music for and by the Many. Chari-ties, February 4, 1905.

•(•SELIGMAN, EDWIN ROBERT ANDEKSON. The New Mortgage Tax inNew York. Review of Reviews, July, 1905.

•j-SiMKHOviTCH, VLADIMIR G. The People's Uprising in Russia.The World's Work, March, 1905.

fSiMKHOViTCH, VLADIMIR G. Russia's Struggle with Autocracy.Political Science Quarterly, March, 1905.

fSiMKHOViTCH, VLADIMIR G. Terrorism in Russia. InternationalQuarterly, July, 1905.

fSTERN, S. T. Chicanery. Harper's Magazine, February, 1905.|STERN, S. T. Mercenary Molly. Harper's Magazine, August, 1905.•(-STRAUS, OSCAR S. Historical Relations of Russia and the United

States. North American Review, August, 1905.fSTRAUSs, PAUL. Battle Against Infant Mortality in France.

Charities, October 15, 1904.fSuTRO, ALFRED. Love and the Lady. The Cosmopolitan, October,

1904.SZOLD, HENRIETTA. See ADLEE, CYRUS, and SZOLD, HENRIETTA, and

GlNZBERG, ASHER.

TIERKEL, DAVID B. Shirei David. Vol. I. Philadelphia, 1904.Hebrew poems.

UNION OF AMERICAN HEBREW CONGREGATIONS, COMMITTEE ON CIE-CUIT PREACHING. Holiday Sermons. Tishri, 5665—September,1904.

Page 31: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

180 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

USSISCHKIN, M. Our Program. Translated from the German byD. S. Blondheim. New York: Federation of AmericanZionists, 1905.

|WALD, LILLIAN D. Medical Inspection of Public Schools. Annalsof the American Academy of Political and Social Science,March, 1905.

WALDSTEIN, C. The Argive Herwum. Vol.11. Boston: Houghton,Mifflin, and Company, 1905. (With the co-operation of tenother writers.)

fWALDSTEiN, C. What Herculaneum Offers to Archaeology. Har-per's Magazine, April, 1905.

f , ISABEL R. The Dino Collection of Historic Armor.Scientific American, September 17-October 8, 1904.

fWALLACH, ISABEL R. The Hall of Fame. Four Track News,August, 1905.

fWEYL, WALTER E. Immigration and Industrial Saturation. Uni-versity Settlement Studies, August, 1905.

fWEYL, WALTER E. Samuel Oompers, Representative of Ameri-can Labor. Review of Reviews, January, 1905.

WEYL, WALTER E. Street Railway Employment in the UnitedStates. Department of Commerce and Labor. No. 57, Bulle-tin of the Bureau of Labor, 1905.

fWoLFE, S. HERBERT. The Suspension of Life Insurance Com-panies. North American Review, July, 1905.

fYARROs, VICTOR S. The Labor Question's Newer Aspects. Reviewof Reviews, May, 1905.

J-YUDELSON, SOPHIE. Educational and Professional Activities ofWomen. Annals of the American Academy of Political andSocial Science, January, 1905.

•J-ZALINSKI, EDMUND LOUIS G. Modern Siege Operations. Interna-tional Quarterly, April, 1905.

f , ISRAEL. The Elixir of Life. The Reader Magazine,January, 1905.

JZANGWILL, ISRAEL. The Future of Vaudeville in America. TheCosmopolitan, April, 1905.

ZANGWILL, ISRAEL. Without Prejudice. The Reader Magazine,August, September, December, 1904.

+ZON, RAPHAEL G. Forestry in Germany. Chautauquan, Novem-ber, 1904.

Page 32: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

LIST OF JEWISH PERIODICALS, ETC. 181

A LIST OF JEWISH PEEIODICALSAPPEARING IN THE UNITED STATES

AUGUST, 1904, TO AUGUST, 1905

[An asterisk (*) placed before the name of a periodical in thefollowing list indicates that the Editors of the AMERICAN JEWISHYEAR BOOK have not been able to secure a copy of the publica-tion issued during 5665, or authentic information about it. Itsappearance in this list is justified by references to it in otherperiodicals.]

THE AMERICAN HEBREW AND JEWISH MESSENGER. Weekly. NewYork. Est. 1879.

THE AMERICAN ISRAELITE. Weekly. Cincinnati, O. Est. 1854.See also THE CHICAGO ISRAELITE.

DER AMERIKANER. Yiddish and English. Weekly. New York;Baltimore, Md.; Chicago, 111.; Philadelphia, Pa.; Boston, Mass.Est. 1904.Successor to THE JEWISH WOULD.

DIE ARBEITER WELT. Yiddish. Weekly. New York. Est. 1904.English title, " The Labor World." Published by the United Hebrew

Trades of the State of New York.Suspended publication during 1904-1905.

T H E ASSOCIATE MONTHLY. Philadelphia, Pa. Est. 1901.Organ of the Young Men's Hebrew Association, Associate Organization.Suspended publication during 1904-1905.

DEE BALTIMOBEB WEGWEISER. Yiddish. Weekly. Baltimore, Md.Est. 1897.English title, " The Baltimore Guide."

B ' N A I B 'RITH MESSENGER. Fortnightly. Los Angeles, Cal. Est.1897.

B ' N A I B 'RITH MIRROR. Monthly. Vicksburg, Miss.Published by the Intellectual Advancement Committee, District Grand

Lodge No. 7, of the Independent Order of B'nai B'rith.Suspended publication during 1904-1905.

Page 33: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

182 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

T H E BOSTON ADVOCATE. Weekly. Boston, Mass. Est. 1905. (F i rs tissue May 5.)" Mount Sinai Monthly," and " The Jewish Home Journal " combined.

CAP-MAKERS JOURNAL. Yiddish and English. Monthly. NewYork. Est. 1903.Official organ of the United Cloth and Capmakers of North America.

T H E CHICAGO ISRAELITE. Weekly. Chicago, 111. Est. 1854.Chicago edition of THE AMERICAN ISIIAELITE.

CHICAGOER WOCHENBLATT. Yiddish. Weekly. Chicago, 111. Est.1887.English title, " The Chicago Weekly." Weekly edition of DEH TAGLICHEH

JUDISCHER COUHIEB.

T H E CHRONICLE OF THE HEBREW ORPHAN ASYLUM. Monthly. NewYork. Est. 1904.Published by the Hebrew Orphan Asylum.

T H E CINCINNATI ZIONIST. Monthly. Cincinnati, O. Est. 1905.(Fi rs t issue in April.)Established as organ of Ohavey Zion, Gate No. 90, Knights of Zion ;

now organ of the Zionist Societies of Cincinnati.EAST-SIDE L I F E . Weekly. New York. Est. 1903.

Suspended publication during 1904-1905.

EMANU-EL. Weekly. San Francisco, Cal. Est. 1895.EMANUEL BULLETIN. Monthly. Pueblo, Colo.

Published by Temple Emanuel.Suspended publicatlun.

FARMERS' LEAFLET. Occasional. Woodbine, N. J. Est. 1903.

Published by the Baron de Hirseh Agricultural and Industrial School.

FREIE AKBEITER STIMME. Yiddish. Weekly. New York. Est. 1900.

D I E FREIE STUNDE. Yiddish. Monthly. New York. Est. 1904.English title " The Leisure Hour."Suspended publication during 1904-1905.

T H E GLEANER. Monthly. F a r m School, Pa. Est. 1901.Published by the National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

HA-LEOM. Weekly. New York. Est . 1902.English title, " The Nation." Monthly publication until 1904.

DEE HAUSFREUND. Yiddish. Weekly. Brooklyn, N. Y. Est.1905. (F i r s t issue March 26.)English title, " The Jewish Home Journal."

Page 34: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

LIST OF JEWISH PERIODICALS, ETC. 183

THE HEBREW. English and German. Weekly. San Francisco,Cal. Est. 1863.

THE HEBBEW STANDARD. Weekly. New York. Est. 1883.

HEBREW STANDARD NATIONAL MAGAZINE. Quarterly. New York.Est. 1905. (First issue in March.)

THE HEBREW WORLD. Weekly. New York. Est. 1904. (Firstissue in May.)Official organ of the Independent Order Free Sons of Judah, Indepen-

dent Order Free Sons of Israel, Order B'rith Abraham, Independent OrderSons of Benjamin, and Independent Order B'rith Abraham.

HIRSCH SCHOOL JOURNAL. Published periodically. Woodbine, N. J.Est. 1901.Published by the Baron de Hirsch Agricultural and Industrial School.

INDEPENDENT OEDEE FREE SONS OF ISRAEL. Chicago, 111. Est. 1903.Organ of the Order.

ISRAELITE ALLIANCE REVIEW. Monthly. New York. Est. 1904.Organ of the Alliance Israelite Universelle.Suspended publication temporarily in 1905.

• T H E JEWISH ADVANCE. Monthly. Detroit, Mich. Est. 1904.Organ of the Young Men's Zion Association.

T H E JEWISH AMERICAN. Weekly. Detroit, Mich. Est. 1901.

T H E JEWISH BANNER. Weekly. Cleveland, O. Est. 1905.Organ of the Zionist Council of Cleveland.

JEWISH CHARITY. Monthly. New York. Est. 1902.Published by the United Hebrew Charities. The official organ of the

Rational Conference of Jewish Charities. Formerly " Charity Work."

• T H E JEWISH CHRONICLE. Weekly. Atlanta, Ga.; Montgomery,Birmingham, and Mobile, Ala.; and Shreveport, La. Est. 1899.

THE JEWISH CITIZEN. See THE WESTERN JEWISH CITIZEN.

JEWISH COMMENT. Weekly. Baltimore, Md. Est. 1895.

THE JEWISH CONSERVATOR. Weekly. Chicago, 111. Est. 1904.

THE JEWISH CRITERION. Weekly. Pittsburg, Pa. Est. 1895.

THE JEWISH DISPATCH-HERALD. See THE WESTERN JEWISH CITI-ZEN.

THE JEWISH EXPONENT. Weekly. Philadelphia, Pa. Est. 1886.

Page 35: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

184 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

THE JEWISH EXPRESS. Yiddish. Weekly. St. Louis, Mo. Est.1903.Suspended publication during 1901,-1905.

THE JEWISH FREE PRESS. Yiddish. Weekly. Cleveland, O. Est.1902.

THE JEWISH HERALD. See THE WESTERN JEWISH CITIZEN.

THE JEWISH HOME. Monthly. New York. Est. 1894.Formerly " Helpful Thoughts."

THE JEWISH LEDGER. Weekly. New Orleans, La. Est. 1895.Official organ of the joint lodges of New Orleans, Independent Order of

B'nai B'rith.THE JEWISH ORPHAN ASYLUM MAGAZINE. Monthly. Cleveland, O.

Est. 1903.THE JEWISH OUTLOOK. Weekly. Denver, Colo. Est. 1903.

First two numbers issued as a monthly.JEWISH PRESS AND PROGRESS. Yiddish. Semi-weekly. Chicago, 111.

Est. 1888.Formerly " Der Blumengarten."

• T H E JEWISH PROGRESS OF THE TWIN CITIES. Weekly. Minneap-olis and St. Paul, Minn. Est. 1904.Early numbers appeared under the name " The Israelite of the Twin

Cities."THE JEWISH QUARTERLY REVIEW. London and New York. Est.

1889.

•THE JEWISH RECORD. Weekly. Kansas City, Mo.

•THE JEWISH REVIEW. Monthly. Denver, Colo. Est. 1905. (Firstissue March-April.)

*THE JEWISH REVIEW. Monthly. St. Joseph, Mo.

•THE JEWISH REVIEW. Weekly. Milwaukee, Wis. Est. 1905.(First issue August 9.)

THE JEWISH REVIEW AND OBSERVER. Weekly. Cleveland, 0. Est.1889.

THE JEWISH SPECTATOR. Weekly. Memphis and Nashville, Tenn.Est. 1885.

THE JEWISH TIMES AND OBSERVER. Weekly. San Francisco, Cal.Est. 1855.

Page 36: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

LIST OF JEWISH PERIODICALS, ETC. 185

THE JEWISH TRIBUNE. Weekly. Portland, Ore.; Seattle andTacoma, Wash.; and Sacramento, Cal. Est. 1902.

THE JEWISH VOICE. Weekly. St. Louis, Mo. Est. 1884.

•JEWISH WEEKLY. English and Yiddish. San Francisco, Cal.Est. .

JUDISCHE GAZETTEN. Yiddish and English. Weekly. New York.Est. 1874.English title, " The Jewish Gazette." Weekly edition of JCDISCHBS

TAGEBLATT.

DIE JUDISCHE POST. Yiddish. Weekly. Pittsburg, Pa. Est. 1903.English title, " The Jewish Post."

DIE JUDISCHE WELT. Yiddish and English. Daily. New York.Est. 1902.English title, " The Jewish World." Merged, December, 1904, with

DEU AMEKIKANER, which see.

DAS JUDISCHE WOCHENBLATT. Yiddish. Weekly. New York. Est.1905. (F i rs t issue March 17.)English title, " The Jewish Weekly." Organ of the " Verhand Gali-

zianer und Bukowiner Juden."

DEB JUDISCHER JOURNAL. Yiddish. Weekly. New York. Est.1899.English title, "The Jewish Journal." Weekly edition of NEW YORKEB

ABEND-POST, and DER MORGEN JOURNAL.

JUDISCHES TAGEBLATT. Yiddish and English. Daily. New York.Est. 1885.English title, " Jewish Daily News."See also JUDISCHE GAZETTEN.

DER KLOAK-MACHER. Yiddish. New York. Est. 1905. (F i rs tissue August 5.)Published by the Cloakmakers' Union.

T H E MACCAB^EAN. Monthly. New York. Est. 1901.Published under the supervision of the Federation of American Zionists.

T H E MENORAH. Monthly. New York. Est. 1886.

T H E MENORAH. Monthly. Toledo, O. Est. 1904.Published by the Sabbath School " Children of Zion."Suspended publication during 190^1005.

• M I Z P A H BULLETIN. Monthly. Chattanooga, Tenn.

Organ of Mizpah Congregation.

Page 37: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

186 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

* T H E MODERN BUILDER. Monthly. Kansas City, Mo. Est . 1901.

Organ of the Modern Builders of Israel.

T H E MODERN VIEW. Weekly. St. Louis, Mo. Est. 1901.

MONTHLY BULLETIN. New York. Est. 1900.

Organ of the Young Men's Hebrew Association.

DEE MORGEN JOURNAL. Yiddish. Daily. New York. Est. 1902.

English title, " The Jewish Morning Journal." Evening edition, NEWYORKER ABEND-POST ; weekly edition, DER JUDISCHER JOURNAL.

MOUNT SINAI MONTHLT. See T H E BOSTON ADVOCATE.

D I E NEUE STIMME. Yiddish. Quarterly. New York. Est. 1904.English title, " The New Voice." Published by the Radical-Zionists

Organization.

• T H E N E W OCCIDENT. Monthly. San Francisco, Cal.

N E W ERA COMMENT. Monthly. New York. Est . 1904.

Organ of the New Era Club.

T H E N E W ERA ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE. Monthly. New York.Est. 1900.Formerly " The New Era," Boston, Mass.

N E W YORKER ABEND-POST. Yiddish. Daily. New York. Est. 1899.

Also a Philadelphia edition. English title, " New York Jewish Abend-Post."

See also DER MORGEN JODRNAL and DER JUDISCHER JOURNAL.

ORDENS ECHO. German. Monthly. New York. Est . 1884.

Official organ of the Independent Order of True Sisters.

T H E REFORM ADVOCATE. Weekly. Chicago, 111. Est. 1891.

* T H E SABBATH JOURNAL. Yiddish and English. New York. Est.1905.Organ of the Sabbath Co-operative Association of the Mlzrachl in

America.SABBATH SCHOOL JOURNAL. Monthly. Philadelphia, Pa. Est . 1904.

Suspended publication during 190J,-1905.

T H E SHEARITH ISRAEL REVIEW. Appears six times annually. NewYork.Issued under the auspices of the Spanish and Portuguese Congregation

Shearith Israel. Early numbers issued under the names " P. T. T. S.Review " and " K. K. S. I. Review."

Page 38: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

LIST OF JEWISH PERIODICALS, ETC. 187

DEE SONNTAG COUEIER. Yiddish. Weekly. Chicago, 111. Est. 1887.English title, "The Sunday Jewish Courier." Weekly edition of DEE

TAGLICIIEB JUDISCHEB COURIER.

DIE TAGLICHE STIMME. Yiddish. Daily. Chicago, 111. Est. 1896.English title, " The Daily Jewish Call."

DEE TAGLICHER HEROLD. Yiddish. Daily. New York. Est. 1894.English title, " Daily Jewish Herald." See also DEB VOLKSADVOKAT.

DEE TAGLICHEE JUDISCHEK COURIER. Yiddish. Daily. Chicago, 111.Est. 1887.English title, " The Daily Jewish Courier." See also CHICAGOER

WOCHENBLATT, and DER SONNTAG COURIEE.

THE TBI-CITY ADVOCATE. Monthly. Davenport, la. Est. 1904.(First issue in October.)

DER VOLKSADVOKAT. Yiddish. Weekly. New York. Est. 1891.Weekly edition of DER TAGLICHEK HEKOLD.

DEE VOLKSFREUND. Yiddish and Hebrew. Weekly. Pittsburg,Pa. Est. 1889.

VORWARTS. Yiddish. Daily. New York and Philadelphia. Est.1896.English title, " Forward."

THE WEEKLY BULLETIN OF THE REFORM CONGREGATION KENESETHISRAEL. Philadelphia, Pa. Est. 1896.

THE WESTERN JEWISH CITIZEN. Weekly. St. Paul, Minn. Est.1905. (First issue August 25.)A consolidation of the following papers: The Jewish Citizen, Omaha,

Neb., est. 1904 ; The Jewish Citizen, Sioux City, la., est. 1905 ; and TheJewish Dispatch-Herald. Des Moines, la., est. 1905; the last heing aconsolidation of The Jewish Dispatch, and the Jewish Herald, Des Moines,la., est. 1903.

DER YID. Yiddish. Weekly. New York. Est. 1905. (First issueJuly 28.)

YOUNG MEN'S HEBREW ASSOCIATION MAGAZINE. Semi-monthly.New Orleans, La. Est. 1903.

ZION MESSENGER. Monthly. Chicago, 111. Est. 1904. (Firstissue in August.)Organ of the Order Knights of Zion.

DIE ZUKUNFT. Yiddish. Monthly. New York. Est. 1902.English title, " The Future."

Page 39: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

188 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

ANNUALS AND YEAR BOOKS

Annuals or Year Books were published in 1904, or for 1904-1905,by the following congregations:BETH ISRAEL, Philadelphia, Pa.B'NAI B'RITH, LOS Angeles, Cal. (V).KENESETH ISRAEL, Philadelphia, Pa. (XVI).*OHAVEI SHOLEM, Nashville, Tenn. (III) .RODEPH SHALOM, Philadelphia, Pa. (XII).TIFEKETH ISRAEL, Cleveland, O. (VII).

Annuals or Year Books were published by Sections of theCouncil of Jewish Women in Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Cincin-nati, New York, Pittsburg, Syracuse, Washington, and elsewhere.

SERIES OF SERMONS

•BETH ISRAEL PULPIT. Published monthly by Congregation BethIsrael, Portland, Ore.

EMANU-EL BROTHERHOOD. Sermons of Rev. G. Lipkind. Est. 1904.THE JEWISH PULPIT. Sermons delivered by Rabbi M. M. Eichler

before Congregation Beth Israel, Philadelphia, Pa. Est. 1904.Published weekly.

KENESETH ISRAEL SUNDAY DISCOURSES. Series XVIII. Phila-delphia, Pa.

THE REFORM PULPIT. Fourth Series, 1904-05. Containing theSunday lectures of Rabbi J. Leonard Levy, D. D., Pittsburg, Pa.

Page 40: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

APPOINTMENTS AND HONORS 180

APPOINTMENTS AND HONOES

AUGUST 13, 1904, TO AUGUST 20, 1905

Cyrus Adler, Washington, D. C, appointed Assistant Secretary ofthe Smithsonian Institution.

Daniel M. Appel, major surgeon, promoted to be deputy surgeon-general with rank of lieutenant-colonel, August 3, 1904.

Cecil H. Bauer, Portland, Ore., appointed Colonel Judge-Advocateof the State Militia of Oregon.

A. H. Bear appointed Corporation Counsellor of Belleville, 111.,1905.

Nathan Bijur, New York, elected President of the New York StateConference of Charities and Corrections, November, 1904.

William Blumenthal, New York, appointed Secretary of Legation,Lisbon, Portugal, in 1904, and third secretary of the embassyof the United States at Paris, France, in 1905.

Herman M. Blumenthal appointed postmaster at Columbus, Co-lumbia Co., Wis., December 6, 1904.

Harry L. Cohen, Omaha, Neb., appointed United States DistrictAttorney for Alaska, in 1905.

Walter L. Cohen, Louisiana, re-appointed register of the landoffice at New Orleans, La., February 1, 1905.

Lewis Einstein, New York, third secretary of the embassy atParis, appointed third secretary of the embassy of the UnitedStates at London, in 1905.

Jacob Forst re-appointed Alms Commissioner in Kingston, N. Y.,in November, 1904.

Bernard Foster, Vicksburg, Miss., appointed Trustee of the StateCharity Hospital and of the Confederate Veterans' Board, inNovember, 1904.

Herbert Friedenwald, Philadelphia, Pa., receives the John Mar-shall Prize from the Johns Hopkins University in recognitionof his recent book, " The Declaration of Independence."

Rabbi William S. Friedman, Denver, Colo., elected President ofthe State Board of Charities and Corrections, in 1905.

Page 41: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

190 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

Joseph Goldberger, Pennsylvania, assistant surgeon, appointed bythe Senate passed assistant surgeon in the Public Health andMarine Hospital Service, July 27, 1904.

Louis Goldschmidt, New Hampshire, consul at La Guaira, Vene-zuela, appointed consul at Nantes, France, December 6, 1904.

Charles J. E. Guggenheim, second lieutenant, appointed firstlieutenant in the Marine Corps, June 4, 1904.

Angelo Heilprin, Philadelphia, Pa., receives the title " Officier del'Academie" from the French Government.

Jacob H. Hollander, Baltimore, Md., appointed Special Commis-sioner of the United States to San Domingo and other islandsof the West Indies, in 1905.

Abraham Jacobi, emeritus professor at Columbia University, re-ceives the degree of Doctor of Laws from Yale University.

Louis Jacobs appointed postmaster at Kingstree, County of Wil-liamsburg, S. C, December 6, 1904.

Moses Kaufman appointed City Auditor of Lexington, Ky.Adolph Kraus, Chicago, 111., receives the decoration of Knight of

the Order of Francis Joseph from the Emperor of Austria,in recognition of his services as a juror on fine arts at theWorld's Fair, St. Louis, Mo.

Charles H. Lauchheimer, lieutenant-colonel, assistant adjutantand inspector of the Marine Corps, nominated by the Presi-dent as adjutant and inspector of the Marine Corps with rankof colonel.

Edward Lauterbach, New York, receives the degree of Doctor ofLaws from Manhattan College, New York.

Joseph Levenson, New York, appointed Internal Tax Appraiserby the Governor of New York, in 1904.

Bernhard Levy re-appointed postmaster at Walterboro, ColletunCounty, S. C, February 11, 1905.

Paul Lowenthal, Shreveport, La., appointed aid-de-camp on thestaff of the Governor of Louisiana with the rank of major.

Daniel Mayer, of West Virginia, consul at Buenos Ayres, Argen-tine Republic, appointed consul-general of the United Statesat the same place, December 6, 1904.

Laurence H. Moses, captain, appointed by the President major inthe Marine Corps, June 4, 1904.

Page 42: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

APPOINTMENTS AND HONORS 191

Jacob H. Schiff, New York, decorated with the Second Order ofthe Sacred Treasure by the Emperor of Japan.

Professor Edwin R. A. Seligman, New York, given the honorarydegree of Doctor of Laws at the celebration of the One Hun-dred and Fiftieth anniversary of the foundation of ColumbiaUniversity.

Henry Steinart, New York, appointed magistrate by the Mayorof New York, in 1905.

Samuel Stern, New York, appointed member of the Board of Edu-cation by the Mayor of New York, in 1904.

Marcus Stine, New York, appointed member of the Commissionon the Prison Probation System.

Hon. Oscar S. Straus, New York, given the honorary degree ofDoctor of Laws at the celebration of the One Hundred andFiftieth anniversary of the foundation of Columbia Univer-sity.

Joseph Strauss, lieutenant, appointed lieutenant-commander inthe navy, September 30, 1904.

Marcus Sulzer, Madison, Ind., appointed postmaster of the town,in 1905.

Isaac N. Weiner appointed School Commissioner in Kingston,N. Y., in November, 1904.

Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, Portland, Ore., re-appointed by the Gover-nor Commissioner of Child Labor for a term of five years,1905.

Jacob H. Wolf re-appointed postmaster at Pringhar, O'BrienCounty, la., February 11, 1905.

Page 43: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

192 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

ELECTIONS TO NATIONAL, STATE, ANDMUNICIPAL OFFICES

AUGUST 13, 1904, TO AUGUST 20, 1905

Milton L. Anfenger elected State Senator in the First SenatorialDistrict of Colorado, in November, 1904.

Ernest R. Bernstein, Shreveport, La., re-elected member of theCity Council, in 1904.

Morris Block re-elected (second term) Mayor of Kingston, N. Y.,in November, 1904.

Solomon Boehm elected to the City Council of St. Louis, Mo., inApril, 1905.

Edward J. Bromberg re-elected member of the Board of Alder-man, Boston, Mass., in 1904.

Emanuel S. Cahn, Schenectady, N. Y., member of the Board ofCivil Service Examiners, elected Assemblyman, New York, inNovember, 1904.

M. Caplan, Florence, Ala., re-elected Alderman, in November, 1904.Reuben S. Crohn elected Public Administrator, Kansas City, Mo.,

November, 1904.

Nathaniel A. Elsberg, New York, re-elected State Senator, Novem-ber, 1904.

Philip Feld, Vicksburg, Miss., elected Alderman, in November,1904.

I. N. Fleischner, Portland, Ore., elected school director in 1905.Louis Freidel elected Assemblyman, New York, in November,

1904.Henry M. Goldfogle, New York, re-elected to the United States

House of Representatives, in November, 1904.

M. Goldsmith, Fort Pierre, Fla., elected Prosecuting Attorney ofBrevard County, in 1904.

Joseph I. Green elected Judge of the city court, New York, inNovember, 1904.

Page 44: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

JEWS ELECTED TO OFFICE 193

Albert Grunsfeld, Albuquerque, N. M., appointed member of theBureau of Immigration, and elected County Commissioner ofBernalilla County, in November, 1904.

Simon Guggenheim, Denver, Colo., elected one of the five Repub-lican Presidential Electors for the State of Colorado, in No-vember, 1904.

Felix Haas elected to the Board of Education in Portsmouth, O.,in November, 1904.

G. A. Hartman elected Assemblyman, New York, in November,1904.

David E. Heinemann re-elected Alderman of the First Ward ofDetroit, Mich., in November, 1904.

Joseph Hirsch, Atlanta, Ga., elected Alderman in November, 1904.Louis D. Hirsheimer, Pittsfield, 111., re-elected member of the

Illinois State Board of Equalization, in November, 1904.Henry P. Hirshfield, Mobile, Ala., re-elected Coroner of Mobile

County, in November, 1904.Harry S. Joseph, Salt Lake City, Utah, elected Representative for

the Eighth District of Utah, in November, 1904.Julius Kahn, San Francisco, Cal., elected to the United States

House of Representatives from California, in November, 1904.M. Katz re-elected Alderman of West Point, Miss., in November,

1904.Herman Leinkauf, Mobile, Ala., elected member of the School

Board of Mobile County, Ala., in 1904.Julius Lesser elected to the City Council of St. Louis, Mo., in

April, 1905.Jacob Marks elected State Senator, New York, in November, 1904.D. Mancovitz, Boston, Mass., member of Common Council, re-

elected in 1904.Julius M. Mayer elected Attorney-General of the State of New

York, in November, 1904.Max Michael, Mobile, Ala., elected member of the City Council, in

1904.Albert Newman, Omaha, Neb., re-elected County Clerk of Shawnee

County, in November, 1904.Aaron Norden, Chicago, 111., elected to the State House of Repre-

sentatives from the Fifth District of Illinois, in 1904.

Page 45: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

194 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

Joseph Oberndorfer, Salt Lake City, Utah, elected to the Boardof Education, in December, 1904.

Emil Pollak, Cincinnati, O., elected a member of the Board ofEducation, in 1904.

Leopold Prince elected Assemblyman, New York, in November,1904.

E. Rosenstein elected Assemblyman, New York, in November,1904.

Louis Rosnosky elected City Treasurer of Atoka, I. T., in 1905.Moses N. Sale, St. Louis, Mo., elected Judge, in November, 1904.Jacob E. Salomon elected Assemblyman, New York, in November,

1904.Martin Saxe elected State Senator, New York, in November, 1904.D. J. Schlenker, Vicksburg, Miss., elected Alderman, in November,

1904.Louis Elmer Siegelstein, Cleveland, O., elected coroner of Cleve-

land, in 1904.Dr. Charles A. Simons elected Circuit Court Commissioner for ths

County of Wayne, Mich., in November, 1904.Mrs. Joseph Steinem elected trustee-at-large of the Board of Edu-

cation of Toledo, O., in 1904.Mayer Sulzberger, Philadelphia, Pa., re-elected Judge of the Court

of Common Pleas, in November, 1904.Simon Swig elected Representative from Bristol County to the

legislature of the State of Massachusetts, in November, 1994.Jacob B. Ullman, New Haven, Conn., appointed Judge of the

Court of Common Pleas of New Haven County.David Wile elected City Treasurer of Kingston, N. Y., in Novem-

ber, 1904.William Winter, Shreveport, La., elected to the State Legislature

of Louisiana, in 1904.Eddie I. Wolfe elected to the Senate of California, in November,

1904.

Page 46: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

BEQUESTS AND GIFTS 195

BEQUESTS AND GIFTS($500 AND UPWARD)

BY JEWS AND TO JEWISH INSTITUTIONS

AUGUST 13, 1904, TO AUGUST 20, 1905

[In this list no account can be taken of regular annual contributions tocharitable institutions in various cities. There are now ten cities In theUnited States in which the Jewish Charities are federated. According tothe last published reports in seven of them the funds available for oneyear for organized charitable purposes were as follows: Cincinnati,$48.001.19; Cleveland, $41.745.62: Detroit, $6662.74; Kansas City,$4508.14 ; Milwaukee, $11,193.00; Philadelphia, about $155,000.00: andSt. Louis. $43,108.03. The reports issued by the federated societies ofBoston, Chicago, Kansas City, and Omaha, were not obtainable. Thereceipts from twelve societies in New York City amounted to $1,494,745.12for one year.

For the new Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago subscriptions amountingto $400,000 have been secured. The individual subscriptions have notbeen published.

On July 21 it was announced that the Sinking Fund of the NationalFarm School at Doylestown. Pa., amounted to $36,488.

At the Nineteenth Council of the Union of American Hebrew Congrega-tions, January, 1905, It was announced that the Isaac M. Wise MemorialFund of the Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati, O., amounted to $450,000 ;and on July 31, the amount collected was announced to be $289,700.10.

The following entries should have appeared in the AMERICAN JEWISHYEAH BOOK 5665 ; Julius Newman bequeaths $250 to the First HebrewBenevolent Society, San Francisco, Cal. ; Mrs. Nettie Schwarts bequeathsS3r.n to the same institution ; J. Alfred Kay. Philadelphia, Pa., bequeaths$1000; Jacob Walker $3000 : and Valentine Geng $7096.30, to the JewishHospital Association. Philadelphia. Pa. ; Jacob A. Schwarz, Philadelphia,Pa., endows with $1000 a life privilege bed in memory of his parents,Albert and Naomi Schwarz, at the same institution.]

Louis I. Aaron, Pittsburg, Pa., gives $1000 to the Sinking Fund,and $500 for new dormitories, at the National Farm School,Doylestown, Pa.

Abraham Abraham, Brooklyn, N. Y., gives $5000 to the JewishHospital, Brooklyn.

Mrs. Henry Abraham, New Orleans, La., in memory of, $1000given to the Association for the Relief of Jewish Widowsand Orphans, New Orleans.

Ben Adler, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Jewish Hospital, St.Louis.

David Adler, Milwaukee, Wis., bequeaths $3000 to the JewishOrphan Asylum; $500 to the Home for Aged and InfirmIsraelites, both of Cleveland, O.; $,§00 to the Hebrew Union

Page 47: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

196 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

College, Cincinnati, O.; $1000 to the Hebrew Relief Society;$200 to the Milwaukee Orphan Asylum; $100 to the St. RoseOrphan Asylum; $200 to the Children's Hospital; $100 to theProtestant Home for the Aged; $100 to the Infants' Home, allof Milwaukee; and $500 to the Odd Feilows' Home, GreenBay, Wis.

Ben Altheimer, St. Louis, Mo., gives $1000 to the Jewish Hospital,St. Louis.

Ludwig Altschul, in memory of, his heirs give $500 to MountZion Hospital Association, San Francisco, Cal.

Anonymous gift of $10,000 to the New York Section of the Coun-cil of Jewish Women, for a Home for Young Women.

Asiel and Company, New York, give $500 to the Guaranty Fundof the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Louis Auerbach, San Francisco, Cal., bequeaths $500 to theEureka Benevolent Society, San Francisco.

Joseph Austrian and Mrs. Austrian, Chicago, 111., give $500 to theMichael Reese Hospital Endowment Fund, in memory ofWalter Austrian.

Julius Baer, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Jewish Hospital, St.Louis.

Sig. Baer, St. Louis, Mo., gives $1000 to the Jewish Hospital, St.Louis.

Maurice Bamberger, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fundof the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Meyer Bauman, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Jewish Hospital,St. Louis.

Henry Beer, New Orleans, La., gives $500 for new dormitories atthe National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

Mrs. Julius Beer, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fundof the United Hebrew Charities, New York; and $300 forfive years to the Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati, O., fora Julius Beer Scholarship.

Moses Bensinger, Chicago, 111., bequeaths $1000 to the MichaelReese Hospital; $1000 to the Jewish Training School; and$500 to the Alexian Brothers; all of Chicago.

Bernheim Brothers, Louisville, Ky., give $500 for new dormi-tories at the National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

Charles Bernstein, the estate of, gives $1000 to the United He-brew Charities, New York.

Clara Bloch, St. Louis, Mo., bequeaths $400 to the Jewish Hospi-tal; $300 to the Home for Aged and Infirm Israelites; and

Page 48: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

BEQUESTS AND GIFTS 197

$250 to the New Mount Sinai Cemetery Association; all ofSt. Louis; and $300 to the Jewish Orphan Asylum, Cleve-land, O.

Emanuel Bloch, Cleveland, O., bequeaths $500 to the Sir MosesMontefiore Kesher Home for Aged and Infirm Israelites,Cleveland.

Lyman G. Bloomingdale, New York, gives $1000 to the Isaac M.Wise Endowment Fund of the Hebrew Union College, Cin-cinnati, O.

Herman B. Blumenthal, Philadelphia, Pa., bequeaths $2000 to theFederation of Jewish Charities, Philadelphia.

L. Blumgart, New York, gives $500 to the Hebrew Union College,Cincinnati, O., for a Blumgart scholarship.

Mrs. Simon Borg, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fund ofthe United Hebrew Charities; $10,000 to the Hebrew Techni-cal Institute in memory of her husband; $2500 to the Educa-tional Alliance; and $500 to the Emanu-El Brotherhood; allof New York.

Mrs. Babette Braham, St. Louis, Mo., bequeaths $500 to theJewish Orphan Asylum, Cleveland, O.; $500 to the Free Sons'Cemetery; and $500 to the Beth Moshav Zekeinim; the lattertwo of Chicago, 111.

Hiram Brooke, Philadelphia, Pa., the executors of, in distributinghis residuary estate, add $4000 to his original bequest of$1000 to the Jewish Hospital Association of Philadelphia.

N. and L. Bry, St. Louis, Mo., give $600 to the Jewish Hospital,St. Louis.

Adolphus Busch, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Jewish Hospi-tal, St. Louis.

Murray Carleton, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Jewish Hospi-tal, St. Louis.

Andrew Carnegie, Pittsburg, Pa., gives $12,500 to the NationalFarm School at Doylestown, Pa.

Aaron Cohen and Mrs. Cohen, Pittsburg, Pa., give $500 to theNational Jewish Hospital for Consumptives, Denver, Colo.;and $500 in memory of their father for new dormitories atthe National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

Richard Croker, New York, gives $500 to the United HebrewCharities; and $500 to the Mount Sinai Hospital, New York.

Ben Wood Davis, Cincinnati, O., bequeaths $50,000 to Yale Col-lege, New Haven, Conn.; $15,000 to Harvard Law School,Cambridge, Mass.; $15,000 to the University of Cincinnati;

13

Page 49: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

198 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

$10,000 to the Jewish Hospital; and $10,000 to the SymphonyOrganization, the latter two of Cincinnati; and $5000 to eachof the following: Berea College, Madison Co., Ky.; VassarCollege, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.; Sir Moses Monteflore KesherHome for Aged and Infirm Israelites, and Jewish OrphanAsylum, both of Cleveland, O.; Home for the Jewish Agedand Infirm; Hebrew Union College; College of Music; andPublic Library; the last four of Cincinnati.

Emma Dreifus, the estate of, gives to the Jewish Foster Homeand Orphan Asylum $200 in memory of her mother; $200 inmemory of her brother, and $3583.68 as residuary legatee.

Moses A. Dropsie, Philadelphia, Pa., bequeaths the bulk of hisestate, valued at $800,000, for the establishment of a collegein the city of Philadelphia, for instruction " in the Hebrewand cognate languages and their respective literatures, andin the rabbinical learning and literature."

David Eiseman, St. Louis, Mo., gives $1000 to the Jewish Hos-pital, St. Louis.

E. Ephriam, Chicago, 111., bequeaths $621.19 to the Michael ReeseHospital Endowment Fund, Chicago.

Jacob Epstein, Baltimore, Md., gives $500 to the Sinking Fundof the National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

Louis L. Firuski, Brooklyn, N. Y., gives $500 to the JewishHospital, Brooklyn.

James L. Flood, San Francisco, Cal., gives $1008 to the PacificHebrew Orphan Asylum and Home Society, San Francisco,Cal.

Isaac Frank, Pittsburg, Pa., gives $500 to the Columbian CouncilSchool Mortgage Fund.

Moritz M. Frankenthal, New York, bequeaths $1000 to each of thefollowing: Mount Sinai Hospital; Hebrew Orphan Asylumand Benevolent Society; Montefiore Home for Chronic In-valids; Hebrew Infant Asylum; and Home for Aged andInfirm Hebrews; all of New York.

Andrew Freedman, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fundof the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Julius Freiberg, Cincinnati, O., contributes $500 to the BibleTranslation Fund of the Jewish Publication Society of Amer-ica, Philadelphia, Pa.

Julius Freyhan, New Orleans, La., bequeaths $500 to the TouroInfirmary and Hebrew Benevolent Association, New Orleans.

Page 50: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

BEQUESTS AND GIFTS 199

Abraham Friday, Philadelphia, Pa., bequeaths $750 to the JewishHospital Association, and $750 to the Jewish Foster Homeand Orphan Asylum, Philadelphia.

S. M. Fridenberg and children, Philadelphia, Pa., give $5000 tothe Jewish Hospital Association, of Philadelphia, in memoryof Mrs. Esther Fridenberg.

Jacob Friedman, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Jewish Hospi-tal, St. Louis.

N. Friedman, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Jewish Hospital,St. Louis.

A. Fuller, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Jewish Hospital, St.Louis.

Moses Geisenberger, Lancaster, Pa., bequeaths $500 to the JewishFoster Home and Orphan Asylum, Philadelphia, Pa.; $500to the Congregation Shairy Shomaim, Lancaster; and $300 tothe Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati, O.

Julius Glaser, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Jewish Hospital,St. Louis.

Morris Glaser, St. Louis, Mo., gives $600 to the Jewish Charitableand Educational Union; and $1000 to the Jewish Hospital,St. Louis.

Godchaux, Leon, the family of, gives $50,000 to the buildingfund of the Touro Infirmary and Hebrew Benevolent Asso-ciation, New Orleans.

Henry Goldman, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fund ofthe United Hebrew Charities, New York.

J. D. Goldman, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Jewish Charitableand Educational Union; and $1000 to the Jewish Hospital,St. Louis.

Marcus Goldman, New York, bequeaths $500 to the Jewish Hospi-tal Association, Philadelphia.

Charles Goldstein, Dallas, Tex., bequeaths $1000 to the TouroInfirmary and Hebrew Benevolent Association, New Orleans,La.

William Goldstein, St. Louis, Mo., bequeaths $500 to the JewishCharitable and Educational Union; $250 to the ProvidentAssociation; $250 to the German General Protestant Orphans'Home; $1000 to the Home for Aged and Infirm Israelites;$1000 to the Jewish Hospital; and $500 to the New MountSinai Cemetery Association; all of St. Louis; $500 to theNational Jewish Hospital for Consumptives, Denver, Colo.;and $1000 to the Jewish Orphan Asylum, Cleveland, O.

Page 51: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

200 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

Ph.»J. Goodhart, New York, gives $500 to the Building Fund ofthe Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati, O.

S. Grabfelder, Louisville, Ky., gives $500 to the National Jew-ish Hospital for Consumptives, Denver, Colo.

J. B. Greenhut, Peoria, 111., gives $2000 to Congregation AnsheEmeth, Peoria, to pay off its debt.

Mrs. J. B. Greenhut, Peoria, 111., gives $1000 to the NationalJewish Hospital for Consumptives, Denver, Colo., for aWoman's Pavilion.

Isaac Guggenheim, New York, gives $1000 to the SydenhamHospital, and $1000 to the summer camp of the EducationalAlliance, New York.

Meyer Guggenheim, New York, bequeaths $20,000 to each of thefollowing: Hebrew Benevolent and Orphan Asylum Society;Montefiore Home for Chronic Invalids; and Mount Sinai Hos-pital, all of New York; and the Jewish Hospital Association,Philadelphia, Pa.

M. Guggenheim's Sons, New York, give $5000 to the GuarantyFund of the United Hebrew Charities, New York; and $2000for new dormitories at the National Farm School, Doyles-town, Pa.

Murray Guggenheim, New York, gives $20,000 to the Mount SinaiTraining School for Nurses, New York, as a fund to providetwelve annual scholarships of $100 each.

Simon Guggenheim, Denver, Colo., gives $75,000 to the ColoradoState School of Mines, Golden, Colo.

William Guggenheim, New York, gives $1000 to the GuarantyFund of the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Solomon Halff, San Antonio, Tex., bequeaths $500 to the Associa-tion for the Relief of Jewish Widows and Orphans, NewOrleans, La.; $1000 to the Montefiore Hebrew BenevolentAssociation; $500 to the Ladies Hebrew Benevolent Associa-tion; and $500 to the Protestant Home for Destitute Children.

Philip Hamburger, Pittsburg, Pa., gives $1000 to the NationalJewish Hospital for Consumptives, Denver, Colo., for aWoman's Pavilion.

Joseph Harris, Chicago, 111., gives $1000 to the National JewishHospital for Consumptives, Denver, Colo., for a Woman'sPavilion.

Abraham and Hannah R. Hart, the children of, Chicago, 111., give$1000 to the Michael Reese Hospital Endowment Fund, Chi-cago.

Page 52: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

BEQUESTS AND GIFTS 201

Asher Hassler, Philadelphia, Pa., bequeaths $2066.52 to the JewishHospital Association, and $1033.26 to the United HebrewCharities, Philadelphia.

Abraham E. and Amelia K. Hecht, $1000 given in memory of, bytheir children, to the Mount Zion Hospital Association; and$250 to the Eureka Benevolent Association, San Francisco,Cal.

Joseph E. Heimerdinger, the estate of, gives $3000 to the UnitedHebrew Charities; and $1000 to the Hebrew Technical Schoolfor Girls, New York.

A. Heineman, Philadelphia, Pa., bequeaths $500 to each of thefollowing: Jewish Hospital Association; Jewish Foster Homeand Orphan Asylum; Familien Waisen Erziehungs Verein;and Congregation Keneseth Israel; $350 to the Jewish Mater-nity Association; $250 to the Manual Training School of theIndependent Order of B'nai B'rith; $100 to the Hebrew Edu-cation Society; and $100 to the Jewish Publication Society ofAmerica; all of Philadelphia.

Louis A. Heinsheimer, New York, gives $10,000 to the GuarantyFund of the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

I. W. Hellman, Sr., San Francisco, Cal., gives $1000 to the MountZion Hospital Association, San Francisco.

A. Hirshheimer, La Crosse, Wis., gives $500 for new dormitoriesat the National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

John C. Hoffman, Germany, bequeaths $1500 to the Jewish Hos-pital Association, and $1500 to the Jewish Foster Home andAsylum, of Philadelphia, Pa.

Henry Horstman, San Francisco, Cal., bequeaths $4000 to thePacific Hebrew Orphan Asylum and Home Society; and $1000to the Columbia Park Boys' Club, San Francisco.

Henry W. Hyman, San Francisco, Cal., bequeaths $1000 to eachof the following: Eureka Benevolent Association; PacificHebrew Orphan Asylum and Home Society; Mount Zion Hos-pital Association; Hebrew Home for Aged Disabled; andFirst Hebrew Benevolent Society; all of San Francisco.

Henry W. Hyman, the estate of, San Francisco, Cal., gives $1000to the Hebrew Home for Aged Disabled, San Francisco.

Independent Order Brith Abraham gives $857 to the JewishConsumptives' Relief Society, Denver, Colo.

R. L. Jacobs, the estate of, gives $1000 to the Building Fund ofthe Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society of New York.

E. Jonas. See H. Tuholske.

Page 53: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

202 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

Mrs. Joseph Joseph, Cincinnati, O., gives $1000 to the Union ofAmerican Hebrew Congregations; $1000 to the National Jew-ish Hospital for Consumptives, Denver, Colo.; and $500 tothe United Jewish Charities, Cincinnati, O.

Otto H. Kahn, New York, gives $1500 to the Guaranty Fund ofthe United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Bertha Kakales, in memory of, $1000 given to the United HebrewCharities, New York.

Emma H. Kaufman, New York, gives $5000 to the Hebrew Tech-nical School for Girls, New York, as a scholarship fund inmemory of her daughter.

Joseph Kaufmann, New York, bequeaths $1000 to the HebrewFree School Association; and $2500 to the Educational Alli-ance, New York.

George A. Kessler, New York, gives $5000 annually for threeyears to a special fund of the United Hebrew Charities, NewYork.

Bennett J. King, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fund ofthe United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Mrs. Bennett J. King, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fundof the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Mrs. Edward J. King, New York, gives $500 to the GuarantyFund of the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Miss Sarah King, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fund ofthe United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Sarah B. King, New York, bequeaths $10,000 to Mount SinaiHospital; $2000 to the Home for Aged and Infirm Hebrews;$5000 to Congregation B'nai Jeshurun; $2500 to the HebrewFree School Association; $2000 to the Hebrew Benevolentand Orphan Asylum Society; $3000 to the United HebrewCharities; $2000 to the Hebrew Technical Institute; and$5000 to the Monteflore Home for Chronic Invalids; all ofNew York.

Simon Koch, Louisville, Ky., bequeaths $1500 to the Jewish FreeHospital Association; and $200 to Christ Evangelical Church,Louisville.

Henry Kramer, San Francisco, Cal., bequeaths $100 to RabbiSamuel Salant for the poor Jews of Jerusalem; $200 to Con-gregation Nevah Zedeck; $100 to the First Hebrew Benevo-lent Society; $50 to the Chevra Gmilus Chasodim; all ofSan Francisco; and $50 to a theological seminary in Wilna.

Joseph Krauskopf, Philadelphia, Pa., gives $500 to the SinkingFund of the National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

Page 54: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

BEQUESTS AND GIFTS 203

Mrs. Carrie Krieger, Philadelphia, Pa., gives $1000 to the Feder-ation of Jewish Charities, Philadelphia, in memory of herhusband, Samuel Krieger.

Moses Krohn, Cincinnati, O., bequeaths $400 to the Jewish OrphanAsylum, Cleveland, O.; and $100 to the Manual TrainingSchool of the same Asylum; $250 to the Home for the JewishAged and Infirm; $250 to the Jewish Hospital; $100 to theHebrew General Relief Society; $100 to the Hebrew UnionCollege; $100 to the Home for Incurables; $100 to the Chil-dren's Home; $100 to the Associated Charities; $100 to theGood Samaritan Hospital; $100 to the General ProtestantOrphan Asylum; $100 to the Home for the Friendless; and$100 to the Colored Orphan Asylum; all of Cincinnati.

Louis Kuhn, Cincinnati, O., gives $4000 to be divided among eightcharitable institutions in memory of his wife.

Lazard Freres, New York, give $700 to the Guaranty Fund Ofthe United Hebrew Charities, and $500 to the EducationalAlliance, New York.

Fred Lazarus, Columbus, O., gives $1000 to the National JewishHospital for Consumptives, Denver, Colo., for a Woman'sPavilion.

Sam Lazarus, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Building Fund ofthe Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

Emanuel Lehman, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fundof the United Hebrew Charities, New York; and $500 to theEndowment Fund of the National Farm School, Doylestown,Pa.

Mrs. Mayer Lehman, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fundof the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Herman Leiter, Syracuse, N. Y., makes the Jewish Orphan Asy-lum Association of Western New York, Rochester, N. Y.;Home for Aged and Infirm, Yonkers, N. Y.; Hebrew UnionCollege, Cincinnati, O.; and the Congregation Society ofConcord, Syracuse, N. Y.; residuary legatees (probably $75,-000 for the four institutions together).

Stella Leiter, Syracuse, N. Y., gives $25,000 to the National Jew-ish Hospital for Consumptives, Denver, Colo.

Julius Lesser, St. Louis, Mo., gives $25,000 to the Building Fundof the Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

J. Leonard Levy, Pittsburg, Pa., offers a prize of $1000 for thebest novel on " Universal Peace."

Adolph Lewisohn, New York, gives $10,000 to the Guaranty Fundof the United Hebrew Charities; $75,000 to the Building

Page 55: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

204 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

Fund of the Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society; both ofNew York; $5000 to the Isaac M. Wise Endowment Fund ofthe Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati, O.; and $5000 to theEmanu-El Brotherhood, New York.

Albert Lewisohn, New York, gives $150,000 to the Hebrew Shel-tering Guardian Society of New York.

Henry S. Lewyt, Baltimore, Md., bequeaths $100 to the GermanOrphan Asylum, and $1000 to each of the following institu-tions: Hebrew Orphan Asylum, Hebrew Hospital and Asy-lum Association, and Hebrew Benevolent Society, all ofBaltimore.

A. Lippman, Pittsburg, Pa., gives $500 to the Sinking Fund of theNational Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

Lester and Madeline Livingstone, South Bend, Ind., give theLivingstone Library to the Orphans' Home, South Bend, incommemoration of their escape from the Iroquois TheatreFire in Chicago.

Betty Loeb, the children of, New York, establish a fund of$750,000 for the Betty Loeb Memorial Home for Convales-cents.

James Loeb, New York, gives $2500 to the Guaranty Fund of theUnited Hebrew Charities, New York.

Morris Loeb, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fund of theUnited Hebrew Charities, New York.

Joseph Louchheim, Philadelphia, Pa., bequeaths $1000 to theHebrew Union College, Cincinnati, O.; $1000 to the JewishMaternity Association; $1000 to the Jewish Hospital Asso-ciation; $500 to the Young Women's Union; $500 to the UnitedHebrew Charities; $500 to the Jewish Foster Home andOrphan Asylum; $250 to the Orphans' Guardians; the lattersix institutions of Philadelphia; and $500 to the Jewish Con-gregation at Jebenhausen, Wiirtemberg.

Mrs. C. L. Magee, Italy, gives $1000 to the J. M. Gusky Orphan-age, Pittsburg, Pa.

Louis Marshall, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fund ofthe United Hebrew Charities, New York.

David May, St. Louis, Mo., gives $1000 for the purchase of coalfor the poor of St. Louis; and $500 to the Building Fund ofthe Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

Mayer. See Weil.Henry Meis, Cincinnati, O., gives $5000 to the Home for the Jew-

ish Aged and Infirm; and $5000 to the Jewish Hospital, Cin-cinnati.

Page 56: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

BEQUESTS AND GIFTS 205

Samuel Philip Mendel, New York, bequeaths $1000 to the Societyfor Ethical Culture; $1000 to the Hebrew Benevolent andOrphan Asylum Society; $1000 to the Mount Sinai Hospital;$1500 to the Monteflore Home for Chronic Invalids and Homefor Consumptives; all of New York; and 5000 mark for thepoor of Elmshorn, Holstein, Germany.

Albert Meyer, San Francisco, Cal., gives $2500 to the EurekaBenevolent Association, San Francisco, Cal.

Clara Meyer, San Francisco, Cal., bequeaths $1500 to the EurekaBenevolent Association, San Francisco, Cal.

Herman Meyer, Monroe, La., bequeaths $1000 to the Touro In-firmary and Hebrew Benevolent Association, New Orleans,La.

George S. Meyers, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Building Fundof the Jewish Hospital, St. Louis, Mo.

Elias Michael and Mrs. Michael, St. Louis, Mo., give $10,000 fora Day Nursery and Kindergarten in connection with theJewish Charitable and Educational Building of St. Louis.

Herman Molner, Chicago, 111., gives $2000 to the Building Fundof the Sabbath School of Congregation Beth El, Chicago, inaddition to $3000 given a year ago.

Nathaniel Myers, in honor of, the Board of Trustees of the insti-tution donate $2500 to the Hebrew Technical School forGirls, New York, as a Scholarship Fund.

Max Nathan, New York, gives ?500 to the Guaranty Fund of theUnited Hebrew Charities, New York.

David Nederlander, Detroit, Mich., equips a hospital to be knownas the Nederlander Hospital, at a cost of $15,000, and givesit to the Jewish community of Detroit.

Sigmund Neustadt, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fundof the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Jacob Neustadter, San Francisco, Cal., gives $500 to the PacificHebrew Orphan Asylum and Home Society, San Francisco.

Isidore Newman, New Orleans, La., gives $3500 to the JewishOrphans' Home, New Orleans, for the equipment of itsManual Training School; and $1000 to the Library Fund ofthe School, making in all $44,000 given by Mr. Newman forthe erection and equipment of the School; $500 for newdormitories at the National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.;$1000 to the National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives,Denver, Colo., for a Woman's Pavilion; and $1000 to theTouro Infirmary and Hebrew Benevolent Association, NewOrleans, La., in honor of his son's marriage.

14

Page 57: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

206 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

Mrs. Jennie H. Northman, Wiirzburg, Germany, gives $500 to theSinking Fund of ther National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

D. C. Nugent, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Building Fund ofthe Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

Joseph Openhym, the estate of, gives $5,465.62 to the UnitedHebrew Charities; $2732.61 to the Hebrew Technical Schoolfor Girls, and $2732.81 to the Educational Alliance, NewYork.

Mr. and Mrs. Oppenheimer, Pittsburg, Pa., give $1000 to the FreeKindergarten Association for the Nannie Oppenheimer Me-morial Kindergarten.

Marx and Moses Ottinger, New York, give $500 to the JewishTheological Seminary of America, New York, in memory oftheir father.

Mrs. Rosa Peck, New York, gives $1000 to the Educational Alli-ance, New York, in memory of Leopold Peck.

Henry Phipps, New York, gives $5000 to the Educational Alli-ance; and $2500 to the Legal Aid Bureau, New York.

John F. Popp, New Orleans, La., gives $1000 to the Manual Train-ing School of the Association for the Relief of Jewish Widowsand Orphans, New Orleans.

Louis Renard, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Building Fund ofthe Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

Mrs. Jonathan Rice, St. Louis, Mo., gives $10,000 to the BuildingFund of the Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

Slgmund Roedelheim, Philadelphia, Pa., bequeaths $500 to theFederation of Jewish Charities, Philadelphia.

Sigmund Roedelheim, the estate of, gives $500 to the Federationof Jewish Charities, Philadelphia, Pa.

Adolph Rosenbaum, Philadelphia, bequeaths $250 to the JewishFoster Home and Orphan Asylum, and $250 to the UnitedHebrew Charities, Philadelphia.

Louis Rosenberg, Philadelphia, Pa., gives an endowment of $5000to the Jewish Hospital Association of Philadelphia, for afree room.

Moses Rosenthal, Peru, Ind., bequeaths $100 to each of the fol-lowing: Jewish Orphan Asylum; Sir Moses MontefloreKesher Home for Aged and Infirm Israelites; both of Cleve-land, O.; Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati, O.; NationalJewish Hospital for Consumptives, Denver, Colo.; and theAssociated Charities of Peru.

Sigmund Rosenthal, Hamburg, Germany, bequeaths $4744.98 tothe Eureka Benevolent Association, San Francisco, Cal.

Page 58: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

BEQUESTS AND GIFTS 207

Julius Rosenwald, Chicago, 111., gives the Bernays-Hirsch Li-brary, consisting of 9000 volumes, to the University ofChicago.

Sigmund Rosenwald, New York, gives $1000 to the GuarantyFund of the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Isaac Rosskam, Philadelphia, Pa., bequeaths $5000 to the JewishHospital Association; $2500 to the United Hebrew Charities;$3000 to the Hebrew Education Society; $2000 to the JewishFoster Home and Orphan Asylum; $500 to the YoungWomen's Union; $500 to the Waisen Erziehungs Verein;$500 to the Home for Hebrew Orphans; $500 to RodephShalom Congregation; $500 to the Pennsylvania Society toprotect Children from Cruelty; all of Philadelphia; $2000 tothe National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives, Denver,Colo.; and $1000 to the Free Hospital for Poor Consumptives,White Haven, Pa.

Isaac Rosskam, Philadelphia, Pa., gives $500 to the Hebrew Edu-cation Society, Philadelphia, for a Ulysses H. Rosskam PrizeFund.

Solomon Rothfeld, New York, bequeaths $5000 to the Society forEthical Culture; $5000 to the Mount Sinai Hospital; $2000to the Montefiore Home for Chronic Invalids; $1000 to eachof the following: German Hospital and Dispensary; HebrewBenevolent and Orphan Asylum Society; Home for Aged andInfirm Hebrews; United Hebrew Charities; Educational Alli-ance; and Beth Israel Hospital; and $500 to the ColoredHome and Hospital; all of New York.

Simon Rothschild, New York, bequeaths $50,000 to the MountSinai Hospital, and $2000 to the Educational Alliance, NewYork.

Archbishop Ryan, Philadelphia, Pa., gives $1000 to the Independ-ent Association Chesed Shel Ernes (Jewish Free Burial Asso-ciation), Philadelphia, for its new building.

William Salomon, New York, gives $1000 to the Guaranty Fundof the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Kasriel H. Sarasohn, New York, gives one-tenth of his fortune,estimated at $10,000, to the Hebrew Sheltering House andHome for Aged; Montefiore Home for Chronic Invalids; andthe Machzyki Talmud Torah; all of New York; and to theHospital and Home for the Aged at Jerusalem. Will notprobated.

Jacob H. Schiff, New York, gives $5000 to the Jewish Hospital,Brooklyn, N. Y.; $55,000 to Harvard University for annualexcavating expeditions to Palestine; $1000 to the Jewish Con-

Page 59: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

208 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

sumptives' Relief Society, Denver, Colo.; and $1000 to theNational Jewish Hospital for Consumptives for a "Woman'sPavilion; the latter two of Denver, Colo.; $10,000 to theIsaac M. Wise Endowment Fund of the Hebrew Union Col-lege, Cincinnati, O.; $1250 to the Herzl Fund; $100,000 forthe endowment of a chair of Social Work at Columbia Uni-versity; $6000 to the Self-Support Fund, and $5000 to theGuaranty Fund of the United Hebrew Charities, and $1000annually to the Yeshibah Yitzchok Elchanan, all of NewYork; and $2500 to the Endowment Fund of the NationalFarm School, Doylestown, Pa.

Mortimer L. Schiff, New York, gives $2500 to the Isaac M. WiseEndowment Fund of the Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati,O.; $500 to the Educational Alliance, and $5000 to the Guar-anty Fund of the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Mrs. Babette Schloss, Baltimore, Md., bequeaths $500 to each ofthe following institutions: Hebrew Hospital and AsylumAssociation, Hebrew Benevolent Society, and Hebrew OrphanAsylum; and $400 to the Shearith Israel Congregation; allof Baltimore; also $200 to the Home for Aged and InfirmHebrews, and $300 to the Hebrew Sheltering Guardian So-ciety, the last two of New York.

Seligmann Schloss, Detroit, Mich., gives $1250 to the NationalJewish Hospital for Consumptives, Denver, Colo.

Moses Schoenberg, St. Louis, Mo., gives $1000 to the BuildingFund of the Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

William Scholle, New York, gives $500 to the Isaac M. Wise En-dowment Fund of the Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati, O.

Mrs. Isaac Schwab, St. Louis, Mo., gives $1000 to the BuildingFund of the Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

Leon Schwab, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Building Fund ofthe Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

Max Schwab, St. Louis, Mo., gives $1000 to the Building Fund ofthe Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

Mrs. Isidor Schwartz, San Francisco, Cal., in memory of herhusband, gives $1000 to Mount Zion Hospital Association;and $500 to the Eureka Benevolent Association, San Fran-cisco.

R. M. Scruggs, St. Louis, Mo., gives $1000 to the Building Fundof the Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

M. G. and Simon Seelig give $500 to the Building Fund of theJewish Hospital, St. Louis, Mo.

Page 60: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

BEQUESTS AND GIFTS 209

Henry Seligman, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fund ofthe United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Isaac N. Seligman, New York, gives $500 to the Educational Alli-ance; $5000 to the Guaranty Fund of the United HebrewCharities; both of New York; and $1000 to the Isaac M.Wise Endowment Fund of the Hebrew Union College, Cin-cinnati, O.

J. and W. Seligman and Company, New York, London, Paris, andFrankfort-on-the-Main, erect a home for children in Baiers-dorf, Bavaria, in memory of their parents.

James Seligman, New York, gives $1000 to the Isaac M. WiseEndowment Fund of the Hebrew Union College, Cincin-nati, O.

Jefferson Seligman, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fundof the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Isaac H. Silverman, Philadelphia, Pa., gives $500 for new dormi-tories at the National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

I. M. Simon, St. Louis, Mo., gives $1000 to the Building Fund ofthe Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

A. Slimmer, Waverly, la., gives $500 to the Endowment Fund ofthe National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.; $5000 to theSinai Hospital Association, Milwaukee, Wis.; and $5000 tothe Waverly Hospital, for extensions and improvements.

Nathan Snellenburg, Philadelphia, Pa., gives $500 to the SinkingFund of the National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

Samuel Snellenburg, Philadelphia, Pa., gives $500 for new dormi-tories at the National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

Corwin H. Spencer, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the BuildingFund of the Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

James Speyer, New York, gives $5000 to the Guaranty Fund ofthe United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Emanuel Springer, Philadelphia, Pa., bequeaths $1000 to each ofthe following institutions: Jewish Foster Home and OrphanAsylum, Jewish Hospital Association, and German Hospital,all of Philadelphia.

Mrs. Jane Stanford, San Francisco, Cal., bequeaths $10,000 to theHebrew Home for Aged Disabled, San Francisco.

Mrs. Abraham Stein, Brooklyn, gives $1000 for a bed in theJewish Hospital, Brooklyn, in memory of her husband.

Barnet Steinberg, New York, bequeaths $10,000 to the Jewishcharitable institutions in New York.

Page 61: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

210 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

Benjamin Stern, New York, gives $2500 to the Guaranty Fund ofthe United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Mrs. Jacob Stern, San Francisco, Cal., gives $2000 to the EurekaBenevolent Association, San Francisco.

Mrs. David Stettauer, Chicago, 111., gives $50,000 to the MichaelReese Hospital, Chicago.

C. A. Stix, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Building Fund of theJewish Hospital, St. Louis.

Mrs. C. A. Stix, St. Louis, Mo., gives $500 to the Building Fundof the Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

William Stix, St. Louis, Mo., gives $1000 to the Building Fund ofthe Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

Isidor Straus, New York, gives $1000 to the Educational Alliance,New York.

Mrs. Jacob Straus, Ligonier, Ind., gives $500 for new dormitoriesat the National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

Lazarus Straus, the children of, New York, give $5000 to theIsaac M. Wise Endowment Fund of the Hebrew Union Col-lege, Cincinnati, O.

L. Straus and Sons, New York, give $1000 to the Guaranty Fundof the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Charles Sweeny, Spokane, Wash., gives $500 to the Sinking Fundof the National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

Louis Tobiason, Philadelphia, Pa., bequeaths $5000 to the JewishHospital Association of Philadelphia and $10,000 to a freepublic library in the event of the death of his two daughtersand their children.

Henry M. Toch, New York, gives $1000 to the Young Men'sHebrew Association, New York, in memory of his parents.

Tomlinson, the children of, give $500 to the Pacific He-brew Orphan Asylum and Home Society, San Francisco, Cal.

Herman Tuholske, St. Louis, equips the operating room of theJewish Hospital, St. Louis, at a cost of $2000.

H. Tuholske and E. Jonas give $1000 to the Building Fund ofthe Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

United Cigar Manufacturers, New York, give $1000 to the Guar-anty Fund of the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

William Vogel, New York, bequeaths $5000 to the Mount SinaiHospital; $1000 to the Home for Aged and Infirm Hebrews;$1000 to the Montefiore Home for Chronic Invalids; $1000to the Lebanon Hospital; $1000 to the Sanitarium for HebrewChildren; and $1000 to the Hebrew Benevolent and OrphanAsylum Society; all of New York.

Page 62: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

BEQUESTS AND GIFTS 211

Aaron Waldheim, St. Louis, Mo,., gives $1000 to the BuildingFund of the Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

Felix and Paul Warburg, New York, give $3500 to the Isaac M.Wise Endowment Fund of the Hebrew Union College, Cin-cinnati, O.

Felix M. Warburg, New York, gives $5000 to the Guaranty Fundof the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Paul M. Warburg, New York, gives $3000 to the Guaranty Fundof the United Hebrew Charities, New YorK.

Washington Lodge, Independent Order of B'nai B'rith, New York,gives $500 to the Home for Aged and Infirm, Yonkers, N. Y.

Weil and Mayer, New York, give $1000 to the Guaranty Fund ofthe United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Simon Weil, Lexington, Ky., gives $1000 to the Building Fundof the synagogue at Lexington.

Raphael Weill, San Francisco, Cal., gives sums varying from$100 to $1000 to sixteen charitable institutions in San Fran-cisco.

Caroline Weinstein, the estate of, gives $500 to the United He-brew Charities, New York.

Julius Weis, New Orleans, La., gives $500 to the Lecture Fundof the Young Men's Hebrew Association, New Orleans.

Samuel Philip Wendel, New York, bequeaths $1000 to the Societyfor Ethical Culture; $1000 to the Hebrew Benevolent andOrphan Asylum Society; $1000 to the Mount Sinai Hospital;and $1500 to the Montefiore Home for Chronic Invalids; allof New York.

Ferdinand Westheimer, St. Joseph, Mo., gives $500 for new dormi-tories at the National Farm School, Doylestown, Pa.

Marcus S. Wieder, the family of, St. Louis, Mo., gives $5000, andthe estate of, gives $2500 to the Building Fund of the JewishHospital, St. Louis.

William Barr Dry Goods Company, St. Louis, Mo., gives $1000 tothe Jewish Hospital, St. Louis.

Wolf Brothers and Company, New York, give $500 to the Guar-anty Fund of the United Hebrew Charities, New York.

William Wolf, San Francisco, Cal., purchases the synagogue ofCongregation Beth Israel, and has it remodelled as a Betha-Midrash.

Lewis S. Wolff, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fund ofthe United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Page 63: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

212 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

Fanny Woodleaf, in memory of, $1000 given to the United HebrewCharities, New York.

Samuel Woolner, Peoria, 111., gives $1000 to Congregation AnsheEmeth, Peoria, to pay off its debt.

Isidor Wormser, Sr., gives $500 to the Guaranty Fund of theUnited Hebrew Charities, New York.

L. Zimmermann, New York, gives $500 to the Guaranty Fund ofthe United Hebrew Charities, New York.

Page 64: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

SYNAGOGUES DEDICATED 213

1904AUGUST

SEPTEMBER

OCTOBER

NOVEMBERDECEMBER

1905JANUARY

FEBRUARY

MARCH

SYNAGOGUES DEDICATEDIN THE UNITED STATES

AUGUST 13, 1904, TO AUGUST 20, 1905

14. B'nai Israel, Chester, Pa.22. Ohev Sholom, York, Pa.28. Children of Israel, Plainfleld, N. J.28. Sons of Israel, Camden, N. J.28. Sons of Judah, Racine, Wis.28. Tifereth Zion, Chicago, 111.28. United Hebrew Congregation of Indianapolis,

Ind.2. Beth Hashalom, Williamsport, Pa.2. Shaare Teflllah, New Iberia, La.3. American-Roumanian Society, Brooklyn, N. Y.4. Ahavai Sholom, Portland, Ore.4. Beth Mordecai, Perth Amboy, N. J.4. B'nai Sholom, Toledo, O.4. Keneseth Israel, Green Bay, Wis.4. Ohab Sholom, Brooklyn (Brownsville), N. Y.4. Rodphey Sholom, Holyoke, Mass.4. Synagogue at Scranton, Pa.5. Adas Jeshurun of Jassy, New York.5. Agudath Jeshorim, New York.8. Bene Israel, Natchitoches, La.7. Har Sinai, Trenton, N. J.9. Brethren Sons of Israel, New Britain, Conn.

16. B'nai Israel, Council Bluffs, la.21. Temple Sinai, Lake Charles, La.7. Mizpah Congregation, Chattanooga, Tenn.9. Adath Yeshurun (rededicated), Syracuse, N. Y.9. Beth Ahabah, Richmond, Va.

—. Gomel Chesed, Kansas City, Mo.

8. B'nai Reuben, Philadelphia, Pa.8. Temple Sinai, Milwaukee, Wis.

12. B'nai Israel, Brooklyn, N. Y.19. B'nai Israel, Philadelphia, Pa.22. Beth Israel, Brooklyn, N. Y.15. Beth Asher at Hallettsville, Tex.24. B'nai Israel, Natchez, Miss.

Page 65: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

214

APRIL

MAYJUNE

JULY

AUGUST

1.1.

12.16.21.

4.4.

11.16.16.20.20.

AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

Ahavath Israel of Greenpoint, Brooklyn, N. Y.Ohav Sholom, Brooklyn, N. Y.Sir Moses Monteflore, Richmond, Va.B'nai Israel, Sacramento, Cal.Gemllas Chesed, McKeesport, Pa.Adath "Xeshurun, Houston, Tex.Shaaray Tephiloh, Portland, Me.Beth Abraham Talmud Torah, New York City.Ahavas Achim Anshe Nazin, Philadelphia, Pa.Sharis Sphard, St. Louis, Mo.Beth Hakneseth Anshe Bialystok, New York City.Sons of Israel, Asbury Park, N. J.

Page 66: JEWISH STATISTICS · New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. The new fig-ures have been adopted from " The Jewish Encyclopedia." JEWISH STATISTICS 151 Alabama 7,000 Arizona

HOMES OF SOCIETIES DEDICATED 215

1904SEPTEMBER

OCTOBER

NOVEMBER

4.

25.

27.

13.

23.30.6.

13.

DECEMBER

1905JANUARY

MARCH

APRILMAYJUNEAUGUST

15

15,18

25

8

15121219

30142513

HOMES OF SOCIETIES DEDICATEDIN THE UNITED STATES

AUGUST 13, 1904, TO AUGUST 20, 1905

Tent Cottage Sanitarium of the Jewish Consump-tives' Relief Society, Denver, Colo.

Home of the Ohavei Zion Club and Herzl Me-morial Library, New Orleans, La.

Miriam Barnert Memorial Hebrew Free School,Paterson, N. J.

Home of the Young Men's Hebrew Association,Baltimore, Md.

Hebrew Friendly Inn, Baltimore, Md.Hebrew Institute, Hoboken, N. J.Building of the Emanu-El Kindergarten, San

Francisco, Cal.Cahn Memorial Hall (Gymnasium), connected

with the Hebrew Orphan Asylum, Baltimore,Md.

Home of the Hebrew Day Nursery, Daughters inIsrael, and the Maccabeans, Baltimore, Md.

Jewish Educational Institute, Cincinnati, O.Home for Jewish Friendless and Working Girls,

Chicago, 111.Hebrew Literature Society, Philadelphia, Pa.

Isidore Newman Manual Training School, NewOrleans, La. (formal dedication; used sinceJanuary 4, 1904).

Hebrew School, Burlington, Vt.Home of the Daughters of Jacob, New York.Mount Sinai Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa.Home of the Independent Chevra Kadisha (Free

Burial Society), Philadelphia, Pa.Young Men's Benevolent Association, New York.Jewish Hospital, Louisville, Ky.Home for Hebrew Orphans, Philadelphia, Pa.Cincinnati Tent of the Jewish Consumptives' Re-

lief Society, Denver, Colo.