Show MARTYR IS HONORED S BY JEWISH PEOPLE Addresses on the Great Emancipator Emancipator Eman Ernan- Delivered at Temple 5 AN INTERESTING PROGRAM S 5 S Character of Lincoln Is Pictured Pic Pie From Many Points S of View I I S of or the Groat Great S r That the memory 4 I Emancipator Is dear deat to the hearts of or th the people was wao beautifully beautiful exemplified and last night by the large atho attendance at al the Centennial celebrations cel cel- at templo Unal Israel The temple templo was festooned with r.-Ith bunting and flaps flags and ana pulpit covered cov coy ered ored with a profusion of or InS in S front of ot tho pulpit was Il a picture of oC S our fIrst martyred President illuminated at Qt d tl with red white and electric ugh lights ts S The program opened with an organ oran prelude by MIsa i Pearl which was followed followell b by an un by b S. S W. W Jenkinson chaphIn n of or tho the House of oC Representative ee Harry s. s Joseph was expected to give gho the opening opening open open- ing inS remarks and aud Introduce tho the serS ser SO oral eral speakers Unavoidably how however over S it was Impossible for Mr Joseph to tobe tobe tobe be present and tho tim task devolved on RabbI Charles J. J Freund The rabbi after a l few rew appropriate remarks Introduced introduced In Introduced In- In William Thurston Brown pastor of the church who delivered an address on Lincoln an Inspiration Ho lie spoke of Mr air Lincoln ns as The most deeply revered and und greatly loved lOVel of ot all alt our Presidents and stated that he lie fully believed that he lie could thus speak without tho least disparagement to an any of at the tho other oilier good and brilliant men who hail had held the office of ot chief executive of the na na- na- na tion Democracy was Vas tho the religion of ot Lincoln the on only religion he lie knew the only religion he cared to know and he needed no other said Mr r. r Drown Brown wn Mr Drown Brown said that it waS waS' almost impossible to conceive that Robert T. T Lincoln president of the Pullman company was the eon of Abraham Lincoln that Abraham Lincoln was himself Of or the people by the people and nd for tor the peopleS people while the tho son was wa not to be class lied as either cither but was ns of ot the plutocracy and worshipped only the God of gold He stated staled further that the mind of oC Robert T. T Lincoln was too to conceive of ot the words used b by r his father In his hla first message to Congress In conclusion rr Nr Brown Drown said that Abraham Lin Lin- coin belonged to no party no nation l but ut ut to the world and that In tho the onward onward on- on ward march to enlightenment and libErty liberty lib lIb- lib lib- erty the name Lincoln was one that would live throughout the ages to come Following this speaker was 05 a medle med med- S le Icy Jey of the national airs rendered on the organ and violin Among Amon man many others other might be bo mentioned Tho Suanee Sua- Sua neo nee River Marching Through Georgia Georgia Geor Goor- land gia Dixie and Maryland ar S Lincoln n an lI n a Lawyer r. r Judge D. D N. N spoke on Lincoln Lin coln as a Lawyer and while man many ure ere of the opinion that Lincoln was not a 0 brilliant success as a law lawyer er the judge rather took the opposite side lie carried bi hla hie audience through Lincoln's Lincoln's Lin Lin- S coln's coins life from the little Kentucky farm on which he be was born through S Ills his precarious struggle for an au existence exist- exist once ence as clerk clerIc In a general store to toS S his partnership In a a. business of ot his hisS S own In which ho failed as the tho judge judgeS S t stated Because the partner drank up S S lila liU half helf and Lincoln ate up his Ills He lie that Lincoln's first Initiation Into the study of oC legal literature was the the- reading of the Indiana statutes and stated that he supposed Lincoln found und them as the Irishman found Cound the dictionary a constant and abrupt Change of or subject The Tho next Item on tho program was wasa a a. a son sons song by the quartet consisting of ot Mrs Irs Corinne Harris Hammer Miss Edna Dwyer Robert Hobert IL and Charles Kent Governor William Spry followed with a short address on Lincoln as asA asa asa a Statesman und and while tho the address of f U governor was short It was thorough and aud In fc few well chosen words he pointed out how his contemporarIes contemporaries contemporaries con con- temporaries considered Lincoln as a dreamer and scoffed at tho the thou thought ht of his Ideas Ideas ever over being realized but stated that Lincoln knew what the country countr needed and when It needed It Tie lie compared the Great Emancipator to o Moses losell and said What Moses was to the Jewish race Lincoln Is to posS pos pos- S Ho He called attention to the fact tact that slavery was never mentioned as asan asan asan an issue lesue at the onset of the tho Civil Chon war S but that Lincoln had the tho Idea In mind mind nevertheless ne but knew the tho time was not yet ripe for when the he governor of Missouri issued a proclamation of or Independence early In the tho war the tho President frowned on the Idea and had hall the tho proclamation withdrawn until such time that he knew the tho the entire country wa was ready for It After a solo The Tho Good Old OM U TJ S. S A. A II by Charles Kent Rabbi Ch Charles rles T J. J S freund 8 spoke oko for a a. few minutes on on Lincoln a as an Emancipator Tho rho rabId rabbi rab rab- bi Id stated That Lincoln from his S earliest Inception of ot the the fundamental principles 0 of the Constitution knew that slavery was a 0 thing that thai never nevert t should and antI never could exist in a country y whose whoso battle cry was Free dom tom S Judge Charles S S- Zane who vho was a a. contemporary ot of of and nd personally ac ac- ac- ac with the thc revered President delivered a short no address on Personal Recollections of ot Lincoln Judge ludge Zane told numerous anecdotes tOld Pertaining to Lincoln a as a lawyer as a a. President PresidentS S and as a man all of ot which tended to show the love and compassion of ot him In gathered whose memory tn tholo so present had With 1 the singing of ot America In which all Joined the meeting closed closed |