May 17, 1935

Page 1

Dedicated to the Ideals of Judaism

In the Interest.', cf the Jewish People

Entered a s Second Class Mall Matter uo January 21, 1921. at Posmfflrx of Omaha. NebraBfea. under the Act of Mnrcb 3. 1879

i- i

Omahans Outstanding I n The Deliberations of Conclave Henry Monsky and Sam Beber, Omaha'B representatives at the fourteenth quinquennial convention of the B'nai B'rith in "Washington last -week, played outstanding roles in the deliberations of the conclave, according to reports received here. " Monsky "was re-elected a member of the order's executive. He delivered the report on the Hillel Foundation Commission, in "which a ^research bureau "was recommended. He -was chairman of this committee, and was also on the Constitution committee -which drafted many changes. ; Beber reported on the A. Z. A., junior B'nai B'rith, of "which he is president of the Supreme Advisory Council. Beber was also on the committee on benevolent institutions, the committee on redistricting, and the committee on fund-raising. . From the accounts of the parley. Monsky, Beber and Sigmund Livingston (of C h i c a g o ) — a l l three members o* the District No. 6 delegation—"were probably the three most active participants in the convention proceedings.

MM

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Monsky Declines To Bun . Monsky, "who has been on the Central Administration Board of the B'nai B'rith for the past decade, was nrg-ietf - by many of bis friends at the convention to run for the -presidency of the order. Ho-wever, he declined to consider running for the office. on the floor of the convention for the Tice-presidency, he declined to stand for election, hut did accept re-election to executive committeeship. His declination of the vicepresidency "was one of the tense and dramatic moments of the convention. Archibald Marx; of New Orleans, -who for the past twenty years h a d served as vice-president, was again nominated. Mars, however, arose and stated that, for thirteen years a young man had been a tower of strength on the executive committee and "was perhaps as responsible for every major change of policy as a n y member of the executive—and that man "was Henry Monsfey. Marx continued that i e felt that he ought to defer in fa.vor of Monsky, and therefore -withdraws, with the request that the District 6 delegation place Monsty's name in nomination. But Monsky arose to decline, insisting that Marx be re-elected, and he prevailed in the selection of Marx. In being re-elected to the executive, Monsky represents Dis j trict 6. One member from each district is elected to the executive, -which is the supreme authority .of B'nai B'rith during the interim between conventions.

however, to the approval of the district affected. His report on the progress of A. Z. A. was very impressive, according to convention reports. Convention Highlights Many important changes took place at the convention. The most important was the shifting of the international headquarters from Cincinnati to Washington. The executive has three years in which to make the shift. A constitutional change was adopted calling for conventions every taree years instead of .five, and providing t h a t officers' terms should likewise he changed. Addresses were delivered to the convention by Professor Norman Bentwich of the Hebrew University; M. Gordon Liverman, president of t h e British District of B'nai B'rith; and Joseph W. Byrns, speaker of the House of Representatives. Liverman, -who is also president of the Rotary Club, is now touring Canada, addressing Rotary clubs. Speaker Byrns paid eloquent tribnte to the contributions of the Jewish people to the development of-America. His talk was published and appeared in the Congressional Record. _ • Alfred. M. -Cohen was re-elected .president,, ^and L M. RubJnow executive secretary. '

SOYIETOPENS UFBIR¥BIDJ5r TQ ALIEN JEWS

OMAHA,

NEBRAS

T,

MAY 17,

1935.

VOL.

Duel Over Student's Portrayal of Hitler

George Givot May 'Middle-Aisle' It Soon

Easton, Penn. (WNS)—Only the prompt intervention of college authorities prevented a duel between G. E. Morris Allen, a senior in Lafayette College, who took the part of Hitler in the college's annual dramatic revue, "Laughiettes of 1935," and Gunther Kiersch, a German exchange fellow, who took offense at the manner in which Allen portrayed Hitler. After seeing the performance Kiersch called Allen aside, asked him to remove his glasses, and then slapped his face, the traditional German student manner of challenging to a duel. As the challenged person, Allen had the choice of weapons, but not adept in the use of either swords or pistols, offered to meet Kiersch in wrestling or boxing. Before the metch could be arranged the college officials heard of the incident and acted to prevent any further trouble. . Kiersch has since apologized to Allen, but subsequent performances o£ "Laughietes of 1935" were given •without any changes.

George Givot, the Omaha boy who made the bright lights glitter with his histrionic ability as the ''Greek ambassador," m a y soon middle-aisle it with Tamara, glamorous stage star. Givot and Miss Drasin (known professionally as Tamara) were on the same west-bound plane going through here l a s t Sunday. During Ms stop-off here, the j Omaha star of radio, stage and screen, told friends that i.e had The came of the outstanding "met the sweetest girl in the world." However, no date h a s jvrorker in the Jewish PhilanthroA determined baud of IOJTS.1 been set for his wedding with the! pies campaign will be engraved, i workers are coEtiisclEg in their at the conclusion oi the drive, on beautiful Russian-Jewish girl, j j efforts to raise every dollar possince radio a n d screen engage-1 the "Jacob Milder Trophy," a | sible for the Jewish PMI&nthrobeautiful memorial placque donainents have already been contract- j | pies campaign. ed for. . j ted by Wiiliam and Hymie Milder in memory of their late father, | As the total creeps closer Tamara gained renown as the Jacob Milder. I closer to the sorely-needed star of the stage-hit, "Roberta," Each year there will be added | of S4d,65B, the volunteers &re which had such a successful run in New York. She made "Smoke j the name of the person who has | increasing their efforts instead distinguished himself or herself I of relaxing, since, thirty-one loGets in Tour Eyes" intemation-i during the campaign of that year j cal, national snsS international ally famous. She recently t o o k j by • exceptional work. Excluded a screen test for Paramount Pic-1 from "will be t h e Jewish agencies look to this tares and seems destined for fu-jgeneralconsideration chairman and the heads drive for funds to help carry on ture stardom. H e r first picture j of the various divisions. their institutions.

Omahan Outlines Need of Field Director for Plains-States Region The needs of this territory for

XL—NO.

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Luncheon To

a field director to organize Federations in smaller communities were outlined by Sam Beber, a member of the executive committee of the National Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds, at a meeting of that body tor, reports that, the popular reheld in Cleveland last week-end. sponse to the campaign, is high!'" The executive voted to authorencouraging. W i t h many prorize the employment of a field dipect cards yet unsolocited, he if rector in this region—the Plainsoptimistic about t h e final camStates region—if the budget paign total. could possibly allow such an exHighlights? penditure. An analysis of t h e campaign The Plains-States region infigures reveal: cludes the states of Colorado, More individual pledgees hnvr Iowa, Nebraska, Minnesota and becc received Jn I li i * yearV, Missouri. l'iiiianthropies drive t h a n Jr. 1 Present at the executive meetany previous campaign. ing in Cleveland were twelve The actual c a s h collection members of the committee from - witli. the pledges is mucli lai'p;1?.scattered parts of t h e country. will have a' Russian background. At a. report lnne&eoEt held &t than, ever before. William J. Shroeder of CincinGivot appeared on the air with Increases in pledjres arc linthe Jewish CoioiDQ&lty Center nati, president, presided. Ben Bernie at Denver, Tuesday) i yesterday EOOU, the total report- ing received in all divisions. T<5 The; committee decided to hold evening. He again stopped off in date, the Increases in ples%g». the next annual assembly of tbe Omaha between planes WednesI ed has! readied smonut to three thousand dolCouncil in St. Louis next Janu- day, on his way to Minneapolis,! At t h e annual luncheon-jneetOptimistic ls rsr imore than decrtwes. ary. where he opens an engagement: falS of the Beth-El auxiliary held "To Keep F a ith—$40,650," "Power", regarded as an outIt was announced at the gath-j Friday. j at the J. C. C. Wednesday, May stated General Chairman Philip standing picture, will be given at a C l o s e , to one hundred m r T ering - that Felix Warburg had i Givot is scheduled to appear in ]15, the following were elected to I Klutrnicfe, 'Vas chosen as the workers attended a dinner at tbc benefit performance under the contributed S5,000 to the work of [ a network of radio programs in office: Mrs. Dave Sherman, re- | Keynote of this-campaign, and the Jewish Community Center Tuesauspices of the Vaad auxiliary, the National Council, and thatj e l e e t e d president; Mrs. A- D. 'manner.in -which the dependable various parts of the country. May 21, at the. ^Circle Theater, the Rosenwald family had contriFrank, first vice-president; Mrs. j workers are rallying around the day'evening. At this . t i m e «.l>c. 33rd & California. buted a like sum. B. A. Simon, second v i e e-presi- | Philanthropies, b a n n e r demon- men's work for the remainder <>•' This is the story of t h e Jew, Combined, unified Philanthropy dent; Mrs. Sain Stern, recording ; strates that we are keeping fsith, the campaign was replanned, ftim Suss, a man "with the sinister campaigns—such as the one be-; secretary; Mrs. Sam Blotkey, cor- i "We a r e pledged to continue those present •undertook to finish brain of a Machiavelli, the finan- ing conducted in Omaha now—responding secretary; a n d Mrs. ! the solicitation until every l e s t the task of solicitation. cial genius of a Rothschild, the are spreading throughout the • Campaign leaders considered Dave Cohen, treasurer. political power of a Richelieu, country, replacing the individual >. ' prospect has been, given an oppor- this meeting very successful, beand the intriguing finesse of a drives of past years, according to \ "It's the most hilarious enter"New directors elected are Mes- t u n i t y to keep faith and u n t i l cause of • the spirit of en*ki!ei«i<< Casanova. I t is the story of how reports at the meeting. tainment -we've ever seen." Take j dames Herman Cohn, R o b e r t I every last dollar, has been raised." prevailing:. he became the Power behind the Kooper, O. Fox, Sain F r o l a . 1 Paul .Goldblatt, • executive, direcT i e purpose of the National the word of those who have -wit- j S u n d a y morn in gr, the m c r, throne—an .uncrowned king. It -Council nessed dress rehearsals of the sec-;Julius .Stein,- and I. E r a s i i e ' c f ot Jewish. Federations •workers vrere t h e frneptf-- s t ST is taken- from the -pow«r£al "st'ory" and Welfare Funds is to organ- ond* annual Gridiron- Variety Council Bluffs. early bird, breakfast i i l r e n V-" by Lion Feuchtwanger. The program included a draize, foster and develop the organ- Show to be presented this coming Harrj" Trustin, general potfei**7 Tickets may be obtained from ization of these Welfare Funds. Monday evening' at the ' vestry matic reading . a n d fiance selections chairman, and William Mi'rtany member of the auxiliary. Mrs. tions by Gloria and Lois Novitrooms of Temple Israel. er and Ben KaziowFky. ftpsooiste A. Greenbaum is chairman and "Dish the Dirt" is the slogan sky, daughters of Mr. a n d Mrs. chairmeTi of penersl solicitations

Re-elect Mrs. Sherman Auxiliary President

"Power" to Be Shown Tuesday

Gridiron Varieties at Temple Monday

co-chairman.

OMAHA LQDCE TO FETE DISTRICT HEAD UNVEILING OF MONUMENT

for liiia ye•""**£; ^liow

cLud tlicrc i s

Fol'owivg the breslvfsrF,,. t '< r going to be plenty of it dished, j '— their solicitation f»J men Make no mistake about that. Ra- needed to make Brodkey unloose j pledges, ^~> • mona Slosburg Pepper and her a bag of tricks. The unveiling of the monument Report Luncheon talented staff of gag writers have The Omaha lodge of the B'nai And will yonr face get red j Rangoon, India, (WNS)—A for Jacob Single, who died May Whrct is expertrd! *c* f>^ ft**21, 1932, t o o k place Thursday, B'rith announces that they will left nothing sacred, and if. you j when you see baby pictures of j two-year legal battle bv the Bene Uraal report, luncheon of 1 h n be hosts to Arthur Brinu of Minwant to see your friends—and enj yourself and friends flashed upon | Burma, the brown-skinIsrael of Campaign will lie IK"!<T! st fhr< Moscow (JTA)—An important May 16, at 8 a. m. at the Pleasant neapolis, Minn., president of-Dis- emies, placed on the pan, here is the screen—pictures that you had in e d J e w s o £ I c d i a > t 0 o b t a i n Jewish Comta unity C u t o r . decision, which may have far- Hill cemetery. M a y 1 8 1 s t h e trict 6 of the order, on Monday, the place to see it. forgotten all about. rights in religious and Jewish Monday n o o n . May SO. A13 reaching effects on the fate of memorial date. May 27. We can't tell you what's going i Other laugh provokers that communal affairs with all a l other workers are urged to be i>ro*>» many thousands of Jews in Po- New York—A total of ?S5,000 Members of the lodge will fete to take place, because that would promise to have you in stitches is • j e T r s j n TE^ia came to a successland a n d other East European has been contributed to the build- Brinn at a noon-day banquet at spoil the fun. We ca.n tell you, | the takeoff on a Sisterhood Board j £Uj conclusion when Justice Leach «?»t and to • have »H their propcountries has been adopted by the ing fund of the Rothschild-Hadashowever, that the program 'will j Meeting, a forecast into the fu- in the Kigh Court of Rangoon pects seen by HICK BO thai « the J. C. C. Soviet government, the Jewish complete report m»: y he ron-> r esemble in continuity " T h e t u r e , a n d s o m e I o w d o w n o n a ruled that notwithstanding their may be made sah, and the American Jewish Reservations Telegraphic Agency learns. dered at that time. Committee, it was re- t h r o u g h t h e C o m m u n i t y C e n t e r ] M a r c h o f T i m e " w i t h D o n B r o d - g r o u p o f O m a h a J e w i s h f o l k ; c o i o r the Bene Israelites vrere The decision provides for thePhysicians' The campaign coiBiniitee £t '-. and -will be limited to one hund\ key acting as commentator. And | given by two negro eateresses in ported Friday by Mrs. Moses P. of the Jewish communimass admission of Jewish immimeeting Monday morning' deculpfT that familiar "play Don" Is not;the know. red. Epstein. ty and entitled to all its rights grants from Poland and o t h e r to postpone the proposed, "victor.' and privileges. Justice Leach's countries into Biro Bidjan, t h e dinner." However, tins • dini?f>r decision grew out of a suit Far Eastern Jewish autonomous was poftponerl only bPCRusc thf brought by a group of Bene IsSoviet district which neighbors campaign task is not y e t comraelites against the trustees of Manchukuo. pleied. and will be held for uli the Musmiah Yesh.ua Synagogue A first contingent of 4,500 workers vhen the solicitation in of Rangoon who had refused the Jews from abroad will be admitover. 'At this meeting it was &l»f> I brown-skinned Jews the right to ted into^ Biro-Bidjan, according determined to pursue t h e drSvfe b • represented on the synagogue to the decision, under the followfor fuutis until every possible dos ing conditions: What may perhaps be the Loosli, non-Jewish author and the Czarist archives furnished by the zens sharing our joys and woes" j council or to participate in syna- lav has been obtained. 1.—They must be selected death-knell to the malicious and court's own appointed expert wit- Soviet government to expose the are criminals seeking to destroy gogue elections. Initial Gifts Tor generations the while Jews from elements fitting the require- fraudulent forged "protocols of ness. He unequivocally declared fraudulent character of the pro- us. "If this is science," he deof India have drawn a color line The initial gifts committee, UTJ.. ments of the industrial and agri- Zion" was struck at Berne, that the protocols were a brazen tocol^ der the chairmanship of J. Harrj The first wide-spread use of the clared, "then I ask you to certify j against the Bece Israelites cultural work in Biro-Bidjan. forgery concocted by the Czarist Switzerland, Tuesday when a secret police for political reasons. forgery was in Russia, where the me as an incurable idiot and put; r e fused to'acknowledge them as Kulakofsky, hopeg to be able tr2.—They must consist of 1,000 • Jews. Tv'hea this discrimination report having reached theW quo.'*. court verdict declared the doc-He reiterated that the protocols Black Hundreds used it as an ex- me into an asylum." families and 500 single men. The evidence brought out that j was challenged the white Jews fcr Monday's Tneeting;, \ were plagiarized '•• UT o m Maurice cuse f o r their pogroms against 3.—-The selection is to be con- uments falsified. after the Czarist secret police, or! defended it on the ground that The number of increases tr, ducted under the supervision of The verdict was handed down Joly's pamphlet, "Dialogues in the__Jewish. people.• • . * • * < • "+T, Black Hundreds, h a d prepared! the Bene Israelites were not real this division has been unusually Q representatives of foreign Jewish in the interest-inspiring suit Hell," written in lS67,'long beS ai p relief organizations and Soviet brought by the Swiss Federation fore the alleged date of the Jew- . ™ - 7 i ! t ^ f i f l t X , " | the protocols, they were polished j Jews because they do not practice large. propaganda b e i n g carried on up by Sergi Nilus, anti-Semitic \ the laws of Yiboom and Chalitsa Beber Very Active experts. against the Jews in Switzerland Russian writer. When the Czar-• (the Orthodox laws concerning of Jewish Communities to have ish writing. Beber received national m e ni M r s . Irvin -StalKifister, 4.—Preference is to be given to In finishing, he declared that is only a shield for Nazi criminal ist archives were opened during j the procedure of releasing & Jew tion in the dispatches from the building "workers and to artisans. the protocols declared defama! man of the vomen's division, reif the Hitlerite doctrines as ex- j intentions against t h e indepen- the Kereasky regime, definite evi-1 from the obligation of marrying convention for his brilliant fight '. ports that her workers are "stickThis first group of foreign Jew- tory. The suit was brought to shift more B'nai B'rith empha- ish immigrants, which must not against the Swiss Nazis, who pressed in nazism and the spread; dence and the democracy of our deuce of the falsity of the prcta-i^ deceased brother's wife). ! ing to the ship" despite the fact i Beth-El Synagogue, t h e other , that in t h f. residential district* sis upon the perpetuating of an exceed 4,500, w i l l be.admitted had been circulating the forged j of the false protocols was science, j country." He ridiculed the Nordic cols was found. intelligent Jewish consciousness within the period of 1935-36, the blasphemy upon the Jewish then "I c l a i m a diploma as a theory and the Aryan science that Fleischauer, Germany Nazi "ex- j congregation of white J e w s in •they have to make frequent c a l j simpleton." Loosli also presented "Jews who live among us for genas represented by such B'nai B'- decision adopted by the Soviet pert." sought to make the court | R a E & 0 0 S ' a d m i £ t e « t h e : Bene Is- lbacks and usually receive o n l y name. I documentary evidence from t h e ] erations as peaceful fellow-citlrith institutions as the anti-de- Government states. believe that the protocols were j ™a}?s about a year a t o after j Email contribu tior.s." .* The Nazis of Germany in effect famation league, t h e A. Z. A., The official text of the decis- tried the case, sending over their the w o r k of Jewish authors, « ? ' , Xh\e0 S ^ Gf f ; ef f *?*a°*<™a- I "The tromen," Blie states, "hsv*< and the Hillel Foundations, neces- ion will be published within the Herzl or' Achad Ka'am, by ^ u o t - i ^ f / l ° ^ Serhardic .ews,' a difficxjlt and discouragiupr task, sitating a curtailment of the oth- next few days, the Jewish Tele- a b l e s t attorneys and pouring i but ther li&re responded nobly." ing from-works of thes^ men. In! declared thai the Bene Israelites er B'nai B'rith activities. After graphic Agency has been, inform- forth huge sums in an effort to were e n t l t i e d t 0 c o m p i e t e nlm d o i n g this he ripped passagesj ~ a most hectic debate, the propos- ed from the highest authorities. find some desperate way of subous rights. The trustee; of Musfrom their context and deliberatestantiating what clearly appeared al narrowly lost. miah Yeshua Synagogue were I The youth division, headed -fey Meanwhile, details under which ly misinterpreted, in order to cre-j adamant. After protracted hear- I Alfred A. Fiedler, Js also contibH-. a brazen forgery. • N a z i experts Beber also fought for the re- the immigration from abroad will The annual Federation Mother wicked sisters, Elaine Frank and ate the Imppession that the Jew-j ings Justice Leach decided, on the i ing its • solicitation until e r e r ? districting of the order. A reso- be.conducted, are still to be work- from Germany testified, the trial having been adjourned for sevand Daughter banquet w i l l be Phyllis Milder; the wicked step- ish philosophy coincided with the strength, of expert testimony by i Jews!.; youth in the city in sent,. lution was adopted by the conven- ed out. eral months to allow t h e m to Dr. Gaster and Chief Rabbi Jos- j The report luncheon last tiionheld on Sunday evening, May 19, mother, Joyce Greenberg; t h e protocols. tion directing the executive comDr. Joseph Rosen, head of the Judge W a l t e r Meyer, on the gather their data. eph Herts of England, that the j day •was dedicated to the youth at the Jewish Community Center king, Buddy Barish: the queen, mittee to make a survey of the Agrc»Joint, "who 'is now in MosGeraldine Cohen; the page, My- bench, interrupted t h e proceed- j B e E e I s r a e j i t e s were Jews, point- i division, Fiedler presided, a n 8. However, their evidence was so at six o'clock. country with a view of determin- cow, is studying details of how to *-* once before it was con-jj n g 0 E t t i a t i n t c e s 6 fiBrE ms31y i Sal Micfcnicfe,' chairman of t h P A splendid program has beenjron Milder; the lairy cod-mother, ing whether the best interests of settle the first group of Jewish flimsy that t h e y realized t h e y This was to take sharp | j e w s cSfsregarfi the biblical laws ! genersl solicitatloia? ciiviBlon r>l the order would he .served hy a Immigrants from Poland. It Is must necessarily lose their case. prepared for the evening's enter- Delores Cohn; and Prince Charm-1 objection to the language nsea in!0£ Tib'oosi and ClialltEa. If ilis \ the youth, peve an inspiring afling, Y a l e Trastin. Community re-arrangement of 1 h e districts. understood that the Agro-Joint Accordingly, at t h e last minute tainment. "Mrs. Jeanette ArnIf the executive committee found will undertake the "responsibility they switched their story and at- stein, chairman of the "Women's \ singing will be led by Mrs. Nate Nazi papers in t h e neighboring j ultra-Orthodox Jews accept tlie | dress, l i e pledged the continuftd court's decison decision it it will mean the ! participation oZ Jevrish. y-outh iit the order would be hest served for settling several hundred Jew- tempted to say that instead of Division, of t h e Jewish Commu- ' Gren, Green, with Mrs. 4 4. M. Malashoek German t o w n in reporting the jj courts philasthropy and JewJslt tria Alleaagce, a a p e r ; end of a sharp division In Indian thus, the committee is authorized ish families in Biro-Bidjan this having b e e n conceived at t h e nity Center and Welfare Federa- as accompanist, Mrs. L. Neveef j p p ; s h a p as accompanist, Mrs. L. Neveleff j -lgeneral, but called to task i to effect such changes, subject, year as an experiment. Simi- Zionist conference a t Basle t h e tion, will be toastmistress; Mrs. will have charge of the dinner,| published in Liarrach, a town just; Jewry. The Bene Israelites, who | pbli o£ the &dults "who, Jiving ft larly, the OUT is also interested proctocols were worked out for Frederick Cohn will give the in- Miss Blanche Zimman of decora- across the border from Berne, ac-i number about twenty thousand, ! I comparative luxury and. BO!f-satis-* .in promoting t h e settlement of Jewish domination of world af- vocation. "A Mother's Message" tions, a n d Mrs. H. A. Wolf of cused Judge Meyer o£ being BE-j came to. India £boir der Jewish influence. Comment-;hundred years ago. They look ! faction, "prer© breaking ! a ! t h •. foreign Jews, particularly J e w s fairs at a B'nai B'rith meeting. will be g i v e n by Mrs. Isadore tickets. on t h i s , Judge Meyer said:! like Hindus, but observe most of i MicSsntek called opoa " all Jewish*" from Poland, in the Bureya. By the court's verdict, the doc- Dansky, and "The Daughter's ReReservations may be made by i people—young1 -and old—to keep. "We have just listened to Colonel < the Jewish religions customs. uments w e r e called a c a s e of sponse" by Lee Jane Greenberg.' calling the J e w i s h Community 1 h e annual meeting of t h e ! taitb with themselves' a n d wiite "Cinderella," an. • entertaining Center, Ja. I3S3. The committee j Flelshehhauer on t h e difference! Omaha Hebrew Parent-Teacners Chicago—Rabbi Solomon Gold- plagiarism a n d it. w a s decreed cv£- Itlicar tvlih. association will be held Wednes- man announced here that Temple that they belong to immoral liter- and colorful adaption of the fa- "a charge of arrangements are: between the Jewish and the Arys n ' jerc ', Af tnis ki&clseom the total T«N miliar fairy tale will be present-' Mrs. Arnstein, chairman; Mrs. J. spirit. I want to say that if this post, v . ature. The verdict banned them Ansche Ernet soon will begin cont day evening, May 22, at the J. | ported bmuutited to $3O,S8I.6O. 1'alfslin.p. was es.'.&MisJ]ed under the direction of M i s s | J. Greenberg, Mrs. Irvin Levin, • newspaper report is in the Aryan ties, ii: C. C. at S p. m. The annual elec- struction of a community house at in Switzerland. an, ed or. t h e . Mpd5tcrrE.sean shore J Close to 2,400 pledges had Helen Merritt. Those taking part; Mrs. Paul Goldblatt, Mrs. Paineasi spirit, I to be a a cost of $125,000, of which sixty A highlight of the Court's testion of officers will take place. jiurned in. near Tel Aviv. All members are urged to attend. per cent already has been paid in. timony was the evidence ot C. Z. arc Cinderella, Betty Cohn; the|"Wintroub, and Sirs. L. Neveleff. j Aryan."

Swiss Court

of

Mother'Daughter Banquet .:"' of Federation on'Sun

TALMUD TORAHP.T. A.

Vt

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