September 27, 1935: Rosh Hashanah Edition

Page 1

The March of Time , Rosh Hashonah 1935-5696

May the New Year Be a Joyous One

NEW YEAR'S EDITION—OMAHA, NEBRASKA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1935.

Beth'El Launches Aroused by Jewry Will Usher Dutch Nazis' Insult In Rosh Hashonah to Queen Holyday Tonight

Registration for "Schechter" May Be Jewish Studies An American Registration for the College of Idiom Jewish Studies will be opened to j

OfiOO To Build Synagogue on Lot at 49th andFarnam

Am s t e r d a m (WN S)—The the general Jewish public nextj Washington OWNS)—The name Butch press is demanding that i Tuesday, October 1, at the Jew- j Schechter, now famous in history because a case inTOlving the A. the Netherlands government lodge ish Community Center office, Registration will continue until |L. A. Schechter Poultry Company an official protest -with Germany i October 20 evening at 6:30 p. m. Saturday Courses in Jewish • was responsible for the overthrow and Sunday mornings the services against the .insulting remarks | a n ) j Hebrew subjects are being; of the NRA, may become part of; HUNGARIAN NAZI LEADER ! - , ._ -. _ i. y^, will start at 8 a. m. • made by i Julius Streicher, Nazi.'irorked out, and a two-year cur-jthe American idiom if a precedent The following synagogues : are h i g h priest of anti-Semitism, i riculum will be offered. Those'set by Secretary- of Agriculture affiliated with the Vaad: B'naii . . -, _-_. . . completing the two-year course' Wallace catches on. I Budapest (WNS)—The latest will be presented with diplomas. In referring to the possibility sensation in Hungary is the dis_ , „„., i <-n • T. t. i against Queen Wilhelmma. Commenting on the Queen's reIsrael, 18th and Chicago; Beth _ . The school sessions -will be held of a Supreme Court decision in- covery that Kanhauser Kaufman, Bosh Hashonah — the Jewish Hamedrosh Hagodol, 19th and cent refusal to visit Duke v o n | a t t h e J e w i s h Community Center] validating the A A.A. law, Secre- leader of the Hungarian Nazis, is B'naiTeshuren, Jacob, 24th n d ; wied, one of her German kins-; building, starting on Monday, Oc- tary Wallace said, "if we a r e the adopted son of Rabbi Kaufyear 5696 ~ will be ushered in Seward; Bart; Adass 25th a and Xiiholas; Congregation of Israel, ! m e n beca u;se of his anti-Semit- !tober 28. schechtered." man of Bel. this evening at sundown, when and Stretcher's I Classes -will he held every Mon- If the verb coined by Mr. WalFirst reports stated that KaufJewish people the world over, in An intensive campaign to campaign for each of t h e | ism, Der . Stuermer, day and Thursday evening. Rabbi H. A. lace comes into common use it man was the natural son of Rabbi raise funds with which to build years. every clime and in all walks of Dr. Sher has been Te-elected | will he a translation so to speak Kaufman but the latter explained The steady growth of the life, will bow in prayer. •Vaad who formerly occupied t h e | i r, -nrho was also friend- president. Sal Michnick will act j of a Yiddish word, "schecht," that the Nazi leader was no blood a new 8100,000 house of wor- gregation and t h e insistent Rosh Hashonah has been u i e ; G a r T I n ( 1 ^ o r t hodox pulpit, will m e r K a s e ship will be launched by the m a n d o f t h e kin of his.

App

To Be Held Locally

ADOPTED SON OF RABBI b a m B e b e r H e a d s C a m p a i g %

Generous Contribution by Zimman Family

inspiration for faith and hope t o | c o l l d u c t services for t h e high ly to the Jews. the Jewish people through the j holydays. H P will .waV .-it <l.e centuries, lending them tlie cour- B'n*ai i s r a c i synagogue Saturday age to face life's battles anew. j morning and at the Beth HamcdThe New Year is not observed i r O sh Hagodol Sunday uw,-..;.^ by the Jewish people with festivSaturday his subject will be* "It ity and merry-making. Instead, Is Xot in Heaven." Sunday's topit is for them a time set aside | ic will be "Sacrificing or Squanfor meditation and consecration dcring?" to the ideals of Israel. Rabbi 3f Feldman will be at Literally, "Rosh Hashonah" the Adass Yeshui-en, and Rabin means the head, or the beginning H. Grodzinsky at the B'nai Jacob. of the year. In early times, the j Cantor A. Schwaczkin and his Hebrew New Year started in the j choir will chant - the' services at autumn, -with the opening of the the B'nai Israel. agricultural year in Palestine. I . Rosh Hashonah was accordingly i B nai Sholom regarded as the New Year of the! The Congregation B'nai Sholom will hold high holyday services at agricultural cycle. the Elks club. Day of Retrospection. The exile and the dispersion added a' new significance to the observance of Rosh Hashonah. I Rosh Hashonah became the Dayj of Judgment, the holy day on which' God takes accounting of the individual's deeds, good and evil, during the past year. It is the Day of Remembrance, and the i people of Israel try to recall how Outstanding Cultural Program they have spent the past twelve Is Being Mapped. Out ,„,. . months -and ask theraselvcs--what " • • • • - f o r M e m b e r s •judgment s h o u l d be written against their names in the Book, A n intensive program of diverno man may see. sified activities, offering a culturIn rahbinical tradition, the hoi- a l m e n i l attractive to m e n , women iday is regarded as the commem- and children, is being mapped out oration of the beginning of the for the approaching season at the creation of the world, the day up- Jewish Community Center. of me the on which all creatures ' oi .< T h e s e a s o n o f 1935.36 promworld pass in Teview for judg- i s e s t o b e a m o s t a c t i v e a n d in _ ment before the Creator. jt e resting one for youns and old The Jewish people exchange 1a l i k e > » s t a t e s Ruth Allen, educagreetings by saying "L'Shonah. t i o n a i director, in planning the Tovah Tekosevu"—"May you b e ! C e n t e r p r o g r a : m . written for. a good year','—desir-1 T h e community Forum will ing that the Jewish people m a y . b r i n g s u c h-prominent speakers as have their names inscribed in t h e ; E m i l mdwigr, WO rld famous hisBook of Life. • ,torian and biographer, on NovemRefonn Judaism devotes o n e j b e r 1 2 . ^Ir. Ludwig is in Amerday to the observance of the hoi- j c a for a limited two months' iday; others two days. tour and the Center Forum Committee feels fortunate in securing Local Services hig services The celebrated and The Rosh Hashonah holyday! i i b e r a l clergyman. John Haynes will be appropriately observed a t ; H o l m e s w } 1 , ak on December all of the local Houses of "Wor- 4. Dr. Holmes is undoubtedly ship. one of America's outstanding perTemple jsonalities and speakers. JoseAt Temple Israel Xew Tear's i p n j n e R OC he, asistant secretary of eve services will begin at 8 p. m. l\/fae treasury, will follow on Janthis evening. Rabbi I>avid H.. u a r y s_ M " iss R OC he is noted for TVice's sermon topic is "The Jew- h e r s o c i a i reforms and her ability Ish Toast to Life." On February 5 the a s a speaker. Services New Year's morning F o r u m w n i p r e s e n t the noted will he held at 10 a. m. The ser- j c o m m e n t a t o r and political analymon subject will be "Planning a i s t Norman Hapgooa, who for ovLife in a World Gone Mad." er a decade edited Collier's Weekly and later Harper's Weekly. Beth-El The Forum will close on March schedule for Rosh Hashon- 11 with Dr. Alfred Adler, the ah. services at the Beth-El syna- noted Viennese psychologist who gogue is as follows: I recently arrived in America for a Friday evening services at 8 p . ' speaking- tour. : m.; Saturday morning services Dramatic department 8:30 a. m.; Saturday evening s,.-, „, . _ ..of

J. C. C. PLANNING INTENSIFICATION OF ITS PROGRAM

m

[as secretary for the institute.

which means to kill.

Tonight as the fiery rays of the setting sun are enfolded by the silver-shadowed mists of t w i l i g h t . . . . a people with the sorrow of the ages etched in the lines of their faces, will solemnly yet h' hfully bow their heads in prayer at the birth of a New Year. . About them is confusion=and d3aos,.,^kUon&bfa$y..mpge.ia the darkness of political intrigues. The economic ship flounders rudderless amidst the shoals of uncertainty. The march of socialprogress is made a mockery through the seeming triumph of might over right. Soul-stirring is the despair and hopelessness suffered by many of our European brethren, who have fallen victims to the human fiencfishness of medieval barbarism. The poisonous venom of demagogical anti-Semitism has infected a wound-torn, maddened world. And in many ports shrinking assets have caused Jewish institutions to adopt a policy of retrenchment, Opportunely, then, does Rosh Hashonah soothe the spiritual bruises of our people, infusing new hope and inspiration through the memory of our immortal past. Down through the hills of eternity, the highway of Jewish history is built on a faith which leads to wide outlooks. The recurring miseries of the centuries - - instead of sapping the strength of Jewry - - have built up a strong-fibred resistance and have revitalized the traditional Jewish mission. Isjrael on die New Year rededicates itself to the inevitable victory of righteousness and justice, with peace and brotherhood among men.

rices at sundown; a n d Sunday the Center will again offer its morning services at 8:30 «. m. js e r i e s o f t h r e e o u t s t a B ^r Friday evening, Rabbi David A. iTtLe season will open on November Goldstein will speak on " T h e j 19-20 with the hilarious -Price of a Full Life." Satnrday i Broadway success " B i g . Hearted morning his sul.iect will bo "The i Herbert." In addition to these Reward of a Fuil Lire." His ser-i three plays the Children's Theamon topic on Sunday morning ter will present two productions will be "The Exiles Return." j *n December and April. The new1 • • • j.ly formed Sunday afternoon DraVaad ! ma Club promises to be popular Rosh Hashonah services at the • with those interested in the study synagogues affiliated with the ] of the stage and dramatics- It Vaad Ha'Ihr, or Union of Ortho- will meet regularly each Sunday dox Synagogues, will begin this afternoon beginning October 13 Helen Merritt who directed the Guild last year will be in charge Miss Szold Feted by of all dramatic activities at the AUSTRALIA WILL OPEN Center this year. GATES TO IMMIGRATION German Zionists Jewish Scries. Berlin—Miss Henrietta Szold, The Jewish Monthly Forum Melbourne (W N S) — German 75-year-old American woman!Series will bring to Omaha each refugees and East European Jews Berlin (JTA)—Jewish leaders Zionist leader and head of the;month some of America's outZionist Bureau for settlement of j standing Jewish spokesmen. Ten- seeking new homes m a y find are refraining from commenting German-Jewish children in Pale- j ative speakers are "Dr. Mordecai jj them in Australia as the result on the new citizenship laws enstine, was given an impressive re- Kaplan of the Jewish Theological! of a hint dropped by Premier Jo- acted by the Reichstag, but the ception by the German Zionist; Seminary of New York, Henry j seph A. Lyons that immigration general feeling rmong the Jews here is that Julius Ptreicher, GerFederation, the Keren Hayesod, j Hurwitz, editor of the Menorah: into Australia may soon be re- many's anti-Semite No. 1, has Zionist colonizing fund, and the Journal, Marvin Lowenthai, writ- opened because of a distinct im- won a complete and resounding Jewish National Fund, Zionist; er and commentator, and A. W. provement in economic conditions. victory on the Jewish question. land redemption, agency. j Binder, noted Jewish musician Premier L y o n s indicated to The conviction grows that the Miss Szold was also feted by; and critic. Saul Raskin, distin- newspaper m e n on his return the Reichsvertretung der Deutch-1 gished Jewish painter will bring from abroad that the immigration Jews will be held as hostages in en Juden. representative Dody of j his exhibit liere on December 10 restrictions may be lifted before the event that the anti-Nazi boyi cott makes further inroads into the year is over. Jews in Germany. . and 11.

Hitlerites A r e Holding Jews in

Third Reich as Their Hostages

[ • s•

Beth-El synagogue, with the b e - : membership for a » -> quate quarters have prompted synagogue-building decision The drive will be under the the board of governors. chairmanship of Sam Bebcr. Vice-chairmen will be Mrs. J. Building Site at 40th and FarnWft H. Kulakofsky and Harry SilThe first move toward A * verman, -while Nathan Xogg building was made last July, and William Racusin will act as secretaries. Hairy B. Zimman is treasurer. According to both J. J. Greenberg, president of the synagogue, and Chairman Beber, the needed $100,000 will be sought over a period of five years. Because of present business conditions, prospective donors will be asked to pledge only what they •will pay in one year. There will be an annual

•ginning of the New Year 5696.

Germany's economic system. Now that the status of the Jews has been regulated, it still remains to be seen whether individual acts of terrorism against Jews, about which even Reichsfuehrer Hitler found it necessary to comment, will be curbed or whether they will continue as before. The press generally hails the new laws relegating the Jews back to the medieval ghetto

"PERFECT" YOUNG NAZI EASILY LOSES CASTE Berlin (WNS)—Because he played tennis with a Jewish boy, Jnergen Ohlsen, known throughout Germany as the perfect specimen of Aryan Hitler youth, is to be expelled from the Hitler Youth Organization. tvo years ago Ohlsen won a nation-wide contest to select an actor for the leading role in a Nazi propaganda film called "The Hitler Lad Quex." Because of his acting- in this picture Ohlsen became famous a? the perfect young Nazi.

B'NAI B'RITH TO HOLD REGIONAL CONCLAVE HERE Neighboring Lodges to Send Visitors and Delegates to Conference The Omaha loige or the B'nai B'rith will he host i o delegates SAM BEBER, Chain" m El Campaign and visitors from the neighboring lodges at an all-day regional con4 9 t h nrul ference, to be held at the local a building: pite at nam streets waE purchnFp'l. '"'l-,* Jewish Comicunity Center on lot occupies a commfindint: "•"•••Sunday, November 3. tion-and is well-locnled. At this meeting, B'nai B'rith Great impetus towarrK •I''leaders hope to organize a Southwest Regional Conference of Dis- building was pivrn by the- r-'«* trict Grand Lodge Number 6 of j erous gift of .*».">,000 froi»i !.}>•>• B'nai B'rith, so that the B'nai j rj\ I. B., and Iilnnrlip Zininuii. B'rith groups in this area can j This gift, which came nns,-i> work out a program of inter-! cited, caused the board to *••.'•(«• lodge activities. Common B'nai { plete plans for the building. B'rith problems and ideas will bei However, not content wiib *A discussed. generous a gift, the Zinnnsn The conclave is being called by family has decided to maV.- « Dr. A. Greenberg, second vice- Rosh Hashonah gift to the <•««•• president of the District, and Phil- gregation oi an additional SS,«ip M- Klutznick, a member of SOO, making a total gift of £&,*• 500, the net cost of the lot. the general committee. Sessions will be held in the The Zimmans offer tlm la morning and afternon. In addi-| memory of their d e a r tion to a luncheon for the dele-j mother, Sarah Zimman. gates and visitors, a final banProspects Heartening quet for men and women will be, Although the campaign its held in the-evening. (tended to extend over a ifiv The feature of the morning j period, Chairman Beber^s so program will be a forum discus- j[timistic about the prospects sion on the function of B'nai j n e stated: "I am convinced iltt B'rith in national Jewish afEairs. I the campaign for $100,000 run >> This forum will be led by Henry j completed within little more ;h>-* Monsfcy, a member of the esecu- three years, instead o£ tlie «;'ii«v tive of the international order, j ted five years." Representatives of the various Even though the drive l w v--' visiting lodges will participate. yet officially started, thcrp The highlight on the afternoon been an enthusiastic respons agenda will be an initiation of number of men whopo n n m ^ the "Conference Class." I. B. be p u b l i s h e d l a t e r h a v e fiiin Padway of Mil-waukee, president; ed very generous contvi1m'iif>iis of this District will address the J. Greenberg expressed his s 1'to the large number of in"i, class. Tentative arrangements are al- women v."ho have come ta.v so being made with Mrs. Arthur unsolicited to offer help. Laufman of Chicago, past presiEnlhusiastic Kospop^r dent of the Women's Auxiliary of Mr. Greenberp- dot'lnrc:!. " District.6 B'nai B'rith, to address outpoiiriiic n. s the women present in regard to spontaneous port has thrilled us all. Ws women's auxiliary work. hope that, wii.hin n few ?•?•;. :-t The lodges that will send dele- will be able to iniiHl fynnj-fi gates include Sioux Falls, S- D.; on 4'Mh and Farnam n v.-lii, 1 !' Sioux City, la.: Lincoln, Nebr.: be a credit to ihp city of Out Council Bluffs, la.: Omaha. Nehr.; and the pride of the Omrhfi -; and possibly Des •Joinet and Ma- ish community." son City, la. "Vice-chairmen "Mrp. J. '!'•. '•• •Julius Bisno is general chairman of the conclave. Philip Rkofsky and Harry Silverir,.-.;;n Klutznick is vice-chairman. Oth- pressed confidence in the sn. , of ihe drive. They mentioiT.": ; er committee chairmen: Dr. A. Grpcnherp, reception ticularly the synagogue's vcommittee: Max M. Barish. trans- tilde to tlie larpe number •>', • portation; E. L. Marks, luncheon: pie who, though not memli.-''Hy Shrier, initiation; Simon Piz- the synagogue, have piv.ii.i er, banquet: Sam Green, registra- their liberal support. Organized only six yenr^ •tion. On the general committee are the Beth-El synasotue. \vl:i. ! included the followinp: Henry the youngest eongre^iilini, Monsky, Sam Beber, Sam Leon. Omaha, already has a larpc tn. Dr- Leo Fellman. Al Fiedler. I. hership. And. to meet their r>r. F. Goodman, Paul Goldblatt, Ben it is planned to build a f-ynnrn Kazlowsky. Dr- Ben Shitsky. Wil- with a capacity of 1.000 tn ;.. liam Holzman, Harry A. Wolf, and n school for BOO. Rabbi David A. Goldstein, Rabbi Competent architects bnvfFrederick Cohn, Rabbi David H. timated that; s u c h a bin !<•': Wice. Dr. I. Dansky, Leo Rosen- would cost a. minimum of i,A tiial. Leo Abramson. Carl Lag- 00 0, and so the Beth-El bor,v(; man, and Harry Trustin. the campaign goal at that. fi£-i •!•;<•


New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

Mandates Group Raps Japanese Dumping Tactics

the plan in his own country, the aged Chancellor von Graf visited fifty-two nations, in t h e north, the east, the south, and the west. Such was his dignity and enthusiasm, added to the statistics he carried with him in a dispatch case, that, as a result of these Geneva (WNS) — Foreshadowvisits, Jews were everywhere de- ing action to prevent the dumpThis clever story by Robert a f t e r there were the "wars of t h e clared not to exist a n r longer. ing of Japanese goods into PalesNathan, one of America's out- Duke of Alva, the Duke of Marl- And almost at once a marvellous tine to the detriment of PairsBE JEWS . . .• standing younger novelists, is borough, Louis XV, a dozen revo- peace settled down over the whole tine's infant industries, the ManThe teaching of history ia man- published here by special ar- lutions, the wars of Napoleon, the earth. Bankers no longer sold dates Commission of the League ifest. A bell as of eternity rings rangement with The Xcw York- Civil War, wars with t h e Rus- worthless bonds to their com- of Nations called upon Great Britout to us the message. To save er. Mr. Nathan's forthcoming sians, the Prussians, t h e Boers, patriots; the great munition com- iain, as the Mandatory power for ourselves, to help to save a pagan book, "Road of Ages," also the Japanese t the Chinese, t h e panies no longer made cannon Palestine, t o explain at the next world even against its will, we deals •with the Jewish problem, Spaniards, the Turks, the Great with which to shoot each other. session of the Commission w h y and all uor house are to re-dedi- to which this author has been War, and the Bolsheviks. The Oil companies competed in har- jGreat Britain permits imports America's outstanding Jewish to defend thorn we died on in- where today is the far-flung, em- cate ourselves to- our faith and to giving m u c h thought.—TJHLE devil! mony; industries no longer quar- I from Japan to be admitted to PalMan of Letters wishes y o u a numerable fields of battle. B u t p j r e of- Spain? A n d where on our destiny—to be Jews, to avoid KDITOR. relled with one another; capital I estine on an equal footing with "If only they did not exist at even these temples that ,ve built [ £ o m e h i s t o r i c t o m o r r o w w i l l b e happy Xew Year and tells you in all things the glitter and the and labor, the rich and the poor, | the products of states that a r e • ~ . ! , „ , - „•„,},- d m n i t i n n c : TVil! n o t I . •„ . . „ ,__ „ _ ; _ all." how to achieve it.—The Editor. to their gods the nations will not the Reich of the Germans? The lures of the pagan world: its class The Baroness gave her brother embraced with joy in a Jewless members of the League of NaAll through the world things I let stand because we built them.. goods of the spirit "have remained conflicts and its wars and Its con!.That—that, Jews, is t h e truth, j ^ ^ e r a n d Euripides and Ver- quests and its cruelties between were in disorder. Nations were a wink of full intelligence. "My world. And Germany and France tions. Another year and deepening the bitter and wor d-piercug bu Publication of the minutes of ^ C e i . v a n tes. even as Mozart man and man. Not for centuries unable to pay their debts; people dear Gregor," she said, "When I extended to each other the hand darkness on the horizon o£ ouralso ultimately hcaling^truth that uwere starving; even the rich was a child, my mother used to of brotherhood, and the smile of the June session of the Mandates : Goethe wU1 remajn. Btlt a l , has cruelty been so rempant and people. In how many Jewish cries out from the blood and te?« love. Commission revealed that British a t w a s : g a i n e d by force and con- unashamed as it is today; not for found it hard to make money any say to me, 'What you do not know breasts does there not echo the and agonized sweat and utter^hu- t h— cannot hurt you.' She taught me more. And to cap the climax,an The Jews, also, enjoyed the sun representatives were sharply crit. . , £ , &n t h a ( achieved b y centuries has the world been so cry of the Psalmist: Secher, Ado- miliation of our brethren inGerd e r of unredeemed. The cries of the de- impending war hung like a cloud to avoid misery by refusing to of peace and good will, the har- icised for according trade equality nai, libnei Edom eth yom Yerush- many. Build no more temples to t.h^e r h u m^i l } a t i o n _a- n d m u r recognize it. Since it is the Jews vest of love and understanding. to Japan in Palestine, although bretHren a l l t h a t w i t h e r s spairing and the tortured rise over the chancelleries of Europe. alayim! Remember, O Lord, the gods of the h e a t h e i ^ t o ^ j . s a t l e a s t b l o w n from Arctic labor-camps and Ger- Things were indeed in a bad way. who make all the trouble in the They called themselves English- Nippon has forfeited this equality and.die8 a n d against the sons of Edom the day gods of power, to the gods of bat-' One day, while walking by the world, let us simply say that they men, Frenchmen, Americans, etc., by withdrawing from the League man camps and prisons and Italof Jerusalem! For that "day of tie, to the gods of mere worldly with the random winds. shores of the Rausmeisersee, the I do not exist a n y more. When and they spoke the languages of of Nations. Jerusalem" is a forever recurrent knowledge unquickened by mercy Why are we here at all? Why ian islands. We need more than old Chancellor of Bohemia, Count j there a r e no more Jews, there those countries. It is.true that The British explanation t h a t day 'in our history. Whether East a n d by love. Build temples in are we not with the Babylonians ever to be Jews. The pagan world von Graf, was thinking to him- will be no more trouble. That is their churches looked a little the Anglo-Japanese commercial or West, whether by better means j'our hearts to the Eternal of Is- who conquered us and with the that knows it not needs more than or by worse, whether with inten- rael whose prophet inaugurated d e c k s and t h e Hellenized Ro- ever that we do not fall in with self, "What a dreadful world this something which 1 learned in Moorish, but their cooking a n d treaty of 1911 prevented Palestheir violin-playing were m u c h tine from taking action did not tion or purpose more or less in the first and t h e only decisive mans to whom we sold_ out spir- its ways but remain Jews—men is, so. full of Jews and other bad school, in the algebra class." admired, and on the whole they satisfy t h e Commission which things. It is the Jews who make The Chancellor gazed at his sisharmony'with our eternal destiny, revolution, in the affairs of man- itually precisely as we sold our of peace and men of Geist, pracwe do buili up again and again a kind, a revolution that has never hearts to the Germans? Because ticing the loce between man and the wars in which people g e t ter with respect. "That is not a enjoyed a distinguished s o c i a l pointed out that despite this treaty England had applind trade Beth Ha-Migdash, a temple, or been won, a revolution that is aft'"-!' that last-revolt under BaT man that o u r prophet bade us shot, and also t h e depressions bad idea," he said. "That is not success. quotas to Japanese goods in other "what at least from age to age we facing the blackest.iforces of re-Kochba we abandoned and had to cherish, being alight to the Gen- which follow, in which good Bo- a bad idea at all." British colonies, notably W e s t And the next day he issued a Anti-Semitic Paper Banned consider a temple, and again and action in this age, a revolution of abondon the sword. Because we tiles and not sharing their dark- hemians starve, or die of infludecree which s a i d , in effect: | Africa. again the nations come, the sons which we, the Jews, are the bear- had no force or power or possi- ness of force and war and also re- enza." Praha—The anti-Semitic Nazi j Similar measures could be takAs he walked along through There are no longer any Jews in of Edom, and raze that temple.to ers and responsible executants-— bility of dominance. Because we membering our sins. j organ Der Aufbruch, was official- j en in Palestine, the Commission the ground and make it level with the revolution that was announc- did1 not betray and could not beOur Bins—which are precisely the lovely autumn air, in which Bohemia. ly banned by the Czechoslovakian the earth and soak t h a t earth ed in th6 great mystic words that tray the central mystery of the the opposite of those imputed to the odor of wood smoke mingled In this way he hoped to solve | authorities for serving the ends!i said. Japanese dumping recently with that of grapes ripening in with the blood of our martyrs. tlit. problem of evil in the world, i of the German National Socialist jj has been the cause of widespread ed in tne great mysuc woras • mai i ----.--.-. us by the pagans. We have gone m al the sun, he thought: "If only it ! protests in Palestine. j! One American-owned silk mill More not less tragic does this embody forever the nature of the |w e° tr o r n »«e of man. Therefore were to war with them and broken our were possible to get rid of. the by refusing to admit that it ex- jparty. isted. I moral life: V a h a b t h a . • Treacba | out of the context of hiscommandment: Thou shalt n o t recurrence grow as the ages pass. The suspension order quotes j! in Pales! ine was forced to close a i Adonai. Aaonai. n u n thou LUUM I[tory ----ani And The very boldness of the plan kill. We have helped to increase Jews altogether." n a l and S v h e eliberated l We t 0 0from h a v ethe k n eterw For in olden days we did a t least khamocba, shalt bear love unto t h y ' n e i g h b o nr 4 ' t00 ' have But he did not see how it could was its own success. Soon it was ;from a recent article published in j because it could not meet Japana l wheeh -We k n ow nn the sum of pagan knowledge withbuild a temple that was a temple as unto thyself. I am the Lord:]not one but many many periods the paper under t h e heading \ 41 uf decay. o But from that decay we out regard for its moral use. We be done. He could not kill them noticed that a strange ameliora- i "Race a n d Culture," wherein ese competition. to our God and a witness of our all, because long before the last tion was making itself felt all rose again and again; each grave have turned eyes that see not and spirit, and when it was destroyed TRUTH, XOT SERMON one had been killed, the execu- over the country. The great house open hatred against the Jewish iso, this ima i» uu mere mcic iua 661 uu.u . of the Jewish people was t h e ears that hear not upon the auonly the physical structure was section of the Czechoslovakian ; Diamond Dealers No, is no maggiduth tioners would have become tired destroyed, only t h e house built or sermonizing.; I t is, by the sev- > scene of a resurrection. For an thentic Mechiach of this age, the of the whole thing. And then, in of von Schlager, which had man- Ipopulation was preached. Brussels—The Jewish diamond •with hands, and we, the Jewish erest tests of historical- fact and j hundred years the Jews of Ger- [spiritual re-birth b y re-integra- a hundred years—-they were such ufactured munitions of war f o r ; dealers in Brussels and Antwerp more than two hundred years, ' historical experience, t h e whoip •--«, :_J — j j . _ — ^ — tion of t h e Jewish people both many withered a n d decayed as people, would wander elsewhere sly devils-—there would be as have suspended t h e boycott of Librarian essentially unharmed and unim- truth of the matter. Forconsider Jews; For an hundred years they here in exile and in the land of many as before. No, he m u s t closed down its factories. At the '] Nazi goods as a result of extremeJerusalem—The post of direcsame time, the Bohemian Nationj our fathers. We have been indifadded to the glory and the splenthe nationsof earth a n d their poverished because in our loyal think of something else. al Treasury paid off its debts to tor of the Hebrew University Lib- I ly tempting concessions made to hearts we carried with us where- story. -Like plants or like trees dor of a pagan polity and lived jferent to the highest good of ourThat night he expressed some foreign countries, and the bank- rary, vacant since the recent re- j them by German dealers, accordever we went the temple of the they grow and grow stronger up Cor it and died for it.' And had [-.selves' and of mankind and our of his concern to his sister, the ing house of the von Immelbachs signation of Dr. Hugo Bergmann, ! ing to reports in t h e Belgian ; feet have been swift only on the the pagan forgotten his paganism Eternal and t h e unwavering to a certain point and reach what who intends to devote himself to press. knowledge of our destiny. B u t seems permanent dominance and the German Jews might have'''dis- ^errands of the pagan world . . . wise and witty Baroness Wiczecy. gave back to its subscribers ev- jlecturing on modern philosophy; No confirmation of these r e ' erything above two-and-one-halfOver a glass of golden Tokay, he iDo you want a better New Year appeared.' But the pagan could since the so-called emancipation power. And then it is seen, that at the University, has been filled ports has been obtained from the •we built temples of substance not in that highest reach there slum-j not forget his paganism; the mur- i and a happier and more hopeful said to her, "It will not even do ! percent profit on their invest-! by the appointment of Dr. Gott- Belgian boycott committee, a l | ments. I to exile them, because then they one? Be Jews . . .be Jews . . . our own and enshrined in them bered already the seed of their iaerr.r stuck to his trade. So his would simply go to some other j But the trouble was that there held Weil, eminent Orientalist; though rumors . that the Jewish gods that were not ours and to decay. And the decay set in and sharpest hatred w a s directed (Copyright, 1935. by Seven Arts country, and the world would be ; were still Jews elsewhere in the | and former professor of Islamics . diamond merchants were considFeature Syndicate) they withered—their power and \ toward those whose v e r y existthese gods and these alone we ering such a step have been curno better off. That is what hap- j world. And therefore, in other at Frankfurt University. turned out hearts and for these their folk, and finally they left' ence was a reproof and an agony rent for some time. gods, these idols of the nations, only a monument a n d a name. 1 to his not utterly dead conscience. The true university of these pened in 1492, when Spain asked j countries, there was still misery When l a w ends, tyranny bethem all to leave. What did they land poverty. Struck by this fact we spent our strength and o u r This thing happened to Egypt and ! He cries: "You are guilty, not I!" days is a collection of books.— do? They went to Holland. There- | and encouraged by the success of gins.—William Pitt. Patronize our advertisers. wisdom and our very souls and to Greece and. to Rome. • An d j and by h i s murdering at once Carlyle.

New For A Year — Be Jews!

prove thes lie to be a lie. But under his blows the souls of thousands of German Jews a r e remembering their Jewishness, are remembering who they are and whonc-T they came and the nature of "their destiny and are arising through suffering and death and bitterness of heart o u t of their graves.

The Chancellor's Plan A Short Story

By ROBERT NATHAN

By LUDWIG LEWISOHN

A

and Steadfastness The ever-moving torrent in the waterfall of time — onrushing in its descent from cascade to cascade through the ages - unheedingly swirls by the firmly-bedded rock of Rosh Hashonah. However, though the waters dash past to a shallow stream and into the oblivion of the sea, the waterfall itself - in all its grandeur and majestic splendor - remains permanent and steadfast. Rosh Hashonah is a man-made waterfall. The years with their constantly shifting currents are lost in the ocean of time - but Rosh Hashonah - identifying Israel as 'a river of God full of living waters' - is steadfast and permanent - continuing despite a turbulent course '. '.

to feed anew the great streams of human civilization.

Goldstein-Chapman's, too, has been a monument to permanency and steadfastness in the stream of ume. Policies have veered their course to meet the flowing tides - but principles have endured. Service, dependability and proven quality - form the eternal rock from which those principles have been hewn. Onthe occasion of the Jewish New Year it is our heartfelt wish that the ideals of Israel be made even more permanent and more steadfast in the days ahead.

5^^iliW)STEIN-Ct1APMANS


New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27,-1935.

The Challenge oI

ago you Jews were shouting 'Long Live Rathenau!' " "Quite so," replied the Jew unperturbed, "and did he live?"

AUSTRIAN JEWS WARNED France to Grant NOT TO STUDY MEDICINE \ Syrian Concession

Jerusalem Synagogue and Center

THE SAVIOR A poor melamed came h o m e from synagogue and sighed bitterly. " I have just heard from a reliable source that the Messiah is close at hand. His coming will be accompanied, of course, by a great many trials; the wars of Gog and Magog, exiles, expulsions —in short, we are in for a lot of trouble." • i By BERNARD SEMEL "Why worry?" said h i s wife 000, of which the major portion, consolingly. "We h a v e a great Salient facts and figures of 65-70 percent, is derived from tu- and merciful God. He saved us Jewish education, throwing a ition fees paid by parents, the re-from Pharoah and Haman. He'll revealing light on the importmainder coming from neighbor- no doubt save us from this Mesance and vastness of the problem in our country. The author hood charity enterprises and cen- siah, too!" The Jerusalem Synagogue and Center is being built with is honorary secretary of t h e tral agencies, like philanthropic -mr** funds raised in America. Jewish Education Association. federations, and, in the City of i ZIONISM The money was raised by a nation-wide drive conducted —THE EDITOR. New York, the Jewish Education Yankele: I've j u s t bought a jointly by the United Synagogue of America and the Women's ticket in the Irish sweepstakes. If Association. League of the organization. Of course, t h e Jewish educa- I win, I'm going to Eretz Israel. There are over a million JewThe completed project will stand as an offering of AmeriMendel: And if you don't? tional enterprise in America is ish children—little ones, bigger can Jewry to the youth and spirit of the Holy Land. Yankele: If I don't, I suppose living on a depression regime, and ones and big ones—w h o should there's nothing left for me but the worst sufferers under it have be spending some part o£ their nothing husband is an undesir- Immigration Aided been the teachers. Few people are Palestine. precious lives in acquiring knowl- | able citizen. He drinks like Lot, aware of the tragic plight of the edge- of the faith, the traditions ' BAD COMPANY sins like Haman, and curses like Tirana, Albania—Jewish immiHebrew teacher in America today. and the culture of their people. _ small Balaam." grants from Eastern Europe as A Jewish woman in a His wages have been dispropor- mid-western town sued her hus1 Over a million ot them is the-eswell as refugees who are without "The petition is granted," protionately reduced; his position b a n d f o r d i v o r c e o n y ^ g r o und timate. They are to be found in I has been rendered galling and hu- ( O 7 dVertion. The ^ w a s pret - u n c e d the judge, -and as for financial resources will be able to the public elementary schools of miliating. In the face of all this s e n t e d b_„ y _ the land, in the high "schools and _ , e w i s h , . _ _„. _„ , _ h o the man's dangerous associates, I result of the Government's abroin the higher institutions of learn- ' Bernard Seme], Honorary Secre- j he has held his post with patience !c o n c l u d e d h ^ address to the court 7^1 s e e t h a t they. a r e gation of an ordinance requiring j into court a n d p u n i s h e d . ' tary of Jewish Educational So- and heriosm. Jewish public poling. We may visualize them as a | all immigrants to have at least ciety. (Copyright 19^ri. by SevpTi Arts j icy, to the extent that it exists, vast host or a. great procession "Your Honor, this good-for- i Feature Syndicate) , 200 gold francs. • has paid but little attention to moving forward towards the fu-

Jewish Education

ture—our

future, t h e future

Vienna (WNS)—Following the BEIRUT (JTA)—The ' Syria*, refusal of the minister of "health valley of Alomex will be given '*& to consider any applications from Jews under a long-term cotie**Jews for positions in local hospi- sion. M. Iurieux, the French cottrtals, the Jewish Medical Associa- missioner in Alexandretta, tion of Vienna issued a warning closed at a meeting of the to Jewish .young men not to un- trict administration. dertake the study of medicine. I A Jewish company, the The warning called the position j missioner said, has of Jewish doctors in Austria "ca- the government with a view *ft tastrophic." obtaining a concession on thife The minister of health's deci- land, e x p r e s s i n g readiness T-ft sion has the effect of barring Jew- j undertake its drainage on a l&rgfe ish internes f r o m practicing in ' scale. The offer is being favw* municipal hospitals. ably considered by the French a tt* thorities, he added. The d i s t r i c t administration meeting after hearing from tb* Against Council French commissioner m o r e <J*> Cairo—In two lengthy and vig- tails on the Jewish offer, expre*** orously worded articles the edi-ed the opinion that the tor of the Oriental section of Jehad, central organ of the Egyp- should be taken up, with tian Nationalist movement known reaching of a favorable result * as Wafd. warned t h e Palestine ticipated. Arabs against participating in the Palestine Legislative C o u n c i l . London — Officials of which is to be set up in the near ] Yard are investigating charges future. | German refugees in London Acceptance of t l i e Legislative ; they are being spied upon Council, the Wafd warned, was persecuted by secret Nazi equivalent to acceptance of the ' masquerading as English poll** Mandate and of the Jewish Na- officers. tional Home in Palestine. Such a I The refugees complain th&t move, it was said, would be fatal j they are constantly shadowed to the Arab revolutionary spirit. ! that their mail is opened.

of! a r e of t h e c o n g r e g a t i o n a l t y p e , ' ; h l s Problem, oblivious of t h e fact

t h e Jewish people in America. | that is, they are attached to d e f i n - , t h a t t h e teacher, harassed a n d And not only of t h e J e w s of j ite synagogues or temples. Oth- 'distressed, cannot effectively disAmerica, but of our people every- ers a r e of a communal character, e h a r s e h i s d u t i e s t o h i s p u p i l s where; for doesn't the record am- that is to say, they are independ- j The Jewish teacher has been the ply prove that American Jewry is e n t institutions controlled b y ! m o s t completely forgotten of all an important factor in the for- their own directors a n d e x e c u - 1 o u r forgotten men. At the same tunes of o u r people throughout tives. Still others, t h e Y i d d i s h ! t i m e ' c r e d l t a n d & r a t i t U ( i e cannot schools, are part of t h e system! b * d e n i e d t o t n e m a n y members the world? 0 *, t h ° ! ? c a l ^ o a ^ d s ^ o £ How is.- this vast procession aided and controlled by central;j schools throughout the country, j - equipped to perform the charge bodies. who have borne their responsibili- j that history has laid upon it? Are"WEEK-DAT SCHOOL | ties with courage and self-sacrithey armed for this great and peaceful battle? May we, the par- Whatever substantial achieve-; flee. T h e organized women's ents and elders, go our way with merits can. tip to the present be j groups, attached to most of t h e the secure feeling that our bur-credited to Jewish education in ; schools, have been of great help den has been taken up by should- America, it is the week day school to them in tiding over the emerers able to carry it? This is a "which is entitled to the largest gency. The American Jewish commuquestion to which there may beshare of this credit. These schools possess the facilities and the time nity needs men and women who but it is well various answers, to impart some fair measure of will make the problem of Jewish that all who knowledge to their pupils. There education an object of special thought—a n d all Jews should they learn the elements of the study and make the problem of -should give this matter thoughtHebrew language. They learn the Jewish education and object of i essence involved in the question. They ish traditions, customs and cere- special study and solicitude. They see in it the key to our fushould, in other words, have some monies; they learn something of must ture. They must see in it the key picture of the status of Jewish the inspiring history of their to the spiritual integrity of our education, in America. race; they are imbued with an children. They must see in it a It may be argued, and argued understanding, an interest, and a holy task and an historic Chal- j impressively, that figures, statis- concern for the ideals and aspira- lenge. tics, quantity are not important. tions of their people. (Copj-rieht. 1S35. Try Seven Arta In Jewish thought there runs like Feature Syndicate) The type of school which takes a golden thread the idea of thein the next largest number of the overshadowing importance of theapproximately 225,000 children individual human soul. A Jewish who are receiving some sort of soul, says a popular Yiddish pro- Jewish education is t h-e Sunday verb, cannot be measured. If you school. Some 80,000 of the total have saved the life of a single are attending schools of this type. man, says the Talmud, you have They are, as the name indicates, Compiled by ,P. JF." B. saved a -universe. Any Jewish one-day-a-week schools attached mother, says the popularbelief, to a synagogue or a temple. UnT>o you know what golgen humay become the mother of the like the : week day schools, t h e mor is?>'Tt is a peculiar type of Messiah. Any child of ours in Sunday schools have been copied Jewish humor—a humor-that has whose heart and soul our great by Jews from their Protestant a tragic undercurrent. When a and immemorial heritage h a s neighbors. Within the limits of Jews tells a joke about Hitler— been implanted, may become his their possibilities these schools he does not merely laugh- at the people's saviour. a r e no doubt doing excellent German dictator but also laughs work. If they cannot impart a at himself. And when nobody FACTS AND FIGURES him, he wipes off a tear. Quantity, true-enough, is notconsiderable amount of informa- wacthes Laughing through invisible tears tion/they have it in their power the most important consideration. golgen humor. And now read Nevertheless anyone who desires to impart a considerable amount —is a picture"-of the status of Jewish of inspiration. They can develop these jokes and have a good time. education in America cannot ig- in the heart and mind of the child —r. J. B. nore the salient facts and figures. Jewish pride and Jewish loyalty, BIRDS OF A FEATHER Over a million keen, bright- the pride that is always touched At a recent press conference in eyed, eager Jewish children, over with humility and the loyalty that Berlin Goebbels sidled up to a embraces their country as well as a million souls for whom we of distinguished American journalist the older generation, parents and their faith.•, With all due recog- and whisrered to him: nition, however, of the excellent communal workers, must answer. "If your President Roosevelt Whatever other responsibilities service rendered by, t h e Jewish only had a man like Hitler to help Jewish leadership may have, this Sunday school,: it cannot be den- him, you'd have no more gangone is surely among the-most ser- ied that alongside of the v a s t sters in your country." ious. How many of this vast num- spiritual heritage of our people, "Indeed, Excellency," replied j ber do receive some Bort of Jew-alongside even of a reasonable ish education? Probably no more minimum of this heritage t h a t the American politely, " t h e y } than about 225,000. A little over may be agreed' upon, the Sunday would all have been Storm Trooptwenty percent of the total. That school lacks the possibility of giv- ers by now." is the number of Jewish children ing our, children an adequate Jewwho at any given moment are be-ish education; The 80,000 chil- HIS OCCUPATION GONE Julius Streicher woke up one! ing instructed in the Jewish heri- dren attending our Sunday schools night in a cold sweat and began tage of mind and spirit; although are entitled to more. it should be added that in the Within recent years there has to scream violently. Immediately his orderly rushed course of their lives the number develbped in - the American Jewin to see what was the matter. of our children who receive Jew- ish educational scene a type of "A dreadful, incredible dream!" ish instruction, much or little, school which h a s stirred great represents a higher proportion ot hopes in the hearts of those to shouted the editor of Der Stuerthe total, approximately 50 per-whom Jewish education is a par- mer. "I dreamed there •were no cent. But if at any moment you amount consideration. It is a com- Jews left in the world." approach the million-headed pro- bination secular a n d Jewish cession and take out one hundred school that is sometimes called a QUITE SAFE Hitler sent for Goebbels after at random you will find that ap- j Jewish parochial school a n d is one of his more sensational efproximately 7 8 of them are be-: also known as Yeshivah. Here the forts in the press. ing, in the Jewish cultural sense,'Jewish" child is taught the public disinherited. • j school curriculum as well as the "Good heavens, man," cried the ; Fuehrer, "how can you. say things The figures just cited are basic j curriculum- of his Hebrew and like that? It's political suicide, I and, to a mind gifted with imag-! religious training. Here the child tell you." ination, spiritual as well as vis- spends the greater part of h i s "Calm yourself, Fuehrer," reual, they tell t h e story almost leaking-hours. Here he lives in plied t h e propaganda minister completely. It Is not a story cal- an atmosphere where the secular culated to make us happier, it and .the Jewish are integrated and gently, "who reads t h e German' newspapers today1" 18 a story, that should fill us with j harmonized. In New York these "small Yeshianxiety for the future. It is a! have become an integral part record that should set our best] voth came .one d a y Many par- from a Berlin school energies into motion in search o f ' o i during Pass• ents to whom the Jewish educa- over with a swastika badge pinned a remedy oft h e to a matter Let us. for the time being, shift i of tremendous ^ to his jacket. . import, prefer to our attention from the 78 percent\ s e n d their children to these "What are you doing with that of the disinherited and confine it | , There a r e today some thing, Moishele," cried his astonto those of our children in Amer- || | children who are being ished and outraged parent. J " T h a t ? " replied Moritz blandnf a^nnl^ do thp>*> children i t i x"cle remains to be added a l l y . "Oh, I swapped a piece of tend and what sort of education !t o t a l o f P r o b a b l y 2 0 - 0 0 0 to 25,000 jmatzoth with Friti Muller f o r are they receiving? We have, to ! ^ ™ ° w ^ ° v a | * ^ l ^ t ^ l begm with, the week-day school, : A m e equivalent of t h e oldTHE PRESCRIPTION equivalent of the afternoon school that supple- i time Cheder, to complete the pic- A Jew was travelling in t h e ments the public secular school. ture in its salient features. train from Berlin to Frankfurt. In schools of this type there are In the opposite corner of the <x>mapproximately 120,000 children ! KEY TO OUR FUTURE partinent sat a Nazi Storm Troopthrougnout the country. In many j The schools vary, of course, e r . of these schools the children meet greatly in :size. The average r e - | "Long Live-Hitler! Long. Live five times a week, in others only gister of the approximately 1,000 Hitler!" murmured the Jew conthree times a week. The sessions week-day schools is about 120, tinuously. also vary in length from. a little that of the 800 Sunday schools, 'Swine of a Jew!" suddenly over an . hour to two a n d even about 100. The total cost of the burst in t h e Storm Trooper, three hours. Most of the- schools system is approximately §6,000*. "damnable humbug! Not so long

AH In Fun

•A i

* * * •

HE charmmg gown , . . die figure flattering - a figureid feminine beauty that every woman dreams of. «

.

Apparel alive with personality is the secret of smart grooming . . . the answer to woman's longing for loveliness. Neither wealth nor nature nor wishful thinking - - - only style and iriterpretiye .. . designing can tap the well-spring of beauty in dress . . .And it is style and designing which have attracted fashion-wise women to Carman's salons.

,-

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The New Year is a stern reminder that life is too fleeting not to make real our desire, for beauty. In the New Year as in the past Carman's is ready to lend enchantment to feminine appearance its contribution to the realization of woman's dream of beauty.

O M A H A * STYLE CENTER

It is oar deep-felt wish that during the New Year the vineyard of Israel blossoms forth with the fruits of health, happiness and prosperity.

!. - i

.i'J,_« ,r. .


New Year's Edition—THE

^r^:|:;.;;r4.r;^:-;;-.'#;:.vv-;;

ewry By BORIS SMOLAR, Editor-in-Chief of J. T. A.

JEWISH

PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

estine. A Jew in Tel- Aviv met Jew appointment in the cabinet after many years, a Jew in Jerus- was Thomas Jefferson. alem, who owed him a considerThe first editor of an Englishable sum of money. "When are \ you going to pay it?" said the Tel; Jewish paper in America was a Aviv Jew. • • _ . . . | gentleman named Solomon Jack"How do you want it?" asked j son—a relative of Mordecai Manthe Jerusalem Jew, "in schilling ual Noah. or in pounds." The Hayim Solomon elected to "What difference does it make?" replied the Tel Aviv Jew..' the City Council of Jerusalem is "Well," said t h e Jerusalem! no relation to the Hayim Solomon Jew, "if in schilling, you won't j of American Revolutionary fame. get a groshen, and if in pounds, you won't get a piaster." An interesting experience—that of Clinov, the editor of the HeA GREAT JEWISH GENERAL brew daily—Haaretz—in PalesWell, well, well, it seems that tine. Clinov has been forced to we Jews can produce great gen- retire from the journalism of erals, too. Who would have three countries. He wrote for a "thunked" it. But no less a per- Russian paper and was forced out son than Lloyd George implies as by t h e Bolsheviki Revolution. much. Then he had to get out of Polish Did y o u read Lloyd George's and German journalism. After statement, that Marshal Halg, the writing those three languages— British generalissimo during the he is n o w editing a Hebrew ^ar, cost the British a needless paper. waste of 400,000 lives? And did you read that Lloyd George said Ur. Joseph Klausner, editor of that another person whom he de- the Revisionist organ, Hayardan, scribed without mentioning should i^ the author of a Life of Jesus, have been made commander in Tvritten in Hebrew. chief of the Br'+ish armies. (Copyright, 1035, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) And now they say, that this other person was none other than A man with knowledge, b u t Sir John Monash, the Jew who was the commander of the Aus- without energy, is a house furnished but not inhabited; a man tralian armies during the war. with energy but no knowledge, a THIS AND THAT house dwelt in but unfurnished. The first President to offer a —John Sterling.

EDITOR'S NOTE: In the year I to this effect. Fighting -with ' the | tine. Such Immigrants are per'»i -—* 1.1 O :il-I, —»™ : . I n i M ^ tn tnirs nut CR HHA TTpTW "5C95, a s i n the past two years of extreme anti-Semitic elements injmitted to take out §5,000. Few the Nazi Cabinet, Dr. Schacht wasiJews are left in Germany today, the Hitler regime, the eyes of the world were again focused on the successful for some time in gain-j however, /who have a capital of tragedy jthat was stalking the I ing his point. He was, however, §5,000. With less they are not footsteps! Vs, €rrrsian; Jewry. The defeated later, when t h e Nazis permitted to e n t e r Palestine. following article gives the high- got what they, wanted in foreign Thus, they are compelled to relights of; the r year of persecution politics and turned their attention main in Germany. Mr. James G. McDonald, t h e suffered Jby the Reich Jews. It is to domestic affairs. It was then 'written1 -Jby Boris Smolar, chief that - Streicher emerged victorious High Commissioner f a r Jewish ' European correspondent of t h e over Schacht, and the anti-Jewish and Other Refugees from Ger' Jewish telegraphic Agency. outbursts reached their peak for many, in his report this year on the entire period since the Nazis the position of the Jewish refugees from Germany emphasized The year past started in Ger- came to power. The ne£t year will, therefore, that the League of Nations is not many wi|h the hope that the Jewdoing anything to alleviate their ish situation w o u l d improve witness a tremendous Jewish emi- position. He advised that his ofgration from Germany as in the there. .Ijj concluded with the most fice he liquidated at the end of first days of the Nazi regime. Aldrastic; anti-Jewish measures, un- ready* there are ov"er VoTooO Ger-j 1935 and that the League of Naequalled i in t h e history of t h e Jews wandering about! tlons assume directly the responfor t h e last hundred yeass. | m a n i sibility for the f a t e of Jewish It" was The h o p e of" German I abroad. This number will grow refugees from Germany. His deJews that, while ousted from pub-j considerably during the year^ to mand was supported by the Govthe for Gerlie life, they would be left alone come since • ^ - - prospects ^ ernment of Norway and by Visin commerce and would be per- man Jews in Germany are getting count Cecil of England. At the darker and darker. . . mitted quietly to continue their moment these lines are written existence in the Reich. It was on RETRAINING EFFORTS it is not - definite whether the the basis of this hope that many HAMPERED League of Nations will agree to Jewish refugees began to return Efforts were made by German accept this demand. to Germany after being in exile Jewish leaders in the year past In order to assist the rehabilifor many months. to adjust the young Jewish gen- tation of Jewish refugees f r o m This -hope turned o u t to be eration in Germany to artisanship Germany, a ten million dollar corfutile. With the anti-Jewish legis- and farm work. But even these poration was set up in July by a lation in Germany completed, efforts were hampered by the group. of American Jews under Nazi rulers at the end of the year Nazi authorities. The largest Jew- the chairmanship of Felix M. resorted to physical terrorism ish farm in Gross-Gaglow n e a r Warburg, the Jewish leader and "With regard to the Jews. T h e Berlin was confiscated by the philanthropist. This corporation • Jews in ; Germany today are prac- State. Individual farmers w i t h will help the setting of German tically not protected by the police whom Jewish youths were workJewB in overseas lands. It will .1 and are^exposed to attacks at any ing were ordered not to keep any provide them with, credit to esJew on their farms. The same j| hour of any day. orders were issued also to non- tablish themselves in the n e w ENGLAND HELD Jewish artisans with regard to countries where they will settle. The hopeg which many enterRESPONSIBLE keeping Jewish apprentices. tained that German Jewry m a y The attitude of terrorism which: These orders made it difficult adjust itself to life within Gerthe Nazi Government has adopted for the Jewish Relief Organizamany under the Nazi regime have "}} toward the Jews is chiefly due to tions to concentrate on the readturned out to be false in the year •']) "the fact that It has b e e n perjustment of German Jews and ji initted by England to restore its past. The new year, will there| , army arid navy. As long as Nazi i ^Germany was in the midst of nei> gotiations with foreign govern- era and artisans. The establish- t o r e m o v e a s m a n y J e w s f r o m j| ments for the modification of the ment of experimental farms and Germany as possible. Only mi!i Versailles Treaty, it had to take shops abroad therefore became a gration can save Germany Jewry. Into consideration public opinion necessity. Such experimental in- This has now been acknowledged abread. ; Once these negotiations stitutions w e r e established in by all, including those who would reached; a desirable point for the Holland, where t h e government not like to see the Jews of GerReich, the Nazi rulers saw no granted a special tract of land to many as wanderers. the further necessity to consider what Jewish organizations for (Copyright, 1935. Jewish Telegraphic building o" barracks to train Jewmight be said abroad about them. Agency, Inc.) ish youth for Germany. Immediately after obtaining the agreement with England for the restoration of the German army THOUSANDS LOSE and navy, they therefore renewed CITIZENSHIP In addition to making it impostheir prosecutions against the Jews, and Catholics in the most sible for Jews to readjust themselves and pushing them into actbrutal manner. ual ghetto life, the Nazi authoriThe i'ate of German Jewry was ties this year denaturalized thoulanded [over by the Nazi Govern- sands of Jews who obtained Germent at the end of the year to man citizenship a n d even those Julius Streicher and Count Wolff who were born in Germany. The A FOOTNOTE ON t von Helldbrf, the two most notor- denaturalized Jews have remained IMMIGRATION ious 3'ew-baiters of Germany. people without a country since no It is seldom that things a r e Count von Helldorf was appointed country -would admit them. They properly noted hi the process. It • Chief of Police in Berlin a day are therefore'entirely left to the is very difficult to appreciate a after anti-Jewish riots took place mercies of local Nazi .authorities process. Havta you ever seen them on thai Kurfuerstendamm. As a without even having the privilege take two chemicals in a laboraTesult of his appointment, t h e of appealing for protection on the tory and fuse them. As o n e II Jews in Berlin today are prac- part of anybody. watches the process, the appeartically limited to a ghetto life. ance of the chemicals w.bile unThe fate of the Jews in Ger|j fearing to appear in the streets dergoing the chemical relationmany is now being shared by the after certain hours and keeping ship seems to bear no resemblance themselves as conspicuously iso- Jews in the Saar which was re- to the finished product. The same lated from the rest of the popu- turned to Germany after a plebis- thing is true except-more so in cite held early In the past year. lation as possible. I The German government had giv- the study of social movements. The appointment of Count von e n written obligations to t h e What am I getting at? Helldoxf as the Berlin^police chief League of Nations that it would It is this—the figures show "was tafcen as a signal by the Nazis not persecute the Jews in t h e that about 50,000 Jews entered throughout the country that thej Saar for a period of twelve months Palestine this year. A n d about Nazi government does n o t con- j after taking over this territory. the same number entered last Blder the Jews in Germany as When the twelve months expire year. citizens -who are to enjoy police the Jews will either have to leave Ah, you say, that Is quite a ' protection. This indication w a s the Saar or submit to the Bame number. You think It very Im'.'sufficient to stimulate a wave of treatment which Is being meted pressive. And yet with all our anti-Jeiwlsh terror throughout the out to the Jews in Germany. As appreciation of its impressiveness, country and keep the Jews in con- a matter of fact, however, t h e I don't believe we can truly grasp stant i>anic. pledges made before the plebis- what it means. cite have already been violated in Consider this, that in the greatCITIZENSHIP ISSUE SETTLED many respects. est immigration current to be The' question of whether t h e noted in Jewish history—the im"Jews in. Germany are to be con- MIGRATION ONLY HOPE migration of Jews to the United sidered citizens was cleared up a The only hope for German Jew- States from 1900 to 1914—only few months be Core they. w e r e ry today is migration. Here, too, 95,000 Jews entered the United practiiially refused police protec- however, . h e Jews- are facing States annually. And yet Pales- tlon. It was during the conscrip- great difficulties/because the Ger- tine, so small in comparison is. tion of the new army in Germany man government does not permit absorbing more than half that that the regulations provided that number annually. no Jews be admitted into the milWe can see what the process itary formations because they are did to the United States. Can we n o t considered full-fledged citivisualise it however—after t e n zens of Germany. years more in Palestine? Do we Thepe regulations w e r e previsualize it? I believe the most ceded''by a wave of arrests of acute "vlsualizers" do not. Jews [who returned to Germany It boils down to this: Someunder i the impression t h a t the Berlin (WNS)—How a piece of thing enormous ,is happening to * Nazi ^government would not go ' further than to eliminate t h e N a z i propaganda boomeranged Palestine. Not only comparable Jews from government and state into anti-Nazi"propaganda w a s to the coming of Jews to America, ' 'Institutions. Having.left the larg- disclosed by the Nazi press when but most likely, surpassing it est part of their capital in Ger- it protested against t h e Madrid even. • man fjanks, the returning Jews paper, El Heraldo de Madrid, COFFEE IN JERUSALEM •felt that if they were left alone which had lifted from the Nazi Getting less serious, you have In commerce, they could adjust press a front page story describ- heard of the Vienna Cafe. Or ;them£jelves to the new conditions ing how girl strike breakers in you should have heard of it. The Dallas, Texas, were stripped nak. In Germany. Vienna Cafe is not in Vienna—-at What actually happened was ed and spanked by women strik- least the celebrated Vienna Cafe that all Jews who returned from ers, and in reprinting t h e story J about which I am referring. It is abroaji to Germany were immedi- said that Dallas was a suburb of in Jerusalem. It is the place where - ately'arrested by the German au- Berlin. all the Palestinian conversationThis error^ was due to the fact alists gather. And there is a good thorities and sent to concentration camps "for educational pur- that the Spanish paper was famil- story about it. There is a sign in posesj" to he imbued with the new iar with Nazi campaign against front of the Cafe advertising its spirit!of the Reich. Many of them the Jews and attributed this in- coffee. I believe it's the best ada r e 'j still in the concentration cident to that drive. The publi- vertisement of coffee that ever camps and regret to this day that cation of this, story in the Nazi was done. I shall not attempt to press was designed to counteract translate it. It reads: they returned to Germany. Berlin dispatches in American Mokka—2 Piaster STREICHER "WINS OVER papers telling ot attacks on Jews Guter Mokka—3 Piaster SCHACHT and Catholics. Sehr guter Mokka—4 Piaster return ot German J e w s Now the Nazi presB refuses to Erstkassiger Mokka—5 Piaster . •was stimulated early In the past believe that the Madrid p a p e r Pss, ist das ein Mokka 1 6 Pias-year ,b"y the fact that Dr. Schacht, made an honest mistake, and calls ter. the economic dictator of Ger- It a "deliberate distortion." many, insisted that 3 0 dlscrlmin- them to remove any capital from POUNDS OR SCHILLING < atlonjbe practiced against Jews in Germany. An exception is made And that reminds me of ancommerce and even issued orders only for those who go to Pales- other story just come out of Pal*

ASK BREAK WITH REICH VET UNIT

MISSING VILNA JEW OFFICER IN ETHIOPIA ARMY

by a Falasha, one of Ethiopia's black Jews. After he was nursed baclr to health he enlisted in the Ethiopian army where he advanced Warsaw (JTA)—An appeal to ! rapidly. In his letter to his kins- ' sever relations with the German I men in Vilna lie made inquiries ! Veteran's Association until Ger! about his fiancee, who is n o w I man citizens, regarding o! race i married, asking her to join him | or creed, are granted full rights, was addressed to t h e executive Vilna (WNS)—Abraham Zog- in Ethiopia. committee of the Federation of rovsky, a Polish Jew, w h o disj Polish Veterans by the i residents appeared from Vilna ten years \ Dl"OWTlS J e w i s h B a b y , I of Jewish Veterans' Associations ago after his romance with the i in Poland, daughter of a local Jewish meri Meeting in special conference, chant was broken up, is now a Censtochow, Poland (JTA) — ! the executives also decided to apcaptain in the Ethiopian a r.m y One of the three women held here j p°a1 to the -fewisli veterans Tor and one of the important military for the murder of a two-months- j an economic boycott against Danadvisers of Emperor Haile Selas-! o l d J e w i sli baby, confessed last ' zig. sie, according to a letter received | w e e k t h a t s h e kidnapped t h e 'Badge" Decree Withdrawal here by his relatives who h a d j c l l i l d - t h r e w j t i n t h e r i v e ^ ' a " d long given him up for dead. then sold its baby-carriage for 1(J I Brussels—T h o Belgium gov' crnment announced that its reIn 1925 Zogrovsky was about zlotys (about three dollars). The baby, a child of a Jewish i cent order forcing alien peddlers to be married to a girl whose initials are L. P. w h e n certain ! grocer named Barenstein, was and market traders to wear spefromT h its carriage in a cial badges was meant to apply charges made against him led his j snatched bli<J fe> e b o d w a g i only lor a period of three mouth* fiancee to break off the e n g a g e - - ^ I f l t h e r i v e r _ I after which it would i>robably \>4 ment j The murderess said that s h e [ withdrawn. Before t h e charges cquld^ be i killed the child out of jealousy of • The order was promulgated a proven false, left Pol' '~'~~ Zogrovsky " child's nurss. ;.month ago. It provided that the and and enlisted in the French! ! aliens, most of whom are from Foreign Legion. Four years ago | . . . , TO. Poland and other East Er.iopean he was captured by roving Bed- i Wight Wire Service ouins in Algeria. Escaping from Jerusalem (JTA)—A new tele- countries, must wear red badges. t h e Bedouins he managed to graphic night service vr a s in- Peddlers and traders who are citreach the Ethiopian border, half > augurated by the post offices at izens wear blue badges. dead from thirst and hunger, Haifa, Jaffa and Jerusalem. Tel where he was found by an Ethi- Aviv, the all-Jewish city, however, Thought is the parent of th« opian border patrol commanded is excluded from the new schedule. deed.—Carlyle: Essays.

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Piece of Nazi Propaganda In Spain Hits Back

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935. 1 ! secret which inwardly consumed God . was presented with altars ; property of monasteries a n d J!.- '•" of | pal ordinances declared that the and bloody conflict. In Sevi them. For they * could not show and flags, she w a s -- S D O f f e r e ( j !xhe..richest bishoprics. as openly as under the rule of This golden a g e lasted about Jews had studied medicine in or- began in the church and. s' the Moslems that their conversion the soul of Jews who h a d been i forty years. Then the reaction set der to mxirdeT. their Christian'over the whole City. In co^ was only a pretense. Their love saved. Many a moral lapse was jin—-slowly at first, then more patients, and that they were pur- the battle broke out during *. t ' • ' • ' was a dangerous' one. And after annulled by such a gift. |siwftly, and finally with rushing suing t h e profession of apothe- cession. In Segovia a ritual ni.-An age of great assirniliation j force. As the number of Chris- caries in order to poison the pop-'(jp r trial ended with a Eplit .-.£. baptism they tried to obey t h e Mosaic laws -with greater strict- began. Marriages between con- j tian Spaniards grew, w h o prac- ulation. The material factors were [the barricades. In Toledo ?. OJIP ness than before their first ap- versos and Christians -were re- j tice'd medicine and science, phil- mixed up with the spiritual ones, i spiracy was discovered, thr ?>i.-*pearance in church. They did not garded with great favour in the ology and literature, and particu- The Spaniards knew of the Jews', pose of which was to m»iw!«: *.-• keep every. holy day, b u t they eyes of those in high places. For l a r l y .as the occasions became pretense of Christianity and felt;,marranos. The alcaide soir.inr>M.'. kept alf the important ones. They the Church these unio- s h a d a more frequent when the Christian j themselves doubly cheated — in the converts to firms, and the j their purses a n d in their faith, tie which commenced TO1** ; were guests at the tables of the [twofold sacramental character; m j e r generation found the sinBy VALERIU MARCU S i d b t att h t h y ate at addition -"-•"— -to the usual one, --- --Spaniards, but home they they of-;• ectsres and benefices tLat had i The apostates were suddenly re-1 hundreds of lives. Nearly < in accordance with Jewish.ritual. fered the pious prospect of receiv-; b e e n .previously, b e e - their pre- i ferred to not as eonrersop, bni ;town possessed its Recret 1* ' Valeriu M a r c n , Rmnanlan Everything that the Jews had' was no less corroding in iU eftag Christian Chritian children from for for- serve occupied by the. conversos, las marranoE, winch means nn-j against the marrarcos, and t* historian and essayist whose achieved in the fields of chemis- fects tnan the pogroms and the And. they had at least one son cir- ing cumcised. These" apostates had no mer Jews. Spanish society, t h e so their hatred became more vio- i equivocally: wretches, swine, men !every town saw fighting. European reputation w a s ex- try, {astrology, mathematics and terrorism of the missionaries. If ; Frequently the victory v,-Rk tended to this country some medicine In their collaboration wealth and doubts due to pdu<*a- presentiment that their sin of pre- not always wealthy grandees of lent. The new Christians had not | who are damned. tended conversion-"would be vis| From now on it was no longer \ Aragon and Castile, went in for the marranos, who were years ago with the publication with the Arabs they now handed tion sauted many Jews to incline only "acquired new pos^", but had but when ; cy of "Men and Forces of O n r on alone. They were enthusiastic towards assimilation, their defec- ited as an apocalyptic curse, if the most fervent fusion with the retained their old ones. They c o n - | t l l e orthodox of the ghetto hut the• gTRnaees; Time", and "The Birth, of the •roclaimers of experimental sci- tion was accelerated by the daily not on themselves, yet assuredly converts, for whom before to be army contractors, converts to Catholicism who con- feated, they, together with i no eyerie was t o o lefty. After tax-farmers, and bankers. Where- stituted the problem of Spanish wives nnd children, were r>n Nations" tins written a book of snce, and science "was practically hardships. During this »ong spir- on their. descendants. The former were for the death end their houses set or; extraordinary interest, "T h e their monopoly. Throughout the itual process, the individual ele- . By their. Jewish, brothers they four decades nearly every aristo- as a knight had formerly be -i. 4Jewry. . t i m e being forgotten and left in The Inquisition w a s heinj: iv-\~ Expulsion of t h e Jews From whole of Spain the art of medi- ments of which frequently inter- are called "vallals -of • Christian- crat had Jewish Linsmen. able to cudgel the usurer who b e - | e a c e They were harmless and pared in the minds of the pr Spain." The Viking Press which cine -was in their hands. The per- sected, coincided, or neutralized ity" and in Spanish society they With the speed of the wind the came too importunate, and prob- i C0B P will bring out this volume in sonal physicians of the grandees, one another, the great preacher were known as convefsos—con- apostates, freed from all fetters I ably only had to pay a fine of four! ; *d be crushed at any moment. for thirty years before \h* 1 The marranos. however, were en- pearance of Torquemada. T <n-D1! the fall, has granted us per- the kings, and t h e archbishops Vincent Ferrer appeared on the verts. Theip new world received and in full possession of civil'—-~™*;; maravedis, +^° the ~,~n,«ri=„*=,. moneylender was mission to publish this chap- were all Jews. Even the pious scene. Ferrer made his appeal to them with emotion and enthus- rights, begin, to fill all positions, jj himself a grandee and an-< emies within the fortress. T h e true that, by the time the »>v I general watchword was "Drive the Inquisition h a d arrive., ter. Marcn's book will attract rabbis, who had once opposed the those Jews whose views were un- iasm. They were regarded as liv- The favourable atmosphere gave !! swered with a drawn sword, (the converts from their posts!"; m o s t n n S f t h e J e w s i n S p H i l International attention.—T H E ultural alliance of Jews a n d affected either by wealth or by ing trophies of the millitant them "wings. Above all they oc-j EDITOR. ]But the realization of this wish j been baptized. But these C Arabs and still prescribed the sci- rationalism but who, in . certain Church. It was considered' an cupied municipal office i~ the au- i MALICIOUS FALSEHOODS entific work of the Jews, made an atmosphere, were susceptible to honour and a work of devotion to tonomous cities, which had been! Hatred of the creditors was ^ s s not so simple as an ordinary' lies, writes one conversant When the Jews of Central Enr- exception in the case of medicine. the' Catholic gospel. He was im- have stood as a godparent at the barred to them withe t exception. combined -since science h a d so|pogrom. The Marranos had for a their history, "were, in a p? ope were accused ot having pois- Among this stratum of Jews, com- bued with the conviction of the baptism of a Jew. The conversos before their baptism. T h e y ac-ilong been the domain of the Jews! long time now been related to tb.e! der&nt majority, more close! necessity for conversion. T h e became the rage. - Every bishop, quired manorial fiefs and won the;—with a contempt for everything'; aristocracy. &r\& they were accord- n e c t e d with Jewry than is i oned the Rhine and the Danube, partly 1of t h e prosperous, emotional exaltion of preaching every grandee, every" lady, a n d most important posts in the army, of - an intellectual nature. T / . e ! e ^ protection by the r o y a l au- a n y assumed. They snbmiU prot together with all their tributar- posed of the most cultured and vorked on him as an impelling every hidalgo" wanted to have his They quickly climbed the ladder j masses regarded the scientists as thority. force and were Christians oi ies, according to prescriptions in partly, there had come to the force and intensified beyond all own conversos. A party "without of the ecclesiast--al hierarchy,' diabolic wizards, and t h e upper' Inside Spanish society there: appearance, but they lived s»: the Talmud, and they were faced educated,, under the rule of the Moors measure his readine^ to endow an apostate lacked the brilliance j mounted episcopal and archiepis- j ten thousand regarded them as,arose a dissonance—for or against j and observed the laws and '• ~•with the alternatives of baptism iore movement the Talmud the Church with a militant garb. Of novelty. Just as the Mother of! copal thrones, and administed the j intriguers and swindlers. Munici-|the marranos. Discord led to open | scriptions of Jewish ritual." or death, thousands of them did which was notagainst only influenced by He was 'he most powerful preach-: not wait- to receive sentence but Maimonides and his school but er Spain has ever had, and is said committed suicide. A remarkable also due to personal feeling. to have addressed fifteen thourace began, to see who could be was men on whom Judaism had sand proselytizing sermons to the first—-the robber bands and the These oosened the Tightness of its hold Jews. When he spoke of Hell he municipal authorities in burning found themselves two sobbed, and when he mentioned the JewB or the Jews in burning fires—the strictness between of rabbinism themselves. In Mainz t h e race and the hatred of the Spanish Paradise he laughed out loud. He was won by the authorities, who people. no force and restrained impetus of those who employed caused twelve thousand Jews to directed The his disciples, only with an the force of their hos- effort, from though be "roasted to such a degree that tility against murder. Yet he the Jews was strongthe window leading and the bells er than the m o s t well-meaning pushed his w a y ruthlessly- into of the Church of Saint Quirinus wilL The walls of the.ghet- the synagogues. T h < Jews, al•were melted." In Esslingen, on royal toes did not, of course, impinge ways easily intimidated, did not the other hand, t h e Jews were on the royal palaces, and daily exactly know whether the dreadfirst. The whole community gath- contact was only with the hate- ful punishments with vrhich he ered in the synagogue and turned fllled subjects. Like ghettoes, threatened them were to be their the temple into a gigantic pyre. the towns possessed the their auton- lot only in the next world or al"•' In Speyer it was the robber bands omy, their fueros or statues, and ready in this one. At any rate he that won; they did not burn but the Christian fueros "vrere divided induced tens of thousands of Jews strangled, and sent the corpses against the Jewish ones. T h e y to undergo baptism, and the Jewfloating down the Rhine in empty to enclose t h e Jews in ish Catholic zealots, who w e r e " wine barrels. In Frankfurt the wanted their Jewries. The King might do later to become archbishops, came Jews set their ghetto on fire and his Jews what he would, but mostly from- his circle of friends ' threw themselves in great num- with the towns desired to keep them and were his pupils. . bers into the flames. out of their territory. It could An eyewitness \rh.o saw thirty- therefore come to pass that Jews ATTRACTED BY eight Jews roasted in Branden- to "whom every state office was EXTERNALITIES For the overwhelming majority burg wrote: "How stubborn the open, and who determined t h e . Jews are! I should have found it policy of the country as semi-dic- of Jews the Catholic religion had difficult to believe if I- had no tators, were not allowed to use no attraction, but they were atseen it with my own eyes, how the same bath-houses as t h e tricted by the externalities of life they not .only sang and laughed Christians or appear as "witnesses and t h e possibilities of activity that would be open to them. They as they burned, but many of them leaped and exulted, and suffered before Christian +tribunals. In saw in Christianity a convention death with great firmness despite strict contrast to he royal pat- to which, as to all other social the torture which they were evi- ents, the towns tried to deprive forms, they were willing to subthe Jews of the right to carry on mit. Inwardly t h e y remained dently undergoing." They killed themselves from a trade or enter into commercial Jews, and at their baptism tears tear of being' made into Chris- transactions outside t h e ghetto were often mingled with the wattians, even though it was allowed and defamed them wherever pos- er of the sacraments. They entered into a marriage of conveniby the Talmud to go through the sible. This chicanery, which w a s a ence, and their love for the daughpretense of conversion if life was endangered. The Jews of Central matter of everyday experience. ter of Zion remained their own and "Western Europe were so detached from life outside Jewry that even the attempt to continu their existence without the ritua: to which they were accustomei Herewith is printed that im- How came they here? What burst seemed impossible. of Christian hate, mortal poem by Longfellow, . It was otherwise in Spain. Here "The Jewish Cemetery at NewWhat persecution, merciless —in spite of t h e ghettoes, in port " and blind, spite of all ordinances, in spite oj Drove o'er the "sea—that desert rabbinism—t h e y played an im desolate-— portant part in the corporate life "THE JEWISH CEMETERY These Ishmaels and Hagars-of of the developing Spanish nation AT NEWPORT." mankind? The Jewish nabobs of the aristo- By Henry Wads-worth Longfellow. cratic Christian quarters, w h o possessed hundreds of A r a b How strange it seems! These He- They lived in narrow streets and lanes obscure. brews in their graves, slaves, who presented silver canGhetto and Judenstrass, in Close by the street of this fair • delabra to the synagogues to mirk and mire; seaport town, lighten their hearts of the sins they had committed against the Silent beside the never-silent Taught in the schools.of patience to endure waves, prescriptions of the ritual, were The life of anguish and the allies of the kings. For three cen- At rest in all this moving up death of fire. and down! turies they lent their aid as faith. ful servants of the crown against . all the forces which s e t them- T h e trees are white with dust. AU their lives long, with the unleavened bread selves up in opposition against that o'er their sleep And bitter herbs of exile and absolutism. The Jewish Court Wave their broad curtains in its fears, . dignitary was almost a part of the south-wind's breath, A tiny pebble . . . tossed into placid waters mirrors its effect in graceful ripples . the unwritten constitution of Cas- While underneath such leafy The wasting famine of the heart they fed, tile. King Ferdinand IV had the tents they keep which widen and grow ever greater. And slaked its thirst with Jew Don Samuel at his side as The long mysterious Exodus of marah of their tears. comptroller of hi3 policies. King Death. . Alphonso XI did not p a r t for years from h i s mentor Joseph And these sepulchral stones, so Anathema maranatha! was the As Fashion's allure blossomed to maturity, Herzberg's stirred the calm pool of local Beneviste, and the absolute adviscry old and brown. er of Peter IV was Samuel AbuThat rang from town to town, dress with a far-reaching idea - - and the ripples of that idea . . . now an ideal . . . are That pave with level flags their lei ja. The most important monfrom street to street. burial-place, archs of Castile seem to h a v e Seem like the tablets of the Law, At every gate the accursed Mordegrowing greater in ever-widening circles. ' been unable to manage without cai thrown down Jewish educators, advisers a n d Was mocked and Jeered, and And broken by Moses at the . ministers. spurned by Christian feet. mountain's base. Herzberg's idea Was Style without Extravagance, offering chic individuality in die Pride and humiliation hand in HANDED ON AliOXE . hand • These Jews, who were for the The very names recorded here selection of costumes.. .an idea whose whispering wavelets have spread irresistibly through are strange. Walked with them through the most part rich, consciously furOf foreign accent, and of difthered the great process of na•world where'er they went; the shimmering waters of feminine charm. ferent climes; tional construction. Through its Trampled and beaten were they exalted representatives J e w I s h Alvares and Rivera Interchange as the sand. •wealth fulfilled a political func- With Abraham and Jacob of And yet unshaken as the conold times. tion quite outside Jewry. In the Smartly-gowned women have learned to desire the exquisite taste of the Herzberg tinent. domain of culture the part played , by the Jews was no less signifi- "Blessed he God; for he created F o r in the background figures ideal . . . Greater and greater, wider and wider expands the sphere of its influence, reDeath!" cant. The contact between t h e "vague and vast The mourners said, "and Death Christian and Arabian worlds, Of patriarchs and of prophets flecting the poise and confidence which can be achieved only by the assurance of wellis rest and peace;" which was so important for "Westrose sublime, ern Europe, took place through Then added, in the certainty of And all the great traditions ofthe groomed personal appearance. faith, • the intermediary of the Jews. The Past "And giveth Life that never expelled Arabs had bequeathed to They saw reflected in the comthem the inheritance of Hellen- more shall cease." ing time. ism, and the brilliant universities of the caliphs at Cordoba a n d Closed are , the portals of their And - thus for ever with reverted Toledo continued their activities Synagogue* look under Christian rule—and the No Psalms of- David now the The , mystic volume of the silence break, : ' guidance of Jews. Jewish scholars world they read. had once competed with the Moors No Rabbi reads the ancient De- Spelling it backward, like a Hecalogue in - translating into Arabic the brew book, works of Plato, Aristotle, PtolIn the grand dialect the Till life became a Legend of emy, and the Greek mathematiProphets spake. the dead. clans and scientists, and they now It is oar earnest wish that t&e New Year brings translated these further Into Cas- Gone are the living, but the dead But ah! what once has been shall . tilian. Not only were they transremain, into fill bloom the gturden of your desires, with he no more! lators, but they were among the And not neglected; for a hand . The groaning earth in travail their flowers of contentment and happiness. first to produce original literature unseen, and in pain In the Castilian tOague; they Scattering its bounty, like a sum- Brings forth its races, but does stood at the cradle of Spanish, and mer rain, not restore, they moulded It from a dialect Still keeps their graves and And the dead nations never .Into % language. their remembrance rise again.

Blood

AN IMMORTAL POEM

growing greater..

Herzbergs


New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935. Locally, the year 5695 has witnessed a deepening of the Jew- GEMS OF THE BIBLE 'Mm TALMUD & ish consciousness of the community. The storms surrounding our Published every Friday a t Omaha, Nebraska, by te Jewish brethren in many areas of intolerance have failed to ? By O. O. DASHER M ' THE JEWISH PRESS PUBLISHING COMPANY By PMiKEAS S B1EON sweep aside the deeply-rooted Jewish feeling which has been deTeach me and I will hold my Subscription Price,, one year - - — - . , - • - §2.00 veloped in Omaha; instead, these signs of anti-liberal forces have peace and cause me to understand RAfeHONAH Advertising rates furnished on application. served to bind Jewry of all walks of life more closely together - - •where I have erred, how forcible Close to half a million persons of near-blind persons is different BOSK We are introducing to yon in the United States with l e s s from that of normal individuals. I all striving for a better Americanism and a more significant Jew- are words of uprightness? But than 2 percent of normal vision Editorial Office: .500 Brandeis Theater Building. In .1D31, Dr. Feinbloom w a s ! Rabbi Abraham I i . Isrnelitan, what doth your arguing prove? ishness. will have new hope of visual re- elected president of the New York j1 •who, in order to give us a Sioux City Office—Jewish Community Center Do you hold words to be an arto go to Kyjingosne, lias Thus, the synagogual activities during the past year demon- gument, the speeches of one that habilitation, increased activity and Academy cf Optometry for o n e ;chance DAVID BLACKER - - Business and Managing Editor graciously consented to !>e our independence through a new op[ year. He received an honorary FHANK R. ACKBRMAN - - - - - - - Editor strated an intensification of Jewish life. The cultural programs is desperate to be wind? tical device, the "Micro-Vision j degree of Doctor of Ocular Sci- guoft columnist « - Rabbi Is» Heturn I pray you, let there be Spectacles," which Dr. William | ence from the Northern Illinois raclitan has oxcr.\'«ited si numFANNIE KATELMAN Council Bluffs, Iowa, Correspondent sponsored at the Community Center and the various Houses of injustice, y e a return, my Feinbloom, a Research Fellow of I College of Optometry in 1832. He ber of ijiteresihis facts about ANN PILL - - - - Sioux City, Iowa, Correspondent Worship magnetically attracted growing numbers. The Jewish no cause is righteous. Is there in- Columbia University, demonstrat-1 is now a Research Fellow ct Co- Sosh Knslsonnli RSH] we a r e Print Shop Address: 4504 So. 24th Street Philanthropies campaign met with warming success. And the or- justice on my tongue? Can noted for the first time last month, only too happy to give you his lumbia University. precimis jewels of «! o w i s h ganizational activity - - a barometer of the Jewish activity in the my taste discover drafty devices? at the fourteenth annual meeting I will not refrain Tay mouth, I of the American Academy of Opknowledge.—T1JE K1MT0R. community - - maintained an increased tempo. will speak in the anguish of ray tometry at New York. We do not like to think that the rise of Nazism and thespirit. I -will complain in the bit• • • • • • Rash Hashonah . . . the birth of a New Year . . . breathes Several years ago, Dr. Fein'IT XTGHT IXTFKT1ST YOU soul. the spirit of hope and faith, instilling the courage necessary to spread of its poisoned barbs to other countries lies behind the terness of my bloom figured in the news as the TO KXOW THAT: TALMUD continue life's battles. But, while on Rosh Hashonah we look ahead revitalization of Jewish life in America. We have no wa'y of judg- Rabbi Zadok said, "Separate inventor of a telescopic l'e n s By NENA M. AGEEKMAN Tlie first d a r of lioali Hashonaided in bringing sight to ah can never occur on Sunday, with trust and fortitude, we would be blind to the tradition of the ing how much of our latent energy was aroused through the not thyself from the community. •which persons •with as little as 2 percent Wednesday or Friday. holyday were we to neglect a stocktaking or inventory of the massing of diabolically cruel forces against the Jewish people, Act not the counsel's part in the j M M T Jewish women, in t h s Judge's office. Make not of the but whatever the cause we should determine to strengthen in- Torah. a crown where w i t h to suit of still further research, Dr. ,_. „ , . ,, iay. , _ . , twelvemonth just behind us. . , . | past, would prepare for the Rosh has developed a means •Tis Sabbath quiet—Friday m t t ! Hashonab. table loaves of bread The year 5695 has deepened the sorrow of Israel. The Jew stead of relax our Jewish spiritual gains and by keeping the exalt thyself, nor for material and Feinbloora E of helping another considerable Gleaming holders -candles' light in the shape o£ ladders—because is known as the Man of Sorrows, and little has occurred this past Jewishness within us kindled, spread the renaissance of Jewish- selfish purposes." grandma And a kerchief— group of near-blind whose vision in Rabbi Jose said, "Whoso honit is on this sacred festive day swaying year to lighten the burden of that title. Of the sixteen million ness in widening circles, and through it become happier indivi- ors the Torah will be himself hon- is even less than 2 percent northat God decides "who shall bemal, but who have light and form \ Hands o'er face—is praying. Jewish people, almost half dwell in benighted Eastern Europe. duals and better citizens. ored by mankind, but whoso discome poor find who shall w a x Ordinarily classified 1 honors t h e Torah will himself be perception. Germany, Poland, Austria, Rumania, Russia . . , out of all comes t h e covered rich, who shall be brought low, ! as totally blind, members of this j The table snowy, by mankind." who Day unto day uttereth speech, and night unto night show- dishonored group are usually condemned to i bread , end^ .^ ^ shall be upraised." the same woeful tale of persecution and injustice. Nazism, not Rabbi Ishmael said, "He whoinactivity, psychological malad- j The wine for ki&f.ush.—at t h e ! jg Palestinian Talmud recor< illrt content with spreading its venomous poison in the Reich, has eth knowledge. shuns the Judicial office rids him- justment, a n d economic depend- j one early Kosh Hashonhead self of hatred, robbery, and vain ah morning, when the Shofar was spread its tentacles in every direction. Through a well-organized, ence, from which a large percent| Of that pious table where swearing, but he who presumpsounded in the synagogue, the world-wide propaganda network, the gospel of hate has been tuously lays d o w n , decisions is age in the future can now be res- j Grandpa has his cushioned chair. Roman authorities, believing that cued. I preached in every nook and cranny the world over. While predicblasts of the ra The passing years impress more and more indelibly upon our foolish, wicked and of an arro- In demonstrating the "Micro-j And then my grandpa, fciddush those iVceve signals for a Jew tions of the downfall of Hitlerism continued to increase, the more minds the importance of Jewish education in the perpetuation of gant spirit." Vision Spectacles" before in em-! said 'ire,' Rabbi Ishmael said, "Judge not bers of the Academy, Dr. Fein- j Proceeds to pray and break his called forth their strangulating the German economic condition the tighter did theJewish ideals and Jewish life. Knowledge of Jewishness Is still alone, who immediately for none may judge alone bloom presented one of his pa-j attacked the bread. Nazis draw the knot of oppression - - - until it embraced not the golden hinge upon which our national and religious existence save God. Neither say to thy juJewish population, tients, Isadore Cohen, 46 years j "Gut"Shabbos, kinder; Sabbath's ! "" Although today it is not perdicial colleagues that they must old, a practising attorney, of 3511 L only the Jews but also the Catholic^, war veterans, non-Nazi turns. here L.,M, ,, +*\ r.iittt-d to blow the Shofar on a accept your view for the choice Protestants, Masons, and liberals of all descriptions. The turn The problem of Jewish education is recognized by our lead- is theirs to concur, and it is not Stone Avenue, Brooklyn, who be- j Now eat and drink—good cheer.' Rosh Hashonah that occurs on a of events has made it imperative for Jewry to forget about fight- ers. Nevertheless, despite every encouragement - - every means for thee to compel concurrence." came practically sightless at the i Saturday, this prohibition did not of twelve years, following a I exist in the famous Temple at ing Nazism alone but instead to unite forces with all other op- of persuasion and publicity - - too small a percentage of our Rabbi Jonathan said, "Whoso age sreious illness and numerous op- j I Jerusalem . , . In the Beth Hafulfils the Torah In the midst of pressed groups in Germany and through allied, concerted efforts Jewish youth receive a Jewish education. Too many of our par- poverty shall in the end fulfill it erations. Now, after two and one I And old Jew in Volin I milcdash. the Shofar was soundhalf years of visual rehabilitation • With sideburns and beard, help alleviate the dire condition of the Reich. ed on every New Year's Day—; ents throw away the key to the treasurehouse of Jewish know- in the midst of wealth, and whoso with the aid of the spec- Long caftan and skull cap even if it occurred, on the SabIn the pall which surrounds the German situation, many have ledge and Jewish lore by not giving their children a thorough Jew- neglects the Torah in the midst he is able to read ordinary:And "Tzitzes" usually smeared, bath. of wealth shall in the end neglect failed to grasp the full significance of the crisis in Poland. Here ish education. If the faculties were not present, it would be dif-in newsprint. He can also see for i Rabin I3ebid, p. Babylonian the midst of poverty." the first time his wife, Mrs. Paul- • At dawn, already praying are three million Jews — six times as many as in Germany - - ferent. But there is no excuse for any Jewish child in Omaha scholar of the fourth century, rteine Cohen, also an attorney (to \ In that slowly droning chant. | cl;;refi that one can foretell the three million Jews, one million of whom are actually starving, growing up without a fundamental learning in the teachings of whom he has been married for : In a freezing drafty ; ynagogue j weather of the new year by means •without means of eking out the barest of livelihoods. The situation his fathers. fifteen years) and their three ; Half-starved, yet content, * | cf Kosh Hashonah . . . If that children, Melvin, 13, Beverly, 12, j SAOfON O. LEVINSON in Poland is made especially acute because there is .no official i holiday is worm, it means a warm Jewish education is the soul-life of Israel. Without it, we and Major, 7. Both Mr. and Mrs. i His bodily ills forgotten | year: if it is cold, it indicates a anti-Semitism. Ostensibly, the government is hi no way placing would have long ago become severed from the tree of history; SALMON O. LEVINSON: Law- C o h e n a r e c l o s i n g a t t o r a e y s In his Soul's ecstatic iov— year. legal obstructions hi the path of the Jewish citizens. But actually without it we would have withered away and terminated in yer and amteur diplomat. Born for the Home Owners Loan Cor-! He clasps the Torah to his heart ! cold It is the practice among very in Indiana seventy years ago. Ed-poration. an under-cover legal discrimination is wreaking its havoc, slowly wholesale apostasy. Without it, our children cannot know the ucated at Yale. Has practiced law j Ana repeats again, "Boruch Atoh i observant Jews not to eat nuts Born with normal eyes, Cohen Aaenoi"but surely driving all the Jewish residents out of the government- meaning of the Jewish heritage nor can they comprehend the in Chicago since 1891. Is a spe- became on the New Year Festival, bepartially blind at the age! cause, the numerical value of the controlled monopolies and leaving the Jewish population no recialist on t h e reorganization of! _ approximately 50 p e r ! of 5 l o s i n g worthwhileness of Jewish suffering in the face of persecution. giant corporations and Hebrew word lor rait, "egoE," is cent of his vision after an attack j dress. Nowhere are the number of Jewish suicides increasing in It is the parents' responsibility, and unless American Jewry pays One equivalent to that of the Hebrew of Chicago's leading public- of combined diphtheria, scarlet; He's crippled b a d I y—little word for sin—"ehet." Poland. more attention to Jewish education and learning, the future will spirited citizens. First came into fever and whooping cough. Three [ g n i m Nowhere, in the entire- literathe limelight as author of a plan y e a r s later he completely lost ms -,Y e t B e v p - &oev In Rumania 'the Jewish people are in a peculiar status. King have in store for us not a ghetto, but a grave. ture preceding; the Talmud, can for readjustment of German repUii«r>t after s i nipritinn r i n i *,•,<,'•„ \ V «--•"Carol seems anxious to avert any anti-Semitic incidents. Yet, the « i e r an operation i*po:i ms He.watches playmates, full of vim i one find a statement declaring arations and the interallied debts. slI~Ilt eyes. When he was twelve years S l E i i e s t o t h e E 5 a n d m d e s h i s I ) a l n - i that Kosli linshonah is a. Day of powers that control the country think otherwise. Despite the govYears before he h a d fired first As the crackling of thorns under a pot, so is the laughter of old, he underwent a series of ] Judgment . , . The first reference gun in his one-man war against twenty operations which restored H e U 1 n e v e r W E , l k _ a c u r e l e s s c a s e . to ernment's efforts, the many tragic incidents hi Rumania mark the a fool. New Tear's Day as P. day on •war. Was not a pacifist during light perception to the right eye! , ' incertitude of Jewish Me hi that country, an incertitude which is H i s w h o l e life> j u s t g v h e e I c f c a r ; which God judges mankind is the War. Two of his sons saw only. ; I'cund in the SXishna, that famous in itself a deep sorrow. Even worse is the situation in Austria. Shim knows, yet smiles End gets service a t the front.. In 1915 he He was unable to read, write I code of Jewish laws which was his face Here, the government with one hand denies anti-Jewish discrimconceived the idea of making war .ceivea tne saea oi maKing war o r recognise figures. Too greatly j A s u f ' p r m r -nnrt n* hi* A ccc c e e t^e h V * fis B e r i n g — p a r t o* has! written by the great Rabbi Judah, ination, while the other hand weeds the Jews out of the economic, A land focuses a people and calls forth, as nothing else can, an international crime. Launched j handicapped to attend ordinary ! i'li^ Prince (lSTi-220). There we race, for outlawing war with! schools/he entered the New York • | are informed . . . "On Nev Year's social and political lif e of the country. their potentialities. The rehabilitation of the Jewish National campaign his first article on " T h e Legal j Institute for the Education of the I Day all men pass before Him like The largest Jewish population in that sector of the world Homeland hi Palestine has re-opened the sacred fountains of Status of W a r , " which appeared j Blind, a t Thirty-fourth Street and • • young lair, b s . " The Happier Way lives in Soviet Russia. We can be thankful to the Soviet for many creative energy of the Jewish people on their own soil, writing on March 9, 191S. Worked sin-j Ninth Avenue, where in addition ! The Jew—in the struggle a n d i TrdcTiUon relates that it was on i, gle-handed to build up public j to the regular curriculum h e I Kosh' Hashonah that. Joseph went things. Where anti-Semitism thrives on economic distress in the a new chapter in the annals of human history. strife opinion in favor of his plan, j studied music and composed. He : forth from his imprisor-ment, and Of h i s never-ending, helpless During the past year between fifty and sixty thousand Jews Coined the phrase "outlawry of j nt first wished to become a mucountries around Russia, the Soviet has definitely and unqualii ic was also on this day that the fiedly stamped out the virus of this disease. Also, the Soviet has entered Palestine. There are now approximately 350,000 Jewish war." Attracted to his causes Sen- sician but abandoned the idea in ; F o r t h equest : Hebrew rlaves ceased working for hate3es Knox and Borah, Dewey and favor of law. At the a g e of '•N o t t h a t o f tlae s and peaceful life ! Pharaoh of Egypt. established Biro Bidjan as a Jewish autonomous republic, with people in the homeland, representing twenty-five per cent of the ators unwelcome guest, Raymond Robbins. For ten years twenty-one, he entered the Brook- j In Talmudic times, when the the promise of thousands of refugees eventually entering for settld population of the country. he labored tirelessly to win keylyn Law School, from which he' JN'ov* Year would arrive, everyone tolerated—often scorned settlement. But, hi spite of these advantages, we cannot help but Last season, in the orange industry, Palestine exported in men to his idea. Then he worked was graduated in 1913 with t h e i Barely would dress in white garments, IIss pp rr oonn lll iis ff& l l ttE a E dd e r r o r s t 0 with them and through them but degrees of Bachelor of Laws and ! ! 5 " for white was, in their eyes, a view the Russian scene and realize that if the present Soviet excess of 7,000,000 cases of oranges. In the building industry, the forget. always as a private citizen. Neg- Master of Laws, taking highest! syit.bol of joy. regime continues along its elected course, then there will be no country is proceeding at so rapid a pace that there is a shortage lected h i s business to commute ] honors in a class of 300 men and ' Self-earned, some hate—though During the Middle Apes, it was mourned. Jews left in Russia to worry about with the next two decades or of laborers and the country is not producing sufficient building between Washington, and Chicago women. He had to study with the customary smong the French a share deserved, and so. Zionistic and Jewish nationalistic activity is prohibited, re- materials to keep up with the construction activities. There were in the unselfish effort to promote aid of a paid reader, who read i Admittedly, eat red jn ' on Kosh Jews yet 1 his plan. Carried on vast correbooks aloud to him. He has j Hashonah. The Jews- of the Provligious life is inhibited, and Jewish cultural programs which are more new industrial establishments of a large order organized spondence. Utilized every oppor- law been successful in law practice, j of his virtues over- ence, however, would eat white allowed are only those which use Yiddishist assimilationism as an during the past year than in any period since 1920. The past year tunity to g e t his proposal into but felt himself so greatly hin-! K o w : grnp.'s, figs, and t h e head of looked; or on the lips of some pub- dered by. his limited vision thatj ally for Sovietism. '•."•• saw the figure of private funds invested in Palestine grow past print licist. His efforts resulted in Pres- in 1933 he consulted Dr. Fein-j How minimized achievements of ; lio«fs ben Abraham Mat, learnhis braiu. So much for the black clouds which hang over our unfor- the fifty-million-dollar mark. As a measuring-rod of the economic idents Harding and Coolidge re- bloom. At that time, no apparacd «i;;lician rabbi of the sixteenth at his greatest b a r e l y ;i century, Even stability in the homeland through the influx of Jewish capital is ferring to outlawry of war. Es- tus existed for measuring the very tunate brethren. A few rays of sunshine pierce through the forerelates the following inbrooked, important contacts with slight extent of Cohen's vision. It | : {ereKf.ing incident in his wellboding skies. In Czechoslovakia, in Yugoslavia, in Italy, in Bel- the readiness of the government to spend half of its surplus of tablished responsive minds abroad. Created was first necessary to complete | Accused of ever-looking for the -known book. "MATTEH MOSHgium, in Holland, in Switzerland, in many of the smaller Euro- $30,000,000 on a program of public works. gam. American Committee for the Out- certain research a n d develop a j ' EH" . . . There were in the city The most important achievements of the Jewish Agency for lawry of War to carry o a t h e special lens powerful enough t o ' S j a a i 1 :: three expert blowers of the Shopean countries the spread of anti-Semitism has thus far been that some—seeking ; far. "Then JXo'Ai Hashonah armore impersonally. Con- establish the extent of visual | ease staved off and has been fought vigorously and successfully. We Palestine during the past year were: the receipt of a loan of five work ferred with Briand in 1927, when acuity, which was finally placed i I rived, each of the experts tried do not say that none'of these countries will in the future adopted hundred thousand pounds from Lloyd's Bank for the consolida- the French stateman proposed bi- at somewhat under two percent, j ^ f j f * f r o m J e w s t Q s t r a j ' : !1 to blow the Shofar, but they were an anu-Jewish policy, but it is heartening to know that despite tion of national debts; the acquisition of the Huleh concession, lateral treaty outlawing war as The greatest problem encoun- \ Thinking to secure esteem a n d all unsuccessful. So t Ii e Rabbi peace commanded thr.t 1 h e Shofar be France and United States. tered at this point was Cohen's 1 the high-powered propaganda of selfish, self-centered groups, bringing into Jewish possession land that may eventually harbor between treading t h i s , ' t h e coward's I t u r r r d around, and oorttiin Scrl|>-' During all this phenomenal effort complete lack of visual associa- i way. some countries have been able to retain enough balance in a topsy- 30,000 Jews; and constant pressure averting the establishment of he raised no funds, invited no tions. He had never learned to j I tural words be uttered into it . . . i It was PO done, and, remarkable read visually and did not associ-j subscriptions, enrolled no memthe Legislative Council in Palestine which, Jewish leaders admit, turvy decade to fight hatred and bigotry. Countries like the 3 et b sucIj m e a n s * >' happiness | i.e.- say, the Shofar became normal ate letters with sounds. A train-1 bers, subsidized no agencies and attain. United States, England and France have had their PeUeys and would sharply curtail Jewish progress in Palestine by submitting no magazines. Ultimate- ] ing period of sis months was nee-; „ , j end. gave forth its accustomed The Habbj then said: their Mosleys, and though the influx of the propaganda of intol- such important problems as immigation and land to the super- launched ly his unparalleled effort b o r e essary in which the patient had; ^ w e l c o m e still, despue t h e i r |j sound. "Satan must have been in that erance has planted seeds which have grown into ugly weeds, the vision of an Arab majority. fruit in the Kellogg-Briand Pact to be taught the mechanical pro-1 larrning smile • ; ritur.l horn, and he m B B t have professional hat'e-mongers have been unable to make telling headIn spite of an increased pressure from Arab political groups, of 1929, which was signed by sis-! cess of reading as a child i s , Seeting to_ hide their Jewistness :been the one who stopped those tv nations. He was only private | taught. At the end of this time! in tain i sounds from going forth, way hi these citadels of democracy. there has been an easing of tension between the Jews and Arabs citizen present at the historic | an increase in visual perception |T ^ world sees through them ax,.d j (Copyrfchl, insr,, \)y <;<-von Arts This brings us to the brightest spot on the Jewish horizon of Palestine. The mass of Moslems realize that the Jewish immi- signing in Washington. Widely | was noted. By means of further: tnroutn t^eir guue. I feature ^iyiidi^ate) •• - - Palestine. The Jewish homeland - - an oasis hi the desert of gration into the country has been responsible for the prosperity recommended for Nobel Peace j optical research, Dr. Feinbloom | . depression - - remains a well-spring of Jewish inspiration. The the country is enjoying and have therefore resisted the efforts PrizeTn 1929 and 1930'. Was a | increased Cohen's vision to 10 p e r j Happier fer the Jew, proua of his of a learned, I GliettO PeilClI Veildior progress in Palestine has been phenomenal, with the promise of of professional agitators whose future depends upon their stir- silent partner in the events that I cent for distance and 50 per cent. i i o 3 l o r e acame, led to Henry Ford's recantation I fOF reading. Further laboratory i member So smnll—so old—so grey even greater development But, the thing we must realize is that ring up trouble between the two peoples. The Histadruth, Jewish of his anti-Jewish views. Estab-! experiments now in process indi-' _ . aacieni. rac ^ sells her pencils all the day Palestine can only partially solve our problem. Not for years and Federation of Labor, has also been an influential factor in organ- lished an endowment fund of | cate that it will be possible still; ^ ' ^ by ni^aigE.ty ana learn- She A careworn smile on her face ?>>5 000 at the University of Ida- i f urther to increase the subject's! . . „ " * , ? ..,• . , . years '. . . if ever , , . can Palestine or the surrounding territory izing Arab labor groups. f Dressed in tntiers-—yet used to Jo to be known as the William i extent of vision. He is now able ! Aspect Contented w.th his r-eo~ ' lace.; possibly take care of all of the Jewish people who seek a haven ple&nam s Edgar Borah Outlawry of War I to read newspaper type, and can Piaceof. refuge. The Jewish problem in the main must be solved in the Foundation. Founded Chicago I also write simple words. In Jiddi- ] ''Pencil sir—pencil please"' Committee for Defense oZ Human j tion, he can now walk about the | Diaspora. In solving that problem, the Jewish people must never Yet oncn she lived in case ...... . ..Sat, Sept. 28 Rights Against Nazism to prose-1 streets unassisted. \ Surrounded l:y luxuries a n d cringe, or succumb to the philosophy of defeatism. Wherever they Rosh Hashonah, 1st day .................. cute anti-Nazi boycott. Decorated! The results in this case, which 11 watched linn—the old peddler— Rosh Hashonah, 2nd day Sun., Sept. 29 friends. : live and labor, the Jewish people must battle for justice when it by French Government. Tall,; presented e x t r e m e difficulties,; As he slowly made his way Now old, alone, lier halting .way Fast of Gedaliah ............. . „ ..„. ..Mon., Sept. 30 is denied to them or any other racial, national, or religious group thin, bespectacled. Has L'rey hair | open up untouched fields for vis- i From door to door. His chant she wends . . . „ ^ _...Mon., Oct. 7 and an easy grandfatherly smile. | ual rehabilitation. j Monotonous—"Old clothes—o 1 d - - be'that group the Catholics in Mexico, the Negroes in America, Yom Kippur rags." . .„ .Sat., Oct. 12Benign-looking. Hates personal j A graduate of Columbia TJni- \ or the lower castes in India. No discrimination or prejudice, no Succoth, 1st day „..._ _ * / JEWISH. publicity. His n e w plan called i versity in 1923, Dr. Feinbloom! Succoth, 2nd day . ...—.. .. .»_ Sun., Oct. 13 injustice or intolerance must go unrebuked or unchallenged. Moral "Liquidating the Depression" is j field began of his Sub-normal specialization Vision in Irnnse-; the! With A small, bony dark-bearded gnarled hand man he ringr ' vC~r 400,090 arousing international approval. Hosha'ana Rabba ..... ; ..„. . „ ..Jri., Oct. 18 M and spiritual defiance of wrong-doers must be a strong weapon Has earned the title of "Prince cf diately afterward. Extensive clin-j Each bell—obsequiously asks ical and research work reported j "Old clothes?"—six days e a c l „_ . Sat., Oct. 19Peace." —" 1 e Jewish used without fear. We must fight unceasingly for righteousness Shemini Atseret . in a ruraber of important' ecien-j week. (Copyright, 193S, by Seven Arts •. >•> l o v a k i a i s Simchat Torah ... . .. ...Sun., Oct. 20 and justice and peace and good-will - - therein lies Israel's mission. Feature Syndicate) tific pscers brought him' national | i to official "Rosh Hodesh Heshvan .™ ._ . .Mon., Oct. 28 recognition. Some of the papers j On Sabbath—great tne- change 1 1 re. T w o Rosh Hodesh Kislev __._ .„ . .Wed., Nov. 27 Mexico City, D. F.—More than presented before scientific bodies i-This peddltr—tattered, worn ' t h e JOTS 1 persons pledged to boycott in various sections of the coun-j Becomes a proud Jew—In shul A' child inherits its parents' nature not as a special punish- Chanukah, 1st day ..„.„._.„.„„„ ... „ . Sat, Dec. 211,200 "•- 'ir>ir mother German goods at a mass-meeting try were "Application of Tele- At dawa—He chants, but' piouslj 1 i. i 1 c p ed t h a t ment llmt'by natural law. Rosh Hodesh Tebet•..._.— ,.„ . .Fri., Dec 27 here. scopic Spectacles to Refraction," 1 OI " ^ . elitieh c a NOTE—Holidays begin in the evening preceding the dates • I T u t l . c T< — in ing stated A resolution was adopted ap- "The New Sub-normal Vision The ancient chants of Israel. . tr.ct ihcj i j ere re JCV.K J C . Kby race b a t * Buy What thou hast no need of, and ere long thou shalt sell designated. pealing t o the world to protest Lens" and "Case Studies of Sub- i Forgets bis daily eervile ways, Normal Vision Patient?." He also Becomes s "Bal-habos," one day gave a variety of other nationaliagainst "barbarous actions fa *Rosh Chodesh also observed previous day. £hy necessaries. iirst recorded that the psychology Out cJ the seven, a proud man. ' ties. Nazi Germany."

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HEBREW CALENDAR

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27,1935.

FflR HORIZONS A people with vision - - - and a business institution with vision

both seek the far horizons.

The J. ,L Brandeis &. Sons, as the Boston Store, was established in a horse-and-buggy era - - but its wise founders laid the cornerstone with a thought for the unborn ages. Service, dependability, variety, quality merchandise and fair prices have been the foundation blocks upon which our institution has~built upward - - - progressing ever higher -seeking the far horizons with policies keyed to new times and new concepts. The people of Israel have also built with vision - - - faith and hope, symbolized by Rosh Hashonah, have been the cornerstones upon which they sought the wide horizons of peace and good-will, justice and morality. Such a people, disdaining the present but with its eye steadily on the future - - - living on faith

is, like faith,

eternal.

BRANDEIS

fin

May the New Year open new vistas of nu&erid end spirited progress, brightciting the horizons of ps&ce end anierstanibig for Israel mi fill mankind.

i^^^^5Sllfe3l^Ste

»^ f*'


New Year's Edition—THE -JEWISH

PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

placed his foot on the first rung MacDonald at the early age of 3S of the Labor Party ladder. In to the seat of power as controller

MEMORY HAVEN

j TiTOidir, the embittered man • touched her on the sleeve—"Was • • : Israel Maelech rea'Jy dead?" he i asked her. She nodded, then she

due time he made that unassum- of the immediate destinies of the ingly modest maiden speech in widely scattered British Colonial Parliament which, like that of a possessions at a time when the famous father's son before him, British Commonwealth of Nawas "dear and refreshing to a tions is in a state of incalculable , , • Iv dead—and his father had A fihort story by a young Calfather's heart. Many young men flux, and the future of the British 'poor mps who had «med across ^ ^o n t o o _ G r a d n a T l j r > t h e f at Westminster h a v e shown an Empire is filled with indefinable ifornia writer, which introduces I the water. And now the "t.ulis ; i nh,s ru,ned m i n d c,eared a new note into the usual import. industry and devotion to duty, were trying to pin this shootmg^ , hfi, o o k e d na t t h e m U e unaccompanied by any visible This plain, unassuming, studi- American Jewish fiction. And it scrape onto him might as well white-haired old lady. My mother. sign of brilliance, equal to that ous young man sits in the seat yon think this story is a bit far- sit here anyway and take things; and she doesn't even Know ft'« of Malcolm MacDonald. But Ithallowed by Joseph Chamberlain fetched—remember that life is easy. At least they wouldn't throw! me! God in Heaven, such a mesa falls to the lot of few to be the and Winston Churchill. He rules stranger than faction. him out of a synagogue, he knew '• his face was—not even a mother son of a Minister of the Crown, that part of the British Empire A man was being chased by athat much! could bear to look at him twice— and to fewer still to be the son which has given it its prestige as plainclothes detective—persistentThe little white-haired old lady. those ugly scars and misshapen of a Premier. I""*" the greatest aggregation of States j ly—doggedly—the chase had last- next to him began to cry softly, t"'""' "^kj •—-*•« — der the undoubted disadvantage r.,.. rocked ,__, vback . . , _ __., An -nnretonclied portrait of and,__ forth i t . _ . , | feature.*! Anyway, he would say If Malcolm exhibited no excep- in the world's history and in this | ed—block after block. Soon oneShe of having to follow a father, so tional Parliamentary brilliance, sense his office is the pivot of the j or the other would have to give mumbled to herself in Hebrew. Kbadish for his father, and he Malcplm'MacDonald, 3VI. P., son much a political heretic, as- to his extraordinarily rapid advent whole scheme of British Govern- i up- The man rounded a busy cor- Tears fell and splashed on her began in falteringly, low tones, of Ramsay MacDonald, former the traditional Hebrew words. adopt no distinctive outward char- to the magic and restricted circle ment. To have cast such a respon- jj ner and saw a group of people prayer book. Prime Minister of England. j The service drew on to a close, acteristic as might be a guide to Malcptm MacDonald was r e of Government, must be ascribed sibility on shoulders so youthful '• all heading for the entrance of Cripes! That made him f e e l ; a n d he handed the little whitehis ability or importance. cently appointed Secretary of as a mark of parental devotion and so inexperienced as his may j an imposing building. He edged [funny inside. Perhaps his own. j, j_ j j talked with her slowly s aw e State" of His Majesty's Colonies Malcolm at Oxford, "was, how- rather than as a reward of merit. be regarded either as a pathetic J in among them and began walk-! mother had cried like that too u p the aisle—through the lobby in the reorganized British cabever, son of Ramsay, already an Nor can one eliminate that ele- illustration of the strange ways : ing with them. On past the en-j when he had not returned w i t h ' a n d 0 , I t t 0 the sidewalk—walking inet ;nnder Stanley Baldwin. In ex-Premier, and that was at least ment of filial duty which s e e s of British, politics or as another ! trance into the lobby. A feeling of! his outfit from overseas. Well, it as this capacity the younger Macone factor upon which to base an clearly its right course in follow- example of the boldness of Brit- : faintness came over him, anything j was no use thinking back on all if in a dream. detective stopped by casDonald wil be the pivotal perestimate that he might "go far" ing the footsteps of fatherly guid- ish experiment. i for a seat! He must sit down—; that past history. i ually, gripped his arm firmly and sonality in political matters afin politics. Unlike most sons of ance. For when Ramsay saw the . For^Jewry Malcolm MacDonald, j ah—there were seats. Thank God| what was it that the Rabbi was; grinned: "You're nabbed, kid— fecting the policy of Great distinguished political fathers, need, in the "National" interest Secretary for the Colonies, has a j for that! And he sat down next j chanting now? Yes, he remem-i me along to police headquarCO Britain towards the Jewish Nadefinitely Socialist, Malcolm Mac- of shedding a life-long allegiance special interest and anxiety. Un-j to a little white-haired old lady.! bered that too it was the prayer!ters!" tional Homeland. The author of Donald displayed no sparkling im- to the party which had raised him der his jurisdiction comes "t h • -e' j"He - closed -1---0 his ^--- eyes and - - ^relaxed! .- fOr the dead "Yis ga dal Yis^ga Then the little white-haired old this; (article is a distinguished itative qualities- Rather, was he, to rank and power,-there was no mandate for Palestine and t h e his weary body. Gradually, he ! " (From the dust thou com„„*young ,„„„„ man — and d a s l l | U t u v turned I U 1 U C U to w the lady non-iJTewish English journalist, as he has remained, of a quietly hesitancy on the part of MacDon- carrying out of Britain's promise, sensed an air of peacefulness; "Couldn't you est> t o t h e d u s t t h o u r e t u r n e s t - ) L a i d l m p a tientlv, ald the Younger to follow in afone (of the most widely-read studious, undemonstrative disposito achieve t h e Jewish National | around him and lifting his eyes;God! ow the ,,^- „ H I ^ ninnpr G o i 1 . hhow P r t Uhurry the litle litle olfl old lartv lady Enext! aH little? Dinner is is wattintr. waiting. contributors to the London Extion, pleasant and modest in man- fectionate loyalty. Home. To him falls the grave towards the front of the large j t 0 cried. Made him feel sick ] and I am tired, and we have spent | press.—The Editor. • ner. Though decorously obedient . To emphasize the "old-fashion- duty of handling the difficult room he saw men standing up; over | a long day in Temple. Come! Isto the political teachings of hised" character of such obedience, problems of Jewish aspirations with praying shawls over their j rael," she saidfather, he exhibited no exagger- is to appraise its courage in these and Arab truculence, of Jewish j shoulders and an old, old Rabbi; Suddenly, she turned a wet A pleasant parlor game to enwrinkled face t 0 h i m a n d asked.| P u z z i e d and uncertain, the deatedly flambuoyant loyalty to the days when filial rebellion in mat- pressure to be allowed speedily j liven an otherwise tedious evening chanting in front of t h e ; « W o u l d y o u c a r e t 0 u s e my h u s - tective stepped back and glanced softly parental creed nor did he make ters political is the rule rather Ramsey MacDonald Is to attempt to gauge the chances to people the land of their fathers j Ark. ! band's Tallas? fnravine shawl). shawl 1. I nervously r^r™,,^- from frnm the thp • old nlrt lady lariv to Tallas? (praying to the welkin ring with any extrem- than the exception. At all eyents, and;tlie prospects of the younger of Arab resistance to it, of God Almighty! He must h a v eI:band's O n c e jt o 0 a son. God only j the man. "You been in there all fortunate enough to become only ism of youthful enthusiasm. The it had its reward when Malcolm Palestintian self-government facpoliticians, especially those who Hadn't' is now. He has j da y f son?" came from the detecare the sons of their fathers. a Treasurer, the most that may promise that he showed during MacDonald, rawly young in Par- ed with a Jewish minority returned from the war. Now tive. "Guess I've . got the wrong be expected is the prophecy that his student days at Oxford was There I are certain guiding factors •there is no one to say the Kad- party." He let them pass on. in this game which diminish its more will be heard of him." that, in the fullness of time and his political advancement to the j as a refuge for afflicted Jewry was that Canton w a s : d i s h f o r h i s f at her, God rest his! "Well, I'll be gol-darned!" Even purely speculative elements and a With reasonable luck he will by virtue of his father's exaltedrank of Under-Secretary of State fleeing from the terror of Euro- | singing? "oh,""yes, he remembered" !"*? J a good detective gets on the status, he might reach the com- for the Dominions. In that capa- T\onn rronnioc i ... _ . . _ . ouuidegree of skill which renders the reach Cabinet rank. pean ftyrannies. "Shema Yis Roel Adonai EloHesitatingly, he took the Tal-j w r o ng trail sometimes in his life! players immune from the rigors All this by way of preliminary fortable security of a Departmen- city he has exhibited a zealous •-' How will1 he face this complexI r 1 15 L rd lasi:: ° ! unconsciously murmured""a I ^ I n d "the Httte ~white-"haired old of the| Lottery Actsconsideration of the latest politi- tal Secretaryship in the perman- devotion to duty and a quiet as- ity of issues? Will he recall Win- ™ ^ ' V ^ T T f - ° r t - ^ ' V our God, the Lord is One.) [blessing and kissed it gently b e - | l a d y turned to the young man beent Civil Service. sumption of unspectacular author"Painters" in this agreeable cal "son of his father" Mr. Malston Churchill's insistence on the Hell! What a joke. He, .of-all | fore slipping it over his shoulders, i side her—timidly put her arm pastime are such things as fam- colm MacDonald, youthful SecreEvery noteworthy father in ity, performing the tasks of hisJewish ' right to - enter Palestine ily, the old school, a "blue" or atary of State for His Majesty's British political history, however, office with - an adequate regard "as a right and n o t on suffer- people, to land in a synagogue! j No, he couldn't refuse the little j through his. "God answered my prayer, Isreputation for college ragging. Colonies, successor of Joseph h a s within him the deep-seated for the conventions and without ance," allied with' a refusal to After the caricature the war had, old white-haired lady. 4 displaying any exceptional qualimade of him—one couldn't bej . Maelech—you ' have" come T h e n h e h e a r d t h e R a b w c a l ] r a e l Chamberlain and Winston Churgrant t h e full measure of that These; are certain indications of instinct of a hereditary principle, futurq political eminence. The chill, sired by Britain's recently the ambition to "pass on" t h e ties marking him as destined-to declaration?. Will he remember lieve that stuff _any more. T h a t | i n g o f f i n a s o f t > d r o n l n g T O i C e ' back at last!" former Etonian or Harrovian who departed "up and up and on and fruits that he himself has sown. go a great deal further' on-the Jewish, despair o n ' t h e occasion was all right for those who'd j the names of those who had And trembling with joy, he at home—those who did j passed on within the last year. half-followed and half-led bis litpulled a weighty oar in Oxford's on" Prime Minister. And so, it may be, MacDonald road to fame and power. of the White Paper, issued by* I tstayed he talkin his "father's"labor*Gov"er"nment, i ^ - The whole thing was i Benjamin^ son of Aaron, Hyinan, tle old mother towards their old or Cambridge's "eights" has In this particular case our par- Pere, anxious to introduce this But the whirligig of politics home—on into the soft fading thereby given ample evidence of lor game has a difficult subject. unorthodox principle into Social- with MacDonald pere at the cen- out-Churchilling Winston in t h e ! a j o k e o nh l m a n < 1 t h e r e s t o f t h e | Cohen, Levy—endlessly on went his political quality, and if, be-The absence of the public school ist dogma, steered MacDonald fils tre has seized this young.man'and threat • to: Jewish hopes in Palesthe names. Then a page of thelight. (Copyright. 1935. by Seven Arts sides,! he has chosen a father tradition is complicated by the into the paths which might lead borne him higher than the -proph- tine, or his father's Letter grudg- the s o n of Ramsey MacDonald, j big book was turned and a new Feature Syndicate) with ; ample party associations, mark cf Oxford where young Mac- to a passing on of a Crown of ets would have forecast for him. ingly softening the offence? Or who, in the days before the be-j list began—Israel Maelech, son of you. may safely prognosticate for Donald though prominent in theParty Sovereignty and eventually Maybe it is the balance.of-par-ties, will he.. strike out f o r himself, \ wilderments of high office ob-JGoetel and Gershon—whj-, that that son, at least an Under Secre- Union debates did not reach if of the diadem of leadership in the in the "National" Government with" the zeal and enthusiasm of j scured the clear path of his politi- ; couldn't be his Hebrew name, j Condemnation ca taryship for something or other. indeed he aspired to, the compar- House of Commons. concoction. Maybe it is the trib- .youth, to re-create a "Seventh | l judgment, saw, applauded and ' could it—lie had almost forgot- London — Fascism and Nazism Dominion" where Jewish patriot-1 S a v e his enthusiastic aid to the : ten that he had one. atively modest height of Treasute to his father's record in its If college eminence has made Youg Malcolm, according to in all their forms and the persethe young political aspirant Pres- urership. Nor did he pave the way this view, received his political brewing. Maybe it is his own ca- ism and British courage may kin-' accomplishment of Israel's true Suddenly, the little white- cution of the Jews in Germany identio'f his University Union, it to" his" future~eminence by muscu- training at the feet of his august pacity, discernible" only to'those die the light of a new civiliza- destiny in her ancient homeland : haired old lady lurched forward j were vigorously condemned by the of Zion. is a skfe bet that he will one day lar prowess among the University sire himself and in dutiful regard in the "inner ring"—one or oth- tion? in a fit of sobbing, "Oh, my son, annual congress of the British (Copyright. 1935, hy Srven' Arts be Prime Minister, If he Is un- boat crews. And he labored un- for fatherly counsel and ambition, er, or all, have carried Malcolm If he be so minded let him be jmy son, my son!" Trades Unions. Feature Syndicate)

A Short Story by BIANCA PEYSER STHGMAN

ona

By A. L. EASTERMAN

&&2e£s '

Needled by Master Hands A New Year . . . . another stitch in the fabric of time . . . is delicately woven into the ages by Master Hands. The threads of Israel's deathless history have been intertwined with the chronicle of the world, needled into a sensitive pattern by Master Hands blending moral and intellectual progress with an undying adherence to the principles of social justice, peace and good-will. The apparel at the Nebraska Clothing Company is needled by the master hands of the clothing marts <• - binding public confidence through incomparable values, lending our quality merchandise a prestige which is inseparable from fine reputation . . . . the distinction which attaches inevitably to good taste and discriminating selection. As Israel on the New Year rededicates itself to those tenets of faith which have survived the centuries, so toodoes the Nebraska Clothing Company reaffirm its policy of incomparable values . . . with the sincere wish that the months ahead bring to all, health, happiness and prosperity in brimming measure.

CORRECT APPAREL FOR MEN AND WOMEN UP

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New Year's Edition -THE JEWISH PRESS T Friday, September 27, 1935.

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ROSH HASHONAH, with its warming rays of Faith, brings with it the hope of a bright* er tomorrow* From behind the darkness of the clouds of yesterday there slowly comes the bright dawn of a new day-* a new year -- re* splendent with courage and accomplishment*-

I I "I I A

During the last period of economic upheaval, the H. A. Wolf Company, Inc. has not forgotten that the brightness of a new day was near*- The darkness of depression tried the souls of men and institutions - It was saddening to see many institutions and men swept away in the whirlpool of financial chaos. Those that remained have gained the strength borne •of .adversity, the courage t h a t conies from tribulation, the hope b o r n e to t h e v i c t o r 'in.-the -struggle of the survival of the fittest* TODAY ~ in the bright sunlight of the New Year we are better able to carry on our traditional p o l i c y of s e r v i c e , efficiency and reliability* Out of the storm have come visions of new hopes, vistas of new accomplishments* W e turn towards them striving always to fill /an even more useful place in the commercial life of this growing, progressive community*

i I |$ Sf.

I

CO*, INC. fth Floor, Brandeis Theatre Bldg.

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

M Volcanic Danger In Outmoded Laws By B. H. HARTOGENSIS (The following article by Mr. Hartogcnsls, a well known Baltimore [ attorney who has contribute^ to the Yale l a w Review, JSthe American Mercnry and other i leading publications, reveals the little known fact that there exists throughout the country in many states old antiquated - laws, not now enforced; which could easily be used for his purposes by a selfseeking dictator eager to launch ' a n anti-religious, race or Semi t i c ^campaign. Enumerating these f well-nigh buried legal antiquities, M r . Hartogcnsis suggests that steps should be taken fo remove them from the records.—-THE EDITOR.

tion, Statutory Laws and State Supreme Court decisions. The very purpose of Sabbath rest on the first day of the week as stated in many decisions, is not an economic one of periodic cessation from labor, but the distinct religious one "not to profane the name of the Saviour" "by unciville recreation thereon" in order thus to "foster and encourage Christianity."

Now in only 21 states of the union may regular religious observance of some other week day as Holy Time, be pleaded in defense of Sabbath Breaking. Yet Seventh Day Adventists and Baptists and Jews observe Saturday: Mohammedans, Friday; Confusionists, Wednesday. A few states With| the Hitlerite government (Oregon, California and perhaps of. das;jdritte Reich announcing District of Columbia) have no that only Nordics of pure German Sunday law for the keeping of blood are first class citizens and the generally observed rest day, have heritable blood, the question with arrest of any one disturbing arises-4do any of the states in the peace and quiet of a neighborthis free America similarly dis- hood and interfering with public qualifyiby law, any of its minori- worships as on any other week ties? "wjith painful regret, it must day. be asserted that there is h e r e Under the common law, trials such inequality before the law re- may not be had on Sabbath, a lics of-mediaevlism of the Colo- dies non juridicus. Yet not only nies. . : ; • • ; ' . ' : : '•. •• - are they frequently had on that Minorities m u s t a l w a y s exist i n day, but trials are forced on Jews any state, because of differences and Christians who have religious in sex, irace, nationality, color, re- scruples against such procedure. ligion find politics. As to the last, Thus at Philadelphia in 1793 a some modern, governments secure Jew was jailed for contempt of recognition for minorities by the 3ourt because he refused to come preferential b a l l o t , cumulative o Court and testify, a martyr to voting, [minority representation in conscience. In 1932, the Court of parliament,! etc., and certain Eur- Appeals of Maryland (Corchert's opean states, e. g. Poland to es- case) while affirming the law tablish the legal rights of some that trials could not be held on of these minorities by law, thus Sunday, yet upheld the verdict in creating a state within a state, a an automobile case because by practice generally regarded as ob- reason of the smallness of the noxious and against harmonious fine, an appeal was not allowed and plbasant interrelations. There by law from the committing magalways!has been class preferment istrate to the Circuit Court. Thus in countries where there is an of- it gave its latter day approval--to ficial ifnion of Church and State, a line of decisions oh a worn out blue law passed in 1723 to carry as in Great Britain. into effect the. aforesaid bloody The:ibest known of disqualified diet of Toleration (1649.)- The groups; in America are aliens. In Seventh Day Adventists report a many states, they cannot h e l d eries of persecutions which ocland. Moreover they are liable to curred forty years ago to a group be depbrteii. Indians (technically of their coreligionists near Fords -wards;of the nation) are restrict- Store (Maryland) .who felt they ed from certain rights by law. must literally carry out the words Negroes, as it is well known, are of the 4th Commandment.of.The not entirely emancipated as re- Decalogue viz; - "Six days shaft gards their civil rights. Japs and thou labor;" 1. e, work on the Yellow [peoples are discriminated first day after resting on the sevagainst by the immigration and nth. This caused a conscientious naturalization laws. Finally in observer to be sent to jail for many i states, a preference is sixty days in 1893 for refusing to shown t to those of the dominant :o on with the trial of his case Christian ; religion, in a manner after a vain appeal to the. New to give the lie to the preamble Testament as his authority; and of thii Declaration of Independ- in 19S2 a fellow-believer atjRockence, ithat all men a r e created ville, Maryland, suffered- a jail equaljl that is, a l l enjoy equal sentence confirmed by Court, bestanding before the law. cause under the Constitution an Because in some of the back- appeal could not be made for a ward 'states of the Union, mem-fine of less than $10.00. Instanbers of minority religious groups ces may be multiplied of similar and non-believers a r e denied persecution, in Tennessee, Arkanequal;! rights before the law, in sas and Kansas.

those tried now-a-days are mainly Communists. B u t many civil actions, are Interrupted by such laws and decisions of worth-while men, who are thereby held morally deficient. In early Massachusetts history, there is a group of decisions attacking Universalists, because they believe in no punishment hereafter. In early Maryland, until George Fox came in 1672, the Quakers, because they would not take the, oath of allegiance (or any other oaths) were driven from pillar to post, from constable to constable and excluded from the Province. In Georgia, in the Bunfele case, an* Orthodox Jew's belief in a hereafter was assailed; in Mas«cahusetts a test was had to allow inquiry into the religious belief of a Catholic; to the contrary in Vermont, it was held that such inquiry was n o t only against the Constitution but degrading to the individual. In Illinois, the statute was liberalized out of defererence to the unbelief of its attorney general, Robert C. Ingersoll. Wherefore many states following Virginia's early lead and extending it do not allow religious opinions or absence of belief to interfere with any civil right. Great Britain f o r a full century, despite t h e established Church, has allowed testimony of non-Conformists to be admitted. Over against this liberalism, the law. books are full of attacks on many kinds of religionists for alleged failure to measure up to the Common Law requirement of belief in a God of Vengeance; otherwise they a r e perpetui inimici, eternal enemies" and nondignus fide "unworthy of belief," infideles, therefore "infidels."

CIVIL MARRIAGE DISALLOWED West Virginia a n d Maryland are the only states where right to a civil marriage i3 denied; without consecration by the Church, such a marriage is illegal, t h e children illegitimate. Elsewhere religious sanctificatlon, does, frequently supplement the civil marriage while marriage by the Mayor is obligatory to all in some countries. A' member of Maryland's legislature said this deference to the Church Is required a': least on one solemn occasion in a man's life. With the result that though each of•these states arrogates to itself the exclusive right to divorce the marriages of its citizens even divorcees may not come to such state officials or; to the Court itself,'to be joined in a new marriage; because ministers of the divorce's Church refuse to solemnize it averring "which God hath joined let no man put "asunder." Defying the statutory law, therefore-many benefits as well as divorcees flee the state ( even at the risk of a penalty), preferring to have their marriages performed by others than clerics, Ministers accordance with blue laws which are not always outmoded, but fre- Less harsh, but not less provo- of the Gospel, Priests or Rabbis. quently put into painful effect— ative, are the cases of-legal enThe forcing of religion on citithere .does exist a menace, which forcement of laws against applymay, ;under an assumed dictator- ing a religious test of office. It is zens is not one of the sins of the ship (the order of the day) de-wrongfully thought by some that Hitlerites, but in America, it is a velop Into an American Hitlerism. this medieval practice was abol- kind of prescription which almost This [will follow religious preju- ished for all the states by the ex- everywhere produces the greatest dice of long standing and not be-press words of Article VI of the amount of hatred. An instance is cause "cells" to propagate that Federal Constitution. To the con- the contesting the right of t h e movement, have been*planted and trary it applies only to Federal of- Sisters of Charity In Oregon to parochial ficers. Yet: to this day in five conduct their o w n organized here and there. states, officers otherwise quali- schools. On the other hand readfied- may- not take the official ing of t h e New Testament with INEQtJAXJTY IN oath unless they express a belief Christian teachings and devotionOPERATION Since the Revolutionary War, n God or as in Maryland on the al exercises in taxpayers' schools there, haye not been repeated such faith of a Christian. More arrest- is frequent and usual. Christmas barbarities as the hanging of ing- is the fact that. in several and Easter exercises in the public witcnes, the threatening of a Jew states such disqualification for of- schools with prayers offensive at in Maryland with hanging for re- fice is by law made the basis of least to some taxpaying parents fusing to affirm the divinity of an attack on credibility of the is another exercise of the same the Saviour (1658) and the bor- witness in a Court trial; allowing effort to go out on the highways ing the tongue of a Christian at as in the Gastonia Mill riot cases and byways, and make souls for Baltimore County for denying-the the right to examine on that ac- Christ. Witness the effort to preChrist (1748). These last t w o count into the defendant witness' vent the teaching of Evolution in cased came up under the mis- religious beliefs, thus to sway the Tennessee. called "edict o£ Toleration," pre- prejudice and passions of the jury This zeal found expression in cisely "The Act concerning Re- hearing criminal charges. And in Juarez County, T e x a s (1925), Maryland, by a strange conflict ligion of 1G49," the principle of where .the Klu Kluxites required Fundamentalist which still holds in Maryland of law, only a decision of a higher .Court that law, | although the penalty . of Christians and Orthodox J e w s Catholics might n o t serve as "blasphemy" has been reduced to may hold office, the former on members of the Grand Jury. One six months In jail and f 100.00. the faith of a Christian," and the may be assured that if ever a There are similar Acts with pen- latter by- announcing their faith form of Hitlerism comes to Ameraltie^ on the statute books of six and then professing belief in a ica, those who try to proselytize states, and there have been" trials Supreme Being, under whose dis- will be its most active protagonthereof recently in Massachusetts pensation, they will be rewarded ists. of Prof. Horace M. Kallen and in and punished either in this world Maine of one Mocus. And t h e or in the world to come. Unbe- CIVIL RIGHTS DENIED BY leading case in t h e country is lievers and ' all other creedists NEIGHBORHOOD Kneeland's, wherein t h e Court alike are excluded. This kind of RESTRICTIONS held.' criminally blasphemous, a embargo is allowed because United The denial of Civil rights to publisher who in a learned dis- States Chief Justice Marshall In negroes principally in Southern cussion ' without irreverence said 1819 said the Constitutional re- states, the successful effort in the thatlthe "God of the Christians striction applied only to Federal Southland to keep them from vothas;: moral attributes. Nothing appointees; the States could in- ing, the enforcement of J i m morci than a chimera of their own dulge in such religious activity as Crowe Laws when travelling withthey pleased. imagination." in state lines, is another aspect of this proscription. Frequently IVHltRE CHRISTIANITY' IS UNBELIEVERS UNWORTHY when an effort to compel segreTHJB' STATE RELIGION OF BELIEF gation of negroes in cities is Apart from this is recognition The religious test of belief in a made, the -word J e w appears by tlie state of Christ as our "Sav- God (in Maryland, in a God who joined with negroes alike in proiour; and of the Resurrection to will avenge), applies in live states posed state laws and city ordicomlnemorate which t h e Lord's to disqualify witnesses from giv- nances. Of course, these a r e Dayy'the Christians' Sunday, was ing testimony in our Courts and unconstitutional ..deprivations "of established. This appears in Penn- in eleven others to allowing an Civil rights. ' But that does not sylvania, Maryland, Massachu- attack on the credibility of the prevent^ in effect, practical exclusetts] ' Vermont a n d elsewhere testimony of the unbeliever, which sion of negroes from white blocks withj appropriate penalties f o r on cross examination amounts in and t h e keeping of Jews, hownon-recognition threatened; en- practice to the exclusion of such ever respectable, vfrom t h e best . forcejable even though not regu- testimony; ajl resulting in appeal residential sections. Race and' relarly.t enforced. Again Christian- to the passions and prejudices of ligion are here hopelessly mixed; ity ifc recognized in many states the Jury. Usually this prescrip- t h e grandfather clause defining by Bills of Rights, the Constitu- tion applies in»«riminal cases; and registration in South Carolina re-

appears in Hitlerite Germany in laws excluding Jews from Civil service, e. g. as teachers, and in the inheritance (land) laws where it includes the French denounced as negroid. The taint of blood is thus passed down from the third generation, lest Nordic chivalry be affected. In America as elsewhere even in Germany, it has ever been the Jews, who fighting f o r social justice 'prescribed by their creed, have done most to stay off the unhappy result which threatens to overwhelm t h e m now. Here the burden falls to the American Civil Liberties Union fighting for Unbelievers and to Seventh Day Adventists champions of the principles of separating Church and State.

of their fathers. Lest they be accused of this heinous offense, many a one refuses to enroll in a movement to establish a refuge f o r their oppressed brethren of many lands, to establish a National Home as allowed in Palestine by the Balfour Declaration. Tel Aviv (WNS-Palcor Agency) As Nathan der Weise (Lessing) —In another eighteen months, an exhibition of Jewish newspapers said 150 years ago, "Thut nichts the world over in forty tongues, der Jude m u s s Verbrannt."— 1 tracing their beginning and de"Whatever he may do, the Jew ' velopment, will be held in this must be damned for it." all-Jewish city by Z. Pevsner, the If you want to learn how such learned janitor of the local Town worn out laws outlaw responsible Hall who has devoted a lifetime citizens consider the case of that to the w o r k of collecting such eminent literateur, H e n r y L. specimens. Mencken, known for his liberal He was responsible for the views. By the Constitution of the Press Section at the recent ExhiState of Maryland he cannot qualbition of Hebrew Art and Culture ify either as witness or Juror. In | and has received a Municipal effect in 1931 he was actually bei grant for the continuance of his cause of his regilious views, denI meritorious work. In a year and ied by 11 judges of the Supreme This healthy youngster is getting a thorough course in a half's time the 100th anniverBench, the privilege of serving as a member of the Grand Jury of manual training as well as a general education in one of the " sary of the birth of Joel Moses Solomon, one of the fathers of HeBaltimore City. Jewishsettlements in Palestine. brew journalism in Palestine who With such moral degradation, He is one of hundreds of German Jewish children who, ran a newspaper in the'50's of the the downfall of our civilization is unaccompanied by their parents, have been brought to Paleslast century. threatened and it becomes a mat- tine by the Jewish Agency for Palestine and its Central Bureau The exhibition planned for next ter of public concern. For it is for the settlement of German Jews. year will be named in his memdistinctly not a moot question ory. One of his grandsons. Haim that class hatred in America, Solomon, is a member of. t h e arising mainly from the "dislike | of law and aegis of some crazy i Pythian Head of the unlike" differs from pro- dictator, should be made forever ; Toronto—For the first time in Municipal Council of Jerusalem. scription in Chauvanistic Hitler- impossible by the passage of re- the history of the Knights of Pyite Germany; the difference is medial legislation because this is i thias in Ontario, a Jew, B u r t Art does not represent things one not of kind, but of degree; needed in many of the States of '• Freed, h a s been chosen grand falsely, but truly as they appear and its outbreak under authority the Union. I chancellor over 5,000 Pythians to mankind.—Ruskin.

COSTRUCTIVE REBUILDING

Thus it appears that in America, too, identification with t h e dominant Church, is a first requirement for a badge of citizenship. The t e s t of devotion to country is set aside for a chauvinistic appraisal of real Nordic blood. In vain did Schiller write that it is a poor ideal to write only for one national while Herder denounced as the completest fool, one who vainglories of his nationality. Yet Jews everywhere outdo their Catholic neighbors in refusal to allow even suggestion of divided allegiance to any other potentate or even a sentimental appeal of devotion to the land

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J ^ O S H Hashonah marks another chapter engraved onthe scrolls of time and another page inscribed by Hayden's in the book of friendships. Hayden's friendships, like Rosh Hashonah, live from year to year - - - because they are etched in the hearts of men. More than a mechanized mercantile establishment, Hayden's - - - a pioneer among local business firms — is a store with a personality seeking and strengthening mutual esteem. In serving our friends, we last year expanded and beautified our store, broadening the scope of our utility - - - adding inever-growing numbers to the Hayden book of friendships. For, though our policies may be rewritten to fit the changing pages of history, the principles of quality, value, efficiency and service have end u r e d — we have composed Hayden's future on the time-honored traditions of the past. As history unfolds itself in the days ahead, Hayden's will strive to deepen the warm friendships which make us a store with a living heart - - - with thehope that the new year will usher in an era of friendship and amity among all peoples, the index to happiness and prosperity.

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TRY HAYDEN'S FIRST ENTRANCES:

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DODGI£ AND DOUGLAS S T S .

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S3 New Year's Edition—THE

JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

and the object of cleverly stim- While not intended "as an a n t i ulated anti-Frennli feeling. T la e •Jewish measure, t h e r e d -badge government sent a t'ommission, "became practically a J e w i s h from Paris to iir. cstigr.te the sit-: badge, since most of t h e alien uatlou and report proper meas- raarketxrien ^vere Eastern Euroures to maintain ord^r. but the pean Jews. pn-.ti-n of the Jews, particularly One of the most important

eventful year for Ue'igian Jevrry. Jews of Eastern Europe and an Jewish-—-subjects who find in U. organisation of Eapiern European (he epitome of the tradition n~ Holland Aided Refuses Jews in Holland is now raising liberty anrl freedom f 0 r vrlii^T; The same can b e reported of funds for the assistance of their Holland has stood for 1=0 msr.; Holland 'where refnsree w o r k w a s brethren. generations. the chief Jewish activity t h r o u g h Economic and currency dif?vAmong the many signs of inout t-h e year. The Netherlands creased Jewish activities in the culties JncresRod the cost of livGovernment, u n d e r high-niinded, Netherlands were t h e increased ing in the Netherlands, while ihfi n A l g e r i a , r e m a i n s c o n e t o oc o m - ; e T e n t s o f t h e y e a r w a s t h e o p e n - f o r t h r i g h t Q r o e n AVil helm in a, 1o rtable. """'" " ing of the Brussels Exposition and .E_U p_p o r ted and' aided t h e w o r k of vole in the Zionist elections, world-widp depression continuef; the reception given Maurice to have an adverse effect on thr Tiny Belgium, with a Jewish — f o r t h e j € T r s — t h e Palestine population of about 70,000, man- ; p a v i y o n . M a yor Max, the burgo- ; r e h a b i l i t a t i n g refugees from Gcr- Rcltvartz's Yiddish Art Troupe Amsterdam diamond i n 6. 11 s f r y many a n d m a d e possible n i e mag- (although the Yiddish-speaking with which many Jews are confully coped with an overwhelm-: master of Brussels made famous :•,.;«„„_* 7,,TJP_ Zce train ing en- •population of Amsterdam is very nected. T h e s e conditions, :>"•' ing refugee problem and refugee .b y h i s c o l l r a g e , i n the Xace cf t h e - . I ! . - - 1 , . - . . nriall) anil the new stress laid on course, were reflected in the Uff. committees in Antwerp and Brus- invading German armies in 1914, al) matters pertaining to Jewish of the Jewish community pin; sels worked heroically to assist formally opened the pavilion "with l e a r n _ r k r i l n , r e „ n rt f l - i r P ort the refugees from t h e Third culture. This strong and well-or- greatly increased its burdens. Reich. A cabinet commission, rep- a glowing tribute to the Jews. ! themselves 'while to cloir.ir. Tim cani-cd community gained furThe Jews of Holland, as do '•!<(-. Belgian Jewry suffered a se- : project has engaged the intcrr'-r ther Etrcng-th during the years. The author of this article was a qualifying phrase added to [ -who would destroy our American ; resenting t h e government,- apJC-.VL- in Belgium, and in Franc.'!. vere loss in the death of Joseph was last 'week awarded t h e the above precept, "except t h e idealism through the dissemina- j proved many measures facilitat17-n'ch Nn.zi Movement. of all section? of Dutrli Jewry. look toward ECPfi wiLh iemppr^.'i. May, brother of the Icge Belgian American Good "Will Plaque for JewB, the Hindus and the Mos- ] tion of. propaganda or create in ing the assistance -work. ortimism. They know that th*!v which, under t h e ler.clcn-liip Ov.^ of the developments of tlie Minister to the United States, and'Senator S. Van den 5605 by majority vote of'-.the lems." | the minds'of any of us hostility countries—s n d thereforp they As in France, the economic sit- president or t h e Consistoire Isyear VB? tlie purpri.^irig dcvclop. generously supported -t with aseditors of the American-Jewish I like to recall an incident j and hatred because of racial or uation complicated the problem. have a long and 'afficuli. row tt; rnriit of t h e Dutch Nazi movcraeli'e of Belgium, who died at ' sistance from the international publications affiliated with tlie that happened at the Chicago Bull j religious views. , hoe in thp next twelve months, Faced with a perplexing unem- the age of-65. M. May for many r^enf. a direct oCf-spriric: of the •agencies. Seven Arts-Worldwide Syndi- i-Moose convention in 1912, The i Let us all re-dedicate ourselves but they believe the worst is Tl"-^; situation, the German orirrir.a!. The Eutch Nazi yeai« ! 1 I The Dutch Government also perr* ' rnaflp a stronpr p'hov.'lnp: in or passing: and that gradual Siifcate. Governor Hoffman owes panaemonlum that broke loose at to those cherished principles of jment was not to increase •• took the itiiviative in ar-sU"'!in.r iiio rrovinciBl PiPt electinns clue provement of peneral conuit ions his selection as the ward win- the completion of the party slatt [ liberty, "which, since the adoption it, and refugees found it difficult, ner to his consistent advocacy | shattered all records for enthus- [0£ t h e Declaration of Independ- if not impossible, to get permits h i s death deprived Jewry of a pEssportlerE rcfu.-oes cut of their clifcfiv to clir^atisfactinr! over tIn? will be reflected in their livt*p. leader at a time when one could nerve-racking ail e mm a by proand championing of all efforts i iasm. And when the band started j ence and the Constitution, have to work. economic state of affairs. Leaders iCcryi^ht, IPor.. Jewish Tel^e-rap'il.-ill be spared. Acenry, inc.) i viding for the issuance of special of the parly made violent attacks for better understanding be- j playing "Onward Christian Sol- j D e e n regarded as the sacred herXationalists Active in Prance Aside from the refugee prob- passports to those deprived cf up0:1 the Jews to which, it may tween all the religions and Ldiers," who was it at the head of > itage of the American people. Let The nationalist movement, felt racial groups in this country. the happy, delirions throng that ju s follow out to a worthy conclu-1 i n every country of Europe, did lem, Belgian Jewry did not have citizenship in Germany who have ' be said with pricle, the Jews re- Illegal Stamp His signing of the Xew Jersey marched up and down the aisles? | s ion the noble experiment started not pass over Belgium where it a difficult year excepting, of resided in Holland for a certair, plipd boldly in full measure. Toronto—The Canadicm law prohibiting incitement to JCo one else but the late Oscar ; j n 1776 -when our forefathers, i took the shape of restrictions course, for the economic situation ' i ; "S'n of time. By (hi? mearsp. ifh Congress IIP.F called tl On several occasions the Jews racial anil religious prejudice Straus. And the gentle kidding j seeing that our government should I against aliens engaged in busi- 'from which it suffered equally many refugees a r c given an op- were gratified by the displeasure tcntion of the TlariK of c was the first legal barrier put and bantering that Straus had to ! e n d u r e as a common unit with the jn e s s — m a n y of whom had been in ! with the rest of the population. r o r t n n i t y to refulnrize t ! r : r rxvt- Queen Willumiina and tlie royal to toe action of Poroininri up in the United States against family showed toward the attacks agents who are Ptampinp: >'azi propaganda. This article, bank notes with swastikas. on their Jewish subjects. especially written for The JewThe Queen's unequivocal stand ish Press, is a declaration of A woman's thought runs for tolerance and justice has even public and personal viewpoints! e r a s neighbors in t h e mutual I g i a n citizens to wear a distinctive j did not suffer from it as Jsazi ef- ings for settlement. Governor Hoffman's attitude , . . . .. .. , ; pursuit of happiness, each con- red badge distinguishing them ! forts to sow unrest fell on barren \ T 3 l e Jev.-s of t h e Netherlands further endeared her to her Jew- her actions.—Shakespeare: toward intolerance a n d preju- toward racml relationships h a s , f r J b n t i n g i n l a * g e o r s m a l l m e a s . from their Belgian competitors. ; ground. On t h e whole, an un-' also took many steps to aid the ish—and the majority of her.non- L. I. dice.—THE EDITOR. more than repaid m e in the thou-. u r e i n t h e upbuilding of t h i s sands of warm a n d undying: m j g i i t y n a t i o n , t h e "blessed land j friendships that have come to me. jo f r o o ' m e n o u g h . " In this modern day, a day in I hope that I shall always have (Copyright. 1935. by Seven Arts -which civilization^ and Progress jt h e c o u r a g e t o s t a n a against those Feature Syndicate) are supposed to elevate us from t h e slough of primitive provincialism, it .is abhorrent to gaze across the "Atlantic and see the evidences of intolerance gripping countries whose culture has been profound. Prejudice of this kind, conceived in ignorance and bigotry, is entirely out of line with the inherent American spirit of fair play. In this mighty nation, founded upon freedom and reared to great- j ness through the gifts in brains, I in brawn, and in blood of. all the ! The year 5695 has not been an j stand and has not given any inpeoples of the world, no prejudice < eventful one fOT the Jews in: dications that it would develop is more unworthy of America' France, neighboring Belgium and i one. Its leaders, indeed, h a v e than one based upon race and re- Holland, but neither has it been ; gone to some trouble to refute ligion. Study the making of Amer- an uneventful period. Carried j the charge frequently made by ica and you will find that from problems \ their opponents. For the present. its beginning this country h a s been destined to become the crad- and situations arising in 5G94 to |. there is no danger to the Jews require attention a n d action in from the organization, but, with le of better understanding among * _ such movements, therp is always 5695. people. the possibility that the Jewish Chief of these was, of course, O u r nation, Is d'stxnguished d Hospitable issue may be raised for lack of a from others g p r a nance c e r e cee i i t M largest influx j better war-cry, to capture popued on those rights and terror j lar support against a new."menre£ugees from t h e Nazi denied the citizens o^other^na- ^ ^ f i r s t g r e a t ^ - a v e o f f l i g n t a c e . " tions. Many of those from the Third Reich and. many Communal Life Strengthened on our shores and implanted here thousands since • then. The many With Paris now the real center the finest of American traditions aspects of t h e refugee problem, of Jewish life on the Continent, fled from religious and economic ranging from temporary relief to j with most of the major internapersecution. Accordingly, the permanent settlement of t b. e I tional Jewish organizations havframers of our State and Federal homeless occupied—-m^ch iatten—j-nrg—-their headquarters there, ~lt " Constitutions-wrote into our laws tion. But this problem, of course, j would only be natural that there "the words "religious freedom." is not that of ' French : Jewry • should result a strengthening of And declaring that "all men are alone^—no more than; it is that of | Jewish communal life in t h e created free and equal," the obFrance's alone. It is an interna- j country.... vious purpose was to obtain setional problem requiring an inter-j This Jias been one of the develcurity and tolerance for the minnational, consolidated approach. opments of 5695. In France there orities. . Some 9,000 Jewish refugees [ has "been a quickening ol interests As the chief executive officer from Germany remain in France, in things Jewish and the chasm of one of these original thirteen A good proportion of them a r e between the old French, Jewry colonies, I would be derelict in dependent on relief. They consti-'and the. comparatively new Eastmy performance of duty retute not only a relief problem but \ em European settlers, has been creant to my oath of office if I an economic and political prob- • narrowed, and both groups have 1SreS Aside from that, myjleni as well. The world-wide de-j united to form a central body to principles. time I pression struck France very late,! combat Hitlerism and prosecute have personal convictions and again been expressed publicly [but with especial severity. Today, | an anti-German boycott This quickening of interest in when I s a i d that "there is no while the other nations of t h e ] world are beginning to see t h e | things Jewish was manifested also room in America for any person group who would incite class j light of economic recovery, France in the Zionist movement "which hatred or foment religious preju-! is still in the darkest period of this year succeeded in enrolling Another New Year is here, and another old year Is added to the length ©I years that • •I depression. This, of course, has a greater number in t i e world dice." In my private and personal re- j had an adverse effect on the refu- Zionist congress elections- than stretch endless back to the beginning. Years that have been fat, and years that have ever before. lationships with neighbors and • gees. been lean. Years of Joy, and years of sorrow. Reward aad piraisfeaiesit have been fellow-citizens who are of Hebraic i Sympathy Changed to Fear Rothschild, Dreyfns Dead extraction, I have always enjoyed | The original sympathy of the French Jewry—-indeed, world served out, and over it all God watches without ceasing, nc-r is His hand shortened. His the friendliest concord. As city French people for the victims of Jewry—suffered severe loss in word is established, "While the earth rema:iseth, seed fee and harvest, and cold and treasurer and mayor of my native intolerance has turned into fear the death of Baron Edmond de town of South Amboy,. New Jer-jthat these refugees may take j Rothschild, and his 'wife, Baronheat, and summer and winter, and day and night SIIEII mi cesoe." So the years come,, with sey, daily contact with Jews has | bread out of t h e mouths of; e s s Adelaide de Rothschild, who taught me t h a t race, color or 1 Frenchmen. A nationalistic -wave ! survived him by only a their seasons in succession, and New Year's day brings wiili Its obligations and duties, its _ . Rothschild, ._, creed is never as important as the has been experienced in France,: months. Baron de promise of opportunity and achievement. individual man. There are many one result of which has been fear j whose Palestine activities began men in public life who seem to that the country will be over-run; E 0 m a n y years ago as to make "And I will make of thee a great nation and I will b!ess ihee, srA make thy name great," said have the words "irrespective of with refugees and another, t h e ] him almost a legendary figure race, color or creed" eternally on tightening of restrictions on gain- j within his lifetime,-was one of the God to Abram, when He bade Mm get out of the land in which he was born. It was a promise I chief supporters of French Jewtheir lips, but seldom are those ful labor by aliens. sentiments in their hearts aa n d The refugees in France, as a j jg^ philanthropic activities, d that has been fulfilled. No other race of men cap, look cv£? tlie centuries as do the Children of minds. •-.'•• result, have had not a pleasant Echoes of the world-famons Abram, whose name God changed to Abraham, as Ee did that of Jacob, to Israel, to denote the I have tried to the best of my year. Funds available for their Dreyfus affair, which split a i n assistance dwindled, possibilities j d i d l d ibili ability to regard my fellow man into two bitter camps and •greater favor of Jehovah. Throughout the centuries, en even7- page ef history, sacred ©r proas one whose rights and interests for their emigration overseas did furnished a world with grounds fane, are found the names of these Children of Israel, who spring from Abram? fulfilling the prodeserved the same consideration not.materialize to any appreciable for n o less calm argument were and protection as my own. The extent. They could not work in j heard again in Paris in July when mise made him, that he would be the head of a great satioa. question of anti-Semitism is usu-; France, many of them were har- Col. Alfred Dreyfus, protagonist ally based on a low order of in-J assed by the police for overstay- in the world's most eventful trial, • Spread over the earth, lodged In homes that are far from the City cf the iGag? is i&nds widely retelligence, and usually, it reveals ing their leave- -although t h e y died at t h e age of 73 after a long the country beillness. H i s death, curiously moved from the land that was given to Abraham, this ancient Eatiea reveres its Fathers, rejoices ii itself in some reference to Shy- could n o t leave locfc. Shylock no more represents caitse no other land would per- enough, came on a day w h its records5and looks ahead with confidence IQ the years that are yet to C0ir«e in G©d's bounty to the the Jewish race than d o e s Sir mit them' entrance. . Frenchmen walked softly a n d Giles Overroach in Massinger's "A j talked with bated breath as they fulfilment of His plan. And should the nation that withstood the oppression of the Pharaohs, that surPlan to Aid Refugees New Way to Pay Old Debts," sigAa 5695 drew to an end, h o w - 1 a w a i t e d a Bastille Day the world vived the ravages of the Assyrians, that lived after TItcs, that lias patiently borne tlie afflictions of fanatinify the Gentiles. _ _ ever, a more sympathetic attitude j thought would witness a reviva" of b l o o d I have always wondered why j was* noted" in".~French official cir-j y conflict between t h e cism through years of persecution and ostracism, Hindi v;lben ccnfrcEied by the madness ef new persecO'my Jewish friends do not coun-i cles and the new Minister f o r [ Political Right and Left.. Col. tors? Let the Jew read the history of his own people, and note the inevitable late el the oppressor and teract the Shylockian caricature j Labor, M. Eroissard, approached i °reyfus ,w a s buried on Bastille by a wider distribution of such j the problem from a humane andiDay, secretly,-lest rowdy demon • consider the glorious honors that cluster around the names of philosophers, poets, historians, statesmen, stories as "The Menorah" and common-sense viewpoint. He had I stations mar the services. And ovr law givers, scientists, men of action, the race has given to the werM through the centuries. France awaits with impa"Zelig," both written by Benjam- under consideration a plan to give i * in Rosenblatt. These two stories recognition to political refugees t i e n c e Publication of the memoirs which Col. Dreyfus is known to give a most wholesome delinea- whose starts as such w a s conOn this New Year the Jew may proudly Ift Ms head in a land of liberty, to tlie upbuilding of which he has tion of Jewish character. They firmed, and give theia permission i have written, seeking in them the s o l l l t i ( m t 0 tlle so definitely and extensively contributed. His heart mill years with compassion for his kindred, wh© feel the counteract the voluminous litera- to work in France. While this j enigma which th ture of centuries that depicts the would undoubtedly be injustice of man, knowing that the faith which-has sustained them through the ages ©I injustice will give them great then Captain Dreyfus was to the Jew as only a mad devotee of bspn to the refugees, it would not wortd during t h e years of hi strength to endure. And this yearning wii add to Ms gratitude for what he esjoys, and tinge with soft radiance money. The struggles of Lea to solve their problem in entirety. tribulation^, and steadfastly rekeep the Menorah, her love for That remains a challenge not only fused to disclose in the long year, the pride he feels in his new homeland, a land of -opportunity, whose life is boUded on the foundation of equalher ancestors and the traditions to French Jewry, but to the Jews following his viiidhation. ity and freedom under God. oE her race and religion m a t e of the world—and not only to the TUots in French Colonies this one of the finest short stories Jews, but to the nations of the If, in; France, the Jews had a of all times. world. comparatively easy year, the same In my own Gentile training I Unsettled conditions in France, cannot be said of the French have never heard one sermon politically and economically re- North African possessions. T h from my church pulpit which sulted in the rapid growth of a bloody riots of last year were rewould stir up racial or religious Fascist movement, the strength of peated in Algeria again, but on a hatred, and I think this the true which is yet to be tried. T h e lesser scale, as Arab nationalist concept of Christianity.. For if it Croix de Feu, a well-financed, agiti.tors and German Nazi agent) is taught ns continually from the well-organized and well-armed or- tried to incite the populatio pulpit to "love our neighbor as ganization with about 250,000 against the Jews. In a dozen in ourself," wouldn't it be a diffi- members, mainly w a r veterans, stances durnig 5695, J e w s i cult doctrine to absorb if there has not taken an anti-Jewish. North-Africa were the scapegoats

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By HAROLD HOFFMAN, Governor of the State of New Jersey

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By MORRIS WOOD

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Five Thousand Six Hundred Ninety-Six

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935 I Czaristic regime must still be : closely watched a n d punished. While the number or outstanding Jewish Communist leaders in j Soviet ]''kraine has demonstrated its sta-' Russia has not increased it has

Noted Committee to Aid Palestine Fair

oys

dve Shows Gain in Saar

nature O u t s t a n d i n g a m o n g ; C o m m i t t e e a n n o u n c e " l a s t y e a i i n o u a r i i e r i u <iF w . , , . — . . . . . . . - ~ Saarhruecken (;TTA\ T h e a c t i v i t i e s w h i c h w i l l h a v e a ; t h a t a g r e a t m a j o r i t y o f t h e J e w - t h e U . S . S . R . C o m m i s s a r s -;> - a n t i - J e w i . h c r , v e i s g a m i n g ; m o from London e f f e c t o n t h e c o m p l e t e i s h s e t t l e r s w e r e i n a p o s i t i o n t o j v i n o v a n d K a g a n o n c h a r c - s . m .m e n t u m i n t h e S a a r t e r r i t o r y , a n iroill IJUIIUUU that LUU.L the tuu Federated r c u c u i c uj e t ' " T ' " ' " i-• e y of t h e district British Industries, outstanding orBritish Industries, outstanding or-!p c n v e r effect on t h e complete . ish settlers were in a position t-o j 'v i n o v - a-n a i\iis««u' '*^ •"" "••i•i c u m-•, -m ,.,.<.-k; Jewish Telegraphic ganization of English business rehabilitation of tho Jews in the . pay back financial advances, made : regarded as only next to Stalin in intensi.e survev will participate actively in t h e U "S " ^ ' R "T v e r e t h e undaunted ' to them since 1926 a n d t h a t t h e authority. T h e Soviet Union, i, ya S p C cial .Tcu n d e n t r e v e a l s . •ward drive drive of OI t m Kovenimeni. Soviet ouwci uu.tiuiii="i "« -=> - - -friendly terms , _. - - corres'poi . Fair, which will be held in A.pril • forward hee government Government h a-d agreed while- still on with Agency

__... o h posters a r e being - - - - - ' • •>:•i "n ..omection ^ntiriprtinTi with v.-itb the flip, upbuilding unbuilding n n o tt to t oaccept accept reimbursement reimbursement lor for; Germany, Germany,from ha as s curtailed curtailed its.• i t sP™-• p u r - . Anti-Jewish Anti-Jewish pc 1936. The Federated British In- i ™ / ™ ' B l d i _ _ government funds invested in t h e nchases. t h e Reich and hasp u tu p throughout ' h o territory. o t recalled , not i t s Jewish a n i l i a s s a . bearinghe e inscription, inscription. 0 1 L > u i i l u a > | g i p n s ciustries announced tu hi e e appoint' J e w:e .l l colonies •_ _ * — recalled i t=s .Tpw-ish jewis.ii ambassa;j;i:uu>oa- c-;~.,~ s j , r n s .,„„,.;„. bearingtth dustries announced appoint-'- J " ." . ^ ^ I i^^i 4t ;*

ment of a committee to stimulate Close t o To,000 000 rubles have ••••_ _• . . J e v - S E1.on o tp o l . n l i U e d t 0 e n . t e ' dor to Berlin although unofficial in t o, I t is t o note pressure was 0exercised .a do s o . ' ter" ..„ p.pprr.r „„ ' „.,_ .leading „.,. Vpr.isp.d i n tt h nA e fair t a i r which w n i c n will w i n , been u-.--v.-n appropriated u n i n u i i i m i ^ by .,.. Moscow .,*v,^v, .„ ... also interesting on the roads It is esf.ii-iated t-hha t 100 -proling congestion i n . the cities. Not reform whereby green fields and , comprise Malcolm MacDonald, Co-1 prepare t h o Jewish territory in that Polish Jewry is becoming — to many towns and villages, The year 5695 was a peaceful i- feysional nifl scientific German M n n y f o l T l m , m U ; o s have posted lands will be assigned t o iJ o n i a l secretary, Walter Runci- ! th s F a r East for settlers a n d i n - ! more an.1 more interested in coland blessed one for Palestine. a finger is lifted t o enable t h o forest the land-hungry Jews. Jews. Internal Internal m a n > president of t h e British j dustrial pioneers. I n accordance I .'inization. possibilities in t h e So-refugees have found positions in signs reading " J c s a r e ot tolt o settle on t h e land or t o t h e land-hungry Jews to on the to Jews who had been in the counBoard„ of Trade, a n d David John | with o-nvnv-nrnpntnl governmental nlprl-rps pledges aan | v;et U Union. There is no ciouot " • ' " ' . ' ' " " " « . ~ -„ ,-pressure, will the nGov_.=„ also _ , _ _ force * „ „ „ „ tVka r,v.i _„ m - . j . • _ _ j T ^ . , . - . , T » I . _ I ^ . U T I nlv;et nion. There is n o doubt hpre." try for some time and Arabs as aid them in the development of ernment to Colville, noted British industrial- autonomous administration head- '• that with the constant progress of > Knssia. Besides t h a t many o£ t herated e revise its present inTho anti-Jewish boycott in t h e "well, amassed considerable profits vast agricultural belts in the ist, .who was formerly Under-Secj ecl by a J e w was inducted into of-;.Jewish colonization in Soviet It us-; intellectual jrelugees such a s Dr. dustrial policy in favor of Jewish field. .too. is obeing during the year. The Government south and north and east, where In answer j s-ia foreign Jews, strangled econ- j Friedich Wolf.^ dramatist, a n d Ubusiness UE.mcp>. ueKl 0 0 ]s emf? enterprise. Then, say these op- retary of t h e Department of Ov- • fici» in Biro Bidjan. made out ;eyen better than did its jso much barreness now prevails, -Trade in 1 9 3 1 . I to appeals by Jewish leaders in ' cmically in their respective conn-1 Piscator, t h e director, have been p r e c K 0 c l vi«,ol.out:1> a n d n u r n o r o u ! , timists, the time will have come Arsons erseas Trade in 1931. private citizens. Some 60,000 j One can travel here l o r hours for a strong and resolute Jewish America and in Europe the Stalin tries, will f.nd a way out through j received with open arms and giv- , } . bljt;1,n . . f tq Jews entered the country during j-without sign ot a Jewish s^ttle- political move, based on the con- The active participation o Brit- Au their '•c::iir - - ' - - to *- the *•.._ Soviet C,.-J,,» 17nion.|« !•„<„„ ! cn opportunities opportunities to to continue continue thentheir r J ,tto ' shut , ',, - ,doors. i"-->«6 a industrialists is a recognition ' s u v w . u . ^ , , . ,.„„ work. has..,.,,..„.approved political move, u w u UM mc Vv.^- lish _ s n muustriaiisLB is a. I W U S U I L I U Ugovernment t the period under consideration, ment or even an'-Arab village^. In .SanrlmiFckr-n proper, nntilittle w a sheard about Jewish posters havr bpon pasted Many brought with them considThe Arab is no longer anxious stantly growing pressure of the o f the. strategic role that Pales-* plan to transport a limited mini- The Jewish sitinlinn in the ._ jt i n e has begun to play in t h e her of foreign Jews to Biro Bid-'viet .Union Las definitely improv-! Very,, little w a s -heard erable capital, and all were im- t 0 sell his land. Nor does he need Jewish masses in the country. , ( 1 ab< . ., u p in front of theu main svnaSuch optimists are to be^ found Iw o r l d t r . a de market and is regard-'! jan provided these Jews are pre- ert. The number of declassed Zionist bued with; the desire to work and ]t o sell it. He is simply a t a loss r e n e r a l l yI. executions recognizedbecause that tit h e earn a living. The legendary Horn iaa ss tt oo what to do with his accu- not only among Jewish politicoes, ,,e ( j a sa na u g u r y o f the success of pared to engage in strenuous pi- Jews has been reduced about Zionist n.uvemeiit a s such h a s <=°=UG> w h a oneer work. eer work. per cent ;-;of Plenty^; overflowed -with boun- mulated capital. Not so long ago, but also among o u r economists ] the Levant Fair. '' " ' * and financiers, although the »*„ As a whole t h e B i r o Bid.ian., Bidjan. J e w s . h a v e adjusted '.hemselves [ ceased t.r inby the U. S. S. R. New York — The national con- -• . <• >lati 1 i - ler.ist. i . l!t"">. Snvpn Arts tiful: prosperity for t h e whole it was almost a certainty that vast ter are fewer and ] ventiou of t h e National Jewish more reserved. project is looming as one of the and have round avenues of. liveFeature Syndicate) country. *r I Labor Committee will be held r t stretches of mountain slopes capRegardless of who is right— Czech Population _r_. most ambitious undertakings for lPuood in the various trades, in: Optimists a and pessimists alike ! the Central Plnxa Now York, on oft cultivation 'wouiu -would ppuaososi Optimists n d pessimists alilce jj able o _ . — _: The . Praha latest census fig-: the settlement of a large number dustrics end government offices. The imagination is t h e secret October 27th. T h e convention will agree t h a t this w a s a. y e a r of readily into J e w i s h h a n d s . Today, j o n e t n i n S i s c e r t a i n : should t h e p r a h a —: T h e l a t e s t census fig- t h e s e t t l e m e n t of a large n u m b e r d u s t r i e s e n d g o v e r n m e n t ottices. g r o w t h a n d development. N o t however, t h e A r a b s realize t h a t L s a m e process a s i n t h e last t w o |u r e s released h e r e disclose t h a t ; of J e w s i n a n a u t o n o m o u s tcrri- : Ar.ti-Seni'tism h a s been effective^ and m a r r o w of civilization. I t is h e t h e fiist since t h e Committee only t h e J e w s benefited by i t , b u t 1 these b a r r e n a n d rocky hill-Sides |y e a r s continue u n r e t a r d e d for a n - o [ 350,000 J e w s listed a s living in lory whicn promises economic in- '• ly stopped. Only a few m i n o r in- a n d m a r r o w of civilization. I t is lie ' b e fiist since t h e Committee ' *•' a " •n• "d"IiCzechoslovakia, CzeciiosiovaKia, za*,(vy mtLhi e . i s h, „j,cidents d u r i n gw t. h. e year . i c n.i.u.»-. .. • Arabs! . :.:-: x - - and — A perhaps —«i,n»,o even » , . O njU |should other t h r e e y e a r s a t least, 294.779 ggaavTee; d ue ep pe en udjecnucree in future. J« ew served t h e very eye of f a i t h . — H e n r y . v.-p.s founji d n o t quite two years the too, are potential fnld-Tninps. gold-mines. m nntcmtini endeavor j their nationality as JewishI c-olonizaticn ia Crimea and t h e notica that some vestiges of the i Ward Beecher. a greater extent, enjoyed thej . A t a time like this, when the gain measure *,","" . ~ . .. ' . -, - , s a i n at a t least leusi a u. moderate u i u u m a i c -uj^ti.= uA^ year's bounties. The present ali- yish-ub is up to Its ears in-daily J Government, yah (immigration) has carried economic problems and is far re-j then a g basis £ o r prosperity into the most remote moved from political or national' ish National Home in Palestine corners o£ the country. considerations, t h e Government •will, have come into being. The sum total of Jewish econ- has manifested its desire to es- In contrast with t h e catasomy in the country has yet to bejtablish the proposed legislative trophe of Jewish life in a large expertly analyzed. Side by side • council. It found this moment and important sector of Europe, with the gains there are also cer-!most propitious to present the this year; in Palestine was one of tain losses. The balance sheet of mighty Arab majority with a par-good fortune and many blessings. the Arabs, however, and also that | liamentary tribunal which may, The good fortune and blessings of the Government, reveal most and undoubted will, lead to dan-of the Zionist program in the next positive results. Both have accu- gerous political and nationalistic few years, however, is dependent m u l a t e d considerable capitals, friction in the country. largely on how Jews interpret the Both have s e t aside impressive There are certain optimists in terms of the Mandate, a n d t o reserves for lean years to come. the country who maintain t h a - t j w h a t extent we ^approach"the r e •The Jewigh catastrophe in Ger-this calamity may be put off for ja l i z a t i o n o £Z i o n i s m i n Palestine, many, and the condition! uia,u>, auu metterrible v-,x.— ~. .,another Meanwhile, t h r year. year Meanwhile they they) Th t t of f the t h Jewish J i adh d The extent of Jewry in Austria and Central j contend, the Jewish population in in the p a s t Europe, have both impelled such: the country will have been inand not

By M. A. TENENBLATT .

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towards Palestine, that even the Government will be confronted j v a n c e i however,, must be evaluinternecine strife between t h e with am mass of over 400,000 J e w s ! a t e d by a purely'zionist standard, with a , two leading parties in Palestine in t h e country And this mass of r A b l t m asure a n d value are are measure and in the country. And this mass of r h a d to be abruptly suspended, j j e W 3 -^m i,e able to ward off roron the next few I •Willing it or not, Zionist-Social-: > e v e r the establishment of an Arab (Copyright, 19S3, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) ism and Revisionism had to strike,[parliament in Palestine, up a truce. Goodness knows, whatj rj-^pg i s a l s o a no p i n ion among tribulations the entire Jewish. them, that sooner or later the in- No thought is beautiful which Community lived through after jt e r n a i pressure of t h e landless is not just, and no thought can the Arlosoroff murder trial. Un-j J e w i s l l m a s s e s w n i force the Gov- be just.which is not founded on derstanding, a cense of justice,! t i n s t } t ' u t e a n a g r a r l a n [truth.—Addison: The Spectator, good-will could have j ._ [ forestalled the internal crisis that hung over the community. Only the irresistible impact of m a s s ] immigration of Jews, with all of Its accompanying problems a n d ! potentialities; served to bring1 peace and trancruility. At such a time, t h e unexpected agreement between Jabotinsky and Ben-GurOne of the paradoxical conse-jtime the plebiscite rolls around ion was doubly /welcomed by thequences of these troubled times | later in the year, unless unforCommunity. .... _ , has been the reversal of the ,tra- \ seen developments occur, the Jewin• *ta*h2: e ! Later \\ i; developments .«* ditional 'Jewish attitude towards 1 ish population, or a majo/ity of country were of such magnitude;\ ioTJas o £ government in at least' it, will cast ballots in favor of that it no longer mattered what 1t w Q E u r o p e a I 1 countries. From j the restoration. u wQ E u o p a TO to OU ,/ttctpact. l alTSe° v e r ! t i me en . cimmemorial, the Jew, have I n a I 1 t h e B r i t i s h Empire, the peace . The- struggle, o^rer o n s i d e r e d i u the forefront Crown h i s Ve than ^ l u p p o n e . s than5, ^..e w s f, S1 union movements lost its 5«in-; . Y the T-. 1 f . , , raenls leL. t n f i _ v »_ W i h t ioaa>, in vihrant >, ia, t n e , England. No one who witnessed JeW3 a r e and so placed that t h e y jt h e j u b i i e e celebrations and the with o f . . o l e p l a y e d i n them by the Jews, would w e l c o m e a restOration The practical economic strut,-1 the Hapsburg dynasty, and ana in.j in; cc aa nn truthfully controvert this, -jthe Hapsburg dynasty, truthfully controvert this gle between the two unions h a d , G r e e c e > t h e Jewish population,! h King George V Jubilee ForT 0 l t i ! h J i h also lost its real basis. "What is (disturbed and perplexed by t h e je s t p r o ject is equally an expresthe ^ , „ . „ „ , , political ^ . . the sense sense of of fighting fighting and and calling calling t^rta,^pwidly revolving wheel;,ssl l o n o f this esteem as it is a fine strikes in factories or i n c o l o n i e s , o n W hich they rotate dizzily, a r e L C D e m e t o aid t h e work of Pales-}, to determine whether a Socialist 1 i j e g j n n ! n g t o look fondly on a \ t i n e upbuilding. I n fact, I b e - ' or H ai non-Socialist shall restoration which would { e v p support for t h e project i s ! Or UUU'UUV'IUUIIV u « « " . be per-]Greek * ! U1CCU lliOkUlUUUU 11 U l V l l ,IVL**U ! i i £JgVP mitted to work there, when the j give them ,— a o feeling *„„!,-„•„. ~f of st . n -bility. n i t . j'reaiiy really m a r e t h e former objec-jj country; i V e tt h a n t h e latter. One canconn try; is experiencing e x p g a-grave i The answer, of course, is ob- jttive Th e Schuschnigg 1 US li Bgovern n not hhelp being impressed y The shortage in labor hands and every vious. !??!'?• f _ . ..?!! . ^! E. ° ™ ; ! ' ° ^ "elp"being- impressed"by7he available worker; is eagerly grab- ment in Austria has not gained sincere personal regard all Jews bed up?; What is the sense of car- in strength in the passing of £ e e l a n d express from the formalrying oil this internecine warfare months and its grip is precarious. | , y . a t t i r e d select-gathering at the for the'sake of colors, banners or It can only suffer further weak-1 G u i l d h a l l d i n n e r for the forest even party ideologies, when mass- ening by Italy's withdrawal from jt o t he most tattered a n d tired es of Arabs are occupying Jewish the European arena to concen-; J e w l s h m o t h e r i n whitechapel trate.on on its Abyssinian adventure. hholding positions of labor due to the in-trate o l d i n E aat tot o t Uup D i in n h her e r a r arms m s -t 0 to sufficiency of Jewish, workers in Austria's Jews still remain a sort get a glimpse of the smiling King of cat's-paw in the incessant pol- and Queen passing by. It is a revthe country? It was inevitable, therefore, itical manouvering going on beelation to a foreigner on these that this political passion should hind the Austrian scene and their shores. spend itself. The surging process rights are still in danger of be- A n d in other lands—in Ruof upbuilding in the country con- ing ing offered offered up up as as a a desperate desperate sac-1 sac- Jm a n i a _ K i n g C a r o l l a r e g a r d e d sumed b.11 energies, left no free rifice to appease Nazi anti-SemiticU, y t ] l e J e w s i n royalty's ancient moment and ; g a v e no peace of appetites. r o l e o f p r o t e c t o r of the weak and mind to ponder over social and A Hapsburg on t h e Austrian I o p p r e s s e d . W h e n a I 1 e l s e f a i I s > national political philosophies. The passion of work and creating throne would lessen the danger. t h e y • B d d r e s s their pleas to him • i U B p . ^ - - - - - r - - - - : i of ^Germany swallowing Austria w i t l l t h e knowledge that w h a t forged!!a still ring wherein were,either outright or by victory ofw g c a nb er e d r e s s e d i w i l l b e . embraced great gand practical aallp p small.] the Austrian Nazis. Because the a n d . t h a t they have his sympathy. obstacle Nazi progress in.-the practical furnish another i cle toyould Progress in-the I! |A ^ s; yBmo p-a-t ah-y 1, 1 for It dulled, and andpressing for someproblems, time'1 to[restoration m a nM c o u nthe' t r i s cJ et ow d a in y> come has eradicated all social dif- ilifectior tior.,ol Austria, it is daily d o e g n o t . . f l o w I n a n Over-abungatherng m upp ferentiations. It also stifled the gathe more support f r o m d a n c e _ I n Holland, the .royal fam-1 !r ing most tiacred of national senti- Austria's harassed Jews. ily has has' the the undivided lov love of The situation, is not so simple ments bnd denied even the most Dutch Jewry. The blunt showing 1 vital national interests the atten- in Greece. The Jews there have o£ displeasure by members of the 1 tion ^!hich they so ardently re- j gone through harrowing times al- royal family at the Nazi attempts j Quiredi ; ' • • • • . * — • - < - » . . - - ^ i _ i ^ •. *. ;,u^*n~ ^A i i H i For I the political situation in has further endeared it in iPalestf|ie has ^ot improved. To t:o,ns seeking, to coerce • Jewish the Jewish heart. Boris of Bul- j be sure, it has hot become worse. voters if not into-support of their garia is loved by his Jewish sub- | Nevertheless, KH there is any Im-partv than at least from support jects and his: government has j proyerolent to be noted, it is only of the opponents. tried to be most fair to the Jews. in asii&uch as Jewish strength in The Venizelists threatened dire The late King Alexander of Yugo-1 the country has[increased—to a things to Jews, voting, for the Gov- slavia was universally regarded' tne cuuuiu „„„ ^..--r-^.^..., -.W , U)J ». W ..u,,». .•—.„.«~ »„,, ww. s iavia was universally regaraea lesser Ifextent in the^ colonies, to jermnent-party. The Government^ h J gJ e w i g h s u b j e c t s a s their a greater extent in the cities, A, party wooed t h e Jewish voters p r o t e C t O r and guardian. They powerful Jewish force has devel- with protection of Jewish rights m o u r n e d h i s d e a t h u n r e S ervedly bped>i& the country. , . — „..„ „....„„,. ,.~^ -»»..— they are among the strongnned 14 the country v and with actual observance of the Today o d a v t h e v a r e amone the strons BuWRhQ-^rab; force has grown j Jewish right of equality. The Test supporters of the Regency : e^ven^ g^r0ater and more powerful. Ju\73 ctroncly supported the Gov- governing for his young son, MikAnd-Hie. Goyernment has hardly ernment Party. hail. advaAcfed Fin the; direction'of the T h e election, unfortunately, Tha Jew, liberal, zealons cruJ e w r not even as regards the im- settled nothing. Greece is again isader for social justice, gives each miCTai;on problem; where it ap- buzzing with the activities of ^a| mpnaii'hy.' Its due. Where toler* "arenC^ had Talented somewhat, score of political camps and the i, justice and sympathy flourNothliik has bien altered. In the q ueUion of a monarchy is to the: j• jT~h';"tn ~^" ^']<,„ p a y S \a k i n d Well-^fen neiitral, and, in reality rcre. T h e Jews would like to ^ i t h f u U heart. What is best for 1 1 1 ^ M i ^ b i i ^ ^ n ^ * ^ ^ . ^ ^ the Tsaldarists, t h e f o a n t r y l n w h ich he lives, is fi^rnment in fulfillment Pf the i who, of all the factions, h a v e b e & t { o rt h e J e w as well, for his '' " • - - - • ' • • ••rtpven their best friends.:.:If a n e e d s : a r e t n e same—peace, law, „ „ . _ „ . . ^atsoiyer.is made monarchy w i H bring internal o r d e r a n d the right and oppor: peac; tc.the country, the Jews are U m i t y to earn a livelihood a n d to f a ^ i t e t e t h ^ Jewish ii , lin e c country. u u U ^ . ; ; - . - - ^ , : t o r l t - Atfe.J.resenftime,: they r a i 3 e a f a m H y . rtn the"; ^li^htefet mbveiamade to helpjthe are gradually aligning themselves ( C o p j r i K h t > • y 3 5 ; J e w I s h T e l € E r a p h l c

onarchies

By VICTOR M. BIENSTOCK

"At the end of every seven years thoa shall make a release. And this is tke manner of the release : every creditor shall release that which he hath lent unto his neighbor: he should not exact it of his neighbor and, his brother because the Lord's release hath bezn proclaimed." Beat. Chap. IS, Verses 1 and 2.

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§ 1 ! I l l S S n l e l v e s ^ O f the ^trif^ with the monarchists.

By the

Agency, inc.,

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Herein lies prophetic wisdom. The best kind of New Year Greeting that any man could give any other man would be the wish that he might indeed find himself in a Renaissance of the spirit -- that all excess baggage of burdens, fear, doubt, worry - might be thrown overboard with one grand free gesture - - - that his soul might soar unencumbered on the Smooth Sea of Success, that . Life's Master of Ceremonies might give him a better part to play, and that all the cards might be shuffled in some magic, merciful manner, and he'd be handed a NEW DEAL with which he could "go to towrn."

Happy New Year

Sounds all right - - you say ~ • but what do you have to do to get that way't

"THOU SHALT MAKE A RELEASE" Meaning what? That you're to nobly get busy tearing up all the "premise to pays" you are now holding, and start wiring all of j'our debtors to "come on home . . all is forgiven! No! Not necessarily, for the "loose him and let him go" idea is mostly mental, anyway. All you have to do is to say (and mean it from the heart as well as the lips): "Bill, don't feel you have to duck when you see me come barging around the corner - - - you're a GOOD EGG whether you meet that interest or not - - better times are here - - you'll make it - - come on, let's have a drink." Bill will tear his shirt or some other part of his raiment to make gcod with you and you, too, will feel a sense of RELEASE.

...

EVERYBODY! May our God - - the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob - - answer oar prayers and bless you and yours with Health, Happiness and Prosperity. MR. and MRS. SAM JOSEPHSON and FAMILY.

1


The March of lime. Rosh Hashonah 1935-5696

May the New Year Be a Jctytrai One

NEW YEAR'S EDITION—OMAHA, NEBRASKA,

Registration for Jewish Doctor Makes Junior Classes Vital Cancer Open at J. C. C. Discovery/

Greetings from the President

New; York (WNS) What is On the occasion of the Registrations are now open for the junior classes in dancing, dra- expected to prove to be the most celebration of Rosh Hamatics, crafts, and d u b s at the mportant step thus far in the age-long ; battlei to conquer canJewish Community Center. Annette Ricklin Silverman, who cer in'humans was announced by shonah I wish to extend • Schwartzman, reis well known in the city as a Dr. Gregory 1 dancer and dancing instructor, search worker I at Mt. Sinai Hosto all our citizens of the will have charge of the Center pital, :when he • revealed that he had successfully treated a certain dancing program. She will teach Jewish faith my sincere classes in acrobatic, ballet, and type'->-of cancer in guinea pigs, mice and rats.tap dancing for juniors on Tuesgreetings and best wishes Dr.; Schwartzman's discovery is days and Thursday afternoons based; upon an application to canfrom 4:00 to 5:00 o'clock and for the New Year. will have a special class in Span- cer of his famous method of antiish and tap dancing for senior toxin injections through the skin •-••". sirla on Tuesday evenings from and the veins." 7:30 to 8:30. . The junior dramatic classes will meet on Tuesday and Thursday "afternoons from 5 to 6 p. m with Helen Merritt. Center dra matic director, as the instructor Emma Louise Rothschild, widow Tiiesa classes will provide instrucof iirst Lord Rothschild, 9 1 ; Davtion in voice and dramatic ex- - The-year 5695 was marked by id Trletsch, o n e of founders of pifcseion and will prepare the the passing of many of the most Zionist movement, 65; Max Liebchi'dren for parts in the perform- famous Jews of all time. - Hardly ermann, German j-ainter, 87; ances of the Child: en's Theater a country in the world was with-: Meyer Elsasser, Los Angeles comThe junior department will fea- out a loss among its distinguished munal leader, 67; Joseph Simon, ture classes in? wotdwork. meta' Jewish citizens- Here we list some former U. S. Senator from Ore-Brjfc, and clay-m.-deling for boys of the more outstanding of .those gon, 84; Radu Faubergher, Rouon Mondays and "Wednesday from who died during the past twelve manian Zionist leader, 63; Dr. An4 to 5 p. m., and for girls on months: gelo Sacerdoti, chief rabbi of Italy. . Tuesdays and Thnit day from 4 to 49; Eugene Landau, president of Oscar Wassermann, G e r m a n 5 T m. An excellent workshop Hilfsverein der DeutscLen Juden, banker and Palestine leader, 65: is being prepare'! end caapble in 83; David E. fleineman, former Leon Blank, "Yldd'sh actor, 66: stmctors will supervise the activpresident of Detroit city council, Ludwig Vogelstein, philanthropist Itirs. 69; Samuel Sachs, banker and In addition to these activities, and leader of Ame-ican Reform philanthropist, 83; Joseph Saphir, Jewry,_63; Franklin _Simon,._mera nuncber of d a b s for boys and one of founders of Zionist moveriris are now being termed. Those chant, 69; Samuel Samule, dean ment, 35; Aron Nimsowitch, forof the British House of Commons, clubs will meet weakly at the Center under the guidance of trained 79; Baron Edmond de Rothschild, mer chess champion, 48; Salomon club leaders- Hegi.-ter now for father ' of Palestine: colonization Aronson, chief rabbi of Tel Aviv, and philanthropist, 89; •Osc.r 73; Louis Wiley, business manathe junior program. Cohn, former. German vice-minis- ger of New York Times, 66; ter" of justice, 66; Jacob Onder- Adolph S. Ochs, publisher of New wyzer, chief rabbi of Holland, 72; York Times, 77; Abraham H. Storm Troopers Warned Berlin—^Orders prohibiting any Jobann Kremenetzky, first presi- Fromenson, editor, 60; Mrs. Mary individual anti-Jewish activities dent, of Jewish National Fund, 85; Shonberg, secretary of National were issued to all Berlin Storm Sir Arthur Wing Pinero, English Council of Jewish Women, 45; Troopers by their supreme leader, dramatist, 79; Edwin Wolf, Phil- Hans Ullstein, German publisher, jadelphia philanthropist, 80; Lady 76; Alessandro Defano, chief rabvon Jagow.

DEATHREAPSITS TOLL DURING 5695

Franklin D. Rooscudt

FRIDAY,

SEPTEMBER 27, 1935.

Says Capacity Jew Arrested Selling of Palestine Anti-Semitic Not Exhausted Sheet

Lower

Geneva (JTA)—The absorptive Berlin (WNS)—Failing to see capacity of Palestine is far from t n e tragi-humorous aspect of a exhausted, the Political Commit-! T „ „ , . ... , ,,, ,

bership ommynlty

. , .», T , ... .. . Jew making a living by the sale tee of the League of Nations As-! sembly was told last week by Dr. ! o f anti-Semitic publications, the j Basic Kate Still Open, Though age. Such memberships •will I~!KA include all the privileges «->:. ->-<• Christian L. Lange ot Norway, t p o l i c e a r r e s t ^ Semmi Rosenthai, j Membership Drive J e s h basic Center membership. Julius Streicfcer's paper, D e r presenting the annual review of | ^ newsdealer in Kottbus, bei " Is Over mission. ause he v a s Family memberships harp s^lx? development of Palestine Bosenthal arrested theThe work of the Mandates Com- IcStuermer. vendingwascopies of j a f t e r a moh ot storm 'been popular. AH physics. ^ »"."*" has continued to be satisfactory,! Troopers j Despite the success of the cam- partment and -ultural advun^wst Dr. Lange said, Jewish Immi- j h a d demonstrated in front of his apign for one thousand new mem- may be enjoyed by the ?».'.!>ftt. ntwsstand grants and capital accounting for; \ the increasing prosperity of the j He ' v r a s accused of trying to bers for the Jewish Community 'mother and children under ••'•. ••*'*country. j make an un;astifiable profit out Center, conducted under t h e i ing at home, for a family in .->:*?chairmanship of Harry Trustin, i bership of $25 per year. He congratulated the Jewish • o f the X s 2 i Weltanschauung. the Center is still continuing to ! In the membership caniT»~i£'?i| Agency for Palestine on the re*-! ! add as many names as possible : Mrs. J. J. Greenberg bead?*! • >-* suits thus far obtained. The conn-1 ANTI-JEWISH LAWS FOR onto the membership roster. ! women's division, with Ssi ?••'."')try, he said, is actually suffering; p . . . . » i ftftnFn irWe nrnv jnick in charge of the The new basic low rate of five from a shortage of labor. "This! rULL-DLUUUE.U JfiWd UftLI dollars per year for a Center is a fact," he declared, "which is j membership has caught the popubi of Milan, S8; Dr. Magnus I a matter for gratification in view | Berlin (WNS)—While N a z i laT fancy, and according to Paul ! Mszrachi to Start \ of the large number of refugees j Germany presented the amazing Hirschfeld, sex pioneer, 67; Isaac anomaly of recognizing the Zion- Goldblatt, executive director of | M i n k o f f, Russian Communist | seeking a home at present." Colony Is Pales&f the J. C. C. and Welfare Feder! He congratulated the Mandaj ist blue and white flag, the only ation, those who are not members leader, 4 1 ; Shmarya Levin, Zionist leader, 68; Franz von Mendel- j tory Power, Great Britain, for its j emblem which Jews are permitted may still avail themselves of this j New York (JTA)—A K K ; ™ ^ ! " | Land Development Corporstlnr. :.* ssohn, German banker, 69; Bar- I liberal immigration policy. "Pros-j to display, German Jewry learned low price. | settle American religious .7rv-> '••-• oness Edmond de Rothschild, 9 1 ; | perity not being eternal," he said, j with amazement that the official The five-dollar membership enj Palestine will be established *"••"••< Dr. Simon Ashkenazi, Polish dip- I "the Mandatory Power is doing i news agencies had announced that 1 lomat and historian, 68; F r e d : well in reserving a fund for pub-! the newly enacted "Jew laws" ap- titles the holder to all of the i January 1, according to « rr ".'*"^Center programs. There will be. i tion adopted by the nation* J «•*>•> plied only to 100 percent Jews. Landsberg, Canad*un philanthrop- lie works." Although no official confirma- as an illustration, five monthly I utive committee of the !Ui;•.--*.-.-u ist, 76; Sir Francis Montefiore, "Jewish immigration," he emZionist leader, 7 1 ; Andre Citroen, phasized, "naturally h a s certain tion of this report has been f orth- programs of lectures, concerts ! organization at its meetinc V-.".. French industrialist, 57; Alfred I limits also in relation to the atti-1 coming, it would mean, if true. and outstanding Jewish events, \ The corporation, the repf>li;.'!.->c Dreyfus, French martyr, 78; Tic- tude of the Arabs. Generally that several million non-Aryans, by noted national and interna- I said, will purchase a n d drvM.".T tional Jewish leaders—free to I land and gradually settle tr.Ui.-,*.~tor Jacobson, Zionist leader, 65; 5; I speaking, Jewish immigration is that is persons with some Jewish Mrs. Maurice Steinfeld, president ! a complex problem. The Manda- j ancesters but who are themselves members. Admission to plays of | class individuals and labor?"-* ."•» National Federation of Temple \ tory Power must be congratulated | Christians, would be exempt from the Jewish Center Players Guild, ! orthodox inclinations. ] for its efforts to establish har- ' the sweeping anti-Semitic legis- as well as admission to children's i The proposal was made hy ; .^.vs. Sisterhood, 51. affairs, will also be free to mem- i Gellman, acting president. *»?-i mony between the various inter- ! lation. (Copyright. 1035, by Seven Arts bers. Members will be given a \ adopted unanimously by ?rri--,~» Feature Syndicate) ests." "reduction of one dollar on the sentatives of JMisraehi, the v-.; .";-•• cost of Community Forum tickets r a c h i Women's Organize; >.-».n. New B&sk Defeated - - Embittered Jailed for Propaganda Warsaw—The statutes of the in addition to enjoying various ; Hapoel Hamizrachi, the Ut')»r «"••» Chicago — Apparently embitW a r s a w — T h r e e members of.116"*" Polish-Palestine Emigration cultural privileges at the Center. i Orthodox Rabbis, t h e Uni.-u .*.r For those who want to use the Orthodox Jewish Congress-•">.*•?•-* tered by his crushing deefat for h e National Radical Party, e x - j E x P ° r t B a n t v e r e approved by gymnasium and Brimming pool, land the Young Israel Com'.-i. mayor of Chicago last April, New- treme anti-Semitie organization, t l l e Polish authorities. ! It was also decided to Ipunrv * ton Jenkins, local attorney, has jwere sentenced last week to four It is the purpose of this bank membership rates are: SI5 per undertaken to increase the num- j months' imprisonment each for to finance t h e transportation to year for men over 21, $10 for j campaign for 25,000 new nifnber of prospective "third parties" ! possessing anti-Jewish propagan- Palestine of equipment of Polish those 18 to 21, and S6 for boys I bers. with one dociic.itcd t.> an anti- da a n d a mimeograph machine j workshops and factories which under IS; ?10 for women over IS, and S6 for girls under that Patronize our advertiser*. Jewish p-<. pram. for illegal purposes. I are now idle.

R O S H Hashonah -marks another fleeting milestone on the highway of time where in pausing, we may in retrospection relive yesterday's journey and chart the course for the distance ahead.

MAX M. BABISH

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The beauty along the path traversed is far more important than the rapidity with which we speed through life - — To me, the personal friendships and deep, lasting confidences I have gained along the business roadside are priceless; treasure houses of inner wealth from whose store I can draw long after material considerations have faded. The purpose of our institution is to keep setting motordom's pace — and when during the year just past I announced our agency for Dodge and Plymouth ' automobiles, I was deeply moved by the invigorating response of the people I serve - - a generous testimonial which bespeaks keeping faith with fair dealing and dependable service, a prestige built on the solid basis of public confidence. On the New Year our eyes are turned optimistically ahead. As we approach the curve of progress on life's highway in high gear, it is my ardent hope that Rosh Hashonah leads to the road of happiness and cheer, brightened by health and prosperity in fullest measure.

Barish-Sanders Motor Co* PLYMOUTH DODGE

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS-Friday, September 27, 1935. was found.'to be an effective pre- Board of Managers composed of ventive of t h e development of Denver residents. National oflicers of the Hospituberculosis in animals. With the cooperation of the State of Colo- tal are Louis D. Beaumont, New rado, limited tests on humans York, Honorary President; Rev. Samnrl Dicfcsteln: Author of conducted during last year and Dr. Wm. S. Friedman, Denver, it h e resolution Riithorizing a In 1935 indicate t h a t this vac- President; Morton May, St. Louis, : sweeping congressional probe of By RABBI DAVID H. WICE cine may be developed into a Vice-President; Paul Felix WariNazi propaganda. Has representdefinite preventive of tuberculosis burg, New York, Vice-President; Mankind is as a caravan B. Flesher, Denver, Vice-Presied New Yor'-'s lower East Side in in man. Herman Wile, Buffalo, Viceinarching across a desert. As congress for 11 conseevtive years. While the Hospital does not dent; president; Harmon S. Auguste, far as the eye can see, there Born in Russia. Son of a rabbi. claim at this time that the vac- New York, Vice-President; Edwin lies the sand of wasted strag! Educated at City College. Atcine is a definite preventive of tu- J. Schanfarber, Vicegles and frustrated ideals. i tained political eminences by hia berculosis in humans, the results President; AlfredColumbus, A. Benesch, thus far attained open a vast field Cleveland, Vice-President; Mrs. S. An occasional c h a r l a t a n jown aggressiveness and wit. Amfor further study . and investiga- Pisko, Denver, Secretary; Ben shouts, "There! ..There lies ibitious, able and hard-working. By SAMUEL SCHAEFFER, Supervisor of National Jewish Hospital tion, and under the idection of Altheimer, Ne v York, Treasurer; the golden city of ocr iWas a deputy state attorney-genDr. H. J. Corper, Director of Re- Paul M. Rosenthal, N e w York, when he wa« 26. Became Of the patients treated in the months to several years. Many of dreams!"- But it is the mir- lerai Wifli the approach of a New search, these researches are now ,an alderman Served Assistant Treasurer; Members of age of the false phrophet. ,' two terms in inthe 1917. Tear in ksr«iel, tt>H Board of the them are confined to their beds Hospital, 337 were adults a n d being prosecuted vigorously. state legisla100 children. the Executive Committee include daring the greater part of this National;! Jewish Hospital at DenThe Jewj as one of the memture. Elected to congress in 1923. Should there, as a result of the officers and Alfred M. Cohen, Splendid Record Maintained ver looks; back upon the year just time. To insure that the depressbers of that caravan, finds I Has been reelected every two these new studies, be developed Cincinnati; N. L. Dauby, Cleveing effects of homesickness and Of particular interest in t h e j ending •with, gratitude to the thoua tree spiritual oasis in his years since. Champion of the sands of friends of the institution the mental weariness that results work of the past year, is the in- an effective and efficient tuber- land; Max Freschl, Milwaukee; religion w i t h its eternal .underdog. Defended 30,000 tenthroughout the country, -who have from weeks and months of bed- creasing use of surgery for very culosis preventive, its value to Sol S. Kiser, Indianapolis; Judge ants against landlorc without troths. In'that march across made possible the continuance of rest, will not play an adverse part sick patients. This is in line with humanity is incalculable. Within Samuel D. Levy, New York; and the desert spaces he is just I compensation. Author of New its free life-saving service for the in their recovery to health, whole- the Hospital's policy of making our reach may lie a priceless Wm. B. Woolner, Peoria. tuberculous poor of all faiths. some recreation a n d interesting available to its patients every blessing to humanity—the connow approaching an oasis, i York State kosher food laws. ImThe National Jewish Hospital They look, too, with confidence to educational opportunities must be modern method of care, and as j quest of tuberculosis. With con- is now in its thirty-sixth year of the New Year. Parched nnd , migrants are his legislative hobFought long and hard for new techniques are developed, as tinued financial help that victory service. Its equipment and facilithe Ne)v Year just ahead, know- provided. thirsty, he will find springs jI by. amelioration of immigation laws. ing thiat the same loyalty and deAt the National Jewish Hospi- new theories in the treatment of may be accelerated, and the dawn ties are of the highest type; its of living water at the icran- I Won chairmanship votion t0 the welfare of the dis- tal these fields-of service are be- tuberculosis are made practical, of the d a y which will witness work has earned international imtainhead of Jodaism. Me will I migration committee ofby house tressed and needy will be mani- ing constantly enlarged to care the Hospital readily incorporates man's triumph over this centur- recognition; the need f o r that seniority. drink deeply of the living ] First Jew to he?d that commitfest during 5696. for the needs of the 300 men, wo- them into its w o r k as routine ies old devastating disease, be has- work is as great now as it was tened. practice. While this philosophy men and children who form the tee and only Jewish chairman of A tragic loss came to the Hoswhen, at the beginning of the cenwaters. He will be refreshed, renewed, and revived for the pital last summer in the death of daily resident patient population means an increase in costs of op- . While the improving economic tury, the Hospital was opened as a. house committee. His busy journey yet ahead. eration (since surgery, e v e n conditions throughout the coun- the first institution in America Dr. I. Dj Bronfin, who had been of the Hospital. iaw office in New York k e p t Medical Director of the institu- Occupational Training Featured though performed in the institu- try reflected themselves in slight- for the free care, on a national How beautiful an ideal does ©Er people cherish! Judahim shuttling between Manhattion • forii over seven years. His Thus during the past year spe- tion, is expensive) the Hospital ly Increased subscriptions a n d scale and without regard to race tan and Washington. Was too ism does not set itself up as the only pattern of life; it devotion1;; to the Hospital's work, cial instruction in various handi- has always taken the position donations during the year, t h e or creed, of men, women and chiloccupied with politics 1 get maris the highest and finest pattern of life for the ^ew. Inand his \ vibrant personality and crafts was instituted for adult that every possible assistance Hospital still continues to oper- dren suffering from tuberculosis, ried until he was 4 7. Then he dividual Jews have strayed from the Oasis of ^odasim in tender sympathies had endeared patients, and knitting a n d rug- must be given t h e patients in ate under a deficit. For the year who could not afford to pay for married the girl who was his secthe long treks of the ages, bat never has the purity of its their battle against disease. That ended June 30, 1935, this deficit treatment. Its potentialities for him to thousands of people, and weaving are taught by an instrucretary for ten years. Known in waters been defiled nor a substitute been found for its life- ; congress caused his name to stand high in tress who was herself but recent- this policy is a wise one, is evi- was in excess of 571.000. It was the accomplishment of greater as a dandy because of denced in the fact that during the only through bequests received and increasingly greater good for giving and life-sustaining qualities. the annals of the Hospital's his- ly a patient in the institution. Inhis flamboyant manner. Sincere struction is given to groups of past year, of 186 patients dis- from tried and true friends of the this and future generations are tory. ' and loyal. Has a host of friends. charged, 129 left the Hospital To my brethren of the Household of Israel f say with ] Reveals a gamecock In December, 1934, Dr. Charles ambulant patients, as well as to classified as improved or recov- institution who died during the unlimited. the psalmist: "Come ye, and let os walk in the light of the < in his speeches. Usesnervousness J. Kaufman, of New York, became individual bed-patients. T h e s e ered. This is 70 per cent of the year, that the Hospital was enIts future is in the hands and a colorful lessons, together with those hereabled to continue its service withLord." Medical Director, following a in, the hearts of the J e w s of New Yorkese speech. Short, wiry, total discharged group. When one wide experience ' in tuberculosis tofore offered in typing, steno- considers that 54 per cent of this o u t curtailment or lowering of America whose ears have never prematurely grey. His activity graphy, English, bookkeeping and standards. May the New Year of 5696 be one of profound hapwork, both in private practice and been deaf to the appeal of the group of patients entered belies his 50 years. Is the chie* in large institutions in the east. other commercial subjects, form same piness and intense living upon a high and holy plane. May Subscriptions and donations are I destitute and the needy. To them the Hospital classified as far adhate of the Nazis and the hundred not only a pleasant diversion with Under his administration t h e you and your dear ones experience every joy, health, and i percenters. vanced cases of tuberculosis; with the Hospital's only source of in-1 t h e National Jewish Hospital Has received hunmedical work of the Hospital is which to fill the long hours of relatively contentment. May the shackles of oppression, bigotry, Idreds ot threats because h: hope for their im- come—since "None May Enter | sends heartfelt greetings for a going forward steadily, further treatment and. convalescence, but provement,little prejudice, and ill-will be everywhere broken so that man- i launched Nazi probe. Now has a record of the Hos- Who Can Pay, and None Can Pay happy and prosperous 5696. enhancing the Hospital's 1 reputa- also provide genuine occupational pital's workthebecomes doubly im- Who Enter." All readers are urgkind may go forward in its search for the Godly. j personal bodyguard. Was offertion as an agency dedicate' - to the training. pressive. ed not only to make an annual ; ed chairmanship of congressional alleviation of Buffering and sorFor the children of the Hospisubscription to the Hospital, but '. committee to investigate Nazi acrow along the finest lines of hu- tal, the educational work h a s In the field of medical research, to remember the institution with Rabbis Are Asked to Aid tivities but refused it. Didn't manitarian idealism. • been enlarged, and the school the National Jewish Hospital con! to our past and faithless to our United Jewish Appeal the other day by Joseph Buerkel, want to be both judge and jury. During the year 5695, as in the which the Hospital maintains on tinued the work which had been special gifts; to contribute to the j future if we could not at this the Reich's Saar Commissar, to past, neither effort nor expense the grounds, and whose work is started during the previous year, "Memorial Flower Fund"; to New York (JT A)—Felix M. ! time give new evidence of our adhere strictly by t h e Rome commemorate some joyous event; were spared to give .the patients recognized and accredited by the and which itself was based on Warburg, national chairman of j loyalty to each other and of our steamship tickets of the institution the best type of Denver Board of Education, now work done in the Research labor- to signalize some special occasion t h e United Jewish Appeal, this ' willingness to share the common agreement of December, 19 34, •to Warsaw—All Palestine have been sold out in the life of a relative or friend. and to leave t h e treatment of medical ;i care. In an institution embraces all grades, from kinder- atories during the preceding fifburden." for the months of Septembei and "While the work of the Hospi- week called on rabbis of the counsuch as the National Jewish Hos- garten through Junior H i g h teen years—that of perfecting a Jews in the Saar to his discretry to urge congregants on the October. The demand is so great pital, the phrase "medical care" School. vaccine for the prevention of tu- tal- is 'under the direction of a na- forthcoming High Holidays to tion, the Pfaelzischer Kurier add- that every available accomrr.odational board of 100 men and wo- support the Appeal's $3,250,000 embodies, more than mere mediDuring the twelve months end- berculosis in mankind. ed a statement by Buerkel advo- : tion lias been reserved until Nocal and nursing service, food and ing June 30, 1935, the institution Xnberculosis Preventive Possible men throughout the country, each drive for relief of the Jews in Commissioner In Saar cating the boycoi.l of Jewish cat- \ vember. shelter. _ Pati3nts come from all cared for 437 patients in the HosEarly in 1934 the Research De- a leader' in their respective comBacks Jewish Boycott tle traders and demanding that ; More than 1,500 Jewish emiand other countries. parts of i the country; their stay pital proper and 400 in the Out- partment developed a vaccine munity, the operation of the Hos- Germany "We Jews," said Mr. Warburg Berlin (JTA) —Reprinting the the names of all "Aryans" deal- grants left Poland for Palestine in the Hospital ranges from six Patients. Department and clinics. which, after hundreds of tests, pital is entrusted to t h e local in a statement, "would be untrue manifesto issued to Saarlanders ing with Jews be published. ' this week.

Union Pacific, pioneer railroad of the west, is still pioneering and bringing nation-wide prominence to Omaha as a progressive railroad center. t

s>3|''- ; it

I ..

With the building and Introduction of the first fully streamlined, high-speed, light-weight train, Union Pacific launched a new era in transcontinental travel. And not content to pioneer in the development of this new type of rail travel, Union Pacific is again "stepping out in front." Its deluxe Pullman equipment, unsurpassed for restful, luxurious travel, was the forerunner to new luxuries now within the reach of every passenger in coaches and tourist sleeping cars-'on Union Pacific through trains.

LOW

Breakfasts, 25c; luncheons, SOc . d i n n e r s , 35c . A 25c breakfast, for example, may include scrambled eggs •with two strips of bacon, choice of rolls or toast, and coffee or milk. Three wholesome meals a day at a cost of only SOc—that's economy. Also low cost a la carte prices—sandwiches, 10c; coffee or milk, 5c; apple, orange or banana, 5c. Meals served "off-tbe-tray" to passengers in their seats; from unique Eteam-tables In coaches on through trains, except the San Francisco Overland Limited.

<On T H E CHALLENGER, Low Priced Meali are »erved In "Coffee Shop" Dining Cap.) The

QKANO rCTOff. NAT*. PARK

Challenger carries deluxe coaches for the exclusive use of women and children. These cars, with their increased lavatory facilities, smoking lounge, and complete privacy, have been extremely popuiar since the day they were introduced.

"FREE P I l I ftWS - are *urn!s5iei* *° ft" coach and • •»«*• rilMltWVIO " chair car passengers on through trains. Thus, comfort is added to comfort, as all Union Pacific coach seats are roomy and restful. Individual drinking cups are free, too.

I \'

AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT -£ well as Pullman, tourist and standard sleeping: cars, dining and observation cars on all through trains ar* fully air-conditioned — the right temperature and th« right humidity to insure perfect comfort.

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Whenever you travel • Wherever ym go - Travel by train. Union Pacific offers you speed, comfort, safety,-new train economies and low feres - - - And it serves mora of the West than any other railroad.

UNI

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free for coach passengers on all ITnion Pacific through trains. Efficient porters in smart, new uniforms are a4 your service day and niffht.

PORTER SERVICE

At in:on n. m., or earlier If passengers desire, lights are dimmed in coaches on all Union Pacific through trains, With free pillows and the comfort of deeply upholstered seats, restful sleep comes quickly.

RESTFUL SLEEP -

fjtf RI?I1?I? While continuing to maintain the very l i l DKIEaF/ " e s t standards of Pullman travel service on its famous trains between Omaha and the West, Union Pacific has set a new standard of excellence for coach and tourist car travel. On Union Pacific's popular transcontinental trains, you may rest and relax while th» scenic miles fly by. Tour comfort, safety and enjoyment are in the hands of the Union Pacific—one of the world's finest railroads.

PACIFIC


New Year's Edition—THE

JEWISH _ PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1925.

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Insecurity . . . the fear for the future of loved ones . . . shad-

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or blind - - but insurance is one ally that never, deserts . , . whether in life or in death.

ness - - is the dread of a dwindled earning capacity, a penniless

B E S T wishes /or a Year of Felicity and Prosperity. W e extend sincerest wishes to all fora Future of joy and contentment, brightened by the sunshine of material comfort and greater happiness

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planning in the present with lif e insurance. Instead of being a busi-

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OFEICEKS and DIRECTORS

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u ' . T

LLOVD DORT First Vice President and General Counsel DtDA Treasurer H. P. FARBER Secretary

JOHN A. FARBEK President W. D. CAUE A. D. FRETER Junior Vice President : Vice President r-ud Actuary Airencj- Director M. \X. GOGGIXS DR. E. E. SIMMOXS Assistant Secretary Medical Director D. S. PAIRCHILD 3. BERCOVICI Assistant Secretary and Assistant Treasurer Chief .Underwriter anrdf Auditor

Assistant SecretatT

W. F . PATE Director M. t. MORRIS Assistant Actuary

I;


r New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

COUNCIL CONGRATULATES NORWAY FOR REFUGEE ACT

By HAROLD STRAUSS In tho Jew the creative fire haB ;i burned, not withstanding the most ,| adverse circumstances, for thouj!" sands of years. And.it is now a j! casual aspect, but the very es\f sence of his being, for it was L's 5! first great literarr undertaking, '{ the oral creation of . t h e Bible, '< which sets its stamp upon the fate } and character of the Jew. Since ' that time the Jew has never rested in his attempt to represent God j and man and the universe in 1 words—sometime logically, somen times lyrically, sometimes epical\. ly, but always in words', for the I plastic arts for a long time were ,' banned to;him. Before the abolition of the !. ghetto and the emancipation of the Jew (what irony and tragedy there lies' in the word!) he had no problem of audience and language. H6 wrote either jn Hebrew or Yiddish for a compact and disl • tlnct audience. During the last j> 'hundred years, however, the Jew\_ ish community has been dlspersh t ing, has been knitting itself into i - the fabric of the various nations j In which it had previously isolated V Itself. It was inevitable that the f Jewish writer, under these condl^ tlons, should gradually adopt the "f; slanguage of his country. In Eng; .land, Italy, and France the process j "^.occurred easily a n d swiftly; in * ' Spain a little m o r e slowly; in ' .'Germany and Austria it could not j begia until 1810, and in Eastern * J; Europe not until very recently. ' • "What has all this to do with

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the books of the year? I am seeking to explain the surprise and shock that was mine when I discovered the meagre part of Jewish writers in American literature. There are about 12,000 books published a year in this country. Of these, all but about 3,000 are text or technical books, and thus outside my province. These 3,000 are the body of American literary production.' T h e y will be composed of 1,000 novels and 2,000 volumes of poetry, essays, biography, history, plays and general non-fiction. Now, with the annual lists of "Publisher's Weekly" before me, I have been able to identify less than seventy-five n e w, non-technical books as by Jews. Making allowances f o r some I have missed, the figure cannot be greater than ninety, which is exactly three per cent of 3,000, or much less than the percentage of Jews to the total population of the country. And this figure includes t h e translated works of foreign J e w s such as Einstein, the Zweigs, Werfel, Roth and Neumann! When Fascism comes to this country and t h e stump speakers rant about t h e Jewish domination of literature, let us remember these figures. TRANSITORY LULL But in normal times it is a condition to deplore, rather than to vaunt. Why does It exist? Does it represent an. end of the Jewish literary tradition? I think n o t .

Farming Trend By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ

Samson Liph knows every Jewh farmer in the Middle West. y this exclusive interview he ; I tells abont: Anti-Semitism among j £ farmers. Farmers and the Inre of ^ City. Intermarriage among ,jf farmers. Religion among t h e ' 'farmers. -.i Here IK an authoritative comi"*} positc picture of the Jewish fara* "f er in the Middle West.—THE •i EDITOR. i * The desire on the part of thou!,, sands of Jews to leave the city | L -and fo join t h e : back-to-the-soil i 4 movement' suffered a setback as \£-a result of the depression scares j'and the drought. ; ,j It is the opinion of Sampson j'^Liph, for seventeen years t h e A s ^'Bistant Western Manager of the i;1 Jewish Agricultural Society, that ",this scare,was in a large measure V responsible forvthe prevention of is'-the settlement of many Jews on • farms. Mr. Liph goes a Btep further in , blaming ' Jewish, leadership at .present for failing to;make Jews \farm-minded. In. t h e course o£ • one of b^s periodic visits in Deji'troit this year, Mr;IiipH deplored \Jthe fact that the Jewish press and i f Jewish leadership does not bring )( ito the attention of the public the j»truth that Jews can. adapt them• selves to(, farming-.;. "The initiative must come from - t h e prestj a n d from leaders in '^middle-class and rank and file of £ Jewry," Mr. Liph said. "We must

'make Jews farm-minded and then '"the fact ;will become known that r ' Jews can1; make good farmers and £adapt themselves to. outdoor work "and can produce as well as non, "Jews." ,

! Mr. Laph is well qualified to i;tliscus8 the possibility of the Jew '"as a farmer as a result of the _ vast knowledge he has accumul a t e d in' : the past thirty years on s ^the subject. He Is a graduate of jl_ the Baron de Hirsch School of ij&Woodbine, New Jersey, a n d in |;-!1915 graduated from the Michig a n State College, then known as :; the Michigan Agricultural Col.s-'lege. Thtee years; after his gradL. nation from the M. A. C. he be'^eame tho Assistant Western Man"f ager of jthe Jewish. Agricultural \K Society with offices in Chicago ,,'jand ha^[retained t h a t position r (;Blnce. In the course of his sevenjjteen y e a p of service with the Sor;-clety he[ has become thoroughly Sfamiliar'jwith every angle of JewHish farming in the Middle West Land hasjjmade the acquaintance of ^practically every Jewish farmer in I'fptllchlgan, Ohio, Illinois, Missouri jfjond other states. j

Middle West are to be found in Michigan. This state has the fourth largest number cf Jewish farmers in the country. New Jersey,- New York, and Connecticut precede Michigan in importance in ~ Jewish farming enterprises. Roughly estimated, there a r e about 250 Jewish farming families In Michigan. About seventyfive families are located in the Benton Harbor district, and most of them are engaged in fruit farming. Another seventy-five families are to be found in the South Haven district. These are engaged In poultry a n d general farming. An additional forty families are located In t h e Detroit area In Romeo, Roosevelt, a n d other villages, and these are engaged in truck and poultry "farming. The rest of the Jewish farmers are to be found mostly in southwest portions of the state. In point of numbers of Jewish farming families in t h e Middle West, Ohio is second to Michigan as a Jewish farming community. According io Mr. Liph, no antiSemitism has thus far been noticeable in farming communities, and he stated that to the Gentile neighbors it Is a revelation that the Jew can do a hard day's work —that he can be a farmer. The non-Jew is amazed at this phenomenon, and to him the invasion by the Jew of the f a r m is a curiosity. Mr. Liph also explained that there are no wealthy Jewish farmers for the reason that most of them start on a shoe string, Immediately want to see results, expand, and accumulate indebtedness.- As a result, in Instances of large farming communities it is not reasonable to state that they are wealthy farmers, because they are burdened with debts which they manage gradually to pay off from their incomes. It Is also of Interest to quote Mr. Liph on the fact' that very few Jews have left the farms, and that fully eighty per cent remain as farmers. Approximately thirtyseven per cent of the young folk remain on the farms, and an additional twelve to fifteen per cent enter professions. Some of them return to rural districts to practice their professions. JEWISH AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY T h e r e is no intermarriage among Jewish farmers, according to Mr. Liph, and he points out that most of the work is done by farmers themselves, their farming- enterprises being based on the self-help proposition. Usually interpreted as centers of mis-Information or completely lacking In information, Mr. Liph nevertheless pictures the Jewish farm- as a p l a c e of religiously-minded Jews. He explained, that the re^ llglous atmosphere Is strong in the countryi and that the Jewish youth is therefore compelled to think in religious and nationalistic terms, thus becoming nationally and religiously conscious. Mr. Liph pointed out that while in a city like Chicago, f o r instance, only ten per cent of tfce children get any sort of Jewish education,

;%DCHIGAN THE LEADER !• % It is interesting to note In connection jwith Mr. •. Liph's career Sthat upon his~ graduation from Ithe Michigan State College he rtras called to Chicago to direct a •J&acfcyarcl beautifying project at fthe instigation of the Jewish PeofPle'a Institute. Hundreds of peo,'fple joiied his classes,' planted f ll -ga rdens d i back of thefr f in small flpd beautified their front ards. Ij A ma b Interesting fact revealed \'r)%r Mr. Liph Is that the largest f Jewish {farmers In the on the farms they become much

a

Geneva (JTA)—A resolution welcoming Norway's initiative in demanding that the refugee question be placer" on the agenda of the forthcoming session of t h e | League of Nations Assembly, was adopted last week by the conference of the World Alliance for International Friendship Through Churches, meeting here. The resolution declares that the Alliance itself is doing all in its to protect racial, linguistic Most of the Jews in this country power and religious minorities everycame here for economic Seasons where, and advocates the creation within the short period of fifty of a permanent Commission for years. They, .gathered in commu- Minorities under the League. nities and spoke the language they brought with them. They are gradually adopting the language Cayton Re-Appointed and traditions of America, b u t Washington, D. C.—J u d g e they have not yet, any more than the Slavs or Italians who came Nathan Cayton h a s been reapwith them, had time enough to pointed to the bench of the Dismaster them to the extent of us- trict of Columbia municipal court ing them creatively. (Meanwhile for a t h i r d term by President there is a fine and virile Yiddish Roosevelt. literature flourishing in the as yet unassimilated sections of the com- secular Jewish nation against the munity.) So, for the time being, might of Rome—b u t his craftsa large part of the books a n d manship is English, and of such literary importance by Jews pub- high order that it will remain a lished in America a r e transla- mark for American Jews to shoot tions. at. A fine augury for AmericanThe two most important novels Jewish letters. of the year by Jews were Franz (Coryright, 1935. Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Inc.) Werfel's "Forty Days of M u s a Dagh," and Staolom Asch's "Salvation." ' Both were not only by Jews, b u t concerned themselves with Jewish affairs: "Salvation" directly, a n d "Musa Dagh" because of the obvious lessons which Werfel drew from the oppression of the Armenians by t h e Turks and its application to the Jewish situation in Germany. A first novel, however, of great beauty and importance, w a s written by an American Jew, a Jew out of New York's near-ghetto. This was Henry Roth's "Call It Sleep." If this fine novel Is a sample of what American Jews of a new generation can do, the figures I have given above will soon change. The only other Jewish novelists who must be noted as having published worthy books In America this year are Robert Nathan, Alfred Neumann, Tess Slesinger, G. B. Stern, Leo Lania a n d Alvah C. Bessie (whose "Dwell In the Wilderness" shows the most amazing feeling for t h e great historical traditions of America and w h o seems destined to become a major novelist.) • NON-FICTION In non-fiction, Albert Einstein's The World as I See It" and Stefan Zweig's "Mary, Queen of Scotland and the Isles," stand head and shoulders abovs all other books by Jews. A n d both, It should be noted, are translations. Both books a r e so well known that they need no further comment. Rather, let us turn to the drama, in which the Jews are represented by Lillian Hellman's fine play, "The Children's Hour," and bjr Clifford Odets' "Awake a n d Sing." In this play Mr. Odets has achieved an outstanding representation of Jewish life In N e w York.1 In this connection, that is, in the connection that this theme Is Jewish, it Is interesting to observe thatleadlng dramatic critics have predicted that Odets will become one of the foremost, American dramatists. At least N a z i chop-logic has not penetrated, to the play-reviewers. There a r e many other books which might be mentioned, but It Is best to restrict this list to unqualifiedly distinguished works. There Is one more book I would like t o mention, although 'it will -be published just after the Jewish- New Year. That Is "Festival at Meron," by Harry Sackler. Mr. Sackler 13 an Austrian Jew who immigrated to this I country. English Is an acquired language for him, and yet so perfectly has he mastered it that he has produced one of the greatest novels ever to be written by a Jew. True, his theme Is Jewish—the life of. Simeon ben Pohal and the last stand of the more religiously minded because they are more Inquisitive about their history a n d heritage. He admits, however, that on the farm the parents are compelled to be their own childrens' teachers, and that only in some Instances are arrangements made for teachers to come to the farm to train the youth. Mr. Liph speaks with a great deal of enthusiasm about t h e achievements of the Jewish; Agricultural Society. "The Society has risen to the test of serving, the Jewish farmer during the crisis and has saved many farmers," he declared. "We have secured loans for the farmers, and we have Interceded in their behalf with the government and the Federal Land Banks. In many- instances we succeeded in securing reductions on primary obligations while refinancing went on." Mr. Liph is an ideal spokesman for the farmer. He understands his case, a n d sympathizes with him and is therefor* his natural representative with t h e powers that be. As spokesman for the Jewish Agricultural Society he had his his organization a force here, and vin turn renders great individual service to the MidWestern Jewish farmers. (Copyright, 1S3B, by Seven ArU Feature Syndicate)

New Scientific

HAPPY IN THE SADDLE

j Afuleh where basalt stone is plentiful.

.WILL PERMIT AID by Palestine! FOR EMIGRANTS

These happy, carefree youngsters were only recently snatched from the terrors cf the Hitler regime in Germany. Since their arrival in Palestine with their refugee parents, they have recovered their rights to a free and wholesome life. For them, as for thousands of other refugee children, Palestine opens the door to a bright and rich future.

Expanding

weekly trip between Haifa a n d the Italian port. The Tel Aviv, a 10,000 ton vessel, is the first modern ship to fly the blue a n d white Jewish flag.

Jerusalem—The P a l e s t i n e Shipping Company, owners of the all-Jewish steamer, Tel Aviv, are reported to be ready to put a second ship into service on the Haifa-Trieste line. Humanity Is constitutionally The new steamer will make a lazy.^Timothy Titcomb.

! Berlin (JTA) — The creation Jerusalem (WNS-Palcor Agen- • of technical courses for Jewish cy)—A sensational scientific dis- | emigrants will be permitted by covery which is expected to revo- | the German Ministry of Trade, lutionize industry in Palestine and j since any project facilitating to exert a heavy influence on in- | Jewish emigration from Germany dustry elsewhere was announced j is welcomed by the government, s the German press here report.B. here by a Jewish engineer. The process, a method of re- I The C. V. Zeitung, official orducing basalt stone to a liquid ; gan of the Central Union of Gerelement without resorting to the i man Citizens of the Jewish Faith, 3,000 degrees of heat previously i takes issue with the suggestion necessary, is highly important to j made in certain Nazi papers that Palestinian industry using r a w I the Jews themselves organized materials such as iron which is | the smashing of Jewish windows not to be found in Palestine and | in Munich recently, "in order to ; disgrace the name of the Nazis." must be imported. i The suggestion is incredible, For the electrical industry, the i the paper says, not only because new discovery will be of import- | there is not a jot of evidence to ance since it will be possible to ! support it but also because it is produce casting pipes in Palestine 1 impossible that any human being j which will not be influenced by ! should for partisan manipulations heat, sun or rain. As far as it is ; arrange to have his own windows known, only a volcanic disturb- j smashed. ance could previously reduce baThe Frankfurter Volksblatt salt stone to a liquid. publishes the names of a number The discoverer, it was announc- of "Aryan" artisans in Frankfurted, is negotiating with Palestin- am-Main who engaged Jewish ap- • ian industrialists asking them to prentices. invest $75,000 for a company to use this process. Art is nothing more than the The factory of the n e w com- j shadow of humanity.—H e n r y pany will probably be located at i James.

it's a habit

A

Pendulums

Hie pendulum of time .pauses on Rosh Hasrionah

more disconcerting, the forces of barbarism

• . . ere continuing its endless ticking through

have again become mighty on earth, holding

the gravity of history.

undisputed sway over the former citadels of reason and humanity;

It's a habit of pendulums . . . to pause before reversing the direction of its arc. That momen-

But on Rosh Hashonah the pendulum has com-

tary "hanging in space" is the signal of the end

pleted its course . . . the law of gravity compels

of the cycle.

its swing from the tear to the smile, buoying up our spirits with hopefulness. Rosh Hashonah

Israel - - the entire world - - can on the occasion

is a time for rededication to prophetic ideals, a

of Rosh Hashonah gain inspiration from the

rebirth of Jewish loyalties, and a renaissance of

mechanics of the pendulum. True - - madden-

Jewish spiritual values . . . the swing of the pen-

ing hopelessness assails the world. Industry is

dulum of time promises a revaluation of spiritual

anaemic, intellectual and moral progress is

worth and a return to social justice, peace and

stalemated, political turmoil is chaotic. Even

.a humanized, progressing civilization.

OMAHA FIXTURE & SUPPLY CO. Comer 11th and Douglas Streets Omaha, Nebraska

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New Year's Edition—THE ^JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September. 27, 1935. which will include a department preached for support of this nafor t h e _ training of'-prospective A FIRST HAND STUDY tional Jewish institution. A eecuchalutzim and other emigrants to jlar college "that will appeal to all Palestinein scientific and practij who are interested in the furthercal -farming. • The -'need f o r enance of Jewish life in this councouraging - agricultural activity try, the Seminary-University is to among American' Jews h a"s long be built up by American Jewry been T felt,; and it, is. hoped . that New York (JTA)—West. . for American Jewry. through its •• agricultural course nations in South America 1 (Copyright. 1935. by Seven Arte Feature Syndicate) jtlie Seminacy.-University will give shown themselves more frf-n* an impetus _tp .a, more even disto German refugees ths.rj trib'utipn^of.'the ^"American Jewish great eastern nations, Brs^i" Leader In Denmark Argentina, said Dr. Samuel C; population ^between urban and ruraj communities. Decries Intolerance man in an address this weei-„ He accompanied James f». t"'.'Tne Seminary-University w i l l By JUDITH G. EPSTEIN aint'tb "develop among.its"students Copenhagen—"Denmark is not Donald, League of Nation? Jewish" spirit, but at a place for hatred of the Jew,"Commissioner lor Refugees, Stirring events and cataclysmic among the masses, trained gradu- which the present Hadassah hos- a"progressive thV same" time "to "preserve t h e declared Christmas Moeller, lead- recent tour of investigation. changes nave come upon the scene ate nurses, given specialized post- pital: in : Jerusalem is housed; eternal1 Jewish rvalues in "Ameri"The Argentine and Br*i-:ii er of the Conservative Party, at both In Palestine and throughout graduate -courses to many physi- these scientists cannot long -con- c a n Jewry.,' Particular\emphasis that they are bi= enough ." an extra session of Parliament. the "world in the last decade, af- cians, helped to establish s i c k tinue-their significant work. They will; be, placed, upon'the, ideals of "Anti-Semitism is not tolerated tries to ape the United SU*< fecting the status of the J e wbenefit societies and rural medi- heed- the fully equipped .labora- social 'justice; and ^ethics,,'u p o n Dr. Inman asserted. "The* here," he declared. "wherever he may live. Palestine, cal service, and through all these tories and the variety of "clinical passed laws restricting IirtTT> ] bringing into' harmonious' accord Moeller attacked Sehester, lead- tion, similar •which ten years ago -was the pas- activities lifted the health norm materials that the new medical to those in this ." Sir Arthur Wauchope, High Commissioner of Palestine, is the Jewish heritage a n d ' ideals jer of the Peasant Party, who dursionate concern of only a limited of the country, so that Palestine center is planned to provide. Extry, despite the fact that '. here seen in the colony of Naaneh, where 120 refugees from and the American environment of • ing the recent peasant march be- have no over-population number of Jews has now • become is looked upon today by neighbor- perts familiar -with the status of prnl Germany have already found a home. the student. | fore the King blamed "the might the medical sciences in the Near the focal point in the whole world ing states as a criterion and leadBut they are bound to realte Because of the impartial nature The High Commissioner is studying diagrams and drawings j o£ Jewish capital" for the agricul- this attitude is a mistake., East are of the opinion that the Jewish problem. The tragic events er in health progress. research that will be performed of the institution and of its spon- illustrating the program of the agricultural settlement to which Itural depression. Sehester had al-immigration m a y be a '>!-0 in Germany and the raging flames jso spoken of the "unnatural rela- from God. Think of what mt, in the new institution under the sors, who represent various phas- many other German Jewish refugees are expected to come. of anti-Semitism -which cannot be JUST THE BEGINNING For the university the graduate direction of distinguished scien- es of American Jewish life, it will Itions between peasants and Jews.' suit from t h e influx into S confined to the borders of any To the right is Moshe Shertok, head of the political deschool of medicine is the begin- tists now gathering in Palestine be possible to gather about the I The conservative leader accused America of 100 of t h e v.v one country, have brought home ning partment of the Jewish Agency for Palestine, which is the is hoped will even- will be of supreme importance to Seminary-University a faculty that 1 Sehester of deals with Jewish fito every Jew the need of finding tuallyofbewhat a complete medical de- that section of the -world. At first will include prominent Jewish supreme authority of the Jewish people for the rebuilding of nanciers for private gain and ask- greatest scientists!" a solution for the problem of the partment, -with an undergraduate the post-graduate teaching a n d scholars and specialists in the va- the Holy Land. ed: "Is this the right man to homeless Jew. Let every m a n , if ponn^s1* school as •well. At present the research will be confined to the rious fields of instruction, irresspeak of hatred cf Jews?" Moelgather some good books utidp- ?.!*• The influx of Germans into Pal- need f o r post-graduate teaching estine has wrought many changes is t h e more necessary, because departments of hygiene, bacteri- pective of the personal ideologies sity, its . existence to depend on I United States and Canada are now ler received an ovation from the roof, and obtain access for J.:S.T| the support it receives from! being organized into societies for j members at the conclusion of his,sell and family to some sort*..; :••>in the land, and .has accelerated from all parts of Europe young ology, bio-chemistry, paTasitology, of the individual men. The Jewish Teachers Seminary American Jewry as a whole. With- \ the support of the Seminary-Uni- i address. rary. Almost any luxury KTI.-.I/;£ the. tempo of. upbuilding. German physicians • are coming to Pales- general pathology and cancer. In equipment of the research and Peoples University, as its out regard to party affiliations, j versity. Various community chests be sacrificed to this.—Winttn; Jewry enjoyed a degree - of cul- tine for further-study and prac- the and in the scientific name implies, is a peoples' univer- individuals in every town in f-.siand welfare • funds will be apEllery Channing. tural opportunity unequalled in tice who cannot, get this oppor- laboratories, Patronize our advertisers. capacity of investigators, the prothe eastern European countries tunity anywhere else in the world. posed medical center will be on a from which'has "come the bulk of The graduate medical school -will par with finest institutions of Jewish immigration; and there further expand the. university that the kind the in Europe and t h e have come into Palestine at this has made such fine progress. Last United States. ' time men of outstanding calibre year the student body numbered •who have had great advantages, 240, -while this year the creden- • Jewish medical men in t h e •who have participated in the in-tials of eight hundred applicants United States are deeply interesttellectual life of Germany and were approved out of one thou- ed in the new development; they who are bringing to this corner sand seeking admission. The fac- see the new institution as creatof the Near East the latest knowl- ulty now numbers eighty. Some ing an opportunity for Jews to edge and approach to scientific departments were expanded and make a real contribution to the new ones added, including the In- scientific thought and knowledge problems. , In connection with the problem stitute of Agriculture. The uni-of the -world, and they look forof public health this new immi- versity's splendid library contains ward to t h e time when the gration has made urgent the con- o v e r , three hundred thousand achievements of Jewish scientists may be credited to t h e Jewish summation of a program that bids volumes. fair to open a new medical era in The current situation in Hitler people and may be known as Jew- Palestine. A modern medical cen- Germany which has caused t h e ish accomplishment. ter will be built near the Hebrew expulsion of eminent scientists The land is there—twenty-five University, which will be dedi- and medical men has brought to acres, leaving ample room for fucated not only to the cure and Palestine men of outstanding rep- ture expansion; the men a r e prevention of disease but to med- utation and calibre with which to available, ready a n d eager to ical research and teaching. staff the new institution. Such make their contribution to'; t h e The whole of the proposed men as Prof. Ludwig Halberstad- world's knowledge. Only . the remedical center, which "will be ter, noted cancer specialist, and sponse of the generous interested known as the Rothschild-Hadas- Prof. Bernard Zondek, world-re- Jews of this country, conscious of sah-University Hospital, will con- nowned gynecologist, h a v e al- their Jewish heritage a n d consist of a model three-hundred-bed ready joined Hadassah's staff as cerned -with the future of their hospital, with complete medical chiefs of the hospital department Jewish people, is necessary to and surgical departments, X-Ray and heads of the teaching staffs transform a dream and an ideal and radiology institutes, diagnos- for post-graduate medical -work into the bricks a n d mortar of ', tic laboratories, tuberculosis pa- and. research.. But in the eighty- reality* (Copyriclit, lSSS.'by Seven Arts vilion a n d out-patient depart- year-old outmoded building in Feature Syndicate) ment; the graduate school of medicine with laboratories for re• • • search and teaching, including a special division for cancer study; lecture rooms and a medical library open to the entire medical Hie caravan of time rolls endlessly along the profession of Palestine; a n d a By PINCHAS G1NGOLD . nurses' training school and residence. sands of the shifting years . . . . nourishing the * • b i t h i s article Mr. -Gingold, sity is intended as a purely YidExecutive Secretary of the new- dish college. But it is the aim of PURPOSE OP CENTER world-rocking events which make history. The purpose of the center, as Iy incorporated Jewish Teach- the incorporators to give to t h e Yiddish "language, so long the laners Seminary and Peoples -Uni-' outlined by Dr. Haim Yassky, director of the Hadassah Medical versity, sets forth'the aims'"of» guage of" everyday speech for the Organization, and Dr. Judah L. the sponsors of this institution^ J.ewish masses, academic recogniCaravans of food also travel along the highMagnes, Chancellor of the Hebrew and outlines the program of the tion and standing. Consequently, University, is threefold, as fol- first secular school for the high- the * Seminary-University will iner education of young Ameii- - clude a well organized department lows: ways and byways of the universe . . . . bringing for'the "study of Yiddish, its liter1. To provide the highest type can Jews.—THE EDITOR. ature and its folk-lore, and exof medical service to all the inpects also to use Yiddish as the physical nourishment to the human family the habitants of Palestine, and inciTo give to the Jewish masses dentally to those of neighboring in the United States a college of language of instruction in various countries. their own, where their young peo- courses of study that fall outside world over. 2. To provide facilities for in-ple will be able to receive a high- this department but for which the social and culturalimplications of vestigating diseases, more partic- er education in which Jewish ularly those prevalent in the Near learning shall p l a y an integral Yiddish are of great significance. Eastern regions. part and in which Jewish contri- In all, the Seminary-University Great or small — king or commoner -- we must 3. To provide opportunities to butions shall be synthesized and pans to employ three languages of practitioners to renew and deepen blended into a whole with world instruction: English, Yiddish and all take passage on the caravan of time . . . . and their knowledge and keep abreast culture, is the ideal of the incor- Hebrew. In every case the lanof the rapid developments in theporators of the Jewish Teachers guage will be chosen in accordscience and practice of medicine, Seminary and Peoples University. ance with t h e subject-matter must all partake from the caravans of food. so that the/ may give better ser- It is the aim of this first secu- studied. vice to their patients. lar Jewish college, the first to This brings us to the attitude The new medical development have received a charter from the of the Seminary-University toward is being sponsored by Hadassah, Legislature of one of the States Hebrew and all the ancient reliWe have no option on time's inexorable trek* the Women's Zionist Organization in the Union to teach Jewish his- gious heritage of o u r people. of America, which has maintained tory, literature, religion and phil- While the Seminiary-University is But we do have a selection from amongst the carmedical and public health insti- osophy by t h o modern scientific planned as a definitely secular coltutions in Palestine for nearly a method by which similar subjects lege, this does not by any means quarter of a century, and t h eare taught at the great classical signify that it will ignore the reavans of food. Hinky-Dinky offers at a saving the American J e w i s h Physicians' universities of America and Eur-ligious implications of the Jewish Committee, which has worked for ope, thereby giving o u r Jewish heritage. In general, however, the years toward the goal of intro- youth a conception of civilization religion and traditions of the choicest of quality foods, drawn from all direcducing medical research a n d from which Jewish culture, Jew-Jews will be studied in the light teaching in Palestine under the ish problems and Jewish ideals of modern scientific knowledge, tions, from r_-.any fields and many climes. aegis of the Hebrew University. cannot be omitted. By signing the and in the light of Jewish hisMany years ago, Miss Henrietta bill of incorporation Governor torical ideals. The development of Szold, founder of Hadassah, saw Herbert H. Lehman of New York Jewish ethics and social outlook the direction that the Hadassah official sanction" to this ideal will be studied w i t h a special By trading at Hinky-Dinky*s during the new health work in Palestine would gave and opened the way to a higher view to their application to presand should take—from the cura- education for many young Jews ent-day conditions. ture to the preventive, to the reyear, you can make the journey on the caravan whom the unacknowledged but Among the various departments search stages—and envisioned the undeniable numerous clausus now planned for the Seminary-UniverHadassah hospital of the future as an institution of learning as operating "in numerous American sity is the special labor college, of time more bountiful, with a fuller measure of well as healing. Dr. Nathan Rat- universities may otherwise ex- the purpose of which it will be to clude from the benefits of college train men and -women for intellinoff, of New York, chairman of gent participation in t h e labor satisfaction and enjoyment. the American Jewish Physicians' training. Committee, shared Miss Szold's The Jewish Teachers Seminary, movement, in social agencies, and dream and has given years of de-of which the newly incorporated for leadership in social-educationvoted effort toward the consum- Seminary University is an out- al activities in this country. In mation of the plan. None is hap- growth, has f o r eighteen years this labor college, much attention pier than these two originators of been Tecognized as t h e leading will be g i v e n to the economic the scheme to see their ideas so national educational institution of problems facing America Jewry near fulfilment today. the labor and middle class groups as Americans and as Jews, and a in America Jewry. These groups study will be made of the Jewish For Hadassah the new develop- view the Jewish problem from the position and future In American ment is the climax of nearly a standpoint of social justice a n d industry. It is generally recogquarter of a century of steady national solidarity. For t h e m nized that t h e s e problems are progress in curing the sick, pre- Jewish culture, ancient and mod- fundamental and that an underventing disease and teaching the ern, whatever has been created in standing of them is essential for people.of Palestine to keep them- Hebrew from the "Biblical period a sound development of American selves well-by proper personal and to;.the present day, including the Jewry in the' economic organism social hygiene.; In the' course of contributions of modern Pales- of this country. By providing an these years Hadassah has spread opportunity for the serious and a network of curative and preven- tine, contribute one unified whole. concentrated study of these probTo these groups, too, Yiddish reptive health Institutions throughlems the Seminary-University exout the country, including t h e resents the language of Jewish pects to aid materially in their culture/and tradition. All contrionly tuberculosis hospital in all solution. of Palestine; has waged success- butions made to Jewish culture in this language are, studied by ful war against endemic diseases, AGRICm/TURAIj TRAINING notably trachoma a n d malaria; their youth as a part of the Jew- SCHOOL ish social -inheritance. raised standard of medicine, inAnother special school projecttroduced modern methods of reat- TIDDISH RECOGNIZED ed for the Seminary-University is ment, advanced health education Not that the Seminary-Univer- an agricultural training school,

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

By RABBI FREDERICK COIIN

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We stand again on the threshbold o £ another "New Tear." What it may hold for us we do not know, we cannot know, we do not wish to know. God has mercifully screened the future from even the wisest mind. Day after day, in due course, in proper, order, in event after event and experience after experience, it will reveal itself to us. It is a Jewish New Year, that is a Jewish institution, a Jewish religious holy day; therefore of particu-" lar, perhaps, exclusive and certainly supreme interest to Jews and for Judaism. It is always fraught with deep emotion and interest, purest feeling. On the eve of a New Year Israel's heart trembles a s t h e leaves of the forest before the wind. How will the wind of viccissitude and circumstances agitate and affect Israel? This year particularly Israel's heart is disturbed. For we are living in one of the most critical eras of all history. The whole world is agitated and confused. Not only have we not yet completely emerged from world-wide economic depression but political and social problems and dangers threaten us. War again looms upon the horizon, more menacing than even in the recent months and weeks of ominous and fast-gathering storm. It seems that the world is bent upon violence and cruelty, and the pacific and humane forces are hard put to it to avert strife and wide-spread disaster that threaten again the very foundations of our civilization. A madness has infected men and nations. Individuals have risen to power who threaten and who have already injured, and in some cases destroyed, the lives and rights of many. This lamentable situation is of utmost concern to all, for the lives and security of all are affected. But it is of special concern to the Jew, to the Jew of all countries, for however Jews may differ among themselves, in the eyes of the world they are one, and their fate is ultimately the same. Jews are judged and regarded and treated in the mass. And, alas, we know from bitter and all too uniform experience that the woes of the world are placed upon the Jew. Not only does he feel them as a member of the world, but by a strange perversity he is held accountable as the chief cause, the instigator, the special perpetrator of the ills and evils that affect society. We know not why this should be so, but we know, alas, from bitter and tragic experience thatit is so. The Jew is made the scapegoat for the misfortunes and calamities that anywhere befall the world. It was so in darkest most benighted ages, it is so even in this supposedly enlightened and advanced condition of mankind. Therefore the Jew is terrified at the storm that is about to break and overwhelm mankind. Only one thing saves the Jew as ,the proud waters are again about to go over his head. And that is what has saved him in all the trials and crises of the past,, and that is his faith, his invincible faith,. renewed ever with the coming of his Holy Days. Israel withdraws to the synagogue in deepest meditation and holy communion. -Israel fortifies herself with the conviction that God is with her, that He will continue to care for and protect her, that, "the Keeper of Israel sleepeth not nor- slumbers; that Divine Providence rules the world, that right and justice will tri-1 umph in the end, that the wicked will be over-thrown, that they will themselves fall into the pit that they have dug ' for others, that'their pride and arrogance and cruelty and outrageous iniquity will go before their own destruction." May the heart of every Jew wherever he may be, be filled with this sublime faith at the sacred season and may it give him confidence and courage to carry' on, so that despite all it may be turned for him from sadness into gladness, and bo a year of joy and a year of jubilation, truly a "Happy New Year," for Israel and for all humanity. A year of health, happiness, prosperity and blessedness for one and all. ••;•'..•". •••.:•'

everyone puts' it, Is most heartbreaking and utterly hopeless. I spoke with a Jew from rural Germany who had come to Berlin. Not a customer had been permitted to enter his store lor three weeks. Storm-troopers s t o o d guard outside his doors to prevent anyone from entering. A recent development is not merely to refuse to buy from Jews, but to reftfse to sell anything to them as well—not even the provisions needed for sustenance. Life is absolutely impossible f o r them in the small towns. In 1933 they were able to seek refuge in Berlin, but today their oppressors drive them from Berlin." About one-fourth of German Jewry, Dr. Eisendrath said* is maintaining t h e other threefourths, through increased selftaxation and with the aid of outside assistance, such as that rendered by American Jewry through the Joint Distribution Committee, which with the American Palestine Campaign is a major beneficiary of t h e United Jewish Appeal. In Palestine, Rabbi Eisendrath said, he had spoken to hundreds of young Germans wh,o were exuberant and joyful over their escape from Germany. Magnificent work, he said, has been done in providing habitation for these refugees and some of t h e finest buildings he saw in moat of the colonies were built wtth relief funds. The German Jewish youth, he added, are unanimous in their desire to rebuild their lives in Palestine, and in addition to the young people, erstwhile profes-

9Avq uava ssanjsnq pne ustn ITJUOIS b e e n so completely affected by what has happened, that t h e y want nothing more than to make a complete break from everything that is German—land, language, culture, and to reshape their lives in I'alestine. "I would like to add my personal testimony," he said, "to the imperative necessity for continued relief in Germany. The people are starving. The only possible, escape for the youth is by training them f o r admission to some other country. We m u s t provide funds to give them the chance to escape. The one hope and bright spot In the whole situation is that with sufficient funds at our disposal, we c a n make it possible for thousands to leave Germany. T h e i r philanthropic institutions—old people's homes, orphanages, schools, hospitals—must be sustained. Inmates of old people'3 homes live in daily and ghastly fear that at any moment the institution will have to close its doors and they will be thrown out on the streets. Tho same thing applies to orphanages and hospitals. Any money spent under Joint Distribution Committee auspices for the maintenance of these institutions is spent as judiciously as possible."

Canadian Labor Backs Boycott Halifax, Nova Scotia—Boycott from the Berlin Olympic games in 1936, was demanded In a resolution Introduced at the Canadian Trades and Labor Congress.

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Land-A People's Need and Glory By DR. ISRAEL GOLDSTEIN President Jewish National Fund of America As the old year goes out, the cry of the oppressed and persecuted Jewish masses rises to Heaven from all parts of the world. Particularly is the Jewish heart sensitive to the cry of anguish which reaches us from our tortured and martyred brethren in the inferno of Hitlerland. Recent events have vividly proven that the Jewish National Home in Palestine is the only constructive response the Jewish people can give in this hour of distress." During the past year, the Jewish. National Home absorbed more Jer/s than all other immigration countries combined. Close to 30 thousand of the new arrivals who found peace, contentment and an opportunity to rebuild their lives, are refugees from Germany. The bright picture of Jewish progress in Palestine is blighted, however, by our inexplicable neglect of the very foundation upon which our structure of hope and beauty is to rise: The Land. Eretz Israel's Jewish population approaches the 400 thousand mark. We now constitute 2G per cent of the general population in the country and while our population Increase since 1931 amounts to SI

By BISHOP VINCENT SHAYLER Episcopal Bishop of Nebraska

God hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on the face of the earth He has set them apart in families but all are brethren, children of a common Father. In' Him then are neither circumcision nor uncircumcision, Jew nor Greek, bound nor free. When all recognize the truth and live it God's will will be done. per cent, the area of our land iis shocking as it is menacing.

possessions, both national, as well as private, has increased only to the extent of 11 per cent. Of the precious soil which is to redeem Israel, we have succeeded, after nearly 50 years oi effort, to redeem only 6 per cent. The result

There is not enough land available for Jewish settlement. World Jewry, and, in particular, American Jews who enjoy a status of freedom and comparative prosperity, cannot remain indifferent any longer to this most

To cope but temporarily with this land emergency, a call for the raising- of five million dollars has been issued. This call came simultaneously with the launching by us in the U. S. of a nationwide 600 thousand-dollar campaign for Palestine Land Redemption work. In extending to the Jews of America the heartfelt New Year's wishes of the Jewish National Fund, and in expressing our appreciation to the countless thousands who have manifested their interest in, end their desire for, a sound agricultural development In Palestine as" the basis for the Jewish National Home, nxa1 I, In the language of our High Holiday liturgy, offer to American Jewry the test of a prayer as a program of action: TEN KAVOD LE'AMECHO, SIMCHAH L'ARTZECHA— BRING GLORY TO THE HOUSE OF ISRAEL THROUGH THE REDEMPTION OF THE LAND OP ISRAEL!

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Bldck Picture Seen By United Palestine Drive

,f New York—The Jews of Ger-' that particular phase abated. I Fjinany, like the primitive tribes of knew, of course, that t h e econ! 1'America, aro these days praying omic campaign was still going on, ; ;|!for rain. 1 These prayers are, how- but I 1thought that the 'shrech1 •*? ever, not inspired by' crops im- lichkeit . had somewhat abated. l!;l|perilled by prolonged drought, Therefore, I was surprised to dis; t I but by the tragic circumstances cover that the population was z.jthat only when it rains, dare the still living in utter terror a n d ^ijJews of'Germany emerge f r o m stark fear. * h their barred a n d barricaded "I came Into Germany Just foljji homes tt» walk without fear"^ of lowing the renewed drive against \j i molestation on the public streets. the Catholics and Jews and found & |When a iheavy downpour drenches that the Jews were so uncertain V|jthe pavements a n d drives hood- as to what might happen t h a t i'bljlums in/doors, Berlin's Kurfur- they were taking refuge whenever j ! stendanx' is crowded with J e w s they thought they could find proseeking ,'a few breaths of fresh tection. • This w a s particularly true following the recent tirade of t This pathetic picture was given, Julius Streicner. here by Rabbi Maurice"'N. Eisendrath of > Toronto; Canada, one of " ' I saw evidences of new viothe leading younger figures in the lence in the shattered name plates reform rabbinate,, in an interview of Jews in front of several buildings; Then, too, I saw the lorif *> during a stop over in New York ries filled with Brown Shirts on City en]|route to Toronto. Rabbi 23isendr£th has j u s t returned Kurfurstendam stopping in front of the various cafes, shouting !\ from an j extended tour, of Europe 'Jude Verrecke*, a n d heard Inand Palestine and stopped over flammatory speeches denouncing here to confer with officers of the Jews who have the temerity to United Jewish Appeal of the Joint visit in the cafes. On the whole, Distribution Committee and t h e Jews do not frequent these cafes. American Palestie Campaign on These lorries had posters on them their plans to raise $3,250,000 In with slogans condemning b o t h this country for aid to the Jews Catholics and Jew3. of Germany and other lands and "The passerby c a n n o t , of |J fcr their settlement in Palestine. course, glimpse the horror of the "I was in Germany in the sum- actual dally existence of the Germer of |JL933, just a few months man Jews—the constant fear, the . !j , after thb Nazis came into power," communication by whispers be» ! Rabbi Ijisendrath said, "a n d at hind bolted doors and barricaded that time I found the entire Jew- windows. To get below the surish population completely terror- face, I spoke to a number of Jews ized. Tills time, I expected to find and non-Jews. The situation, as

vital of Jewish problems. As president of the Jewish National Fund of America, I had the great privilege of attending this summer the sessions of the 19th Congress- at Lucerne, Switzerland, But It seems to me that a most important message was flashed to Jewish communities everywhere when the World Conference for PalesJtine Land Redemption, held prior {to the opening of the Congress, issued , through the lips of Monahem Ussishkin, that venerable figure in the epic of Palestine Reconstruction, an urgent SOS call: SAVE OUR SOIL!

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27,1935.

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As the dawn of a New Year banishes the darkness in which man gropes, electricity . •. • . with its magical wires . . . . spreads its cheering light 'round the world, brightening the horizon of the' day ahead.

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Electricity is the constant servant of man. Whether shedding light on die news of Africa by your own hearth, or generating power for factories in far-off Palestine - - electricity is a faithful, tireless

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benefactor. While the globe of the universe spins its endless course, more and more does this electrical energy weave its magic comforts about the homemaker. The electric

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range has supplanted the coal hod - - the vacuum sweeper has outmoded the dust-Hck-* *" ' _

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ing broom - -• the modern switch has antiquated the kerosene lamp. ITHe enchanted wires of electricity light the path around the world, blazing the trail toward ~lalx>r-saving - *

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conveniences and more leisurely ease. As its candlepower increases from year to year

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New dear's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 19S5.

ervice High

inU. By NATHAN KOENIG Washington. D. C.—Tne economic and social rehabilitation of this Country Is being furthered materially by the contributions of American Jews w h o hold high public office In the service of the Federal government. The record of achievement of these office holders during the past year and in other years reveals a Btory of personal sacrifice and the expenditure; of untiring energy in the interests of the national welfare. Of:;the 531 members of Congress,;; only 11 are Jews. These are members of the House of Representatives. Of the 10 members of the President's cabinet, one is Jewish. Out of the 5S diplomatic envoyB'to foreign countries, three are Jews. Two of the nine Justices of the United States Supreme Court' are Jewish. Of the dozens of high ranking lawyers, economists, and other experts serving the Federal government, the number of Jews in these positions may be counted on one's fingers. Y e t in spite of the comparatively; small number of Jews holding important posts in the Federal government, it is . significant that those who are engaged in governmental work have s e t a high standard of service and loyalty. ; Many of these Individuals have exhibited a rare type of leadership which is bringing glory and honor to the Jewish race. One of the outstanding leaders of the House of Representatives is Adolph J. Sabath of Illinois. Born in Czechoslovakia in IS6C, he came to the United States when \16 years old. After being In this country for two years, he started bringing the rest of his family here, one and two at a time.'! He is the second oldest of a family of twelve. On, his arrival in t h e United States, Representative S a b a t h made , his home in Chicago. His first Job was in a planing mill. Later he clerked in a shoe store. Working by day, he went to business college at night. Not being

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content with studies about business, he began studying law. In 1892 he was graduated from the Lake Forest University. After the panic of 1893, Mr. Sabath started to practice law and became one of the leading lawyers in Chicago. In 1895 the governor of Illinois appointed him to t h e circuit court. In 1906 Mr. Sabath was elected to Congress and has served as a member of the House of Representatives during every subsequent session. Representative Sabath has served in the House longer than any other member. He is!the Dean of the House and holds a post on the most powerful House committee —the Rules Committee. In addition, he is chairman of a special committee which is investigating real estate reorganizations. He is a Democrat and a staunch supporter of the New Deal. One of the few Republicans In the House is Representative Isaac, Bacharach of New Jersey. During the days of republicanism, Representative Bacharach. -was. a powerful figure. He was second ranking . member of the Ways a n d Means Committee and took a special interest in tax legislation. Mr. Bacharach still holds a ranking position on the Ways and Means Committee, but is in the minority group which practically is without power. He is high in the Republican councils a n d Is recognized as one of the outstanding minority leaders. Representative Bacharach was born in Philadelphia in 1870. He makes his home in Atlantic City, N. J., where he h a s important business interests. He began his service in Congress in 1915, and has been re-elected for each subsequent term.

terms in 1D23 and have been reelected ever since. All are Democrats. Representative Celler was born in Brooklyn in 1888.. In 1912 he was graduated from the Columbia University Law School a n d was admitted to the N e w York bar that same year. He.is a member of the House Judiciary Committee and has been outspoken against the persecution of Jews in Germany.

Representative Bloom was horn in Pekin, 111., In 1870.. He came to New York in 1903, where he engaged in the real estate and construction b u s i n e s s e s . Mr. Bloom is a member of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. He was director of t h e United States George Washington Bicentennial Commission, and now is a member of a commission which will plan for. the observance of the 150th anniversary of the Constitution. Representative Dickstein was born in Russia in 1885 and came to the United States at the age of three. He attended the New York Law School and was admitted to the bar in 1908. He has held numerous state and city offices. As a member of Congress, Representative Dickstein is primarily interested in problems surrounding immigration and aliens. He is chairman of the House Committee on Immigration and Naturalization and was the sponsor of an investigation of un-American activities in the United States. As a result of this investigation, numerous measures are pending which are designed to curb subversive activities in this country. Representative Dickstein is leading a drive to humanize immigration laws and has Introduced several measures which he expects will be considered during the coming session of Congress.

Next in point .of .service as House members aro RepresentaThe one Jewish woman In the tives Emanuel Celler, Sol Bloom and Samuel Dickstein, all-of New House is Mrs. Florence P. Kahn York. These men began their first of California, who in 1925 took

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office ~to-succeed her husband, the late Julius Kahn. She has been re-elected to Congress ever since. Mrs. Kahn was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. She is a, republican and holds an important place on the Committee on Appropriations. Mrs. Kahn is known as the wit of the House. She is independent and frank in her opinions. She likes to joke and says that this has helped her over a lot of rough places. She says she believes in Joshing, "It jogs people o u t of grouchiness—and that's a help in politics."

| served in t h e Roosevelt cabinet j methods of procedure in the iield | when the President was Governor'of statistics which have been of New York State. W h e n Mr.! adopted by many governmental Roosevelt assumed the presidency , agencies. in 1933, Mr. Morgenthau was giv-! One of the key men in the State.. I en the difficult task of re-organ- ; Department is Herbert Feis, eeon-1 izing the governments system of j oniist, who was born in New York By RABBI DAVID A. GOLDSTEIN farm credits. When the late Wil-! in 1S9S and in 1921 received his "VVoodin no longer could ful- I doctor's degree from Harvard. 5695 passes as another j liam fill the duties of Secretary of the For a time he taught at Harvard trying and eventful year i Treasury, owing to ill health, and at the University of Kansas. in the history of our J President Roosevelt turned the j From 1926 to 192D he was head people jjob over to Mr. Morgenthau. At! of the department o£ economics at Our brethren in Central I present. Secretary Morgenthau is \ the L'niversity of Cincinnati. a n d Eastern European | engaged in one of the most gi- ; i countries have found no j gantic financial operations in the Another key man in the service history of this country. j of the Federal government is surcease for their sufferFollowing Mrs. Kahn in point Mr. Morgenthau v: a s horn in j Nathan R. Margold, solicitor of ing. German Jewry has of service among the Jewish mem.New York in 1S91. He comes of I the Interior Department. Born in lived through another year ia bers of Congress, is Representafamily interested in financial i Jassi, Rumania, in 1S9P, Mr. Marof the Nazi inferno. Pol- i affairs. tive William I. Sirovich of New Early in life he took a' gold was brought to this country ish, Lithuanian, and .RuYork. His first term in Congress keen interest in agriculture, and | by his parents in 1901. He remanian Jewry continues to began in 1927. He was born at later became publisher of the \ ceived a law degree from Harvard York, Pa., in 1882, and studied be crushed u n d e r the American Agriculturist, a farm! in 1823, and In that fame year medicine at Columbia University paper which he disposed of when I was admitted to the New York weight of political and ecowhere he received his M. D. dehe became Secretary of the Trea-ibar. For a number of years he nomic discrimination. gree in 1906. ' sury. He owns a farm in New i engaged in general law practice Only in Eretz Yisroel Representative Sirovich is ' a York State where he and his fam-| in New York and in 1925 was has the year been one of Democrat and is recognized in the ily spend much of their s p a r e ' ; named assistant U. S. attorney happy, hopeful building. House as a leader in. legislative time. I for the Southern District. From matters which concern standards Almost 50,000 Jews enter! 1930 to 1931 he was legal adfor food and drugs. /In addition, ed Palestine. The Holy The Administration's statistical Iv i s o r o n Indian affairs for the Inhe is prominent in legislative acLand is again rapidly bewizard is Dr. Isidor Lubin. Born i s t i t u t e of Government Research, tivities which deal with civil sercoming a great center out at Vorchester, Mass., in 1S9C, h e ' a n d i n 1 ? " 3 w a s » a m e d solicitor vice and patents and copyrights. received an A. D degree from '< ot t l l e I^ei-jor Department. of which inspiration and spiritual sustenance will come for He is chairman of the House Comt h e United States DepartJews all over the world. Clark College in 1916 a n d in m eIn n t of mittee on Patents,' and a ranking 1920 his doctor's degree from t h e ! Agriculture, Dr. MordeWe-in America has cause to" be thankful for America's member of the Civil Service ComUniversity of Michigan. Most of I c a i Ezekiel heads the list of econgreat tradition of freedom and our gratitude takes the form mittee and of the Committee: on his work before 1923 was in the ! omists. He is economic advisor to Merchant Marine and Fisheries. .of unqualified loyalty to American democracy. teaching field, although during I t h e Secretary of Agriculture and Three of the Jewish House In bur community Omaha the past year has seen an the days of the World War he | associate director of the Division members have been in consecuwas statistician for the U. S. Food ! °£ Program Planning of the Agintensified Jewish life. Our people have responded satisfactive service since 1933. Those are Administration and a special ex- j ^cultural Adjustment Admmistorily to every Jewish call. We must carry on. The New Representatives 'Herman'/P. :KopI pert for the War Industries Board. tration. Year,-however, is;a ; challenge to resolve to exceed the plemann of Connecticut,? Henry Dr. Ezekiel is recognized as one I In 192S, Dr. Lubin became econachievements of-the. past'yearJ May God grant us the visEllenbogen of Pennsylvania, and of the outstanding agricultural omic advisor to the Commissioner ion \ and. the'sympathy: and ,th^ to achieve great Theodore A. Peyser of New York. economists in the United States. on Education and Labor, and aidj things in the coming year for Israel, for Israel's Torah, for All are Democrats. ed the United States Senate in its i H e P^yed a leading role in the God and humanity. Representative K o p p 1 e mann investigation of unemployment. development of the agricultural was born in Odessa, Russia, in In 1933, Dr. Lubin was named adjustment program now under 1880 and came to t h e United United States Commissioner of w a y A l s o in t h e States with his parents in 18S2. Labor Statistics, a position which Department of AgHe was educated in t h e public his legislative activities have cen- necticut legislature in 192 7 and he now holds. In this office, Dr. | "culture is Louis Bean, economtered around old a g e pensions 1931, where he w a s democratic i Lubin is concentrating on improv- ; i s t attached to the office of the schools at Hartford, Coim. In 1904 he was elected to the city and public works. He is a. mem- floor leader. He is representative- ' ing t h e government's statistical j Secretary of Agriculture and chief council. Later he served in the ber of the House Census Commit- at-large from Connecticut. service. He has developed n e w ! Continued on next page Representative Citron is a memConnecticut House of Representa- tee, the Insular Affairs Committee, and the District of Columbia ber of the House Judiciary Comtives and in the State Senate. mittee. His legislative interests As a member of Congress, Rep- Committee. Representative Peyser was born center around veterans' affairs, resentative Kopplemann has been interested in several major legis- at Charleston, W. Va., in 1S73. social security, and labor. lative matters, including measures He represents the Silk Stocking affecting social security, banking, District of New York. He is a In the executive branch of the and agriculture. He is sponsor of member of the House Interstate Federal government is H e n r y Bishop-elect of Omaha legislation designed to provide and Foreign Commerce Commit- Morgenthau, Jr., the Administraloans for business and industry. tee, and has been particularly in- tion's No. 1 official in charge of Through a resolution introduced terested in legislation Effecting financial affairs. As secretary of I send cordial and sincere greetings to the Jewby him and adopted by Congress, labor. the Treasury, Mr. Morgenthau has The youngest of the Jewish one of the most intricate and at the Federal Trade Commission ish people of the States of Nebraska and Iowa. The now is engaged in a nation-wide members of Congress in point of the same time the most delicate Jewish element has been a most important one in investigation of the dairy indus- service is Representative William of tasks in the government's aftry. Representative Kopplemann M. Citron, democrat of Connecti- fairs. He is the government's paythe growth and development of our country. They is a member of the House Bank- cut. He began his first term in master as w e l l as the governJanuary, 1935. Representative ment's collector of revenue. ing and Currency Committee. have shown their loyalty and devotion on more than Representative Ellenbogen of Citron was born at New Haven, Secretary Morgenthau serves as Pennsylvania is the youngest of Conn. He is a graduate of Wes- one of the most trusted of Presione historic occasion. As the new Bishop of Omaha, the Jewish members in the House. leyan University and of Harvard dent Roosevelt's lieutenants. An I extend every good wish to our Jewish friends. He was born in Vienna, Austria, Law School. He represented the old friend and neighbor of t h e in 1900. He is a lawyer. MostArf-itown ot Middletown in the Con-| President, Secretary Morgenthau

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 19S5.

Continued from previous page France. He "was named to that of the Agricultural-Industrial Re- post in 1933. Born in New York lations Section of t i e Agricultur-I ^ 1872 > Mr. Straus is a Harvard al Adjustment Administration. | graduate ana known in financial Mr. Bean -was born in Russia in .jmcircles as a banker and "business 1S96. He is a graduate of thej a : n • "University of Rochester and is the | Mr. Sack is Minister to Costa recipient of a degree from the i Rica and was named to that post Harvard Business School. From! in 1833. He -was born in Tupelo, 1923 to 10;.3, he was a member! Miss., in 1SS9, studied at the TJniot the research staff of the Bur-jversity of Missouri, from 1S07 to ean of Agricultural 13conomics. In 11909 and was one of the student 1933 he was named to nis pres- \ founder? of the University of Misent position. jsouri School of Journalism, the The Federal Reserve Board has; first of its kind in ".his country. Emanuel A. Goldenvreiser as its \ Mr. Sack is -widely known as a director of t h e Division of Re- i newspaper man and "was Washsearch and Statistics. Mr. Gold-1 ington correspondent for t h e enweiser was born in Kiev, Rus- j Scripps-Howard Ohio group of sia, in 18S3. He Teceived degrees'j newspapers when he was named from Columbia and Cornell, and \ Minister to Costa Rica. in 1907 entered government s.er-1' Mr. Steinhardt has been Minisvice as special investigator for the i ter to Sweden since 1933. BeTJ. S. Immigration Commission. sides being a diplomat, he is wideHe served until 1910 when he be- ly known as a lawyer and econcame a special agent for the U. omist. He was born in New York S. Census Bureau. In 1914 he;in 1892, graduated from Columjoined tbo economics staff of the!-Ma University and was admitted Department of Agriculture, a n dj to the New York bar in 1915. He from there, in 1919, became as-j is a director of a number of large sistant statistician in the Federal j corporations. As a member of the Reserve Board. j finance committee of the DemoThe three diplomats who rep-; cratic National Committee, he Tesent the Federal government; played a leading role in financing abroad are Jesse I. Straus, X.eo R. the campaign which resulted in Sack and Laurence A. Steinhardt. the election of President RooseMr. Straus is Ambassador to velt.

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j New Year Thoughts r

By RABBI URI MELLEB of New Orleans. Former Spiritual Leader of the Omaha Waad

Israel is living in a period of historic intensity. Not a day passes but word reaches us of profound changes affecting the Jew. Everywhere we seem to he involved in a dynamic ferment. The tragedy of G e r m a n Jewry, the glorious adventure in Palestine, race riots in Algeria, settlements in Siberia and Uruguay, an international trial in Switzerland, Zion's flag sailing- the High Seas; a constant staccato of g l a r i n g needliness chronicle t h e swiftly changing panorama of Jewish life. We are living in the romantic period of• .. . . Jewish history. Things are happening. It is hut inevitable that certain concomitants of this rapidly moving drama should be expressed subjectively on the Jew. If a nation without history is blessedly happy, as the proverb has it, Israel is indeed unfortunate. But the misfortune is not the objective onslaught of hostile forces. It is to be found in the subjective reaction of the Jew, to the stimuli of an abnormal world. Suffering has become ingrained in the historic con: scionsness of Israel. We have suffered; struggled; and pre« vailed. The hammer blows of our would-be destroyers have but hardened the fibers of our national heart; the persecution of our tormentors has contributed to our immortality. Under torture we have stiffened and grown strong; in adversity we have blossomed forth. Not in Biblican times alone was it true of Israel that - - "The more they afflicted them, the more they multiplied." If there does confront us a danger, it lies not in what other may do to us, but in what we may do to ourselves. Strenuous times demand stern characters; and in the face . of constant stress we must be strong to maintain emotional equilibrium. , There is the danger of becoming:. panic-stricken in a crisis such as has befallen us in this historic moment. Too much is happening to us and. the very magnitude of our troubles may lead to a conviction in the futility of resistance and to the resignation of the hopeless. An era of erratic psychological mass neurosis can be discerned in the movements and measures that have become popular in the Jewish fold. Desperation leads to hasty and faulty judgment; and a people with Israel's problems can afford neither. We heed the historic balance that is traditionally ours; the ability to see in the problems that are ours, the continuity of Jewish life. Our forefathers fought these problems and came forth unscathed. We must emulate them in national poise. But equally as dangerous to Jewish well being is the threat .of too much calmness. Some of us are becoming so accustomed to our abnormal condition that we make it normal by subjective adjustment. It is a peculiar kind of resignation. Behold sorrow becomes the status quo and suffering the norm. Behold our tragedy has become commonplace and our great adventure a drab episode. Resistance becomes passive and the spirit of protest dies out. We become inured to the suffering and humiliation of our brethern in Europe, and neither alleviate their pain nor resent their degradation. "Peace, Peace," we cry, but there is no peace. We make peace with defeat; peace at a price we cannot pay and retain our national self-respect :L

It is well on the New Year, to pause a moment in the spiritual calmness of the holy day and regain our traditional balance. On the mountain top that is Bosh Ha Shonah it is well to re-survey our long march - to re-sight our goal to re-invigorate our souls. We must fight, not flee; combat conditions, neither acquiesce to them nor collapse in terror at their magnitude. Jewish traditional standards must be retained; our morale, unshuttered in ages past must remain whole. On Eosh Ha Shonah we must fall in step again in Israel's March - marching anew to the thrilling rhythm of Israel's spiritual destiny.

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T New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935. Order of Roumanian Eagle; Dr. cago; Albert Abrahamson ap- British Empire; Mrs. Elizabeth doctors has issued an order forJonas Friedenwald awarded gold pointed Federal Works ' Progress Goldsmith of London awarded' Or- bidding all German medical doc; tors to attend f h e international medal for opthalmology by Amer- Administration for Maine; Harry der of British E npire. (Copyright, 1935. by, Seven Arts ' medical congress • at MLontr.eux, ican Medical Association; Dr. Leo Kalodner n a m e d Pennsylvania Feature Syndicate) Switzerland, because; of an article Loeb awarded John' Philips Mem- State Secretary of Revenue. attacking Nazi racial ideas puborial Medal by American College Women:lished in the Swiss Medical Weekof Physicians; Leon Simon namOne of the most Interesting fealy, in whose offices the secretared director of BHtish Postal SavNew'York (WNS)—"Germans, iat of the Congress-is located.-The Jews, and France,"'a collection of ings; Ivan . Solomon . re-elected tures of the year,5695 was the author of the.article was Dr. Jul- excerpts from the writings of mayor of Pretoria, South Africa; increasing number, of honors acius Bauer, Vienna Jewish doctor. Maurice Freeman-; elected- mayor corded to Jewish women. Here are •Friederich Nietzche, showing that of Johannesburg; Louis-Gradner some of the more outstanding of - Berlin ( W N S ) — N a z i Gerthe great German thinker was the many's racial policy was hailed re-elected mayor.of Capetown; Ir- suclr distinctions: as "epochal" and "a pattern most uncompromising foe that win Steingut-. elected, speaker of Mrs. Florence ;Prag K a h n-re- which other nations and other Starrs Still. Hope to Germaav ever had, E pro-Semite N. Y. Assembly;, Dr. Abrevaya elected to Congress; Mrs. Shosh- racial groups must follov if they Get'Uncle's Fortune nnd Francophile, has been comelected to Turtlsh parliament; ana Persltz named vice-chairman do not wish to fall behind in their piled in a pamphlet by Btnjamin Herman Koppleman, Henry El- of Tel Aviv city council a n d racial quality, in their racial acNew York . (WNS).—Although tie Casseres. editor critic and delenbogen a n d William Citron awarded Order of British Empire: complishment and in their proselected- to Congress; Dr. Morton Mrs. J'jstine Tulin Wise appointed pects for rurvival" by Professor the million dollar fortune sup sccntl&tu of Baruch Spinoza, tn Gottschall named dean of C i t y N. :Y. domestic relations court Clarence G. Campbell of New posedly left them by their • uncle. dispose of HIP tiuggcs.ion that the College;." E. Neudegg appointed judge; Mrs-. Jennie ,Lpitman-Bar- York, president, of the Eugenics Harry Kozlak, purported South Psazi klcaU-gy is founded on Nietzdirector of Basle Municipal The- ron r named Bostou judge; Miss Research Association, in a speech African diamond magnate, evapatre ; Louis tTntermeyer w i n s Ruth I.ewinson elected treasurer before the Nazi-controlled world orated into thin, air, members of In a statement to t. h e Seven prize for best book on Italy; Rab- of N. Y. County Lawyers' Asso- race improvement congress. Pro- the Starr family are now hopeArts Feature Syndicate. Mr. tie ful that thei.may be.nble'to salbi David Feuchtwang. gets ^A'us-^ ciation; Miss Susan Brandeis. ap- fessor Campbell is the same man ! trian Order ofi Merit; Samuel pointed ? t o . N . Y. State Board t who admitted two months ago' vage sometli.in? from their rirdely Casseres said that his compilation reveals that "nothing more dras" Dickstein, William Sirovicli, The- Regents; Mrs. Anna Rosenberg that" he was the author of a Nazi shaltered hopes Counsel " for Abraham " Starr, tic or devastating lias ever been odore • Peyser, Emanuel Celler, named New-York State Director pamphlet favoring sterilization of East Side Jewish ironworker, be-: said about the Germans than AdolphT Sabatb, Sol Bloom a n d of, NRA;. Mrs.- Tillie Jacqbson of the Jews. Here that Kozlak's estate is..in came fron the pen oi this GerIsaac Bacharach reelected to Con- Southern Rhodesia awarded Order This pamphlet, written in the Hialystok and although it is con man, :-. descendant on both sides gress; Charles Taussig appointed of-British, Empire; Mrs. Archibald United States a n d published in s'derably less than the - S13,000.- of a long line of Protestant paschairman of National Adv.isory Frieman of Ottawa. awarded Or- Germany, declared that Jews "try tors. It is 'he greatest ps>chologiCouncil of National YoutL. " Adr der of British' Empirei;sMrs.; Lion- to destroy social institutions and 000 first reported,-expect to get. cal portrait of the German ever sonap of it for the" penurious ministration; . Jacob >Liebferberg el Hart .of South Africa awarded moral and religious ideas through made and explains much of what elected: first head/of Biro-Bidjan Order of British Empire; Florence racial mixture" with the peoples Starrs. is going on today in Germany. soverniiient; Daiiel/Auster' nam- Cfibetz wins national essay con- among whom they lived. It deOut of the mouth of Germany's ed viceTniayor- of"Jerusalem; Sabr test of America's Good .WUl" Union clared that "t h e difference beTo be prepared for war/is one; greatest thinker comes not only bati Levy named? vice-mayor - of of "Americanism"; Mrs. Ahavah tween the Jew and the Aryan is a drastic drubbing of the antiHaifa; Rudolph" Samoiloyich gets Passy-of Palestine awarded; Order as insurmountable as between of the most effectual. ;.iii;eans , of ; Semites but pi-aiso of the Jews preserving: peace.—G-e.orge,,Wash-; Order of Lenin;' Barnet'Ho'd e s of British Empire; Mrs. Louis Mo-| black and white." Speech-, to'.both:.'Hxruses—: • thr.t ought to make all Jews blurt named corporation council'of Chi- delK of: London. awarded ••Ordar of I : Meanwhile the Nazi leader of j 1ington: 790. ". . • • • . . - . - . , . . . - . • { for Jews."

• '•• Writings Show:

One

American Professor Hails Nazis' Policy

By BERNARD POSTAL On' the occasion *of tho 100th Nathan' Kothschild was> admitted Tiger," her tours of Europe were anniversary ot tho birth of Adah to the British House of Commons; an endless triumph. fr wrote a famous article which In December, 1866, she became Isaac Menken, Bernard Postal re? caljs tt\e turbulent career of tho was translated intor several lan- the 'rage of, Paris at the Gaite in American Jewish Beauty. .•]• Theguages. R-bthEcbild; thanked .her "Les Pirates-de la Savane.". A "Coiriei i Up ta See Me Sometime and-proclaimed her*"the^lnspired •scene was introduced into t h e Girl" ot t i e '60V was a moat In? Deborah of^he.r race.".-Dabbling play, in which 'Adah impersonated tcresting personality as you will inverse as a young :girl/ she re- Feoria, a dumb Mazeppa, t h u s discover when reading; t h i ar» vealed herself to -be a .poetess of enabling Parisians to see the dargenuine talent. 'She w.a^ a • fre- ing- and dazzling actress ride an tlclo.i-4.jrHE tTDITOR. quent contributor to tho Ameri- untamed horse, to "whose backIn; the Jewish section of th6 can Israelite i and - corresponded side she was lashed, up a steep Jamousf Pere j Lachaise Cemetery with many of the great and near and riarroyr :runway • to the dome In 'Paris there stands a granite great of her time; - Adah Menken of the theatre. Parisians loved it column. One side beari the wc-rds: the poet and literary •figure, glow- and they" went wild over Adah. "thou- knoweBt",< and -its' other ed; as/brilliantly as Adah Menken The play' was given .for one hunBidVthe Inscription: "Adah Isaac the actress. She als"o' learned to dred nights,; and the last performMenken, born in Louisiana, United read -Hebrew and tried "her" hand ance-•was" witnessed- by Napoleon States of America, died in iParisi at ;sculptured In every city..-_ that HI/ the King' of Greece! the Duke August 10, 1868." Under t h a t she played she. was idolized. of Edinburgh and Prince Jerome, .slab-of grey atone lie the mortal When sheWme to Dayton, Ohio, who "presented, a diamond ring to remains of the first American wo:- she. was named captain ~b£-1 h e ,tHe American star after the per; ' mah whom all. Paris loved; -the light guard? Tin' San Francisco the formance." gold miners tossed thousands of incomparable Adah; Isaac: Meiikett • In 18.68 she returned to Paris —nlancer, actress, v poetess, sculp? dollars worth, of gold"dust on to to ..rehearse .In a new- play, but her performance tress and Jewess—^a magnetic and the stage after contracted... bronchial, pneumonia 1 ; colprful personality who .combin- o f " M a z e p p a . / : "; •-•-.•: • •• - • and died. She "was "33,' povertyWhen she" arrived in -London stricken and", friendless when her ed* lit -herself the talents of a'Dorothy Parker, t h e • bravado-of a she • was received • not' only' as . a amazing' career came .'to an '. end Mae West, the daring of an Amel- great actress>but1 also" for the stir in r an attic .in the Latin quarter ia Earhart and- the.: physical at- she had made -in ' the literary cir- of Paris.- At .her .death-bed was traction of a Peggy Hofikins cles-; of theHime. Swinbnrno{de- a rabbi, and under her death pilJdyce. In her day -this beautiful; scribed her >as "the world'si de- low, was a Hebrew testament. She exciting and brilliant woman, wafe light." Dickens was proud to have was' burled. in the -Pere Lachalse the toast of two -continents, but one of her :;'i»pema" dedicated'; to m y * through." the "generosity today, a hundred^years after her him. To her ?Lqndon apartments of the. Rothschild family.. It; was came Dickens and Charles Roade. the Rothschilds who rescued her birth/she is virtually,unknown. In 1 Paris h e r admirers included Bom in New Orleans.intlS35, Dumas, pe.re, • and'^Gautier;••': > In from a pauper's grave and paid she-was the oldest daughter - of America Eh~e\was: an- intimate- of for'the gray slab that marks her an-Irleh Immigrant merchant arid M^rk Twain*, and': Joaquln - Miller. resting place.; .The, great actress his t Creole wife. Christened Dol- Legend: has it that; she was the and poetress had "died -virtually ; alone,-neglected by, the great; and ores1 Adelaide McCord, she was mistress of b.dth Dumas»andtSwlnsomething of a child prodigy. Be- burne but -this' is v oniy one of the near great whom she had charmfore'she was nine she knew Latin, malicious; tales spread':about the ed s and amused. To.day she is alEnglish, French and Spanish' and •woman who brought" kings,- poets, most forgotten except in Paris when fshe was twelve - had trans- bankers and /prize fighters under where 'the - memory of h e r trilated ' i t h e Iliad : into French. her .'•• irresistible spell. Although umphs in. the-days of the Third Schooled in the dance, her.grace Victorian London was;.outraged Empire linger for she was the arid'beauty .won her a stage en- by.'• her so-called "•'indecency, all first of those women ]to whom, begagement" in a dancing act ;at the London streamed over Westmin- cause' they - w e r e triumphantly French Opera Hoiiae at. -New Or- ister: Bridgei to see Her. Despite American and triumphantly themleans. Still in her teens, she ap- the.' abuse. of ..prudish London*' she selves," .was offered one of t h e peared with her sister Josephine hadjlong and repeated runs there world's shining tributes-—that of under; the name of Bertha Theo- as well aB/in;. Paris;-and. Vienna^ being called a true Parisienne. dore.' i| Leaving the -theatre • for d Calling, herself the • "Royal Bengal . ' (Copyright,-1935. by Seven Arts • ' Feature Syndicate) whilej I she -went to work as an English, and Spanish teacher in A girls! i school. Teaching wits dull business to;her and in 185j she joined: a "trarelling hippbdrome" a n'dj became a" proficient equestrienne. ' Adah soon - tired; of being, a: circus -performer a n d Ift 1853:rBue' appeared as premiere daiiseuse at the/opera house in .Mexico Citj*.. On her way back to —• Notwithstanding--the -fact- that civil aviation; Peppah Alallah apthe United ^State's she spent some thp bulk of Jewish efforts during pointed Greek vice-minister of fitime 'at Liberty, Texas,.editing a the past year were concentrated nance; Jacpb_ Greenberg appointweekly newspaper. There > she was oh"" measures ' of s e l f-defeiise ed;r associate superintendent of N. captured by Indians, • escaping throughout the world,, Jewish par- Y. school syBtem; Ernest Gurenticipation in the public life of the ing appointed Porto Rico admindeath i by a ruse; countries in which1 Jews 'lives • was istrator; - Joseph Hanken elected she was 21 she .met Alnot lessened' by: the . fear. of Fas- junior vice-commander>of .Veterexander I3aac Menken, a devout cism." During 5695 Jews in many ans of. Foreign Wars; Rudolph S. Jewish musician and merchant from [Nashv'iiie. They fell desper- lands continued .to'..win> positions Hecht elected'president of Amerately iin love and were married'in of trust and'to receive" honors "in ican 'Bankers' Association; Sidney GalvejBton, April 3, 1856. Adah recognition". of --notable- 'achieve- Hillman named one of five mempublicly "embraced Judaism and ments. The -most outstanding • of bers; of National Industrial' Recovery Board; Rabbi F. Hoogalthough she was' later divorced thefee were; straal of Holland given Order of from'! Menken, never abandoned Samuel Xgnon of TelAviv reher, JudalBin. It was then that CeWed the:BIalik Prize:in Hebrew Orange Nassau; Rabbi Imanuel she adopted the name Adah Isaac literature, . Palestine's Pulitzer Loew: re-elected to Hungarian Menken, . a, name which subse- prjze; Dr.. .Adolph • Duchowitz senate; Rabbi Sandor elected to quently brought her the title ot awarded;gold medal of Argentine Hungarian chamber of deputies; "the divine Jewess." Marital ties Medical Association; B a r n e t t Eugen • VIda.gets Hungarian Serbegan to bore her before long and Freed man .of London w Ins con- vice Cross; Meyer: NIssim,elected she, permitted a quarrel with her test'; for design .of .King .George to Bombay c i t y council; R. A. Raphael re-elected mayor of Burhusband over her taste for cigarettes to break up her marriage. Jubilee stamp; $1,000 Altman ma; ^ General," Umberto Pugliese After her divorce she never saw priie of National Academy ot De- named. Headvof Italian naval consign, given .to. Leon ; Kt-oll; ;-Dr. struction commission; Lazarus Menken again. Robert Strieker, M. Klemperer, Kaganoyich named Soviet ' rail Soon after she made her debut M.. Plotkes ' and M. Lerenhertz commissar; Sir Elly Kadoorie and ag an actress In Mllman's tragedy, named to Austria's federal ultur- Sir Victor Sasson get gold medal "Fjulo," in New Orleans., Later al council;- Ferdinand ,BJoob-Bau- from Chinese "Government; Hershe flayed with a Shakespearean er elected president of Austro- bert H. Lehman.- reelected govertroiipe, supporting the -famous Czechoslovakian chamber ot comtragedian, James Murdoch, a n d merce; Robert Kronfeld, Austrian nor of New York; Jacob Goodale also • appeared in Havana.. Al- aviator, sets world "glider record; gets Chandler Medal for chemithough h e. r acting received in- CarriiHe Gut named Belgian min- cal research; Isadore.Lubin namcreasingly impressive notices, she ister of finance; Alfred A. Ben- ed. American delegate to Internadid not really get warm praise as esch appointed Ohio commerce tional Labor Organization of an-actress until she appeared in head; Jacob Billikopf ~ n a m e d League'-.'of.'.Nations; James MarAlbany on June 7, 1861,. in a re- chairman of Philadelphia Region- shall named to N. Y. C. board of vlval-of "Mazeppa." Instantly "sue al 7 Labor Relations Board; Dr. education; 'Leo Pasvolsky . apwas'a success. Critics raved oyer Mario Malamud named 'Judge in pointed foreign trade economist her '.pale beauty,, her form, her Rio de Janeiro;--Horacio L a t e r ot U, S. Bureau of Foreign and dark hair and flashing eyes, in- elected to. Brazilian- parliament; Domestic Commerce; Benjamin vitations poured In f o r . h e r to Dr. Selig Brodetsky elected pres- Scheinman named chief justice of play'in every city of America. Her ident of British Association of Los Angeles municipal court; Tame also spread to the Contin- University Teachers; Benjamin Max Spelke named Assistant ,U. S. ent.- During the 186O's~there*~wHs FairvovifclT elected to "city coun- Attorney-General;- Jacob Weiss scarcely a person • who had n o t cil of Santiago, Chile; Jacob Ka- chosen president of Indiana Senheard of her sensational perform- balltin appointed Jewish - adviser ate; Philip L. Sykes named chief ance In "Mazeppa*" in which she to Manchukuo; Leon Cohen nam- justice" '""of Baltimore Orphans' rode.'-up a -nountain strapped'to ed • deputy commissioner • of" Fed- Court; "Jacob Kaylan -named head the back of a white boree. in pre- eral Securities Exchange; David pf:Boston finance, commission; vious performances of "Mazeppa" Cf611' named minister of Labor of Henry Bank- elected vice-president the custom had been to use a man Ontario Province; • Dr. Angelo of Minneapolis city council; Louis or'a; dummy in the tbrifiing jiofse- Goldstein and Chaim Kugel*elect- Pink" named New York State' sulespTscene, but Adati wanted -the ed to Czechoslovakian parliament; perintendent of Insurance; -Igidbr sensation to be hers. .In this scene Prof. W. ,J. de Haas ot itolland WasserVogel re-elected to N e w she1'wore tights, the-*flrst woman awarded Rumford Medal'of Roy- York State Supreme Court; EdIn tho history of the American al Physical Society of London; gar : Lauer; elected to. New York stage to do so. The effect ou the Franklin Institute Medal • award- State Supreme Court;. Joseph public was startling. • She became ed to Albert Einstein and Robert Fromberg. named assistant U: S. the center of an international con- E. Nanmburg; Abraham Eimaleh Attorney-General; David' Levine troversy. Moralists" a n d purists of Palestine named ' to' French elected president of Seattle city denounced her and demanded her Academy; Alan M. Green of In- council; • Sol A. Rosenblatt aparrest, while art lovers rallied to diana Civile Service -knighted by pointed NRA•'"* compliance chief; King; Leslie Hore-Bellsh, British Baron Maurice de Rothschild her ;support. v minister ot • transport", • named "It was at this time that she privy councillor; Israel E. Vol1 elecjted to French Academy; Marnullified John C. Heenan, then the cani of Palestine, Abraham^Gold- cel Rosenberg of: Russia named heavyweight champion of t h e water ot London and-Elijah.Sll- vice-secretary of League" of Nawb'rid. Later she also' became the vefstone of Montreal receive Or- tions; Jean Arent appointed Ruswife? of OrpheuB C. Keer, the sat- der _ of British Empire; Marcus sian consul-general «Jii_ U.-S.; Jan irist* of 'the Civil War, and- James Samuel elected to House of Com- Gomarik' named chief "deputy-comBarclay, California shipping mag- mjons; Gedrges Mandel • named' missar of Russian Consul-General nate and Wall- Street promoter. French minister of. communica- in-U. S.; Jan Gomarik n a m e d Butlnone of her marriages equall- tions; Albert Goldman named chief deputy.commissar of.Soviet ed -In. happiness her days with postmaster of N e w York City; national defense; Jonah Jakir api. • To her' short-lived lite Daniel Alaluf and'Asher JMaUah. pointed commander of Ukrainian Sholom UJvolitrki named with the Jewish musician Is trace- elected to " G r e e k parliament; arJJiy; head of Soviet Trading Bureau in able her ardent Judaism as wen Isaac Sciaki named-head ot 'Greek "France;. Rabbi "Niemerower given literary • fervor.

AN D

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TELEPHONE

COMPA-HY

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.New Year's .Edition—-

i-xt.ni.3v>—-irictay, September 27, 1935.

from 10 per'cent to over 100 per j activities, the place of the syna- j cial service activities of particular : ' Q u ^ F g> of .Ships cent over those made in previous K o s u e j n Jewish iife today. Ainer-' interest tn the wrofp.spinTts.i tprh^^° ' ^ New York—Because S. Klein, years. In some Jewish eomnnml- j , ican aid to over-seas communi- nician. I••liion Square merchant, waB payties not a single Jewish family ties and movements, and general And so this summary comes to •ng for t h e . trip, John Thomas has failed to respond to the call problems affecting Jewish adjusthe Warsaw (WXS) for funds. The overseas need is ment and integration Into Amer- an end with the writer's apology Kennedy, sent by the Boys Club courts sre now faced with ft JI.--1-for omitting a great deal of perof Bay Ridge as the gooa will amreported to be very severe and ican life. The National Conferthreatening and only such a full- ence of Jewish Social Service, tinent detail. • However, those in-' bassador to Ireland ssilrd on an lish legal tangle involving: a Jr>vhearted and ready answer by calling together a greater propor- terested in more information on ;American stcEicpr instead of on ish merchant's refusal to par <v<~ shipment of German gooHf American Jewry can bring the ur-tion of the professional people in any of the items listed will find the S. S. Deuischland of the Ger-awhich he sent back. M. Skurts ina number of national Jewish agen- man line on which lie had booked gently required relief. social service, made the theme of cies ready to supply Each addi- passage. ski, s. Jewish sugar denier, orriprthis year's Conference "Economic tional data as the reader may WELFARE CONFERENCES When Mr. Klein was informed e<i s. lot of Bug IT from Leipxijr. Adjustment Problems of Ameri- desire. that Kennedy was to sail on the shortly before Kitlpr came ir.rrTwo major conferences were can Jewry." This problem w a s Jewish Telegraphic (Copyright, German ship he threatened to power. held during the past year: The analyzed from various angles and cy, Inc.) When it wag delivered a "tier n>* hare nothing to do w ' i t h the Conference on Jewish "Welfare in ] recommendations based on facta0.vent of the Ka?,i • regime onivr project. Reuppt&rs ; ual material were offered better January and the National Conferinto power, he- returned it. ht GOVERNMENT AID ing." At this writing (August 15) - In this brief summary, an atLondon (WXS)—The anti-SemLeipriE firm is n o w cle Although the government's in- about §1,500,000 has been con- I ence of Jewish Social Service in • to deal with the peculiar econ- itic paper, Al Hedaya, published tempt will be made to touch only the former, which as- o m i c problems facing J e w s payment'.for 1he sujjrpr. Palestine a tew high lights of Jewish social terest in social welfare has great- tributed by some 300 communi- j sembled 461 delegates from 64 I throughout the country. • Meeting in Bagdad, Iraq, has resumed Jerusalem—The largest bakery The Jewish merchant's defpn welfare work : during the p a s t ly lessened sectarian responsibili- ties, with campaigns scheduled in cities throughout t h e "Cniied jointly -with the Conference was publication under t h e name of in Palestine was started on the is thnt : the" Nfisifc forbid trftrii year. It should be emphasized ties it should be remarked that Lissan Al Hedaya, in order to cirthe National Association of JewStates, the relation of Jewish Tray to operation here when thp with Jewish firms while the T .»! that much has failed of mention actually the load of responsibility 200 cities this Fall. At the end ish Center Executives and the Na- cumvent a government ban on the because of the limited confines of and work that we, as Jews and 1of the year, it is estimated that communal effort to the welfare tional Council on Jewish Educa- paper, according to word received cornerstone was laid p.t Shechunnt zig PugflT dealers ccntenrt i 1t' * needs of Jews throughout the Shapiro, a settlement near T e I SUuritinski'E rpfi'ssl to pay in this summary. Generalizing, how- social workers, must carry is no iover 800 Jewish communities will and shared in this effort. The world was discuseed in the differ- tion. The topics jointly consider- here. Aviv. {violation of the recent Polish rf ever, one may state that although less now than it was before 1929. have In its new guise the paper is standard of both in the ent sessions. Such topics as the ed covered cultural progress for ! cree outlawing the snti-Np.Ei bo American Jewry has not as yet The government needs the con-ID3i and thegiving A capital.of £125.000.has been the Jewish community and t h e continuing its violent attacks on present campaigns following were covered: The posi. cott. returned to its standard of giving tinued support of private welfare shows a commendable increase tion of the Federation in the total redemption of Jewish life from the Jews, devoting much space to invested by French. Jews. which characterized the period agencies in order that its o w nover any year since 1929. Some field of Jewish welfare, public its present chaos and futility. violent tirades against the ZionExpert bakers are b e i n g from 1924 to 1928,the various j program may develop a n d con-cities are reporting increases in welfare and social insurance, cur- There were also sessions covering ists and to defending the Nazis; brought frim Vienna to operate Art can never give the social welfare activities have been [ tinue on a sound and desirable individual contributions varying' rent Jewish cultural needs a n d the more technical aspects of so- for their war on the Jews. ; the plant. • bp.t makes ' p.vi.—Burke, substantially maintained during j basis. The coming year should see these depression years under very a renewed dedication of Americanj severe and trying operating con- Jewry to support and continue; ditions. There is great need for the social service work which Jews to increase the total of their they have developed in this counphilanthropic contributions in or-try during the past hundred years. der not to "break down the instrn- ] SOCIAL WORKERS mentalities for Jewish self-help T h s< B e T e r a l yearshave and for the continued mamten- w i t n e s s e d J e w i s h s o c i a l o r b ance of organizations which our p a 5 8 i n g t l n . o u g n a T e r y people and the government expect strenuous period which has taxed US to support and keep alive. the Intelligence, resourcefulness and devotion of hundreds of proSOCIAL SERVICES fessional Jewish social workers. They deserve great credit for havFAMILY RELIEF Since the depression, every year ing carried forward BO successhas seen larger a n d larger de- fully under the burden of increasmands made upon Jewish family ed work, extremely trying condiwelfare and relief societies f o r tions, reduced salaries and other care and services by needy clients. insecurities. Jewish communities This past year has shown the first should recognize this contribution tendency toward a dceline. ' Butof the .professional social workers in spite of this reduction in de- and meet their responsibilities mand, the actual need for relief toward this group cooperatively • funds and for social services still and understandingly. exceed those of the years 1927, JEWISH CENTERS FIELD 19 2S, when American Jewry supChallenged by the need for ported these organizations much more adequately than at. present- building and making Jewish life Some 25,000 Jewish families are more significant and meaningful. at present under the care of about i the Jewish Welfare Board and its l l ! 1 +hr hundred"- asaoasso40 reporting Jewish family wel- ! " 1 " t < o f than " three "p' "ivnnfirp.fi fare agencies. Their expenditures ciated local Jewish Centers in the during the past year exceeded United States and Canada h a v e three million dollars, both for re-rset for-themselves the tasks of developine b e t t e r functioning lief and service. - This amount was types of community organization larger than the total spent in than , generally operate at the 1927, 1928, 1929, or 1930. Jewish agencies are straining every^ present moment and of helping effort to meet their obligations Jewish youth toward a better ununder the pressure of greatly re- derstanding of and a more effecduced contributions from Jewish •ti~v e '/participation in meeting sources. It is hoped that this present-day J e w i s h problems. During the past year Jewish Cenyear's drives for local JewisTi ters expended 3% million dollars will bring philanthropic work (an increase of half a million dolforth the necessary increases in lars over the preceding year) to giving, to help safeguard , the. carry on their varied activities. JI 1 work which Jewish relief organi- The number of professional, exezations have so carefully and sue-, cutive heads of Centers increases cessfully nurtured throughout from 145 to 161. Fortyrfive cam: these depression years. paigns were held which raised a total of $600,000 in increased CHELD CARE During the past year about 10,- memberships and..to meet requir000 Jewish children were under ed operating, deficits.; (Mofe than 1 the care of some 30 Jewish child half of these campaigns • were under . Jewish 1 Welfare Board aus• care agencies doing work of an acceptable character. This num- pices.) Various studies were made ber is larger than in the years and plans launched-for better co1927, 1928, 1929, 1930 or 1931. ordination of .Jewish - communiThe trend Is away from institu- ties. In a number of instances the tionalization, with a greater ten- Jewish Welfare Board, through dency toward care in private or its field servicerhas actually-helpfoster-home. Expenditures for the ed in the development of a more care of these children, likewise, satisfactorily unified Jewish com- J have increased above the amounts munity in various cities throughrequired in the pre-depression out the .country. There Is an eviyears. Jewish contributions f o r dent need for more funds to make this work have lagged, but by thethis field service a more effectiveuse of reserves, reductions in sal-ly operating unit ot the Jewish aries and operating costs, and inWelfare Board toward - a better other ways, the emergency to date integration of Jewish community has been bridges. But increased activities, and responsibilities. ~ Incontributions to Federations, Wel- creased funds are also required to fare Funds and individual agency assist more fully on governmental appeals must be made in order programs involving C. C. C. work, to make possible a continuation community recreational and leisof present child-care services on ure time programs for unemploythe decent level that they should ed or governmentally aided youth 11 ^ «*, and adults. .On the whole t h e be carried. Center Movement has shown, during the past year, capacity for '.MEDICAL CARE The 37 reporting hospitals un- adaption to present d a y needs, der Jewish auspices record almost helpfulness on civic, governmenthree million days' care provided tal and local Jewish enterprises during the past year. This repre- and substantial health in carrysents an increase of over 5 per ing forward its large and varied cent over the preceding year. This programs. increase was paralleled by increased demands for bed utiliza- JEWISH EDUCATION FIELD Perhaps the one field which has tion.- About 10 per cent m o t e people applied for - medical care been most niggardly treated durthan the year before. It is inter- ing these depression years h a s esting to note that only one hos-been the Jewish education field. p?!al of the 37 reported 100 perAmong the first to suffer reduccent Jewish clientele. About half tions in income it has yet a long of the hospitals have a non-Jew- way to go to recover its financial ish clientele varying from 50 perstatus of the pre-depression period. However, the professional cent to over 75 per cent. Dispensary services have shown and lay leaders in this field have consistent increases year been doing heroic service to • carafter year throughout the years ry on and maintain the activities Of tbe depression. Some 40 dis-so vital.to the preparation of an pensaries, clinics and out-patient educated ,and understanding Jewry here in America. There were departments report close to million visits for medical care and some signs during the past year service. Not a single one of these of an awakening, in scattered secclinics serves a 100 per cent Jew- tions of this country, toward the ish clientele. About half of them seriousness of the existing situagive care and service to 50 pertion and of the need for a more cent or more non-Jewish needy. practical and helpful concern with the problems facing the program CARE OF THE AGED of Jewish education in the United About 4,500 aged were cared States. • -. for in about 30 reporting Homes for the Aged. This is a larger FOREIGN RELIEF number than has been under care The major activity here is the in any of the past seven or eight work of the United Jewish Appeal years, and represents about 20 to of the Joint Distribution Commit25 per cent more than were cared tee and the American Palestine for in 1327 or 1928, the pre-de- Campaign. The 1934 campaign pression period. This increased yielded over $2,100,000 from responsibility on the. Jewish agen- some 750 Jewish Communities cies caring for our dependent throughout the country. The 1935 aged places a further responsi- campaign is for $3,250,000—"a bility on American Jewry to meet sum deemed indispensably Beeesits philanthropic obligations this sary for the work: of relief and coming year on much more ad- rehabilitation in Eastern ajad Cenequate and satisfactory basis than tral Europe, t o r ref ngeef settle'.'.. b e f o r e . . '.'. • : " ..-..•• -- ;"--.'•• .'• ' ment and for Palestine upbuild-

3r DR. S. C. KOHS

Coming Soon...

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New Year's Edition—THE

JEWISH " PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

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The March of Time . . . Rosh Hashonah 1935-5698

Be % JOTOUS

ihNEW

YEAR'S EDITION—OMAHA, NEBRASKA,

FRIDAY,

SEPTEMBER

27, 1935.

only a slight alleviation dne to | ilies were taken care of by a JewI organizations were Federal aid, has maintained the i s h Worker, Miss Grace Dansky, The and were assisted. pressure and stress upon our Wel- ' employed by the Douglas County a m o u n t pledged, namely ?>.'.'-.•• fare Federation work. Many fam- i Relief Administration. Our high 5SP.S1. exceeds the- toial s;r,ViH."'i"^ ilies, who until this year w e r e ' standards of Jewish relief a n d ' tions of jiny year in t h e )iu;h-i; • able in some w a y to maintain : Zamily care was strictly adhered of the Philanthropies exrrt»;;r..r themselves, have been obliged to ; and niantained, and in this way, • the first. The total jiismlv; <>• By EOT X. TOWL, Major, City of Oiuaha come for assistance this year. ! tlio efforts of the Federation were ! subscribers, £04 T>, IF nl^o <r- t" j Tliis, together with the number of ; coordinated with the country-wide ; cess- of P. x\ y prpTiou.K ^fimpr-It'1' children under care and the need i relief machinery. The riiUanthropirs Canu>;:i>--'i, " To the Jewish Citizens of of providing fairly and well for j Clothing and coal -were distribthis year iiun<'ated anew tliev:,'j;f the Citv cf Omaha, their maintenance and develop- : uted to the needy as usual. Clofhof 11: e Kindle unified effnri ;.ment, has been a serious charge icjr : •raise fundp. for r> romnmr.itvV- -.-was contributed through the .;' Greetings: The organizational activities provide financial support for the ;cers and Executive Committee are upon our Case Worker, Mrs. Rose : American R e d Cross, through | Klionsibilitics. Reprc^rnfntivr!- r,' of a community are the heart- tubercular sanatoriumsin' Denver j au follows; Bisno. i many Jewish, firms and individI all walks of life, of nil orgnr.i-r.f ';;1 On behalf cf the people cf beats by •which, we can feel the and to organizations of relief, edOfficers I uals, and through, the aid of the ;tic>ris, ;md all shade? of opir.\:\r.f Qsaaha, I want to take this A limited income made it espulse of our progress. iteation, and health programs for Henry Monsky, 1st Vice-Pres.; Guild, of which Mrs. B. A. opportunity to extend to leooneraied in xnnlunj: i 1\ c C'-fiv In Omaha, the panorama of Jews throughout America and the Sam Beber, 2nd Vice-Pres.; Mrs. sential to be far more careful of ;; Needle Simon was chairman. Mrs. J. the resources of each family askOmaha. Jewry my sincere ; paifn t-ueceysful. It denioTif-i "!>•:•:'• entire •world. Jewish life is best depicted L. Neveleff, 3rd Vice-Pres,; Harry aid. It meant many necessary j Blank ol t h e Women's Division preetangs on the eve ©f fhi* i again t h e fact t h a t the P}.•!:.;;• through the many-phased proIts Jewish Community Center Silverman, Secretary; and Abe ing I was chairman of the clothing comadjustments. Nevertheless, t h e Jewish Holiday Season. We I t h r o p ' e s has 8 p e r m a n e n t pl^er :n gram of the Jewish organiza- program has provided a meeting Goldstein, Treasurer. •mittee, and Mrs. Maynard Greenooimiiuniiy's developnu'iU s*i--;,. Federation consistently maintainare thankful tc Onvahs- Jews, '(the tions—a lull picture of a com-'; jplace for all groups, all factions, berg of the Council of Jewish , ife a positi\'e factor ia devF-ii'>",'u.s ed its standard of adequate relief. Honorary Officers xmmity teaming with vitality ; and all ages. Its Forum and drai . as we are to every section, of and maintaining, the life of. n .!•• v Dr. Philip Sher, President; H. ^Ye have continued to provide de- Women was chairman of the Sewand seeking communal better- matic activities, its group work Omslia citizenry, for the im- ; ish group. ing Committee. The Live W i r e pendent families with adequate B.Zimman, Viee-Pres.; Mrs. Morment. program, and its emphasis on the portant role they have- played I The Initial Gi'tF. Commitfpp '•"Levy, Vice-Pres.; and Mrs. allowances f o r food, shelter, | Cleaners rendered services in Herewith is presented the valite of Jewish culture air have ris yt in t i e building «£' car city. ; tier the Chairmanship oi IVIT. .'-, clothing, etc. Tie comparative • cleaning all used garments conHarry Lapidus,. Viee-Pres. annual, resume of the work of added in malting the Jewish Cen: number of families receiving as- i tributed to t i e Family Welfare ; In the prosperity of •'••he variH . I v i i l a k o i p k y , •with "Mr, j\ii!'.-.r, the Jewish organizations in ter the hub around which t h e Executive Committee sistance, advice, a n d care from • Department for distribution to •: ens groups which make up ; A b r a h a m F as Vice-ChBinr.s,:• Omaha and the wider horizons [entire Jewish Community' Center • Milton Abrahams, A. B. Alpirn, 1932 through July, 1935, is as families. The Motor Corps Com, Omaha lies the prosperity r>f ; brought in $21.412.00 Iron: ci !•• they seek. program has revolved. In coop-! Mrs. Jeannette Arnstein, M a s follows: : inittee, of which Mrs. William ' Omaha. All Oinalja, there- i scribers. exceeding E n y prc'.'i.".i,j eration with the B'nai B'rith, the Barish, David Blacker, Eugene fore, expresses to the ^evish ; total. T h e Women's Dh'isioi'. vi,;. 1932 1933 1934 1935 Milder was chaiman, began, their JEWISH CO>Drt7XITT CEXTEK Center instituted a - College of Blazer, David Conn, David Gold- January ...... 73 103 1GS 13 3 j work in giving regular service to . people its wishes for s. happy ; under t h e Chairmanship of. ''.::•>,. AND WELFARE FEDERATION Jewish Studies for adults which man, Dr. A. Greenberg, David February .... 74 109 173 139 j the Case Worker of the Federa" < r.nd prosperous year to roree, ; Irvin Staiinaster. Mr. IIarr>- T"-.M;<Vi Greenberg, Mrs. J. J. Greenberg, March tion. successfully conducted classes in ' tin took chsrge of t h e 3V'ov-V .^•. . . SI 10S 159 127 T i e central vitalizing- force and J. J. Greenberg, William Grodin-. 72 117 167 139 Transients vision with. "William TilildFT S.KS; unifying- influence in Jewish life j Jewish History, Elementary and sky, Abe Herzberg, Morris Jacobs, April ... 70 123 15G 139 Through a cooperative arrange- which administers the Welfare • H. Hirschrnsr., Dr. 2VT. Margolin. i Ben Kazlowsky as his a s s i s ' s i r x in Omaha continues to be the I Advanced H e b r e w , Palestine, Philip M. Klutznick, Mrs. J. H. M a y Jewish Community Center and Great Jewish Personalities, Mod- Kulakofsky, J. H. Kulakofsky, June . ... 70 127 14G 144 ment with the Federal, Transient services of the Federation. This ; Dr. J. Weinberg, Rabbi 1'ri Mil- One of t h e outstDiidinp pipr-p< .-,:. Welfare Federation. Through its ern Jewish Life and Customs, Robert Kooper,- Irvin Levin, Jack July ..... ... 74 113 135 142 I Bureau and Shelter, we have con- committee has met regularly, for- ler, Henry Monsky, Mrs. IJ. Neve- . w o r k during: i:he Philainhrrinipjt i n u e d the policy of providing for ... SO 123 129 Campaign w a s t h s Kpleniiid *u'.-Welfare Federation program, it j Yiddish Language and Literature, W. Marer, Alfred Mayer, Harry August mulated general policies, given : leff. Sam Kavitz. Dr. A. Rubnits. • reps ! transients. Whenever advisable 125 of t h e Youth orj:nr.i".f.;'•'.!• September 120 1 and the Bible. SI lias provided for the care of deMalashock, Morris Milder, Wilspecial consideration to the most Mrs. Philip Sher, Harry Silver- Orpanizecl as a complete in;i:., «.~; and practicable, Jewish transients pendent families, children, and j Mr. J. S. Pearlstien,- Executive liam Milder, Isaac Morgenstern, October ....._ ss 112 120 ! man, Louis Sommer, Irvin Staldifficult cases, and has provided i utilised the Shelter maintained by I licitiTip contributions fron- .':-•? 124 Xovember 139 . . 93 j Director, left last Fall and since transients, relieved distress a n d Irvin Stalmaster, Harry Trustin, ; the Federal Government. When individual services whenever nec- ; master. Miss Blanche Zimiaan. I yonnjr people of t h e enmiTi.;.!;" poverty, and concerned itself with; j "ilarch, 1035, the Jewish Commu- Mrs. H. A. Wolf, Harry A. Wolf, December .-„ SS 154 125 essary. The members of the Fam! "Mr. A, A; Fiertler pr.fl 1H"K SSS.-The cooperative policy between special treatment, care, or f o o d ily Welfare Committee are: the health, happiness, and econ- Snity Center and Welfare Federa- and Isidor Ziegler. 1 TV "* i r t e , Sal Kiehnielv. broiirlii ;r s the Federation and t h e Dcraglas 'was necessary, the Federation omic condition of t h e unfortun- • tion has .been in the capable hands ! Jewish fnilanttiropies ., ;j rlarper i provided such services through its a m o u n t thnr, prpr iir--.•,-.-, Mrs. H. A. Troll, Chairman; C o u n t y Relief Administration ates in our midst. Through its | of Mr.-Paul Goldblatt, who before : During the month of May, with • namely. J75T.G4. from, a t:,-'}••' own office. Win. L. Holman, Ex-Officio; Dr. coming Xo us, held a similar posi(•which is the joint relief set-up Jewish Philanthropies, it h a s Philip M. Klutznick as Chair- • n u m b e r of coritribiirions. r.iuTi"!->."~^ of the Federal government a n d This important work was made O. S. Belzer, Dr. Frederick Colin, |; Mr. raised funds necessary to • niain- tion in : Harrisburg, $!a.y for the man, t h e Jewish Philanthropies : ing 5P0. The Clubs BIK! Ovr'-i-~Dr.' Max Fleishman. Rabbi D. A. The continuance of the depresthe County, h a s bean continued possible through the activities of past 10-years.;.MrWilliam; Holz; tain our Hebrew School, ^ttieJJewI Campaign was conducted. Thirty ish Old People's Home,laM;- to inunfs" President.? The other offi- sion during the year 5G95, with during the past year. Jewish fani- the Family Welfare Committee Goldstein, Dr. A. Greenberg, Dr. I local, national and international ; (Contintied on pa;.;e 2)

Greetings

Welfare Federation

ALFRED S. MAYER

\

The passing years deepen the character of the Grace-Mayer Company - - - an institution which for two decades has devoted itself to insurance service and protection. Businesses thrive as they deserve to thrive. Because of unexcelled service during the past twenty years, theGrace-Mayer Company has continuously written the insurance for many

of thelargest business firms in Omaha and is still expanding. We write Surety bonds and every form of insurance, including life insurance, automobile insurance in all its branches, fire insurance and all allied lines. Your patronage and loyalty has proved a mighty factor in our growth. Our appreciation is shown - not by words - but by insurance service.

THE

MPANY CITY NATIONAL BANK BLDG, OMAHA, NEBRASKA

T


ftp Now Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

PAGE

' mittee, the Center Players' Guild shock, Mrs. J. Finkel, Mrs. Mamie ] communally-minded men in 1910.: various meetings of the Lodge The committee expresses its ap-.. during the past year. j WPS re-established. Three splen- Kneeter, Robert Kooper, Mrs. I. preciation for the following re- j This year during the month of i did productions, including "An- Kulakofsky, Dr. Philip Levey, Dr. other Language," "T h e Torch- N. Muskin, Sam Ravitz, Dr. A. cent contributions: J. Janger, in • May, the qtiinqxienial convention I Eearers," and "The Front Page," Steinberg, Mrs. Kate Tatle, and appreciation, §5; Estate of Esther; of the Constitutional Grand Lodge marked the year's endeaver. Ev- Mrs. A. Wolf. Miller, $100. j was held in Washington, B.C., at jery play was a success, both fiThe Free Loan Society fund is, which time Alfred Cohen was reinancially a n d from back, stage. being constantly swelled by vol-1 elected to the B'nai B'fith presiWomen s Division ;The Dramatic Committee consistuntary contributions from public j dency for the ensuing term. The During last year there was de-e d of the following: Mi-s. S a m spirited individuals. The commit-; headquarters'of the Constitution* veloped a Women's Division of Theodore, Chairman; Mrs. Dave tee appeals to Omaha Jewry to j al Grand Lodge ere <.o be moved the Jewish Community Center and , Brodkey, Mrs. J. M. Malashock, follow their example by "contrib-": from Cincinnati,--Ohio; to WashMrs. H. P. Milder, Mrs. J. SoloThe Jewish' Free Loan Society Welfare Federation. Its purpose nice Perimeter and Fanny Witkin (Continued from page 1) far-sightedness of the leaders of uting to the fund, either in -mem*; ington, D. C. Delegates to this mon, Mrs. Leo Milder, *Mrs. A. | has been an appreciated benefaczations division was beaded by Ir- the community' in constructing as members of the team, brought ! was to supplement the work of cry of a departed loved one or in ; convention from;.'Omaha consisted Pitlor, Mrs. Sam Wolf, Mrs. H. j tor in the community since its inlionor of dear ones who are living.j of Henry Monsfci' -and Sam Beber. vin Levin,-with Mrs. J. J. Green- and completing our communal together representatives of six- the parent organization; to or- iRosenfeld, Mrs. Philip Romonek, ception, and has proven of inesl ganize the women Into effective The district convention -was teen organizations in a program The need for more funds is' berg acting for women's organi- home in 1926. In this institution, Mrs. Phineas Wintroub, Mrs. Ar- timable service during the years which was rife with interest and : working groups and to carry on held this year in Minneapolis, our people come to get strength great, since many Who once genzations. ,. of value. Officers of the Round Itha women's portion: of the work jtlitir A. Cohn, and Mrs. J. Bram- of economic upheaval. commencing July 4th. At this erously contributed to the society The fact that the Campaign has of mind, culture, body, soul and i son. Table of Jewish Youth for 1934- I of our. Agency. . ' H. A. Wolf is president of the are now themselves in need of aj convention, two of the local memreached all elements is the com- learning. Omaha Jewry Is realiz1 S5 were: Alfred A. Fiedler, PresMrs. Jeannette Arnstem acted ing more and more the value of | The program f o r Juniors in- Jewish Free Loan Society. Other i temporary loan. These people bers of the Lodge were elevated munity-*—rich and poor—is apparident; Sara Rifkin, Vice-Presi- as Chairman -of the Women's Di- j eluded individual and group work, officers: J. H. Kulakofsky, vice-' neither ask nor seek charity; all > to very important positions in the ent when we notice t h a t 17 67 an institution which houses .a 11 dent; Max Resnick, .Secretary; vision; Mrs. Wm.. Milder, Motor and classes in plastic arts, a n d S chairman; David Feder, secre- ; they want is an opportunity for ; district. Dr. A. Greenberg w a B pledges w e r e under ?5.00; 64G form3 of Jewish activity a n d Jean Beber, Treasurer: "William Corps; Mrs. Sam Wolf," Citizen- amalgamated in the presentation itary; Leo Abramson, executive: between $5.00 to $10.00; 320 be- which brings" to i t s doors men, economic adjustment through a elected s e c o n d Vice-President, Wolfe, Parliamentarian; and Joe ship; Mrs.; J. Blank', Clothing; ! of "Snow White" last February. | secretary; W i l l i a m Grodinsky, women, and children for the entween $10,00 to 525.00; 130 betimely loan—which, though rot <and Philip Klutznick was made a Solomonbw, Reporter. Mrs. L. Neveleff, House; Mrs. Jack Marer is Chairman of t h e treasurer. . ; charity, is most charitable. tween $25;00 to 550.00: 115 be- richment of their personality, and I member of the Executive CommitD a v e Greenberg, Membership: Center Committee. Other memtee. The total number of loans outtween $50,00 to ?100.00; and C7 for the growth, of . their. Jewish Physical Department Iftlrs. A.. Greenberg and Mrs. J. J. bers are: Wm. Holzman, Ex-Offi- standing on August 1, 1935, ] life. Local officers are: Ben E. Kazpledges over $100.00. The Physical Department con- [Greenberg,. S o c i a l Committee; lowslcy. President; Ephraim In carrying out ou r program, tinued cio; Milton Abrahams, Eugene amounted to $24,745.12. Since; to provide for the physiSiocinl Service we have attempted to include ev- cal well-being- of all groups. The j Mrs.. Hairy Wolf," Family Wel- Blazer, David Greenberg, Robert its organization, this society has ' Marks, Vice-President; Harry jfare; Mrs." Jeannette Arnstein, j Kooper, Irvin Levin, William m a d e a total of 1.G28 loans J The main work of the Social ery known form, of activity so as Friedman, Treasure: ; Sam H. Recently the Omaha Lodge celService Comthittee, headed by Dr. ' to - find -some activity which will women's volley ball class contin- [Child Care;* Mrs. Sam Theodore, Milder, Mrs. L. Neveleff, Dr. D. amounting to $14»,0G5.73. The Green. Secretary; Stanley F. Levued to be well attended, o u r ebrated its fiftieth anniversary; Dramatic Committee; Mrs. Harry C. Platt, Dr. Philip Romonek, Dr. number of loans from January 1 ' Philip Slier, ia to care for juven- ' attract and -hold the aspirations, in. Warden; Alfred A. Fiedler, ile cases, and to prevent juvenile ! ideals, and desires of every, per- Health Club maintained its policy Silver man, Community Coopera- S. Z. Stern, Fred White, Rabbi D. j to August 1 of this year.equalled \ commemorating t h i s occasion Guardian; D. A. Dcnenbefg, Trusof,providing a well-rounded prowith a Goldra Jubilee Stag. Ini tion; Mrs. M. L. Cohn,- Junior delinquency possible, i. e., b o t h i s o r i . •_ . . . - . • • ' ' , ' • ' . thirty, in the sum of §4,625. Dur-; ' . . . ' . ' tee; David A. Finkle, Trustee; gram for-men, and our swimming Clubs; Mrs; Irvin Levin, Publi- H. Wice. preventativjs and curative efforts. ing 193 4, 45 loana were made, cidental to the anniversary cele-( William Weiner, Trustee. T fa • . Use of Building Increased program in. t h e delightful pool city; Mrs.- I. Stalmaster, .Educabration, a membership drive in' amounting to ?6,1S5.5O. Jewish Old People's Home In case ivrhere Jewish children During the yean approximately attracted an increasing num- tion; Mrs. Harry Trustin, • Buildhonor of Alfred Cohen's seventy- : Executive Committee consists of: violate the, social code regardless 170,000 persons used the Center j has A joint committee representing Many splendid families—who, fifth birthday., was held, which ', Julius Bisno, Dr. B e n Slntlky, ber of young m e n and women, ot character, a social diagnosis of facilities. • Practically every Jew- boys and girts, to whom the bsne- Jng; and • Mrs. Harold : Farber, j the Federation and the Daughters though the victims of unforseen Sam Gold were,' Carl Lagman, its character is made, and a social ish organization 'in Omaha h a s '! fltS Library. j of Israel Aid Society determines reverses, cannot reconcile them- resulted in a class of two hun- Bennett L. Cohn and Simon Pizer. of swimming has been of imdred and fifteen (215) members. treatment prescribed, following a made use of' the building during j measurable value. An Executive Committee of sev- i all the basic policies and budgetto accept charity-—h a v e Ben E. Kaziowsky atsjd Ephraim ! During the rncmth of Novemconference' with the parents and the year. Our kitchen, maintain- I The Athletic Committee, head- enteen members, each of w h o m |; ary needs of the O 1 d People's selves been enabled to work out their Marks were co-chairm'e^i of this ber, the local Lodge will be host the child in question. ed on a strictly kosher basis, is | ed by Irvin Levin,, consists of the was responsible for a specific com- j Home, as well as deciding on ad- economic rehabilitation through to a regional conference of all th* Tb.2 effectiveness of the com- used increasingly f o r dinners, j following m e m b e r s : William mittee activity, carried on the de- mission and discharges of in- a temporary loan from the funds successful membership ^ampaign surrounding lodges in t h i s dis—this being the largest jferoup of mittee's work may be attested to luncheons, and parties. In addi- JHolsman, Ex-Officio; Arthur A. tailed work of the'organizations. mates. of the Jewish Free Loan Society. members ever inducted into trict. The purpose of this confer" by the fact'that the Jewish juven- tion, the Center has acted as a j Cohn, P h i l Feldman, Robert The Motor Corps, which assisted Investigations are made by the These loans are m a d e to any new ence will be to coordinate the acile court cases do not reach more clearing house for all Jewish'ac-. Kooper; Isadore Levinson, J. M. | our • case worker, was developed Federation through its case work- Omaha Jewish family of g o o d the Lodge. The campaign was cul- tivities of the various lodges Rnd minated by a large banquet honthan 1-3 of 1 per cent, including tivitics in Omaha so as to avoid Malashock, Jack Marer, Dr. D. C. by this Division. T h e Dramatic ers. All cases are followed up by character, self-respect a n d good to work out a coirmon program the transient cases. conflicts as to dates and events. jPlatt, Joe Rice, Dr. Philip Rom- Committee helped " t h. e Center the Federation, whenever special standing in the community, upon oring President Alfred Cohen at for the various lodges. A large the Jewish Community Center, on Included; in the work of the so- It is both gratifying and pleasing onek, Earl Siegel, Dr. A. Stein- Players Guild in its productions. need arises. notes endorsed by business men. Sunday, November 4th, 1934. | delegation is expected from Des cial service committees: Juvenile to visit the -Center almost a n y berg, Jay Stoler, Harry Trustin, The Camp Committee cooperated Moines, S i o u x Falls, Council Funds for operating the home The fund from which the loans The present membership of the •work. 4 scholarships to deserving evening and see the scores of men and Phineas "Wintroub. with Miss Allen a n d Mr. Gold- come chiefly from the Philan- are made is a permanent revolvorganization is six hundred twen-j Bluffs, Sioux CJity a n d Lincoln. students; a strong campaign for and women, boys and girls, who blatt in developing our successful thropies. ing fund. The fund has grown to ty-five (625) members. A n e w Further announcements will be citizenship; annual Father-Son come in and out of the building Summer Home Camp. Community Pormn The O 1 d People's Home Com- its present proportions f r o m a policy of the organization b e s i made concerning this conference Banquet; &• reception for high to use the pool and gym, to at265 paid up members' attested The Community Forum f o r issues of thie paper. school graduates; Chanukah pres- tend meetings, to hold confer- j 1934-35 . was .immensely success- to the rapid growth of the Or- mittee consisted of: Harry Silver- capital of $1,000, which repre- brought numerous outstanding j in later (Continued on pftge 4) sen ted a ?100 gift by each of ten man, Chairman; H a r r y Malaentertainers and speakers to the ents to orphans in Cleveland; vis- ences, listen to lectures and deFred S. Svhite was chairman ganization, which in t h .e future iting of Jewish inmates in penal bates, attend study groups, read ! ful. of -this committee and succeeded should carry an increased responinstitutions! magazines or books in our library, J in bringing five outstanding-per- sibility for women's work in this The amount advanced to needy dance, or merely to meet their sonalities who attracted a filled community. " . . . students was §470.00 during the friends in our pleasant atmos- auditorium on each evening. The Miscellaneous Activities past year.;! The Social Service phere. speakers were: Dorothy ThompThere are many more activities Committee'for the year WBB: Dr. (Mrs. Sinclair Lewis), Arthur worthy of notice a n d " comment Philip Shen Chairman; Mr. Wm. Round Table of Jewish Youth | son Garfield Hays, Scott Nearing, carried .on .by the Center in the L. Holzman, Mrs. Jeannette ArnThe Round Table of Jewish Ludwig Lewison, a n d Professor i course of its year-around prostein, Isadora Abramson, M a x Youth has had an extremely BUC- Irvin Fisher.Our Forum was suc- gram. . T h e reference library is Barish, Eugene Blazer, Rabbi cessful year. Twenty-fbUr organiFrederick Cohn, Dr. J. M. Erman, zations participated in t h e pro- cessful in covering costs during the only ' Jewish library In t h e city and is used extensively. Its Dr. O. C. Goldner, Rabbi D. A. gram of the Round Table a n d the past year. T h e Educational Committee circulating library is" quite popu-j Goldstein, Dr. M. I. Gordon, Dr. conducted both educational a n d ' • '| M. M. Greennerg, Philip Klutz- social events during the year. The • consisted of: Fred White, Chair- lar. Dramatics, debate, oratorical nick, Rabbi Uri Miller, R a b b i monthly Youth Forum on tho jman; William Holzman, Ex-OffiDavid Wice. theme. "Jewish Youth Today," jcio; J a c k Marer, Ex-Officio; contests, and other forms of eduprovided .an opportunity for self- Frank Ackerman, Mrs. Jeannette cation are carried on in the proexpression, as* well 'as an oppor- Arnstem, Dr. O. S. Belzer, Eu-1 gram. Athletic tournaments, holtunity to participate iff Round i gene • Blazer. Harry B:-Cohen;-Ar- iday-festivals,- Father-Soft a n d Cohn, Rabbi" Frederick Mother-Daughter Banquets, and. As the years pass, the value of Table discussions, on. matters "af- j thur A. Dr. Leon Fellman, Mrs. A. Boy Scout -troops are- among the: the Jewish Community Center fecting the very life of the mem-jj Cohn, group. The Debate D. Frank, Mrs. Max Fromkin, varied activities. building an.ti its program becomes bers of the won by t h e • Alpha !Wm. Grodinsky,. Rabbi D. A. During the course of-last year, I, more evident. Year after year, it Tournament Gamma Chi Sorority, with Ber- | Goldstein, " Mrs. M a x Holzman, under • a capable Dramatic Comilt Den Er-zlowsky, Mra. J. H. Kulakolsliy, .Louis Lipp, Rp.bbi Uri Miller, Mrs. L. Nevoleff, Dr. D. C. Plntt, Ruth Pollack, Mrs. Ben Silver, Rabbi David Wice, Sam Zacliarla, and Mrs. Irvin Stalmaster.

Jewish Free Loan Society

B'nai B'rith

j

Most Sincere Wishes

&>mmunity Center

• gives increasing evidence of the

for •

15th &. Douglas St.

Joyous and Prosperous

• : - *

New Clothing Department featuring TOPCOATS and OVERCOATS Outstanding values of a nationally famous tailor of fine Men's Clothing are noyr offered you at- a popular price under the Label of "Tully's Men's Store.'.'

YEAR from the

OFFICERS AND EMPLOYES of the

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Tailored by Enro. exc

.swiTy 1 ••• f o r i T u S y . • N e w

ratJIerns, New colors. AH sine)).

1.95

Wishes YOU ALL A HAPPY NE WYEAR tyles of Today with a Touch of Tomorrow,

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

PAGE FOUR.

children, brought to this country and placed in homes by the national headquarters of the Council. Another project of the Council, planned last year and which is expected to reach completion this year, is t lie Woman's Exj change. Plans are going steadily , ahead a n d ' l t is to he opened j shortly after the Council resumes j ineetiags this year. !

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Our affairs were largely attended, (Sterling; Co-chairman, Mrs. Her-) and much was accomplished in a man .Cohen; Social, Mrs. S a m cultural. way as well as in the Theodore; Telephone, Mrs. A. S. Enhanced by an increased raising of our quotas for the var-j Rubnitz; Rummage Sale, Mrs. I. membership and stimulated be• ' The Omaha Hebrew Club, one '"* of the oldpct Jewish organizations ious funds. In the face of the Grossman; University Hosp. Proj-j c a u s e o £ b e i n g o n a S0U nder finan' In the city, continues to flourish economic conditions we h a r t to ect, Mrs. J. H.. Kulakofsky; Year | c i a l b a s i s the Highland Country Mrs. Julius Stein; Jr.-Sr. j c l u b e n j o y e d o n e o f l t s m O s t E u c ' " and to benefit the Jewish comniu- cope with, Hadassah women have Book, worked undaunted by all, obstac- * e l ?_ U o n S > M,r_S; S ; . ^ a ^ l m . a n A C i " U e s s f u l seasons last year. i nity. ' / les to speed the work in the epoch chairman, Mrs. Julius AbrahamUnder t h e capable leadership The Hebrew Club was organmaking, gigantic task of . t h e son; Courtesy, Mrs. A. D. Frank, of Louis Hiller, president; Sam J. : lzed July; 1, .1892, with a memPianist, Mrs. Anne Shlaes. Leon, vice-president; Harry Malabership of twenty-one members. building of our homeland. Hadassah has undertaken the work shock, treasurer; Alfred S. MayToday, only two of the founders s er, secretary; and Lazar Kaplan, ; arQ left,:! Mendel Blank and A. of caring for the health of Palesexecutive secretary; an excellent Levin. - ' • tine. This year has seen a trewell-balanced program of activity The organization has behind it mendous increase in immigrant was carried on throughout t h e an impressive record of charity population, which f o r Hadassah Functloningl under the. leader- year. and benevolence. During its $3 has meant a large expansion in f years of existence, the club has all its.medical and public health ship of three executive vice-pres- . The board of directors Includ". paid out for various causes the services. The population of Pal- idents, in lieu of a president, the ed the officers and Leslie L. Burestine continues to increase in un- Council of Jewish "Women h a s i k e n r o a d , Jerome Heyn, M. E. following sums: To 149; widows and beheflclar- precedented numbers, and there made very definite progress, as | Chapman, David P. Feder, Ben =, - les, as death • benefit, $78;894; is no question that during t h e jw e l l ' a s surmounted^ many ' ob- Danbaum, Manning ' E. Handler, sick benefit'to members, $32,037; coming year the many thousands stacles In its reconstruction. pro-1 Dr. M. I. Gordon, I. B. Zimman, Morris Milder, Harry A. Wolf, J. *• , for outside worthy causes, $25,- of Jews who will enter the coun- gram of the past year. Mrs. Manuel Grodinsky heads H. Kulakofsky, Morris Ferer, Abe 137.50; Telief to members, $3,- try will impose upon Hadassah 970; toward the • erection of ;the still greater demands. Ours is a the Council for the year j u s t Herzberg, Milton Livingston, MorJ. Cv C. building, Sl.SOO; fur- service, that gives them the very opening, and under her guidance ton L. Degen and Dr. A. Greenfoundation for the life in Pales- the Council is expected to once berg. nishing of lodge room, $1,750. ] "The organization recently cele- tine. Palestine ha3 opened t h e again assume its place in t h e The committee chairmen who brated Its anniversary with a door to an oppressed people, but community as t h e only Jewish) assisted in making the season an city-wide picnic. An active year unless' they a r e given strength Women's organization represen- enjoyable one are: Leslie L. Burtative of every Jewish woman, be- kenroad, chairman of the house; •was had under the presidency of and courage the opportunity avail t h e m little. Hadassah ing as it is, the one organization Ben E. Kazlowsky. Manning E. Handler, chairman of stands f o r Health-for-Unity-for 1 with national representation inithe entertainment; J. H. KulaPresent officers are: Betterment. world problems dealing with Jew-;kofsky, chairman of the golf com"; J." D. Gavenman, president; The new officers elected at the ry. ; . Louis Morgan,'vice-president; Sol ,; • _ ;... / . . . .. mittee; A. H. Brodkey, chairman Rosenberg, secretary; John F.eld- last meeting are as follows: Despite many handicaps, t h e of the greens; Harold P. Farber Mr3. Joseph' Gold ware, presi- Council has had. a very successful and Homer I. BInswanger, chair--' man, treasurer; Sam Feldnian, ^ - Albert Kaplan a n d Abraham dent; Mrs. Irvin Levin, Vice year.' Perhaps its '• two outstand- man of the weekly bulletin; Paul ' Richards;; trustees; Nathan S. Pres. (first); Mrs. Phineas .Wln- ing activities from polnt-of-num- Blotcky, chairman of the memYaffe, Marie Polonsky, and Hy- troub. Vice pres. (second); Mrs. bers, was the child - Btudy group bership; Mrs. H. P. Farber, chairmen S. Bhrler, members of the Jack Kaufman, Recording Secre- and the International relations man of the ladles' entertainment; tary; Mrs. R. Bordy, Correspond- and civics group, which met every Mrs. M. E. Handler, Mrs. A. H. ' ' executive committee. ing Secretary; .Mrs. David R. week throughout the fall and win- Brodkey and Mrs. Ernest Nogg, Cohen; Financial Secretary; Mrs. ter seasons.- Each- was. attended co-chairmen..' of the golf commitAllan Kohan, Financial Secretary; by an euthuslastlc and interested tee. Mrs. B e n .Handler, Treasurer; group who took part in the pro-j Starting out with an excellent.'At tui^ itlme of the year, we Mrs. A. D. Frank,. Auditor. grams and discussed problems ly attended New Year's party like to, ilcok : backward and forBoard of Directors: Mrs. Julius pertaining to the subject. which was followed by the formal -wardu In • looking back at t h e Abrahamson, Mrs. B. A. Simon, I .• Monthly programs, -too, held In- Highland opening, on Saturday, a i^f? year: that ;has past, the Omaha Mrs. Max Fromkin, Mrs. Julius terest of the general membership May 25, attended by more than | i ; | Chapter 6f Hadassah sees a year Stein, S[Irs. M. F. Levenson, Mrs. high. They wer.e planned by. Mrs. two hundred and fifty members, ~"~"'" filled to sbapacity' with Its various Jos. Rosenberg. j j , H. Kulakofsky and covered a the club's activities consisting of activities!] It. is extremely gratiChairmen- of Committees: Ad-j varied 'field of "interesting suh- monthly stags, ladies' day, Monte fying to.'jnote the success HadasCarlo Night and the Fourth of Eabi;has jhad In bringing to the ministration. .Fund, Mrs. J. J. jjects: A talk by Dr. Victor E." Levlne | July celebration, Ladles' Highknowledge to all, the aims and Friedman; Bulletin, Mrs. M. "F; purposes"' of ; our organization. Levenson; Co-chairman, Mrs.. Ir- of Creighton University, ..who had land Fling, and the annual HighMany whjo have hitherto been un- vin. Levin;' Community Co-opera- just returned from. Arctic' travels, land Fling were remarkably well mindful pi their Jewish heritage tion, Mra. David Goldstein a r i d opened the season in October; The supported - by the entire memberand obligations ara n o w doing Mrs. David Sherman;- Education-! following month,-with a program ship of the club. With a redecorated club house, their shares to minister to the al, Mrs: M. F . Levenson; Finan- j dedicated to peace, t h e iriternahelpless' and the. oppressed and' iu cial, Mra. B . A. Simon; Co-chair-j tionai relations, group presented a new lounge, a n e w outdoor so doing,;jhelpjng to create a sym- man, Mrs. T. A. fully; Gift Fund, an. allegory!. " T l i e Torch of dance floor, the excellent cousine Hospitality, Peace,"j written, directed, and of Mary Stein and well conditionpj p pathetic understanding of the Jew Mrs,, David Epsjfejn;. Jli N& M M i staged by_- Mrs. Ben Sj|lv6r. Ber- ed golf greene, there "was no difthe world over. The good work M Mrs. Julius Nev&nan, Mrs. Morris nard SzVld, Community. Playhouse! ficulty, in securing a.good attendHadabsah has done in "Palestine dlrecto|^g;a : y e a- groUp of read-;' ance at all of the functions of this has been: created by the Vill of a '-.•;• Ings a P t h e December meeting, club. and in-January a. prbg^ram dealing With Austin'Bevans a n d his with local; social' problems w a s ! Royal Highlanders . providing the •giTen.'-.'^;. :.\.\.-.v--";--"--V;?"-'.-•.'V\.V;:..J:";:' imusic'for the club the entire sea. Febrjiiary-hrpught t h e annual! son, the Saturday night affairs, Kaplan; Membership, Mrs. Counclt. -bridge;- and;*In -March, I parties, and the stags enabled the 'The 0maha Chapter of HadasPhineas 'Wintroflb; Motor Corps, Rabbi David.Wice,of ;Temple Is- j club to" present a full and entersah, rwhjcb. was organized over 16 j Mrs. Wm. Milder; National Fund, rael spoke on the.topuv "Esther." | taining calendar. year$ agi}, has; now a-roster numMrs, t. JJanskyr Co-chairman, In April, high school debaters Through the untiring efforts of . her ing A$0>Despite economic" c!onMra. iioute Alberts; Parliamen- presented an interesting program, the committee headed by Leslie l-ditions; :exis£ing th^ .past year, tarian, Mrs; M. F. Levenson; Pro- and in May the Council met to L. Burkenroad, the golf auction j "Hsitlassah hafc more than done heir gram, Mrs. O. S. Belzer; Publi- elect off leers.- * '""**". " , ~ and stag, with Morris Ferer as duty in the raising of the Various city, Mrs. J. M . E r m a n ; School The year's iutstanding relief auctioneer drew a large number funcis for the .maintenance;:of Luncheon, Mrs. Samuel Stein- project. was the-'^collection' of a of anxious purchasers, with Julhealth iii Pajlestine. '. ; • berg; Co-chairman, Mrs. J a k-'e The season opened last October Blank; Sewing Circle, Mrs. Ruth fund of over two-hundred dollars ian Milder, the defending chamfor the aid' "of German-Jewish pion, bringing the most money. with a ''tret Together Tea."' Book review groups organized! b y Mrs. M- r.PV: Xiev'ehsori, a n d , cultural i meetings under the leadership of Mrs." Max Fromkin were held biweekly Harid: '. largely atterided. Hadassah's :outstanding affair is always the "Give or Get" Luncheon, thej proceeds of which gd to the Medical Fund. At t h e last "Give or Get" Luncheon -hel(J on M a y "1st, 200 women attended. Mls3;Nell Ziff, National vice-presideut ot Junior Hadassah; w a s the.guest speaker. Mrs: H. S. Novitsky, 'chairman ot the TVfedical Funcl, iieseiryes * special mention !PR.QTECTION: for' theijgoodi^ work s h e , accom[AND'SECURITY plished.^ •:.-;.' . ' ' Mrs. jpavldi Stein,- Gift " F u n d chairman, received many" fine donations in imemory. of departed lpved ones, or In honor of a joy-, ful occcielon. uThe moneys' eojlected this j-|ray is.used to plant trees, an everlasting memorial. . T h e school luncheon luhd, which Is •tised:toilprovide'nourishing meals• to underfed children of Palestine,' and also to .teach- hygiene a n d sanitation was raised by our capable Mirs. Julius Stein and h e r i committee.; Mrs. J. • j . Friedman •^ent o^er the top with her quota for :th4; Infant Welfare. B a k e gale* dpnducted by Mrs. : F. H. Koddy and rummage sales- by Mrs. !.'• Grpst$man;fproved very success- j iui:; j^irs. . I;'--..IDanskVi National Fund cjiairnian with her well organized; committee collected t h e coiiten|k; oC! the "Blue Boxes" kept i i n the jlhornes by t w o extensive (Bity w^fttf ilrives, money whica is tiseja. tiijipurchase land in Palesline, tdxlrain'the swamps, to Install BJiiiitary improvements: and Sew;efajr^, and in other ways to prepare the Jand for living. -;.-.-•• I: ^"Thejfpeal quota of the fund.for ;the.:firiit: Medical Cep.ter: and.graduate efliopi jot medicine In Palesjtlnei tif;be Isnpwn. as the Roths'child-iiadassah-'Dtiiverslty -.Hospi'i^;-^^|i&--:'cpii^cted*-'aimoBt'-.--Btngler Organized 1901- - - Thirty-fourth Year

|

(Continued from page 2)

Highland

Omalia Hebrew Club

Council of Jewish Women

Hadassah

f4

spirit of enthusiastic co-operation On August 29 a Siyum, the tradi- Synagogue, 10th and Burt streets, wus shown by the membership. tional feast celebrating the com- , has had a very successful year. Services are held three times a Services were well attended. The pletion of a course of study was day with a class in Talmud being choir was at its best. Rabbi Gold- held. Many other cultural activities conducted between Mincba. a n d stein's series of h o o k evenings w e r e again highly successful. ara conducted by the Vcad in co- Mr.arir by Mr. C. D. Sfendelson. Thanks to the Study Club tvro ex- operation w i t h. its affiliated Special services "were held on csllent cultural events enriched groups. This includes a Jewish all holidays in accordance with the life of the community. Dr. A. .Lecture Series, after Service £or- thft Orthodox ritual. T h e MizLi. Sacliar repeated bis institute utns and debates, a book review riichi concort and many V a a d and thrilled the capacity audi- group and similar culture activi- functions were held in the synaences with his recital of Jewish ties. The Vaad also cevducted a gogue. adventure. Prof. Louis Finkel-! Religious School in South Omaha. Officers of the Congregation stein . of the Jewish Theological; An appreciable gain in mem- are: Louis Blotcfcyy Rfirry Rim: Seminary gare one ol the most bership v;as reported during the msrmr.n, Is*a.than Wilfson. Nathan inspiring and informative lectures past year. In addition to individ- Lnvinson, Ben Gross, Ephriam ever heard by the synagogue. The: ual members, thn four Orthodox Vv'cinberg end Philip Sokoioff. Men's club sponsored a fine evesynagogues of Orr.aha and the ning o* Jev,-ish music presented by Cantor Aaron Edgar of Des \ South Omaha Congregation a r e Molnes. ; members o£ the Yaad. The Adass Yeshuren Synagogue The Vaad has actively particiThe Women's organization conpated in all communal institu- continued its spiritual activities tinued its support of the school, tions, such as the City Talmud. during the past under the leaderand ably assisted the synagogue; The Philanthropies, the Jewish ship of Rabbi Xathan Feldman in all its undertakings. This year's and Rabbi Uri Miller. confirmation class numbered 34 Community Center and. the variA large increase in membership welfai'6 ; ous problems of Jewish —tho largest in our history. was one of the main characterisand interest. • The most important event of tics during the past year. At the end of the year Rabbi the year, of course, u-as the purTha Chevra Mishnayls' meet Uri Miller resigned ss Rabbi of chase of the synagogue building: regularly at this synagogue. lot on 40th and Farnam. The lot the Vaad. He was tendered a tesThe officers of the Congregawas completely paid for, thanks i timonial dinner on September 3. tion are: George Soref, ChairThe Vaad, on behalf of the orto the generous $5,000 gift of I.! man; M. • Mlttleman, 3. Rhukert, B., Harry, and Blanche Zimraan. thodox community, undertook the S. Fellman, Joe Ban, J. KirshenThe manner of its giving was in- distribution and sale of Matzoh bawm, and B. Lindenbaum. spiring. The Zimmans gave this and other Passover products, as: r generous gift unsolicited a n d is customary in many othsr Jev, -^ ish communities. ; made no conditions. By so doing. Commissioners of the Vasd in- I The B'nai Jacob Sj'nagoguf they have won the eternal gratitude of the synagogue. Hopes are elude Mr. N. Levinson, chairman; ! continued its -.splrittfal'' activities Harry Marcus, Sam Ravitz, Nath- undiminished during t h e p^st A well-rounded program dedi- high that soon, very soon, t h e : an Wolfson, Isadore Goldstein,.; year, under the guidance of Rabcated to the religious, communal, Beth-El synagogue will be housed ! in a magnificent sanctuary of its; George Soref, Morris Bursteln, bi H. Grodzinsky. sociaU and. educational welfare of Dave C.rounse and A b e Green- . Officers of the congregation the congregation marked the 64th own. baurn. : are: Harry Steinberg, J. M. Bakyear of Temple Israel's existence er, B. Shaiton. II. Gilinsky, Abe in the community. Hlrsch. Abe Greenbaum, and J. The Religious School, with ten Ahramson. grades and a department of HeThe Vaad Ha'Ihr has conduct-i The B'nai Israel Synagogue is ] brew, was eminently successful. ed a full program of coagrega-1 one of the largest and oldest syn-,' The ladles of the Sisterhood tional activities during the past! agogues in Omaha. This past year i distinguished themselves through year. . Services have b e e n held | was the 51st year of its spiritual : The E'nai Isra'e* eynngogue of tasks dedicated to the Temple and regularly every Friday evening at •' activities. '< South Omaha, located at 25th and to many worthwhile projects both the Bnai Israel synagogue includ- j The B'nai Israel Synagogue was ; within the city and nationally. ing many special services which ( headquarters for Rabbi Uri Mil- •;J streets, was founded twenty-six The Congregational Seder, the were attended by capacity con-: ler and for many of the Vaad Ac-, years ego. The silver anniversary of the Youth Conclave, Layman's Ser- gregations. This included a Stu- • tivities. Its Cantor and choir ofvice, Youth Services, a n d many dent service, Auxiliary Night, ! ficiate the late Friday services, synagogue was elaborately cele.. , similar occasions give high testi- Talmud Torah Service and an An-; and its club rooms are used by brated last fall. The synagogue has e membermony to the all-inclusiveness of niversary Service.' The A. Z. A.; the various organizations af filiat- i ship of about seventy-five and the the congregation's activities. conducted services twice, as did • ed with the Vsad. " ! building has been renovated BO as The officers and trustees who the Young Men's Vaad. | Regular services are held three ' served during the pas; year are: The Vaad sponsored during the • times a day and special services • to house ell the activities of; the Sam J. Leon, president; Harry year a Junior Synagogue in co-: on all holidays in accordance with affiliated"-groups.' The congregation conducts a Religious gchool Wilinsfcy, vice-president; ii o u i s operation "with the City Talmud j the orthodox rituals. which meets Sundays, and is assoHiller, treasurer; Minnie 71. Wolf, Torah. They also sponsored a Re-' A Sefer Torah w a s presented! secretary; Milton R. Abrahams, ligious School which meets Sun- by the Milder Family in memory j ciates! with the local Vaad. Eugene Blazer, M. L. Cohn, Sol day morning, which was attended • of Jacob Milder on ^!arch 17th. L. Degen, David Goldman, A b e by about 200 children. The grad- This w a s preceded fey a dinner Goldstein, .Max Holzman, Alfred uation exercises of the Religious and was the outstanding event of S. Mayer, Harry Z. Rosenfeld, and School was held May 24. The Men's Ciufe ot the Beth-151 i the year. Fred Rosenstock, trustees. With the cooperation of the i Commissioners of - the Syna- \ synagogue enjoyed R v e r y sucPhilanthropies, the Vaad is tak-; gogue are: N. S. Yaffee, Louis ] cessful year. The membership ining care of the meshulochira.' Epstein, Dr. N. H. Greenberg, Joe : creased from 110 to 145, and acFunds to these organizations are j Tretiak, Wm.. Milder, Louis Mar-; cording- to plane being worked The year 569 5 was another now sent directly to headquarters solin, and Harry Marcus. S. Weiss • out it is expected that the twoyear of successful achievement in by the Vaad. is Secretary aud Hymie P. Mild-1 hundred mark will be reached the history-of the Beth-El syna- - The V a a d conducts an adult j er, is Accountant. . • . | during the nerv year. During the coming year, many gogue. : , ! class in Talmud called Chevra j activities ere expected to materUnder the leadership of Mr. J.; Shass. This group meets every j ialise. The first activity will . b« J. :Greenberg, president, the syn- j Wednesday evening at the BetV j (Continued on page 51 . agogue continued to growt A fine j Hamedrosh Hagodol synagogue.; The Beth'Hamedrosh Hagodol The gala day of the year, the "Highland Fling," which was under the chairmanship of Leslie L. Burkenroad, taxed the club to the capacity in handling the enthusiastic turnout of 600 men, who enjoyed a full day's program of golf and special events. The "Highland Fling," which 13 a feature of the club's yearly program, is one of t h e strong good-will endeavors on the part of any local groups, for not only are the members urged to bring members of t h e other country clubs as their guests but out-oftown golfers also attend this dayfull of activity. After reigning over, the Highland golf tourneys for three years, Julian Milder was upset by Marvin Treller, who in turn was defeated by Richard Hiller in the championship match. In the women's tourney, Mrs. M. E. Handler defeated Mrs. Abe Brodkey to win the championship. Bill Schuchart, one of the finest golf professionals in the city, was club professional during the entire year. He assisted in planning all of the club's golf activities. An exceptionally fine formal dinner dance which served as the closing affair of the year w a s held on Saturday, August 31.

Adas Yeshuren

B'nai Jacob .. .;."

Temple Israel

Vaad

•em HI ivien's -Club •.

Beth-El

Beth Hamedrosh• Hagodol

r~ r~

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New Year's Edition—THE -JEWISH " PRESS—Friday,- September-27, 1535.

PAGE FIVE.

Mrs. i i . i>i"ncia. financial secretne merabers of the • B t o r Cho- agres of 12 and 17. l a conjunc- operation have been oi such in- . tary: Mrs. 2.1. Arbitman, recordlim, their good •will, tlieir obvious tion with, the colonies, ice Wo---estimable value. pleasure in their self-appointed men's Council also maintained : Last year's officers .were: T-Jrs.-,' The Iocs!1 -Women's Misrachi ing secretary: Mrs. L. Morgan, tasks make their visits eagerly and enlarged;-its nurseries. .This J. Razniek. .ehiurmaE; Mrs. J. ,organisation c&me into boinjr dur- treissurer; Mrs, Ben Haiuifer. proanticipated by the friendless or year there was an increased de- Feldrr.an, financial secretary; Mrs. ing the past year, and has already grsirn. chairuiRV.; Mro. E, Wf'nmand upon these nurseries, caus- J. Eiclilin. recording: secretary; done much toward achieving, the l)orgf. EIH' Mrs, M. TJrodfcry, tinker lonesome sick. Mrs. Louis Neveleff is presi- ed by the .emigration of the Ger- and Mrs. Mas- Goldstein, treasur- aims and purposes of the vovp- flrpv'ii.ip rhnirinrn: Mrs. K. IJPV-er. Meetings £re,he!d t h e last Tb.e Hebrew name o£ the orgar.!- in.'on, card pnrty clijpiTman; ISXVX* dent. Other officers are: Mrs. S. man children. Willinm Kuluin, bnssar chsnrFish, vice-president; Mrs. J. FitsDuring the past .year the Oma- Thursday o'f every month. Pros- ZEtion is "B'nos MisracH." IMi's. It. HAnrgtw, rummage iiel, vice-president; Mrs. Charles ha Pioneer W o m e n continued pective members may coraiuuBiThe program, of the 'Women's mm; .sale; Mrs. Sol HanfileT. roovinr cate with r.ny of the above offiRoss, treasurer; Mrs. Leon Men- their contributions to m a n y Mizrachi includes the Jewish XrJji'B. N. Levinsson ans. delson, corresponding secretary; worthy causes: TSie Jewish Na- cers. tional Fund as a major asvpet pf picture*: ?.-rs. K, Krizelman, refrrehnu-nts ^Continued from page 4) | quet Tvas held May 15at t h e ; sary of the Synagogue and a Pur- Mrs. J. . Miller, recording secre- tional Fund, The. Omaha Philanthe acini lies. Also included, how- and chairmen; I«irs. 1*. 1-iopeni im party, besides small programs tary; and Mrs. N. Pitlor, finan- thropies, the Omaha Community "an evening with Abram sachar," | B > n a ? Israel Synasogue. ever, are the specific • womrn't- blait.i.ea and "Mrs. E. Pioman. mam._, Sunday,t October 27. Plans are j A dessert luncheon at the reg- that have been held during t h e , cial secretary. on Mizrachi prelects, such f.s t h e Chest, the N e w York Teacher's monthly meetings. Very lovely :j"ao"in~the "making lor "a dinner j ular_ monthly meeting June 17. c-chool for Chalutsos in Jerusa- Ue.rsfcip FJKI CIUPF; Mrs, 1. Beber* Seminary, and the Political Fund. The The Jews, through the execu- lem and the nfiw scliool beinp National Fund. (lanc<Tduring November "andone! Ladies Auxiliary serve din- \ programs have been arranged by As Zionists, the Pioneer Women • n e r s f o rt h eMen s c l u b tion cf the last simple rites, ma.Ice ' meetings ; Mrs. Nathan Perelman, chairman, • •pirt«aor W r m o n ir two additional outstanding ' sold many shekolinx and contrib- of death a noble thing. It is for built at Tel Aviv. The women's at all. the affairs. i once every month. organisation also participates in pcakers. uted much time and labor in the U7 ! f the people • who wish their rites the Keren Misrachi fmu:s r.url tltc The Pioneer Women's OrganiThe p a s t year's program j The Auxiliary has sponsored I Officers are: Mrs. J. Gold-ware, zation campaign. The cultural meetiEg«, performed in an ovihoii-ox ir.c<T:- work of the Poals Miirachl, vrhich of Omaha has continued to S. Canar, vice'.wrought before the club s ii c h | various cultural affairs, including f president; Mrs. The Onuihft Workmen's Loan progress with the International including the Oneg Shaboth gath- ner, that : the Chesf>d She!" E.\aa* speakers as Henry Monsky, Ran- the religious school, open forums'president; Mrs. S. Bronstetn, organization.' In retrospect, t h e erings, were well attended. The Society was formed. Death makes is the labor seetion. o" Ihe iJiz- As^orir.tion v; a F incorporated in treasurer; Mrs. A. Kazlowsky, rachi party. tlal ^Biart and John R,. Rine, as and.a book review group. . IJ'IT. f.Uhov.ph its beginning past year—one of hard work— last Oneg Shaboth of the season all -men equal—therefore, t'io~e The officers include: Mrs. L.secretary. .... ; well as an evening of music by was held in "conjunction with the who can pay, and those who can The charter of the local groiip detes back to three or four yefirf shows a steady succession of sucj"Neveleff, president; Mrs. L. Ep- Board of Directors are: Mrs. Cantor Edgar of Des Moines. iHadassah and the Beth-El auxil- not. have, the sarae'riies perform- was accepted at' a wc.'1-attencleG before it? incorporation. ; cesses, both" culturally and finanLeo Ostrovich, Mrs. Dave FlanThe officers of the Beth-El | stein, Mrs. H. R. Milder and Mrs. city-wide banquet at the Jewish "With tile grovth of the RSSOCIB• cially. As .all integral part of the! iary at the'.Elackstone Hotel. At ed for their dear ones.' Men's Club are: Arthur A. Cohn, ! J. Kirshenbaum, vice presidents; chek, Mrs. Morris Lipsnian, Mrs. I Zionist Labor party the Pioneer I that meeting Chaverah Sophie Community Center on March "I. tion the need ©I itr- services l>rAl Kutler, Mrs. Henry Lebovici. For many years, the maiLLtrs president; I. "VY. Rosenblatt, vice-! Mrs. M. Burstein, recording secUdin, president of t h e Pioneer The nationa! headquarters of the Committee chairmen are: Mrs.I Women were honored by the ovof the Chesed Shel Ernes Sociiny Women's Misracti IF • in N e v: came grreetor, a ii (i |>err:iRi»-er.S president: Bernard Theodore, sec- iretary; Mrs. 1. Elewitz, corre; Women, was enthusiastically recv.f.rt.erp V P T . csttibUslirfi i?.t tbr 1 | erwhelming vote of t h e Jewish have worked quietly unassr.m'nc •retary-treacirrer. . | spending secretary; Mrs. D. Ep-L. Gorelick, Ways a n d Means; •; ceived by the women of Omaha. ly, that there might be- a r>la»-ft Tork. Jewish Community Center vhert; stein, financial"* secretary; an'djMrs^N. Perelman, Program; Mrs. j people which elected the party as ; The annual dinner, with. Cha.vP 1 1 businens is transacted eve-rr Prior to their afTitistion with the majority members of the 19th for the orthodox Jew to bu burH. riaderman. Publicity. j Mrs. D. Crounse, treasurer. Zionist Congress, to be held this : erah Elisheva'.Kaplan, the Organ- ied, as his fathers w e r e before the Mizrachi, this group hnd fari ization's representative from Pal- him, according to the ritual pre- ried on Palestinian work for the The present, officers vi the oryear. estine, was attended by 300 peo- scribed by Jewish law. Their ef- past twelve years as the iDp.v.jrh- ganisation fir f- ; F, Giusbvir|,v • The Men's ciub of t h e Yaad The success this year of theple. prcRsdent; K. Ha'Ihr was organized to promote forts are rewarded in the- work t.ers of Hon. The importance and the value Pioneer Women' in t h e United •jdpiit; Isptlore The Sisterhood of Temple Iscood fellowship and to sponsor of the Chesed-Shel Enes Society. The officers of the local WoStates and Canada enabled t h e That the Quotas'have been fult -come of the many activities of the rael is a vital factor in the con- of the Deborah Society is indi- Women's Council-of Palestine to Mrs.- Louis Xevelelf is presi- men's Mizrachi are: Ttlr's. I. Kula- c r y : nntl K. Lind filled is due -to the generosity of Vaad. Aa such, it enjoyed a phen-j tinued growth of the synagogue. cated by its active membership. dent; Mrs. J. Milder,- vice-presi- kofsky, president; Mrs. M. Brod- urcr; a n d t h e directors a r e F», the twelve colonies lor Omaha Jewry. The thanks of the omenally successful career in the ; The Sisterhood promotes socia- AtTthe present" time this" Ladles | maintain dent; Mrs. S. Wemzweijr, secre- ' key. first vice-president; Mrs. A, GUSR, J . B a r , S. Bloom, IS. K i r o t t , girls "which-are under their care i billty and Temple attendance, be- Auxiliary boasts 200 members. Pioneer Women's Organization is tary: and Mrs. R. Milder, treas- Wolf, second vice-president; Mrs. B. Gorelick, S. Wleii^vej;, A, Gilt.*year just closed. to open yet another one for The sole purpose of t h e De(Continued on page S) E. Weinberg, third vice-president; '• The Club sponsors a dinner j sides helping in the conducting of younger" girls, between t h e tendered to all those whose co- ; urer. meeting one evening every month, I the Temple Sunday School." Inihorah Society Is to help maintain

Women's Mizrachi

Chessd She! Ernes •

Vaad Men's Glub

.

Deborah

Sisterhood

^VMH^M^^M^^M^'V'^^M^^f1

usuaUy .on the third Thursday. At! addition, this ladles Auxiliary j the Talmud Torah financially. The officers of the Society are: these meetings, -varied programs helps in the promotion of all Mrs. K. Tatle, President; Mrs. j • are presented, and excellent meals Temple activities, an3 serves at are served by the members of thethe various banquets and dinners. J. Finkel, Treasurer; Mrs. A. Ladies Auxiliary, headed by Mrs. The local auxiliary is affiliated Wolf, First Vice President; Mrs. A. Schwaczkin and Mrs. S. Ep-with the National Federation of J. Bernstein, Second Vice Presi-Bteiri. -.-' " : Temple Sisterhoods and also with dent; Mrs. M. Fromkin, Financial District Number 20, composed of Secretary; Mrs. C. S. Ross, COT. Among the speakers w h o addressed the dinner meetings dur- the Sisterhoods of Missouri, Kan- responding Secretary. ing the past year are: William.L. sas, Iowa and Nebraska. Hblzmari, -who -.told of his AusThose "who served as officers: tralian trip; Rabbi David Gold- Mrs. M a x Holzman, president; stein; -who apoke on Maimonides; Mrs. M. It. Cohn, vice-president; The Jewish National F u n d •John K. Chappell, radio announc- Mrs. Louis Kulakofsky, recording Council of Omaha "was established er: Dr. Walter Lpwenstein, "who secretary; Mrs. D a v e Goldman, to serve as a clearing house for .Bpoke' on' conditions in Germany corresponding secretary; M r s . all local Jewish National fund acfrom personal experience; and Harry Rubenstein, treasurer; and tivities, Trtth practically all Omaothers of equal merit. Musical Mrs.. Sam Wertheimer, auditor. ha organizations interested in the numbers also featured t h e prcn upbuilding of the Homeland begrams, including t h e singing of ing affiliated. Zmeeros (traditional Jewish and The officers are J. RadinowHebrew songs) under the spirited sky, president; Morris Milder, direction of Cantor A. Schwacz- .-. The Beth-EI Auxiliary looks j vice-president; I. Morgenstern, back on a year of activity that treasurer; a n d . M r s . S. Friedel, kin. ' The officers during t h e past j has been highly gratifying to airsecretary. ,. . year were Ephraim Marks, pres-i who took-part in any of its varied The following organizations are ident; Sol Lagman, __=, , vice-presi- j projects. As a result the year es- affiliated: Hadassah takes care of collections; Junior Hadent; Max Chasen, treasurer; and' tablished a record that -will long has charge of flower and Sidney Katlemah, treasurer. The i remain a standard ol comparison I tag days; Mizrachi attends t o the membership of t h e Men's Clnb for other seasons to equal. Under the leadership of Mrs. I collections in t h e synagogues; totals 159, Tvith average attend- David " Sherman, • a well-planned Jewish National Worker's Alliance at dinners 100.- .. program "was formulated and car- ance; - the Pioneer Women; t h e ried through to successful conclu- Zionist - Organization and t h e j sion. The annual Succoth tea Poale-Zionists all do. their share opened the year in September. In in the.work ot-jaising funds. In ft i :e past year ; the Erothe'r- November,, after six • weekeLpi re- •' The funds of t i. e Jetsrish • Na-' hood- of Temple? Israel' has j • . *. .1 \tional Fund or Keren Kayemeth witnessing the^Wossotning out of \ topped a U iL^Ijs^r ^a ej .l a r e u s e d t 0 r e d e e m t h e the seeds of activity which have! Stofore

You All New Year

J. N F. Council

Beth-El Auxiliary

Brotherhood

;

e-d t l f Aux

SDiI o £< P a l e s t t a e a s t h

*

iaali

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U b I e property oithe Je ish pe0 Thi3 group serves to stimulate one hundred pie. During its thirty-three years and promote activity and the de-and fifty persons who took part of existence it has collected over, velopment-of projects which are presented such anvexcellent J show ten million dollars in pennies, sponsored- by Temple Israel. .Last that; reviewers i-terined ^it* of nickels and dollars, from the poof, year .every- endeavor fessional and the rich, all used to further been'desired and planned for in the aims of a homeland for the the past actually began to funcJewish people. tion aid ..teepme an Important 1^"luncheon in; December, and part .of the. Temple activities.. , J ^ February,; the annual dancing A; • very successful ".Gridiron" j party at the Paxton hotel attractwas held, an annual dance at t h e | e d a large crowd a n d raised a The Omaha Mizracli organizaPaxton: hotel was attended by an sizeable portion of the year's budtion has just concluded a year of unusually large crowd, and thelget. Friday evening services enjoyed A. Purim celebration was held i fruitful activities. the largest attendance in recent j n March, and in April, brides of; The regular meetings h a v e the year were honored at a pro- been held once a month In the years. form of a Malava Malkeh, these The Brotherhood is affiliated I gram which combined music i and d •with the National Federation of I entertainment. In May, Mrs. Dav- meetings featured cultural proBrotherhoods, and its program J id Sherman was re-elected presi- grams and traditional songs. Inhas been of Inestimable value and! dent at t h e . annual luncheon teresting programs were held including out of town speakers. service to local Reform Judaism. | meeting. The annual Mizrachi concert In.conjunction -with the SisterThis year, as It did last, the given the Haaomir Singing hood this group promotes more Auxiliary sponsored Rabbi David Society by was held January. 27 at activity and spirit in the Temple ! A. Goldstein's series of book eve- the 19 and Burt street Evnagogue. and sponsors all social life of the j nings with eminently successful Temple that is not -under ' ' ~ the ! ult. This series has become one , ^ ^ V ^ T n t * i MizreS p ! of the outstanding literary events , T h e sponsorship of the Sisterhood. The outstanding outstanding event event of the The officers of the Brotherhood! o f the year, and is attended by In-1 - eaT are: Homer Binswanger, presi- creasing numbers of non-Jews as I ? was t h e Regional Conferjence held in Omaha March 29, dent; David R. Cohen, secretary; Plans are nearly complete for! 30 - 3 1 - Many Rabbis from surR o b e r t Rosenthal, treasurer. this year's j projects and the open- ! rounding communities attended Members of the board of trustees, L1Xia J C O I o , I U J C V , u „„„ WiiV, ^^^ aa rr ee :: Donald uonaiu Brodkey, u r o u « j , David ^ a . , u I. ing ing meeting meeting will will find find workers workers !! tt bh ii ss conference conference and and a a regional regional oror Block.Dr. Benjamin T. Friedman, waiting to make this another in-! gani2ation was formed. The Con...__ *_ — 1 . _ «vi^ n^«*i,o^ !„.! ganization was formed. TJ " — teresting and eventful year. and Louis E. Lipp. i service ference was andpreceded concludedby by a special a dinner. It was a refreshing cultural experience for-the Omaha Jewish community. Several of the offiThe Vaad Auxiliary h a s just j The Ladies Auxiliary of the cers of the Region are members completed a year of successful en- J Congregation of Israel Synagogue, Io f the local organisation. deayor in the religious and cul- {25th and J streets, has ended its! During the past year the Miztural fields. : j second very active and successful j rachi has gained many members. . The Auxiliary meets on t h e ; y e a r . , . . |A Women's Mizrachi organization third Monday of each month. j This auxiliary was organized iu i fcas been formed. A successful card party w a s; November, 1933, with a member-! Officers include S a m Ravitz, held October 10 at t h e Jewish j ship bf c l o s e to one hundred .|.president; Nathan Leyinson, vice Community Center. Mrs. Dave j ladies. The purpose of this auxil- j president; E; Bloch, secretary; Epstein "Was chairman. j iary is to help promote sociability land Max Venger, treasurer. The Ladies of t h e Auxiliary! and to keep up the interests of | The Executive Committee teservea and prepared t h e dinner j the Soutli Side Synagogue and itsjdades: Messrs. L. Blumenthal, J. for the Father and Sons banquet! community, I Kirshenbaum, S. Katelman, N. held a t t h e B'nai Israel syna-j During the past year, with Mr3. J Levinson, H. Marcus, C D . Mengogue November 25. • j J. Goldware at the helm, and with j delson, ' S. Riekes, A. G. WeinA Carnival Bazaar was held De-| the cooperation of the members j stein, E. Weinberg, A. Katz, Revcember 2 at the Municipal Audi- [ of this organization, many things •< erend A. Schwaczkin and Rabbi torlnm under the chairmanship of t have been accomplished in t h e ! Nathan Feldman and Rabbi Uri ! MrB. Samuel Brown. Mrs. W. way of making t h e auditorium J Miller. Milder and Mrs. N. H. Greenberg beautiful, aa -well as useful for were in charge of the dance pro-! -weddings or parties. gram for the- dance. \ A modern heating plant a n d On January 9 the--Auxiliary ! cooling system has been installed, For eleven years the B i k u r held a bake sale a t Brandeisjanew stage has been'constructed cholim Society has not failed the StoreB with Mrs. H. H. Singer and ;-with a beautiful" velvet stage cur- lonesome s i c k — f l o w e r s to its j Mrs. Meyer Katzman in charge, itain and drapes a t each window.. members, bringing with their ex-. The unnual dinner held Feb- 1 A model kitchen has been install- j quisite colors good wishes for ruary 10 at the Jewish Commu- j ed, adjoining the auditorium that speedy recovery—good, whole- > nity jCenter was prepared and! Is strictly kosher, with services to some kosher food for those wha jaccomodate over two hundred J turn wearily from "trafe" food served by the Auxiliary. A rummage sale held April 9,; people. The floora have been tat- j they Ernst not eat—cany are Use 10, 11 -with"Mrs. A. Schwaczkin! en care of for dancing and theexamples of the expansive kindauditorium ia now available for liness and understanding of this and Mrs. I. Fiedler in charge. j society. The Auxiliary sponsored t h e any one Interested. Among the events on the social j The Biknr Cholim has averagpicture "Power" a t the Circle Theatre, -with Mrs. A. Greenbsuin calendar include a benefit bridge, J ed. thirty hospital calls a mony and Mrs. S. Kattleasan in charge. a mother and daughter social, the)and almost the same number of A Mother and BaugUte? ban-4 celebration of the "2 oth ' annlver-' home calls. The friendly cheer of

hunted

^

Mizrachi

Vaad Auxiliary

I

Israel Auxiliary

"

It's Important to it n o \v what's inside the pipes and coils of the electric relrigerator yon bay! Electricity does not freeze the ice cubes, nor does it provide a cold temperature in the refrigerator. Instead, a "refrigerant" does this important work. Only Grunow uses safe Carrene refrigerant which, instead of being a gas, is a liquid, under all ordinary conditions. This safe liquid refrigerant operates under a vacuum. There is no pressure used, to strain pipes and connections, nor to cause the refrigerant to leak out into the room. But even if it. should leak out into the'room If would do no harm of any kind, either. to plants, pets, or hu; mans. Because Carrene is really safe as a refrigerant —so -safe that "it can be carried, around in open pails, like water. Yet, with all its safety and simpli-city, it is one of the most efficient refrigerants knoivn. It permits the xssa of comparatively simple mechanisms and does its work at lov/ operating cost.

Toil -Hiil gcarcelT feeiievc your own ears -H-h-ea TOH i?.€sr t h e «mRsinjj new depth and fidelity of rcprodnftiora achieTed •with the cscfesire Griixww Tone-Tested .Resonator. But here It is, for you to marvel at—all lbs *'loae ireefcencies'*" heretofore missis^ sow brought vn, to reveal & richness of reproduction thai is truly sensational. • And just look at tlie other great forward steps tslces. to srs&ke these Grunowg the greatest radios ever huilL ALflBSBI CQLCRFLASB CIHL—This EISO IS a G-runow achievement that-will fascinate J"oa.; If you wish to taije ia oa env of the varions bands oftlie Gruaow AU-^TsTe Keceiveryoa merely turn tlie switch and EnlomaticaliT a colored light Sashes to signal ro-a which band yon are operating oa. CLSCK C5SL PCtKTESS—By mescs of this. simple Lwt intriguing clock dial timing ETB-

-tct&. once yoa hare SoCEled the position of s. etalioD, lorere? sfterward? you tuae it in lite a Sash without any pEiastRkinj: search for it, . .-^-

vavc timing. Jt Ftations ef tfe* Gninow achi

I1SBSEM SHERILRIS CSBIMETS—G rn.no vr

y fitepe yam c f nd is -«n d

KETM, TillS—Metal Tv,ij«i met", She scientific acbicvCTnint of. gmm neerii. They eliminate .breakage, gu*e p mstch<>{j for t.jK wtfoiipii. p-n f preater ;

leads the Industry v-ith these beautiruL bi^Wy modern cesijas <s£ cabinetry M^faicb fit in hsfEiosaonsly with the fumialjings of any borne.

mtivi'r end ist^x-eTt! 6 -WtJvs'>,

This Beautiful Model ."' Priced at $87M® a e

Biloir Cholim

WITH GREATEST

TONE FIDELITY

Q Y$

lOCHMAN, Prop.

WAlnut 5611


. New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday,-September T7,1935;

PAGE .SIX.

tehance of the Labor Lyceum building, located at twenty second and"Clark streets. During the year this-organization contributes to the local charities and other national Jewish agencies. ' The'officers J fo" this year are: Mrs. S. Pollay, recording secretary; Mrs. Li. ,"Witkin, financial secretary and-treasurer; and Mrs. J.- Helman, hospitaler. On t h executive committee are Mrs. M. j Susman, Mrs. J . Susman, Mrs. A. Coltoff, Mrs. L. Bailen, Mrs. H. Cohn, • Mrs. P. 'Miller, -Mrs. M.Schwartz, a n d Mrs. M. Rosenstein. •" . .

The organization holds monthpermanently in t h e Chapel. T h e i ing secretary; Mrs. J . Ban, hosAuxiliary also raffled' a beautiful j pital committee. .Board members ly meetings • at", the homes of t h e Coxwell chair and ottoman a t the i include Mrs. J . --FlabeS. Mrs: S. various members. An • admission- i '•'. The Omaha Chapter of t h e first annual luncheon h s l d ' o n May j Fish; Mrs. J . Goodbiflder, Mrs. H . free social affair w i t h an out; Junior KaclEFsah has concluded a 21 a t the Jewish Community Cen- j Adelstein, M r s . H. Rothkcvitz, standing program is being plan- year full of accomplishments. « n ter. I Mrs.. J . ' Kovitz, Mrs. . H. G u s s. ned shortly after t h e holidays. : der the leadership-of Miss Minnie The officers'of the g r o u p : . Mrs. i Frooin a s president, a n d under We a r e very happy t o state a tI Trustees include Mrs.. L. Rul?eEI. Pearlman,;,president; Mrs.. Sam \ the sponsorship oi Mrs. M a x the-present time that t h e Chapel • stein and Mrs. Sam Reiss.. Epstein, vice-president; Mrs. D. : Fromkin, • "who h a s recently r e is -completed, although n o t all B. Epstein, secretary; Mrs. J . J . paid for. The unpaid pledges will ! signed after serving- in t h a t ca1 Greenberg, treasurer. . e be sufficient to offset the balance pacity since t h e beginning of the due.'-We want to take this opporchapter fourteen years ago. The B'nai A b r a h a m ' lodge , in tunity to thank a l l those w h o South Omaha.was organised about | Other officers "vvlto served durdonated to this cause, without jing the r e a r 56!>5 were Sarah Soltwo decades ago. • Its membertheir'assistance we could not. have ! omonow antl Ruth Silver as fi|i'anship is near the hundred mark. • accomplished o u r purpose. jCisl vice presidents: Dora. F#eshThe organization pays sick and ; man, culture! v i c e-president; The officers a r e : Mrs-. J . Fin- death benefits, and maintains t h e kel, president; Mrs. J . Kirshen- B'nai Abraham c e m e t e r y ' l o c a t e d In j u s t a few years of existence, • Anria Hahn, membership r i c e b a u m , . vice-president; Mrs. L. on Fishers F a r m in South- Omar the Beth Hamc -rosl. Hagodol president; Goldie Seidman, corEvelyn Mendelson, financial secretary; lia. During its existence t h e Cemetery Organization h a s been responding secretary; Mrs. G. Soref, recording secre- lodge h i s paid out over 57,000 in transformed from what was once GJazer, recording secretary; Jeant a r y ; , Mrs. A. Rochman, treasur- benefits. a neglected farm l a n d into a nette ResnSck, financial treasur• • er: S a r a h German, recording er; Mrs. D. A. Finkel, correspondbeautiful garden spot. ing secretary. A new gravel road h a s been treasurer; Mildred Falk and Fanlaid, burial equipment purchased, nie Katelman, reporters; and the Misses Ruth Swengil, Fannie KatThe Goldie Meyerson club is a water and pipe lines laid, a n d Ie3man. and Gertrude Guss, hoard many other improvements added. branch of t h e P i o n e e r . Women's -Within the - last year, t h e - o r - : members; and I d a Fine, parliaThe Hazomir Singing Society is | organization and' is * composed of ganization,' in conjunction with mentarian.' i a social choral group, a n d i tjsyoung married women. I t was or-. • The fall season v a s opened main purpose is t o learn to enigaiiized i n ' N o v e m b e r , 1 9 3 4 / a n d t h e Beth Hamedrosh Hagodel with a Membership Tea a t t h e Synagogue, has purchased an adi joy Jewish music. : n o r h a s a membership of 25: Blaekstone Hotel, with a n u m b e r : j At present t h e society h a s 2S I. Among t h e fund-raising proj- ditional acre, a new fence, plant- ; members. The officers a r e : - C a n - ! ccts sponsored successfully b y ' t h e ed new shrubs, laid a new water of new members joining the chap*, tor A. Schwaczkin,. director; Leo jgroup was a bake sale which r.et- line, graded, leveled, removed : t e ^ A clever skit, "Junior H a Bernstein, president; Morris Tep- :.te"d $25.00-and i. csrd party which trees, prepared t h e ground f o r dassah Girls on a Spree" was pre-. ,' } lisky, vice-president; H a r r i e t I brought $15.00. This money.was seeding, and planted n e w , grass ; sen ted. Bernstein, secretary; L i b e r t y j-.sent to Palestine for t h e purpose seed. They have purchased new : The annual southwestern re-* a n d several concrete • gional convention was held in Des. j Cooper, treasurer. o f . building a n d maintaining shrubs benches. A new . road has been i Moines, Icwa, November 10 atlS' schools for working girls. i l l . with more than fifty mem.-; laid, leading into t h e new cemeI- .Officers of t h e organization • bers from Omaha chapter attendtery End exiting through t h e old. are: Mrs. Sam Friedel, president; ing. In November was also theThe organization is-laying out the Constructive and needed " serv- j Mrs. Harry Biish, secretary-treas: annual Thanksgiving Dance : on: new. plot o f g r o u n d with l o t s j u r e r ; a n d Mrs. • Sarii Lansky, r e ice is being rendered by tlie Lad: ready f ,o r sale. Arrangements November' £9, a t ' ' t h e Fontenelle jporter. " ' . . .< ies' Free Loan society. I have been made with' the South Hotel, which proved a hupe suc' No interest is charged for t h e Omaha Shule to take down their cess both socially and financially." small loans -which ar-j made t-o fence which adjoins t h e old acre ; Miss Kalah Franklin was general, members, t h e organization loan; and combine t h e use of the road chairman. The Golden Hill.Society maining sums u p to thirty dollars -to « ' In December, a Chanukah pro-' _jf | members only. Though t h e s e j-tajns t h e cemetery. and cares for as one, further beautifying t h e ; gram was held with Cantor :A, ; "~^ f appearance of both cemeteries. loans are small,-the good they do j the chapel at the Golden Hill cemI Schwaczkin singing a group • of. \ ! etery.. Arrangements have been made is large. Chanukah songs and . lighting t h e ; The organization meets twice a i Tliis past .year t h e -women in to have rabbinical ' services t h e candles. - ' • ,; . | ; this organization have done ranch two Sundays preceding t h e high month. During January, a series of cidj c Officers a r e : Mrs. S. Bar on, • to. beautify t h e cemetery. Their holidays. ' ture studies were given by promF u t u r e plans a r e being considpresident; Mrs. E . Epslciu. vice- work hns been so fruitful that inent professors from t h e Creig'h-' president: Mrs. L. Adler, treasur- they a r e planning, a n intensive ered for t h e building of a new • ton University. - ' °"; er; Mrs. S. Zornovsky, loan secre- ; membership campaign, asking all chapel. ' ' On February 2 3, t h e annual! **f tary; Mrs. J . Weiner, dues secre- •who have an-interest in the cemThe organization n o w comContinued on next, page tary; Mrs. J . Miller, correspond- ' e t e r y t o join. , " • prises £00 active members. •- . I

|

• • - B'naii Abraham •

tributed to the Philanthropies campaign and is always willing to aid in any worthy undertaking. . The officers are: S a m Stein, : The Jewish National Workers secretary; Lewis Gitlin, treasurAlliance is a fraternal o r d e r er; and. Sam Ruderman, hospitalwhich insures its members, from er. Acting as executive officers o n e hundred (§100.00) to five are: Max Selicow, Abe • Forman, The Mutual Loan Association thousand (§5,000.00) dollars life Sam Susman, Louis Rubin, -Isa- of Omaha has just completed a insurance and sick benefit of from dore Swartz, Sam Swartz, a n d very successful year. Louis Mandel. .'.. . . . . six to 20 dollars. . ' Founded in 1926, the organiThe purpose of the organizazation has continued to serve tion is to help labor J groups in Omaha men and women who have Palestine and in this regard corequired' financial assistance. In operates with all organizations in The Labor Lyceum building, the recent years of depression, it Omaha in campaigns . for Pales- which is located at twenty-second i has especially proven beneficial, tine. and Clark streets, is an instituOn its tenth anniversary (SepThe Omaha branch,. No. 54, | t i o n w h i c h i s h O u s j n g the .Ladies i tember 4 ) , it looked back with inofcfo r\P forty fnrtr m o m h n r c The T'Tio ' » » •* ' - . .. • _ -__JJ ' i . ' • • » - _ consists of members. Labor Lyceum club, the Mutual pride a t t e n years of successful meetings take place the first Mon- Loan Association, a n d Branch service to -the community. day of the month. These meet- Number. 173 of the Workmen's The officers and directors give Loans made to members a r e ings which are cultural 'as well Circle. , ', •. •' . freely of their time and efforts. repayable oy.er a period of eight as business meetings are open. to The supervision of the building Loans range from $75 to §300 months; in weekly payments. Any the public. They are held at theis in control of a board-of direc- and meetings.are held every Monand all profits that remain after J. C. C. tors and a president, vice-presi- day evening at the Labor Lyceum The present officers are: A. N.dent, secretary and treasurer, who building, 2201 Clark street. the payment of nominal operating expenses, since the directors Cohen, financial secretary; M. are elected from among the mem- : The - officers, most of whom have served since the ineeption of serve without pay, are distributed Minkin, recording secretary; J. •bers supporting this building. Feldman, Max. Goldstein, J. RazAmong the activities.of organi- the organization, are: among, the members in proportion nick, L. Minkin, J. Radinowski, zation is a citizenship '- school! Max Selicow, president; Hymie to their interests in the associaB. Bondarin, and S. Richman,which is conducted by the Board ! Zorin, vice-president; Sam Stein, tion. At the present, time there executive board. of Education. The use of the hall I secretary;• Max Crounse, treasurare approximate^ three hundred is donated to the school board! er; Max Fromkin, counsel. members in the association. for this use. ' j Serving on the board of direcAt this time the funds of this During the winter months open j tors are -Abe -Forman, Louis Gitassociation total over thirty thouThe Workmen's Circle, Branch forums are conducted. Social and lin, Sendor Lipp, Sam' Ruderman sand dollars which belong entirely to the members. In the early 173 of Omaha, Nebr., is a part of literary meetings are held which and Sam Susman. '••—> days of its existence it was neces- one of the largest fraternal or- are sponsored by the various-or-I sary to borrow funds from banks ganizations in the world with an ganizations who use t h e Labor from time to time in o r d e r ' t o aggregate of 750 branches with Lyceum as their meeting place. Bazaars and other forms of enmeet the continued , needs of itsexecutive offices in New ' York, members, but during the last few City. There are 70,000 members. tertainment are held from time The- Independent Workmen's years it has paid back all bank! At this time of the year the lo- to time for the benefit of Ihe Jewloans, and is now able to operate cal branch looka back at a num- ish public as well as for the or- Loan Association of the South Side, is a mutual loan association entirely: on its own funds. The j ber of varied events it sponsored, ganizations who sponor. them. • The officers for this-year are which had its beginning in 1924: members of this association con-! a successful lecture, a successful picnic, and of special interest was as follows: L. Witkin, president; Loans up to $500 are given to sist of Jewish people of all walks | the annual concert, which is look- M. Selicow,, vice-president; ; L. members in good standing. Durof life a n d of all branches of ed forward to eagerly each year. Ruben, secretary; and S.'Susman, i n g ' i t s existence the organization Judaism; and Is non-political in An impoitant and outstanding treasurer. has loaned its membership more character. event to every member of t h e Those who are members of the than 5200,000 without sustaining Workmen's Circle was. t h e con- board of directors are: A. For- a single loss| vention held in New York at man, L. Gitlin, S. Ruderman, I. The Progressive Hebrew club Is which all branches were repre- Schwartz, S. Schwartz, and Mrs. now i n ; its second year of exist- sented. Mr. Louis Witkin was the M. Rosenstein. ance.' The purpose of this or- local representative. The Mt. Sinai Auxiliary was organization is medical protection The organization is always ganized October 3, 1934. T h e ' of its members and families and ready and- willing t o aid a n y purpose of the organization is to the sponsoring of social activities, j worthy cause or institution. In Another active a n d successful raise money to build the Chapel Cultural and educational meet-j the past year, as it does e a c h year has been enjoyed-by, i l i / e j a t the cemetery, recently purchasings arei being held for members year, it contributed to: Hias, Los Ladies -Labor Lyceum club, which i ed by the Adas Yeshuren Synaand their friends. Whenever pos- Angeles Sanatorium, Denver San- has been in existence for the past! gogue,. 25th arid Seward streets. sible, outstanding speakers, busi- atorium, ex-patients, Denver, De- fourteen years. [ The money is being raised by ness leaders, clubmen and profes- borah Sanatorium,- Federation of The purpose of this group Is to! contribution and the names of all sional men are secured t o address j Jewish Charities, and National sponsor activities which ..will iraise I don-ors are t o : be written j n , t h e Hospital, Denver. Locally it con- money for the upkeep "arid-main- < Golden JBook' which'-'wilp" r4m£ih the meetings. (Continued from page 5) 'burg, ij! M. iWintroub, and L. Morgan. : -! :;"; • . ' • • - • '• • , ' This • organization has. proven of invaluable assistance to local Jewistibusiness men and working men •who can, through this organization, o n : the strength of their personal character,; obtain financial aid; to tie them over a period of economic distress without any red tape. The need for this association is attested to by the fact t h a t in these unusually . tryink times the" demand for the association's services lias increased and members have been greatly aided by financial help that they could not procure elsewhere.

National Workers Alliance

Mutual Loan

Labor Lyceum

Workmen's Circle 173

Independent Workmen's Loan

junior

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- Goldie Meyerspn

Haz<omir

Ladies' Free Lean

i Golden Hill Society

Progressive Hebrew

Mt. Sinai Auxiliary

Ladies Labor Lyceum

ATURES

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, v Resnick, financial vice president; »" Fannie Katelman, cultural vice- j gj president; Goldie Seidman, mem- j g befship vice president: Kalah jjS Franklin, recording secretary; ; § j Evelyn Glazer, corresponding sec- j jgi retray; Ann Goodbinder, financial j § treasurer; Ruth Swengil, mem- :s , bership treasurer; Minnie Froom, s ; parliamentarian; Una G r o s s , t |reporter; and Sarah Taub, Doro- ~ ! thy Berg, a n d Anne Kuznit, as \ board members. 1 On Sunday afternoon. May 5, an; The new officers were formally -• open meeting was held at the J.'.j installed at a Banquet given at ~ C. C. with Miss Ziff as the pfin-j the" J. C. C. June 23. The Ban- = cipal speaker -Manet was also a farev. ell to Mrs. A group of the members at- ^oxnkin, who resigned as spon- ^ tended the various cultural class-.f*>r - °f•• t h e organization. Mrs. es sponsored by t h e College of f r o m k i n w a s presented with a r Higher Education, =studying H e ^ l l o T^ f - wgift in appreciation of her B "'£,"<=». • ^ " " v - " " u " > ^ v . . — *, " " • i orlr a n d o « - o n p r a t i o n

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Continued from previous page Brother-Sister Danciag Party -was given at the Jewish' Community Center, -with Miss Ida Fine in charge. On ilarch 14, a Purim. program •was given at the J. C. C. at an open meeting with Rabbi Miller as guest'speaker/ and Cantor E. Sellz singiug a group of Jewish songs. At this time, Mr. Harry Trnstin wound an eight-day /clock to inaugurate the "Junior Hadassah Silver Mine" contest, •with a prize of fifty dollars to the per-

son guessing the correct time that the clock stopped. Approximately two hundred dollars was netted from this affair.. Mrs. Harry Abramson won the fifty dollar prize, and she immediately donated part to the Jewish National Fund. , Miss

Nell

Ziff

of Minneapolis,

national vice president of .Junior, Hadassah, was in Omaha the early part of May, and on. Friday^ evening. May 3, the Chapter held special "Junior Hadassah Sabbath Services" conducted by Miss Ziff at the B'nai Yisroel synagogue.

May the New Year Bs a Joyous One

"T"»

FEUS Marriage, a barometer of \. in the building of Jewish life throng* Sanctified in Jewish history, the n^ of our happiness and given Israel etrnitf= We welcome and congratulate thetV we announced in our columns durins 1 tr.

Miss Miss Miss Miss MiKR Miss : r o n Miss brew, Jewish, the Bible, and Cti*I J ^ ^ ^ V u S J ^ » r a i sed ? Miss Miss toms and Ceremonials. j their quota for the "Give a n d ^ Miss On June 13, the annual elec- Get" who were honored guests at 2 Miss tion of officers took place with the banquet, were the Misses Una | ^ Miss Miss Miss Dora Freshman chosen as Gross, Ruth Silver, Jeannette Res- ^ Miss Miss President for t h e coming year, nick,: Minnie Froom, Sacks, ~ Miss Other new are: Fannie Katelman, Eve Katzman. ! 5 Miss Miss Ruth Roffman, Dorothy Berg, ~ Miss Miss I Goldie Zusman, Mary Garf inkle, j r, Miss Mildred "Whitman, Anne Kuznit, j ^ Miss Miss Ruth Swengil, Zelda Charney and ~ M"iss Miss ,A-- summer outing .-was HeiQ - Miss Miss Sundav AusruSt 1 1 , at Elmwood ; Miss Miss - Miss ( Park, -w-ith Miss- Rose Aoramson Miss i in charge. ~. Miss \ ^ MJss Hiss Miss I SI lVIU Miss The year 5 695 was one of the ; Miss Miss uccessful in the eight years Miss ' of existence of the Psi Mu. j Miss .During the past year the frater- ; Miss Sriss Miss , nity won t h e basketball cham-' Miss ipionship without suffering one! Miss Miss j defeat in the ten games played, j Miss j They were also runner-ups in the ^liss ;

Jorephine Jlonheit and Mr. Herman Levinson Rose Simons anfl Mr. Bernard Theodore Ann Tretiak and Air. Burton G. FeMrnan Dena Goldstein and nir. Max Givot Sarah Baum and 35r; Herman C. Babich Tillye Sigra] and Mr. Abe Sie.gf-1 Marion Martin and M.r. David YTine Bva Katzman and Mr. Louis S. Tintroub Gerry Wiritroub and Mr. .Adolph Wilhelm Nioma Cohn and Mr. Irvine Greene Dorothy Cohen and Mx. Milton H. Tudelson Freecia Biodkey and Mr. John Rosenblatt Anne Zweiback and Mr. Arthur Grossman Edith Garflnkle and Mr. Robert Nodule Hose Kaplan and Mr. Morris Rifkin Margaret Hurwitz and 11 v. Al Fir.kel Jann Fannie Lemer and Mr. Ben Brodinsky Mjldred Levy and Mr. Sam Freiberg: Tieva Bernstein and Mr. Myer W. Rosenbaum Marian Goldner and Mr. Robert Rosenthal Marian Glochowslcy and Mr. Harry Shukert Sarah Solomoncw and Mr. Ben Rndner Rosella Perils and Mr. Arthur Smith Ann Berman and Mr. Morris Roitsteir LTicile Weiss and Mr. Harold B. BrcwJkey Kay Rosenberg and Mr. Ber, Rockas Sylvia Zevin and Mr. Alfred S. Mayer Mildred Falk and Mr. Sol MirofT Dorothy Tuchman arid Mr. Martin Shiff Ruth Cobpn and Mr. Arthur H. Goldstein Merrlam Hollander and Mr. Harry Friedman Hermine Green and Mr. Joseph A. Krasne Florence F. Sucker and Mr. Sol Berg Ida MentielEOTi and Sir. Henry Korwitz Bertha Slutzken and Mr, famuel Shif£ Bessie Bailer, and Mr. J-ulius Hornstein Helen Gittle and Mr. Ernest Koss Mary Cutler and Mr. Ralph Nogs Reva Kaplan and Mr. Jack Kaiman Monya Riehman and Mr. Gus Fr&iVkcl Ksther Horwritz and Mr. Louis Appet Kate Greenberg- and Mr. Sam Zlotkin Ruth Fox and Mr. Shell Katskec Sarah Tucker and Mr. Lou.Lewis Ann Betty Gitniok and Mr. Gus Asrron Sarah "WoskofT and Mr. Morton Plotkin Lillian Epstein and Mr. Charles Guss Elizabeth Dolsoff and Mr. Harry

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j pre-season tournament. 1. Two of the Psi Mu members, A i-— i lie r e p o r t c;?>Gene ! Manny Goldberg a n d Morris g ,wv p Vo-°11ci?r3icr B P P cnlated ' Bloom, were outstanding in the irl Xpr.i o r p u n 5P j annual A. A. V. handball tourna- \ carrying out of the five fold and program of religion, social-serv- tional A. Z. A. Eabbcth. Friday, . full program of A. Z. A. , ice, cultural, social, and athletic March 29, IPS?, at the B'nai 1 . = ,i / I" 1 r i c h F i ?• i« c h m i e r j meiit that was held at the Jewish cliTi^vri. w a s o f i i c i i ' l Community Center. Manny won. . Officers presiding durins the activities. Sain. Beber Chapter No. raol Synagogue, at lSUi and Chi-; bfen the singles' championship while present term are: Ernie Xogg, j 100 of A. S. A., junior orcier el caco street?: and on April CC. \y Morris Bloom doubled up w i t l i Aleph Godol; Ben Shrier, Aleph \ the B'nai B'rith, has just round- lf'55, the chapter and chapter Ko. The CLiieir-l r-fatemr-nt d-eclsre^ Paul Grossman and won the dou- \ S'gan; Irving Yaffe, Aleph Maz- • ed out another full year of vrorth- 1 sponsored Rabb: Shulman ol that postpor.pniont. of 1 h e t.rin'i. kir; Lou Riklin, .Aleph Gisbor; \ while accomplishments ar.d activ- Glencoe, Illinois, who FpcUe fit v.'liici; wns scheduled to open it:. bles' championship. 1 ilit Conservative Synagogue, There was a full program of Ernie Priesman, Aleph Kohen Go- ; Hies, Eerne. Anjrusi 2Z. is due to W* The present administration of activity in observing the annual idol; Sam Wolk, Aleph Shotare Amone the important social- fact tliF.t nev; cvi;]pi?.ce line hper ; Godol, Reuben Lippett. Aleph the chapter is: Nathan Crounse, service projects of the year were: entered and writs- lor P. KPCOPCI cr Psi Mu day,' which was held'on ! Shotare Koton, Morris Arbitnian, Aleph Godol; Max Crounse, Aleph j contributions to the Omaha Coin- tion agaihbt Fk-isdirucr li a T * Sunday, March. Sunday, March. There was a basS"gan; Richard Hurwitz. Aleph m unity Chest and the Jewish been filed. The- Dew date for boiV. kethall game, a dance and a ban-; Aleph Soph er. Mazkir; Herbert Forbes, Aleph philanthropies ina woricers on aciions vi!) be t;f'l thoi'tlv. -quet as part of the day's celebra-i. '.The advisory board consists of Gisbor; Harold Zelinsky, Aleph • -^g The action against Col. Flc-is> lalter campaipn: building oi tion. ' • • " I berg. StanleyArt . F.. Levin, Harry WeinGrossman, Max Barish, Shotare Godol; Morris Eaumer,' Last year tnere were nine stags chauer was brought by Dr. Tobkc a Succali on Suceotli at the JewTield by the fraternity, some of Philip M.. Klutznick, Max Baer, ' Aleph Shotare Kotone; S a m ish" Community Center; financial oi the Tobier uaiuly firm follow'•• them in honor of various raem- City Commissioner Harry Trustin F.riedrnan, Aleph Kohen Gadoi; aid and supervision of A. Z. A. ins heroes of per.iury inndc >;y and Jay TTeisnian, Aleph Scplier. scout troop Xo. 62, also the pro-Fleischcucr agsnut-t "Dr. Tolilcr 1r oefs Of the"fraternity. During the !-and Kabbi David A. Goldrtem. Spine of the highlights of -the vision of a leader for the group: the innious ''i'rut icol? ol Slot;" summer two . outings were sponsored by the group. chapter's religious activity were: the donation of a playground to c;ise in liios'ne hu;t Bfivinp. Co<. the sponsorship of the Rosh Ha- the city Talmud Torah, the instal- Fleischf.uer way EII ''expert" far MJllard.Sigal, who was the city ping pong champ the year before, Patriotism, Judaism, Fil- shonah and Tom Kippur service lation of the equipment beinp en- the Nazis, and Dr. Tobler testified was defeated in t h e city finals ial Love, Charity; Conduct, Pur- in conjunction with the Mother tirely done by the alephs of the for the Jevs. this year, his playing being han- ity, and Fraternity as its "creed,! Chapter A. Z. A.: conducting the' chapter. dicapped by an injured leg. .and ever holding in mind t h e services jointly with the Mother! As part of the social activity Jewish Press advertisers merit. The annual Psi Mu May dance "Five-Fold and Full" A. Z. A. , Chapter A. Z. A. on the Interna- j smokers were given hy Sam Friecl- -ronr patronage. • • was held at the Fontenelle pavill 1 1 ion, with one hundred couples attending. Several prominent men leading in various phases of activity, have spoken at Psi Mu meetings. Two of them, Professor Brown of Creighton university, who spoke j is on "Criminology," and Ed :,Weir, ^ former All American, who .-spoke \ $ on "Nebraska- University's . Foot- j a ball Activities," addressed • larg-e | & open meetings which were held : p. by the fraternity..'.. \£ c

I T ' S A hard job pleasing an entire 1 amity, for a family's taste varies m radio. Father, fop example, likes the sports reports, the political talks, the dally news commentators, while mother is much more interested in the women's features on household hints — recipes, fashions and informal chats. As for^the children, they, clamor for comedy( for romantic tales of adventure. In short, "big time shows" can't do the job atone. It takes music,' drama, -comedy,-:news, education-Hn all their ; countless, forms—to give the "typical "radio family ,the entertafhmetit the"y_enjo>% With that fact In mind, turn to your dally newspaper and compare the offerin^s of, Omaha ^tatlons.-^,Compare them ' for-.their, variety^,;.'"."for what they offer /-.-the" fanSliy.' If ,'you do, we think you'lf "see.what'we mran' by'saylng that WOW is'"your voice of the air."

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A. Z. A. 1

The initiation of; a medium through which-' the Jewish. youth of Omaha were enabled* to participate actively, in - the traditional holyday services of o.ur laith stands out once more as the highlight of achievement as the Mother Chapter of the Aleph Sadek Aleph reviews a year. of. activity. : : Starting the sfecond year of the second decade, as t h e official junior order-of the-B'nai Brith, the local chapter took charge of the services sponsored by the Conservative Synagogue for the Rosh Hashonah' and Tom; Kippur :• services last year. • ; Another religions activity in which the A. Z. A. participated •was t h e International A. 2. A. Sabbath held last March. At this time members of the two Omaha chapters conducted services and 1 delivered sermons at the B'nai Is-. rael synagogue. ' " The Mother Chapter again combined with the Sam Eeber cliap! ter on" the occasion of Interaat tional Parents' Day, when a pro| gram of outstanding local speak| ers and entertainment was prej sented by the parents. CilHural , innovations during the past year rIncluded a forum of outstanding. ; speakers of the city after the business meetings and the publicajtion, of biographies of .-.prominent Jews in the chapter's official [paper, the "Kibitzer." | - The Tegional A. "Z. A. tournaiment at Sioux City last -February j saw the Mother Chapter represented in debate, oratory arid basketbalL The debate team, consisting of Massie Baum and Ernie Priesman, -arguing - t i e ' question of the desirability.of establishing an autonomous Jewish Republic In Biro Bidjan was eliminated in .the finals, while the basketball gquad was eliminated by D e s jMolnes, the champions. Ernie I Nogg placed third in the oratori! cal contest. } At tls. e first regional s-jnnser I tournament held in DPS Mo'nes, I first a n d second of SeptemI ber, , the . Mother Chapter w a s presented with t h e Gir«sberg Trophy for the outstanding chapter of the district in attendance at the tournament The awarding 1 of the trophy is based uyo3. the _&sSSSSJ«a89S3S9Saese6S6S«3BS«»S36«3eSSSS^^

May, the year.'5696;'bring to

<\

our people everywhere Health,

Happmess arid Prosperity and the sweetaegs-of liberty under every flag.

o Leaves OMAHA (Union Station) da3y Arrives CHICAGO .:.„.„...;.... :. ; •Amves MILWAUKEE > -

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New Year's EdiUon—THE JEWISH" PRESS—Friday, Sopteaifeer 27, 1935

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A N T A L I Z I N G , carefree gaiety... filling the cup of happiness like bubbling wine....is the theme song at the SsKty Club, where sophisticated fashion merges with relaxed merry-making. A t this lovely garden of enjoyment, you can escape those worlc-a-day" cares ~ under romantic lights....dancing to the soothing music of enchanting melody-makers...^surrounded by your friends and acquaintances....dinsng rd^ally from the choicest of menus. A s the lengthening shadows of the old year recede before the brightness of a new day, let the sparkling merriment of the Sixty Club gladden your heart, helping fill the twelvemonth ahead with laughter ar^d song, meEiowed byhappinessandi good fortune.

These Firms Join Us in Wishing You a Happy NeivYear Omaha Market Benson Ice &• Coal . Masterman Coffee Central Market Osoff Hardware Omaha Towel Supply City Cfyb Beer -Graham Jce Creem Ben Hem-man Grocery

• Paxtort& Gallagher Gold Seal. Creamery:

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The March of lime Hoik 1535-5695

7 the JCew Tear

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"""I? Plea to League Solomon. JMartin 'tTrustin, S I \Iari.m Scnwivc € >Sara jSIiriam TBl;raK,

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Parents Offerefl of SecarSxng ISvenls of Importance

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"TTllie 3Iofson, o,-> Esther W h i r " -»7 Haul L"\-\ fen Bochal .Ksttlemaii. P7 Zalira Goldberg-, rn Josetih Horotritz. T9 Eijslf Colnich, -"70 a\dolph T"Tiefl, 60 SPhlllrp TDuncan Gedaukir., •X-ouis 3!auir.. 2S

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xdile jneiiiuBi through which to «j German J e v ~ " 2 .AtaT-iiham .^Phillips, 34 record, lor ryears anil generations " l a m Uszmnii. S4 Dr. TTise'" rpr^al - : . I L ' r t i Jien Hoseiililuqp, C9 to came, the events t>f Importance lsh legislation m t i t Ti "•_ 'Alas STUSHO. o~i Bm in the life nl t l j Jewish child, Himon BorBy, 7J Heich xep-esents c rcrr*"c => i If Bel! Baamos. -with the opening recently of the medieval nolic" v-itl' "•^'•fi te n Rachel S4 Sefer HaTsled, a Children^ 3ie:TMaTian f i J e v s , and creatt.? m the 1r -r4" o r iUrk J i t S. Triedman, So gister. « Europe oi the JIUth cen-u~ z — Joseph ~T. Gohn, Co The Children's JEtesister, simi:" chetto iov the p u ' - p c e u£ cT •> Zolnaxn 'Slier, "73 3S -Nirthun ITs^iilan. -TT I.nttie -ilayercvsvich. 4G lar -in design canfcl i n pnrpose ID i n s a n d diohoiioi i n r iii r J* Louis "V\ eiuberg. So Isaac: Shapira. ^p the wafift-^famous ^.Golden-~Bo6k nl people ID"*, ou Jav in;; T"' i ( "Dsther TJemsteiTi Sliames IJHenrv 'llQKeTitiial:. <J 4S the Jewish ^National iPunfl. in Jerry Tudelson, IS A Jews. In cccrT'' ing on ^^JCL •Samuel TUibmron. U Durkeirroad. T which the mames <ai the most outSenrj- .Pollack. SD Bessie OsJieraff, fii standing -personalities ol t h e -presv. orld e'er and b^ F T " ' dine: ent and jrreceamg gfinsrations are lWlla^!.TJa•'•gLi-'.v^l•^^^ali•^!^iLSsaa^.^i^l!^J^ cial -th^rries -vhirh imp1* r n inscribeE, lis TWV? on xiew at. tlie tion of tne-rerv prmc pl° r ^ EJ! si henil olfice vl t h e Jewish "KaticmIt al Fund in Jerusalem, ana is open DI Tesidence, t h e occasion, t h e Ha'Xeled was presented and dis- ^ ^ ^ - h e voii^^ D j - i o T "^ "'no lor entering <ol the names of,Jew- -name ol the donor, of the amount cussed a t the international con- P v E ! C i l u e ctro-es tn<= bus. o." r J ish chilaren. 'necessary to-effect the entrj. the ierence of the TTomen's Intama- e r n c ; T i I l z a t l o n afd tn- 1. -J : , Ganceivefi as nn attractive I date at -the entry and—a photo- tional Zionist Organization tTli jsTations a= tn° rinbc diri-- ZO) lield Teeentlj in Je-usa- i o i ^ _ ^ d j d e I l l ? p a . i t , , „ >Ut. a method tD incrilcate into the Jew- graph of the 'inscribed .child ish chilS an attachment to t h e' .According ~tD EH .announcement lem. the Tilan was entliusiasucalH n o c I e 3 t -minds at xM U- t ideal of ~Zian 1161311111, t h e inscrip- ' by the headijTiarters ol t h e Jev;-andoried and all jnembcrfe 01 tlu* a p p e a i TO ^ o _ a n u tii'ou_£ - L - .D tions in t h e •"CMl£re_'*s IRegister I ish ^National Tund an Jerusalem. vorld-wide orsanization pledged ^ > a = n p o l Canons ,1. U u^of t h e Jewish jSTatiunal T u n a a r e the amount, the basis of -winch Jieir active support m brmgmK -h_^en beliei, to v hi^L T • .1 «. likely -to constitute :the -first :imlr ' entries onto -the Children's -Hegis- the knowledge o£ t h e Children's h 2 V e ,Almz; _b-nu=nn«t ^ in the T>anfl of idealism and loyal- ter "may be made, has been set at rvesistei- into e\erj Jewish honiK t I l r i e B n f o u - t-«.su L -.u- U ty between t h e Jewish chih3 and 12 pounds Sterling, approsimatelv I Jewish .National !Fund "head- the lorces of ri=lit csimn* X_J. t or 13 ' quarters m the United States, 111 :prevail tha* tit" coi.-ci'—^" r the ideals as well as t h e cultural 510.00 m American monej, iD as Tallies :for which t h e Jewish TTa- t o malce "the Golden 3 o o k .for theiT'ifth .iTennfi, jSew Tork City, on -mankind vrill - n c ; . tolorar>Jewish child an accessible a n d the occasion nl -the Sigli Holiday JeTn, should be ciejrraaed in this ; 1 tional Home stands. .popular medium t o r xecordinc season, issued an snnouncement; century a= paritdis. The struggle The CDTCT QI the Chilflren'B Heisri rs ce. £ *:ne peooj gist er 'rcas designed by t h e TVSII- ! events :in the lite oi tire Jewish ; that it i s ready t o receive contri- againsr fti? anti-Jewish policy- nl" . i n o! lils. IIIEL lrnDTvn Palestinian artist, Ismar 'family. "VThat Jewish .mother butions towartiB "Palestine X.s-n d the Third lieich is a task incur.;- > in all'walks David, .the author of tlie rover de- i would -nut -wish t o see t h e -name .Heclemrption for the inscription-Df "bent upon iramanity. r u o s e fiisign i n r t h e tilth "volume erf t h e! ol Tier child rpermanently inscrib- -£he names of children in t h e rare is -ciencicec! in the increasinj:s ii c :ly tlrreatening tendencies cisplc;.-Golden -Book. 11 shows children j ed a~n d T>aby's -photTJirraph -pre- CWldren's.^Register. !.served in Jerusalem.? On airy DCcarrying "baskets oi fruit in a n cess"I a n : ed'.by-this-policy. The -Jewish peo-' orchard. Oi even greater 'interest j casian, such a s "liirth, lirst birth• . pie-Trill •pursue-with inflexible tleP.ri. S c^ IPTI*are t h e Inscriptions themselves. ! day, entry, into "kindergarten or -paris—Ji. loan b a n t t o .assist, termination the Ktmcrsle vluei: [-.school, recovery from illness aiifl. -On each -nags, of the Children's German Jewish refugees in Paris has been thrust upon then:, .in TIH- ; .Itcsistsr there iis :roam fnr ifive in- jT_st but :not least, there would behas heen opened here "by the Joint'. imiailms hope t 11 a t all prnpiet. i scriptions. 32aeh ^inscription con- no :more iitting Uar Hitzvah -pres- TLGcanstruction Foundation oi t h e v.\Lio nrize 'liberty and 'justice. ano j sists nf the s a m e aZ t h e child in ent than .an inscription in the Sel- 'Jewish ColDuization -AEsociation,'in particular t h e statcK vuicii arf-! ; ^Hebrew anfl i n the language of er Sa-Teled; • and the -Joint .DistriButian" Com-' menilsers oi t h e Leapuo. will j t h e country, date Df birth, jilace the design d the Seler ;.mittee. - [stand by it |

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935. i ! been ia effect in the universities itanglements. Perhaps the true! concrste Cettiils that wcro me\ since 1920. Repeated attempts of : chanical emanations of his leadleader does all these things. That: •Jews, Catholics and other minor-. ership. he failed in these respects nsay i ity groups to have tlie numevus It is safe to say that no man have made his life more diffieut | clausus rescinded have thus far since Thedor Herzl embodies so ; met with 1'ailcre. ibut, for the average layman, his | vividly and persuasively the uniThe heart-beat3 of a family circle are the children. They Jvery failure is a further mark of; Budapest (JTA)—The Hungarversal-implications of the Zionist ian Bar Association, at its confersweeten our lives and through their sunny natures bring us [ideal. Exponent of Western ra| his distinctive character. ; ence here, adopted a resolution • Sympathy Expressed immortality. tionalism and inheritor of Eastvoicing opposition to t h e clause For all the esteem he has won; We rejoice with the proud parents whose hearths were ern mysticism, Weizmann furthby Casaciiaii Premier a new bill introduced last July I in every section of Jewry, Weizmads cheerier during the past year by the addition of a j mann is an isolated figure. There j in iered Zionism not only amons the Ottav.-a OVNS)—The Canadian which would tend to discriminate (sentimental masses but also in youngster. To these parents who announced births during the is a great gap between him and \against members of the Bar Asso- j Government's sympathy with Jews the colder regions of Jewish intelyear 5695 through the columns of the Jewish Press, we extend all his Zionist colleagues, borne' ciation on tlie basis of race. ; :ind other religious EVOUPS sufferI lectualism; The rabid fringe that heartiest congratulations. in the first place out of a dif- j Emil Xagy, former Minister of | ing persecution in Germany was Chaim,;Weizmana blends with- transform the world it is through | still barks at Weizmann's heels ference in creative outlook and \ Justice iu Hungary, declared that ! expressed by Prime Minister R. SONS DAUGHTERS in his character the suave grace Indirect and not direct: means. | assails him for ' his alleged comjin the second place out of his ef- i"Hungary, who demands justice ; B. Bennett to a delegation repreMr. and Mrs. Sam Rice Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Milder Mr. and Mrs. Barney B. Kean of an Oriental potentate and the They may grapple with the rav- promising with the fundamentals fort to suppress his Eastern j for herself, must deal justly with senting the Canadian Jewish ConMr. and Mrs. Nate Gimple and Mrs. Herbert Neveieff | gross which prenoni.ee! him with subtle tact ,of an AngloSaxon ages of aature but never with na- of Zionism. But despite all his os- Mr. Euroreanism. He is an elusive: its racial minorities." Mr. and Mrs. Louis AbramEon Mr. and Mrs. Sam Eialac Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Rimerman statesman. That he should Lave ture herself. But Weizmann is a tensibly injudicious remarks from personality, whose character has! The bill, published by the pres- ! an official memorandum. Mr. and Mrs. I-ouis H. Katelman Mr, and Mrs. Morris Borison surmounted the vast gulf between scientist, who bends the elements time to time on the Jewish State, as many facets as the number of, ent Minister of Justice, Dr. Lazar, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Stern The Prime I.I mister assured the Mr, and Mrs. Jack Rosenberg bi-nationalism, Jewish majority, Mr. and Mrs. Max IJ. Holzman 1B the Eymbol of his virtures and to his will, creating order out of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel H. Green men who try to pass judgment empowers the Ministry of Justice delegation that, h i s government iTansjordan' and other details, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Richards Mr. and Mrs. D. Dsvid Nefsky also the index to his handicaps. that which was chaos, and forcupon him. He has earned ever- to limit the number of new law-• would prive serious consideration Mr. and Mrs. Harry Belmont Mr. and Mrs. J. Rosenbaum Air. and Mrs. S. J. Plotkln lasting hates and eternal affec; yers in proportion to the numbers ; to what it can do after studying The popular school of biog- ing immediate changes in the Chaim Weizmann made Zionism feasible, practical, impressive. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Lapidus Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Cutler tions. But even those who love! of the various racial and religious ; the memorandum end other docuraphers of Zionist leaders gloats course, of events. . Mr. and Mrs.Sam Ballen With "Palestine harboring some Mr. and Mrs. Norman Korney him can give no inventory of sections of the population. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Ravitz upon tlie ascent of Chaim WeizI ments pertinent, to t h e German Pafencc ana Skill Dr. and jVii-3. M. Margolin 350,000 Jews today it is easy to Mr. and Mrs. Harris Sirinsky their motives. It is a tribute tbat mann froin his poor birthplace in Mr. and Mrs. Juc« Broscow The bill met with considerable : situation. He also said that CanThe patience, ana the. skill of utter heroic words about the need, Mr. and Mrs. Harry T. Winer Mr. and lift. M. A. Bercoviei is the natural obeisance to a jopposition, especially in view of ada, like many other countries, is , Motyll, FJnsk to the splendors of the laboratory were imported inMr. and Mrs. Sam Hoffman Mr. and Mrs. Ben Zoorwill Mr. and Mrs. Max Magid leader. .He has committed errors. | the fact that a numerus clausus . seriously concerned over the perthe drawing rooms of Lindon, to Zionism by Chaim Weizmann. for more vigorous demands upon Mr. and Mrs. Ben Katzman Mr. and Mrs. Philip Handler the British Government. •' But in He has ignored loyalties. He has \ linking t h e number of students j secutions fostered by the K a l i Paris and Berlin. The decades His natural impetuosity, shared Mr. and Mrs. Nate Mozer Mr. and Mrs. David Hoberman Mr. and Mrs. Sam Rosenblatt Mr. and Mrs. William Levy been guility of acts of omission from minority groups, has already : regime. that- have intervened have coin- so abundantly by his fellow Rus- earlier days it required, imaginaMr. and Mrs. Saul Graetz Mr. and Mrs. David Potash and commission to which every cided with the upward curve of sian and Polish Jews, has been tion, tact, cour-gc and astuteness Mr-, and Mrs. Jack Lincoln Mr. and Mrs. Philip Ringle Mr; and Mrs. Harry Mandel {mortal is subject. But he need Zionist achievement. The two subdued by the harsh; discipline to deal with British officialdom, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Milder Rabbi and airs. David A. Goldstein Dr. and Mrs. Henry Rosner I only smile and beckon and hei lines have not been interdepend- of the experimenter and the an- ranging, from the major figures Mr. and Mrs. J. Kuklln such as Balfour, Lloyd Geurge, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Greenberjr Mr. and Mrs. Dave Friedman wins the instant response even of j ent but 'only a rancorous foe alyst. Weizmann's character has Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Taub Mr. and Mrs. Joe Borden those he has hurt and offended | •would deny that the destiny of been affected by a two-fold trans- Smuts, Viscount Robert Cecil, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Shulkin Mr. and Mrs. David Bialao Dr. and Mrs. Leon Fellman and forgotten. j Zionism lias gained from the in- formation.. He has had to impose Ramsay MacDonald, Leopold AmMr. and Mrs. Ben Shapiro Mr. and Mrs. .T. L. Zweiback Mr. and Mrs. Sara Krantz creasing btature of "Welzmann's upon mass leadership: the respon- ery, and Winston Churchill to the Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Oilman less notable but more difficult Mr. and Mrs. Simon Green j His soft, husky tones that! Mr. and Mrs. M. Kosoff political and personal powers. sibility of the chemist. . More- personalities who compose the Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Frank Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Blewitz j make of even his casual phrase a Mr. and Mrs. Irving Rubin Mr. and Mrs. Phil Smith The inevitable tendency in the jover, he has made & valiant and British civil service whether in Mr. and'Mrs. Harry Cutler vehicle for poetry have charmed Mr. and Mrs. Ben Marylander successful—although .perhaps • not Jewish world is to regard Welz-! England or Palestine. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur V. Friedman Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church Mr. and Mrs. Milton Berkowitz intimate gatherings and huge Mr. and Mrs. Joe Levy Mr. and Mrs. Julius Walk man solely as a Zionist leader wise—attempt to shackle his demonstrations. His most innocuMr. and Mrs. Samuel Kaiman Mr. and Mrs. Alex Dochen and to evaluate his career in temperament to the cold dignity The Zionist Old Guard is fond F r o m a vacation Mr. and Mrs. Meyer Colnlc Mr. and Mrs. William Raduziner ous asstjition is seemed wreathed terms of his achievements on be- of the Occidental diplomat. On of insisting that the extended Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Weisblat Mr. and Mrs, Harry Krantz in tk? sowing power of prophecy. point I am happy to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Grossman Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Dloogoff half of the rebuilding of Pales- the one hand, his gift for states- Jewish Agency, the creation of Mr. and Mrs. Jake Burstein j No definition, however precise, Mr. and Mrs. Manny Green tine. But Chaini Weizmann was manship has been enhanced. On Weizmann, is worthless because send you greetings on jean fathom the secret of the fasand is a:chemist, who is still so the other hand, he has suffered of the non-feasance of the noncination exerted by a great perthe occasion of publinked t<> hia work t h a t at by a loss in his natural buoyan- Zionists. But Vfoizmann's sole leader shall follow those who are vagaries, of internal Zionist pol- jsonality. No analysis can explain sixty he renewed li i s career as cy and congeniality. purpose was to create a "front," behind him. Conditions of Jewish lishing the New Year icy, buffeted about by the self- I the mystery of Dr. Weizmann's head of the chemical research inr it is not the purpose of this which would be useful with the life makn it inevitable that what hold upon those who know him. edition of the Jewish Btitute a t Eehoboth, Palestine. brief sketch to review Dr. Weiz- Mandatory Power as well as else- is npatf^a nil's* be in the wake of seeking striving of contending Words are too evasive to fix His mastery of the scientific mann's activities from the time where. Everywhere tod-ay public what can bt: <\ man•;<•;%. factions and parties, failed to Press. jWeizmann's place in Jewish hisA method in not unrelated to the he came to Manchester in .1904, opinion firmly believes that a measure up to the broadness of i tory. Time is not always the mood and the content which he through the days of the Balfbur united Jewry supports the" up-ATTRIB1. TFif • ,L ACK1SG Weizmann's conceptions. Racial prejudice is a I I most competent judge of a man's introduced into the Zionist move- declaration to the post war era building of Palestine. The politiThe handicap from which WeizIn small details Weizmann says j deeds. But whether or not he ment. major enemy to peace that brought continuing success cal value of that is priceless. suffers is that although he Is a "yes" easily when he should say ; steered Jewish life in. channels I do iiot knor: whether any- and consequent colic to the Zion- Even on the financial side, it is great leader he does not have to "no." On other o.casions, he I that will ultimately reach a great and goodwill. T h e one has ever remarked upon the ist-movement. Lloyd Geors» still sheer stubbornness to denr that a sufficient dofwrte the attributes hasn't tlie Personal flexibility to 'completion, Weizmann is signific-j fact that t Weizmann alone of all insists that it was Weizman abil- the extension of the Jewish Agen- of leadership Abie to plan on a submit to shifting that is often i ant for his personality alone. No! Jewish people h a v e outstanding Zionist leaders is a ity as a. research worker in tlie cy made possible the influx into large scale. h« bus often failed to required in political movements. ! other Jew since Herzl has so made very large concreator rather than an interpret- British War. ministry that under- Palestine of public and private? take into ac ;-n'nt the individuals A politician reckons with the j powerfully impressed himself uper. Herzl himself was a journal- lay the issuance of the Balfpur funds tbat would otherwise nevev around him who would have to vanities and the self-interest of jon the consciousness of the Jew- tributions to the in. trsns?ate • the nlan into reality. It his colleagues. Weizmann rarely ist. Wolffsobn was a merchant.' declaration. Weizmann's foes have flowed there. ish people. tellectual, commercial Israel Zangwill was a novelist. deny it, and Weizmann himself Instead of shouting i n 3 brovv-. is not difficult, to forgive him his does. That is the secret of the (Copyright. 1835. by Seven Arts Nordau was a critic. Ahad Ha- is'annoyed, by its repetition. But bfAtfog as his opponents con- peridos of imitation. Being the many personal failures that strew and religious life of Feature Syndicate) am was i\ scholar. Sokolow is a Weizmann is not to be measured ceived it his function to do, Weiz- only democratic • movement in his path in Zionist leadership. A! the world and despite journalist; Mr. Justice Brandeis by .single incidents-—whether it mann spoko softl" and calmly. He Jewish life, Zionism has con- word of flattery spoken here; a! Brodetsky Maccabi President is a jurist. .. All. the other notable: be the declaration,, tlie Mandate, was merely carrying out his reslice of patronage distributed j| Praha—Prof, Selig Brodetsky, | persistent persecutions figures were or are craftsmen of the Keren Hayesed or the extend- sponsibilities as a statesman. He ferred upon the least as well as upon the highest t"~2 privilege of j there; a subordination of his owni member of the World Zionist' have striven for toler..the spoken or written word. They ed Jewish Agency. Weizmann's could not indulge himself in the vision and criticism. On endless;standing somewhere else—would Execuive, was this week elected j are essentially luftmenschen, to role in modern Jewish histpry is flamboyance' of the luftmensch. ance and that unity of whom" life speaks In terms of to be assessed by the spirit that The• necessities of Zionism, de- occasions Weizmann was ham- have had incalculable effect in president of the World Maccabij which organization at that body's con-j life absolutely necessary to the peace of the world. Bymbols and parallels. If they he stimulated and not by the mand?!! and still demand that the pered and fettered by men with averting the enmities small 'gifts but large voices. The bound bis career like barbed en-1 gress here.

.ung

,ace oias

By HENRY MQNTOR

By EEV. FRANK A. HOSIER

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' New Year's Edition—THE'"'JEWISH " PRESS—Friday,-September 27," 1533.. 1t

to these charges w h e n it was idencies by acclamation o£ t h e gress ..boycott, committee^ is ..only,' appeal to all synagogues and J P R Swastika PcSlve . '• • learned that- Alderman1- Nathan Zionist -and-Hadassah organiza- permitted.to exert moral.pressure;I to contribv;te:li:afis 10 the' Twhive Kirvery'; Mainp—Police -are-- itvPhillips, K..C, and^dean'-of ;Tor- tions respectively. This marks the and ".persuasion-against.. Jews -who ! during t h e c o m i n g Jev.-ish blph onto's city council, had returned I 17 th consecutive occasion on persist- in boycott - violations and;koiifia^s. veynicalirsp t h e origin of a I? his honorary membership, card to | which Mr. Freiraan has held the since" the goyerjiiaent • is'-.very• lax j It is understood ihfit many of >er<ou = fire v.-bich destroyed the. Yarkdale .Canoe club with . a : position of Dominion president. in • 5ts •'marking -regulations for; Favkfield h. letter to the board of directors in I Mrs. Freiman has held her office goods imported into Canada, it is the... teachers in . t h e rabbinier,! .7ev.-ivl!-<-\vr.f>d which he vigorously denounced I for twelve years, and enters upon difficult- for- the Congress to in- j seminary, have r o t been i?r-icl -for UUT-C uayr- t i l e r a 'Inrg'e e'wp.p.the inclusion in the constitution I her thirteenth. teasify its work; in this-field. It; several m o n t h s , .bar. been painted on (lie !>uild of a clause- preventing Jews from 1 In May, steps were taken by is concentrating on trying to. get i joining the club. I t h e Federal, government,' in re- new ^marking, regulations in co-' operation with the trade and. labThe latter part of October saw | sponse to an appeal made to Sir or • congress ar'd other' Canadian j j George Ferley, acting premier, to the launching by Hon. David associations. It is also ' conduct- j Croll, minister of public welfare I halt. the dissemination of vicious ing; an educational campaign in; and first Jew in the Dominion of ; anti-Jewish propaganda flooding favor of the boycott' against Xazi i Canada to hold a government i the provinces of Quebec and On- Germany. which' has resulted in j : portfolio, of an §SO,000 campaign ! tario and purportedly originating tlie. establishment" "There looms on" the' American with realities in Jewish life." " ' Jews joined the radical parties,! of a . non-sec- j i from a Chicago publishing house. on behalf of the Federation of F-- FE.AXK G. SftllTII horizon today a ghastly Yampire tanas anti-Nazi league in Can- j "To come back to Montor's".con- as>Germans and, subconsciously, I Official circles announced that "which intends to suck from the clusion, quoted 'above: German also as Jews. But the bulk of the Jewish Philanthropies in Toronto. i customs officers and mounted.po- acU;' A chain of 64 anti-defama- j Pastor First Central CoritTocasiowl Ohnrci* Commenting on the compaTitire tion committees in 64 Canadian ' American people the blood of its Jewry did exactly -what' Montor Jewish white-collar men. and midaffluential position of the Toron- | lice were set to investigating the It is a great pleasure indeed to csscrc you of my l?ear(y Infreedom- In the newspapers, in wants American Jewry .to • dp. In dle class faced: Nazism as Ger-j to Jewish community, Mr. Cross i method of entry of this literature citles'-ha's been organized, in some : i terest in yesr people and the work tlirv are sli'i'ct; w tins o esses-"jointly with B'nai B'rith. | local .political campaigns,-in fac- the tremendous political- turmoil | mans representing their particular! stated that the per capita amount ! into Canada. 1 r i A ninsber of your race are VC17- Occr E.n5 h-iinxit;4 fs"ie»'f?v tories, in communal organizations, which preceded Hitler's ascenden- (economic class, ready to accept it j raised by Toronto Jews w a s 1935, Jewish Telegraphic i The conclusion of a preferen-' (GopJ"i ig ht, Ag-er.cy, Inc.) : in^ne and I ecu think ef no vrcrk it- tkf^ city ih?i is for tlw «p even in the government itself there cy to power, in'the tense and re- land disbelieved its • anti-Semitic i among the smallest. of all t h e ; tial tariff for Palestine in. the are depressing evidences of the lentless political battle-of German ! implications. -. '. . - • j cities in Canada and the United j federal budget presented before inroads being made by that vam- Fascis magainst "everything .that, If one were to think Montor's j States. dearth in which yonr pe^pk are not deeply I;ntcrer4od. j the House of Commons on March pire. There is at stake everything is decent in.civiliration," the. Jews viewpoint through to its final, in;22nd brought much favorable The 24th convention of the i Surely, true religion is a r l g t l rclailoufeAup wl'dx our Fads that is decent in civilization. Un- in .Germany did not,, function. as evitable and logical conclusion, Zionist • Organization of Canada I comment. less Jews abandon their selfish Jews. Leaers of German Jewry one would arrive at the following iGod, and a right attitude to cor ic'lov; -o«n, M is xny cou^'ioJ-.i j The coming Fall will witness was held at the Royal York Ho1 " K e n : York (TTXS)—The Rabbi I that-all of us who believe iv. God ere coining nearer nn& «(>»•• preoccupation- with their- own spoke. in- the same tone as "• Henry formula: In view of the fact that tel, Toronto, on Sunday and.Mon- i another federal election. Amongst destiny and lose their isolated Montor uses when he urges Rmer-. Jews should' "abandon their sel- day, Jan. 20th and. 21st-"About ; those seeking.re-election to office ; Isaac- Elchanan Teshira,' the old- i together in our religiDiis thinking ar;d jH-nciirf, Wo rnv ror.;:>-J with their 1,000 delegates from Canada, i are Samuel Factor, Toronto, M. ;-est-' Orthodox rabbinical seminary isjore fully the trnfe Fpc?l;en Ir^.g njro hy o7^e whr? sg^a, "Orn- s" concern with, the minor problem lean Jewish 1 eladership to•*speak/ fish preoccupation si of anti-Semitism; they /will- suffer They_said, in effect: Fascism is own destiny and lose their iso- United States and from Europe ;P.; S. "W. Jacobs, Montreal M. P., j in America and a • division of the 1 one lair, ose element, End cue finr of! fclri«c cvcnl tsward ivl. i Yesliiva\ College',. is • in', danger of a destruction as complete and a political and economic force as lated -concern with the minor assembled in Toronto for t h i s ; and president of the Canadian j closing its- doors- 1131685 the syn- the whole creation, meves." ruthless as that "which has been al-embracing, in . its political, so- problem of anti-Semitism," and' convention, as well as for the | Jewish Congress; and Abe Heaps, ! agogues; of' Ainerira come to its visited upon the Jews of Ger- cial and economic program, as fight Fascism on the whole eco-j eighth convention of the Domin- | Winnipeg M. P. Alderman Phil-' rescue. ; i . Please know that I £tn cleepH' interested in tin3 «viicce»»s ' •. • . • . nomic and political battle-front,! many." : ion Hadassah, held concurrently. j lips, of Toronto, is contesting the : that some of the Marxism A . Teaming:.- to this effect- -vras : your New Year's Celebra-tion, ana tnist that it will in o-cry \v they.must all join the Commun-j eoTustded by. Dr. .Bernard' Revel;- i be all that you anticipate. This quotation is'from a recent Fascist leaders sponsor anti-Sem- ist party. Such <• a • Utopian- plan Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Freiman, of | Samuel Factor riding. article by my colleague Henry itism is- of minor importance - . . is too far removed from the Ottawa, were elected to the pres- i Since the Canadian Jewish Con- ;PTesIdeat of the^inetitntibii. • in an Montor,'^inf, which he vigorously the Jewish battle will be won or- realm of reality to be taken sertakes -to 'task' Jewish leadership lost on the entire battle-front . . . iously. It seems to me that for its .f shortsighted and destruc- and,- besides, this is.a conflict.of American Jewry can present a tive "policy;of,-- fighting anti-Semit- great German political issues. in united front against Fascism, beism as- such Instead of for dem- which we German Jews must forcause anti-Semitism, whether opocraticv-principles as a whole. I get that -we are Jews and must enly or surreptitiously expressed. bring this quotation from Montor's think only as Germans. is.an intrinsic,undetachable part article -because it is.typical of the "Well, "when the German Jews fallacious arguments which " his i thought and acted • as -Germans of the Fascist philosophy. It is necessary only to review the endexhortations to American Jewry they reacted to the oncoming less parade of brown, green. contain. And while it is far from threat of Fascism in accordance black, silver and other-colored their, class:affiliation.. Many shirts to eralize" that Fascism on my mind to write a criticism of Montor's criticism of a Jewish of the well-to-do '"erman Jews the march-to-power has always s-jf tendency, I do believe that, if were much more afraid of Com- utilized anti-Semitism as one of .munism than of Fascism. This Montor's arguments-can be exits main weapons- And as the posed as illogical, contradictory 'because they considered anti- Fascist demagogue mixes in his and historically inaccurate, a con-, Semitism . a: mere bagatelle in this political cocktail opposition to the structive comment on a quivering seething conflict. Only the dis- international bankers with his atJewish issue will have been made. believers in the old order are con- tacks against the Communists, it This because'.'. Mentor's . point "of vinced' that a new political and would be hopeless for the Jew to view;is' representative, and .typical "economic system -will automatical- face Fascism in his capacity as a of the /attitude of the • Jewish : in- ly solve the Jewish question. And citizen, without regard to what tellectual\ who refuses to - deal,| that is why many young German our intellectuals call his "selfish interests." He would be caught between the hammer and the anvil. German: Jewry is being destroyed because it refused to realize that anti-Semitism belongs, bag and baggage, to the political arsenal of Fascism. To use a,metaBy RABBI HAEOLD.A. BEKGEE phor: There is a long l i n e oi ... ^Spiritual Leader of the^Omaha-Vaadtrenches. stretched across the entire front in the battle between : Another year of worldFascism and "what is decent inj Tvide political chaos, ecocivilization." The Fascist artillj . inomic disorder, and social ery is bombarding the Jewish sec-i fhirirest has passed into the tor, obviously -because it is the \ ^annals of history. And the weakest in the line. According to the Jewish intellectuals of the -Jew, the international victype.of'Henry Montor, we should : tim of this man-made conleave;'our own section without retusion, ushers in a new acting to the attack, and mix with year hoping that the past the soldiers.in the other sectors. Y year shall mark the end of This would be, from a Jewish as i an era, the end of a tragic from a general strategic point of ;-era in the history of civilview,.- bad tactics. I am, in my. general "Weltanschauung, as anti-| ized mankind and, particuFascist as my colleague. And, it larly so, in the history of is precisely for this reason that I the Jew. For the history believe that, the Jewish strength '• of the Jew cannot be dewill be so awakened and a much ':. tached from that of the more "compact factor if - Jewish v rest of mankind. The Jew leadership will fight Fascism in suffers when the world its own'*sector and with its own1 !,suffers - as part of the weapons. * world he h'ves in, and as a Of course the road is open for Jews to fight Fascism in the ranks •'victim of the hatred and of those who beliexe in the solu;'malice which world -wide tion of the Jewish . question ;'suffering arouses in the through the reformation of our rest of mankind. The mistreatment, of the Jew at the hands entire social and economic struc- t>f his fellow non-Jew is only symptomatic of a general moral ture. The courage of such Jewiiand spiritual breakdown. ish vanguard fighters has my undivided respect. But here I am • •'•• . Judaism cannot and must not accept the materialistic concerned -with the question of ^economic interpretation of history as the sole explanation for what is the most effective formu"W la for combating anti-Semitism. ;the course of human events. Human ideas andjideals are as And to this qtfestion' there can, be .effective as economics - if not more'so. The mind of man is only' one answer;--To fight' anti,*as influential as the need for, bread'arid butter.**But, human directly and aggressivelvalues might be false. Man might have^chosen false ideals Semitism ly, as Jews who are unafraid to t o guide him in this world and then the inevitable result is take up the challenge of an asconfusion and its consequent human misery. That is what sault against theiv race-

By JOSEPH BRAININ

YESHfVA COLLEGE- IN . • CLOSIHG-

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rthe world suffers from today - false gods. Jew and nonJew, both have deserted the ideals inherited as their spiritual legacy from the past. Wie es christelt sich so Judelt

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Humanism has taken the place of Theism;; Pragmatism the place of Idealism; Secularism the place of Religion. These "new gods have proved to be false gods. They are responsible '< for the world wide chaos and confusion. Nationalize humanism and you have fascism and its consequent destruction of \human liberties. Germanize humanism and you have Nazism -and its consequent racialism. Nationalize pragmatism and jyou have economic nationalism and its consequent evils. ^Destroy God, destroy religion and the process of nationaliza. ..'tion will begin its campaign of destruction with the new gods • as its weapons and ammunition. ^ In the midst of this confusion the Jew prays and hopes ' t h a t the new year usher in the beginning of a new era in the ^history of mankind. But, pious hopes and wish maMngiare'• .as ineffective as the magic of a medicine man in curing dis, eases. Thus far we have been able to bring relief to Jewish • victims of the current chaos - through money and political 'negotiations. But the Jew was never satisfied with half t r u t h s ; the Jew was radical in his analysis of the world; , h e wanted cures, not opiates. The Jew because he suffers more than any other group : from the current spiritual and moral breakdown, must lead the world hack to the altar of God, Religion, and Ideals. But, .he must himself Tetorn to the traditional ideals of his people, to the historical concepts of Judaism; he must again become the prophet of mankind, reviving and rewtalizing those spiritual forces which make humans men and not animals. > W

* The Jew Mmself must first return to God and religion — - a religion of deeds — not of words; a concrete religion .of llitzvoth - - not of mores. Let him lead the world back -:and his reward will be a new era, a new day, and a new age •for manMad-and-for the-Jewr" -••~ - —- -""—

' By BEN SUGAKMAN Most significant event of, t h e year for the Jews of Canada was the adoption by t h e legislature of the province of Manitoba of a bill introduced by Marcus Hyman, member of the provincial legislature, making it a criminal offence for anyone to "incite racial disturbances or to preach racial animosity. This bill is ths first of its kind adopted by any legislative body in" the British empire and was effective in eliminating the rabid attacks of the "Nationalist" (as well as the "Xationalist"'-itself), bitterly anti-Semitic Winnipeg paper. As a precedent it should serve greatly to stem the tide of anti-Semitism in the Dominion. October brought into the spotlight again the anti-Semitic sentiments prevailing in Toronto society. Cnarges" were levelled by the Kev. H. H. Bingham, D. D., of this city against many of the clubs of elevated society standing for racial prejudice in the matter of membership enrollment. These charges were borne out to some extent by newspaper enquiries made of secretaries of golf, badminton and social clubs in the "cifyl~ FuTtTTer"impetus"-was"given

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P AN Y


r New Year's Edition—THE

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COMPANY AND THE FOLt CONCERNS W YOUi

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m New Year's Edition—THE

JEWISH

PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

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THE NEW HOME OF THE SERVICE LIFE INSURANCE CO. The new home-of The Service Life Insurance Company, on the southwest comer of 18th and Farnam streets, is a monument to the art of master builders. The A. H. Brodkey Company and associates are at the moment putting the finishing touches to a remodeling job which has magically transformed an old unattractive building into one of downtown Omaha's most modern, beautiful structures. Terra cotta, Bedford stone and carrara glass were pleasantly blended into a symphonic whole.

It has been a pleasure to serve the A. H. Brodkey Co.

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u. New Year's Edition—THE

JEWISH

PRESS—Friday, September. 27, ..1935.7 ,

' I tract something as beaiitiful as he fectly ready to be set on a strlh'g *i had . -written—but .in - rain, '..p n e —but all in vain. She was'even •'• might "as well try to .squeeze a practical enough to! turn d o w.n drop of.water out of a rock.-.* Sudtheir demand to let them touch denly ; the • boy remembered the her candy, or • even, to smell it! Then a'lump c a m e up. t o Uri's teacher's praise to Lord Balfour's throat" and, chocked by it, the boy noble and persistent fight for the could hardly utter: Mandate, -again he dipped his pen • "You are bad, mean . . .There ' •joyrully, ; and .went on swiftly: isn't another girl in the whole '"And. Balfour, the* prime minworld as mean as you. I'll.tell ister and the-viceroy of the King, your mother how mean you are, the.-.-most excellent oi all the Brit,i -s. and . . . and . . . don't talk to her, ishers, said, to. the wicked scoun•* ^ r ^ * , " . *«boys " drels, of his country, thus: 'Hey, "" Uri turned his back on her and youf^If you don't give them the •4" all the boys followed his example. VMandate, if you don't mail them \ A " „ > fcr * ' ? y *'fc I *" This boycott to which Dinah " the Mandate right' a way,--I'll be i Jj found herself suddenly exposed mad at you. I'll drive you out of made her very sad and lonely. She „.- ,. , Great Britain and all of you can ' ' -t " V\ was already planning to sacrifice go to hell." one candy for all of them, but at Translated from Hebrew. a* By L A. ARIEIXI that . moment little Emmanuel, "*"') ...r^y , who evidently was not very prom) (November the 2nd, as the "Yes," admitted Naftali, "but as though he were talking to himising as a diplomat/ turned his REPORT-HAIFA WILL date of the ratification of the maybe his donkey is not feeling self: r head to the girl and implored: '• ' '„* * I'^ -' "I did not die . . . I am a Tzadwell today. Do you think the donBritish Mandate on Palestine . BE MILITARY BASE "Tell us at least what the taste by the representatives of , 5 6 keys never get sick. Why, only, dik . . ." * * -^^ ^ > Berlin ' ( J T A > — T h e German * AH the litte eyes were lit with is like." nations in San Kemo in 1010, yesterday, my uncle's donkey bepress • this'week printed a sensa*S "And then will you t a l k to is widely celebrated in Eretz- came 111 and uncle Reuben rubbed a. new keen glow and they starttional report that the British Goved to probe the boy with trebled me?", she asked with revived his inouth with salt." ,r Yisroel.—EDITOR'S NOTE) ernment intends to transfer- its hopes. "All the donkeys may get sick, attention. "Is the Uri, their Near East military base from MalJust now the celebration of the but not the Messiah's donkey," classmate in preparatory A, in- "Yes," all the boys except Uri ta to Haifa, in Palestine, t h u s answered reluctantly. A scene in the training, camp, "Werkdorp," on the Znyder Zee in Holland. ratification of the Mandate reach- threw back Benjamin with dis- deed a great Tzadduk? Why then, Palestine t h e most im"And y o u , Uri?" inquired The Dutch government has granted the free use,pf tne land for a period cf years, and funds making ed its end. It was an exception- dain at Naftali's ignorance. "Are was he made to stand in the corportant strategic center on t h e Dinah. "I'll give you the wrapner one time and cried? Do the ally grand and glorious celebra- you trifling with Messiah's donraised'iby the Holland Jewish:,-cpniinunity'.for.ithis wqrk are augmented.by.the Joint Distribution Medittera'nean. tion. Tha school auditorium •was. key? And if even the beast had great Tzaddikim stand in corners pers of the candy. They smell ex- Committee,-which,.in association-with the.^^American Palestine Campaign, is making a nationAccording to the report the actly the same." flooded with sunshine and decor- fallen sick, would not Its master and cry, too?" wide drive-for $3,25.0,000 for the relief and-;rehabilitation of the Jews of Germany :and other British Government will build a Uri preserved sullen silence. ated with bright festoons and gar- cure it instantly with the com- Their speculations were inter' ' * railway from Haifa to Aqaba, The boys coaxed him and he fin- lands and the settlement'of Jews in PalestinsXi lands;, one of the teachers spoke mand of his tongue?" rupted by the soft sound of tripthus establishing a direct outlet ally consented. The boys could The Jewish" Philanthropies • of Omaha -contributes to this fund. in flaming" and poignant eloWhereas. the i embarrassed Naf- ping feet from somewhere near. read ^plainly the word "Mandate" to t h e Red Sea which will make quence on the topic of the day; All the eyes turned to the road. ig room writing a composition, it possible to resell t h e Orient the sweets and fruits were de- tali was digging his brains for a In the little dainty figure dressed on the wrappers although it was ed the gates • of •; the; city on - his 'to eat'.-.. ,\ . ~ From now "on,; my satisfactory answer to his debatwithout vowels. The smell of the Stately ..black."horse last night,: but dear, Jews Iwill^.come here with- entitled "The Mandate—the Tid- .without passing through the Suez licious and simply irresistible. er, the short, curly-headed TJri, In pink they readily recognized wrappers however goaded their he was also full of fond, myster- out hindrance"1;atid restraint from ing of Our Freedom." -He began Canal. The children started to scatter who had been busy all the time lovely, brown-eyed Dinah, the sisJ dissatisfaction still more. Dinah iou-3; longings.; to. taste:.the candy. all the parts-of- the world—and I "The English" . . . But then he to their homes. The last to leave drawing a duck in the sand with ter of the big boy Ezekiel from 1 Mandate.>At the fall,of• dusk he it is groing-to-be good, very good ! remembered his predilection f o r meanwhile concentrated all h e r IQN AGAINST the auditorium were five small hi? finger, emerged froia his sil-preparatory B. While running, attention on her chewing in order approached his motherland asked: | the word "British," .he' crossed handsofno fellows from the prep- en<!e and said: the girl cheerfully waver her "Mother,- what is Mandate?" to define its taste, at last she deNaftali leaned/against'his moth- out the word "English" a n d 'AFGHANISTAN JEWS DENIED aratory A class. They reached the closed fist and announced tri"The * Mandate,"': my ;•'son," t h e er's lap and* mused: clared: * .. • "Oh, shut up both of you! The wrote: ".. . ' I Bombay . (JTA)—Reports of street alii the while moving slowumphanlty: ; lady explained,"is} a- very good * . "The: Jews .will come here from anti-Jewish discrimination in Af"The Mandate^ is a little sweet "The British are a ^wonderful, ly and;talking scantily for their Mandate doesn't ride either a "Look, look, boys! Mama gave thing for the j Jews/' all the world and together with horse or a donkey. Because . . , \ ghanistan were denied by the Afand a little sour." charming and magnificent peolittle heads were thinking absorbme some 'Mandate' candies." , "What do you mean?" Ben"For t h e Jews?" asked Naf- the Englishmen * they will all • eat ple." They said to each other, | ghan consul here in. a statement ingly and remembering all that the Mandate is an an£el, and he The boys threw a look of stark tali, somewhat-perturbed. " B u t Mandate". The Mandate will* be "Let us give a Mandate to t h eI to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. had been, said and done during has "wings. Have you forgotten curiosity at little Dinah and atjamin did not understand. The curiosity of the boys was the Englishmen,;: don't they like served to them^ in t i n y saucers, Jews. How long must-these peo- -.: The Jewish population is wellthe celebration. With particular what* the teacher spoke about the candy protruding from her they will eat it nicely, and'.polite- ple continue to l i v e -without a placed, he said, and the govern. emphasis and vigor stood out and fluttering wings." And then he thin rosy fingers. "Mandate can- again provoked. Dinah tried her Mandate, top?" . ment welcomes the economic ben"Yes, my boy, t h e y accepted iy with little spoons-and-will" wipe Mandate?" rang in: J^aftali's ears the teach- said: "Lo! he came, the angel of dy? What kind of stuff is this? best to explain: tiieir mouths' -with napkins :••• fas"It tastes exactly like . . . like the Mandate for our good." er's words:- "Behold, he came! redemption. Lo! he arrived! And Is there,- besides chocolate a n d Oded wanted to go on with hi& efit brought to the country by the the sounds of his imperious foot- I . - . . 1 saw him today. He flew, lemon candy, besides mint candy "Will they let : usl.taste,.some?" tened, with;safety-pins under their composition, but to his'surprise, Jews. steps sounded in our ears long flew, then came down on the roof that fills your mouth with a deWhat discrimination exists, the But she could n o t remember asked Naftali, secretly hoping chins—and it .will ."he good, Naf- found that-he had nothing more ago, but how he is here! He has of Moshe'-Dov, the storekeeper, lightful cold flavor, also Mandate the thing resembling in taste: the that the English would not prove tali understands, it will'indeed be to say. Isn't that strange indeed? consul declared, is against refuarrived!"'He . . . he . . . w h o is he looked here and there, then candy? Oh, so Mandate is simply Mandate, and the boys scattered as stingy arid stubborn as. Dinah "Very, good." •''-.*.[ - "'. ..'••' "*"- ." | The teacher spoke about the Man- gees from : other countries, who that he? Of course—-the Mandate. he opened his wings and f l e w a kind of edible delicacy and not to their homes sad a n d disap- today. :• While ' Naf tali j- was iplying. h S s date a whole hour and; he, Oded, I are not welcome as settlers. These • . ' •" , ; , : • ! "To taste?" the-Mother smiled •mother with questions,*: his' older cannot find even half" a ' l i n e ' t o ! refugees are permitted to live Under the old knotty sycamore away to- the side of the market." without reason the teacher spent pointed. brother Oded,;"i,a;.,p.upil of' t h e add. He rubbed his forehead vig- I only in the interior and. are giv"And," after a minute of medNaftali had not forgotten the at the strange expression. "Why, such a long while praising -so that stood and kept vigil at the 1 i en temporary transit, visas. gate of Uri's house the children itative silence, he added with a elaborately and in such glowing miraculous horseman who reach- of course, not < only I'to: taste' but fourth.'grade, .was*,in'.the -adjoin- orously as though • trying to exslight sigh: "disappeared the an- terms this delicious, savoury dish, .sat down to play marbles. ; . . and now already one can plainly "And I," exclaimed Naftali, gel . . . " - . All'the eyes opened widely and see the connection of the Englishsuddenly iiout of his play as the broad collar of his sailor's blouse the dumbfounded boys bombard- men with the Mandate. The English must be either great experts was waving gently in the light ed the relater with questions. to prepare Mandate or unusual breeze:."I saw today the Man-"An angel?" dainty mouths and gourmands to date himself.in person as he was "When did you see him?" eat Mandate." The boys all at "What did he look like?" riding a fiery, powerful horse in the street. He came . . . he ar- "Why did he look here a n d once jumped up and surrounding the little girl, stretched out their • •• rived here • on • his horse l a s t there?" "What was the color of h i spalms and begged: night." • • • _ . • - • • "Where? On what street?" all wings?" '"Give us also to taste some, "Uri was going to describe the the children asked in utter amaze-: Dinah!" ..: angel Mandate to • his comrades, went. . •"'-• " \ However, t h e Mandate candy but before he managed to collect "In the street of the synawas too sweet a n d luscious; to gogue," answered Naftali. "I saw himself, he was vehemently burst squander it thoughtlessly to every him on my way to school1 this in upon by the black-eyed, high one on the street and Dinah cut tempered Yifrach. .. , . morning; ' ' • " j short in an explicitely decisive "You liar! Is there a man who tone: "What'•' was the color of h i s horse?" -asked Benjamin, the old- can see an angel a n d remain "No!" est and taeii huskiest o£ them all. alive? Only a very holy and pious The boys started to prevail 1 man, a great. Tzaddik can,: and upon her their offers to trade her "Black/ "Oh, gif on!" retorted Benjam- you did not die." cnndv for other valuable articles in scornfully. "The Mandate . . . For a moment Uri w a s -in' a in their possession, as* f o r . Inlim-, don't you know the Mandate predicament under t h e silent stance a set of funny pictures is the Messiah, and everybody questioning gaze of his class- taken out from the chocolate knows that the Messiah is to come mates. After a minute of reflec- packages "Hermon," a box full on a vhite donkey." tion he said slowly and quietly of apricot stones pierced and per-

FORMER-'PROFESSIONALS RAISE -POTATOES

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ACCEPT OUR FOR A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, W35.

JC

of • cannon - taut from a raging wood.- Mary -Ellis, -Paramount in Paramount Pictures, lias for a chestra, New York Symphony Or- dreamed-of a career on the actress was torn in Ne-w York, chum Eddie Rubin, brother oi chestra. New York Philharmonic Her friends describe h e r as t smallpox epidemic Such'."were-the Jewish, women .but she was reared in and still- Benny Rubin, also, a laugh pro- Orchestra, two and. a half years liii.cui:-;f speaking Freju-h, lit<,lin.v. oE 1776; the.beautiful and light- \ lives in England. The latter made vc-ker. Though be :-holds s o in e a? assistant conductor at the Ri-RVid Kpanish, and says slie fc nup hearted Rachel Franks, the sacri- •her debut vith the-Metropolitan ' sort of record for having' played alio Theatre- in N. Y., conductor o£ the -'smnrippi. dresser; :actressn<-: ficing Mrs.. Shef tall, the pious Eil- 1.Opera House in N. Y. at the age 12 consecutive .weeks «*t- theyPafc- r.-i the ..Capitol Thaa;,re!£ 74-piece the New Yoi!;: p'agr rvr-r yif'lrtnc. hah Abigail Franks; t h e honie- ; of 1C. Miss Ellis owns a farm ace in Xew York, young-Baker orchestra in ihr.t city, five . years to tiip morion pictures. lOTing and capable Miriam Gratz; ; near Sussex, England, and per- had tough cays w h e n he first v.'l-.h Bslnban snd Kstz in Chi(C\i]'yi'U'h(. K'"H. liv Sever Arts iO 'the cultured a n . d genii J Rej-na . sonally cultivates fruits, vege- landed in Hollywood. AE he re- cago which led to him being Touro; the retiring-and devoted tables and flowers for . sale in calls them now lie tells a gxuell- placed in charge of all music for ) Toiehel Salomon; and the patri- nearby tovrns. Only recently she inp tale of his privations. "In the great Publix Theatre chain in Avon a grand prise at a Sizssez tae;," he invariably says. "I was the IT. p. A. In millions of homes otic ' Mrs.- Minis. fair for the finest tomatoes in so hard up—I was starting to run Iii? music is also familiar thmuph (Cojijnsht lr>"." by-Seven-Arts Feature Syndicate) that part of the country. out of Eddie's money." thp medium of orchestral records Berlin—T'lemandinp; t b e "r'fr*~ made for Victor, Columbia a n a clcmcp of t h e Jewish post" Ijy d."Pat he . . . David Diamond, an- priviTip; .IPWF OC thp possibility f>r INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT MOVIES IX PALESTINE By .BERTRAM JONES other New Yorker, was the first pti.TTiinp: ii living. N«~i Ristri."1.;. Enthused over the great devel- INTERESTING PEOPLE that" he "was known as',. Rabbi \ some mention of Ttejna Touro, Mncb has Ticen written about opments of the Jewish homeland - Lupita Tovar is being starred in the motion picture luue-ilie- Ijenctpv Dr. Koib ueclared in i.r. .Jewish patriots and prominent Franks. He he'ped- aq^jXire t h e ' . j j a Philip Minis and Mrs. }Iorin Palestine and its future possi- by- Universal in Spanish-English air-e movement in t h e United i'ddre-s ni p Nnzi mePtitiK ?'• personalities of the revolution. money and land-to JJd^d-the n e v ^ ^ shetolf. - Rpvna-Touro was bilities. Piiltiel Buchner, former vcii-ions of some of their films, States . . . Sally Eilrr's correct "J-Innnheim Ilipt it is ".infolerf-Mf-" Jews hold positions wbi.'-l. 02? IS B !1 vronder-boy cantor, is in Holly- t'he is the wife of Paul Koerner, name is Dorothea Sally Eiiers and that i SEE The author this article pauses synagogue of the^Spanish-Portu- t h e v -widowed sister of Moses Miwood to confer with Jewish film Jewish Associate Producer at the she was born in If;OP, the only <;ouki Jir iiucd by GPTiv,r;r,p. to pay homage to the outstand- gese Synagogue : an^also! evined daughter of Peter and Pauline In S'iiV.'oiipr. ihf distru't <•'•>ui"i «hael~Hays, whe settled in Boscompany executives and to t r y same studios . . . Nathaniel V.*. ing Jewish women of that day. a deep interest in Vlre sfrugRle j By L O n S FEKABSKT and interest them in establishing Finstou. music department direc- (Schoenberger) Eiiers. She is a roi;:ov o. 1 l h ? .invl^dii't iuis of i V, f Ait interesting and fascinsiting which'the Various.- dSnpfiiimrtknis ! Ion., in ^.7.7X-. T h s / werp the nr&t A XEW JOB FOR CANTOR a studio and producing movies in tor at Paramount, is a 'brother- former student, of Horace Ivt'r.tm vTiir-.vd.iiiT of s "Ri«;-Avy;in" v-\<r. in-law of Nat Shiikret end a cous- High Sc-hool in N. Y. Slip ie'ls us had cinr-nupd to the ntrivriiiST A,! AVhen you hear that Eddie Can- j Palestine, tor, - in • addition to his already j Mr. .Bnchner, who is sales tnan- in of Joseph Gollomb and Z o e she always dreamed of being a.r. his wrnfd t o an "Aryp.n." Tlv Couri of Apponis v.i Anvh<<r. long""ljs.t. of activities, i s ; a .radio ;r.trer of the Palestine distributors Beckley, a t r i o well known in actress . . . .lime Clayvorth (yes. she's Jewishi first sav the ligrht rti'upvd ::o revfi';-:-1 i 1; e de<?isi.-.f». Jewish writers who have chron American music circles. Finston consultant, • don't"'laugh: It's a; accomplished hostess and the of YTestinghotise Electric prod- • icled American Jewish history : J^RE .•'/S-bSaye'- many /notable parties " -at | serious business with'Eddie, bus- nets, with headquarters in Tel is a native r-on of New York. His ot day at Wilkesbarre, Pa. While ihoidhiE ihf:t t h e K^-i IOocni i>vjs• • have lon^ since laid bare virtually reK^uSr "5acttvMes^he' ; ; brilliant career included service studying at the Emerson College ! cii.lc h a s lipoomc a prineiriU- :••'• • blue j^and of tlre.famous Ma and fata- Aviv, told the writer: all there is to be known about one prolhiffeit^:ffl^cJ&an\; 's^^^V I law. with the Russian Symphony Or- of Orat.oTT in Boston she. too. a g e n t "in-•'NeV-York f o f j &cTo"ds--were f r e q u e n t guests. Reyj e r of t h e well known" fire Cantor "With the' establishment of a j ot the most notable periods in t e K k s a g n girls. As a matter of fact, we are j motion picture industry in Pales-1, American Jewish history, the gen- u r o v i s i o n i n g t h e royal• navy, d m v n a . T o u r o ' s oldest son, 3ndth, was ^saisaaaexxxsassl^ eration covered by the two de- ing t h e F r e n c h a n d ' I n d i a n W a r . t h e famous Jewish' p h i l a n t h r o p i s t told that Eddie Cantor, Radio tine we in the Jewish homeland r c h a n t prince, J u d a h Consultant, Inc.. e m p l o y s 2 0 feel that through, t i e romance cades immediately preceding the F r a n k s ' c o n n e c t i o n s , w i t h t h e I a n d 1.>'m,5 ewho finance t hh e workers in offices located'in Hoi- and glamour associated with the h h' helped l d fi - Revolutionary War and t h e de- B r i t i s h aristocracy i n N e w Y o r k ^Blinker Hill-Monument in the city lywocd, New York, Chicago, De- • industry a great tourist business & cade following it. Yet it is curious i enabled. Ms daughter td^play a who have have JJProminent role in New'York so- to which his mother came as a" troit and-Boston and does a quar- to the homeland can lie developthat these scholars, who done so much to familiarize all j ciety. Among the leaders of New stranger. Mrs. Minis'was the wife" ter of a million dollars business a; eel. In Palestine we have three f, American Jews with the role of York society were the Delanceys, f ™ P Minis, a Jewish patriot year to date. That's no joke. Ed-. groups of artists, the Habimah snch Jewish patriots as Haym Sal- " w a s the scion of this family, j from Georgia, who.not only ad- die's part in this new business Players, the Hahohel and the omon. the Franks, t h e Gratzes, Oliver, whom Phila Franks mar- | danced money, to the Revolution- consists of advising agencies ant] :I-.Iatures; also many talented dan- \ §> cause but fought in the ranks. prespeclive radio time buyers and '. cers, musicians and composers the Hayses, the Shef tails, the ried. ,,The house.: to which Oliver jary When the British captured Savan- users as to whether or not the• who could be of service in pro- j £» Levys and many o t h e r distin- Delancey, a brother of a Chief nah Minis was so widely itl^as they have f o r radio pro-'; vidins talent for motion pictures. guished American Jews of the Re-Justice of the United States Su- knownMrs._ as an American Patriot grams are ideas that will "sell." : For the time being we are willpreme Court, took his Jewish volutionary era,- have strongly Igthat t h e British officers com' ing to forego the making of picnored the part played by the early bride at Pearl and: Broad Streets pelled her tures in the Hebrew language for ; and her daughter to GOING TO LONDON in New .York became historically American Jewish women. "AlFollowing completion of her the world market and to produce though the history books, e v e n famous, for it was there t h a t do menial tasks as a f o r m of those dealing exclusively with George Washington, bade farewell j revenge. Mrs.^ Shef tall, the wife important part in a new Univer- them in the English language. TVe Jews, are silent on this subject, it to his officers at the. close of the jof Mordecai Shef tall, who was so sal picture, Constance Cummings, : would, however, reserve the privaggressive a rebel that the British who is married to Benn W. Levy. ilege of making pictures in He,,-•'•" is fact that the Jewish women of Revolution. had him on a black list and when playwright, will return to , brew for exhibition in the PalesRevolutionary days occupied a Rebecca Franks' youngest sisprominent place in t h e life of t h e ter, Agibail, was also a prominent they took Savannah thrust him .England to supervise construction i tinian market. From Germany : into prison, was no less a patriot Colonies. figure, in Philadelphia. :Although than her husband. After her hus- of their new home in the Chelsea ! Palestine today lias technicians district there. She also plans to and mechanical experts who are The best known Jewess and one overshadowed by her sister's bril- band and son were captured, she ap],e:ir a play written by her ; ready to lend themselves to the of the most popular of all women liance, Abigail made a splendid fled to - Charleston, South Caro- husbandinand produced in London maliing of films. From the other d'iring the latter part of the 18 th marriage when she was wed to lina, arriving just before the this winter. And while we have ; groups I have mentioned we can Andrew Hamilton, 3d, the grandcentury was without a doubt the British besieged the city.. At the London in our thoughts let us ' secure all the artistic talent necwitty, flirtations, beautiful a n d son of the" famous"-Andrew Ham- risk of her own life she devoted mention that'Binnie Barnes, ITni- [ csssxy to produce fine pictures." light-hearted Rebecca F r a n k s , ilton, who mayor' of Philadelphia, herself_.to nursing the defenders j versal star and Merle Oberon. daughter of David Franks, t h e the defender of John Peter Zen- of the city who were suffering j with Samuel Goldwyn Studio, also ~I\ *\CT \ I X Y EMBAH \SSED only member of the family of that j ger and the builder of Independ- not only from the continuous fire; are British luminaries in HollyBenny Baker, young: fnnmaker naine who was a Loyalist during j ence Hall. Abigail's youngest the Revolution. Born in New York 1 daughter, Rachel, who was named V, in 1720, Franks moved to.Phila T i ajlter. her..famous, ^aunt,. married delphia as a young man. Prosper-1 a son of the chaplain of L'o'rd ing in business, he found a ready Howe, commander of the British 1 / -V ' welcome in Colonial Society,. In fleet. ; ' . ' 1748 he was elected to the pro-1 vincial legislature. During the DIFFilRENT VAME "While - these Franks women French and Indian "War he was the chief provisioner of the army T e r s , losing ,their ^Jewish identity r byy marrying i h t o prominent // and after the tragic Braddock b.Christian marrying i u t o two prominent families, ot h er campaign he helped raise ?25,000 Franks" girjs ^u e r.-e achieving a // for the defense, ol the.colony. At-. AI though he was one of the signers diffefent- :sbf£. of (fame} aDne^of lot. the Non-Importation Resoln- these was a second "Rach'el^r&nks, ti onig.JTQVJ765,;3ie_te^^in;ed i|oyjM the, daughter of Jtoses.B, ,;Fjajaks •'to 3 2 3 ^ George during: :£&;• ~ iution.T Twice arrecteil jdurin-g T T •Reyolu ti on, • i e was-the, chief Iniailer of the'Bnti^Karm'yl WH4 , f .^_ , , _ , ..„-__ „,._ .. ..... . __. •Ing the war which tuined hHfn^s^TI^^JWas uiM iwiiejorttt? fam^the"danghter of DayltP^^s-^'^P^Ti'Hayin;-Salornqn^Mke t h"e Margaret Evans, one' of. the'-'icjHW *&& toft all- great men, Mrs. Salof - Philadelphia, Rebecca:: Franks omon keptvin-TJie back,srQund':and easily gained entry to: the"'highest consequently nothing j ' i s / k n o w : i\ ].^^^%j0^i&§! circles of society. -She was the about'her except that during,the friend7of-many-:British and Amer- trying-;days",^when h e r .husband lean officerjs all of w h o m ad- ^as4inpjis6ned_py1the,Br;itisfi sh^ mired her. ' While Major Andrei- .ft^gg^l-'to^keeB.herrfamily-to£ the British officer' wfto • was- capf ^^?t^andc.later,'iw.hen?she"'; was tured in the Benedict- A^oi'd.^ept^l^l l l'^* i ^S^ r ?^.t d i s : w l ^ o ' w ' " witl1 ; Tide, w a s a paroled;:irisanerSiri- t i ^cEildreii,i sis^wasVunable 'to Philadelphia, he stayed" -ati'i;'hi4: £efc:vGon£ress ^tpj-eTmburse.her: for Franks' home w h t t e ' . M ' - B p ^ i ^ i ^ ^ P ^ ^ ^ r j . j i n s b a n d ^ e x p e n d e d time making minlat^re8-'" : or"tif6|' m ' ? '* eh ^ £i '< ) *^P^?.^l5 tl0 ?- "''"• .. if , . _ i x- \. Of all the Franks women Bilbeautiful Rebecca. .,' 1; '.:„,... hahiAbigail, mother.pf Phila, was j ; REBECCA _••„-••-.•..PRANKS , ^^^e;nipstc^^feH--:i:itiough,iB-rJ i -- J ----: , For our patrons convemence.ancl comtorl, we are TVell-edncated a n d a splendid- .^ther, Mo.^s"4 Levy.? was accepts .coa-versatiqnalist, Rebecca Frank&l'^je liChVis.tJantasiw^il as .'Jewwas. the reigning" DeUe;;of :Fh"ira- *j|£f spciety'^efcause:.'of -his "social- "' now OGCupying MIair-eonditioneel office in The^ delphia during the •British?«fGca-' ly"^pfioiniiif;nT;'-..iu8i.nBss:" fflendl.nation of the city.- Whil<f-t-'K e ^iffiaii'AWgair remained" £ stHdt'j British army was quartered m tbe Jewess, it -was as natural for her New Insurance Building - - - Consult us regarding !/ . City of Brotherly Love t h e to marry Rabbi JacoD Franks as V"! : T/V^ fY fit' Franks' home was the rendezvous it was for Rachel Franks' to be ; §' S W iB> *-*' l ; Jr your insurance problems . . . We are now in our for British officers. General Howe t h e d i c t ator pf Philadelphia so-i was a frequent visitor and his^let- c i e t y _ Bilhan Ahigail was a worters tell of the amusing, remarks t u y ma te''' for, Rabhi rJacota. She 15th year of serving a satisfied clientele in the of the witty Rebecca. The most organized the'ladies of the SpanI V*. 1 f^f1 if; |f Javish entertainment given by the ist-Portugese Congregation into a JL • • British in Philadelphia was the unit to prbcurefunds-for building general insurance fee famous'Moschianza ball in ;honor t h e .^synagogue^S'The''--. congrega-f of Geneial Howe but it was Re- tional records S!K>W» that her enand with the New Year all the prosperity tKat the b'rigKter outlook hecca Franks who stole the show. thusiasm TTas', so' inspiring t li a't

BEST WISHES for a

BASE BALL

.We ExtendJJur Best

ERS

SAM ZIEGMAN, Prop.

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The ball was featured by a tour- every,,, Jewess - in ^New YorK -. nament in which there were two trihuled} something':. When •n^ factions, the Ladies of the Blend- could"not be 'given,' jewelry and

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ed Rose and the Ladies of t h e Io thef * trinkets w c r e ;brou'ght to Burning Mountain. As the licad js-sveir;the ,tund. Her efforts-stamp of • the Ladies of the .Burning her asi.tb:eJspiritaal'*motJier?of jthe j,' Mountain, Rebecca was crowned contemporary;.'synagdgaeiwoinen's •; Queen of Beauty. So famous was. auxiliaries. ..... A \ifi'.: " r i ^ j she as a satirist and purster that Le^s .spectacular'^ t h a i : f t h e ^ o ^ she was credited, undeservedly so, meiHof ithe^Franks'clan ?was Mirv1 j .^s^ •with- being t h e author of an iam ; Gratz,, dajighter '{of Joseph j r anonymous poem called" "The Simon of Lancaster wh<ry:.played a Suite 768-67 iiisiiraDce BIdg. •Times'—A Poem by Camilio Quer- major part in the development, of • no—Poet.' Laureat. of Cp.ngress," Colonial trade' with the. Indians. rwhich lampooned the Revolution- Miriam, ' Ahner Kaiirian Kaimaa. who • married "'Michael B,ry leaders. Rebecca w a s also Gratz, her. father's,.partner,, was noted for her letters,• having.cor- the domestic type but b'epattse her responded with many of the.lead- husband's "business toofehim away ing figures in both camps. Her from, home ,for .montbs\at time, % letters are rich in anecdotes and she ^had '• to ^familiarise herself give an intimate picture of the withr the*" business. The 1 Simfin g a y social .life in..Philadelphia. - . - .. , . . ... •.. . home in- Lancaster • wasithe gathNotwithstanding the^ fact that she e r i n g ; p ^ ^ or -;tra'ders;, soldtefe,; 5 was a Jewess, she had numerous m d i ^ , anii'esplorirfein^er hussuiters, among them the boorish .band.'s,. - • - absence ^Miriam > Sim on %y. '•i 7.:,One;'of;'America'siLea:ding--.-:---'-" -"'•. jSI." OT er4a"comTaofialerBp'ir2 e ^ r 4 . 2 General--;.Ch?rles :Leer ;!Wasbln"g:.' ^'rjtjJfijSI" ";.,^Jbe^paiiifts' "for. joSTyeaFs^.' ,. . h a,t4'estendedCas <-far^' north -as : ton^s^:xival. StortlyVbefore .i-iser -Canada" and, as far west as: the •?.. •iathef'; was rexiled *feffin.""PhifaclBiV Ohio River.'.i She coufd\« drive a D B T v S H O W S - - •'•' : ' : ' • • ; : phia? after "thetBrttiah evacuated bargain';. with','{t>h e mostKcauay tho city, sbe"'married Sir Henry'- trader.'" It was talso herT'duiy to i 'ASMS * y.. •' .Joiinson,r a ' lieuffenant-colonel MJaJ 'keep "the flrm.'s-.agents'iin touch the British armyiVwho later •$& -camera general. 1,/ . • •'-.." *. . ^ with each other by postjand in iNpt quite sb.-well known to post' lerity-vwas -another. I M I i S O N ^ ' - --'-•'•":•- "':/•„:."• ^eo'rge'lRogersf rPhiia-'Franlis,' a-.cousin i i ; ;ca^-Phila; was?t K '.e .daughteripf *"..-;•;':;f?.Agenc5 ' l l a n s g e r ' "• • ' • - • . ; Jacob and Bilhah Abigail Franks. This picture of the Jewish wo°f New York. Jacob Franks was men of t h e . Revolutionary era one of the most learned Jews of would raoiV bs complete without Colonial days. <He •?was so'devout

prosperity that can be doubly enjoyed — — in .the winning and in theresulting freedom from worries. Just as we hope1 lor ourselves, we\ wish for you - - a Happy and a Prosperous New Year.

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DIAMOND SAM MOUSE, Frop.

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September. 21, 1935. * ^ ^

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D MISS ROSE DAVIDSON o£ New York extends to her relatives and friends New Year greetings. ©

SIR. "mill-MRS. JULIUS ABRAHAMSON and children, JOEL and ZELL, wish their relatives and friends a Healthy and Happy New Year. O MR. and MRS. BEN' W. ABRAHAMSOX and family, 2539 Avenue A, Council '.Bluffs, Iowa, extend.their Lest wishes to all their relatives and friends for a very Happy and Prosperous New Year. © MB. and MRS...FRANK R. ACKERMAN wish their relatives and friends a New Year of Happiness.

MR. and MRS. A. DIAMOND aud family, 29 North Seventh St., Council Bluffs, Iowa, take this opportunity to wish all of their friends and patrons a very Happy and Prosperous Now Year.

DR. and MRS. J. M. ERMAN extend best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy New Year.

B MR. and MBS. M. M. BARISH and family, 912 Mercer Park Road, wish their friends and relatives a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity.

RABBI N. FELDMAN extends best wishes for a Year of Health, Happines.; and Prosperity to his relatives, friends, • members of the Adass Yeshurim congregations, members of the Vaad, and to t h e entiro Jewish community.

© MR. and MRS. .TOHX A. BEBER and daughters, BARBARA aud CAROLYN GAYLE, extend to their relatives and friends sincere wishes for a year of Health, Wealth and Happiness. ©

DR. aud MKS. LEOX K. FELLMAN and son, MYRON MAYR, take this means of extending greetings-and hearty good wishes for a Happy and Prosperous : New Year to their friends and relatives. © MR. and MRS. I. FIEDLER and family extend to all their relatives and friends best wishes for a New Year of Prosperity and Happiness.

MR. and MRS. SAM BEBER and family extend New Year greetings to all their friends. O DR. and MRS. O. S. BELZER and son, 224 So. 42nd'St., extend heartiest New Year greetings to their relatives and friends. MR. and MRS. I. BERKOWITZ extend New Year greetings to all their friends and relatives. © MK. and MRS. M. BERNSTEIN, 210 P a r k Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their very best -wishes -to all their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. 0 MK. and MRS. JULIUS BISNO wish their friends both far and near a Happy and Prosperous New Year. © : \ MISS LIBBY BLACKER of Chicago wishes her .relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Y'ear. © MR. and MRS. DAVID BLACKER and-family extend to all their friends a n d relatives their heartiest -wishes f o r a Happy and Prosperous New Year. © MK. and MKS. I. BLACKER and family extend to a l l their friends and relatives best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. . .. O ' MR. and MRS. HARRY BLACKER wish their -relatives and friends a Year of ealth and Happiness.

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MR. and MRS. A. H. BRODKEY and daughters extend to their relatives and friends best wishes for a Happy New Year. © ,

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© MR. and. MRS. AL FINKEL extend their best wishes f o r a Happy and Prosperous New Year to their relatives and friends.© ' . MR. and MRS. ALEXANDER D. FRANK and daughters, MURIEL and .ELAINE, 100S Martha Street, extend heartiest greetings to their relatives and friends for a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. •

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MR. and MRS. DAVID GOLDMAN and family extend to their friends and relatives sincere wishes for a joyous New Year. MR and MRS. A. GOLDSTEIN stud family, 670 North 57th street, extend heartiest and best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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MR. and MRS. I.:CHAPMAN and sons, 121 South 53rd Avenue, extend heartiest greetings of the New Year to all their relatives and friends. © MR. iiud MltS. M. E. CHAI'.MAN . and children, BERNARD and 11KLK\ JANE, extend heartiest greetings of the New Year to their relatives and friends. O MR. iilitl MRS. L. II. CHERMSK and family, 39;;5 North 22nd Street, wish their relatives aud friends Health. Happiness and Prosperity in the coming year.

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RABBI ana-MRS. DAVID GOLDSTEIN, and sons, JONATHAN, JEREMY, ami ALEXANDER, extend to all their friends* best wishes for a New Year of Happiness. . . •. MR. and MKS. MAX GOLDSTEIN and sou, HARRY, and daughter, ROSE, 118 North 49th St., wish their friends Health, Happiness and' Prosperity in t h e coming year. • • '

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DR. BEN GOLDWARE extends to his friends and relatives best wishes for. Health, Happiness and Prosperity for the coining year. •

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MB. and MRS. P H I L I P M. KLUTZNICK and fcETTY. LU and RICHARD, exte'nd their best wishes to their friends, and relatives for a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity.

MR. REUBEN GREENBERG of Greenberg' Kosher Market wishes all his friends, patrons and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year. RABBI H. GRODINSKY, 2639 Davenport Street, extends his best wishes to his relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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MK. and MRS. JOE GOLDWARE and sons wish, their'.relatives and friends a very Happy and Prosperous New Year. • © 3IRS. MEYER GREEN aud family, 3725 Dodge St., extend heartiest greetings to their relatives and friends for a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. © DU. and MRS. A. GRHENBERG and family extend their heartiest greetings for the New Year to their relatives and friends.

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MR. and MKS. JULIUS KATELMAX and family, 417 Oakland Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, take this means of extending greetings and hearty good wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to all their relatives and friends, far and near. ©

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MR. and MRS. B. KORNEY family. 53S So. 22ml St., wish their friends health, happiness and prosperity in the coming year.

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-0 DR. and MRS. S. A. OSKEROFF, 2711 Browne street, extend heartiest good wishes to their relatives and friends for a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity.

DR. DAVID C. PLATT extends to all his friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous N e w Year.

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MR. and MRS. BEN E. KAZLOWHKY extend to their friends and relatives sincere wishes f o r a Happy New Year. ® MARY FRANCES KOKX, 10S So. 18th St., wishes h e r many friends in Omaha a Healthful and Fruitful New Year.

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MR. and MRS. N, LEVIXSOX extend to their, relatives and friends sincere wishes for a year of Health, Wealth and ' Happiness. .-.:'© MR. ami MRS. HAR-RV LOEWENSTE1N, 1141,So. 30th,sAvq., wish their friends both far and • near a Happy andfe-Prosperous New Year. . . '•*?

MK; and MRS. SAMUEL H. KATELMAX and family, 601 Willow Avenue. Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their very best wishes to all of their relatives and frie.ids for a most Happy and Prosperous New Year. . ' "

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JOSEPH LINTZMAN, Attorney, wishes his many relatives and, friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

MR, and MRS. LOUIS H. KATELMAX' and family, 624 South. Sixth Street, Council Bluffs, Iowa, wish all of their relatives and friends, Health, Happiness and Prosperity for the com ins; year. • • '

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MR. a n d MRS. H . SOL XOVITSKY a n d t h e i r daughters, LOIS and GLORLi., wish their friends and relatives Health, Happiness and Prosperity f o r t h e coming year.

MR. and MRS. A. LEVIN, 2051 No. 19th street, wish their friends and relatives, both far and near, health, happiness and prosperity for the coming year. . © ' . • . ' ' MR. aud MRS. SOL LEWIS and family, 2107 Grant St., extend to the Jewish people^ of Omaha their best wishes for a year of Health, Wealth and Happiness.

MR. and MRS. MAX KAPLAN and son, HERBERT, wish their many friends and relatives a year of Happiness and Prosperity.

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MR. and MRS. MATHIAS F. •LEVEXSOX and daughter, JUDITH, DORIS and JEAN MARIE, extend New Year's greetings to all their relatives and friends. © ' .. DR. and MRS. PHILIP LEVEY extend their heartiest wishes for a Happy and' Prosperous New Year to all their relatives and friends.

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MKS. MIXME I/AriDUS ara son, EARL, extend their heartiest best wishes to all for a Happy New Year.

MR. and MRS. MORRIS E. JACOBS and daughter "wish to express to their relatives and friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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MR. a n d MRS. JACK M. NEWBERG and son,' MARVIN, of Blair, Nebr., extend to their relatives a n d friends their wishes for a year of Health, Wealth and Happiness.

We extend our greetings and heartiest good - •wishes for •• a Happy-, a n d Prosperous NewYear to all onr friends a n d . well-wishers. - LADIES' LABOR LYCEUM CLUB, 22nd a n d Clark streets.

® MR. and MRS. N. J. HORWICH and son, JUSTIN, wish their relatives and friends a New Year of Happiness and Prosperity. ; '. © . MRS. CLARA HORWITZ extends to her relatives and friends heartiest greetings for a year of Health, Wealth, and Happiness.;'

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DR. NATHAN MUSKIX wishes all his friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year. 1 • © '' THE MUTUAL LOAN ASSOCLVTION of Omaha, Nebr., wishes to- extend New Year greetings to all its stockholders and friends.

THE LABOR LYCEUM, 22nd and Clark streets, extends greetings to its members and friends for a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity.

New Year.

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MR. and MRS. KEUllEN' K U AKOFSKY and famiU' wuh their many friends ami relativrs a Happy New Year. - •

MR. and MRS. A. HEKZBERG extend to all their relatives and friends heartiest greetings for the New Year. ... © KATE HOXGEROUSKY of the Gold and Grey Beauty Shop, • 10S City National Bank Building, Council Bluffs, Iowa, takes this opportunity to wish all of her Jewish friends and patrons a very Happy aud Prosperous

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MR, and MKS. LEO R. KRASNE and family, 312 Grace Street, Council Bluffs, Iowa, take this means of extending greetings aud hearty good wishes for a Happy and Prosperous N e w Year to all their relatives and friends, far and.near.

MR.'.ami MRS. J. HAHN o£ tlij American Goal*Company extend best wishes to their relatives, friends and patrons for a year of health, happiness and prosperity.

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MR. and MRS. 'IKE.KRASNE and family, 216 Grace Street, Council Bluffs, Iowa; wish all their relatives and friends, a New .Year of Health, Wealth a ii d Happiness.

MR. and MRS. MORRIS GROSSMAN and family, 210 West Washington Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend to their relatives and friends sincere wishes for a very Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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MR., and MRS. SAMUEL MEYERSON and family, C<JO Roosevelt Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, wish all of their relatives and friends,; Health. Happiness and Prosperity for the coining New Year. © '. MR.; and MRS. HYMIE MILDER and sons wis-h their relatives and friends a New Year of Happiness and Prosperity. .' , © . ' . ' . .3111/and MRS. MORRIS MILDER and family of Fairacres extend best wishes to their friends and relatives for happiness and prosperity for the" coaling New Year.

MR. and MRS. GEORGE KRASNE and family, 12 5 • South Eighth Street, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their very best wishes-to all of their relatives and friends 'for a most Happy, aud Prosperous New Year.

MR. WILLIAM GRODINSKY, 7 37 Omaha National Bank building, wishes all his friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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MR. and "MRS. GOODMAN MEY- ERSON and family, 2118 I St., wish their relatives : and friends a New Year of Health and Happiness. ©

MRS. BAILEY KRASNE, 519 Oakland Avenue, C o u n c i I Bluffs, IoVa, wishes all of her relatives and friends health and happiness for the coming year.

DR. aud MRS. BENJAMIN T. FRIEDMAN and family wish to extend to their relatives a n d friends best" wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

and family extend heartiest •wishes to their relatives a n d friends for a Happy and Prosporous New Year. © MRS. M. BRODKEY and children extend to all their relatives and friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous'.New Year. © . MR. and MRS. UAVII) H. BROWN and son, RAYMOND, offer their best wishes for a Happy New Year (o their relatives and friends. .'.._.'.

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DAVE a n d MIKE FREEMAN wish their friends and relatives •a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity.'

MR. and MRS. J. J. GREENBERG and children, LEE JANE and BARTON, e x t e n d to their friends and relatives sincere wishes for a Happy New Year.

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MR. ami MRS. A.MAZIE of Sioux City, la., wish their friends and relatives both far.and near a year of Health. Happiness and Prosperity. © J)B. Kiwi MKS. HERMAN MLYMUSOV and fawiiy, 127 South Eighth Street. Council Bluffs. - Iowa, take this means of ex'ti'ndinjr greetings ami hearty good wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to their relatives and friends, far arid near.

MR. and MRS. W. A. RACUSIN and daughter, NAN, extend heartiest greetings for the New Year to their relatives and friends. © MR. and MRS. I. RAZXICK and family, 3021 So. 32nd street, extend to their friends and relatives sincerest wishes f o r a Happy and Prosperous N e w Year. © MR; and Mrs. J. RAZNICK and sons, AAROX and DAVID, 3834 Hamilton St., extend to their relatives and friends in 'Nebraska and Iowa, heartiest greetings for a Happy New Year. @ MK. and MRS. AAROX RIPS and sons, NORMAN and LEONARD, extend to all their relatives and friends sincere wishes for a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. © MR. and MRS. LOUIS RIKLIN wish their family and friends, both far and near, a Happy and Prosperous New Year. .- © MESSRS. BERXARIJ asid DAVID ROBINSON, ol the Robinson Drug Co., 1S02 North 24th St., extend best wishes to their relatives, friends and patrons for a Happy New Year. © MR. and MKS. ,1. KOIMN and son. MORRIS. G2H West Washingion Ave.. Council Bluffs'. Iowa, extend heartiest greetings to all their relatives ar.d friends for a year of Health. HippiTsess and Prosperity. © MR. and

MKS.

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MR. and MRS. ISADORE ROSIXSKY and daughter. SALLY, of Auburn, Nebr., wish to extend to their relatives and friends a happy a n d prosperous New Year. © DR. a n d M S . A. S. RCBXITZ and family, 501G Burt street, extend best wishes for the coming year to all their relatives and friends.

MR. and SIRS. SAM SACKS and family, 6 2 0 Roosevelt. Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their very best wishes to all of their relatives a n d friends lor a most Happy and Prosperous New Year.

e SAMUEL G. SALTZMAN wishes all of his relatives and friends Health. Happiness and Prosperity for the coming New Year. © MR. and MKS. BEX I. SELDIX and family, Gil Oakland Drive, Council Bluffs. Iowa, take this .means of extending greetings and hearty good wishes for a Happy and Prosperous N e w Year to all their relatives aud friends, both far and near. © MR. and MKS. E. SEJLLK and family extend their best -wishes to all their friends and relatives for a New Year of Health and Happiness. ® MR. and MRS. B. A. SIMON, Gil North 5 0th street, wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. LKSTER SIMOX and son, ALLAX DAVID, extend to all their relatives and friends best wishes for a Happy New Year. DR. BEX SLUTZKY takes this means of extending greetings and hearty pood wishes for a. Happy and Prosperous Year to his friends far and near. ® MR. and MRS. BAYID SOREF and family. 3337 Hickory St., extend to their relatives a n d friends sincere wishes for a Happy and Prosperous N e w Year. © MR. and MRS. IRVTX STALMASTER and son, LYNX, wish all their friends a Happy N e w Year. ® DU. S. Z. STERX wishes his relatives and frienes happiness and prosperity for the New Year. ® MR. and MKS. HARRY STEIXBERG and family, i n South 3 4th St., wish their friends Health, Happiness and Prosperity in the coming year. & MK. and MRS. IZZIE STISS and sons wish their friends a"nd relatives health, happiness and prosperity in the coming year.

T MK. and MRS. J. TRETIAK and daughter, SARAH, wish their friends and relatives Health, Happiness and Prosperity f o r the coming year. © MR. aud MRS. HARKt TRUSTTN and family extend to their relatives and friends sincere wishes for K Happy New Year. © MR. and MRS. M. TURNER and family, 1702 North 24th street, wish everyone a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

V MR. and MRS. M. A. VEXOER extend sincere wishes for a Happy New Year to their relatives and friends.

w MR. and MRS. H. A. WOLF and son, JUSTIN, extend to their relatives and friends best wish-. es for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

ROSENTHAIJ

and farciil--. 17-S Thir'1 Avenue, Council Bluffs. Iowa, -wisli all their friends and relatives a New Year of Health, Wealth . and Happiness-.

SEASON'S GREETINGS FROM THIS ZIMMAN . FAMILY


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May the Mew Be a Joyous

The March of Time . . . Rosh Hashonah 1935-5696

NEW YEAR'S EDITION—OMAHA,

COURSES AT German Jewry Bear HEBREW NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Endless Persecution Under Nazi Swastika

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No whit different than in 5693 smaller towns deceased 20 perand 5694, the news from Nazi- cent and in the larger towns 15 land in 5695 dealt with- the end- percent. The income of the Jewless persecutions, discriminations, ish communities declined 33 peroutrages, and assaults against the cent. Evidence of the steady disJews. Little or nothing, however, integration of German Jewry was got into print about what t h e afforded by vital statistics from Jews of Germany themselves were Berlin and Frankfurt. In Berlin doing in the face of the govern- the Jewish population declined by ment's unmistakable attempt to 10,000 and the birth rate fell 5 wipe them out. In their desper- percent, in Frankfurt the Jewish ate efforts to re-orientate them- population declined by 4,000. . selves to life in the Nazi state the Synagogue m e m b e r s h i p s German Jews swung over to Zion- throughout the country decreased ism. The Zionist movement made by G5,000 and the total Jewish tremendous strides during t h e population dropped to 460,000. past year. Sixty thousand shek The Reich Representation f o r olim were sold and the Zionists German Jews reported that 25,challenged the Liberals' control 000 Jewish civil service employes of the Berlin kehillah. were dismissed, 4,000 Jewish lawOnly the fear of an irreparable yers barred from practicing, 4,breach in Jewish ranks prevented 000 Jewish doctors forbidden to a serious battle. Jewish youth engage in their professions, 800 movements also in a d e major Jewish professors ousted from gains, especially t h e chalutz their posts, 1,200 Jewish writers movement until the issuance of a and journalists expelled, 2,000 government d e c r e e forbidding Jewish actors, singers and other Jewish youth to engage in pub- artists barred from the theatre, lic exercises. At the end of the 90,000 Jewish business men apyear the German chulutz organi- plied for relief, and 30,000 Jewzation had 14,000 members. ish white collar workers applied Tiie problem of obtaining work for work. for Jews ousted from their posiDuring the year, 50 bureaus tions also agitated the Jewish were established throughout the community which undertook an country to help. Jews re-train organized campaign to prevail themselves and schools were esupon Jewish employers to engage tablished for 60,000 Jewish chilJewish professional men and wo- dren. The sum of 13,000,000 men. Efforts looking toward the marks "was raised by the German economic rehabilitation of Jewish Jews by self-taxation for their reyouth also made progress but ligious, educational and social were seriously interferred with by welfare institutions and for the a government ukase forbidding emergency measures necessitated such activity unlses it w a s de- by the government's policy of signed to train Jews for life out- anti-Semitism. "side of Germany. Large numbers (Copyright. 1935. by Seven Arts Feature Syndicate) of Jewish communities in • the provinces were virtually depopulated because of the rising tide of Riches are not an end of life, persecution. but an instrument of life.—Henry The Jewish population in the Ward Beacher.

AIR

New York (WNS)—Courses in the study of Hebrew language and literature open to all adults will be given by the division of general education of New York University beginning with this semester. Abraham I. Katsh, graduate of the Vilna Hebrew College, will be the instructor. The Manhattan Chapter of Avukah is providing three scholarships for these courses to students regularly matriculated at t h e Washington Square College of N. Y. U.

Art Calendar for 5696 Is Published For the first time in the twenty years that the National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods has published an annual Jewish Art Calendar, the drawings of the calendar for the year 5696 are the work of a woman. The artist is Beryl U. Beitman of Cincinnati. To introduce Jewish art a n d artists into Jewish homes the National Federation developed' in practical form an engagement pad carrying t h e Jewish Holyday dates in English, and, in addition, six reproductions of the work of some Jewish artist. In the past s u c h artists as Toddros Geller, Lionel S. K e i s s , Glicenstein, Struck, Penn, and Schatz h a v e been used. This year the six drawings are black and white lithograph crayons of biblical scenes. They are the artist's conception of "Adam and Eve"; "The Flood and the Ark"; "Jacob's Dream"; "Moses and the Burning Bush"; "Moses and Aaron before the Pharoah"; and "Jonah and the Whale." Mrs. Beitman is a graduate of the applied Arts College of the University of Cincinnati, • receiving her degree in Art in Industry.

NEBRASKA,

FRIDAY,

SEPTEMBER

27,

1935.

"GERMAN JEWS" CHANGE \ "JEWS IN GERMMY"

A NEW HOME IN PALESTINE

Berlin fJTA)—The- I-Iilfsverein : dor Deutschen Juden, German | Jewish w e l f a r e organization,'; changed its name to 1-Iilfsverein! K e v." York, K. Y. (JTA>—A. der Juden in Deutschland, thus i new American colony of 100 fairshifting the emphasis from "Ger- ilies is to be established man Jews" to "Jews in Germany." estine, according to an announce> *•% in accordance with the order o£ •ment by the officers of the er.tr?^the Nazi authorities who do not'. prise. The new colony is to h#> *" 1 ! wish the Jews to identify themknown as Achiiaath Haeafon, anf selves as German. j will be situated on Jewish National Fund land in the northern, pur:of Palestine. N" VvV-? i' This is Ihe first new Americar colony to be established in Palestine in the past two years, 1~Tlike o t h e r American colon !>f-: there, this new enterprise will mo.'; concentrate on orang-e plfinfTitinnt,. but •will rather enpfijrp in ir<TevWashington (T\"NS)—A deter- sive and mixed farm in p. with spemined, effort to rid the live poul- cial attention to fruits ^nd vegetry industry of racketeering and tables not. raised in Palest imp. incidentally to save New York's The colony will be establishe.r Jewish housewives several million on a ten-year plan. Every meini«!~ dollars annually -in reduced kosh- family will pay SCOO and will reer poultry prices will be launched ceive about 25 diinams of !r.n.-:. by the rnited States Department per year for about ten years. Thf of Agriculture when it starts to temporary oi'iicerp of the ooloi;:license a71 dealers, handlers and are A. Revusky, president: Dsvir; otl'ers engaged in l i v e poultry IJ. Mekler, vice-president: Dr. &. Landing in accordance with the Margiilies, treasurer; a n d Pf>; recently amended Packers and Borenstein, secretary. More than fifty thousand Jews'not only a new freedom but-also testine, stud;-ing refugee settle- Stockyards Act. from various lands of oppression ' a new economic opportunity. j ment charts in the colony of This act saithorizes the Secrefound a haven of refuge in Pal-i Top row: Three Jewish imini- '• Naaneh. tary of Agriculture to forbid anyestine, during the past year, in-; grants in Palestine reflect the j Bottom, left: A group of bar- one bi't packers and railroads to eluding over 25,000 German Jews ; peace and security they have . racks erected by the first settlers engage in. receiving, bnyinsr, sellwho escaped the fanatical barbar- i found in the Jewish homeland. in Emek Hefer, new colonisation ing, marketing, feeding, leading, .Ternpnlem (,TTA)~ rhprprs n? ism o£ the Nazis. | Bottom, right: Sir Arthur Wau- I area of the Palestine Foundation ^flipping, delivering, trucking; or rolicg crnrlty aprJiist illegal in: These immigrants are - finding i chope. High Conimissioner oi Pal- . fund. •handling live poultry m commerce migrants under srresl a r c. coi?. on a commission or a n y other tained in slleged eye-wjuipps s-fA very talented designer, in 1933 honored with a monument in Sel-: basis without a federal license. ports published in Dfivar, Palp.rshe was awarded a prize in the lendorf, a Berlin suburb. T h e j By the terms of this act, the tine labor daily. Crafters Guild Exhibit. The drawmonument shows an Aryan sit-! poultry industry will be able to The reports assert Jpv.'iFb. ilings selected by the National Fedting on a toad beating its head ! eliminate racketeers a n d thugs legal immigrants are cruelly las;!eration were shown at the 1934 j Berlin (WNS)—While monn- I with a hammer, a symbolic refer- who have, been preying on legiti- ed to obtniri conCossions of naCincinnati Jewish Art Exhibit. ! ments to distinguished German i ence to Fritsch's a n t i-Jewish mate dealers and by forcing them tionality so they can be deported The Calendar for this year is Jews are being razed throughout \ paper, The Hammer. to pay tribute in the form of ex- to their countries of origin. now- ready for distribution, and '. the country, high Nazi dignitaries : Dedicated to "the memory of. orbitant charges have b e e n reThe Davar slso publishes an begins the second quarter' of a i participated in the unveiling of a : Theodor Fritsch, racial pioneer sponsible f o r boosting kosher appeal to t h e Palestine povprn* million to be printed by the Sis- statue of the late Theodor Fritsch, ; fighter," the monument bears an poultry costs to the consumer. merit find the Jewsih Apenc.y t.r terhood Federation. I Julius Streicber's predecessor as : inscription reading: 'fundamenintervene, to halt this Ftlleped pci an exponent of violent anti-Sem- | tally, the Jewish question is a Every form ot human life is iice crudity and to take the propTo be thought rich is as good jitism. j battle between the honorable and romantic. — Thomas TV'entworth er measures against those guilty { Fritsch, who died in 19 3 3, was: the honorless." " as to be • rich.—Thackeray. Higginson. of instituting such methods.

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New Year's Edition—THE

JEWISH

PRESS—Friday, September 27, 19351

fame or notoriety that is theirs. negro, suffering as he does from now plays the role of Ezra of old. rangements f o r group imniigraBut Eeer's "Fifty Years of In- social and economic barriers even The reminiscences of Morris i tion, but could consider the case ternational Socialism" is not pure- higher than those confronting the Beer are the most vibrant, t h e j p£ each refugee who desired to ly a gossipy essay. It is, in addi- Jew, is saved from the 'ulness of most deeply understanding revel| enter this country individually. tion, a remarkably effective defin- the humiliation and the sslf-im- ations of our time that have been | Ei:iphr.sis was placed by the deition of the ideas espoused by the molation which are the lot of so published in many years. From pnrtmeut or, the fact t h a t the more important Socialist a n d many Jews who "pass." And the the tower of his fruitful age he memorandum applied o n l y to Communist leaders of this era. He Jew who "passes" is the one who looks upon the world with comi Russian, Armenian, Assyrian. Asmanages in an incidental aside to attains a place in the world due passion and with mellowed wisI syro-Chaldean and Turkish refushed clarity on the most abstruse solely to his merits in some speci- dom. He imports no condescenI gees and did not apply to refuStraighten Out Erroneous Reeconomic and social relationships. fic field but who is at one time or sion and assumes no mission. He j gees from Germany. port That German RefuHis easy differentiation between another, late or early, cruelly is merely the veteran traveler givEntry requests of German refugees Barred Hegel and Kant is as sharp and nicked with the reference to his ing directions to fresh starters. gees ere received Fympntluuirnlly satisfying as his brief analysis of past as though it were a social Beer has had a enormous in| by United States consular offithe three types of social reform disease menacing his neighbor. "Washington, D. C. (JTA)—Thr- cers, it was explained. fluence in modern Socialism and which have given birth to comStnte Department last Treek made £_r PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Beer himself, economist, his- is a particularly notable figure in munism, liberalism, • and fascism. torian, essayist, reaches the end the Jewish revolutionary move- it clear that German refugees' rePhilip Slomovltz, editor of persecution. I am quite convinced in this country. Many of t h e m j Beer has touched upon many of the road to find his wffe gone ment. And yet none of the au- quests to enter the United States AUSTRIA NATURALIZES t h e jBetrolt Jewish Chronicle, that any moderating of the for- must abandon their previous at- figures who happen to be Jews. Germanic, some children going to thoritative text boks and histori- are given "every sympathetic con20,000 FOREIGN JEWS has again scored a scoop. He eign protests Is Interpreted asevi- titude of opposing mass demon- Their lives could well stand the Zionism and Palestine, and others cal surveys that he has written sideration." Vienna (WNS)—From IP24 to Making public t h e text of a ; IP23 Austria naturalized 2 0,00 0 has asked one of America's out> denceof growing indifference and I strations and should adopt a moref scalpel of the Jewish biographer. even Joining his wife. A n d he compare in vitality and intellecstanding • foreign correspond- tacit acquiescence in- the persecu-j vigorous policy of condemning the But those who might be interest- too begins to think of his Jewish tual raciness with h i s "Fifty memorandum to t h e League of ; foreign Jews, most of them resients, I whose Berlin dispatches Hon. However, 1 cannot empha- J type of prejudice which, once it ed in that approach lack either past, of the days when he worked Years of International Socialism." Nations in a reply to the Nanseu • dents of that section of Galicia .are regarded as the most au- size sufficiently strongly t h a t Is permitted to spread outside of the gift of the interest to attempt for a New York Jewish paper, of At the age of seventy he has writ- International OWce which h a d : which used to belong to Austria thoritative interpretation of purely Jewish protests carry less Germany, will endanger the posi- the feat, which would be invalu- tha time when he helped to edit ten not only his own greatest requested information about pos- j but which is now Polish territory, Nazi inews, a pertinent ques- weiglit \than- do the protests of j tion of Jewries throughout t h e able both for a study of the Jews Singer's Jewish Encyclopedia and book but one that compares with sibilities of settling refugees here, i according to an official report as a people and of the particular of the fate of Heinrich Heine. any volume of memoirs of o u r t h e State Department corrected | made public here by the governtion: J Should Jews go on pro- united communities - in w h i c h j world. time. J The American Jewish Commit-! Jewish individual. the erroneous impression t h a t \ ment. testing? The answer of this em- Christians also share. -• Truly, Beer is the international "On the other hand, I do not | t e 6 ( e v e n j f J t <j oes n o t desire to had been created that immigra- ! Publication of this rnport gives inent observer whose name can(Copyright. J935. by Kevpn Arts That is. because like no other Jew, the Jew who sought to emFeature Syndicate) tion laws precluded settling Ger- I the lie to the charge of the ftntlbo divulged, is of tremendous believe that, unless German inter-1 e m i) a r k upon a new policy of pro- group in this civilized world the man refugees here. significance. Mr. Slomovitz prc- [ national interests become so vital-1 t e 3 t gatherings ought to enlist the | Jew has the m o s t complicated brace humanity and was coldly Semifes that. J?0,000 Jews were infovmed- to seek the monogamy A good name is better t h a n ; sentsiit and draws from it logi- Jly affected by the protests t h a t | a i d o f the most important organ-' The Department, made it ! naturalized in Austria since t h e cal ijonclusions.—T H E E D I - Germany's future is seriously | I z a t i o n s > primarily the Christian psychical mechanism. Even t h e of his race. The non-Jewish world riches.—Cervantes: Don Quixote. clear that it could not make ar- 'end of the World War. menaced, the protests themselves ones, in order to get them to exTOR.! • 'V ' will affect the aim of reducing press the horrors which are genThebone of contention in Jew- the Jews in Germany to a condi- erally felt over t h e atrocities tion of practical servitude by conish ranks today is no longer stantly increasing social and econ- which dominate Germany today. There is such a definite feeling of _ _ the boycott of* German •whether pressure. That Is the avow- abhorrence in the ranks of free made floods is ethically desirable omic purpose of this regime and is, thinking peoples everywhere that or not, but rather whether it ed moreover, the basis of the poli- there is reason to believe that an should ibe publically prosecuted or tico-social creed upon which it just privately pursued. Similarly, has come Into existence and main- overwhelming sentiment c a n be mobilized to condemn the out-} < the isiue of proposed protests tains power. rages and to unite public opinion j against Nazi persecution of Jews "That is my considered opin- everywhere against the new type j is not /whether protests are or are ion and in expressing it, I realize of anti-Semitism which seeks to i not-d^pirable, but whether they thoroughly t h e terrible alterna- crush the Jewish soul as well as should, itake the form of mass ac- tive that it presents. I the Jewish body. tion aiT opposed to quiet expres- expect this regime toMoreover, last for a obligation is great, a n d sions of indignation in the hope very long time, and I have seen theThe road In the fight for freedom of public opinion finally forcing nothing yet which tends serious- and Jewish rights is much more Germany to change its bestial at- ly to.shake its hold." simple one than it appears on the titude.;: It appears to me that,while the surface. A vigorous policy in acWhen the Hitler attitude first correspondent we have just cordance with the view expressed began jto shock the consciousness quoted is not whom presuming to offer t h e eminent correspondent of the ^vorld the Jews of Germany advice, his observations nev- by whose name we a r e unable to ' -were among the first to state that any ertheless point to a very importthey were opposed to mass dem- ant obligation on the part of Jew- mention, must be adopted at once. (Copyright, 1935. by Seven Arts onstration and they urged Jewish ish movements and organizations . Feature Syndicate) communities through t h e world not to;! shout too loudly in their It is virtually impossible to tell make much better-than-average behalfJj Outstanding Jewish leaders and organizations in America which little child's mind will glow grades in school. There are excepand elsewhere refused to partici- t' pate iri protest efforts and they with the mighty fire of. intellectual tions when a child burdened with did not abandon established policy of Ikcting quietly in behalf of genius. The penetrating mind of nutritional deficiencies (generally their tragically oppressed fellow Jewn rather than demonstrate in Albert Einstein is a beacon of unsuspected) makes a good recpublic.1; Tii3 -situation in Germany has Jewish genius throughout the ord. But such a child labors under By HENRY MONTOR become so horribly oppressive, howsrer, that one was compelled world. The tremendous mental a heavy handicap. And, generally Distinguished econpmic writ- alities of so many of the foremost to doiibt the wisdom of a hush"irasli pblicy. In consequence, the er and social reformer. Morris figures of our time and of a genforce and energy of Einstein have speaking, the children whose •writer I solicited numerous opin- Beer has now reached the age eration that has passed that his ions, lit was naturally unneces-; of seventy and has written the book is an indispensable guide to carried him far into the heretofore bodies receive too little of certain sary to inquire Telative to the at-j record of his own years a n d the background of modern social titude of Jews. There is a defin- that of his generation. Mr. reform movements in Europe. unknown. minerals and essential vitamins, Beer himself, n o w seventy, ite a n d sharp division in p u r Monter assays this autobiograni:?, and we know how the two raphy as a symbol and ns an in- ; would make a fascinating" model are listless in school, lack alertextreme ranks are lined up on the trinsic social document.—THE for a biography. In him is symbolized the conflict which enquestion. T h e attitude of non- EDITOR, ' ness, and are greatly dulled by meshes the creativity of virtually Jews Is one of extreme interest. But consider! What could be a A prominent American editor, for The modern science of bio- every Jew of achievement in our lack of vitality. instence, told us that, he is op- graphy has not invaded the lives day. He was born in a distinctly worse tragedy than the blighting posed,to mass protest meetings of contemporary Jewish subjects. Jewish environment, with which because occasionally they react The comparatively few J e w s he never really lost contact durof a growing child whohad such against the- caase in behalf of whose records have b e e n com- ing his whole lifetime. But the which the sufferers demonstrate. pressed into book covers during ambit of his career w a s defingreat mental potentiality as a man * A child may eat enough to He referred as an instance to the this "century have been presented itely outside the Jewish sphere. parades that were staged by Mich- in the light of their surface char- He became concerned with t h e like Einstein. What could be a stuff a harvest hand and still igan Catholics against the paro- acteristics. There h a s been no struggle of all humanity for a chial school amendment which genuine attempt to app1 to them better future. If the Jewish probworse tragedy than blighting the was an issue in Michigan politics the acid of the mercilessly scien- lem ever impinged upon his mind receive extremely inadequate nn15 years ago. This editor express- tific approach, to the same extent it was only at a tangent. And yet mental energy of any child? Yet, ed the view that until these par- that Freudian psychography h a s because he was a Jew, he w a s , trition. What a child eats, rather from time to time reminded that ades were initiated public senti- ripped the veil from the most priscientists find that, with surprising ment was with the Catholics, but vate parts of representatives of the world could not accept him at than how much, determines the that the proponents of the paro- other groups. For example, Theo- hi3 face value as a human being consistency, children receiving chial school amendment gained dor Herzl, in many ways the.most who was deeply concerned with adequacy of his nutrition. support when the Catholics began fascinating Jewish personality (as other human beings, regardless of better - than - average nutrition to demonstrate with p u b l i c Jew) of modem time has com- their creed, His final reminder marches. pletely eluded the intimacy of a came when t h e Nazis assumed biographer. Alexan- power in Germany and he had to The question as to who c a n conscientious Bein, the latest to attempt a leave t h e country in which so best judge the issue now under der of the Zionist leader, has much of his life was spent a n d discussion was answered when the study gone to great pains to penetrate his non-Jewish wife deserted him •writer received a very important deeper beneath the exterior than as an expression of her devotion expression of opinion from one of the other biographers. And yet to Aryanism. the outstanding American corre- there is lacking fundamental spondents abroad whose n a m e objectivity which the vide better-than-average nutrition is essential for . Now Beer is again in England, must be kept in the background the, unraveling of the intricacies where he lived and wrote f o r Are you sure that your children because of the careful watch that of a man's mind. A number of many years as the correspondent for children from sixteen months Is kept upon him and everything short biographical essays h a v e for German newspapers a n d as are getting the foods required to coming from his pen by the Nazi to sixteen years. These lists were written that have come clos- the author of books that are clasleaders. His statement speaks for been sics in modern Socialist writing. to performing the function of build the peak of health? Enough Itself and is such a powerful de- er compiled after prolonged and biography than " t h e In Germany a n d in England, The Jewish people have outlived the ages, indescription of what Jews and non- competent longer volumes. But they lacked Beer came into immediate contact Jews are obligated to do in order milk is vitally important of course, careful experiment at the Universtructible and deathless . . . an Indomitable spirit completeness and the distance with many of the men who have to put an end to the disgusting the that are required for a mature molded modern history. Lenin, of courage and will-power - - - coupled with intel'conditions which rule In Europe understanding of a man's inner as MacDonald, Briand, Kurt Eisner, but other things are needed, too. sity of Iowa. This booklet, Foods that we quote the important par- well as outer life. lectual stamina - - - lias been the creed of the race '•'• Clemenceau, Lexembourg, Liebagraphs to Illustrate the need for Make the Difference, contains in We can now offer you an illustratknecht, Mussolini, Shaw, Snell, which has stood the vicissitudes of time! This spirit arousing public opinion in every Heine and Trotzky and Marx Montefiore, Jaures, Tom possible fashion, whether It is by have been the subject of interest- Leonard condensed form the findings of ed, simplified guide to better-thanhas lent vigor and strength to the individual son of Mann were of his generation and action of individuals or mass pro- ing biographies, but only Heine of his circle. Israel as well ss to the whole people . . . whether tests. "We quote from the statesome of the greatest nutritional average nutrition. We can offer been approached from t h el Beer writes of these men and ment.'which we consider the most has it were Maccabeus of yore or Professor Albert Einproper perspective. There h a s the causes they represented not authoritative that has come to us been no one who has been prescientists in the world. It offers you an illustrated booklet which stein of OBT own day. since Adolph Hitler became t h e pared to diagnose either Trotzky as disembodied symbols of systems but aa colleaguer, of his sodictator of Germany: you an opportunity to check your includes, among other informaor Marx—not as social reformers "I, myself, in t h e beginning, and economic theoreticians—b u t ciety. One thinks of Beer sitting And in the confidence of even a brighter child's nutrition. •was much impressed -with the as men enormously influenced by in h i s English study, recalling tion, lists of foods which will protomorrow vc extend to ycz a:r Best Wishes for view,'EQ strongly tinged by prom- their Jewish origins a r i d back- with a sigh and also with a Eonso inent'1 Jews in Germany and es- ground. But this i? not a plea for of satisfaction the cycles of exa Happy end Prosperous Kcw Year. pecially by the hitherto favored the Nazi approach to biography. perience through which he has Jewish bankers here, that pro- What is meant is that purely from passed in common with others of tests •abroad only worsened t h e the point of truth there have been hishvs.ge. His reminiscences a r e personal and not the collected stasituation of. the German Jews. I packing biographers w h o would tistics of a researcher. The per- have utterly abandoned that view do lor men of outstanding Jewish sonal incident, the human anecI think that some of its original leadership what Guedalla a n d dote, the intimate flavor are the proponents, who were instrumen- Strachey have done for Welling- ingredients of his conversational V This booklet may be of value to yonr children far above \ tal in impressing it upon their ton and Victoria. narrative. There la no pretense friends in America, are also modI any value which can be figured in money... To obtain your j These ' irrelevant Introductory at comprehensive analysis of soifying? their opinion as .they now reflections a r e occasioned by a cial theories or of historical move\ booklet simply c a l l . . . H A 2 2 2 6 / see their out? turn inevitably ap- reading of Morris Beer's autobi- ments. And yet his book is as proaching. ographical "Fifty Years of Inter- fascinating and as rich in person"I am now quite sure that si- national Socialism" (Macmlllan ality as Leon Trotzky's "Russian lence' abroad about the plight of Co.). it is self-revelatory only to Revolution." It has none of the the Jews here merely serves, to the extent that five decades of stiffness and self-consciousness of encourage their persecution. I am European h i s t o r y are seen the Russian leader's memoirs. But equally sure that the plea of agi- through the eyes of the author. if it lacks dates and corroborative tation abroad advanced lor suc- It is unfortunate that we do not documents, it captures the idiom cessive stages of persecution is get a more thorough glimpse of of the exact moment of the occurmerely- the excuse and not t h e the fertile, enterprising mind of rence undistorted by t h o airreason "or. that persecution. I the man who came in contact with brushing of time. The life of Beer Tiave;fleen, again and again, that so much that happened during so has been as eventful, as complete RS the tide of foreign protest rise><s, many crucial and eventful' years. as that of most of the men he describes, though ther - has n o t a halt or irather a pause comes in tlie more, violent aspects of t h e vided an insight into the person-'come to him the fullness of the

REFUGEES TO

KNOWS?,.

Perhaps your oaoy may emulate the works of Einstein f

-,. I „ •

Are You Unknowingly Handicapping Your Child?

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ALBERT EINSTEIN

DAIRY

•y*


New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27,1935.

X

theso periods, was to be unaware character of their great m a s s . A GROWING INDUSTRY of Hindenburg's mental complex. They idolized >iiTn because in him Always he was the Junker. In his thej found the qualities which nbconscious there always lin- they had worshipped through the gered loyalty to the monarchical generations. He was big, strong, idea and hatred for the increas- did not think and act too much. ing encroachment upon the pri- He was properly disdainful of the Tfleges of the military aristocracy lowly. New York (JTA)—X e v? Vo:-t of which he was a part. In his "Hindenburg: and the Saga of live poultry -wholesalers sei"w.. later days, his mind was too be-the German Republic" is S a i l notice they will shortly stop usuis. fogged to realize the financial as I/adwig's salute to contemporary the Kashrnth Association p]umwell as the political chicanery in Germany. Through the personbas and that shochtim who ~f-~ whose behalf his name was being ality of one man, he analyzes the fuse to slaughter without tli»w. used. Socialism and the extension motives, the deeds, t h e aspirawill be replaced. of the rights of the masses of the tions of a land whose activities in Kabbi Jsachman H. Ebm, ch«h"people were crimes which, consti- o u r days have become fantastic man of the Kashrnth Associati/ir By A. L EASTERMAN tutional government might force and incredible. But they cease to executive board, immediately 1 to condone but which he have their bizarre quality under plied the wholesalers w o We present another portrait an Old Master. He, himself, once Epstein's. He himself admits no Mm never accept. The last days the illuminating floodlight of "meet with tlie opposition ol •*'' of an outstanding Jewish per- declared that "the man in t h e such right, and he goes m u c h would of his life were the epitome o£ hisLudwig's psycholography. If the united rabbinate." sonality from the pen of A. JU. strept is a fool" in his valuation further in refusing even to the career. in turning over the German people, in the main, may A spokesman for the Live PoulEastennan, distinguished jour- of the -work of Epstein. But now- learne~d critic the function of de- reins of For government to Hitler in said to have a national charactry Association of Greater N P V nalist. This profile gives us for adays the man in the street speaks ter /xrning the truth or value of his senile acceptance of the in- be Ludwig has identified it and York denied the latest wholesalthe first time a real answer to of Epstein with the same sense of his creation. He has chosen to trigues of his fellow-Junkers, he ter, described it with* such minuteness ers' step to throw off the sypff.jr: the question "Who is that man exhilaration as he would of Lloyd establish th s principle by insist- failed to realize that the v e r y and as to stun the many of tagging chickens with KRKI"Epstein, born in America and George or Mussolini or Hitler or ing on his work as the expression men who had lifted him to the who intimacy hoped and still hope that unhis own mind's eyes and as his nith Association legbands (in sCrnow England's greatest sculp- Gretn Garbo, not necessarily In of pinnacle of power would be crush- derneath t h e ruthless barbarity own view of the material a n d admiration or approval, but befeet since last summer) to p.ff.r.si tor?"—THE EDITOR. ed by this, his last testament to there is concealed the elemental cause cf the spectacular in a well- spiritual things in the universe. that they are kosher-slaughtershuman qualities of which all peoHere is shown a sheep-breeder in Ramat David, Palestine. constitutes a lockout. Ha claims that "any art has the the German people. established public character. ple have a share. to speak ia its o w n lanSheep-rearing is one of the rapidly-growing industries in If the nearly impossible conHe said that in the near fuin"* No doubt it shocks the artistic right Ludwig provides sharp porguage." On this ground he ex(Copyright, 1935, ty Seven Arts ception of a Jewish Dictator were sensibility of Epstein to be rethe wholesaler would simply Pfor traits of such pivotal figures as Feature Syndicate) translatable into actuality my garded as a public spectable, but plains what ordinary men regard Bruning, Schleicher, von Papen. i the public schools as the result of supplying t h e plumnas, or 1P>^ DECREE AIDS CHILDREN OF candidate would be Jacob Ep- that he is so regarded is a fact as the grostesquenpss. if not the They are vividly outlines in the • a decree issued by Josef Stalin bands. Shoehtim would be exp?.'> stein. Though more than thirty beyond dirpu'e—as witness the ugliness, of his b\nzen portraits, tapestry of his history,' but they Twelve Dutch Jews Knighted DECLASSED JEWS IN RUSSIA , forbidding any inquiry into the ed to continue working'. All v,-hr years have elapsed since he be- trundling of his masterpieces "on of his "Motherhood" and h i s are overshadowed by the dominquit will be replaced, the spoV-npantecedents of pupils. Amsterdam—Twelve Jews were gan his merry game of throwing lour" for t'le'vacant gaze of the '"Christ." But the layman may ating figure of that giant-man, knighted on the occasion of Queen man said. i The decree means that the cliilMoscow (WNS)—Tens of thouthunderbolts among t h e artistic untutored and the admiring gasps be permitted to inquire whether Pnnl von Hindenburg. It should Wilhelmina's fifty-forth birthday. sands of Jewish children whose ; dren of declassed Jews will no conventions, he still retains pug- of the pseudo-intellectuals. This even the languid ;e of art is not be said at once that Hindenburg Law is not law, if it Numerous other Jews are men-parents are declassed because of I longer have to suffer because of mciously that "what-I-say-goes" is not t h e least of Epstein's purposeless and without t r u e did not betray the German peo- tioned for various honors on the their bourgeois origin will no : their parentage and will be ac- the principles of eternal and "take-it-or-leave-it" attitude achievements—that, by intent or value unless it is understood by ple. He was a reflection of the Queen's birthday honor list. longer be discriminated against in | corded equal rights in the schools. —Lydia Maria Child. which is an essential characteris- otherwise, he has brought t h e others besides its creator and tic cf dictatorship. realm of his art within the re- whether the right to use a lanNot that I would, for a mo- Eion of the pn:/lie- mind. If he guage whose form is that of the 'j I mem, besmirch his good name by really has something to say and artist alone is not the expression a comparison with the mounte- to teach, he has succeeded in of a superior egotism. It may not bank who struts and bellows in bringing it to the attention of a be enough to dismiss contemptuthe Wilhelmstrasse in the guise world which is now conspicuous ously the rest of the world with of a pagan deity. But- I would or its interest in, far less its un- a "you don't understand.' ventnre a suggestion of the Ital- erstandmg of, new ideas in ar- In that view Jacob Epstein may ian model. Physically and mengo down to posterity as the suconception. tally, Epstein has all the massive- isiio preme Egotist—a veritable DictaIt is for no mere layman to ness of form, the ruggedness, the .ppraise or decry such work as tor in Art. sweeping range, the aggressive defiance of normality, the imaginp.livf, daring that have made II Duce the impressively spectacular figure he is. You have, too, the tearless courage of expression, the creative power that combines clearness of purpose with ruthless determination to accomplish which make for the Dictator complex and arouse either idolatrous admiration or infuriated hatred. By HENRY MONTOR Epstein is well qualified for the role of Jewish Duce because he Was Hindenburg a second to acknowledge his debt to Ludhas all those natural ingredients Bismarck or was he merely an endorff either during or after the of leadership as well as a pro- enlarged edition of the average war. Hindenburg's h u g e frame found sensitiveness of his racial German Junker? Read Mon- and his ability to refrain f r o m origin; he has the boldness to tor's startling review of Iiud- saying anything that might be ofproclaim the pride of his national wig's latest and most import- fensive brought him to the apes tradition. ant biography.—THE EDITOR. of honor, while the man who was responsible for his fame w e n t Whatever controversy t h e r e from anonymity to obloquy. may he about his place as the W h e n Paul von Hindenburg outstanding artistic genius of his But it is not Hindenburg's trivday and generation, there • can be died, the world mourned what it iality, his incapacity for the high believed to be a mighty, symbol no doubt about his emergence as post which became his, that is I among the few really great Jews of Germany's past, a guardian of fundamental to Ludwig's book. In ' •': of his time. Epstein the sculptor the sober virtues of an indus- describing this 'healthy, "unimaghas never forgotten Epstein the xious and devoted people. T h e inative, extroverted, disciplinary Jew, and while the world of art clippings of history were disre- a n d authority-worshipping Ger-, may, rightly or wrongly, -place garded not merely by the average man hero, Ludwig is portraying a ' him among the immortals: whose man but by the very newspapers great section of the German peo- ' genius knows no raciaV frontier, which had chronicled Hinden- pie, that section which has conthe Jewish people have the right burg's activities and appraised his verted the Reich into a 1 ?. n d , to claim h i m as their precious character. Barely a year has passed since which bears no relation to t h e possession and for good or ill as the departure of the " h e r o of Germany where once great poets' a specifically Jewish contribution Tannenberg." Germany has for- and philosophers and n o t turn-, to the culture of mankind. keys were heroes. It is worth recalling that Ep- gotten him, except insofar as it There is no trace of "Grolltat" stein's first essay in artistic cre- couples his name these days with propaganda in Ludwig's biogthe valiant militarism with which of Jew=feglBg t n o ^BhT^typesTnTTTew^ YofEnil lauds. He merely marshals the of course, travelled far since those "Wprld War. But Emil Ludwig has records. By taking his readers hungry early days, and the Jew-now resurrected Hindenburg and into the mind of this most typigiven him back to this world with ish Epstein is now only called In cal of Germany, Ludwig reveals a reality and intelligibility which evidence when Irrational hostility the Field Marshal and President that outlook and that psychology is the keynote of criticisms of his never had even during his eight out of which springs the worship work. of Hitler and the hatred of anyIt is a delicate question how decades of life. thing that cannot be counted on "Hindenburg: and the Saga of far and on what motives of deten fingers or seen with the naked liberate intent Epstein has con-the German Republic" (John C. eye. Winston Company) is Emil Ludtributed to the venom, unparalEven t h e so-called German elled in the history of Art, which wig's supreme achievement in the "Revolution" a travesty. The has greeted his solid creations of interpretation of "modern history heavy-handed was sailors who rebellas well as in the delineation of an the human form and ME concepat Kiel and struck the spark tions of human emotions. His individual. "Hindenburg" is not ed gave birth to t h e Reich earliest work bears little trace of merely a biography.of a man; it which were not fighting for freedom and is a transcription of the mind of the abnormally unconventional and the downfall of the j - His human beings, in those days a people.,It is Ludwig's great con- justice military. It was merely were recognizable, without grea- tribution'to an nndestanding of Junker protest against their food and difficulty, as human beings. And what is taking place in Germany aagainst having the officers call for a long time, the artistic wat- today, even though there are but them familiarly instead of with few references to the National Soers remained unruffled by that Thou. When the War had been vehement denunciation which has cialists who hold power. the Kaiser had fled in the knack of attracting the pub- Paul von Hindenburg and Ben-lost, when when Hindenburg returned lic ear as well as the public eye ockendorff, scion of a Junker and fea~, lower class family, combined with- to the capital, there w a s no DRAMATIC SENSE in himself arrogance- and sterility thought of denouncing the War Like many men of exceptional of imagination. Whether he wasLord whose blindness and incomtalant, Epstein may have b e e n in barracks as a cadet or in the petence had prolonged the' War then, and may be now, innocently office of President administering for a year and had laid the connncoiiscious of his supreme sense the. fate of a nation, Hindenburg ditions which brought Germany of the dramatic. But the fact is was always bewildered when com- a miserable defeat. Instead, the that not until he created the tomb plexity of decision was involved. soldiers and the people curtsied of Oscar "Wilde in Paris in whai Leading an uneventful, unheroic to the aged and still proud Genwas considered to he bizarre de- military career until late in mid- eral. They applauded him vocifsign did the world take notice o: dle age, he w a s in retirement erously years late.r when, called this 'hithe.rio able hut not unor- when the whim of an Emperor before a Commission of Inquiry, thodox man of art. Controversy brought him back to army service he accused the Socialists of uncad abuse placed Epstein "on th with a post w h o s e importance dermining confidence at home and map," and the "grostesque* am stunned even him. thus causing the defeat of the hcrrible" figures on the British army at t h e front. Hindenburg Medical Association building in I t is a biting portrait that Lud- was Germany's Bourbon to a far the Strand merely served to en-j wig contributes. Or perhaps it more stupid extent than e v e n grave his name indelibly on the might better be described, as a William H. record of the public mind. j dissection. Hindenburg's preoccuAll that Hindenburg possessed pation with his official painter, The more-Epstein became the who was "tranquillity." Masses of was with him during the entarget for the arrows of contume- o£ his time and energy than plans soldiers might perish at the front. ly, the more he exposed himself tire period of the war, took more He remained "calm," in contrast to them. His defiant contempt for for" the ^winning of military en- to the fevered, indefatigable brain abusive condemnation h a d the, gagements. E v e n Tannenberg, of Ludendofff. Hindenburg's apdoubtless unsought, result'of inHindenburg's great claim to stra- pearance of stoic fortitude was tensifying public attention to a tegic immortality, was the victory often mistaken for sublime intelstrange new star in the artistic lectual strength. His great body firmament. The torsic contortions of Eric Ludendorff's brain, Lud- concealed nothing except flesh shows with rather convincof Rimain Hyde Park served to 1 and.bone.' His mind was as vacemphasize the originality of the ing documentation. Hindenburg's ant as that of the lowliest of his craftsman, and by ontraging the treatment of his colleague, Lnd- guards. For Germans_ and the public .conscience- in its regard for endorff, whom he always patron- world to Tiave put him on a plane normal ideas of thn human frame, ized as "my assistant,',' was onewith Bismarch was to substitute created the Becuationlr of Epstein of the most miserable displays of worship of physique for apprecia-. pettiness of which there is frec- turn of inind.. a& "Public Enemy No; 1." ; ord. In his foggy brain, Hindenburg understood that LudenddrfX Tne Imperial flag, the RepubliNO Ttnaxixo BACK From those days Epstein M s was the master-mind, "whose can flag, the Swastika flag. These not turned tacit; indeed, he has willingness to keep in the back- three waved during Hindenburg's gone forward with strides of co- ground and let Hindenburg take lifetime. To have said, as populossal measure to a repute that, tJ'e credit was the product of hia lar understanding had it, that he ironically enough, bids fair to gannine military spirit. Hinden- seried the German people with transform the young rebel into burg never had the graciousness equal faithfulness during each of

Jacob

Poultry Dealers Gird for War On Tax

'"•

I want you to know how much I have appreciated your friendship in the years past*

Now it is my sincere wish that the New Year will bring with it a new era of happiness, peace and prosperity to you and to the world.

ButlerNut Coffee

1


New Year'sEdition—THE

JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

t&k& iUtki'tn&ny formerly had monopolies are now. You were out with Jack, their faces to the now year and t«. t40 tm& emld tffif- tVi-f VfiW," Tha Norwegian Federation of prayed that it would bo a good I fcuppose?" 't'*r*tf*t,itw hHbiyr forbade its members to one. "Yes, and he wanted us to get An* .'..._ e.nmpe.li: in athletics against Ger« If only, she thought RilseraWy, married rig'ht away." mim <jjif*ri.f;ni;rn. it could have been Ilk'* thflf, for "Sylvia, you're not crazy!" T'iihtU: fUT,iimPTit in the UniU'd I'm not. But I can't go her and Jack! i '.:,'-is.t<:.', ..-nriTx^Ied the g o v e r n m e n t Chicago (WNS)—If the Demo- on "No, forever seeing him, when we H e r m o t h e r fiat In untii'.(--u#Witi= j \U/ fi1»;<.ji<ifJi5 j i r o p G H o d c o t t o n barcratic organization of Illinois car- know we'll never be married. ed holiday case whfl'i ilin ! %y tt j U.'-.'c ?JJ':I Y/iUi C"i.m~i!y. The once ries out its reported indention not Never! If he asks me again, I g'rls washed thn dl^ltofj, Afti-.f* ' f.'ufi-ottK LrlyziK Trado P a i r lieto siv<^ Governor Henry Homer, u wight—be crazy." ward, Sylvia slipped <m her <*0ftf. (y *T;JV.j-tJ'? f.'most a doycrted village second' term, the state's first JewIn her earnestness, Mrs. Bren- Her mother followed Jier to flu* ; * , htrr.iitififi foreign buyers stayed ish chief executive may be ap- ner forgot her cooking. "Sylvia. door. pointed to a vacancy in the United you've got to be sensible. Tell "Where are you golntr, ttylvfoi States Circuit Court of Appeals, Jack if he's going to talk like It's Yontov." according to persons in close that, you aren't going to see him "I promised I'd moc'l. Jack and touch with political affairs. again. You mustn't Sylvia. What go for a walk." Governor Homer, who "was would you do? What would you "Even on Yontov! Don't you elected for a four year term in live on?" think his family wants him linmp Kuerfurstendamm. Helldorf. noSEPTEMBER - P o l a n d at-' posed U. S.-Germany barter agree- "orlous anti-Semite, named Berlin '1932, has earned the enmity of The The tears stung in Sylvia's eyes. tonight? But remember what 1 15'tr'in ( V ' X S ' i — I n a vicious ment. the Democratic organization by C605 t:aii«fc(I tt-ftSiU; Isftvoc Hi <itT- »!.i.ar;k on Mayor H. I^a G u a r d i a tempts to abrogate minority treat"You're right, of course, mama. told you. Put it to him plain sip police-chief. Wave of renewed MARCH—German.press renews refusal t*> do its bidding. ies. Backs down as powerful naI'll have to tell him." and down. You can't go around many's foreign Irart* 6.n't httn*,u,hl of Kfiv,- York, t.l:<? Allgemaine Keianti-Semitism sweeps Germany. lilsAlthough he has hinted he will tions oppose action. League of anti-Semitic campaign. German Arrests, suicides, boycotts, poThe table • was laid, napery lorcver like this. Better to break the li'-'.U-.h'i', ci'iitiCitriy ntnr the ! c i i - (".'.scribccl him as a m a n Nations;(moves to protect Saar Jews barred from army service. groms, threats accompany Nazi seek the Democratic nomination snowy if a bit threadbare. Mrs. it off now. Then you'll have a breaking point. Shortly hitc-r i'm: "'.vho forced 1: i r, nominntion by Jews aa plebiscite approaches. Spanish President Zamona praises drive to oust Jews from life of next year despite h i s organiza- Brenner went upstairs and chang- chrince to meet somebody w h o beginning of the yaar lh« Amer- t h r r j i t s " me! railed on all " h o n tion's opposition, the contemplat- ed to the silk she had bought for I'M support you. There arc plenty1 ican Fednralion of Labiv from all avi citiEfns of Now Y o r k " to reAustria irames "Aryan" constitu- accomplishments of Jews at Cor- Germany. dova Maimonldes 800th annivered . resignation of Judge Samuel Sylvia's graduation. Helen tore like that, if you'd only look \ parts of the -world met t.» r-Epnnd : lievo i.b.rniH^lve." of this man of tion. German Economics MinisAUGUST—Nazi drive gains in ter Hjaimar Scaacht tells Goeb- sary festival. Laborite plebiscite intensity. Starvation campaigns Aischuler from the U. S. Circuit herself from her latest romance around, instead of always Jack, j the in'"^ment and created p. uni-; ::rrmlf-nr tX iho next election." bels there is no money for propa- In' Palestine rejects peace p a c t launched against Jews. In U. S., Court bench would leave a vacan- and Sylvia laved her sad eyes. Jack, Jack." j fied boycott instrumentality in the! T h e y-'ar.i ]>apor nssei-ted t h a t with Revisionists. Greece bans Non-Sectarian Anti-X r. z i j •Mayor La Guard is-, is " a ' J e w , not cy there to which Governor Homg a n d a . •'•• •'••-'•'*.' ; "Yes, mother," Sylvia's answer World _'eeling grows for shifting Olym- er could be named if the politi- And then her father and MorCouncil. An attempt to declare I an I t a l i a n " a n d quoted him aa OCTOBER—King Alexander I Nazi group. APRIL—Zionist Actions Com- pic games from Berlin. U. S. gov- cians wanted to avoid a primary r's came in, bringing with them was a sigh of acquiescence. the boycott illegal in Belgium was ' h a v i n s r.llcsp.dly f-aid after t h e of YugoHlavia, friend of Jews, asHer mother was waiting up for frustrated when the briskness of the autumn night, expresses sympathy with fight. the courts upheld j sassinated. Zionist Executive and mittee rejects, crown-colony plan ernment Armistice t h a t " I extensively a kiss and a "Good Yontov" all her when she slipped into t h e it. Jews. Revisionist signs truce. Chancel- for Palestine. Anti-Somitic riots ermon house hours later. around. dropped bombs in the H u n s ' h e a d s Nineteenth World Zionist Conclose Bucharest University. Relor Schuschnigg promises J e w s In Poland, however, the gov- and I am proud I killed so many. The absolute justice of the "Sylvia?" she called from the Sylvia watched her father as sjrnss opens at Lucerne, with feelparity ia new Austrian constitu- visionists •• decide to boycott Zion- ing ernment disbanded the boycott I I taught my children a deadly State, enlightened by the perfect upper landing. he led the way into the dining against British plans for legistion, as Austrian government cam- ist Congress. Danzig Nazis fail in committee. At the end of t h e | hate of Germany and I hope my reason of the State. That is law. room. There was nothing about "'Yes, mother." lative council in Palestine Tunplebiscite to modify constitution. paigns against" Jews-In• governfirst six months of 193 5 the boy- grandchildren will cultivate thia —Rufus Choate. "Did you tell him?" him to suggest the harassed storement posts. Hitler admits anti- Nazis launch Easter drive on ning high. cott had reduced Germany's ex- feeling." "Yes, mother." keeper he was on ordinary days, N a z i boycott hurts Germany. Jews. Germany threatens to strip ports o7 percent as compared with j Well?" nothing to remind one that he Jews of citizenship. Berne ProtoAmerican Federation of Labor "We're going to be married 1032. German exports to the i had - a hard struggle to support votes to continue boycott. ZIon-' cols trial reopens. Adolph S. Ochs, I right away. As soon after the United States during t h e same' Scientific Pest two grown daughters and a nearpublisher, New York Times, dies. Ism banned In Turkey. period decreased 49 percent. The Rome—riabbi David Umberto, holidays as we can." ly grown son. MAY—Nazi expert at Berne League of Nations took under famous Bible-scholar and philCongressional committee r e - trial paints picture of Roosevelt, Her mother ran d o w n the She saw the fond light • in his consideration a plan to impose veals Nazis using rifles in New press, League of Nations, etc., in gray eyes as his glance swept the stairs. "You don't know w h a t economic sanctions against Ger- osopher, war, nominated to memYork, Charge Ambassador* Luth- "Jewish plot." Jewish expert calls A Short Story by Nina Kaye table proudly and she knew that you're saying!" she cried. "Jack many because of its violation of bership in the Rcale Accademia er acting as Nazi agent. N e w Protocols forgery. Court rules Nazionale dei Lincei, oldest scienbis heart was saying, "This is hasn't even got a job." military clauses of the Ver- tific academy in Italy, founded in lutely nothing a year between the right. This is how it should be. York rabbis ban untagged poul- document false. Soviet opens "Sylvia." Sylvia raised her slim young j the sailles Treaty. Losses of 20 per- 1G03. two of tis." try. President Conant of Harvard Bureya to 4,500 alien Jews. Mar"Jack." iVTv wife and my family, together, arms over her head in a luxur-' snubs Hanfstaengl, Hitler's press shal Pilsudki, Polish dictator, There was no answer to what, facing another year. A new year. ious, happy gesture. "I know it." cent were recorded by the Ger"Darling." shipping lines which w e r e chief, in offer of gift. was unanswerable. They walked Let us pray that it will be a good "I think you are crazy!" her man "It's no use, Jack." dies. forced to abandon calls at San Refugee In Sooth America back through the autumn twi- one." NOVEMBER—Protocols of Eld- JUNE —Zionist memorandum mother told her. you think I know it? light, two young things with the Diego because of the boycott. Rio de Janiero—Fifty m o r e ers of Zion branded as forgery as to League asks easing of immi- Me"Don't Sylvia shook her d a r k head. She seemed, suddenly, not to studying geology because no spring gone early o u t of their German Jewish refugees have artrial of Nazis opens in Borne and gration, bars. : Anti-Jewish riots Holland's unemployed were giv"No, I'm not, mama. There've be able to see forward into the is adjourned. Baron Edmond de Bpread through Poland. Bureya one needs an engineer! But that tread. en jobs and new industries estab- rived here to take up permanent been much worse times t h a n future, as her mother-mockingly can't keep me from loving you. Rothschild dies in Paris. StreichSylvia's mother, ample bosom- told her. But back into the past, these. There've been people much lished at the expense of German j residence in Brazil and other private ownership. Labor Even from telling you." er widens anti-Jewish drive in permits ed and rosy from the stove, busworse off than Jack and I. But, exports by factories established; South American lands. w i n s in U. S. Zionist Congress "I'll have to be getting back," tled importantly about the house, spread behind her like an end- somehow, everything went on. by G e r m a n Jewish refugees, j Among the newcomers are Dr. Germany. Austrian government elections. less chain of new years. And no Rumanian Jews win de- she said quickly. "Mama needs "Sylvia, where have you been? moves for restriction on . Jews. cision against exporters captured Eu-j Grimaldi, former director of the of Wor- me to help~ her. You don't want When I'm so busy with the cook- matter in what country, in what There was always Rosh Hashonah American Austrian Jews declare they will ship permittingMinister and a new year to look forward ropean markets iii which Ger-! Hanover Symphony Orchestra. travail, men and women turned them election to keep your family waiting, ing. Set the table already. And not give up citizenship rights to either. You should be in Temple tell Helen to stop her reading and new corporative state. Anti-Jew- rights. JULY—Reformed rabbis at now, you know." ish drive in Saar starts mass emiget dressed. Morris went to school gration.; International anti-Nazi convention e n d opposition to with papa. You should have seen He pressed both her hands hard boycott body established at Lon- Zionism. Avoid stand on war and between his. "There's so much I him in his new longies." peace. Elect first Zionist to pres- should be doing," he said in a don parley. Sylvia dashed the handful of j idency. Zionist Convention adopts Kashruth Association wins con- plan for reorganizing its struc- breaking voice. "I should be hav- silver back Into the drawer, tlung j trol over New York poultry mar- ture. Polish orthodox rabbis op ing my own home to come back out bitterly, "I'll see him t e n kets. Nazi attempts to get State pose reform of U. S. conservative to, with you waiting for me with years from now! Still going to charter in New York fail. Smed- rabbis making possible "Enoch a smiling holiday face, a n d a school with papa, while Helen ley Butler reveals Wall Street Arden" divorce decree. t' couple of kids by now, too. We reads her life away for -vant of Fascist plot. ' aren't as young as we were when Col. Alfred Dreyfus dies in we finished college in '30, you something better to do, and you DECEMBER—-Jewish Agency and I get ready for Rosh Haacquires Huleh plain in Palestine. Paris. Hebrew University students know." shonah." strike In: Jerusalem for agriculGermany guarantees equality for She turned away without draw"You may think you can see Jews in; Saar for one year. Bira- tural school. Soviet government ing her hands from his. into the future, my fine lady," allocates $30,000,000 for Bureya. Bidjan opened to Polish Jews. Re"Sylvia!" There was a sudden her mother answered. "But one visionists suspend boycott ol Jew- France invites Jews-to settle in you can be sure of—whereish National Fund in new pact. Syria. League Sigh Commission- excitement in his voice. "Let's thing 6ver we are, whatever we'll be dodo it! Let's get married anyway." er McDonald asks central aid bodj Jewish' Agency gets §2,500,000 ing, we'll be getting ready for forrefugees. .. . "Oh, my dear," she said a n d loan. , Rosh Hashonah then, just like we Amateur Athletic Union side- Riots, break out on /.Berlin's sighed, "how can we? On absotracks issue of boycotting Berlin Olympics at Miami convention. Putsch in New York splits Friends of New;; Germany as rebel group seizes control of newspaper plant. JANUARY—Floods sweep Palestine "causing §5,000,000 damage. Nazis riot against Jews in Saar as plebiscite returns territo'-y to Germany. New Polish constitution decreases Jewish representation. Non-Zionist body for Palestine formed in U. S. as Jewish Agency meets. American Jewish Committee opposes World Jewish Congress. Zionist conference in 'Washington, broadens base of Zionist

Federal Bench Lures Homer

ews

By DANIEL L. SCHORR

FOR A YEAR OF

w o r k .

:;.*.••.*

FEBRUARY — H a r r y Inch, South^ African Nazi leader, sentenced;;to six years for perjury. Sixteen1 drowned in three-day Btorm ;ln Palestine. Dr. Hjalmar Echacht urges Nazis to east antiSemitism.' Chancellor Schuschnisg promises not to expel.Jews Iroro Austria. Roosevelt kills pro-

FIVE CALLS H

JOYOUS LIFE

By PHILIP BASKEK Mr: RasMn accompanied his poem with, t h e following ex* planation: " T h e poem deals with five aspects of life^ corresponding to five periods of human a g e—youth,, manhood, middle-age, declining years and old age* It is most appropriate for Rosh Hashonah, which, is the day for contemplating the meaning a n d . significance of life. \ Though not directly dealIng With Rosh. Ha8honan, it is nevertheless, more appropriate than the haclmeyed theme."— THE! EDITOR. I heard a voice in tu6THOT Loirif'and clear, as a song: Life iff a race of rivals, Witn 'gttts for the swing and . the strong. Then' burst, the hour of midday. And I heard a voice from the I': soil: lAte la an uphill Journey On the rutted road of toil. Then.'twilight lapsed-and •whls.f pered! Life is a-tiverthat runs; And' ca-rriea daily debris Tol-the sea-of setting suas. Thenllevenlng muttered Its mes'' sage' / On'ia -wind's wa7ward ware: Life Is a life-long riddle, - - • Sblfed^and -dtesolved in the T h e J c S t h e . Y o i c e of Midnight Lifije t * e : loving voice of a !: friend:

4

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New Year's Edition—THE

JEWISH

PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

of steel upon steel ringing out, the white-garbed figure of Helene Mayer could be seen thrusting and parrying her way to the fencing supremacy of America. In soccer, the outstanding player of the year was Siegfried (Siggy) Wortman, of the New York Brookhattan Professional t e a m . Wortman has played with the AD - s a famous Vienna Hakoah and with US JETTiSK SS33.the equally renowned Bar Kochba T1NS EViKT CF 3JS VEA'X. eleven of Berlin. He came to this country in 1927 and h a s been playing crackerjack ball e v e r since. He is a sure shot with both feet and the owner of a pair of The year that has passed has he most colorful, the gamest, and BASEBALIi BAMBINOS rubber hips that make him the seen a succession of Jewish men .he grandest kid along cauliflowEver since the late John Mc- fastest dribbler in the game toand -women athletes fighting their er row today. Graw "went to the land where they day. •way to the pinnacles of fame and always win ball games with hard Barney Ross, born Barnet Dav- hitting and peppery pitching, the Henry Prusoff, of Seattle, Berchampionships. Indeed, it h a s heen a banner year for the Jews s Rasofsky on New York's teem- search "for a big league Jewish nard Friedman, Ernie Koslan, in sports on every field of honor ng East Side s o m e twenty-five ball player has continued. It was and Marco Hecht are but a few from the gridiron to the baseball ears ago, accomplished what a McGraw who first realized t h e of the great Jewish tennis stars diamond. Jewish athletes h a v e host of Jewish fighters had tried potentialities of a Jewish ball in the country today. Their play has been brilliant throughout the revealed their excellent sports- o do for years—to whip Poison player both as to the financial asyear. But, if we look for continmanship in victory and defeat and rimmy McLarnin, the fighting pects and the popularity o£ the uous success on the tennis courts, have performed brilliantly on the rishman who had dynamite in national pastime. In the l o n g we m u s t turn to the women. fencing strips, the tennis courts, his right hand. Benny Leonard, years of McGraw's managerial There is a trio of Jewish tennis the boxing ring, in the swimming he Jewish idol of r.ll time, Al reign of the Giants he brought aces in America today that has lanes and on the basketball floor. inger, Ruby Goldstein, Sid Ter- Jewish faces to the Polo Grounds been startling the sedate l a w n We, as .Tews, may be proud of the Tis, Sangor, Fields, a n d Glick for momentary fame. Solomon, tennis circles out of its dignity. Tennis Henry Prusoff 'Jewish and international (mixed) fact that we have a champion in had all fallen before the terrific Bentley, Levy a n d Andy Cohen Baroness Maud Blumenthal (forIn addition, Baroness Levi ; collective farms. nslaught of the Vancouver "Wildalmost every lieid of sporting enwere all tried but none succeeded. merly Levi), Millicent Hirsch, i 3,115 White Russian Jews were Millicent Hirsch cat. Barney Ross beat him and deavor. It seems ironical that not only and Bonnie Miller are all entered j Swimming Janice Lifson [ settled in the Crimea and S,07G beat him badly. the greatest Jewish baseball play- in the national championships at j Track ....Milton Sandier | in Biro-Eidjan. SECOXI> 3IACCABIAD There were three fights. Ross, er the gamehas ever seen but one Forest Hills. The Baroness holds j There has also been a v e r y Sybil Koff GREATEST EVENT OF YEAR winning the first a little over a of the outstanding athletes in the both the clay courts championship ; Soccer Siegfried Wortman great change in the so-called JewThe second international Macmajors today should hail f r o m and the Eastern championship. Golf Mrs. Leo Federman ! ish vocations. Instead of followcabiad that was held last Spring ear ago, became the first man McGraw's own bailiwick of t h e Millicent Hirsch, after winning in pugilistic history to hold three Herman Barroa ing traditional Jewish pursuits in Tel Aviv, Palestine, was t h e Eronx. Hank Greenberg, a Jew- every title for girl's tennis in this Football Barney Mintz and becoming tailors, shoemakoutstanding athletic event of the ring titles simultaneously — t h e ish youngster from New York, is country, is n o w a full-fledged Izzy Weinstock ers, capmakers, etc., Jews are year. Five thousand Jewish men ightweight, the junior welterDave Smukler j now employed in the metal indus?nd women, representing thirty- weight a n d the welterweight the foremost Jewish figure to rise senior player. Basketball _ Sam Winegrad I try, machine construction, buildfive countries participated for the crowns. In the seconi fight, some to prominence during t h e year. Janice Lifson, competing f o r Lt. Ben Jacobs | ing, etc. In 1926 there were 1.000 athletic supremacy of the Jewish three months after the first bat- Setting aside his Hebraic, prom- the Women's Swimming Associa- Polo Ales Levinsky i Jewish workers in the building insport world. It was here that the tle, McLarnin regained his title inence for the moment, he h a s tion, is by far the greatest Jew- Hockey Janice Lifson American track a n d field unit on points. But, it remained for boen termed "the most feared hit- ish swimmer in America. Not only Diving Irvink Jaffe covered themselves with glory. the third and last fight to show ter in the American league to- is she an adept in the 100 and Ice Skating (Copyright, 1933. Jewish Telegraphic They swept to a first place in al- the gameness, cockiness and the day" by Bucky Harris, veteran 200 meter sprint events but also Agency, Inc.) most every event on the program fighting heart that Barney Ross player and manager. holds the A. A. U. diving chamGreenberg, the twenty-two year pionships from the l o w spring Their point total secured for.them possesses. the track and field championship Ross broke his right hand in old "veteran" has been handling board. H e r performances as a of the Maccabi. It was the sec- the sixth round. His managers, the first sack for the Detroit Tig- member of the U. S. Maccabi team ond time that the American ath- Art Pian and Sammy Winch were ers like an old-timer and his hit- In Palestine last year were unletes had wrested this crown from ready to toss the towel into the j ting has been the prop of the equalled. their contintental brethren. It ring. Barney wouldn't let them. Cochrane nine in the flag race was a superb victory. The swim- He kept on fighting. Because of this year. Hank has been powder- THE TEAR IN SPORTS— mers, boxers and wrestlers were his broken hand he lost the sev- ing and hammering the ball for SU3IMARY lint far behind with their equally enth, eighth, and ninth rounds to singles, doubles, a n d triples on In the past year Jews in sports amazing performances. A g a i n the Vancouver Irishman. From nearly every trip to the plate. He have created records in every field Reconstruction America was second in the fina thec on Ross proved his ability. leads the two circuits in the num- of sporting endeavor. The names Vocational Jewish Population scoring among thirty-five nations He hit McLarnin time and again. ber of four-baggers clouted in of the members of t h e second Stressed Second by only five points. To He gave the dapper dan f r o m this season and seems to be well American Maccabi team will enthese sixteen members of t h e Erin a boxing' lesson that the lat- on his way to a new home run dure so long as people talk of Moscow—T h e changes which American Maccabiad team—espe- ter •will never forget. Barney won record. stirring sporting events. Barney cially to Jules Finklestein,. Janic that f'ght and won handsomely. Hank Greenberg earned the re- Ross has secured for himself a have taken place in the Jewish towns of White Russia receive a Lifson, Sybil Koff, Martin Feiden Bob Olin, the lightheavyweight spect of the nation last season permanent niche in the hall of and Lillian Copeland—is due th champion, beat Slapsie Maxie Ro- when he refused to play ball for boxing immortals. Hank Green- great deal of attention in the Socongratulations and t h e laure berg, only a youngster, is already viet Press in connection with the senbloom for the title. Although the Tigers on Yom Kippur. •wreaths that go with winnin one of the greatest ball players celebration of the fifteenth anniHarry Danning, Buddy Meyers, B o b isn't nearly as colorful a teams. i~. the country today. Helene May- versary since White Russia bePhil Weintraub, Ralph TVinegarfighter as Barney, he has t h e er stands supreme on the strips— came one of the constituents of ner, Ivil Goodman, Freddie Singstuff. Jewish boxing fans c a n JEWISH RING PERFORton, and Moe Berg are outstand- a national and international cham- the Union of Soviet Republics, feel mighty proud of Bob. Particular attention is given to MANCES OUTSTANDING ing names in major league parks pion. Davey Day, Art Lasky and Abe these days. The fact that there the vocational reconstruction of Despite the fact that three Jew In football, golf, ica hockey, ish boxers held five pugilisti Feldman still have to win their are at least ten Jewish ball play- ice skating, basketball, and water the Jewish population. spurs. However, they have shown ers with the big leagues this year The number of Jewish workers crowns last year and hold b u polo, sports which we haven't the sufficient ability in the past year is a record in itself. in the guild industries has more three this year, Jewish sport en 1 space to write about, a Jewish thusiasts have the right to boas to number Jthem among the champion was created. The names than' doubled in the last ten years. ~ • .. - FENCING, SOCCER, of the magnificent boxing-recor ners. of these champions and the names I In 3 026. according to the census, created by Barney Ross, Bob Olin • The fall of the ; mighty clown TENNIS, EWEIMING of the athletes mentioned in this there were in White Russia 14,No matter what'the sport is we Davey Day, Art J_.asky and Ab from Livermbre, Maxie~Baer, "was sports review will be headliners 400 Jewish workers in industry; Feldman, in t h e resined arena "considered • the greatest boxing are sure to discover not only Jew- throughout the coming year. They in 1934 there were 31,500, not Their victories and their fights t upset of the year. In a dull, leth- ish athletes but a ranking Jewish will all play the game and play counting 7,000 Jewish workers in reach the top are studded "Wit' argic and absolutely pathetic bat- star. it well—for the sake of the Jew- the building industry and 2,000 tle, the great Baer: literally landthrills, action, and color. Helene Mayer, a German Jew- ish ideal of sportsmanship, fair working in the machine tractor Barney Ross rules the welter ed his heavyweight crown to Jim- ess, now a student at Scripps Col- play, and loyalty to the Jewish stations in the Soviet farms, roalrj ing a total of over 40,000 Jewish •weight roost. He still holds the my Braddock. It was a far cry lege, California, holds both the race, workers employed in industry. Aljunior welterweight title and is from the night when Baer, a American outdoor a n d indoor together, 3,S7G Jewish workers HONOR ROLL OP JEV/S IN one of the two retired undefeat snarling, crouching and fighting fencing titles. By h e r splendid were settled by the Ozet in the SPORTS ed lightweight champions of tin fool, became the first Jew in re- performances on the strips this Barney Ross large industrial enterprises of the world. Benny Leonard is the oth cent years to hold t h e heavy- tall, blue-eyed slim girl, has cut Eoxing Bob Olin Union. Between 1924 and 1934, er man. Barney is one of - th< weight title. Perhaps Max will be down all opponents -who stood beHank Greenberg 10,000 Jewish families, about 50,most popular fighters in the rin on top again next year. Nobody fore her. In scenes reminiscent Baseball of old Heidelberg, with the clang Fencing Helene Mayer '000 souls, were settled in t h e game today. In all events he is knows but Max.

Five years ago there were in White Russia, 17,000 Jewish cooperative artisans; in 1835 t h e number was 55,PCI.

Warsaw Federation Appeals to

ew s

By MORRIS WEINER

tii^^r

r.

MANY CHANGES TAKE PUCE 1 WHITE RUSSIA

dustry, in 19 34 the number had increased to 7,000. In 1S27 the Jewish workers in the tailoring industry constituted P2 per cent of the total number of workers, in IPS i they were only 46 recent. There hare also been big increases in the number of Jewish workers employed in industries where Jews were practically unknown previously, for ins-tanee, in the electrical industry, in the chemical industry, in the textile industry and in the food products industry.

World

Warsaw <JTA)—The Central Committee of the Federation for Combating Jewish persecution it?, Germany issued a manifesto in Polish, French, English and Yiddish "to the conscience of t h e world" declaring;' that t h e Nazi propaganda o£ racial hptred IR B menace to world pepoe because the Nazis are directing their propaganda not only against Jews but ngainst r.ll those who do not believe in Nazi barbarism. "We appeal to the conscience of the world," the manifesto said, "against the degradation of the Jewish population of Germany and for assistance in the etru£,£le to protect the Jews ngatnst th? barbaric treatment of the Nazis, which iP E shame, to civilization."

LEIPZIG TRADE FAIR RUtMD BY BOYCOTT Berlin <'WXS">—The closing of the annual Leipzig fall trade fair has again revealed that the boycott h a s made this once worldfamous mart a complete failure. Even the Nazi press pclmit* iha.t the number of buyers from abroad was disappointingly Ptnall. The lair's records show t h n t this year's business was 3 5 percent less than in lfl<!4.

ii-.K L i

Nothing can fate the place of a lady's lipstick.When it's missing, something is going to fee missing in her make-up!

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This NEW YEAR and Every Year

Peter u

manes

When the coffee you use begins to turn up with' in Savor, it's because cl variation. in the blend, roast, grind or pack, and even special care in making the coffee will not make up the difference. The thing to do is change to Hills Bros. Coffee. It is a never-changing BLEND of the finest coffees grown. This blend is roasted by an exclusive process— CONTROLLED BOOSTING—that insures • uniform flavor in every pound. This rich, matchless flavor is completely protected by Hills Bros.* PUCK, find the GHMB of Bros. Coffee gives perfect results in any coffee-making utensil.

Copyright 1&5 Hffli Bros.


New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

PORTRAIT OF A CIVILIZED MAN

cision encouraged the dealers toi continue their defianco of the rab-j bis. The latter were by no means j of one mind on the question either. At least two rabbis have already been excommunicated f o r questioning this kashruth enforcement policy and many others are opening at war with the Kashruth Association. Marvin Lowenthal, n o t e d those qualities which he delinThe issue was finally brought to a head last June when a group traveler, historian and essayist, eates so sympathetically in the sixteenth century French essayof poultry dealers tried to obtain has now written a s t u d y of an injunction to restrain t h e Michel de Montaigne, some- ist. A person in whom mildness Kashruth Association from adver- times called the most civilized and charm dominate, Lowenthal tising, publishing, or circulariz- Frenchman, which brings him views life daintily, so to speak. ing in any statement that t h e into the front rank of contem- He has traveled far an<*. s e e n poultry dealers were violating the porary biographers. Mr. Mon- much, particularly of the worlds rabbinical laws of kashruth. The tor's review of this book is a that once were a n d hare since injunction plea directly challeng- comment on the author as well perished. Years ago, when Lowed the Kashruth Association's as the sixteenth-century sub- enthal was writing under the pseudonym of II. Ben Shahar for right to force kosher poultry ject.—THE EDITOR. the Menorah Journal, his travel dealers to permit Association-apdiaries exposed as much of his pointed agents (there are 240 suWhether the "civilized" person own personality as of the people pervisors and 190 rabbis engaged daily in weeding out the kosher is one who really advances civili- and scenes lie described in h i s from the non-kosher chickens) to zation is a question that is un- wanderings. Words, as employed affix metal leg bands to f o w l solved by a study of the person- by Lowenthal, are never instruslaughtered accordins to the laws ality of Michel de Montaigne, ments to compel belief but deliof kashruth. It w a s contended called for advertising purposes cate winds to soothe the spirit. that the motive of the leg band "the first civilized European." To So that whatever he writes is dissystem was mercenary and not re- be "civilized" is to be urbane, tinguished by felicity and gentleligious. The kashruth enforce- tolerant, skeptical and yet con- ness. ment group won a temporary vic- form to the patterns of conduct This background is essential to tory when Justice Peter Schmuck as they are determined by the soa s s a y "The Autogiography of ciety of the day. Montaigne measlefused to grant the injunction on the ground that the case was too ured up to each of these stand- Montaigne" (Houghton, Mifflin important to be decided by affi- ards. Marvin Lowenthal contends Co.). in which the latter ostendavits. Ignoring the plaintiff's that despite his objectivity a n d sibly writes his own life. B u t charges that the Kashruth Asso- his refusal to become violent Lowenthal has excised so freely ciation was actuated by mercen- about either words or actions, from the Montaigne writings, has ary motives a n d conceding that Montaigne did far more to solve altered previous translations so the Orthodox rabbinate is a prop- the • problems of his time than radically, has made arrangements er authority to determine the any of the princes or kings who of topics so unrelated to the original that one can credit the book laws of kashruth and to provide bore swords and won wars. to Lowenthal even though the for their observance, Judge There are few persons who Schmuck ordered the case to trial could more appropriately Inter- spirit and the outline of the conin September. And there the mat- pret Montaigne than Marvin Low- tents are those of Michel de Montaigne. It is, in every sense, as ter rests for the time being. enthal. His own character is, in much nn expression of the permany respects, a compound of sonality of the contemporary auIt would- seem, however, that thor as of the •writer of centuries since Orthodox Jewry regards kashruth as a major force in Jew- weed out the racketeers from the ago. As a revelation of self, there ish life, it ought to take some ranks of the shochtim. Thcr^ are drastic action to deal with its en- many people who see no need for a r e few if any autobiographies forcement without resorting to a shochtim's union but if one is which compare -with the utter the courts. A beginning could be to function it ought not to be j frankness and intellectual serenmade by eliminating from t h e dominated by gunmen and thugs. • ity of the soldier-mayor-diplomat ranks of the Orthodox rabbinate The shochtim's union ought to be j whom the world remembers only men who support kashruth only brought under the firm control | as an essayist. Montaigne •was in for what they can get out of it. of the rabbinate. Pour years ago i the midst o£ war, being driven The rabbis must clean their own the shochtim's union in Chicago j about, imprisoned and dispossesshouse before they can hope to was under racketeers' control, but I ed with the least of the victims. bring t h e poultry dealers to when the Orthodox rabbinate de- I He was alarmed by the ruins that terms. If the dealers can be cided to clean house the racket- | lay in the wake of t h e violent shown that the kashruth enforce- eers were quickly gotten rid of | fanaticism cf the Catholic-Proment agencies are sincere, that and the poultry industry and | testant struggle. He had first they are motivated only by a de- kashruth enforcement were t h e i hand knowledge of the hrutishsire to prevent the kosher poul- gainers. It also is plain that if jness of pop-alace and kings. And try-buying public from being rob- racketeering is eliminated from | yet he could separate these facts bed and deceived and that they the kashruth enforcement phase from his ultimate hopss for civare determined to prevent a car- of the industry it will be a major ilization. A devout Catholic, hs dinal principle of Judaism from step toward wiping our whole- | was nevertheless responsible, acbeing made a laughing stock and some methods from all phases of j cording to Lowenthal, for the a mockery by racketeers and gun- an industry which has done so | Edict of Xantes which finally men, they will be r-.ady to co-op- m u c h to embarrass American ! brought the first prospects of erate. Under such conditions the Jewry. The poultry situation prei peace in the Catholic-Protestant most recalcitrant dealers would sents a challange to the Orthodox I war. Enjoying Insty ribaldry, he rabbinate and to Orthodox Jewbe brought to book by an aroused. nevertheless maintained a disJewish public opinion. Orthodox ry which they dare not ignore. creet distance in his marital reJewry ought also take steps to (Copyright, 1933. by Seven Arts lations. Altogether, he was a perFeature Syndicate)

By HENRY MONTOR

By BERNARD POSTAL Is the Kashrath "business" a racket? This question is uppermost In the mind of every unprejudiced; Jew, orthodox or reform, : interested in the war waged around Kashruth. Bead this expose and you will understand the various aspects of the strange game played by business and "religions" racketeers.—THE EDITOR.

In A p r IL 1934, President Roosevelt signed a code of fair, competition for the live poultry industry, of the New York Metropolitan area which differed from all other codes in that it contained provisions designed to eliminate the racketeering which has cost many lives and untold millions of dollars. Under t h e code any member of the live poultry Industry who, committed acts of violence, coercion, extortion or intimidation was guilty of a violation of the N. R. A. In an attempt to deal a death blow to one of gangland's most profitable rackets, the code also outlawed payment of money as a result of intimation, injury to personal property or threat in injury, prohibited payment or collection of money to obtain exceptions, from union rules and forbade trade rebates, commercial bribery, false advertising and destructive price-cutting. The responsible members of the poultry trade were convinced that the code would prove effective in pruging the industry of its gangster dominance.

Is Kashruth enforcement in the poultry Industry a racket? Who is responsible for the unceasing •war in the kosher poultry trade? Do Jewish housewives who gladly pay a premium for kosher fowl really get what t h e y pay for? These are some of the questions which will be inevitably raised early in the fall in the New York State Supreme Court when t h e l i v e poultry Industry, acting through the S. S. & B. Live Poultry Association, brings suit to test the right of the Kashruth Association of Greater'New York to compel live poultry dealers to affix metal leg bands to fowl slaughtered in accordance with Orthodox ritual. Because t h e entire A year later, however, and just poultry industry is virtually a a-month before- the -United States 1 Jewish monopoly—the handlers, Supreme Court overthrew the commission men, market owners NRA (and the .poultry code with and slaughter house operators are it) in a test case growing out of almost all Jews—the answers to an appeal by kosher poultry dealthese questions are of paramount ers who were defying the Poultry importance. Code Authority, Markets CommisWhen Jewish, housewives com- sioner Morgan reported that the plain of the high, cost of chicken industry was again in the hands they are merely giving expression of racketeers, that monopolies to one of the many criticisms that virtually legalized by t h e - N R A has been leveled against that code were mulcting the public of most chaotic of all racket-infested millions of dollars and that, corindustries—the kosher live poul- rupt leaders of the shochtim's try industry. The first violence union were making a mockery of growing out of business rackets the laws of kashruth. So little in this country rocked the kosher had the code altered conditions poultry trade in 1914 when Bar- that Police- Commissioner Valennett Baff, king of the independ- tine urged merchants to slug racent poultry dealers, was murder- keteers and promised to help honed because he defied the N e w . est poultry dealers who were beYork Live Poultry Dealers Asso- ing terrorized. ciation. Since then t h e kosher This already/complex industrial live poultry business in New York, situation was further complicated and to a lesser extent in other by the perennial'struggle between cities with large Jewish popula- the Orthodox rabbinate and the tions, has become a happy hunt- harassed poultry dealers over the ing ground for racketeers. For question of kashruth. The kashnearly a generation, this $100,- ruth war became so bitter In the 000,000 industry has been suffer- summer of 1934 that Mayor La ing from every conceivable form Guafdia intervened and appointed of violence, intimidation and co- Judge Otto Rosalsky a3 a neutral ercion. Public and private at- mediator. The latter drew up a tempts to rid it of racketeering plan providing for rabbinical suhave failed and efforts by t h e Orthodox rabbinate to enforce the laws of kashruth. upon it h a v e merely added to its woes. What a lucrative field this industry is for the racketeers who have been preying on it ia. indicated by a few pertinen*. figures. The 2,500,000 Jews in New York City, who buy about 90 percent of all the live poultry consumed in the Metropolitan area, have an annual poultry bill of $50,000,000. They consume 216,000,000 pounds of poultry yearly; a per capita consumption of about a poun'd and:a half per week. To obtain poultry slaughtered in accordance with the laws of kashruth Jewish housewives- pay eight cents per pound more than their Gentile neighbors. The schochtim, who are organized in Poultry Shochtim Union 440, an affiliate of the American Federation of Labor, and certified and supervised by the Kashruth Association, a quasi-official body of Orthodox rabbis and laymen, g e t $60 a week, receiving one-half cent per pound killed.

When the tosher poultry racket first developed it was limited only ;to. matters affecting prices and distribution. Today it covers the actual process of slaughtering and the enforcement of kashruth as,1 well. William Fellowes Morgan, Jr., New York commissioner of markets, recently estimated that racketeering costs the industry $16,000,000 a year in N e w York alone. This figure is based on the following facts: trucking, coop and feed monopolies, controlled by underworld characters, rent coops that cost ?2 for $1 a day, sell feed to poultereers at fifty cents a bag above the open market price, a n d exact tribute from poultry buyers by forcing them to pay trucking charges, although the buyers haul 80 percent of the poultry received at the terminals themselves. These-levies alone add three cents per pound to the retail price of poultry. If to these are added the sums' extorted by racketeers in ' the schochtim'a union, dealers' organizations a n d unscrupulous rabbis or swindlers posing a3 rabbis one begins to appreciate the burden that has been saddled on the industry, which passes it along to the consumer in the form of higher prices. The chief figurea In this racket are Charles Herbert, until recently business agent of t h e Shochtim's- Union, and his brother, Tootsie, delegate of the .Chauffeurs' Teamsters, Stablemens' and Helpers' Union, Local 16?. Both Herberts a r e charged with responsibility f o r the intimidation, arson, bombings, espionage and murders f r o m which the poultry industry h a s suffered.

pervision of kashruth in the poultry markets. This supervision was to be financed by a surcharge of half a cent a pound to be added to the retail price of poultry. A system was set up whereby metal leg bands, or plombas, were to be put on every piece of kosher poultry to distinguish it from non-kosher fowl. These bands, which cost the Kashruth Association, administrator of the system, 51.45 a thousand, were sold to the dealers for $10 a. thousand. A rabbinical advisory committee, named by Aldermanic President Bernard S. Deutsch, was named to control the work. This truce, to which the rabbis, shochtim and dealers were parties, was of short endurance. By November the poultry dealers were-beginning to defy the rabbis, claiming that to comply with the latter's demands would force the price of kosher poultry up to a point where most of the dealers would be driven out of business. The rabbis retorted by proclaiming an issue, or religious ban, forbidding all Orthodox Jews to use poultry unless it bore the kosher leg band. Although, a. rival organization, the Central Council of Orthodox Rabbis, declared the ban null and void, most of the dealers finally gave in when they found the force of public opinion too strong to withstand. But the triumph of the rabbis was short-lived. Shortly after the issue was invoked a number of rabbis seceded from the Kashruth Association and not only challenged its authority but issued leg bands of their own. The shochtim, whose activities on the religious side are subject to rabbinical direction, became alarmed because many of them feared t h a t the dealers who were fighting the Kashruth Association would break their contracts with the Shochtim's Union if the slaughterers obeyed the rabbinical dictum not to slaughter in markets operated by the defiant dealers. To complicate matters even more, t h e Northeastern State Agricultural Conference, an organization of farmers a n d poultry raisers, branded the l e g band system a racket and pledged itself to oppose it to the bitter end. The collapse o( the poultry code following the Supreme Court's NRA de-

son of irreconcilable contradic- their own dogmas as he was o£ tions. But the essential part of his, only by communicating .to him, which enabled him to view others his own feeling for t li e life without hypocrisy, remained sacredncss of life, could he hope unaffected by t h e mutations in to make substantial deconcy rather than will-of-the-wisp truth prethe world about him. In many respects, there •was a vail. To make decency prevail—• similarity between Montaigne and that is what is nier.nt by tolerErasmus, who died the year the. ance." But it would be unfair both former was born. Both of them lived in periods of.grave internal to Montaigne and to Lowenthal and external stress. Erasmus, too, to premit the impression to exist never broke -with the • Catholic that this "Autobiography" ip an Church even though lie sympa- csccy in philosophy or that it is thized with the fundamental pur- clouded in ruminations as to the poses of Martin Luther. But i origin and end of man. In fact, Erasmus never entered personally jit is the most human book of into the life of hie day. He never j which tho average reader could saw battle on tho field or exper- | conceive. It has the tender reo~-ienced the passions and the bru- : lections of childhood, the dcllphttalities of the average man. He ; ful rcminiscer.es of uninhibited vras in every respect the man of ; love, the amused but penetrating the study. Montaigne was that— 'comments on education, religion. but something more. If Erasmus j friendship, medicine, athletics and could be charged -with moral cow- : the host of other trifles that are ardice, •with unwillingness to rank • part cf tho everyday life of every himself on either side in a cru- • man. He hr.s no hesitancy in uncial controversy, the same indict- i veiling his failings any more than ment could be leveled against j he has ccnvcni.icnc.l modesty in Montaigne, except that he never ! revealing the difference in his shirked physical danger and per- ; attitudes toward mistress and sonal friction. i wife. Particularly the weak, in Referring to the fact that the ; which category most of us find mother of Montaigne was a Jew- : or.rsc.lv;:.-. whether it be weakness ess, member of a family of refu- ; of will or achievement, will find gees from Spain who embraced I renewal in Montaigne's contentProtestanism in France, Lowen- ment with what life has given. thal dismisses t h e speculation ! The books that Lowenthal has that the essayist's ancestry may • previously published were merehave been responsible for "his ly introductory. His "Autobiorestlessness, sensitivity to sugges- graphy of Montaigne" is not. only tion, wariness, and even his tol- a mr.jcr achievement for himself erance and skepticism." Lowen- but in contemporary writing. The thal is too thoroughly steeped in : fluidity of his prose, the intellithe traditions of France, which gence cf his outlook, the scholarproduced many like Montaigne ship that is embedded deep in the even if not of his total statute, to simple phrases constitute badges be swayed assumptions which of authorship such as few other normally have their origin in biographers can exhibit. Through chauvinism. Marvin Lowenthal's artistry a In the mind of Lowenthal, the great man becomes resurrected. (Copyviubi. 1!)"". by Reven Arts autobiography of Montaigne is of feature (Syndicate) importance as well as of interest not merely because it is a revelation of self but because it be- MASONS PLAN WORLD comes a mirror for the reader. CENTER Iff PALESTINE Those who absorb the good, humor, the disinterestedness and t h e high purpose cf Montaigns i Jerusalem (YVNS-ralcor Agenwill be less likely to perpetuate cy)—A world center for the Masthe evils and the injustices which , onic movement is to be erected, in Montaigne saw all about him and Jerusalem, it was announced here which exist in new guises today. I IT the Grand Lodge of Free Mns• onn of Palestine. Montaigne himself believed the | The Lodge has acquired SO "civilized" man. He felt that if : dunams of Ir.nd on Mount Scopus each individual conducted him- land an additional 2,000 dunsms self •with decency, the world near the colony of Petach Tikvah. would right r.11 wrongs. He ab- i These arc to be parcelled out horred violence of all kinds, ': among the Palestine members, whether invoked in the political , each to bo entitled to obtain lots struggle between parties or in the | of from three to ten dunams. attempt of the mass to throw off I The Grar.cl Lodge also nnnouncthe yoke of oppressive govern- \ ed tt.at a fund has been, eatabment. He hated revolutions as .: lish_d to grant loans without inwell as civil wars. In that feel- \ terest to members f o r building ing he lias t h e complete sym- homes in Palestine. pathy of Marvin Lo~enthal, who too trusts that "nothing could • The merchants who advertise save society hut the willingness • in the Jewish Press solicit, your cf men to live and let live. Only i business, and merit your patronif others became as doubtful of i age.

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stn-na inn. The whole v,-eeS yon . all your lives. The Ten CommCTdI tell you? <u«">on cm see. go Tunning around rtown saying: niGnts, l o r instant.." lini: to 'Trrrr i;. you don't believe in Gnd, that; "TTell, yes," said the SnplishTh>- drive "vrni lv under t > ' there isn't any God s i ri never man, "we toot them from you ell •SHE KNEW •AnvxTmnnshiv tv* ilaynumii X. Bs.r., contri hutx : iti could have been, and yet, as soon right, but you can't E s.y we've f'his v-sih S i' " I T°urns;iir; LI* fiRFm-ii.fs as t h s Sabbath comes, you Sres? kept them." r is- r r The ;:ha:rni<ui tnu\ Brirxijircl E . Fii.."-. yourself up, go tD synagogue. \ rx-.ur ps ;reain;'T- . Nearly •'•(>' :?•: o u t a xi'C TalmttcTist. but he often quarreled , take your tallith and T>Tay with • XfCTUS v.-'orlterF. Trilj vnlic.it funds. in 10 pot with his "wife. rr.r,t such obvious devotion. Tell me. i An AmericE-n ~WTLS 'boasiins to After one -of their "petty rifts, 'do you Irelieve in God or do you [ his Jsw ish friends ox nis distin- ^Iend.-ei laid BDWE the "IEW in this jrreally fhrptr "He doesn't exist?" guisned ancestry. fashion. ivOseiu.ir.un;: m j *1 certainly helie-ve 2 e doesn't IP "D'yoa know," lie r>aic prouc"1 am the legal head of tiii? Ill Is. . * * « * ! * *•» i " answered Seymour, "hut iy, ""one of ~_ry ancssters signed house. I aia the husband snd the . Levy: YTliy especially? So 1 laiow that I'm Tislif?" the Declaration ol Independence?" RnpoiiiiriiTn: Hit'icr'F bPOTS' alike Jdmea :in nhserving the day,] Oi' inLerast, too, -was the sign:; another "peace speech. \ i—Aimiwx •.!>! ,tD cmiBciousnesB "That's nothing." replied one house, according to the Talmucl. ! ^Moscow whlch "was topped off with a Na- j ing of a netition endorsing the IHISIA^EN am' 1.17 f »>»:• iin "^TttlBr SGrermany Jewish ia of the Jevrs, unperturbed, "one of : I am like .a ins do you undertional Conference i n ^Washington j GiKndruth, Feaeration of Jewish Little Irwin, eight years o l d . 1 ^ ^ signed the T e n Command- stand. Sarah, in y house I am ennfrnntfid ^with a changing f t h e year "56£F5 3ar Amer- in an effort t o assemble "all bailor In Palestine, by 242. of the w a s registered at a fashionable iments. like a king?" you iieard Kit- [ er—settled ii; sir-oyu. Uic "WBB largely n a e of iorces i n Jewish life aesirous nf EnO members of t h e Central Con- non-Jewish school, but was n.ev- | Ssssn "T-es. iny jjiendel." EnstrereL ,.,,a> crr(J irltory, ir list 1 Ii-y««- fi-on' .Tivjconstructively i n the :re-jErence. 3ta"bbi XiDuis 1. •Kewman, ertheless admonished by his par- | anfl xsralnafiim. " Ba::ah soothingly, '"ol course, in HornielcL: v s-'vsri A-tf. j uary to ~uly. it vtu- r«norie(' lin-r eHtablislrment xtf ^Palestine as .a irtTcmptea t o counteract this peti- cnts never t o hide his Jewish i T H E H E S F E "!Ehfi year saw a IbustlB DI OXLT house you are like a king— j A Jew Tvho kept a delicatessen let us BET like the Kiii£ n: En?tion by circulating a second tpetiJewish national .nrsanizatianal .activity. ; store in Paris Tras -visited one dayiantl: -yoc have the title but -cat The increafiefl Interest of Amer-jtion stating that "no one zparty One airy while walking home, — j This- TUTntHv "iraaies Tspnrten | by a •Frenchman, who asked him lean JP wry "was :nlBD aisptayed In ! or group lias a monopoly upon another boy ol the same school I crease nf 11 ~. von-. •• ' i f in ansmbersiUp. -EontfibutianB t o £0 a elcctians t o the 'Zionist Can-Uh*; fulfillment of t h e ideals of HO- ran up to "him and said breath- : vrhy Jews are cleverer than other Jewiah causes :again an uppeople. which took :place .here In ] cial Justice," ana calling for the lessly: "It's because thry e a t hcrJune. 3Qore than XK.DOO .Jews in ! conciliation and co-operation of "See here, are you a ZMoe tha X , A pious ^evr ccxae to a ssail Bignificancfi ID -"3"es," -snapped li-win, takinc iT-inS3'" replied the storekeeper, country hmight Bhekolim, anfl the -rhole yishub. village in Poland, and decided to life iprmu imi imerely disinnrith?;. X.ater Ttabbi 1 organized j off nis coat, "and can light ;voE ! The ^Frenchman v.-as duly im- investigate the conditioii& ni lilt Imt -in rmncy cases alsD r.cre than on.OOO -went t o t h e ipressed, and i a r the nest lex-: Blect their delegates. "This a body of "Group 3 " Zionists ylime.you're ready." E of xrDncxBtB action. r:ond " I don't "rcant tD fight yau/'jciEVK visited the store Tegularly is the liiggest mnniber ever imar- xtre opposed tD the Sistadruth and "T»"hat are the rabbi's circumin-iiics, flu report iMr rr ov. ans-wered t h e other youngster. ' 1 and ate Jierrings. ~tcncGJ;'."' iie aHkeii of, one o> iiie Catholi y '.to Imve "been linaken, shaHefl i o r ^the CongresB BlectionB jihe Zionist 33sscirfivE. r. u Proresunn -want t o talk "with you. I'm Jew- One day he entered the store v ill er B. Mehrew Teachers Strike vani. Ihongii BIDUT in coming to life, this country. Of t h e "F7 ieadars 3Iay 2Z, i.'bOO 2iehrfi-«- j ish, loo." v. ilii n .puzzled and seemingly its"Ah." replied the ^Illacer. "Got"; .American Jmvxy HeEniB ~to be anare ilates t o Trhich America "seas ucre tar iit look on -life face, if uas done gooa to him. He ha? -2B, t h e | teachers -in 3SJe-v<r 5Tork City &e • conECionB ol 'itseH, 3tB ^position in titleQ, t h e Xabarltfis ."!oriir-;>ir-m-- G r r is it," he incraireC ol the Siven him the sense tr> fast every luf iiEv; noni" o; tne Tl°:'"r AZKD American anfl in Jercisii Hile, >md General ZioniBtB SiO, and the 2tliz-1 flare a a one-day Etqppage affect- j ~.!--r-J p o u n d ! ; 1 i"-2(5f> Of'Mi) 1' " • ' n.. iing all t h e He*:rEfr Parochial] A , Jew and an ^Englishman "were deUcrttassen msr.. "that ynr, sell IMondEy ur.c] Thursdry. Othcrv-is^ T, ?.:. and T . TT. K. A. of "the .Tole Tviiicn iit -is caHeS Tipnn • rtt??rii T^L l i a a t i . l i n n r ! «#*• American :Zioni3t nnov^-j schools a n a Talmud Torahs Trith |'.harins an argument about 1'h e ibErrmgs at live franc? eurh -vrher. he would die of liiinsrer." •±0 play. : ~ have hMm ?f«r1 "ZTB of their Tespective races. 11 enn get them down the -•increBsed cmnmnnal untivlty, anfint -rcas "nnnaraa this year "when 1about BO,000 nupihi. >- t h e semi-annual .session of t h e The "walkout, according to t h e "Tour -people," said the Jew. i nt throe?" cbilitT" of m a r y -i5~;b-nr? t r mnre -rciasspread Jewish cultural been taking things from us | "Ha." replied the Jevr. A rich Jevish merchaiit T-thair menihorshir ob1ip.iuinii y, greater arssponEe I D JEW-AoministeitiTfi Committee ol "thE < statement nf its nTganizers, T^aB lor t h e -pirrpoEe ol "was Tielil lor the j hela •|a>i canses, ilifise a r s some iin3irpublic opinion against a t iirfit'.time on American sdil. American •Estirms 1 1 * in "Jfew "York the conditionB -nnasr last ! is again enming into Ite own. sessions "were January 1, 2, and 3, and Tvere jSeljrew teachers in 2veTr iiimitationB nf BDUCB -malss It must labor. i l b l o touch even "Tiriefly attenaea Seville X.asK, Xork Sehretr teatihers ,on "the TmmETOiiB aeTelqpments :in Xiocker, 3>r. OMaurice t e s t e r , .Hr. \: American Jewish lile anrins the'j^aTm, ~Dr. Cyrus Adler, isiorris; Barn on a n average S70.00 j e r ., 3-sceive their 3>ay in drib•past. year. T B "must content anr- Hotheribers, a n a other ZionistJ ana mon-rZioniKt ^nembers. The!!lets, are lorcad t o take lengthy, sierely -vrith s. BtBtnhy meeting -vnicea its Dppnsitian t o ! vacations -without :pay, s a d in a lew of t h e the anrmafion off the TropDsed! general must work under the Erejuflice X.egislative Council on :Palestine, i^worst nossihle eonaitLons. Althoush there al-vrays i s a t h e sates of ^Pai- j Tne stoppage arouseS s. huzz i jneasure of -jieTennial "native" be opened Tviaer loT a larg-i !OT a lew Bays, but the apathy j anti-Jewish jrrejuflicB I n America, ex jBwish immigration I D m e e l i ctf American Jewry to t h e Jewish , It was to "be expentEa that t h e the:nBfid of Jewry Irom Germany-, j eaucation of t h e young -prevailed tremenuonB internal ana foreign Eastern Europe and jother coun-| m 'this case again. jrropaganaa narrifia on T?y t h e and also to alleviate t h e i : s o t a l l l e Conventions JSezi anoTBment in G e r m a n y against ^voria Jewry "wiraia iave shortage nf labor on the coimtry. j l n a a a i t i t m ± D DctoberHaaassahHeia; ini(1 e a n v e n t i n n B y mentionIts effects also in this cntmtry. annual convention in A HoDd Df -pamphlfits, letterB, "WaBhington. T i i s was onarkefl by eu, the lollowini also took place ana Bpeakers, both A-nnrrim,n -j j— the Tiraaacast, on a n International T50—lD£h Annual Conveiianil German origin, ctmtobntea to | t o i a . ^ t : he c e r e n u m i e s . ^ ti0n lar'Xiabar Talestine, at ISfew Amtirica more "Jew-contfinnilig the Isying oX t h e jenrner— Hcious'* in the 3)ast year. . stone of t h e ne"W HZothsehiiarraisefl to -aid BistaaTuth in 1 Attempts -to buiia t h s SaoasHah -Hebrew University 2 D S leans virtually m e t -with ±ailnre. SadaHsan i s aujw aedicating all Internal -strife among Hmall-iry its efforts. On August HI, i t TraE ilfational Council of Jevrish leaasrs ovfir contral nl iparty TT ii TImTTir^ff n ' ~f"nFTT. 4-4 n il"n^g?> nt "togfith— Xork. iunas, tore thB anovameiit aauD- er "Tvith i h e Am&ricun - Jeiiriah Fhy3an. G—iSth Animal Coaier- ! :der and j-enasrea -it impotent. sichinB Conrmlttee, !haa alTeady imerican JeTvisk Commit- ] A t t h e -Eame timE, •"wonlo-Tie araisea $101j,000 lowaroB t l i i s . ±eB 'rrrk, repudiated j a r American Btreichers -haa thsir in "Woria Jewish Con-wings xlippea -wlien they iell :a- nroject, Tiliich will Tre uniaue i n j | ^Q^ loul of t h e law. Tims TtvTilliam the whole Hear 33ast. 9S 8 1 3 B B S WS S 12. July t h e American ZiohiHt j " " - ^ ^ 1&-T7—American Jewish Uuilley Jpelley, "jniiiliBher of ! S m m -m *ss • 3 &S « SW DrsHnization l i e i a .its .its thirty"thirty-; rrm-n-oss meeting in PhUaaelphia, v Q O S S A V' ±o a ! e i s i I t i l U l m u l i l ^convention ; a t -&±-1 rl)anuDnea efforts t o promote s sm -vllle, S. -C, "was . ~-: C i t y.- ssodng.-plane :tamsai-j. W O T i a J e w i s l l congress this ^ear, g E 3 S E E W ff E a a a ay^r* 1 Ir after t h s electianB t o t h e J^aHinnnsa aficision t o iioia demWCgHBgl! " 1 T? i f 1 ? • gf; tS} _( _ Congress, the convBution !n c r a t j c e i e c t i O ns. Hrigii youth. IRaymnna , iiad t o ;give Bsnression t o t h e T&- j 3115V 3 £ S*nai lE'rith 1.4 th Bentenned t o (ana action of 2ioniBts jover -the xesnltE ! rjnmquennial. at "Washington. nays i n t h e i a r rif the electionB, :ana t o t h e attiAnnual TV.iirkbing t h e neace. tuae "wiich rZinhistB rin America j Couvention, .in "Kew, A-p attenrpt -was 3na3e xesolution l o r "first Xnnis T. IVIcFaaiLi time sanctioning aia tD I'alestine. o i a a ±ailHa ol xe-electinn ±D | c i l f f l ^ i h e Souse of JtepresentativES, l o j . ^ . ^ . ^ , -^ tioniil Conferenne a£ Jervish Soorganize n HEW IRepuhlican Tarty cial -Service "Workers, Association •with fhe Blogan "ChriHtianity "inThe convention :±o .nf "Jevrish Center lEsecutives, INaLEteaa itself ^ i t h t h e getting Ixim at Xiake 3?lacia. Borne ses•a rnresiaential canuUdate JH TLBofi. nointea a -committeB ID m a t e a Jaeia jointly. Hsara nroIBnt t h e -wnole matter "was jnst a .sweeping 'changB "TTI :"fhB Tfiorganinosal flor iO^year to .readjust Inrge iasco. iational Htrnctnre of t h e Z- O. 'Z..,Jewish life in .America. ently mating it Tossihle 2ar Attacks "ware in—-Brlfh Bhdlom, 'S Hauncliea against ^Jews to come to active expression A-rt-nTini Convention, at Atlantic 3y rana ;hiaiviaually -as tndls col or "Palestine. 3IarriB -Rothsnbgrg ! Citv. "International Jewish Bankers" In -high goviirnmsnt TioHitums anB -was xfi-filectea irresiaent, anB J u n e 17—3^eaeration of Louis Iiipsky "was chosen Ironor- j e - 5 v B ConvBUtion, aecidea tD as lirain TruBterB. .._' [ (resident. j:iaunch independent arive I D I Hesentment -was -evdlrea^in Ihis: In aaaition t o t h e aisiinguishea ZanOs lor a-eliei of Polish Jews, if rttackB -on International bankers by 3ather Charles 13. -visitorB Irom ahroaa attenBing lounfi necessary. 2Sfh Annual CDUCoughlin ol Detroit, Tef ernea the HeEsions of the ABniinistratiVE -3une -22-J2 -most freauently tD .Jevrish bank- Committee "of She -Jewish Agency "vention Oraer Sons of "Zion at ers. Although Conghlin lirniHBlf, ".here, nther oiotables .affiliated UraBiey "Bra en. home maker Trants .really iresii tesaiL J\ tm ;yoc csn "bny the Zionist -upbuiiaing 1SS5 and a Je-Kish BprikeHniah, Hahhi visitea -American 3Bwry during Issennan, save lireaa ih&t 3s oven iresb zn& ovec Satefl i o 'PTDXT It. Sxist- ask i o r anccs tirnt there Tras n o Intention the j a s t year, among them David Uen-BuriDn, Xahorite leaaer rana! nn t h e ruart ol the ^ a a i o driest t o •lonicnt -race ^rrejuaice, the Tesent- Tpolitical lieaa iof t h e Zionist TExe-1 cutivfi, ana Tlaaimir 3abotinsky, I onent aiB 3iot abate. leaBer nf t h e Hevisionist. Je-sviish in'd -genfiral liberal cirIn "the -Rjibuinical "AV.ocItl A 3iewly—arrivfiB Jewish settler CIES -were greatly shockel t o A gaoB aeal ni controversy was in Tel Aviv -wanteB to see sennein the 3Jatujnal, libHral • yr.oSacts .are ovsn frssh. .lS"oae of" -their aslioions letters IromThaoaor Dreiser, nop- calleB Jorfh :in ;thB T^abbinical Lone :at the Sadassah iosnital. Be' Tflar noveliHt .ana 3)3Bnao-xaaical, -world "when the canvention of t h e jnccasteB a. young man, dad in the Havnr I s lost. 32ipy*re tcrappefl i n ssnitary -packages "to preserve containing t h e most maive anti- liabhinical ^Hsembly ;DI "the Jew-! blue ahirt of the l a b n r I'arty, and rSemitic allegations. iEflorts ol ish Theological Seminary, :meet- ] asked the nearest -way. "their .freslniess. Smart, maasrn liome :nzE.lisi5 "bur aH i h ^ r THutchins ZHapgDDa, to "whom *ihe lug In Hockaway 3?ark on 3Iay X5- j '-"Wen," the young m a m sugOiroposeB ^reforms "in Tabbmical •• gested, "yon -might :raise a shout letters were aaareasea, t o Imve - aiming .-at t h e elimination xSlXxsr the IBrith TrumpeiaoT:anayou lavkery xegmrBmEnls "irom QM3JI. :OJJLIT 'fhs .finest tasle Trotter, ZDreiser Tenounce his TIBWB 3iarnHtual -wia.owhDDa 3qr women !Trill soon get to t h e hospital. 3uf31e. DreiHEr •stubbornly Imsbanas iiesert them xxr ijJQYE ttlre l»ESt ^ssntOated sagar, pure :es±raets safi Jresh jsuBi. meet tained that t h s letters rtD support them. Any change A shaachan came t o a young ~hiR -opinion, ilfhonsh -he in rthe Istw TKras .Qeclarea ^illegal by bank I h e ^j»prD%iil ^nf O S A S "ij&keis. 'OMAII'S csasp, crnndry .-codkles, nnti-3ijvEiBh Intent. Hfl j ATI these cchallengss "fresh, golden 'tans snU oilier "bakeS jirt52ae±s wiE TJB .a Teal tustfi whose ConventiDn^u J i s l B a ^ « , rt . B a m f i t i l t o g m&aisl ^ loT aflertly nrffit'Tjy. t h e Jfiwifih ^ ^ -imfl by the "raxiDUB jErw-fan nrgan- aays later a t -TCaahington, B..«. - : t e a e ^Jth ^ ^ ^ ymxr iEm2y. ;Get tbsm Trum --OMSK, ^TJUT Ualcsr -lisa, •• dzations. The Sight Traos rpressea 3n .July, The Central (Confer-j . . ^ ^ ^ ^ T e p M i h e tm -Every JrmU againBt t h e eiice of American Rabbis met m ; y Q n n g fiiisible. , T ^ l n l a - 7 i r a DB . Theaded mnnKtET ol j Chicago ior ohsir lorty-sisth am-. 1SaPBiimtTn only marry 2nr love." Hn inany CEHEB unter-2alfh conler- •n-rroi icoiivtiufion t o "'^Evaluate TB""Well," said "the Bhaachan, aslorm. .Juaaism" in Refilling "with Ences, ixmnnB, Heminiiiii, a n a nihaio, Tdll -soy, "Erom m w •an, 1 .sin jraius I D l e t G3LS3i 'isik£ tahished, "Bon't y O"u love iifty sr -gathBrlnss, TTTBTE -0x001563, l»e-: +he changes i n Jewish lifs since fhe adoption ol thB *!PittBburgh •tweeu 3ewiHh s r a n p s a n d if or ans." "Tie ^exfcsa 3uitritioii galnsS STOJH Sie 12% isaBs. -ssSO Blatlarm" 3n 3JBBo. maighboiB. "TIEB -American "The Centxal'ConleTHnce^ttract-too, *TTO3 rrmrrniTrmualy -visDrniiB i n cnntEnt .ol iQSLSS -"BBD HressL -win ^ssks -jim s a S ^ 'in jte condemnation nllKazi attanrptB ea a gooa :3sal .-"til attention an', iirst liear of non-Jewish :as -well a s 3n Jewish ["whnsE treign flu in t h e Unitfifl States. -S0II&ES -other •flsiicious isaksSL .gosas -wI ^Ruth, circles Tbecanse JOI -fhs anany asMight Sianlsm sues "which i t Eonsiaerefl, inclufl-1 SEhDOl ±abiE -mm m a k s .your 2inmE .isjipigr. IRlien ^ Q B nisei pies, ing wax, socialization of inBuBtryv i •Zionism Solomon's:" xeaistribution ol -wealth, a n a j country tiuring t h e naKt year. XOHB, ;cakes or cookies, xemEmbsr the name to think again, Hvsnts i n Kasi Germany, .on the lAmericai uarticipation in t h e ]h ns lh p xme i a n d , anil ±he continufia ieaguc ol Nations. | persisted in .her original ua"En-ovrth ni t h e Jevrish 'homBland, Dr. Pelix TLevy of Chicago Trap ,jrvv-u; ixn& ^ ^ teacher then jnrrtiir-rlth a n Influx of -tens -of than-! electea l o the prsaiBency of t h e , n d "T-'h7 s n e "thought ?o. rspliea Huih, "vre santiB til new '.immigrants, on t h e Conference, the -Kecona "Zionist tD | "Secanse," otuer, contribulea t o make Amer- -hDlB that office. I t was the iirst, ^^ t o l d i n l h e ^Blhle that t"h e ican Jewry 'CRalestine conecinus." time that this Conference of re- tjceen ai .Sheba -went to JerasaCm January 2n, Palestine Day lorm rabbis xemovea .its cppcfsi- i train." •WHB Traclaimsa "thnjughout t ' h e tioii to 7iirmism, und though ! country, .us jjn -cnnuBl "Tiaiiontiil it TEf useB t o ' enaarse •Zionism ,XOU IKKVE3 finy TOI "DbHEnraEEB ol t h s ^Zionist fully, i t neverthelesB tulDptea 311 'ISeymDUT,"" said Habhi Isaacs Sinnists nnd :nsutral 'ID -his erring son, ' 1 don't

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

By JEREMIAH T.MAHONEY, A. A. U. President Herewith Is printed the ra- to be held in 1936 if held In Berdio speech of Honorable. Jere- lin. This action was not precipimiah T. Mahoriey, president of tate, but was 'aken after mature the Amateur Athletic Union of deliberation, and the delegates the United; States, in which he present voted that any final actaken presented the case for the with- tion to be subsequently drawal of participation in the would be controlled by future events. German Olyinrics.-—Editor. Nearly two years have passed In 1SSS, there was organized by a group of ambitious and pa- since the.adoption of this resolutriotic young Americans, the tion and I regret to say that irAmateur Athletic Union of the refutable proof seams' to.....exist United States, of whic*'. at the that the discriminations against present time I nave the honor of Jewish athletes in Germany have being president. In the group of been continued in sucjh a manner these far-sighted and noble young as to justify a definite and posimen. who were to do such wonder- tive decision by America that she ful wort in making America ath- will not participate in the Olymletic, James E. Sullivan was the pic games in Berlin, jnless condimost outstanding figure and up to tions are radically changed and his death he probably did more at once. It is. a cardinal principle of true than anybody else for the physical development and athletic im- and loyal Americanism that all provement of young America. people should be permitted to TLrough the years, due to his ath- worship God as they see fit, and letic leadership, Americi has be- that no particular race, creed or come more and more athletic- color shall ever be a necessary for public honors, or minded, and led by the Amateur qualification f Athletic Union with the coopera- or the right to represent Amerition of all the other sports-gov- ca athletically or otherwise. erning bodies in America, AmeriIt is not denied that the Hitler ca has become so great athletical- regime has cruelly persecuted the ly that-iii all the Olympic games Jews, banished from Germany already held every four years in many of them most cultured and the various parts of the world. most respectable and responsible; America has -;always been su- has placed many others in conpreme. centration camps, and has made The main purpose of the Olym-r it almost imposs'lle for the Jews pic games is "to create a closer, still remaining in Germany to sympathetic relationship among even exist -without fear.that any the nations of the world, to pro- moment they may be brutally asmote brotherly love,-, and through saulted, sent to prison or unjustly athletic intercourse, to cause the punished in other ways. That there has been discriminnations -of the world the better to understanoTranfl to know one ation against the Jews with respect to the competition in the another. • " ," Since the first Olympiad, there- Olympic games, has been proven fore, the original purpose of these beyond a shadow of a doubt. Atinternational meetings, • has been tempt is made to explain this by maintained and incalculable bene- saying that those who wish to try fits have resulted to the civilized for the German team, are eligible world; through the institution, onlj when they belong to a Nazi the continuance and the perpetua- Athletic organization. In the next tion of the Olympic games. Al- breath it is conceded that Jews though in the athletic events that are rot eligible for Nazi athletic take place during an Olympiad, organizations. In other words, all contests are most seriously therefore, due to unfair rulings fought, the battles for supremacy and discrimination, it is imposhave been friendly and the con- sible for any Jew to qualify for testants have grown to love and the Olympic games and no Jew respect more and more their in- yet been given the chanec to qualify. Germany, therefore, has not ternational rivals. Three years ago the: Interna- kept her pledges to the international " Olympic Federation, • acting tional federation. persuant to its rules and regulations, selected Berlin as the site for the Olympic in 1936. All of the nations interested and constituting in part, the international federation, and that includes America, were anxious to go to Berlin because it had been the intention of the international federation long ago to have held the games in Germany, but .such decision had been interrupted by the breaking out of the "World War. During the last several years, however, unfortunately conditions have developed in Germany which have caused many members of the International federation to pause and to ponder and to con. sider whether or not it would be better for civilization and for humanity and for international re.lationships, to hold the games in some place other than Berlin. The difficulty is not due to any feeling .against Germany as a country, nor against the Germans as a people. We all respect Germany for what she has been and for what she is; for her accomplishments and her aspirations; and we sympathize with her because of her misfortunes and her sufferings. The German people are a loving and noble race and Americans admire and love the Germans. Unfortunately, however, due to the combination of circumstances which put the Nazi party in. control, there is a class governing, ruling and dominating Germany at the present time, that apparently does not understand tho naturally altruistic rules governing clean sport, and for some time in competative athletics and other relationships the divine teachings that you should love and aid your brother and you should do unto others as you would wish others to do unto you, have been deliberately ignored. V : Those ruling Germe^y to satisfy their inordinate ambition to absolutely dominate everything and everybody In Germany, and trthrottle all independent thought andj action, long ago started inexplicable prosecution and persecution; inflicted so much indescribable horror upon cultured and patriotic Germans, born in Germany, ;and in such cruel and merciless ways, that the whole civilized world stood and stands aghast. '" ' As early as December, 1933, the Amateur Athletic Union in annual convention assembled, oassed a resolution to the effect that if evidence were established against the Nazi government of discrimination.against the Jews in connestion with the Olympic games, that it was the sense of the A. A. U- that America should aot participate,^ the--Olympiad

:

eevn if in modified ways, toward the Catholics, the Protestants, the Masons, organized labor and those other divisions of the German people who still like to feel that although citizens of Germany, they are not sarfs of any temporary ruling class, "^he banishment of nuns and pries!" and the imprisonment of many of them, the attempt by Hitler to set up a God of his own, for those of protestant faith, and to direct the teaching and the preaching in the Catholic Church, has aroused the fighting spirt of all who believe religion should be kept out of politics, and in t v . hands of those who know and understand the real and only divine Master.

Bertaux' panorama provides an wanger, and Joseph Roth. B u t unexcelled opportunity to study the sources on which they were the place of Jews in that litera- fed were not necessarily Jewish ture. For he has been conscious in origin. Doblin's novels derive of the Jewish ferment in the Ger- their strength from both the early man development. Being a critic ! Hauptmann and Nietzsche. Wedeand not a pseudo-ethnologist, he j kind, Richard Dehmel, Stefan has been content merely to assay George had an influence u p o n its value in relation to the whole their Jewish country men. There of German development. As lie was never any thought in t h e says, "Whatever may have been minds of either t h e Jewish or the reaction of the Germans to Christian writers—with t. h c ext h e introduction of this Jewish ception of the negligible nonetitheir pcstible ascendancy m a-d e element—shock to mental struc- t;os who were embittered by their him &rrJJe gently. ture, shock to race sensibilities, own incapacity—that they were But the "German Literature" defense reaction against foreign expressing a Jewish or Christian which he describes is as dead and ideas—there is no doubt that the philosophy. They saw themselves buried—Insofar as German itself introduction of Jewish vigor into in terms of a harmonious Geris concerned—as the ancient phil- German thinking w a s o£ excep-i many. osophers of Greek and Rome. tional importance." Bertaux' book has more than With the exception of HauptTheir influence was important historical value. As a piece of mann, who has won the benedic- not merely in t h e writing of j critical writing, it is unparalleled tion of the Nazis, not a single im- books, but in the patronage given i ' n this: field- T I i e pungency of its portant novelist, critic, essayist or to all fields of German culture. ! Judgments, the vigorous raciness dramatist who is to be found in The great magazines of Germany, of its style, its powers of synBertaux' collection has room in ] in which the men of letters cry- t l a e s i s J t } l e high standard of its their ideas and received the Germany of today. * i critical decisions gave it a definitive v a h l e i n tlle riptory of GerFew modern literatures exper- taeir encouragement—owed much i ienced excruciating birth pangs to Jewisli editors and publishers. Im a n literature. Within a few parBertaux can. with cornsimilar to Germany's. For while Trey hastened immeasurably the ; agraphs lete convincingness, explain a Germany was trying to attain in- maturity of German culture. I t i s | P tellectual and spiritual unity, it possibJe of course, to say that the i reputation or dismiss it. But his had also to be concerned w i t h German mass mind could not keep finalities are not personal but political unity. The t w o objec- pace with the rapidity of that de- grounded in an all-embracing cultural insight into the life of Gertives were often confused by writ- velopment. ers, who felt that their first duty Hugo von Hoffmansthal, Rain- | m a n y - , H i s b o o k i s ' h l e v e ! T se , nse 7 was to a unified nation and not er Maria Rilke, Jakob Wasser- | a worthy monument to the ghost merely to a cultural harmony. I man, Walter Rathenau, Maxim- j o f a g r e a t I l t e r a t u r e German literature from the end ; man Harden—all dead—were the ' of the France-Prussian W a r to representatives of different and the days of Hitler produced much vet similar currents in German that was self-satisfied and patri- literature. Their honesty of purotic in the dullest terms, but its pose, their sincere anxiety to cregreat representatives were con-1 ate within Germany and to attain j cfrnpd with more elemental pur-j unity with the German spirit was i In the history of the early Heposes than animated the writers characteristic of all their work, brews, we read of gifts that inof France and England, for ex-1 some thought to achieve their ample. The very political uncer-1 purpose through channels of mys- cluded £00 loaves of bread "Give us bread that we may live." has taint d confusion fi iimposed d | tainty a n d a a ,Ld!. .!!!™; of _<itsober ^!™_Ie_realism. -°??-_On But! i h ? b e e n h e a r d d o w n through the heavier obligations upon German I solid pillars letters. Within the short period j their influence on Germanv and a g e s of famine stricken people. the symof sixty years, Germany created a on contemporary literature as a j Bread in many lands is b o I of h e a r t h a n d hospjtaljty. literature which virtually domin- whole was equally decisive. j I n t b e p r o g r e s s o f na£ions, aled tlie European literary world. Bertaux deals with German lit-! bread has been a symbol of civIts attachment to the soil, and its erature in terms of language and ilization. An abundant supply of simultaneous expression of a cos0, BO that bread has meant a well nourishmopolitan spirit represented the j many of the Austrian and Czech ed, satisfied people, the bulwark national devotion and the humanitaiir.n outlook of tha literature. writers are brought within h i s ' against revolt. Bread, century afscope. He does not by any means, I ter century, has been the staff of Today the representatives of that however, attempt to deal • w i t h I life because it is a great energy literature are dead, silenced or these national cultures as such. It! food. scattered on the globe trying to The largest task of the diet is create a new outlook and a new is impossible, however, to miss rhe significance of the fact that to provide endurance energy— source of spiritual sustenance. aside from Thomas and Heinrich energy to promote and enhance John J. Trounstine, who has Ma'in and several others of lesser vitality for life's activities. Bread, done the admirable translation of stature, tbe voices of German lit- in its many appealing forms, supBertaux' book, has added to its eratnre were essentially Jewish plies such energy efficiently. Carenormous value w i t h a biblio- voices—Alfred Doblin, Carl Stern- bohydrates supply energy mainly, graphy which brings up to 1935 heim, Stefan Zweig, Ernst Toller, and are contained abundantly, in the literary output of every writ- Ernst Weiss, Max Brod, Franz j bread, also proteins and s o m e er mentioned in the volume. Kafka. Franz Wefel, Lion Feucht- j minerals.

By HENRY MONTOR A comprehensive review of Felix Bertaux' "A Panorama of German Literature," a book which is arousing international attention because it is the first balance sheet of the "achievements" of Xazi Culture.—THE EDITOR.

Likewise, it. seems to be - conceded; that Miss Mayer,- a Jewess, and the world's leading lady fencer, has not been invited, nor has Miss Bergman, champion lady high-jumper. • .. Furthermore, no protestant or All of the conditions which I Catholic can train or compete, or; have attempted briefly to describe Never in history was a nation prepare for the Olympic games have been cr ted by the Nazi unless he or she is a'member of, government in defiance of t h e |b o r n s o q u i c k l y a s t h e T h i r d G e r " a Nazi controlled athletic organi- rules and ' laws of humanity and man Reich. To all intents and zationof the spirit of sportsmanship and purposes it sprung full-panoplied ' In my. opinion the situation fair play, and contrary to Olym- from a vacuum like Minerva out complained of, has been so in- pian principles. of the sea. But the birth of this controvertibly" established by eviI feel that the greatest aid that new civilization has created perdence impossible of contradiction, Americans can give to those haps the greatest freak in arch•hat the burden of proof is now countless millions suffering in aeological history. F o r beneath upon the Nazi government to Germany at the present time, is this structure erected in three establish that there will be no to make a positive declaration to years lies a stratum of culture further unfair discrimination. the Hitler government that Amer- which bears no relationship to The facts of which I speak, re- ica shall not participate unless that above it. The debris beneath ferring particularly to Jewish dis- the unjust and inhuman and unthe present stratum represents the crimination, w e r e , abundantly sportsmanlike conditions which strivings, the achievements a n d proven in the speech made by Dr. have been created, are eliminated the prospects of three generations Schacht in Berlin last Sunday forthwith, of men and women who had been night. I'hope that the protests of fair- looking toward a goal of l i f e It may possibly ' be that few Jews could make the German minded Americans-who have al- which was razed during the great feelings German cultural earthquake of Olympic. teams, but instead of ready expressed their permitting the natural course to and their indignation, will not be 1932-33. decide events, the Nazi govern- in vain, and that some benefits How complete and devastating ment has stupidly directed action will soon result ,therefrom to that earthquake was is to be seen make easier the lot of the countagainst German. Jewish athletes in Felix Bertaux' "A Panorama in an unAmerican, unsportsman- less millions born'and-living in of German Literature" (WhittleGermany, who love their country, like, uncharitable and unolymsey House) which is an unconare truly patriotic are honestly scious epitaph on the mausoleum pianlike manner. and sincerely religious- and wish of impressive culture. Bertaux' Hitler "apparently is determined to freely worship God- as their that the Olympic games, must be conscience dictates, but who are brilliant study of the birth of held in Berlin. He does not seem not in a position to aggressively modern German literature covers t h e period from 1S71 to 1931. to be at all apprehensive thai the rising tide of indignation the civ- fight forprinciple: without tear of jT h o English version of t h i s ilized world over, migl t yet cul- dire, unjust and inhuman punish- French book has remained as it was written—adding indescribabminate in refusal by many na- ment. I am talking only as an individ- ly to both its ironic and historic tions to participate in Berlin. The Nazi government does not under- ual and I an. expressing my views qualities. When Bsrtaux finished stand why and hence bitterly re- only as an individual- It is true, his masterly review f o u r years sents that anybody should ques- I am a member of the American ago, he had no doubt that the tion the conduct of the Nazi gov- Olympic Commi'tee, but I do riot stream of literature which he had ernment as being contrary to the attempt in any way to speak for described would flow on undisrules of sport and the spirit of that Committee, or for the A. A. turbed, reaching new volume, enthe Olympic games. If the Nazi U. I am speaking and acting ac- riching new fields. He heard mutgovernment were motivated by cording to the dictates of my own terings of some irresponsible rebanything-except the bi.sest kind conscience, but when a meeting els who were thinking of rejectof an insane spirit, the indigna- shall be held of t h e Executive ing tfap intellectual gains of sixty tion ' already 'expressed in Amer- Committee or of the delegates of yi?arg and wishing to substitute ic, should have been sufficient the Amateur Athletic Union, to action in the place of words and long ago to compel Hitler and discuss existing conditions and to ideas. But the very thought of those by whom he is surrounded, determine whether or not the A. tc mend and change existing con- A. U. shall favor participation, I ditions. now declare in view of the presBut what has happened within ent record, that I shall emphatithe last two months? The per- cally vote against America's parsecution d i r e c t e d originally ticipation in any Olympiad in Beragainst the Jews is now directed. lin in, 1932—

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1 New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27,1935. for 5 00,000 pounds, although, heprecisely those who h a d been breathing heavily. "T h e bunch themselves only when they noclaims, the value of the land la Hate-Monger most cringing and servile, reacted would not have played around ticed Shakne's body no longer in actually much higher. only too qnickly to their changed ith you much, if not for me . . ." throes. And taking a look at his situation and became overweenHe started to leave, but sud- face, they both shook from head "England floes all it can fr to foot. ing. The doctors, anxious for the denly a thought struck him. •pusu Jewish rr>]on"Rts to Tram-Sovconsequences of such conduct, orHere," he stretched o u t his jdan, bnt they prefer to stay UPS**The torn out eyes dangled near dered that in every synagogue of hand to Shakne. "Kiss it!" ithe coast," the article said, the bloodied holes, big, round and the Empire, for three consecutive Shakne lifted his blood flooded sticky. No face was to be seen. Princess Niridjma clt Toiaiun;L Feuchtwanger, the great 1 On the other hand, the Romans Sabbaths, there should be r e a d yes and gave him a dazed look. The beard had been beaten into I writing in Le Jorunal, spoke os>exile from Naziland, has final- I themselves were taking tip a dif- that severe chapter of the Proph- He did not understand. bloody bunches of hair, and I thusiasticaUj" of Jewish achieveAuthor Is France Writes ly finished the second part of ferent attitude to the Jews, now et Amos -which begins: "JZVoe to Vasilinka's face became cloud- wet, dead teeth -with the piece of ' ments in Palestine, but declare1."; Justification for his monumental woric "Joseph- that their Emperor was obviously them that are at ease In Zlon," ed. "Can't you hear? . . . Kiss, I the foot between them w e r e boldly they mean a tragef. for the r^'Moslems which the Viking Press in earnest ahout setting a Jewess and threatens the most dire pen- ell you!" sticking out, like that of a slain us tivc population which, r 1J p psi.-i.v ! on the throne. Many a man wha will publish this winter fiS alt CF to those "that lie upon beds Two of t h e youths remained wolf. Vasilinka was still in throes will he ohlii-pfl to quit the coi;i the title "The Jew of Rome." had regarded Jews as inferior of ivory an.d stretch themselves standing Paris (JTA. — T h e warning in the doorway, inter- —not on the stool, but on the I It will bo remembered that creatures began to discover that upon their couches and eat the ested in w that current propaganda activities try or wr.re a bloofly h a t was transpiring. ground. His body stretched out when Hitler came to -power, they were not so very different lambs out of the flock, and the Shakne gazed by the Grand Muili in Palestine I against the Jews. Vasilinka and re- like a snake, and from his throat of his first acts w a s to from. Romans whan one actually calves out of the midst of the mained silent. atThe | are ths preliinint-rv of a pogrom youth became hoarse, drawn out groans t o r e one loot the house of FenchtAvan- came in contact with them. And stall." The President of t h e green. which, the British authorities may tE Not Candidate themselves. His gray eyes became ger at Grunewald near Berlin many people who h a d hitherto Agrippensian Synagogue, Cajus he unable to handle is contained enlarged, pale and glassy. It was 'Ah, you damned Jew, that yon and to destroy the almost com- avoided their Jewish neighbours Barzaarone, the furniture manu| in an article by Francois Dauture | Portland, Me.—Describing liimpleted script of "The J e w of began now to make advances to facturer, rather resented the fact are!" He ground his teeth and evident that he had lost his mind. | in Je ^uis Partout. entitled "Will j self as "too controversial a furwith his hand he smote him on "With a terrifisd "God have pity Rome." Feuchtwanger has liv- them. It became evident to the that this chapter of all others had I the Arabs Revolt?" the lace. "You're still quibbling, I tire in New Jersey" to seek pubon us!" the two youths ran out of Jcwp that Jehovah, after chastised for the last two and a half been chosen, for he did not see heh, fellows, come over! . . ." The writer justified the attitude lic office, David T. Wiientz, »»tthe house. In the street reigned years in France deeply im- ing them for so long, was now why "beds of ivory" were to be ol the Arabs, declaring they were t torney jreneral of New Jersey raw-! The two youths came closer. the maniacal pogrom, and among mersed "- h i s literary work. deciding: to tnrr. His face again discouraged. "stripped naked and exploited"' by 1 prosecutor of B r u n o Kich;<v<" "Alright, take him to work. If the babel of cries no one noticed Julius Streicher, the high, That "The Jew of Rome" will towards His people, and meant to become one of the best sellers send them a new Esther. (Copyright by the Viking Press. Re- he is such a lousy nobleman, then the groans of the living one, who priest of Nazi anti-Semitism, Zionist colonists and threatened ! Hav.pi.mann, convicted L u u l b w l . he must kiss my foot. If not . . ." was passing- out in the teeth of has recently broadened the by a wave of S,00P,000 immi- j baby kidnapper, denied re-pov-'f production In whole or part during 1036 is certain. T h e 1 A good many of the Jews, and strictly forbidden.) that he would he a candidate for He sat down upon a stool. The the dead one. sphere of his influence, seek- grants in the nex few years. historical novel shows FeuchtiV young men grabbed Shakno and Jews, says Danture, h a v e the Democrptir nomination >* ing to spread his gospel of hate wanger at his best and although threw h i m down at Vasilinka's bought half the Arab landholdings ' governor of New Jersey. in every part of the Reich. a sequel to "Josephus," is an Patronize our advertisers. feet. independent book, comprehen"Take them off!" Vasilinka sive by itself. "We are indebtcommanded, kicking him with his ed to the ViMng Press fir perboot in the month. mission to use the authorized Shakne slowly removed t h e translation of this fascinating boot from the youth's foot. chapter which described t h e "Kiss! . . . " Jews of Rome anticipating the m One stood facing the other: a arrival in Home of the Jewish Translated from the Yiddish by HARRY MENDELSON princess Berenice lor her beSbakne's hands and feet were; "Children," he pleaded -with red, dirty foot with a heavy reek trothal to Emperor T i t u s , shaldng. In his mouth it was •un- them. "I, myself, -win show you of sweat—and a bruised face with which, however," never too-k bearably bitter. He was sitting where the money is lying, the sil- a long, fine black beard. Strange place.—THE EDITOR. on a stool, heard the wild cries in ver and everything else, but don't to say, the group nad given little the street, the whistling and the beat me. Why should you beat thought to the beard. It w a s crashing of panes, and to him it me? , . . I have a wife and cnil- plucked only in a few spots, but Very numerous and very varon it still lay the patriarchal fea^ r ious were the poople in R o m e appeared as though everything dren tures of a mature Jew and Tecries and rings within his 1 , 1 But his pleas w e r e in vain. spected citizen. Vasilinka's green, who were making special preparami They took everything and him twisted face with the gray eyes tions for the arrival of Princess ov.n head. The pogrom began so suddenly they beat, hit him savagely in the looked down upon him. Berenice. ; Quintilian, one of t h e city's that he didn't have time to lock teeth, in the ribs and in the belly. "Kiss, I tell you! . . ." most esteemed orators- and bar- his store, but ran right home. In He wept and pleaded, and they And another blow in the teeth \M msm H K mm, risters, endowed with the Golden bis home he found no one. Sarah, showered blow after blow upon accompanied the command. i\w $ £ him. One of the youths he knew, with the children, evidently, had Ring of the Equestrian Order, ^«i For a minute all In the room Y was working day and night at the hidden somewhere, deserting the and to him he turned for pity. s a t without moving or talking. Vasilinka, you know me . »fi&> revision of the two suits he had house and leaving behind the sil£>3< •*. X £ > Shakne bent over his head pleaded before the Senate on be- ver tad the gold. He, himself, Your father worked in my home. Then and Vasilinka let out a sharp, terAs half of the Princess. There was did not think of hiding, in gen- Did I not pay him well? He did rible cry. All the toes and quite eral, pave no thought to anything. well at my place . . . Vasilinka no immediate legal necessity for I J^*5" v*ie< Vasilinka . . . help! help! a portion of the instep disappearthis painstaking revision; the two Simply listened to the turmoil in ed in Shakne's mouth, and two speeches had long achieved their the streets and to the galling bit- save - - - 1" <& rows of teeth cut into the dirty, terness in his mouth. A blow under his heart c u t effect, the .first had been deliv&-**> sweaty meat. The clatter of the pogrom at short his pleadings. Two young ered four years and the second That which transpired afterthree years previously. But Qnin- times came nearer. At times it men sat on him and began press- wards, was wild and heavy, like tilian was very sensitive to mat- seemed coming nearer, while at ing down with their kn:es on his a terrible, fearful dream. ters of style, and behind his back other times further away, like a belly. Vasilinka, a small statured The youths kicked Shakne with the stenographers had published fire in the neighborhood. A n d thin youngster with a twisted his two orations on behalf, of the srddenly it surrounded the house face and gray eyes, smiled and their boots in the ribs with such might that from each blow there Sovereign Princess Berenice in an on all four sides. The windows chatted haughtily. "So what? You paid, how oth- came forth such echoes loud and edition that was flagrantly full of began to crash. A number of Away from home, you know how CocaYou eon eiwcy& jsei cs few bef?l«« of e flm# errors 'Doth of transcription and stones flew into the dining room, erwise. Papa worked and y o u empty, as though from a barrel. Cola right oU iha ice oSwoys makes a «juick!y; bu? fhe b«rt woy h fo order by rh» COM They tore at his beard strip by of copying. And for a man who and all at once, through door and paid. Oh, I should like to have pause refreshing. Serve if the same way (£4 betiles) when yee buy food. strip. With their fingers they got lost his sleep over the wrong plac- windows, gentiles, mostly young seen had you failed to pay!" ct home—ice-cold. Keep the boStlcu in into his eyes and tore them out. ing of a conjunction or a comma, men, with drunken, red faces, beYet he was pleased that Shakne your ice-box and serve with ice. The it w a s a grievous affliction to gan to crawl in with sticks and had turned to him for help, and Sought out the most sensitive COCA-COLA G CO. pause that refreshes everywhere els* i* OTTl have such a wretched version of knives. Shakne realized that he said to the others: "Well, chil- spots on his body and tore slices just cs refreshing at home. from him. T h e body trembled, HA S5SS his works published for all the must do something.. With great dren, enough, let the carcass live S12S Hamey. Street" yn_n__»_p" he's already hardly jshook, fevered, threw and turned frrn-m itself on all sides. And tne two ish Princes3 was coming to Rome chair and with the pogromtchikes breathing . . . " . rows of teeth pressed together Xattle by little they tore them(rioters) looking on, he /began to he •wanted to present lier with the two orations in a form which lie crawl under the. divan that stood selves away from their victim and more convulsively and kept going "would not blush to Bponsor, even; in the room. Some of them broke began to leave the house, smash- deeper. Something cracked there ing the dishes that had yet no inside the foot; the teeth, t h e out in loud, laughter. to the smallest detail. bones, or both together. All the "Here's a fool for you!" one of been broken, Captain Kattwald was another time Vasilinka screamed wildly "Well, Shakne, you h a v e to them said, and grabbed ahold of •person -whose days -were troubled thank me that you are still alive,' and unconsciously, like a slaughby the impending arrival of the his foot. "Hey you! Get up!" Quickly he came to his senses Vasilinka said to Shakne, w h o tered animal. Princess. Kattwald, or as he now How long this lasted the youths began crying l i k e a small stood in front of him with hangcalled Mmself, Julius Claudius ing head and mutilated face and could not tell, and they came to . Chatualdus, was the son of a Ger- child. man tribai chief -who had come 9tttt6^^ as a hostage at a tender age to the court o£ the Emperor Claudius, and lad stayed on in Rome even after the differences hetween his tribe and the Empire had been settled. He had tound favour in the great city; he had been tried out and put in command of a detachment* of the Emperor's German, bodyguard. Now Titus had issued an order that the detachment of Chatualdus was to serve as a guard o£ honour to the PrinceFs Berenice during her visit to Rome. The German soldiers were considered to be as trustworthy as they were stuhhorn; they did 4 ; not understand the speech of the country; they were primitive and HO amenable to discipline. But, and Kattwald their Captain Tmew it, there was one species of human heinga that got on their nerves: the Jews. In the swamps and forests of Germany wild legends were current about the peoples of the East, and ahout the Jews in particular, how they hated fair-haired faces and loved to U sacrifice hlonde heads to their donkey-headed God. These hogey tales still reverberated in t h e minds of the troops who were stationed at Rome, and they were liable to panic whenever they encountered people from the East. When Augustus, for instance, the 4 ' founder of the Empire, had sent i i a German bodyguard to Jerusalem as a mark of honor to Herod, King of the Jews, "Herod had had to invent a polite excuse for sending them back again almost at once. And that was why Captain Julius Claudius Chatualdus w a s full of cares and fears, that was Why he was cursing the Fates, whom he called by turns "Parcae" and "Norns," for having J ! pitched on his detachment above all others to do such a ticklish • OMAHA OFFICE piece of work.

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935. of Jaffa in 1909. But this loan National Fund received 6,846 we know. Wassermann's last teswill be m o n than a mere finan- pounds in such gifts, a 56 per tament to the world is an explancial transaction; it will indicate cent increase over the same peration of his career and an introthc character of development • iod-of 1933-34. Tho total receipts duction to his literary spirit.. taking place at the very outset! for the entire seien months was The pre-eminent international of Tel Aviv's career. | 1T6,95J pounds, compared with position of Harold J. Laski as a I 127,529 pounds for the corressynthesizer of academic politicoimproTements in Jerusalem , ponding period of the previous economic theories with the facts Not to be outdon. in the mod-,y eaTi a n increase of just under 40 of modern life is further strengthWhen, in 1923, the Township! the upholders of Jewish and He-ernization of Palestine, the mu-| p f . r P f . n l j \ j K indeed' a sign of the ened by his "The State in Theory ! and Practice." Notable for its of Tel Aviv raised a loan of 75 jbrew culture. The analogy may nicipality of Jerusalem is r o wgrovinc world Jewish consciouspersuasive prose and the clarity thousand pounds through a -New be carried further to a compari- coining a plan to rrovide t h e ;n w K (l r U l f l U(>\,]e function which which it introduces into even the York banking house, its 15 thou- son of the life of -both centers •city with much-needed • improve-! :tn0 j . V n d ^ playing in the remost complicated political prob- sand inhabitants believed, and of Jewish thought and activity ments, such as public parks, a; d f ! i n p , ; o u o l the" land o£ Eretz lems, Laski's book is an unpar- rightl7, that their civic life had as the golden age of each; there proper sewerage system, roads; ifiriH,{ j alleled introduction to a liberal reached an important turning- was the same mixture of spirit- and the like. interpretation of contemporary point; 12 years later the city of uality, idealism and materialism. One of the reasons for the re-:-, . . . From the authoritative pen and characteristics to whose spir- lated and a powerful figure. This government. It is unfortunate, Tel Aviv, with close to 120 thouWith over a-third of the rap-tarded growth of the capital has; I\egllIsll©21S f novel of industrial life, as observhowever, that Laski stops abrupt- sand inhabitants, increasing atj idly expanding population of been a meager water supply, andj of Our literary editor, we give it he Is alien except in the cold, J ~C you a comprehensive review of. scientific analytical approach. As ed in an engraving plant, gives ly after having been pushed for- the rate of about two thousandj Palestine centered in Tel Aviv, this is now being remedied by the' I crass, Halper the opportunity to present ward headlong by the force of a month, has been placed in a) the city has assumed an unusual new pipeline from the river Petah the literary achievements of a Jew, Ludwig Lewisohn is unJerusalem CTT.A) - Refrnlations , American Jews in 5695. Here doubtedly the greatest represent- not only men and women but the his views. He becomes hesitant position to float a million-pound i life, vying with that ot the capi- Tivka. vernir.K the use by the public of Mr. Montor passes in, review ative of his race in American lit- conditions which mold them. Hal- to affirm vigorously the only con- loan for capital-works. Both per-; tal several thousand years older. Some f i n e public buildings and appraises the works pub- erature. His failure to reach the per is the one Jew who can right- clusion to which his premises can iods are landmarks in the his- j Its budget is now over 4 00 thou- I are going up in the city, the gen-the Rockefeller Museum in Jerusalem, tlio largest institution of tory of the Jewish city which has sand pounds, five-fold greater lished during the past year by supreme height to which his un-fully and fully take his place arrive. ! era! post office, the new govern- its kind in the Near East, which sprung up in just a quarter of a Jewish authors.—THE EDI- rivaled human compassion and among the yornger Americans : than that of Jerusalem, b u t "Erasmus" is treated with tenexquisite prose should bring him who are revolutionizing the Amercentury on the eastern Mediter- what is more significant is t h e ment offices, the Rockefeller mu- will be opened soon, have been TOR. is due to the fact that in dealing ican literary outlook. He still der c a r e by Stefan Zweig, be- ranean. ! future. For Tel Aviv f a c e s seum is compietd and will be published in the Palestine Official opened to the public next spring, Gazette. with the Jewish scene he has lacks t h e mature understanding cause he regards the humanist as an exemplar after whim the lib- Historians of a future ago, \civic problems in respect to its What ten books that were writ- failed to co-relate it to the new a n d t h en e w g o v e r n m e n t printing r ' T h T o r d i n a n c e gives t h e m u which richer experience will probgrowing population. S c h o o l s , eral of today must model his own ten by Jews and that were pub- world conditions. Ludwig Lewisruffling the pages of record for jpublic buildings and roads must works are shortly to be equipped. seum permission to charge admisably bring him. But at the preslife. The conflict between Eras- three thousand years past, will j lished in America during t h e ohn has assumed • that Jews live Contrasted with the congestion in -1934-35 book season will outlast in a vacuum, that their maladies ent moment he seems to have the mus and Luther, and the entire probably find some analog} be- jbe constructed; water supply other towns, there is plenty of sion fees a n d gives its guards right for penetrating the curtain special police powers within the background of the Protestant Reand sewerage system extended the transitory life of the circu- are indigenous a n d their probformation are treated with un- tween the Tel Aviv of today and or put in order, and other ame- space in the planning of the cap-institution.' lating library? There a r e occa- lems can be solved in isolation. of life. The highly prized quality of derstanding and sympathy. F o r the Alexandria of two thousand nities settled. The loan of one italIt also provides punishment up - sions when there might be sharp "The Island Within" ranks with years previously. For the analoTree Donations. to six months' imprisonment or a differences of opinion; but this some of the best novels America objectivity, which is always de- those who enjoy the interpreta- gy lies perhaps not so much in; million pounds taken from the Tree donations are becoming a | fine cf 50 pounds for violation of year there is, with two or three has produced. And yet its great- manded by critics who hate to be tion of history through analysis Prudential Assurance company exceptions, a clean breach be- ness is a restricted greatness, fail- stirred emotionally by f a c t s of the molders of t h a t history, the numbers of residents—for. j of London is to consolidate the popular form of help to Eretz. the museum's regulations. tween permanent additions to our ing in the universal glow which which they would rather avoid, Zweig's biography is an essential according to the Midrash. the expenditure on these services Israel. During the first seven Egyptian city of that day must j over the next four years, and its months of the current year, which Mention the Jewish Press to body of literature and those books is the mark of all enduring liter- to be found in Leo Lania's "Land book to read. have had a million Jews—but i.i repayment over a period of 2 5I began on October 1, the Jewish | your merchant. of Promise." After a brief introwhich fail, either in theme or ature. In his portrait of Michel de j the fact of a teeming, populous duction to Jewish life in Poland Montaigne, as assembled in "The execution, to embody lasting qualyears at four and a quarter per ities. Waldo Frank h a s understood during the Wat he changes the Autobiography of Montaigne," and nationally-conscious Jewish j cent is designed to meet the life, the sense of living in a mo-j ": . This reviewer's choices are as to a greater extent the interde- scene to Germany, to which the Marvin Lowenthal has recreated mentous epoch during which the city's convenience. pendence of t h e modern world, Polish Jews had been invited by one of the outstanding personali'follows: ; but Frank is primarily an essay- General Ludendorff and where ties of modern history and given Jewish destiny was being fashThe Tel Aviv of 19 60 will unIn Fiction: The Forty Days of Musa Dagh ist and not a novelist. He has a they could begin a new life, as him a glowing human quality that ioned. Alexandria had its Philo! doubtedly differ greatly from the | (now linked eternally with Pal-j Tel Aviv of today, just as there less penetrating intuition t h a n the Yiddish posters along the by Franz Werfel. makes his views and characteris- ! estine) as Tel Aviv had its Bia-1 Lewisohn into the motives a n d countryside p r o m i s e d them. tics of immediate interest. has been a vast change since its The Foundry by Albert Halper. jlik; both in their different ways1 establishment as a garden suburb Through the personalities of a Land of Promise by lieo Lania. aspirations of men and. women. The subject of Jesus is always ; Call I t Sleep by Henry Roth. The ability to burnish words Jewish girl and her father on one Kerkhoven's Third Existence until they glitter is not always side and an Aryan professor on beclouded by the controversial and Dr. Alfred Bonne are in the among the five best fiction books by Jakob "Wassermann. the chief requirement of, a novel- the other, Lania synthesizes the element, both of Historicity and German. i of the soar. Its powers of percepI n Non-Fiction: ist. This w a s demonstrated by new Germany, insofar as a novel creed. Edmond Fleg's biography has taken Jesus' life for granted Other Books Mentiouable j tion bespeak not merely the novcan surpass the daily news disTne State in Theory and Prac- Robert Nathan in "Road of Ages." and is concerned not with t h e In the field of the novel a num-| el'st b-ii the profound student of tice by Harold J. Laski. A writer of persuasive charm and patches in summarizing a present new religious founder b u t with ber of volumes arpeared that de-j modern culture. historical event. Erasmus of Rotterdam by Stef- whimsicality, Nathan became lost Books in t h e non-fiction field the intrinsic man. The incomparserve listing. These include "Only an Zweig. in the immensity of the theme The moaning a n d wailing : Autobiography of Michel de which he had chosen. He had heard a few paragraphs back must able poetry of Fleg's mysticism the Pear" by Lenore Marshall, the which the reader may want to reMontaigne edited by Marvin Low- neither/the understanding of Jew- subside**into a respectful silence is peculiarly adapted to a study extremely well done "Camberwell call for possible reference in sefor ish life nor the strength;to hold in the presence of Henry Roth, of the men and women who sur-Beauty" by Louis Golding, "Tar-j lec'iiig books that may be readenthal. able more than sis months from rounded Jesus nad gave his life abas" by Joseph Roth. "Three; together the vast proportions of author of "Call It Sleep." He Jesus by Edmond Pleg. Men Die" by Sarah G. Millin, now included: "A Panorama of knows the life of Jews, the life meaning. Jews in Palestine by Abraham his canvas. The only book among the ten "City of Friends" by Elias Toben- German Literature" by Felix BerRevnsky. With these rambling remarks of the poor, the alarms and the that is of primary importance to kin, "The Life and Death of Dav- ttiux, "Men and Women," Magnru hopes which race through the avIn the field of fiction there is a concluded, we proceed to a brief contemporary Jews as s u c h as id Markand" by Waldo Frank, Hirschfeld's'last book, Emil Luderage mind. His "dissection of the much richer fare this year than summation of* each of ' the t e n personality of the Jewish young- Abraham Revusky's "Jews in Pal-"Florian" by Felix Salten. "Sal- v.ig's excellent "Hindenburg," Jothere was last year. Preferences "books of the year." ster of New York's East Side is a estine." A scholar of wide cul- vation" by Sholem Asch, "Honour soph Roth's "Anti-Christ," Avra; in these matters are, of course, "The Forty Days of M u s a first. novel which needs no pat-tural background, Mr. Revusky is Come Back" by Naomi Jacob. ha mTarmolinsky's "Dosteovsky," : subjective. Last year the choices' Dagh" by Franz Werfel should be which practically deserves includistinguished by his modesty— were: "Three Cities" by Sholom read a century: from ,now~with the ronizing because it is a first. both toward himself and toward "Beyond Woman," the greatest sion in the-first'• five non-fiction Hope which flickered out is reachievement of Maurice Samuel, Asch; "The Oppermanns" by^ Lion same absorption and emotional books, ''The World as I ' See It" his facts. He refuses to accept as Feuchtwanger; "Last Pioneers" enthrallment • which. marks i t s kindled into enthusiasm by Henry valid the hearsay and the circum- was an extraordinary study of the by Albert Einstein a n d "The Roth. If he can maintain the pace mechanism of a bewildered mind • by Melvin P. Levy; "One Happy reader today. It is not merely the Curse of Bigness," a collection of stantial. He declines to be bound 1 Jew" by Nat J. Eerber; and account of the reverent self-as- he has set out for himself he by what Is traditional and accept- against the background of other the papers of Mr. Justice Louis D. will be a major person on the and their sincere appreciation for trie business minds equally confused. From the "Long Remember" by Mackinlay sertion of t h e Armenian people ed. As a result,- his book is a dis- point of psychological craftsman- Brandeis. American literary scene. Kantor. against fate . a n d particularly tinct departure f r o m books on (Copyright, 1935. by Seven Arts you have favored them with the past year In non-fiction the choices lastj against the Turks. It symbolizes The proportion of t w o Euro- Palestine that have appeared in ship it would deserve . inclusion Feature Syndicate) year were "How Odd of God" by the seemingly endless struggle of pean Jews and two American this country in the past."' His Lewis Browne; "Judaism as a the minority to free itself from Jews is again unbalanced by the study of the background of Jewmay the coming year bring to you and yours Civilization" by Rabbi Mordecai the physical and spiritual oppres- fifth selection among the five ish development of Palestine, his M.^Kaplan; "History of Pales- sion-of the majority. "The greatan abundance of health and happiness and survey of the factions engaged in tine" by Jacob de Haas; " I Was ness .of Werfel's theme has been most important novels. It is the the upbuilding, of the problems posthumous "Kerkhoven's Third a German" by Ernst Toller; and matched by the beauty w i t h that face t h e Jewish people in may our business relations be as pleasant m "The Quest for Security" by Dr. which he had ethed it in words. Existence"—the most impressive their relation to the Arabs and of Jakob Wassermann's latter I. M. Rubinow. Not since "Power" of several the Government, a n d his frank the future as they have in the past. The selection of what this writ- years ago has there been a novel novels. In this autobiagraphical evaluation of the fundamental isof equal magnitude in conception - er regards as the "ten foremost" d i r g e Wassermann unburdens sues stimulating and retarding books' of an arbitrary publishing and execution. himself of the agonies, the doubts, the rebuilding of the Jewish Naseason illuminates a topic t h a t Albert Halper- is-the most com- the,-bitter disillusionment which tional Home constitute an importlends itself to special treatment petent Jewish* writer of the "pro- have been the lot of his major ant departure from what has ap;. at this time in view of the situaliterary characters. His portrait peared hitherto in English. It is tion in Germany, where for more letarian" novel. "The Foundry" for that language what books by places him in the forefront of his of a woman is the most devastat- such than two years the Nazis h a y e men as Dr. Hugo Herrmann group, where he remains an isoing study of the feminine sex that been uprooting the alleged. a.n;d actual dominance of Jews, in important German literature. Out of the ten books mentioned above only two are by native American writers. These are Albert Halper and Henry Roth. Marvin Lowenthal Is," of • course, an : American, but in view of. the eclectic character of the book for '- which he is responsible, he is : eliminated from the tabulation! - Tear after year this- same- pro: portion prevails, revealing either © , the incompetence or the indiffer| eat quality of the average AmerT lean Jewish writer. . ' During the past year there were ; books by Waldo Frank and Ed1-ward Dahlberg, although the novAre you looking for bigger canned foods volume and ;el by the latter deserves only the added profits? "' '.•.-•> most g l a n c i n g consideration. Doyouwantextrasalesonleadingcannedfood staples? There is a magnificent stylist like - Robert Nathan and a developing Do you want more business —a lot more business —on m ; novelist like Benjamin Appel..The every DEL MONTE item you have in stock? ! name of Ludwig Lewisohn, too, Here's your opportunity! - may • be included even though he -is a not a native. But when one A Great New Merchandising Plan—The DEL has mentioned these names one MONTE "March of Flavor!'*,Stronger, even, than ' has virtually exhausted the list of last year's outstanding DEL ; MONTE "Fond-Out" those who may be considered anywhere near the vanguard of nadrives. More striking—more easily tied to yourstore! • tive American litesatuse. Starts Week Of Oct. 10—First* big drive breaks With but the exceptions noted right at the start of your biggest canned foods above, the Jew aa a. writer has selling season. That Ultra-Delicious done little to enrich the literary 13 Million Selling Messages...in full color, back creativity of America. He has Food Drink of this first event alone! In leading magazines. In been engaged in writing popularthe American Weekly! Working right in your ly successful novels, such as those market, in your neighborhood, on your customers. of Edna Ferber and Fannie Hurst. There is the acidy talent of Tesa America's Favorite Brand—What a sales set-up . Slesinger, the sprawling volubilfor you I It would be good on even an unknown ity of "Michael Gold. Whether it brand. But remember-—it's selling DEL MOTNTE! be the literature of t h e beaten For years America's leading canned fruit and vegpath, of which Thomas Wolfe is etable label. 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high in the mountains, the na-|jt -was. found that in nearly all tirely or almost entirely free from j I dish of the Semitic people when j tivcs laiew nothing of tooth] 700 cases there was some gain or decay. Generally speaking, he they came to Germany centurie* brushes. But their diet was ex- loss ia intelligence over the six- says that children with good teeth ago as fugitives from depression, ceptlonally complete, nutritional- j teen-year period. In some cases j are mentally vigorous and alert, ! he declared. ly. Comparison showed that chll-;the gain was very, very great—jvery much alive, while children dren in St. Moritz had ninety-nine j even as much as thirty-five points with poor teeth indicate their NEW SHIPPING LIKE UMS times as much decay as the poor, j in several c a s e s. Thirty-five malnourishrnent by listlessness benighted hill-billy children in; points represents t h e difference j and lack of mental vigor and i New York ( J T A } — No living PALESTINE, LOS ANGEIMthe Iioetschenal Valley. j between an ordinary man and a alertness. iJew can claim pure Jewish blood, L o s Angeles (WXS) — T I f quite extraordinary one. In our civilized diet, milk is I according to Dr. N a t h a l i e 1 LACK OF YTTAMIXS Doctor Munroe reports that a vitally important to proper Eutri- : Sclimifit Professor Emeritus of growing; commercial impori.at?.-'rWhat does tooth decay• lndi-, d i r e c t r e l a t i o n s h l p v a s I o u n d t 0 of Palestine is evidenced by j;r: tion, although certain other foods ' catej Tooth ^decay generally_m-j e x i s t L e t w e e n n o u r i s h m e n t and are needed, too. Milk is our best Semitic Languages and Oriental announcement that the ports nr History at Cornell University. dicates a lack of sufficient mmHaifa and Jaffa will shortly b~ source of calcium, a mineral esentality. W h e r e food w a s erals or vitamins—or probably ^ ^ No Jew, Prof. Schmidt declared, linked by direct steamer Per h h a d sential to building strong bones both. It indicates partial starva- t h r i y e d a n d v h ^ . e . £ o o d w a g i n and teeth. In fact, nutritionists knows enough about his lineage with Los Angeles. turn of t h e body. Satisfying a a d e q u a t e > i n t e U i g e n C e h a d de- have found that it would he vir- to affirm that he is a descendant T h e Danish-owned Lauri any! clined. hearty appetite does not by any tually impossible to get enough of those who first adopted the Line is about to launch a Pn. means necessarily result in satisDoctor Munroe says that this calcium from staple foods with- language 0' canasn in Palestine, Coast-Europe service with V fying the body's mineral and vat- conclusion was not hastily reach- out the use of milk. It is to sup-, without any admixture of foreign ships making monthly trips tween Los Angeles, M; ed. Three different mental tests ply a child with enough calcium j b l o _° d tor Drain of t h e University of were checked against each other. for tooth and bone growth that He declared that it was impos-' Alexandria, Jaffa and Haiffi. Iowa declares: "The child with Ten or more people passed on the the American Medical Association sible to speak ethically of an !I The ships on this line will Erno Rapee Is known to mil* night on these shores was a long ence of any kind in the world. active tooth decay is n o t well, ; the S. S. Laura and the mo His next move was again, up- even though his physical condi- nome surroundings of the child, j recommends a. quart of milk daily "Aryan" or a Jewish race today. | ships Jonna and Ulla. lions of Americans ns a sym» one and a restless one. Tracing the history of the Jews grading each according to the edf child. It is to supply enough 1 or a phony orchestra conductor and The next day with a fellow- ward. He was soon musical di- tion • otherwise seems satisfacucation of the parents, the morals calcium for an adult t h a t this and the Germans, Dr. Schmidt 1 as the musical director of the countryman, Erno visited a Hun- rector of the Capitol Theatre, and tory." I and religion in the home, and size said the "Aryans" probably orig-' world's largest motion picture garian restaurant in search of from there, went to the R o s y Governor Nutrition, teeth, health, and a 1and furnishings of the home, in- s a r a e organization recommends a mated in eastern Europe between pint of milk daily for an adult. palace. - In this sketch, we see some Hungarian food. There was Theatre in the same capacity. Chicago— Political Boothsaynr child's ability to do his best in cluding library and musical equipI are predicting that. Bnrnet Hotfr* him as the ambitious immi- a small orchestra at the restaurThen he took over the musical school are all closely relate, as The importance of milk to chil- the Baltic and the Black Seas. ment, cleanliness and health con- dren was shown in a survey made Their speech, he continued, was 34-year-old Chicago attorney »u< grant who came to America ant, and Erno immediately asked directorship of the Radio C i t y we shall see. ditions of the family, t h e food from Hungary and climbed to the conductor for a job as a. pian- Music Hall when it was opened, some time ago of 55,000 Los An- carried into Palestine about £2 00 Jewish communal leader, will *> Poor physical condition handict majority governor of Illinois? within t 1; the top rung of success withand he is now in charge of the caps a child in school much more and cookery, and the occupation gelas school children. This sur- B. C. Although the ist with the orchestra. The conout doing violence to his artislargest symphony orchestra in a than most parents realize. The and income of the father. Each vey showed that milk-drinkers of Jewish people speak Indo-Euro- next ten years ns a result of '•< ductor was kind, but eorry. He report was filed seperately a n d try.—THE EDITOR. motion picture playhouse. He also pean languages that, may be appointment to the post of cf had just engaged a pianist. Rapee, conducts t h e regular national pallid genius has received more the results compiled before any averaged several inches taller, did traced to the early "Aryans," he poration counsel of Chicago, nevertheless, insisted on trying, broadcast, known as the "Music attention than he deserves. As a attempt was made at generaliza- better at athletic games, a n d s a i d jmatter of fact, a survey of 120,graduated from the eighth grade | - others have descended from legal job regarded as the thir When you s e e Erno Rapee, and since the customer is always tion. I Hall on the Air," every Sunday on the average two years before | t n e Semites who ruled over a most important in the country. 000 St. Louis school children maestro of the Radio City Music right, it was agreed to let him Here is a v e r y interesting, j afternoon, in which s u c h noted reat Prior to this appointment, ft'emp^e i n Assyria. Hall Symphony, on t h e podium play one number with the orchesshowed that four times as many short experiment m a d e ia con- non-milk drinkers. It is not with-! £ artists as Jan Peerce, Viola Philo, The early Westphalian dialect jI Hodes was Chicago tax out reason that milk is called our conducting the great orchestra In "slow" children were in poor y nection with t h e longer experitra. He was barely finished when j B r u n a Castagna a n d Robert the world's largest theatre, he is slcal condition than children in ment. Ten children were selected most nearly perfect food. of the Germans became the Yid-jsioner. he was told to come back the next Weede take part. serious, dynamic. the group doing satisfactory work. from families of average heredity day as official pianist of the orSince that day when he landed In other words, the child in poor and good environment. At rehearsal—no longer in im- chr-stra at a salary of twenty-five Every in Hoboken with twenty dollars physical condition must f a c e a girl chosen for the group came maculate swallow-tails and white dollars a week. of his own and a borrowed five, four-to-one handicap. tie, but in his short-sleeves—he is from a family where there was a His next step .was to join the Erno Rapee has scored 750 fulleven more direct a n d businesssister w h o could be used as a And here is an interesting fact, like, galvanizing his men Into ac- Hungarian Opera Company as length feature films and m o r e in every case of a problem child, check. Similarly, each boy had a There c a m e than one thousand newsreels; musical director. tion with quick, clipped instruca child whom the teacher had an j brother who did not receive the tions. , ' * J tours to Mexico and South Amer- compiled an encyclopedia oo mu- inordinate amount of trouble to benefits of Epecial feeding a n d ! ica. sic for theatres, containing fifteen On his return, It was then But in his luxurious green-andcontrol, the child had extremely could be used as a check. The tan office backstage at the Music that Rapee took his next step for- thousand compositions; been a severe tooth decay. In this sur- jt e n children in the test were fed year in Hollywood as musical diward Into the field that was to Hall, Erno Rapee is witty and unvey of 120,000 children no excep- chocolate-egg-milk shake twice a restrained, Teady with a joke or claim him as its most valued par- rector for Warner Brothers; been tion ' was found to this rule. A day for seven months during the an anecdote, alive with laughter ticipant—the musical field in mo- musical director of the National possible explanation of this cur- fall and winter sessions, when, j and full of fun. Hard on the sur- tion picture presentation. He was Broadcasting Company; composed ious phenomenon is that m o s t according to prevailing opinion, face, Erno is really a "softie," appointed conductor at the Rivoli such song hits as "Diane," "Char- severe tooth decay was doubtless children are most susceptible to end talented young artists w h o Theatre in New York, and t h e maine," and "Angela Mia"—and partially due to a l a c k of cal- disease. These milk shakes were hare come to him with their am- foundation was laid for the super- today, he is musical director of cium. In a radio talk, Doctor Le- made of one half pint of milk bitionB, find him an understand- structure that iB now giving bet- the largest theatre in the world, vine stated that a shortage of cal- each, one egg, and a square of ter music to the American motion the Music Hall in Radio City. ing, sympathetic fellow-artist. picture audience, the largest audiHis indeed is a "success story." cium may result In irritability, or chocolate. On audition days in the Music "nerves." Dr. Walter Timme reitAt the end of seven months Hall rehearsal halls seven stories erates this same statement in every child ia t i e experimental above the great stage, all sorts of Science magazine: crossness, tir- group but one had gained in persons apply to him to be heard. edness, misbehavior, and all oth- weight and increased on an averSome are talented. Some are not. er symptoms of problem cases, age about eight points in intelliErno sits at a little table, calling both child and adult, result when Ig e n c e quotient. During the same ont their names. Usually, he is the blood has too little calcium, js e r e n m o n t b s the brothers a n d able to ascertain in the first bar sisters who had not taken part PROPER NUTRITION or two that they sing all he needs in the feeding, but had received How much does proper nutri- ordinary rations of the home, to know of a voice. Rarely, howtion help a child in school? The made no gains in intelligence. ever, does he stop t h e m before evidence on this subject is very th-?y have finished their number. Other similar investigations by inconclusive. But there is some "It would hurt their feelings," Doctor Munroe brought similar very startling evidence, neverthehe rxplains kindly. results. less. Dr. John Munroe, Professor Vvhen he comes across an exof Educational Psychology, Long FTXDIXGS VERIFIED ceptional voice, he is enthusiastic, Mr. Joseph Ihm, professor of Island University, wrote a very iand illustrated the importance The ancient Romans at one and has "discovered" many young time made great material prog- of. nutrition to sound teeth by in- interesting article .SQme^.tiraE_aso. j biology at Benson High School, c i n ^ r s and musicians. has corroborated the findings of HI3 daily contacts are unlimit- ress. T3ut while material progress vestigating the teeth of people in for Parents magazine, entitled, Doctor Munroe in a curious way. ed. They run the gamut f r o m was being made, the human be- different parts of the world. For "Intelligence Is A f f e c t e d by Food.'" The article gives results \ It has already been pointed out chauffeurs to sopranos. Every ings at the base of this progress example, be investigated the conof tests at Faribault, Minnesota, j that sound teeth are the best eviminute of his day has its some- were deteriorating. The result dition of teeth of children in St. covering sixteen years. Approxi- j de-nce of good nutrition, and poor was that there was no real progthing that must be done. HunMoritz, Switzerland, and in t h e ress, only a fantasy of progress. mately seven hundred children re- j teeth are evidence of just t h e dreds of people come to see him Loetshenal Valley, Switzerland. The Jews throughout their hismained in the experiment from opposite. Mr. Ihm has studied the for hundreds of reasons. Yet the St. Moritz, as you no doubt know, tooth condition of hundreds of tory have never forgotten t h a t beginning to end. atmosphere that hovers agout the is a famous health resort. Here In the first place, as all psy- ihigh school students a n d comman is one of orderliness, intelli- real progress is based upon hu- the children were taught to brush gence and a patience that tends man beings. ThiB is evident in their teeth and use proper mouth chologists know, It was found pared the condition of the teeth that intelligence quotients in chil- with school grades. He has found tovrard suavity. Experience has Jewish religious teachings. And hygiene. The diet was about the dren did not remain constant, that almost without exception the not yet produced the situation of Jewish culture has continued average modern diet. In the Loet- Scientists wondered why. When highest-ranking students are those v.-hich Erno Rapee is not the mas- throughout the many centuries. schenal Valley, a remote spot an extended study was carried on, | with far-above-average teeth, enDuringthe past one hundred tcr. years there has unquestionably He h a s never been bothered with indecision. From his earliest been more progress in mechanical flays in Budapest, when he'd slip advancement than, in all the prevbehind the dias of the Budapest | ions centuries of which we bare Municipal bandstand, a n d , with any itcord. The speed of travel an imaginary baton, keep tempo, has been Increased m a n y hunhe wanted to be a musical con- dred per cent; "weather" can be dr.ctor. At the age of eighteen, he artificially controlled as we travwas graduated from the Budapest el; the flight of airplanes can be Conservatory of Music with high- governed by r e m o t e control. est honors as a pianist. His stud- Would it he possible to make as ies were punctuated with repeat- much improvement in the physie:l exhortations from his teacher? cal and mental efficiency of b.uthat the piano was his destined man beings during the next one field of endeavor. But even then [hundred yeass as has been made Eapeo had his sails set and his in mechanics during the last hunbrow pointed toward orchestral dred yeaie? Of course it is impossible to conducting, and the young musician wasted no time in the realiz- answer that question accurately. But ever in the light of existing ation of his goal. It was only a year or two after knowledge, it would seem t h a t his graduation that t h e famous the coming generation and genDr. Shuck, conductor of the Dres- erations to follow can vastly imden Opera House, chose Rapee as prove their mental and physical his nssictant. Soon after, Rapee efficiency over present efficiency performed his own piano concerto —It existing knowledge is put to with the Philharmonic Orchestra practical use. Many scientists now believe of Vienna. Then he turned his that approximately ninety-f i v e eyes to America. A great beer, like an artist's masterpiece, is the result of "knowing In the fall of 1912, lie arrived per cent o£ all children in Amerhow." It takes more than fine ingredients. It takes superb skill In Hoboken with §20, a letter to ica are malnourished at the presand infinite knowledge. a friend he had never met, and ent time—not malnourished in an unlimited supply of determina- | the sense of not getting enough tion and talent. He was informed food to satisfy the appetite—but That's -why Storz Triumph and Pale Beers are famous. Their forby an immigration official that he malnourished in t h e sense that Escalloped Macan J O,s_CT! mulas are jeaiously guarded secrets, the result of sixty years* would have to show twenty-five the body is Btarved by a lack of J£ package macaroni 1H tablespoons flour 1 pint oysters ' Ji teaspoon salt dollars or be branded a public certain food elements. And there experience. 1M cups mllfc }i teaspoon pepper charge and sent baclc to Hungary. is much evidence to show t h a t .2 tbep. bacon lat ^£ cup diced fair bseoa Even the coarsest food may favorite recipe of your own. This wr.s the first, last and only this malnourishment results in "Break macaroni In two or three Inch pieces. The Storz plant has been in continuous operation longer than any Coos macaroni In three qnarts of botlins salted seem a delicacy at the hands of Then await the compliments time -that Erno Rapee was frank- needlessly handicapping a child's water until tender. Oraln. Rinse In cold water. of your family I a good cook. But how much Drain again and place alternate layers ot macother brewery in this territory. Storz never lost the "touch," the ly unprepared, and he looked mental development in school to aroni and a i H a i Is a bafcins Ulsti. f o u r over more your skill reveals itself it the following sauce: For Skinner's, to insure its around ' for help. He borrowed an extent undreamed-of heretoknowledge and skill so necessary to brewing fine beer. Bacon Sance when you work with materials purity, evenness, and tenderCnt bacon In small pieces. Fry until crisp. five dollars from a Hungarian fore. Some of this evidence will like Skinner's Macaroni! It ness, is specially milled from Eemovo from fat. Thsn to two tablespoons of minister who had shared his cab- be presented a bit further on. the tat. add flour and seasonings, stir until well takes the subtle seasoning so the finest macaroni wheat the blended. Add milk. *tlrrimr constantly until Order Storr Beers from your dealer. Try them both and let your in, •and; adding it to his o w n smooth ana cre&miv then s a d bacon and pour perfectly—hlends so tempting- world affords. Just as Sirs. How are scientists aware of over macaroni and oysters. Cover with buttered v noney, passed the barrier with a t h i s wide-spread malnutrition? ly with the tang of cheese, the Downing has found in her docnmibsandbake25inUnitesloanioderatc oven. own taste decide which you prefer. For other novel dishes by Mrs. Xtowntne, pose and control that was even One way is through the prevalpiquancy of a Creole sauce, the mestic science work, so will menu EufiK&ttaas. o&d tasty ways to use left over -meats, etc.. write tor »ew recipe book—• then typically Rapee. Once by the ence of tooth decay. Dr. Victor zest of a meat gravy. you find that it gives really unF1LEC Sfcinner M i s . Co., Oxo&ha, Xeb. officials, he returned t h e five, E, Levino maintains that the conToday, make Ibis test: Serve nsual results. Yet Skinner's i~:et his friend at the dock, and dition of the teeth is one of the Skinner's in the savory way costs you but a cent or two together they ~ent across the riv- best ways of diagnosing malnutriMrs. Downing suggests this more. Your money back if week, or according to some you're not delighted with il! er to an old Metropole Hotel. tion. To quote from this -authorAmerica's guest was given a room ity: "Malnutrition leads to dison the seventh floor. turbances in the development of For the first time in his life, bones and teeth. Poof, teeth, soft Rapee felt the sensation of fear. chalky teeth, decayed teeth, missTTot because he was ID a strange ing teeth, and infected gums are nuntry;"• not because he missed indications of improper feeding. the security of money; n o t be- Mechanical brushing of the teeth cause the Immedite future was an is an external method for peruncertainty—but because never sonal cleanliness a n d beauty. in his life had he been-so high as Hardness or softness of lood or Created b y t h e Storz Bre wing C o . f the seventh floor. It was an un- mastication has very 'little -to do canny height, he thought* at witb/ keeping teeth in a fceakhfnl Skinner's Spaghetti Skiimer'fiFruitPcctm an O m a h a Institution since 1 8 7 6 which to sleep. A carefnl test of condition. For sound teeth and or Skinner's Egg Noodles the floor and walls convinced him sums ire n e e d a -well-balanced Kalsin-Bran of the building's strength in an diet." academic sense only. H i s first J)r. Weston A. Price of Cleve-

No "Aryan" or

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By DAVID MANN

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STORZ TRIUMPH BEER . ISe STORZ PALE BEER . 10c


New Years ^diuon—THJS

Greek Daily in U. Hammers at Greek Jews In this country like Atlantis. Not because it's the oldest Greek daily in the United States, nor even because it's the biggest, :but because its editor is a noted friend of the Jews. The day we went up to s e e Anestis Fanos, his paper ran a picture 'of1 Julius Streicher with the caption (the translation from the Greek is not our own), "The despicable leader of the German anti-Semites." This week a series of fifteen articles on Zionism and Palestine Is running in Atlantis. It's nothing new. T h e paper frequently runs articles on Hebrew culture, on Jewish history. Due to Fanos' influence, t h e paper Is strongly anti-Htier, vigorously anti-Nazi. This Greek has a word for It—for Hitlerlsm, that Is. He calls it madness. Of Atlantis' 40,000 readers, about 5,000 are Jews. (There are about 10,000 Greek Jews in New York alone.) Oh, ho. one might eay, it is Quite obvious w h y he favors the Jews—circulation. But •when you talk to Fanos you tind out differently. He is intense in his admiration for the Jewish people. He talks enthusiastically of Jewish accomplishments. He can talk hours, tracing the Jewish influence of Jewish thought «m Hellenic cnltnre. - Recently, he was embroiled in an impromptu debate at the New Yoi;k Newspapermen's Club. Fanes contended that Moses was one ©f the greatest men history has aver seen. Some of the newspapermen differed. He finally managed to win most of them over with the- argument, aimed at socialeonscioua newspapermen, t h a t Moses introduced the six-day week and in the thousands of years that have passed not m u c h advance lias been, made f r o m that. In many Industries the five-day week is still a great desideratum rather than an accomplished fact.

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"We found Fanos In his cubicle in the Atlantis building checking off the last proofs for. an edition. Collar open, green eye-shade on his foiehead, pencil beyond his ear, and looking very much rushed he bade ns Bit down without asking who we were. A few moments later, he sat back, pushed back the eyeshade and we explained o u r business. ,We had heard he was a Greek friend of the Jews and we wanted to interview him. Interviewing a good newspaperman is easy. He frames his own questions. "We owe plenty to the Jews," .he began, without waiting for a lead; He spoke a heavily accented English. "For myself, I have a great admiration for them. It goes far back. "I am very fond of the Jewish prophets a n d poets—especially David, Solomon and Job. I have studied the psalms carefully. David's poetry is the greatest I have ever read, with the exception of Homer. There is no higher poetry than David's In all literature. I have read Goethe and I have read the Greek tragedians, but the depth of David's psalms surpasses their poetry. "I believe that if one digests Homer and David, he has taken a great step in" his education..

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long the immunity induced by his vaccine will last. In the case of monkeys it has already lasted a year. But he will not be satisfied until the test has been applied to at least'100,000. children over a period of five years, idly disappearing. In Salbnica, for instance, there live some J e w s who are descendants of Jews expelled from Spain. Until that country became Greek, they lived under Turkish rule. "When the Greeks came, they thought they were like the Spaniards, come to exploit and invade. That resulted in some feeling against them. But they are coming to realize now. that the Greek rule is a beneficial one, and the ill-feeling is disappearing." We asked him about the system used In the Greek parliamentary elections last year in which Jews had to vote separately. He explained that the same was true for all minorities and that tine 3ystem was' dropped this year. He pointed o u t that political anti-Semitism left Greece with •the downfall of the Venizelist movement. "Most of the parties today," Fanos said, "woo the Jewish vote. The Populist party, which Is in control—It has 2G0 out of 300 deputies—is firmly against anti-Semitism.

leave in 1915 because of antiGreek feeling which broke o u t with the war. He came to the United States and completed his studies in Columbia University. He hns the degrees of B. A. and M. A. :

Fanos himself is 42 years old. He was born in a small town in Acadia. (There Is a large panorama picture of the town on the wall of his office and he pointed out the dry-goods store owned by Baruch Botes, a Jew. Also he remembers the Jewish owner of a big vineyard In the town.) While still a youth, Fanos went to Ttaly and studied in a college in Naples. He was obliged to

<* Refugees *>

- •£&& •i'VV.'." .•*' -,"V —'.' '"":-•»T*i'rtBl>V.*-»,'. $P,

Smiles By S. FELIX MENDELSOHN . These humorous stories are from the recently published book, "The Jew' Laughs," by S. Felix Mendelson. This work is regarded by Dr. A. A. Brill, the distinguished psychologist, as a distinct contribution to literature. We present these extracts by special arrangement with the author of "The J e w Laughs."—THE EDITOR.

HEBRAIC DIETETICS Israel Zangwill was hanging on to a strap in a London street car, in front of a well-gowned lady. Mr. Zangwill was tired and being engrossed In his thoughts he unconsciously yawned almost in the iady's face. The latter resented his poor manners. "I thought you were going to swallow me," she said squeamishly. We next discussed the Greet "Have no fear, madam," Mr. Jews in this country. "They are Zangwill snapped. "My religion a hospitable, friendly philanthro- prohibits my doing that." pic people," he said. "What I most admire about the . Greek Jews REMARKABLE GLASSES heer-;—I suppose I admire it about A Jewish peddler walked into all Jews everywhere—is their the home of a German anti-Semability to mix the spiritual with ite in the tope of making a sale. the material. The German picked up a pair of "No race in the world can beat eyeglasses from the Jew's basket, the Jews," he said In a burst of tried them on, and said: enthusiasm." "What remarkable glasses these On Hitlerlsm, F a n o s ' I d e a s are! As I look through them at •were decided a n d vigorous. He you I see a dog." expresses t h e m almost dally In a "Is that really so?" answered column of editorial notes, a n d the Je\*. "Let me try them on." they would not exactly win Hit- After placing the glasses securely ler's undying friendship for the on his nose and facing the GerGreek editor. man, the peddler said: "To be "I do not detest Hitlerism only sure, you are absolutely right. because I sympathize with the When looking through t h e s e German Jews," he said,. "but be- glasses, I, too, see a dog." cause I am free' and believe in democracy and would fight a n y HIS REPUTATION IS tyrant—Greek or German. ONLY LOCAL "I believe Hitler's dictatorship A dignified-looking collector for —and Mussolini's,' too—will soon a Yeshlvah called on a wealthy fall to pieces. Hitler's economic resident of a large city t o solicit policy has failed miserably. Soon the Germans will throw off the a donation. The rich man stretchyoke, for Hitler has not solved ed out his hand and said: Ih9 question of unemployment by putting men in labor camps and giving them" a pittance, or, when he h a s : no money, feeding them on potato breafl—bread made of ground potatoes. As regards the German Jews, Fanos believes that if, as Hitler claims, the 600,000 German. Jews controlled a whole nation of 60,000,000 people, then they must be smart enough to deserve It. Although he ridicules Hitler's claim, he expressed the opinion that "the reason Hitler persecutes them is because they're smarter as a rule than the Germans."

" " I Believe the Jews have contributed much to our own Greek civilization. After the Golden Age «f Greece, the Jews inherited the Greeks' glory and helped impart It to. the rest of the world. The Jews wsre the greatest actors, the greatest artists. "Later the Jews became t h e greatest delvers into Greek lore. They came to be better versed in At the close of the year there the old Greek writingc than the Creeks themselves. I suppose they were 85,000 refugees from Ger•were great linguists because they many. The sum of $10,000,000 had been raised to provide f o r yrere dispersed." He turned to present d a y them. Palestine had absorbed 25,Creece—turned literally, for Fan- 000 of them, the United States os wheeled in his swivel chair to 6,000, S o u t h America, 3,000, ft huge wall map of Greece. "Here South Africa, S00. A total of 25,•—he pointed to t h e section 700 refugees w e r e living in around Salonica—here in the new France, Holland, Czechoslovakia, provinces Is where the Jews are England, Spain, Austria, Belgium, most heavily settled." The new Italy, Scandinavia and . Switzerprovinces are .the districts ob- land, and 18,000 had been repattained by Greece In its own war riated to various countries In In 1912 and in the Great War. Eastern and Central Europe. There are about 600,000 Jews-in Approximately 11,000 refugees the new provinces, he said, and had returned to Germany but an 150,000 In the rest of Greece. average of 300 Jews were leaving Germany every month. Ef,"The Jews of Greece are by far and 1 large the greatest patriots," forts to find permanent homes for he said, "and we are very proud the refugee were continued with of them. They are good business undiminished seal.' Albania, Ecupeople, progressive and cultured. ador, Syria, Peru, Brazil, Persia, There 1s a great deal of intermar- Angola, Zanzibar and other unriage, but the Jews as a rule don't developed territories were mentioned as possible places of rechange their religion. • ''The Jews played a "great part fuge. in (the recent history of Greece. But the real problem of locatlnjlS21—our great War'of. Lib- ing places of permanent settleeration—Jews fought side by side ment for the majority of the reWith other Greeks against t h e fugees remained unsolved. The Turks. In the wars of 1911 and Refugee H i g h Commissioner, 1913, again, many Jews played a James G. McDonald, admitted . jrdmfaLenfc .role." ' • .that the problem was serious- and ~ < r> - i ' . » , ~, . called on the League of Nations ^-'-' TjPe' wanted to know about antf- to deal with it directly. •"^Settiltfsm to Greece. I t was one • The only encouraging' features of the few.- times' w e - h a d , to of the refugee problem were" the prompt Fanos.- He said there was continued entry of German Jews practically no anti-Jewish feeling to Palestine and-the placement of • in j Greece;.-:: But we - mentioned large Buwbers -J:o£- intellectuals • Jewish1; Telegraphic Agency -_dis- ana scholars in the universities of -'.Satjenea iliafc cpntradfeted. b,fniv_ '"- Europe, A America - and ;. S o a t h ,„-., 'bVe'lV 3ie%ttettfM*' "there la America,'":^"*'://): -." . ',.» ^ w j r 1 ; lHttei\a»tl-J3emIttsm to7 tCogy^hfc.MaStJbr^evin; Art. A^|v^af?/t£6r£.la is ra'p- ".. 1

(Copyright, rS35, Jewish Telegraphic . Agency, Inc.)

JEWISH

PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

"Peace to t h e e, stranger! Where do you hail from?" "How do you k n o w I am a stranger?" asked the collector. "Only a stranger would call on me for a donation," replied the rich man. "Residents of this city know, very well that I don't contribute a penny to any institution."

suggested Rabbi Vidrevitch, "buy a ticket and go to Chicago." "What will I do in Chicago?" "After spending a few d a y s there come back to New York." "What is the idea of this trip?" "Upon your return to N e w "iorlr," concluded Rabbi Vidrevitch, "you will then be known as the Rabbi of Chicago."

A SAMPLE OF EACH Some years a g o a Russian Grand Duke, a member of t h e Czar's family, visited London and the Lord Mayor gave a dinner in his honor. Among the invited guests was the late S i r Moses Montefiore, f a m o u s millionaire and philanthropist. T h e Grand Duke did not relish the idea of dining with a Jew and in the course of the meal he remarked that upon his recent visit to Japan he found it to be a truly unique country. It had neither Jews nor pigs. The assembled guests pretended not to notice the slur but the old Montefiore responded coolly: Sir, suppose you a n d I go to Japan. I t will then have a sample of each."

THE CANDIDATE IS IMPRESSED There was a knock at the door and when the immigrant Jewess responded she beheld an impressive-looking gentleman with a dignified volume in his hand. "Madam," said the man in a slow, ministerial tone, "I came to you—and in my hands—I brought the gos-pel." The woman turned and called to her husband. "Hayim, Hayim! Come here, quick. Here is the man with the gas bill."

INEXPERIENCED A group of intellectuals, including a number of free thinkers, came together in a private home. When the Rabbi of the town appeared the host expressed the hope that he would feel perfectly at ease. "You need not worry about me," said the Rabbi. "My profession has taught me beautifully the principle of adaptation. I am a Rabbi among Rabbis, an educator among educators, and a business m a n among business people." "And how do you feel among dogs?" asked one of the f r e e thinkers. • "I can't anrwer your question very well," said t h e Rabbi. "I find myself among dogs for the first time."

ANTI-SEMITIC PELLEY TO RUN FOR PRESIDENCY Notorious Jew-Baiter . to Put "Hate" Plank In His Program New Y o r~i (JTA) —William Dudley Pelley, notorious antiSemite, has tossed his hat into the presidential ring as candidate of the Christian Party, on a platform aimed at saving the United States from "predatory Jewry." Pelley, -who -was convicted of fraudulent stock dealings last year, announced his candidacy in ti pronunciamento to members of the moribund Silver Legion and others on his mailing list from his headquarters in Astieville, N.

"Atheistic Communism, sponsored by the worst elements among the world's Jews, disguising itself in this coming election as the Worker's Party, is planning a wholesale onslaught on the remnants of our Chris: ion institutions by capturing the 193 G election . . ." The campaign slogan of t h e Cl>ris'ian Party will be, "For Christ and Constitution." "Every menaced Gentile" in the country is called upon to "form an overwhelming Juggernaut that shall launch itself at predatory Jewry and rip loose the smothering clutch which Jewish Communism has been steadily perfecting on Christir i America since the inception of the present Jewish administration in March, 1932."

Japanese Nationalism JEWS INJURED IN Is Blamed Upon Jews FOOTBALL RIOT Munich (WXS)—The ludicrous lengths to which the Nnsis go in fanning international hatred ol the Jews was again demonstrated here when General Erich von Ludendorff charged in his fortnightly paper, "At the Holy Well of Gi'rmr.n PotviT" that lbs Jews are deliberately fostering chauvinism in Japan in order to inoculate the Japanese with the idea that they have a world mission and thrn lo Bolshevise the nation. According to Ludendorff's fanciful theory the Jews aim to stir up nationalism everywhere to its zenith in order to cause the various nations to fall- upon e a c h other and thus pave the way for Jewish control of the world.

Warsaw (JTA)—A football victory by a Jewish t?nm WP.S responsible for a riot in (he town of Sosnowiece, in which several .Tews were assaulted and one nonJew seriously injured. Order WES restored after t h e mayor had taken measures to calm the population. The German Radio News Service described the incident as a pogrom against the Jews and said Jews stabbed a press photographer. The German press also reported, it. -was learned here, serIcus anti-Jewish riots in Kattowice, capital of Polish Upper Silesia. Patronize our advertisers.

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He declares that he f i r s t "searched my country for a standard-bearer who has the illuminaPHILANTHROPIC tion and courage to grasp t h a t "Dear," said Goodman to his the campaign of 193G is to fought wife, "the secretary of the Temple out strictly on the lines of race writes me that I have been sus- and religion," and finding no such pended from membership for non- leader, decided to run himself. payment of dues." "Every candidate of every par"Never mind, honey," replied ty considers it a foregone necesMrs. Goodman, "suppose we give sity to truckle to the dictates of another Temple a chance." insolent Jewry, otherwise he sees no hope for the success of h i s election," he says. NOTHING LIKE A "I am faced with the grim alREPUTATION A foreign Rabbi arrived in New ternative of lifting that ensign of York and asked Rabbi Vidrevitch an all-Christian national party myself," he continues. "I propose to help him find a pulpit. "Where was your last congre- to follow Franklin D. Roosevelt gation?" asked Rabbi Yidrevicth. in the Chief Executive's chair of "In the Lithuanian t o w n of this debauched and prostrate naYanova. I am known as the Rabbi tion and undo the unshallowed mischief of four years of soviet of Yanova." "Before you do anything else," bureaucracy..

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Mirr EAST EUROPE PLIGHT source at Julius Streicher's hp-«.cHitler's shadow over South quarters in Naziland. America and Mexico provided Jewish life in France was r:>::r nr.any dark days for the Jews of much affected by the German r*>?Latin-America. The Gold Shirts of j ugee problem. Jewish farm trainMexico gave Mexican Jewry a ing schools were established ^^r. slight taste of Hitlerism while in a united, centralized Jewish ].p»^~ B r a z i l and Argentina Fascist ership was organized to deal v--!:fc movements not only terrorized the domestic Jewish affairs. The *>•—Jewish population but forced the tivities of the Fascist group, vsv." governments to become less hosmuch aided by the instability <">• pitable to Jewish immigration. the French cabinets, reache.fi *. Nevertheless, large settlements of | new high, although its anti-SMr.--This authoritative -. bird's-eye Deal in the United States and American Jewry during 5685 was G e r m a n tic platform was not taken vei" Jewish refugees were ejview of 5G95 •was - compiled by its inevitable effect on American the successful fight carried O n ' seriously by the bulk ot "-!'f Bernard Postal, managing edi- Jewry; Jewish history of 5695 against the Bpread of Nazism in tablished in Latin-America, notFrench rural End urban populator of Seven Arts and is based cannot be viewed as a page of this country. Hitlerism, which at ably in Brazil, Chile, Peru and tion. on uncontrovertible data. The extraordinary significance. and the beginning of 5695 evidenced a Paraguay. A number of new Jewintroductory survey presents, a as meaning an important change tendency toward expansion and ish papers and institutions sprang Belgium and Holland oppjipd up in Latin - America where the complete picture of the develop- over, the year 5694. their doors to a limited number t>* seemed likely to make great headJewish settlements are now reachment of Jewish life during the German Jewish refugees, but rir-l* Statesmen and economic experts way in the United States, was ing the same stage occupied by past year throughout the world. for temporary shelter. These eoi; review the past twelve months as a completely routed. The Friends of American Jewry two generations THE EDITOR. tries could not provide p.ny TW.». definite step forward in the eco-the New Germany and Its off- ago. manent prospects for the refupf"-* nomic stabilization of the United shoots went through a transformEast European Jewry's plight, because of economic conditions., History moves strangely. It States, Great Britain and the So-ation and gave up much of their although overshadowed in the Italy continued to present the ><:'viet Union. All other countries, public mind by the German tragtakes no cognizance of manomaly of a Fascist country v.~S:i'aggressive and offensive tactics. made calendars. Sometimes its with the-exception of little Switz- The responsible elements among edy, remained as ominous as ever out anti-Semitism. The death .->: pace is so slow that a century erland," the peaceful countries of German-Americans also definitely I before. In Poland sporadic outChief Rabbi Sacerdoti remo".-v. Scandinavia and Palestine, have the most influential spokesmsr, ;•'.' merely means a small footnote not been able to halt the economic dissociated themselves from the breaks of violence were combatted by the government but nevertheItalian Jewry and the great .".•»in the annals of humanity. At debacle. This economic status re- wild anti-Semitic antics of Hitler's i e s s a feeling of physical insecurordinator and harmonizer of ,7PVother times one hour; changes flected itself in the Jewish world spokesmen in this country. Whethity to the hopeless status of ecoish life in the land of Mussolii^the entire complexion of the po-everywhere. In the United States er" Fiorelo La Guardia's dramatic nomic collapse. Polish Jews conThe political turmoil in Spain tM;". litical and economic 'structures Jewish institutions and national action in retaliating for German tinued to be faced with the alternot prevent a slow hut steady deof races and continents. Jewish organizations staged a. slow come- discrimination against American native of starvation or emigration. SIBERIAN 'TEOMISED LAND"—An air view of the settlement in the Jewish autonomous revelopment of Jewish commuT'.'LT gion of Siberia known as BIrobijan. Jewish settlers went to the eastern Siberian district from history, however, is always slow, back: British Jewry successfully citizens by refusing a license t o | T n e d e a th Of Marshal Pilsudsld, life. Government officials exhibitwestern and southwestern sections of the Soviet Union and from America, Germany, Argentine weathered the Mosley interlude a German alien will reTive Ger- ^ g p o ii s i! rapprochement with and were it not for the custom ed a sincere desire to convin.^ and Palestine to build a new life and new iioraes in the depths of a vast forest. of reviewing Jewish events at an and is raising more money than man pro-Hitler Bentiment in this Germany and the adoption of the Spanish. Jewry -hat a. new day hu.L interval of twelve months one ever before for domestic and fo-country remains to be seen. There new authoritarian constitution ! come for them in the laud of. •!>( reign needs; Jews In the U: S. S. could much more intelligently R. achieved a sense ol economic is also so doubt that last year made the Jewish position even ; British government, disregarding policy of High Commissioner Wau- ; Africa that General Jan Smuts is- ! Inquisition. One of these good vii. "witnessed a more united front on ; the many attempts by Arab na: sued a statement warning anti- |demonstrations was the drama;'.* follow the development of Jew-i security -which resulted in their the part of Catholic, Protestant more precarious than a year ago. tionalists to weaken the - Balf our chope. Not so rosy is the picture in \ Jewish elements and urging co- ' celebration of the octocrnten*><*". In Rumania, Hungary, Lithuania ish history if one were to throw rejection of foreign aid; Palestine and Jewish leadership in dealing and Greece Jews were playthings ; Declaration further, succeeded in Iraq, Afghanistan and Persia. In ; of the birth of MOPPS Mairnor.trirs a glance at onr. tribulations enjoyed a. phenomenal' -wave of with Nazi racial and religious per- of the various political factions keeping a safe balance in Pales- these countries one has to record '•• operation between the various raI in Cordova, hi? birthplace, *>-*£ ; cial groups in the country. The every decade. The year 5695 was prosperity, the government show- sectuions than ever before. It and had to be satisfied with, pro-i tine affairs. attempts by the natives and their j quota bar on immigration was not| the restoration to the Jews of •t-t no exception to the rule. Despite ing' a substantial surplus at the must also be recorded that organ- tecting as far as possible tlieir i various administrations to force ! lifted, despite tremendous pres- ! ancient Cordova synagogue. the continuation of the brown end of its fiscal year. But if one ized American Jewry is still at naked lives. The picture of Jewish I PALESTINE PROSPERITY the Jewish population into a ghet| The German refugee prob'rjr lerror in Germany and the were to draw a map showing the odds. The difference in policies life in these countries was not! Palestine continued to enjoy to life. Excesses and physical as- ] sure due to the German Jewish ; continued to be the major pTonr-< I situation. A considerable number growth of Fascism throughout strength and weakness of the Jew- and tactics between the American only sombre but continued sub-, economic prosperity and increased saults were reported and the danI of German Jewish refugees—the ;cupatlon of world Jewish leart.o-Central and Eastern Europe; ish position throughout-the world, Jewish Committee and the B'nai ject to almost daily change, de-: its economic absorptive capacity ger of widespread. uprisings ! Phip. RefnPTPP Cpwmipsion'er ^ ; > '• exact figures are not known—emione would still find approximately B'ritb." on the one hand, and the against the Jews in these lands pending on political conditions. | to a great extent. It is estimated : Donald devoted most of Jii.<? .im? despite the^ standstill of econoone-half of the total Jewish popgrated to China and successfully i to exploring- and JnveetipRt.ing T>.--Vmic conditions in Poland; de- ulation of the globe, suffering American Jewish Congress and Austrian Jewry, under the regime j that over 40,000 Jewish immi- was always present. The efforts to j integrated themselves in the ecothe Zionist Organization on the of Schuschnigg and Starhemberg, grants settled in Palestine during establish,large Jewish settlements i possibilities for the transpln"?*spite the tremendous advance from either political or economic other remained as marked as it | did not experience any new out-i the year and that German Jewish in Transjordania have not suc- | nomic life of that country. A | tion of German emigres to .nr-v made by Jewish Palestine and persecution, or both. was two years ago. Although the breaks but was forced to submit: refugees brought in a capital of ceeded as yet. j blood ritual story, spread by ani countries. While the results ^ the consistent improvement of American Jewish Congress appar- silently to Tigid discrimination in1 over $45,000,000. Arab-Jewish reJew-baiting and anti-Semitism i anti-Semitic group in Shanghai, ithis search for countries williuf? "•*• conditions among Jewry in the CTGHHNG NAZISM ently gave tip its pet project for a the academic and professional as lations have been stabilized, be- on the.style of _Germany's Nazis iwas quickly quashed when reveal- I (Continued on next Soviet Union; despite the New The outstanding development in world Jewish congress and has not well as governmental spheres. The \ Cause "of the vigorous arid wise reached such intensity in South led as propaganda having its made any progress in organizing anticipated return of the Haps-1 American Jewish communities, burgs was viewed by Austrian I there was an undercurrent of con-Jewish leadership as the dawn of; tinuous friction, due primarily to a better day. Because of the close We Wish the attempt of the Congress-Zion- political union between the pres-j ist group" to foist its philosophy ent Austrian government and i May We Take This Means of Expressing Our of Jewish life upon the masses of Italy, Hitlerism was held in check j American Jewry in a far from in Austria. Under the peaceful ad-j Gratitude to the Jewish People for Their Happimess democratic manner. Due to eco-ministration of President Majsa- j nomic necessity Jewish life in a ryk, who under no circumstances j Kindness and May We Tender Season's number of cities throughout the countenance any racial or country became more centralized. religious discrimination, although to All of MIIwaukee f Wisconsin Greetings for the Year 5696 Weaker organizations and institu- there was one outbreak of antitions ceased to exist or were com- Semitic violence in Prague and pelled by necessity to merge with the new electoral law was reis a good life Insurance Company stronger- ones at the same time garded as menacing to Jewish j that all local Jewish efforts were rights. In Turkey the nationalistic co-ordinated in city-wide councils Tegime showed itself hostile to OMAHA'S and its Agents Know in many parts of the country. Make the Dream House Your One-Stop Station Zionism while at the same time it Completely; Canadian Jewry, until last year did nothing to end the dangerous for good food and drinks always reluctant to follow. Ameri- anti-Jewish agitation in Thrace. Their Business Equipped can Jewish principles, finally sucEngland, regaining her mental cumbed to the greater experience equilibrium with the stabilization Dry-Cleaning of its southern neighbor. It estab- of her economic position, adminislished a national conference of tered a setback to Sir Oswald Power-Plant Jews and Christians and consoli- Mosley's Black Shirts. The past There la Ample Parking Space and Our Phone Service Is at dated its Jewish non-Zionist activ- year transformed England's FasYour Disposal ities and communal activities cist anti-Semitic movement into along lines in use in the United nothing more than a political States. 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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH ' PRESS—Friday, September 27, 19S5. gees and other foreign Jews, especially in Biro Bidjan. Amsterdam, Oct. 3. — Dedicate colony for German Jewish refugees on land reclaimed from Zuider Zee. Site leased to relief committee by government. London, Oct. 2—Press reports official anti-Semitism in Iraq; Jews dismissed from official positions, Jewish papers barred, antiZionist agitation encouraged.

Washington, Oct. 2 6 — A s k London, Oct. 31—Jews of Kur- I jailed and fined f o r desecrating ing foreign press of Jewish persecutions. Roosevelt to act against Virginia jdistan reported living in virtual ' synagogues. Boston, Nov. 16—Mutual agreehotel on government property dis- slavery. SAAR FLIGHT ment bars Jews from jury trying criminating against Jews. New York, Oct. 31—Palestine Saarbrticken, Nov. 13—Anti- libel suit against enti-Semites. Moscow, Oct. 2 6—Russia ap- Economic Corporation reports asJewish boycott spreads in S a a r Warsaw, Nov. 17—Anti-Sempropriate 7,000,000 more rubles sets tripled in eight years. ites bomb synagogues and Jewish for Biro Bidjan colonization. Detroit, Nov. 1—Father Cough- district. New York, Nov. 13—Editor of institutions; Students riot against New York* Oct. 27—Alexander lin denies being anti-Semitic folDushkln named director of "new lowing protests against anti-Sem- chief Nazi o r g a n sentenced to Jews in universities. year in jail for libeling Jew. department of education at He- itic language over radio. Tuga, Nov. IS—Latvia arresta Jerusalem, Nov. 14—J e w i s h leaders of anti-Nazi boycott combrew University. London, Nov. 1—Refugee Com- Agency gets 9,700 immigration mittee. Albany, N. Y., Oct. 27—Hylan, missioner reports Germany delibSCHOLARSHIP REJECTED Nazi-backed candidate f o r gov- erately blocking refugee work; certificates, largest ever granted Rome, Nov. IS—Jews named for six-month period. Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 4—Har- ernor, barred from ballot. heads of two Fascist corporations. Finds plight of exiles worse. (Continued from prc-rious page) the injunction against the Canadi- finds the responsible segment of vard Tejects scholarship offers Saarbrucken, Nov. 14—M a s s Sofia, Nov. IS—Jews fight deParis, Nov. 2—Baron Edmond TEMPORARY PEACE flight of Jews from Saar begins. c r e e banning foreign Jewish open their doors to the refugees an Nationalist in Winnipeg and our people undaunted in the fight from Hanfstaengl, Hitler aide. de Rothschild, father of Jewish London, Oct. 28—Laborites and New York, Nov. 14—American teachers. Antwerp, Oct. 4—Belgium rewere not yery successful, a num- the exposure of the blood lioel against the reactionary and pagan Revisionists sign peace agree- i colonization in Palestine, dies at Jewish Congress agrees to submit, story in Shanghai are all imporforces. The chart of Jewish cultufuses to halt anti-Nazi boyoctt. New York, Nov. 19—City offiber of governments made more or 89. ment; Ban Gurion and Jabotinquestion of when world Jewish cials head new anti-Semitic FasVienna, Oct. 4—Austria modi- sky less serious offers of territories tant milestones on the road to en* ral as well as economic life shows New York, Nov. 5—Orthodox pact ending terrorism, congress should be called to a cist, group. •for the purpose of settling these lightenment. Racial and religious a definite upward trend in those fied ghetto school law under for- partyInitial strife and boycott of Zion- Rabbis place ban on all poultry council of Jewish delegations if exiles. Albania, Syria, Morocco. good will activities in this coun- countries which wil have to carry eign pressure. Saloniki, Nov. 20—Foreign not marked kosher. funds. foes of world parley join Coun- Jews prohibited from landing in Ecuador, Peru* the Soudan and try, Canada, France, South Africa the burden of salvaging the Jews New York, Oct. 5—Jack Shea, ist Paris, New York, NOT. 6—Lehman deOct. 29—North African cil; Abandons plan to elect world Greece without permission of forMadagascar were held forth as of- and Great Britain unquestionably in the lands where tragedy had non-Jewish m e m b e r of 1932 create Arab-Jewish good feats Moses for N. Y. governor; congress delegates in April. eign minister. fering opportunities of agricultu- were significant factors in pre- befallen them. Unless a world war Olympic team, to boycott 193 6 Arabs 11 Jews elected to Congress; Mcwill committee with branches in venting the spread of prejudice will loosen the ties of internation- games at Berlin. ral colonization. V i e n n a , Nov. 15—Austrian Fadden, anti-Semite, loses seat in Tel Aviv, Nor. 2 0—Jewish city all French possessions of North Reviewing the year 5695 as a and discrimination in those coun- al co-operation which are becomZionist Organization rallies Jews gets $1,750,000 loan from British New York, Oct. 7—Nazis de- Africa. Congress. closed chapter in our history, one tries. It can also not be denied ing stronger despite the many na- clare w a r on Jewish candidates Rome, Nov. 6—Two Jews im- to defense of rights. company. Berne, Oct. 2 9—"Protocols, of -cannot suppress a certain feeling that Adolf Hitler's stupid policy tionalist conflicts, the n e w year for public office; 20,000 at Ger- Zion" prisoned for anti-Fascist activity. New York, Nov. 2 0—JDA spent New York, Nov. 15—Chief Nazi branded forgery as trial of optimism. The dark pages are against the Catholics, the anti- 5695 should mark great progress man Day rally pledge to eliminate opens of Jewish suit against Nazis Warsaw, Nov. 7—Poland re- organ halts anti-Jewish policy and Sl.506,000 for relief of German counter balanced by some clear Nazi Protestants as well as. the and may even see the downfall of Jews from politics. jects demand to oust all Jewish, endorses anti-Nazi boycott as edi- Jews and Jews of Eastern Europe, who distributed "Protocols." indications that Judaphobia is a Jews was instrumental in foster- the Nazi regime in Germany. elementary school teachers. Moscow, Oct. 7—Half million annual report reveals. tor escapes jail term. Johannesburg, Oct. 29—Nazi disease which can be eradicated ing a close rapprochement bedeclassed J e w s re-enfranchised; Gray Shirt party outlawed. New York, Nov. 2 0—General Mexico City, Nov. 7—PresidentNew. York, Nov. 16—Scores in! by fearless exposure and radical tween the best forces of the three Ex-rabbis and former employees Smedley Butler reveals plans for elect Cardenas pledges protection CHRONOLOGY jured as Nazis attack J e w s in Paris, Oct. 30—Minister of In- to Jews. operations. "The Protocols of denominations outside of Gerof religious institutions get vote Fascist putsch egainst governBronx. . 1034 Zlon",trial at Berne, Switzerland, many. if they have been out of profes- terior s a y s France will remain ] Vienna, Nov. 7—Austria moves ment; Charges Wall Street group Bagdad, Nov. 16—Iraq imprisopen to refugees. New York, Sept. 12.—Forty-two ision for five years. The new year finds world Jewthe decision in the Gray Shirt lito deprive naturalized Jews of ons Jewish bookseller for inform(Continued on next page) London, Oct. 2 8—Sir Oswald citizenship. bel case in South Africa, the con- ry fully conscious of the many per cent increase in receipts, first New York, Oct. 7—Executive Mosley makes bitter anti-Semitic viction of William Dudley Pelley, troubles and taskB that face it. It since 1929, reported by J. N. F. of American Jewish Congress apMoscow, Nov. 8—Dr. Rosen, New York, Sept. 13.—Christian proves world Jewish Congress; onslaught. Agro-Joint head, reports- B i r o New York, Oct. 30—Move to i Bidjan colonization practical. youth asked to boycott those prac- Sets April 28 as date for election cancel citizenship of Nazis who ticing racial bias. of delegates. Paris, Nov. 9—<Jeorges Mandel JOHN W, WELCH, president Welch Restaurant Company, Geneva, Sept. 13.—Six million New Y o r k , Oct. 7—Robert were naturalized by fraud. names French minister of comJews face loss of rights as Poland Miami, Flor., Oct. 30—Frank j munications. wishes to again express his appreciation of the confidence Moses, Republican candidate for The Original NEON Pianl in Nebraska repudiates minority treaties. governor, raps attempt to inject N. Belgrano, Jr., new commander Shanghai, Nov. 9—Forty-eight and business received during the year 5695 and extends New York, Sept. 16. — Anti- religious of American Legion, declares war issue into his campaign German Jewish doctors practicing Nazi Germans organize to curb against Governor on Fascism and Hitlerism. Lehman. greetings for - - - - . • MADE IN in China. OMAHA Nazism among .German-Americans. Toronto, Oct. 30—David Croll East Orange, N. J., Oct. 7—«I Richmond, Va., Nov. 10—Hotel Saloniki, Sept. 17. — Venizelos appointed minister of labor of James W. Gerard warns of poon government property halts denies he's anti-Semite but his pagroms if Americans identify Jews Ontario Province. "Christians only" advertising polpers continue Jew-baiting. Berne, O c t . 31—"Protocols" Washington, Sept. 19. — Secre- with Communists. trial postponed to give Nazis time icy. New York, Nov. 10—First nine tary of State Hull denounces all New York, Oct. 9—Royal Scott to collect additional "evidence." OMAHA OWNED racial and political boycotts as Gulen and William Ingles cam- Vienna, Oct. 31—Dr. Desider German Jewish children arrived. paign for Congress on Anti-Semeconomically unwise. Friedman, president of Jewish Paris, Nov. 11—Government New York, Sept. 19. — Police itic ticket. community, appointed to State pushes legislation, to curb immiPhone ATIantic 1677 24th Street at Douglas Paris, Oct. 9—Jews lose noted guard Yorkville from Nazi terrorCouncil, one of four bodies ruling; gration; Wars on refugees. champions as Foreign Minister 1706 Douglas Street ists. Fascist Austria. i Basle, Nov. 12—Seven Nazis Vienna, Sept. 21.—Ghetto ele- Barthou of France and King Almentary schools established for exander of Jugoslavia are assassinated. Jews. New York, Oct. 10—Former Montreal, Sept. 21.—Anglican Church' of Canada condemns Nazi Mayor Hylan runs for Governor with Nazi support. of Jews. GOOD LUCK AND BEST WISHES persecution New York, Sept. 23.—Ludwig Belgrade, Oct. 10—Jews mourn j Vogelstein, head of Union of K i n g Alexander; Anti-Semitic i FOR THE YEAR 5695 American Hebrew Congregations, riots break out following un-j fonuded rumor King's slayer is from dies at 63. Sao Paulo, Brazil, Sept. 23.—- Jew. Fascists demand deportation of all New York, Oct. 10—William McClaughlin, publisher of Nazi Jews. Geneva, Sept. 24. — League of| Deutsche Zeitung, indicted for Nations votes to continue retugee criminally libeling former Jewish judge. Paul Costanzo, Proprietor commission. New York, Sept. 25.—Bruno San Francisco, Oct. 11—AmeriHauptmann, Lindbergh baby kid- can Federation of Labor re-in115 South Fifteenth Street 14th and Le&Yenworth 507 So. 16th St. naper, said to be Nazi and anti- dorses anti-Nazi boycott. Johannesburg, Oct. 11—Police Semite. New York, Sept. 26. — Abdul raid all Nazi offices, disband Hit;x^^ Hamid, "Black Hitler," stirs anti- ler youth group. Saloniki, O c t . 11—Separate Semitic agitation In Harlem: Neelectoral college f o r Jews abol- j groes boycott Jewish shops. New York, Sept. 27.—American ished. We wish Olympic committee accepts invita- New York, Oct. 11—Abdul tion to Berlin games; move to Hamid, Harlem's "Black Hitler" organize American boycott of 1936 freed for lack of evidence in disA Happy and Prosperous New Year orderly conduct hearing. Olympiad. Boston, Oct. 11—National OrTo Our Friends and Patrons New York, Sept. 27.—Nazis organize for political action by cap- gan of Congregational Church turing control of German-Ameri- says anti-Semites betra? ChristiEBSEKia anity. can Conference. Istanbul, Oct. 11—Zionism outNew York, Sept. 27. — Sidney Hillman named to -National In- lawed throughout Turkey. Rio de Janeiro, Oct. 13—Bradustrial Recovery board. MRS. B. HIMELBLOOM, Proprietor New York, Sept. 27.—William zilian Jews pray weekly for president who admitted German refuRandolph Hearst, back from Ger1708 Douglas AT. 7456 many, 1511 North 24th Street WEbster 6284 sees Nazis abandoning anti- gees. Jewish policy; indicates friendliPALESTINE MEDICAL ness towards Hitler regime. CENTER New York, Sept. 28.—A. A. U. Washington, Oct. 15—Hadassecretary- says its ban on Olym- sah convention launches ?400,000 pic participation still in effect un- drive for Palestine medical center. less convention reverses action. Washington, Oct. 15—RichSaloniki, Sept. 30.—Greek pre- mond Zionists District inscribes ...5695... mier rejects anti-Semites' demand President Roosevelt's name in for separate Jewish voting. Let the words of our New Year Prayer JNF Golden Pjook. New York, Sept. 30.—Unter- Sao Paulo, Oct. 15—Horacio be fulfilled that all the Nations of the myer protests to Secretary Hull Lafer, Jewish' leader, elected to against rumored German - Ameri- Brazilian parliament; Fascist InWorld may form a sinerle band to do the can trade treaty. tegrilista Party loses heavily. Will of God with a Perfect Heart. New York, Sept. 30.—Negroes London, Oct. 1 6 — O s m o n d and Jews move to crush Harlem's d'-Avigdor Goldsmid succeeds Sir "Black Hitler." Leonard Lionel Cohen as presi•Shanghai, Oct. 1.—Japan moves dent of ICA. Physicians', Norses', Hospital and JIM HAYES, Prop. to end attacks on Jews In Man- Jerusalem, Oct. 16—Lay corSickroom Supplies Kosher Meat Market chukuo. nerstone for new Hadassah-Uni210 No. 16th St. New York, Oct. 2.—Soviet am- versity medical center on Mount Medical Arts Bldg. 1619 No. 24th St. 111 Sooth 17th Street bassador says Russia favors set- Scopus. tlement of qualified Jewish refu- London, Oct. 17—Financial deal jgakyiiq!^ enables Palestine fruit growers to erpoft $3,000,000 w o r t h of Ncx Year's Greetings from oranges to Germany. New York, Oct. 18—German envoy engages in Nazi propaganda, chairman of Congressional --from-Committee charges at c l o s e of hearings; Plans deportation of alien Nazis to uproot Hitlerite activity. Athens, Oct. 18—Separate JewToledo Scales U. S. Slicers ish electoral colleges restored as government party makes election Enterprise Grinders deal with anti-Semitic factions. Belgrade, Oct. 18—Jugoslav 314 So. 13th St, - - - Omaha Just Around the Comer from Everything" Jews honor King's memory with large gift to Red Cross. 119 West Fifth Sioux City, Iowa 1413 Doudas Riga, Oct. 19—Make religious TKE TRADE MARK OF QUALITY education compulstory in all eleMADE FAMOUS BY GOOD IMPLEMENTS mentary schools. Atlantic City, Oct. 22—Protestant Episcopal Church expresses sympathy for persecuted Jews. To our many Jewish friends on this day, we send New York, Oct. 23-—Hebrew our best wishes for health and happiness during | University gets anonymous $50,000 gift. the coming year Vienna, Oct. 24-—More Jewish civil service employees dismissed as Chancellor Schuschmigg pledgWheeled Goods Sec the most beaotifol bar ia Downtown Omaha es Jews equality. - , Vienna, Oct. 25^Johann KremSIDNEY, KEBR. OMAHA, NEBR. SIOUX FALLS, S. D. netsky, one of founders and first • Toys HASTINGS, NEBR. SIOUX CITY, IOWA president of JNF, dies at 85. 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New Tear's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

(Continued from previous page) offered him $3,000,000 to organ- oneers," first Palestinian opera in ize Trar veterans arm for march Hebrew, has premiere. L o n d o n , Nov. 26—-Non-secon capital. Washington, Nov. 20—Sol Ros- tarian world boycott organization enblatt named compliance chief created; Independent Jewish boycott groups merge with n e w of NRA. New York, Nov. 22—Congress agency. Prague, Nov. 2 6—Anti-Jewish committee probes N a z i link to Butler's Fascist expose: High of- riots throughout city; Jewish popficials and business leaders impli- ulation in panic as nationalistic students turn from attacking Gercated. Brussels, Nov. 22—Camille mans to raids on Jewish quarter. Gutt named minister' of finance. • London, Nov. 27—Jewish labor Tel Aviv, Nov. 23—Legislation committee founded in England. adopted to curb high rents and . V i e n n a , Nov. 28—Austria bans b o o k containing blood libels realty speculation. Boston, Nov. 23—Soviet film against Jews. Vienna, Nov.. 29—Anti-Semitic distributors win libel suit against students terrorize Jewish district. Jew-baiting organization. New Tork, Nov. 23—Rabbis London, Nov. 29—Marcus SamJoin Protestant clergy in protest uel, Conservative, elected to Paragainst Mexico's war on Catho- liament. lics. London, Nov. 29—Sir J o h n New York, Nov. 24—City offi- Simon, Lloyd George and Stanley cial quits anti-Semitic Fascist Baldwin attack; Nazi anti-Semitbody. . ism in House of Commons debate. London, Nov. 24—-British-labor -•• Middletown, Conn., Dec. 1—pledges support of boycott as in- Wesieyan University warns Jews ternational boycott parley opens. seeking medical education proNew York, Nov. .25—-"The Pi- fession is overcrowded.

fS

17—International Fascist c o n - anti-religious campaign in Russia. first Hebrew encyclopedia pub-I foreign languages in New York 169,892 during 1934. gress proclaims readiness for war j New York, Jan. 6—Czechoslo- lished. : school system. j Jerusalem, Feb. 4—-Two-3 R * on Jews. : vakia curbs employment of GerWashington, Jan. 11—Pales-! p a r i s , Feb. 2—Anti-Jewish boy-* r s i n ET - orm sweeps Palestine. CairMadrid, Dec. 17—Spain an- | man refugees. tine conference votes to create ' c o t t o r g a n ized in Alsace-Lorraine; j munication system disabled, •' nounces official celebration of! New Y o r k , Jan. 6—Joseph commission to co-ordinate Pales- : Nationalist medical student? riot j Arabs drowned. Damage sot Maimonides Octo-centennial. ; Schlossberg, labor leader, charges tine economic work. against Jewish colleagues in Paris ?50P,000. Montreal, Dec. 18—Judge den- j Jewish clothing manufacturers Philadelphia, Jan. 21—General University. Warsaw, Feb. 5—One ies claim Kol Nidre prayer viti-; boycott Jewish workers. Johnson, NEA administrator, says Beirut, Syria, Feb. £—French Jewish •families ruined t.s gov«vpates Jews' oaths. j London, Jan. 8—Lady Roths- he was criticized for appointing High Commissioner hints Sj-ria ment bans peddling in Polish ;>Jerusalem, Dec. 19—Re p o r t j C J 1 JI { J ; of first Lord Roths- Jews to NRA. may be opened to limited Jewish per Silesia. New Y o r k , Jan. 21—"Black colonization. German Jews brought $50,000,-; dies at 91. Warsrw. Feb. 6—City povprr000 to Palestine. Kovno, Jan. 8—President of Hitler" gets ten-day jail sentence. Istanbul, Ffb. S—Turkish Re- mrnt takes over kasbruth aclir. irHaifa, Jan. 22—1,2 0 0 mile public elects two Jews to parlia- istration, Buenos Aires, Dec. 19—Sixty- Lithuania tells ruling party Jews three Nazis arrested as anti-Hit- a r e n o t aliens in country. Haifa oil pipe line from Mosul ment for first time. Warsaw, Feb. 6—Govern ro«n« Istanbul. Jan. S—Turkey nat- opened. Jerusalem, Dec. 2—Huleh con- ler play stirs riot. disbands Agro-Yid, "body foFtr-.;-Iii> Johannesburg,' Feb. 3—Harry Indianapolis, Dec. 19—Jacob uralizes 2,743 refugee Jews. Washington. Jan. 22—Former cession acquired by Jews at cost Inch, leader of anti-Semitic Gray immigration to Biro Bidjati. of $1,000,000; Arena of 40,000 "Weiss named president pro temW'psmnrtrm. Feb. P—Amfri,i,r. Paris, Jan. 9—OET, OZE and Congressman McFadden announc- Shirts, sentenced to six years' imacres, potentially most fertile in pore Of Indiana senate Emigdirect organize E M C O L , new es self as presidential candidate prisonment for defaming Jews, Jewish Con press delegation f"'-or. anti-Semitic platform. country, opened to Jewish coloniWashington, Dec. 19—German- | . New Y o r k, Feb. 4—Report tests to Japanese ambasp*"'« American barter deal plan scrap- J e w i s h c o ] o n i z a t i o n b o d v sation. Rome, Jan. 2 3—Mussolini disGeneva, Jan. 9—League of Na(Continued on next page) New Y o r k , Dec. 3—Joseph ped. tions rejects demand for Jewish f places Jung, Jewish minister of United Jewish Appeal raised f",New York, Dec. 20—American Healey, 21-y e a r-old Irishman, state in Palestine in replying to . finance. proclaims himself "American Hit- Jewish Committee a n d National Revisionist petition. PEIXEY CONVICTED Council of Jewish Women refuse ler" and wars on Jews. Asheville, N. C , Jan. 23—Wilbid to American Jewish Congress J E W I S H COLONIES Rome, Dec. 3—-Germany pledgliam Dudley Pelley, Silver Shirt SELF-ST7PPOETING es equal rights for one year to elections; 15 other groups accept commander, and two lieutenants places on election board. Saar Jews after plebiscite; GuarJerusalem, Jan. 9—49 Jewish convicted of stock frauds. Paris, Dec. 21—Joint Recon- colonies now self-supporting. antee applies only to Jews resiNew York, Jan. 2 3—Rosen, dent in Saar for three years be- struction Fund appropriates $1,New York, Jan. 10—Supreme fore plebiscite; ..Refugees barred 450,000 for relief of Jews in Ger- Court denies charter to Nazis; Agro-Joint head, denies Soviets will bar foreign Jews in Biro Bidmany and Eastern Europe. from protection. Rebels set up rival organization. jan. Warsaw, Dec. 21—Anti-SeraTel Aviv, Jan. 11—Anti-SpecuRome, Dec. 4—Saar agreement New York, Jan. 2 4—241 Reeaves Reich refugees at mercy of ites capture control of Lodz city lation bureau set up. council. . I Tel Aviv, Jan. 12—Sabbath, vi- form Rabbis issue statement, enGermany. dorsement of Palestine Labor. Cincinnati, Dec. —-B n a i olations cause riots. Jerusalem, Dee. 5—R e p o r t Brith agrees to parley with AmerBuenos Aires, Jan. 2 5-—ArgenSaarbrucken, Jan. 13—Jews in Jewish investments in Palestine ican Jewish Congress. panic as plebiscite returns Saar tina uncovers wide Nazi anti-Semreach $50,000,000. K e w York itic plot; Arrest leader charged Miami, Dec' 9—A. A. U. fails - D e c - 23—Stephen t o G e r many. kOSH Hashonah is an opportune time WlS9 V7arns c I e a _ . Foreign ^ i t n b e i n S responsible for outdiscuss Olympic issue; S e e i ' ? film _ crusade ; Paris, Jan. 14—Foreign troops to to pause a moment from our dailv work Reich invitation rejected in 1935 m a y become anti-Semitic move- ; block pogrom as Jews prepare to : rages against Jewish institutions, ment. i£ l e e g a a r _ j Warsaw, Jan. 2 6—Seven antiif developments warrant. Biro Bidjan, TJ. S. S. R., Dec. j Geneva, Jan. 16 France wel- . Semites get stiff prison terms. Jerusalem, Dec. 9—R e p o r t and extend greetings and good \ushes world Jewry raised 55,000,000 23—J o s e p h Lieberberg elected •c o m e s Jewish refugees from Saar; j Cincinnati, Jan. 26—B ' n a i first^head of Biro Bidjan govern] League fails to act. j Brith votes to establish ninth Hilfor German Jews. to those who are near and dear. ment which takes over _„ adminis^ ^ y o r k , Jan. 16—Maurice : lei Foundation at Penn State ColTuscaloosa, Ala., D e c . 9— tration of region. Levin pledges 52,500 annually as ; lege. Eighth Hillel Foundation chapter Barcelona., D e c . 23—German New York, Jan. 2 7—Jabotinsky To us the beginning of our Jewish N-iW dedicated at University of Ala- refugees hit by new law banning long as he lives to JNF. reiterates Revisionist program in bama. New York, Jan. 17—Dr. Samjobs to aliens. Year is an excellent occasion to express London, Dec. 10—Leaders deny uel Kleinberg and Dr. H. S. Leib- j American debut. Belfast, Dec. 23—Northern Iree w i sh rumors Jews dickering with Nazis erman open way to prevent conI Jerusalem, Jan. land bans racial or religious bias Agency announces §2,500,00 budour appreciation for your patronage durfor concessions. genital hip dislocation. get. Dayton, Ohio, Dec. 10—Feder- in insurance policies. New York, Jan. 17—A b d u 1 Rio de Janeiro, .Tan. 2S—Paring the past year and to dedicate oural Council of Churches of Christ Hamid, "Black Hitler" found liament gets bill to c u r b antiTHREE FAITHS UNITE urge Christian churches to war on Detroit, Dec. 23—Three faiths ; guilty of atheism. Semitic agitation. selves-to cantinucd quality in car proprejudice and Fascism. unite to save churches and syna- I Jerusalem, Jan. 17—Hebrew "Warsaw, Jan. 2 S—Fina n e w Jerusalem, Dec. 10—Hebrew gogues from financial collapse. |University archaelogists find 6,sect of Polish peasants observes ducts . . . . meriting your cooperation telegrams allowed for first time. London, Dec. 2 5—Anti-Semitic !000 year old graves, New York, Dec. 11—Steuben pamphlets distributed in Jewish j Jerusalem, Jan. 17—Dr. Hus- Jewish rites. Rio de Janeiro, Jan. 2S—Dr. during the coming year. Society goes over to Hitlerism. i sein Khaldi named mayor of Jerquarter. Mario Malam-ad named first JewRiga, D e c . 11—Government New York, Dec. 25—R e n b e n usalem. suspends subsidies to J e w i s h Isaacs leaves $575,000 to Jewish,! Philadelphia, Jan. 18—Home ish judge in Brazil. schools. Tel Aviv, Jan. SO—Mayor DizJerusalem, Dec. 11—J e w i s h Catholic and Protestant charities. ! Missions Council flays anti-Sem- engoff recovers from nearly fatal Paris, Dec. 27—France plans itic propaganda. Agency adopts ?3,500,000 budget. ; t 0 cancel t r a n s i t Tisas o£ G e r m a n ' N e w York, J a n . 1 9 — C a r l illness. Sofia, Jan, SO—New Bulgarian MASS FLIGHT \ Schurz's relatives protest Nazi exrefugees. regime bans anti-Semitic groups. Danzig, Dec. 11—Mass flight of Washington, Dec. 29—Congress ; ploitation of his name, Tel Aviv, Jan. 5 1 — D a v i d Jews begins as Nazi persecution committee hears of plan for army j Jerusalem, Jan. 19—D a n i e 1 of 500,000 Gentiles to replace' Auster"named 'vice-mayor of" Jer- i Trietsch, economic expert a n d grows. Moscow, Dec. 12—Prepare for Roosevelt with Fascist dictator. usalem. " 1o n e o f t h e * o u n d e r s o f Zionist emigration of first Polish Jews to New York. Dec. 3 0—M a s D. Bagdad, Iraq, Jan. 20—20 Jews ' movement, dies at 65. Biro Bidjan. Steuer and Dr. Samuel Kopetsky arrested and chained as Zionists. I Moscow, Jan. 31—Soviet canR o m e , Dec. 12—Mussolini approve quotas for Jewish l a w Washington, Jan. 20—National j eels S6,000,000 debts of Jewish backs Italian Jewry's drive f o r and medical students in America. Conference on Palestine opens; i collectives. German Jewish relief. Jerusalem, Dec. 30—Country 1,500 delegates representing 1,-| Setif, Algeria, Feb. 1—Three Vienna, Dec. 12—Jews expelled flooded by heaviest rains in years; I 240,000 Jews attend; Secretary of : killed when Arab m o b pillages ISADORE FORBES from motor corps of Fatherland Orange export trade reported Interior Ickes says America has Jewish quarter. JACK FORBES Front; New anti-Semitic paper crippled. New York, Feb. 1—Hebrew acnothing but good will for reborn appears w i t h government apNew York, Dec. SI—Jewish Jewish nationalism. cepted as qualification of candiproval. Agency administrative committee j Tel Aviv, 21—World's ' dates seeking posts as director of A£hens,-De& 12—Greece modi- opens first meeting on American fies ban on entry of foreign Jews. soil. New Haven, Dec. 12—Probe Jerusalem, Dec. 31—Rainstorm Nazi propaganda on campus of takes heavy toll in Arab quarters; Yale University. Railway service disrupted, power New York, Dec. 13—National cut off. Jewish Labor Committee rejects . 1035 b i d to participate in American Jerusalem, Jan. 1—J e v i s h Jewish Congress elections. agency reports 42,000 Jews enLondon, Dec. 14-—Revisionists tered Palestine in 193 4. and Zionist Executive sign pact; New York, Jan. 2—AdministraRevisionists agree to end boycott tive Committee of Jewish Agency of Zoinist funds and will g e t moves to create non-Zionist conshare of immigration certificates. stituency. Amsterdam, Dec. 14—B 1 o o d Albany, N. Y., Jan. 2—Irwin ritual agitation alarms Dutch Steingut named speaker of New Jews. York Assembly. New York, Dec. 15—Open welMoscow, Jan. 2—Deny reports fare rages as American Nazis split of anti-Semitic riots in Leningrad into two factions. and Moscow. New York, Dec. 15—Dr. Jacob Vienna, Jan. 2—Government Goodale Lipman wins Chandler fails to give subsidies for Jewish 1617 FAENAM STREET medal for chemical research. religious institutions. New York, Dec. 15—Benjamin New York, Jan. 3—Dr. Rosen, Stern, department store magnate, Agro-Joint director, sees Biro leaves 5425,000 to charity. Bidjan as important Jewish miMontreal, Dec. 16—J e w i s h gration center but not homeland. New York, Jan. 4—President o a t h questioned in Canadian court. Roosevelt lauds good will moveJerusalem, Dec. IS—-Palestine j ment as Refugee Commissioner! Jews get first national loan of McDonald gets American Hebrew medal. 52,500,000. Fidelity AH lines of Jerusalem, Jan. 4—Jewish popCincinnati, Dec. 15—B ' n a i Brith rejects bid to take part in ulation set at 300,312. and General New York, Jan. 6—American Jewish Congress elections; Jewish labor groups back world Jewish Jewish Committee unequivocally j 5004 Dodge Street congress; charge Jewish Labor rejects world Jewish congress; i Suretv Bonds Insurance Committee unrepresentative of all 2Sth annual meeting stresses importance of inter-religious co-opJewish workers. Montreaux, Switzerland, Dec. eration and urges moderation of

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f New Tear's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

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(Continued from previous page) New York, Feb. 8—-American against anti-Semitic agitation in Palestine Campaign and Joint Distribution Committee continue Manchukuo. Washington, Feb. 6—President partnership in 1935 UJA drive for Roosevelt announces proposed §3,250,000. German-American barter deal has Montgomery, Ala., Feb. 8— been scrapped. Good will team of priest, rabbi Rio de Janeiro, Feb. 6—^Brazil- and minister address joint session ian immigration quota 1 a w be- of both houses of Alabama legiscomes effective. Heavy blow to lature. : German refugee . settlement plan. Los Angeles, Feb. 8;—Mayor Washington, Feb. 6—Shake-up Elsasser leaves.$197,000 to chariouats Jerome Frank as counsel of ties. A. A. A. . New York, Feb. 10—Jewish Jerusalem, Feb. 6 — J e w i s h Agriculture Society reports JewAgency denounces Revisionist Tel ish farmers held own during 1934; Hal fund. Jewish farmers number 110,000. London, Feb. 7—British forLondon, Feb. 12-—Parliament eign minister confirms reports of members renew chargea that Jews anti-Semitism in Iraq. a r e barred from Government Jerusalem, Feb. 7—Palestine Government adopts $27,500,000 | houses in Glasgow. Portland, Oregon, Feb. 14—• budget. London, Feb. 7—Member of Joseph Simon, former United Parliament charges anti-Semitism States Senator, dies at 84. Washington, Feb.' 15—Fascist In government subsidized housing danger in America real, Congresundertaking In. Glasgow. .

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sional committee reports; McCormack Committee finds Nazi propaganda collapsing; Show force and violence used, t o - w i n over German-Americans; Probers recommend legislation to curb spread of Nazi propaganda in U. S. London, F e b . 15— Refugee Commissioner McDonald puts responsibility for financing resettlement of refugees on League of Nations; Tells governing council refugees number 77,000. . Brussels, F e b. 16^-Premior Theunia says Jewish refugees will not be ousted. New York, Feb. 16;—Survey of directors of corporations explodes myth that Jews control finance and industry. New York, Feb. 17—United Roumanian Jews of America withdraws from America Jewish Committee because of latter's opposition to world Jewish congress. Ashevllle, N. C, Feb. 18—William Dudley Pelley, leader of anti-Semitic Silver Shirts, fined $1,000 after conviction for fraud; Escapes prison term on • promise to halt anti-Jewish propaganda. Paris, Feb. 18—Premier Flandin opposes wholesale expulsion of alien workers. . Warsaw, Feb. 18—F I v e antiSemites receive prison t e r m s ranging from one to five years for bombing Yilna synagogue. New York, Feb. 18—Conservat i v e rabbis endorse Palestine Labor. Rome, Feb. 19—Dr. Angelo Sacerdetl, chief rabbi of Italy, dies at 49. Teheran, Persia, Feb. 19—500 Jewish refugee families from Russia arrested; ' Anti-Semitic wave spreading over Persia. Danzig, -Feb. 19—Dissolution of Danzig diet alarms Jews who fear anti-Jewish measures. New York, Feb. 19—Young Israel withdraws from American Jewish-Committee. Belgrade, F e b . 19—Sixteen Hungarians In Jugoslavia Imprisoned for spreading blood ritual myth.. . New York, Feb. 19—Mrs. Anna Rosenberg named regional director of NRA. Winnipeg, Feb. 1 9 — C o u r t grants permanent injunction restraining Canadian Nationalist from libelling. Jews; Decision first

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test of recent law enabling individual member of race to claim damages when entire race is de: famed. Jerusalem, F e b . 20—Report Palestine Jews sent $1,500,000 to kinsmen in Russia a n d Poland during 1934. Paris, Feb. 21—French press holds Nazi agents responsible for anti-Jewish and anti-French outbreaks in Algeria. New York, Feb. 21—Morris Waldman, secretary of American Jewish , Committee, says withdrawal of United Roumanian Jews and Young Israel part of slander campaign. Paris, Feb. 21—French Jew takes out insurance against antiSemitism In France. Warsaw, Feb. 21—Jewish population of Poland found to have decreased 2 percent. Haifa, Feb. 21—S. S. Tel Aviv, first Jewish ship flying Palestine flag, arrives. Vienna, Feb. 2 2 — A u s t r i a n Jews create self-defense unit; Lawyers association d e m a n d s Jews be eliminated from bar. Kovno. Feb. 23—New banking loan imperils Jewish co-operative banks. Riga, Feb. 24—Latvia bans all Zionist organizations. New York, Feb. 24—President Roosevelt leads three faiths In national observance of second annual Brotherhood Day. London, F e b . 24—Palestine Electric Corporation's new stock offer oversubscribed 12 times. Melbourne, Feb. 24—German consulate urges boycott of Jewish candidates for parliament. New York, Feb. 25—Organize St. Charles Society to study genealogy of-American Jews. Bethlehem, Pa., Feb. 25—Rev. Charles Brodhead proposes Christions observe Yom Kippur as national day of prayer. Washington, Feb. 26—Three faiths unite in back-to-the-church movement. London, Feb. 26—Chancellor Schuschnigg of Austria says there is no Jewish question in Austria; Asserts all citizens h a v e equal rights. Haifa, Feb. 27—Arab and Jewish workers unite in strike on Iraw oil pipe line. Moscow, F e b . 27—Lazarus Kaganovich named commissar of transportation. Madred, Feb. 27—Survey shows Spanish Jewry numbers 20,000.' New York, Feb. 27—National Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds reports sharp cut in relief costs of Jewish philanthropic agencies; Public agencies took over many Jewish relief cases. Amsterdam, Feb. 27—Dutch press demands government curb anti-Semitic outrages- of Nazis. London; - -F"e b.— 27—Fascists smear "Bristol synagogue w i t h swastikas. Washington, Feb. 27—Federal Housing Administration r u l e s synagogues may borrow f o r repairs and modernization under National Housing Act. New York, Feb. 27—Einstein warns American Jews to learn lesson from fate of German brethren; Scores assimilationist policies of Reich Jews. Tripoli, Feb. 27—First Jewish Fascist corporation organized in Tripoli. . New York, Feb. 28—American Nazis paint Bruno Hauptmann, Lindbergh baby kidnapper, as victim of Jewish plot by "Elders of Zion"; Launch campaign to exploit Hauptmann case f o r Nazi propaganda.

FORGERY EXPOSED New York, Feb. 28—Prof. Charles A. Beard exposes antiSemitic forgery linking Benjamin Franklin to anti-Semitism. New York, Mar. 2—Edward Reilly, Bruno Hauptmann's counsel, repudiates anti-Semitism of Hauptmann's Nazi defenders. New York, M a r . 2—Immigration Commissioner tells HIAS' annual meeting advocacy of increased immigration will cause racial antagonisms; 9,107 Jews admitted to U. S. during 1934, including 2,026 German refugees.

4

May the Dawning of the New Year Bring Forth Much Happiness and Prosperity to Our Many Jewish Friends. • CARL THOMSEN • DWIGHT SLATER

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Chicago, Apr. 2—Anti-Semitic candidate for mayor swamped in election. Jerusalem, A p r . S—SokoloW urges Actions Committee to boycott employers not using Jewish labor. Berne. Apr. S—Swiss Government probes Nazi activity: Demands satisfaction from Reich tor kidnapping-of Jacob. Lodz, April 3—Je-wieh municipal councillors injured w h e n anti-Semites riot after elimination of Aryan paragraph. Budapest, April 3—Anti-Semitic candidates lose in parliamentary elections. Madrid. April 7—Jews terrorized as Nazis fail to w i n twothird vote in lower house of parliament. Montreal, A p r i l 7—Canadian Jews to get agricultural school. New York, April 7—Jewish centers gain in membership and financial stability annual Welfar* Board meeting hears. Jerusalem, A p r i l 7—Actions Committee votes to expell from Zionist Orang Organization JewiBli employers shunning Jewish Labor. Tel Aviv, April 7—American! win track and field title at Mao* HEBREW UNIVERSITY cabiad. - ANNIVERSARY Bucharest, April 7—Anti-SemJerusalem, Apr. 2—Tenth anniversary of Hebrew University itic students riot in University. (Continued on next page) marked. Saloniki, Mar. 28—Greece outr laws all Nazi groups. Lodz, Poland, Mar. 28—Municipal subsidies to Jewish institutions ended a« anti-Semitic councillors threaten Jews. Paris, Mar. 29—Nationaliots students stage wide anti-Jewish riot. Tel Aviv, Mar. 29—Samuel Agnon and Rabbi Chaim Kosaowsky win Bialik awards, Palestine's Pulitzer prizes. Chicago, Mar. 20—Anti-Semitism and Hltierism become i»eues in Chicago mayoralty election. Jerufialera, Mar, S O — J e w i s h Agency announces it will t a k e over Maccabiad after this? year. Chicago, Mar. S O — G e n e r a l Johnson flay* Father Coughlin RB would-be Hitler. Jerusalem, Mar. 30—U«thitikin warns RevigSooJfstB of fate of Territorlaltats. Moscow, Mar. SO—Five workera imprisoned for anti-Semitic outrages. Prague, Apr. 1—Alter? Jew* arrested as new law poea into effect. Tel Aviv, Apr. 2—Americans lead by 100 points in first day o£ second triennial Maccabiad.

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Saabruecken, Mar. 2—J e w s Johannesburg, Mar. 16—Gensuffer from boycott as Nazis take tile Protection League founded. over Saar. Toronto, Mar. 16—David Croll Tel Aviv, Mar. 2—Ten injured, named legal guardian of Dionne 11 arrested in Sabbath observ- quintuplets. ance riot. Philadelphia, Mar. 17—AmeriJerusalem, Mar. 2—Dr. Joseph can Jewish Congress session reSaphir, one of three founders of moves world Jewish Congress as Zionist movement in Russia, dies issue; Reorganization plan affectat 65. ed as Wise succeeds Deutsch to New York, Mar. 3—Z. O. A. presidency. administrative committee repudiAmsterdam, Mar. 17—-First ates new Cleveland Zionist dis- openly acknowledged Jewish Fastrict of Rabbi Silver. cist party organized. New York, Mar. 3—First KoshVienna, Mar. 17—Jews barred er butchers' convention hails NRA from film industry aa Austrian kosher meat code. a n d German movie industries Rio de Janeiro, Mar. 4—State reach agreement. of Rio Grande de Sul to accept Tel Aviv, Mar. 17—Stadium for 1,000 German Jewish refugees as 50,000 dedicated f o r Jewish farmersOlympic Games. Haifa, Mar. 4—Sabbati L e v y New York, Mar. 18—"Protonamed first Jewish vice-mayor of cols of 1935" distributed by antiHaifa. Semites. Jerusalem, Mar. 6—Histadruth New York, Mar. 1 8 — N a z i s reports membership of 72,000. smear Yeshiva College walls with Prague, Mar. 7—World Jewry swastikas. honors President Masaryk on 85th Jerusalem, Mar. 18—Palestine birthday;. Plan Jewish colony in imports totalled $80,000,000 durhis honor in Palestine. ing 1934. New York. Mar. 7—City offiBasle, Mar. 19—Berthold Jaccials ban Nazi collections f o r ob, refugee German Jewish jourHauptmann defense. nalist kidnapped by Nazis a n d New York, Mar. T—GRT head taken back to Germany. reveals plans for Biro-Bidjan colHedera, Palestine, Mar. 19— onization and §5,000,000 loan. Rome, Mar. 7—Vatican to con- Labor party rejects pact with Revene scientific congress.to expose visionists. Warsaw, Mar. 19—Polish rabAryan racial myth. New York, Mar. 9—Anti-Labor binate raises 443 year old b a n and pro-Revisionist General Zion- against Spain. London, Mar. 20—Leon Simon ists seek World Congress bloc. named director of British postal Rome, Mar. 9—Block attempt savings. to introduce Nazi racial ideas in New York, Mar. 2 0 — L o u i s Italy. Wiley, business manager of New Saloniki, Mar. 10—Jews unaf- York Times, dies at 65. fected by Greek revolt. Cleveland, Mar. 20—Cleveland Washington, Mar. 10—Federal Zionists make peace with Rabbi Government approves $8 50,000 loan for Jewish subsistence farm. Silver. Warsaw, Mar. 20—Plan law for New York, Mar. 10—Report reveals striking gains.in Influence, examinations of all traders and support and membership of Amer- merchants; See b l o w aimed at Jews. ican Jewish Committee. Albany, N. Y.. Mar. 21—New Amsterdam, Mar. 10—Dutch Government issues special pass- York State outlaws racial and religious bias in state-supported edports for German refugees. New York, Mar. 10—Dr. Ste- ucational institutions. phen S. Wise flays Revisionism as PLAN FOR REFUGEES carbon of Fascism; Disowns disWashington, Mar. 23—Temple ciples associated with Jabotinsky; Brotherhoods adopt plan for setSees Revisionist chieftain as men- tling German Jewish refugees; ace to Jewish people. Revival of traditional Jewish cerNew York, Mar. 10—Orthodox emonials urged by Reform group. Jews launch field work In small Tulsa, Okla., Mar. 24—General communities. Saloniki, Mar. 11—Anti-Jewish j Johnson, NRA head, tells Sunday excesses by Venizelist rebels re-] school class Romans, n o t Jews, killed Jesus. ported. Warsaw, Mar. 24—P o 1 a n d Harbin, Mar. 11—Japan pledges curb on anti-Semitic White adopts new totaliarian constitution which curtails Jewish repreGuards in Manchukuo. sentation in parliament. New Orleans, Mar. 12—Council Ottawa, Mar. 24—Canada exof Jewish Women to work for ed- empts Palestine oranges f r o m ucational approach to Jewish 1 tariff. problems. | Saloniki, Mar. 12—F a c t o r y ; Madrid, Mar. .24—Maimonides foremen dismissed for permitting Octocentennial celebration opens. Moscow, Mar. 24—Agro-Joint outrages on Jewish workers. dickering f o r settling foreign Jews in Biro-Bldjan. BIBLICAL STORIES Tel Aviv, Mar. 24—Chief RabCONFIRMED Jerusalem, Mar. 13—New arch- bi Aronson dies at 73. Cordova, Spain, Mar. 25—Spain aeological finds confirm Bible stories; Archives with Hebrew in- honors Maimonides. Washington, Mar. 25—Reform scriptions uncovered at Tel Adduwelr; Believed to be most im- Union warned against synagogue portant archeological discovery in rule In politics. Jerusalem, Mar. 25—Convenhistory. Foundations of higher Bible criticism shattered by finds. tion of Women's International Danzig, Mar. 13—Nazis wreck Zionist Organization, first world parley to be held in Palestine, Jewish sport club building. Detroit, M a r. 14—President opens. Cordova, Mar. 26—C o r d o v a Roosevelt says he's not worried over tales of his "Jewish ances- synagogue restored to J e w s as try"; Answers Jewish editors •world's savants p a y tribute to query about report of his Jewish Maimonides. Londoc, Mar. 26—First comdescent in Michigan paper. Bucharest, Vaida, Mar. 14— plete unabridged English translaVoyeod, former premier, expelled tion of Babylonian Talmud pubfrom Peasant Party because of lished. Jerusalem, M a r . 27—Histrahis anti-Semitic campaign. New York, Mar. 14—Society druth invites Revisionists to unite for Advancement of Judaism es- on Labor pact. Rio de Janeiro, Mar. 27—Bratablished fund chest for overseas zil moves to ban Fascist militias. Jewish causes. Washington, Mar. 2 7 — J a c o b New Orleans, Mar. 14—Council of Jewish Women adopts German Mack elected president of Union Jewish refugee program as major of American Hebrew Congregations. work for next three years. Jerusalem, Mar. 2 S—Zionist AcSyracuse, N. Y., Mar. 14—Dr. Wise warns Father Coughlin tions Committee meeting opens; against f a n n i n g anti-Semitic Brodetsky declares British bar on Palestine immigration is myth; flares. Report 14,000 Jews entered up to . Moscow, Mar. 15—Larindorff, fifth Jewish autonomous region, March; Five year planned economy program outlined; K e r e n opened in Crimea. Madrid, Mar. 16—Fascists at- Hayesod income increased, 25 new colonies founded. tack Jewish store.

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

'(Continued from previous -page) Jerusalem, April 8—Discipline clauses adopted at Actions Committee ends sessions; Revisionists quit meeting, announce boycott of Congress. . Chattanooga, Tenn., April 8— Adolph S. Ochs, publisher of New York Times and noted philanthropist, dies at 76. Trenton, N. J., April 8—Gov• ernor Hoffman signs law outlawing Nazi and • anti-Semitic propaganda in all forms. Prague, April 9—Czech S i c k Insurance Fund boycotts German University which discriminates against Jews. Bucharest, April 9—36 s t u dents arrested as violent antiJewish riots rage. Iowa City, Iowa, April 10— Jewish fraternity suspended at Iowa University on immorality charges; Hint bias against Jews. Montivideo, Uruguay, April 10 —;IIruguay Jews unveil monument to Einstein.Prague; April 10—New election law seen excluding Jews f r o m parliament. Bucharest, April 10—Jews panic-stricken as anti-Semites run riot. Tel Aviv, April 11;—Austria •wins . team title as Maccabiad closes; Germany second and U. S. third. Jerusalem, April 11—Jewish Agency gets.8,500 labor immgration certificates, largest number in history. Bucharest, Apr. 11—Semi-martial law declared as anti-Semitic students defy government; Bu-

charest University closed. • New York, April 12—Theodore Dreiser reveals himself as antiSemite in exchange of correspondence. • Rome, Apr. 12—Medora Roosevelt, cousin of President Roosevelt, engaged to Massino Treves, scion of Jewish family. - New York, April 12—Reports §7,500,000 raised for German refugees in last two years. Jerusalem, April 12—Palestine passes law fixing weekly day of rest. Jerusalem, April 12—Swastikas and other Nazi propaganda appear in Palestine. • Buenos Aires, April 13—Argentine Jews take legal action to curb anti-Semitic plot. New York, April 14—Anti-Nazi League urges League of Nations to. back boycott through economic sanctions against Reich. BELIEF NEEDED ' Warsaw, April 14—60 per cent of Warsaw, Jews ask Passover relief. • - Sofia, April 14—Bulgarian foreign minister pledges Jews equal rights.-' . Moscow, A p r i l 14—Rudolph Samoiloyich, noted Arctic explorer, gets Order of Lenin from Soviet Government. Harbin, April 14—1200 Jews forced "to leave as Manchukuo buys Far Eastern Railway from Soviets.Lohdon, April 15—Sir, Oswald Mosley," officially.' embraces Hitler anti-Semitism. Prague, April 16—German Uni-

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ersity repudiates Aryan clauses. Tel Aviv^ April 16—J e w i s h xew of Jewish steamer Tel Aviv harges propaganda against Palistine Shipping Company. Rome, April 16—Rumors ships of Palestine Shipping Company are Nazi-controlled. Moscow, April 16—Peter Smid)vich, non-Jewish friend of Jewsh colonization, dead. New York, April 16—Barney loss gives up lightweight title because he can't make weight. Jerusalem, April IS—Reveal Mussolini plan to give Arabs inlependence in event of new world ar. Prague, April. 18—C e n s u s hows Czechoslovakia as 357,000 "ews. Amsterdam, April 20—Nazis make important gains in provincial diet elections. Washington, April 20—Distribute kosher meat code provisions in Yiddish. Jerusalem, April 2 0 — G r a n d rlufti denies report of Italian aliance. Kovno, A p r i l 20—Yemenite ews ask aid to halt persecutions. New York, April 20—Einstein flays Revisionists in address to Laborites. Saloniki, April 21—Two antiemitic publications suppressed. Prague, April 22—Jewish Par;y makes election agreement with Socialists. New York, April 22—Hadassah md Z. O. A. create united front :or Congress elections. New York, April 22—Socialists repudiate Harry Lang, Jewish Daily Forward writer, for antioviet articles in- Hearst press. WASHINGTON Corpus Christi, Texas, April 22 HEADQUABTEBS —Jewish commissioner gets city Washington, M a y 8 —B'Nai to hold public observance of Good Brith votes to move headquarters Friday. to Washington; Move to curtail IN IRELAND Dublin, April 22—Jewish Rec- philanthropic activities f a i l s ; ord, first Jewish paper in Ireland, Work of Anti-Defamation League expanded. .ppears. Paris, May 8—France gets first Paris, April 22—Revisionists break with World Zionist Organ- Jewish secondary school. Chattanooga, Tenn., May 9— ization; Plan own Congress. American Legion post refuses to Bucharest, April 22—A n 11 Semitic factions unite to estab- share in tribute to Hitler government. lish new party. Rangoon, India, May 9—Court Budapest, April 22—Awakening Magyars, anti-Jewish party, holds brown-skinned Jews of India equal to other Jews. disbands. Saloniki, May 9—Greece comIstanbul, Apr. 22—Turkey bans pensates Jews for losses in 1931 clerical garb in public places. Moscow, April 22—Five work- pogrom. Jerusalem, May 10—Blood riters at government shipyards imprisoned f o r insulting Jewish ual charge invades Afghanistan, according to reports from Kabul. comrades. Tel Aviv, May 10—Palestine's Detroit, April 24—Rabbi Isserman of St. Louis, warns against first observatory dedicated. Paris, M a y 10—Anti-Semitic Fascism and race hatreds at Father Conghlin's first political rally. candidates beaten in municipal London, " A p r i l 2 5—Barnett elections. Warsaw, May 12—Jews alarmFreedman, Jewish artist, wins ed as Marshall Pilsudski dies. contest for King George jubilee New York, May 12—First murstamp. New York, April 25—Dreiser al paintings depicting modern denies he's anti-Semite in inter- Palestine unveiled in Rabbi Mordecai M. Kaplan's synagogue. view with New Masses. Haifa, May 13—Jewish settleMoscow, April 26—Three anti- ment named for General Smuts of Semites get ten-year prison sen- South Africa. tences for trying to burn Jewish New York, May 13—Yeshiva worker alive. College establishes commerce deBarcelona, April 27—Spanish partment. Jewry split over differences beKabul, May 13—Medieval ghettween Ashkenazim and Sephar- to imposed on Afghanistan Jews. dim. Berne, May 14—Swiss judge Moscow, A p r i l 2 8—Russian declares "Protocols of Z i o n" Jews rejecting relief from abroad. false; Nazi defendants fined but See no further need for it. law prevents court from banning Geneva, April 2 8—Nazis attack circulation of "Protocols." servant of Rev. James Parks, foe Moscow, May 14—M a r k first of anti-Semitism; Seek documents anniversary of declaration estabexposing falsity of "Protocols." Jerusalem, April 29-—Palestine lishing Biro Bidjan as autonomFarmers' Day unites Jews a n d ous Jewish district. Arabs. New York, May 14—ConservaJerusalem, April 29—Report tive rabbis amend marital code to shows Palestine exported 7,500,- give women equality; Adopt plan 000 cases of oranges in 1935. for solving problem of Agunoth. San Diego, May 14—Boycott Mexico City, April 29—Econ-

forces German ships to end calls at San Diego. New Brunswick, N. J., May 15 —Dr. Leinhard Bergel, non-Jewish German instructor at New Jersey College for Women, fired for opposing Nazi propaganda in German department. New York, May 15—Employees of Jewish hospital locked after city-wide strike protesting pay cuts for workers in Jewish charity federation institutions. Moscow, May 15—Announce five-year development plan f o r B i r o Bidjan; Expect district to have 220,000 people by 1940. Rio de Janeiro, May 16—Report 1.S19 Jewish immigrants entered Brazil in 1934. New Brunswick, N. J., May 16 —Rutgers University begins probe of charges of Nazism and antiSemitism in New Jersey College for Women. Jerusalem, May 17—Palestine inaugurates labor reform program. Jerusalem, May 18—Arabs seek abrogation of British Mandate in Palestine.

BIEO BIDJAN Washington, May 19—Soviet envoy says Biro Bidjan open to foreign Jews. New York, May 19—Dr. Wise booms David Ben-Gurion for presidency of World. Zionist Organization; Z. O. A. amend3 World Congress platform to win support of Histadruth's foes; Endorsement of Palestine Labor modified. New York, May 19—Jewish employees in Brooklyn hospital operated by Jewish charity dismissed because of union activities. Johannesburg, May 19—South African Jews launch agricultural movement. Amsterdam, May 19—Nazis begin anti-Semitic drive in Holland. Prague, May 20—Nazis score heavily in parliamentary election, winning 70 seats; t w o Jews elected. London, May 20—Henry Eskell David bequeathes §1,250,000 to Anglo-Jewish Association and

Jewish Board of Guardians. Madison, Wis., May 20—Antiradical drive at University of Wisconsin turns to Jew-baiting. New York, May 21—Markets commissioner charges racketeers in kosher poultry trade mulct public of §1,000,000. annually; retail kosher meat code suspends as butchers fail to cooperate. Jerusalem, May 22—Revisionists barred from all Palestine offices. New Brunswick, N. J., May 22 —Probe upholds charges o* antiSemitism and Nazism at New Jersey College for Women. New York, May 2 2—American Jewish Committee, B'Xai Brith and American Jewish Congress extend Joint Consultative Council for another year. Geneva, May 2 3—League of Nations gets protest from Jews of Danzig. New York, May 23—1,5 00 Hebrew teachers hold one-day strike to call attention to economic plight. Moscow, May 23—Report great increase in number of productive Jewish •workers in Russia. Saloniki, May 23—Isaac Taki, Jewish, leader, named head of civil aviation. Copenhagen, May 2 4—International Federation of Trade Unions pledges extension of anti-N a z i boycott. Geneva, May 2 5—League of Nations names committee to inquire into anti-Semitic acts of Danzig Nazis; Danzig agrees to repeal anti-Jewish laws if probe justifies complaints. Vienna, May 26—Police burn valuable Jewish library of Poale Zion Club. Tel Aviv, May 27—Permanent Bialik Museum established. Jerusalem, May 27—City ends year without single death f r o m malaria. Warsaw, May 27—Gazeta Warsawaka, Poland's leading antiSemitic daily, suspends publication. Washington, May .27—Appeal of Jewish poultry dealers to Su-

! Dublin, June 1—Weekly 'Ireland's first anti-Semitic ' r ppears. : Ottawa, June 2—Mrs. bald Freiman honored on f ; birthday with $50,000 gift .'v.fji Hadassah. I Mexico City, June 2—Anti-Sf rr>. I itic Golden Shirrs demand JVr *<.-••* deprive Jcvrs of citizenship. Sao Paulo, Brazil. J n n t '•-— REPAYMENTS Haifa, May 2S—First Keren I Jewish refugees from Kci.! ;r« Hayesod colony begins repay- vitcd to work land. London, June 2—Eight, . ' T U ments. in King's bir.i'.'iJV Barcelona, Mar 20—Interna- decorated honors. tional P. E. N. Congress protests Jerusalem, June 2—Joseph ."i> Xazi persecutions. pliali, one of two Jews gentf>T<;r>& Paris, Slay 29—Baron Rothschild warns of threat of anti-Sem- for participation in IP 2 9 ri.W freed by King's amnesty; lrit-.x.J*itism in France. unreprieved. Santiago, Chile, May HP—Abel Paris, June 2—Georges lUiiiu'fu Faivovitch elected to city council; named minister oC rommnr.i.acFirst Jewish officeholder in Chile. tions in Bouisson cabinet. Montreal, May £9—Synagogue Geneva, June 3—Jewish / • / ' : • in Canadian si'mmer resort cy presents report to Man.!. '-•. smeared with swastikas. Istanbul, May SO—Turkish po- Commission showing increr^f '-i* lice raid office of Jewish Coloni- Jewish population, labor M«n age: increased immigratim »'*•zation Association. Moscow, May SO—Soviets can- manded. Saloniki, June 3—Albacif > cel 82,500,000 debts of Jewish vites Jews to settle there, colonies in Crimea. Istanbul, June S—60 JCTI S.New York, May 3 0—Orthodox rabbis flay Conservatives' action | rested when police renew r;iii <.i on divorce code; warn participants ! ICA office. Hollywood. J u n e S—Cl-r '* will be excommunicated. Montreal, May 3 0—Henri Bour- \ Chaplin denies he's Jewish. Balboa, Canal Zone, Jum "• — assa, spiritual leader of Canadian | (Continued jn next anti-Semites, recants. preme Court upsets NKA. London, May 2 7—International congress of Sephardic Jews established. « Utica, N. T., May 2S—Rabbi Joshua Kolin founds Community Zionist Party. Buenos Aires, May IS—Argentina bars Jewish refugees for fear of arousing Fascists.

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omic rivalries threatens Jews of Hermosillio with expulsion. Prague, April" 29—Nazis leaders sentenced to prison for organizing boycott against Jews. Berne, April 2 9j—"Protocols" Trial reopens with court expert testifying documents are forgeries. St. Louis, April 29—-Denying Jew-baiting, F a t h e r Coughlin promises rabbi to war on antiSemitism. Berne, April 30—Nazi expert draws laughs in attempt to prove "Protocols" are historically correct. New York, May 1—Symbols of Christianity and Judaism carried side by side in peace service. Vienna, May 1—250 Jewish doctors plan to leave Austria because of lack of jobs. London, • May 1—British Jewry to mark King's silver jubilee with memorial forest in Palestine. Albany, N. Y., May 2—Governor Lehman signs bill giving Jewish Teachers' Seminary college status. Warsaw, May 3—Jewish girl killed when anti-Semites bomb chalutzim home. Washington, M a y 5 —B'Nai Brith's quinquennial convention opens; President Cohen urges extention of J o i n t Consultative Council; Plan study of Jewish student's problems. Tel Aviv, May 6-—All Jewish city gets $5,000,000 loan. New York, May 6—Jewish Education Association reports decline in Jewish school registration stemmed. London, May 6—Jews of Empire join in celebration of King George's jubilee. Washington, May 7—Ten-point program for combatting anti-Semitism laid before B'nai Brith convention; Speaker Byrne of House of Representative flays intolerance; Orders membership set at 67,000. Paris, May 7—Fascists stage anti-J e w i s h demonstration in Paris streets. Warsaw, May 7—Anti-Jewish terrorism breaks out in East Galicia.

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New Yeai-'s Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27,1935. municipal council of Lods dissolved. Constantlne, Algeria, July 3— Aran sentenced to four years' imprisonment for 1934 pogrom. London, July 4—Dr. C h a i n Weizmann boomed for presidency of World Zionist Organization. Jerusalem, July 6—Two Arabs get death sentence for murder of Jew. Vienna, July 6—Austrian Bar Associations r e j e c t s numerous clausus for Jews. Budapest, July <>—Report 502 Jews embraced Christianity during past year. Paris, July 7—French Jews create first united representative agency. Buenos Aires, July 7—Crisis in Jewish farm colonies eased by establishment of mortgage bank. Brussels, July 7—L e a d 1 n g Catholic organ u r g e s official Catholic boycott of Germany. Richmond, Va., July 8—Judge upholds Shulchan Aruch in dispute between Reform and Orthodox Jews. New York, July 8—Courts ban Negro picketing of Jewish stores in Harlem. Moscow, July 9—Soviet gives ?30,000;000 more for Biro Bidjan development. Danzig, July 9—Jews beaten In streets by Nazis.

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Istanbul, June 22—T u r k 8 y Paris, June 13—French Zioncloses ICA offices. ists create national federation. Warsaw, June 22—Dr. Simon Tripoli, June 16—Chief Rabbi Q a a t e 1-Bolognese deported to Ashkenazi, historian and former Italy. Polish representative to League Lake Placid, N. Y., June 16— of Nations, dies at 67. New York, June 23-—Labor Social workers urge national tenyear plan of Jewish vocational re- scores sweeping victory In Ziondirection. ist Congress elects; leads General New York, June 16—Max Baer Zionists by two to one. blasts ex-trainer's charge he posed Washington, June 23—Patrias Jew to enhance b o x office otic groups move to back Dies' value. bill to ban work to aliens and to Paris, June 16—First congress accelerate deportations. of Jewish war veterans from, all Paris, June 2 3 — B a r o n e s s parts of world held. Rothschild, widow of Baron EdLake Placid, Nv Y., June 17— mond, dies at .91. TAXES REDUCED Geneva, June 6—Palestine Gov- Social Workers told some AmeriBucharest, June 24—Supreme ernment tells Mandates Commis- can Jews want Fascism to protect Court rescinds decision of minission Palestino finances are so their property. ter of public worship depriving Saloniki, June 17-—P e p p a h 11,000 Czernowitz Jews of elecstrong that taxes will be reduced. Warsaw, June S—35 injured in Mallah named vice-minister of fi- tion rights in Jewish community. sew attacks on Jews in Grodno. nance. Lima, Peru, June 26—Ylddishe Haifa, June 9—Dr. Shmarya Moscow, June 17—First 13 Zeitung, first Yiddish daily in Levin, dean of Zionist propagan- German-Jewish savants get places Peru, published. in Russia. dists, dies at 68. RELIGIOUS ONLY Paris, June 25—French Jewry Cracow, J u n e 18—General London, June 9—Tel Aviv gets Vienna, July 9—Aus.trlan Jews Zionists conference splits over creates first united front commit- proclaim Belves o n l y religious $5,000,000 loan. as representative agency. Warsaw, June 10—J e w 1 s h separate labor union in Palestine. teeKovno, June 25—Survey re- community. Jerusalem, June 18—-K e r e n youth die3 after riot in Grodno; Bucharest, July 9—Cuza and veals thousands of Jews lack Goga Hayesod reports 27 colonies con3J3 anti-Semites arrested. create n e w anti-Semitic work. Saloniki, June 10—M. Alaluf solidated. party. Jerusalem, June 26—Jewish Cracow, June 19—Progressive and Asher Mallah elected to Greek Melbourne, July 10—Nazi cells parliament. General Zionists form independ- Agency reports 5,000 German organized In Australia. Jews engaged in Palestine agriIstanbul, June 11—34 Jews' ent body. Newark, N. J., July 10—State Warsaw, June 19—Offices of culture. arrested on charges of smuggling board of education ends Saturday Prague, June 27—-Rabbi adJews from Turkey to Palestine. anti-Nazi boycott committee closdresses Catholic Congress; Car- lasses instate normal schools. Paris, July 12—Alfred Dreyfus Brussels, June 12—-German ed by government. dinal Verdier lauds Jews. dies at 76. Jerusalem, J u n e 20^—Jewish .delegates quit congress of League Zurich, June 27—First large Havana, July 12—Anti-Jewish of Nations Societies after adop- sea-f a r i n g organization estabscale anti-Semitic demonstrations b o y c o t t launched; government tion of resolution asking League lished. Intervention in Germany in beMoscow, J u n e 20—Modified break out over showing of "Beg- bans naturalization o£ Jews. half of persecuted Jews. form of private property estab- gar's Opera." Constantine, Algeria, July 12— New York, June 27—Orthodox Three New York, June 12-^-Healey, lished in Biro Bidjan. more Arabs imprisoned for open war on divorce rac- last year's "American Hitler," gets 60 days riots. New York, June 20—Customs rabbis in workhouse. Barcelona, J u l y 13 —N a % I officials ban sale of Der Stuermer. ket. Victoria, Brit. Columbia, June Tegucipalpa, June 12—Hon- Tel Aviv, June 20—Cornerstone agents terrorize Jewish refugees. duras announces it will welcome f o r Habimah Theatre, world's 27—Fred. Landsberg, leader of Buenos Aires, July 14—United Western Canadian Jewry, dies at German Jewish scientists. Iront anti-Fascist movement orfirBt Hebrew theatre laid. 76. . Bucharest, June 13—Roumanganized to curb anti-Semitism. Jerusalem, June 28—25,000 ian universities adopt numerous SCIENTISTS WANTED L o n d o n , July 17—Refugee clauses for Jews. Tokio, June 20—Japanese pap- dunam area acquired by Jewish Commissioner demands League of National Fund. Sanaa, Yemen, June 13—Rab- er urges government to Invite Vienna, June 2 8—A u s t r 1 a n Nations assume responsibility for bis proclaim fast to avert Moslem German Jewish scientists. Jews move to create singled rep- exiles. Announces formation of Montreal, June 20—C a n a d a riots following widespread dis$10,000,000 refugee aid corporatribution of anti-Jewish pamph- forms national conference of Jews resentative body. tion in United States. St. Louis, June 29—Charge St. and Christians to foster good will. lets. Johannesburg, July 18—BenLouis postmaster dismissed three Jewish clerks because of anti- ion S. Hirsch, leader of South African Jewry, dies at 51. Semitism. Istanbul, July 20—Funds of New York, June 29—Refugee Commissioner McDonald -reports Jewish regilious bodies confiscat4,000 German refugees settled in ed by government. Washington, July 20—Senators South America. Paris, June 29—France bars Walsh and Tydings rap Nazi antialien doctors and dentists after Semitism. New York, July 22—Left wing 1940. Chicago, June 30—Reform rab- delegates and Revisionists stir upbis abandon official opposition to roar w h e n Ab Cahan addresses Zionism; leave Question to indi- anti-N a z I protest meeting of American Jewish Congress. 2614 Martha St. vidual rabbis. New York, July 22—Warburg Atlantic City, N. J., June 30— Reorganization plan laid before announces creation of $10,000,opening session of Zionist conven- 000 Refugee Economic Corporation; President Rothenberg rec- tion. New York, July 23—Mayor La ommends permanent"local Palestine councils; administration at- Guardia refuses masseur's license tacked for failure to support His- to German alien because of discrimination a g a i n s t American tadruth. Chicago, July 1—Reform Rab- Jews. Washington, July 24—Senator )is elected Levy, Zionist, as presWilliam H. King urges U. S. sevident; table action on pacifism. London, July 1—-Sir Francis er relations with Germany because of Nazi persecutions of Montefiore dies at 71. Tel Aviv, July 1—P r o t e s t Jews and Catholics. New York, July 24—Nazis and Amalgamation of Labor and genGerman-Americans p r o t e s t La eral schools. Guardia'a ban on license to GerIMMIGRATION RECORD man alien. Jerusalem, July 1—All PalesLondon, J uly 24—Jewish TerCast Iron and Bronze Bushings, Mantine Jewish immigration records ritoriallst Conference hears Ecuhole Rings and Covers, Cistern Rings broken; 30,000 Jews admitted In dor has granted large tract for and Covers, and Underground Garfirst half of year. Jewish colony. Atlantic City, July 2—Zionists bage Containers carried in stock. London, J u l y 25—Freeland re-elect Rothenberg; plan joint Movement organized to find terZionist consultative council a n d ritory for Jewish settlement. commission to reorganize Z. O. A. New York, July 25—A. A. U. structure; New executive created. President favors American boyCXXSXSSSSXSXSSXSSKKX^ Glasgow, July 2—Scottish war cott of Olympic Games. veterans boycott good will tour New York, July 26—Anti-Nasl to Germany. mob tears swastika from S. S. We take this opportunity to Paris, July 3—Andre Citroen, Bremen; Jewish detectives injurFrance's "Henry Ford," dies at ed protecting Nazi emblem. 57. St. Louis, July 29—President extend our sincere and Warsaw, July 3—Anti-Semitic of Federal Council of Churches (Continued from previous page) Report German Jewish refugee scholars placed in Universities of Preu, Chile, Ecuador and Argentina. Helslngfors, Finland,. June B—"Protocols of Zion" published by anti-Semitic organ. New York, June 6—Raymond Healey, "American Hitler," arrested after Jew tears down Nazi sign. Jerusalem, June 6—Arab workers' League formed by Jewish Labor Federation.

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assails N&zl war on Catholics and Jews. Washington, July 3 0 — S t a t e Department tells Jewish delegation United States sympathizes with Jews in Germany. New York, July 30—The Commonweal, Catholic weekly, urges Catholics to boycott O l y m p i c Games. New York, July 30—Catholics picket' German consulate and urge boycott. Washington, July 3 0 — S t a t e Department gets German note protesting insult to swastika. Johannesburg, July 30—South African Jewry launches drive to combat anti-Semitism. Washington, August 1—State Department's reply to German protest blames German shipping line for riot; emphasizes Jewish detectives protected swastika and praise New York police. Paris, August 5—Paris dressmakers boycott German boats. Chicago, August 5—Christian Century urges Olympics be moved from Germany. Shanghai, August 5—Shanghai city council blasts Nazi blood libel against Jews of China. Harrisburg, Pa., August 10— Pennsylvania adopts law banning prejudice because of race, creed or color in public places. Bucharest, August 12—Police raid anti-Semitic Quarters. Boston, August 12—Massachusetts legislature protests Nazi persecution of Jews and Catholics. Boston, August 13—Governor Curley of Massachusetts rebukes Nazi consul who protested legislature's action on Germany; Says legislature expressed opinion of majority of Americans. Washington, August 13—Senator Gerry tells Senate U. S. ought o stay out of Olympics. New York, August 15—Hotel New Yorker cancels convention of

German-American group because it wanted to fly swastika. Vienna, August 16—Austria bans all sport meets with Germany. Denver, August 16—Jews protest Passion Play in state -university auditorium. New Brunswick, N. J., August 19—Trustees inquiry upholds ban on anti-Nazi teacher at New Jersey College for Women; Clears college of charges of Nazi propaganda and anti-Semitism. Lucerne, A u g u s t 20—19th World Zionist Congress Opens. London, August 21—Refugee Colonization opportunities in Latin-America limited, Dr. Inman reports. Lucerne, Aug. 21—'Dr. Chaim Weizmann elected president of Zionist Congress; Mizrachi abstains from proceedings. Mikveh Israel, Palestine, August 21—Palestine's first agricultural school marks 76th anniversary. Washington, August 22—Arthur J. Altmeyer appointed to Federal Security Board by President Roosevelt. Lucerne, August 22—Central financing agency for Palestine development urged on Zionist Congress; Ussishkin brands l a n d speculators comparable to white slave traffickers. New York, August 25—Dr. William Feinbloom develops micro-vision spectacles which enable persons with only 2 percent vision to see. Lucerne, August 26—Laborites yield on religious question a n d Zionist Congress deadlock ends; Lipsky warns unrestrained economic individualism in Palestine will cause collapse; Urges economic planning council. Lucerne, August 27—Stephen S. Wise tells Zionist Congress

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Nazis are fostering international honorary president; coalition executive named. wars by race theory. Jerusalem, August £S—Dr. Ju* * * dah L. Magnes resigns as chan- (Copyright, 1935, by Seven Arts cellor of Hebrew University. Feature Syndicate.) Washington, August 30—State Department rejects League cl NaGOVERNMENT GRANTS TO tions plea to admit refugees. Sheffield, Mass., August 31— JEWISH INSTITUTIONS Herman Bernstein dies at age of 59. Jerusalem (WNS-Palcor AgenJerusalem, September 1—Chief c y ) — Grants totaling §259,720 Rabbi Kook-dies Et age of 70. for a number of Jewish instituL u c e r n e , September 1—Dr. tions associated with t h e Vaad Weizmann agrees to accept pres- Leumi, Jewish National Council idency of World Zionist Organi- in Palestine, have been approved zation; Zionist Congress empha- | by the Colonial Otiice, it w a s sizes principle of Jewish labor; made known here. Cultural department established; this sum ?1SO,000 will go Measures adopted to combat spec- forOfJewish ulation; Palestine immigration 1S35-S6. education for the year without artificial restrictions deThe Tel Aviv hospital will remanded; Organization headquarceive a grant of |29,205; t h e ters moved to Jerusalem. Safed hospital, §8,550; the Kupat Lucerne, September 2—Zionist j Holim hospital at Petach Tikvah, Congress scores Nazi persecution the Histaruth hospital, 521,500; of Jews; expresses determined the Emok hospital, $6,500; the opposition to Palestine legislative hygienic services in t h e Jewish council; approved Palestine-Ger- public schools, 8S.S15, and infant man transfer agreement but turns welfare work, $5,160. over administration to executive. Lucerne, September 3—Zionist There is a higher law than the Congress adjourns; Weizmann Constitution.—William S. Sewelected president and Sotolow ard.

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1SS5. The noises became confused, each "Don't touch them!" someone 1 raent. His long dried-up a r m s I persistent demands. Reckless and ers to P.uthor3ze an increase new one blanketing the last like shouted. weltered in blood atid, wedged beirresponsible but -withal a man of j the capital of the Bank by clouds in autumn, ieavy masses "Don't touch the children!" tween Ms arms where they joined I courage and genius. j issuance of 25 0,000 poundp * of sounds wallowing la the sud"Stick to the grown-ups!" the shoulders, w a s a frightful ! per cent ciimn.ative rpflprmp (Copj'riErht. 3SDK, t r Keren Arte denly unbreathable air. Feature Syndicate) And then another shriek from : head, a bloody b a l l , hitting i preference shares, carrying' "The Jews are getting theirs!" the child. Sharp as hail it cut | against the paving blocks. i voting rights. VLABIMffi JABOTDfSKT came the pleased voice of a little to the heart and drowned out all Zelmann had ceen a r i d . conj The friendly relation* that !» bit of a man, a well dressed and other sounds. Vladimir Jabotinsky: Most pietractor of public works. I had I lone existed, between the Anr distinguished-looking old fellow. "God damn i t ! " a voice cried often seen him alive but there IturesQue personality In world i Palestine Bank and ilie LAoHe Tubbed his dry little hands out. was nothing of the rich m a n Jewry. Eloquent leader of Zion] Bank p. re bring" fsirfber Ftrmr and added: "That's fine, that i s ! " 1 "Hit 'em on the head!" I about the rag that lay before me. ist-Revisionists. Uncompromising ened through t h e (lecir-iors I elbowed my way out, obey"You dirty kike!" It did not even resemble a human opponent of the Zionist adminis• Lloyd's Bank to participate iti ing a" strangely exciting and ir-» "He's mashed my feet with a being. 1 tration and bitter foe of Weiznew share capital. resistible impulse. The terrifying brick!" Jerusalem (WNS-Paloor Agen- ; In connection with t fe P 's.'Bewildered by all that was go- mann. Versatile, romantic, gifted uproar drew me on and everyone "Come on, Antipe, let's get the ing on around me, choked with and persevefant. A mas of nctiou cy)—The most successful year in i acquisition, t h e Jewish Colon with me, sucking us in like quick- Yid!" dust, I followed the crowd, pushed and talent. Has been called the Its history will be reported by the I Trust, banking institution of i sand. Human faces, distorted with Two laborers from a nearby here and there like a chip o£ Jewish D'Annunzio End the Jew- Directors cl the Angio-Palestme : World Zionist Organization, fof intense and base malice, eyes building elbowed their way into wood swept on by a torrent. It ish Mussolini. Short, brawny, pug- Bank, Ziuaist financial institution, i issued a statesneist pointing * shining eagerly, passed before me the crowd, looked up, and began was like a horrible dream, nosed. Impetuous and reckless. to the nest shareholders meeting: as in a dream. The mob flowed to climb to the roof.- Again the j Brandishing a saber, a police- Affects a military stride and looks on July Slst, tin advance report | that the Trust continues to hnU jPT per cent of the. ordinary v »»forward in a heavy and compact serious faced lad with his rosy j man runs around as though lost. good in a uniform. Born in Odes- for IE34 repeals. ; ing shares ol the An£lo-Falepi"mass, ready to tear down walls cheeks appeared. Struggling, he j They laugh at him. They cry af- sa 54 years ago. Was a brilliant The present deposits and other or barricades should they bar the pushed a large wardrobe into the ter him. journalist and poet with no inter- accounts have reached the sum of ; Bank and, therefore, the cor..!. way, each man prepared to climb open window. est in Jewish life until the po- G,S2S,447 pounds as against 4,- I ot the Cairk, its subsidiary, "Stop! Hold h i m ! " over the man ahead, to trample groms enraged him. Zionist actir- 5CS.544 pounds in 1?.?3. The ' mains unaltered. "Hey, you kids! • Catch t h e "Catch the 'boss!' " on his body, to crush him under dishes!" he shouted to the crowd I Someone throws a broken box ity dates from 19OS when he be- same item on December SI, 1!>S1, foot. who greeted h i m- with frenzied at his feet. The policeman trips, I pan- to -denounce assimilation and was 1,5S8,537 pounds. The exI rushed into the courtyard of joy. somersaults, and falls flat. Gen- advocate a Jewish state in Pales- pansion of business in Haifa he.E However, the wardrobe would eral laughter shakes the street. tine. Helped organize Zionist so- been so great that provisions wiil a house, then jumped the fence into t h . court nest door, repeat- not go through the space of the Happening to glance down at my cieties and toured Europe in in- have to be mane for enlarged &c- ! Honolulu, Hawaii—The ing this process again and again window frame so the young man feet I see a piece of bloody skin terests of Zionist movement. Was comodations, the Directors report. jWelfore Bosircl here has? «c unti! I found myself once more pulled it back. His head dis- stuck there, a tuft of hair still elected to Russian Duma as a Because business has been PP ! through tne gift ol M»x Zionist in 19 05. Formed Zion appeared behind it but reappeared clinging to it. I shudder. in a dense mass of humanity. satisfactory, the reerve feed will i prominer.t local Jew, sn Mule Corps in 1915 which distin- be raised to P0.000 pounds, ?\s • scroll o' the Bool; of EPther w They yelled like demons, heads almost at once over the window "Hey, you people! Come here!" guished itself in the battle of Gali had been in the posseppioTt rcf thrown back, faces red, teeth ledge. Slowly, like the bay of a The cry comes from a neigh- lipoli. Organized Jewish Legion against ts,000 pounds in 1PS1. ! Alexandria Jowiph fnniily for o There is available s balance for flashing in their open mouths. wolf, he shouted: boring courtyard and the mob in in 1916 and helped conquer Palprofst of 8 4,4 6 6 pounds (approx- : three centurieE atid -which w "Look—out—be—low!" They waved their arms, jostled a dense wave rushes in obedientA pile of dishes, unwinding like ; ly. They cry, shout, and sniff. estine. During Arab attacks OE imately ?422,P0<>••>•.• The Directors , sold on the underptandSiiE ttee. each other, climbed on the roofs Jews in Palestine in 1S20 he or- propose a dividend of S per cent. | would alvrars remain in the V.s. of the buildings, slid to t h e a great multi-colored ribbon, fell Like beats they growl. ganized Jewish self-defense corps. They will also ask the sharehold- i o£ Jews. ground and then, without stop- to the ground, followed by a samAt the entrance of the court ping or tiring, climbed and climb- ovar flashing in the sunlight. Be- horses' nostrils surge unexpected- Was arrested and sentenced to 15 ed again! Despite the confusion low, the crowd ran in every di- ly; the blue caps of the cossacks years imprisonment. This w a s of movement there was something rection, covering their heads with j swing to a n d fro; their short later annulled and he was destrangely homogeneous in this their hands and laughing in great i whips crack as they Ekirn t h e ported. Since then has become swarming mob. Each man seemed guffaws of mirth. A redheaded backs of their, animals. A loud the chief critic and opponent of the World Eiocist Organisation. to have become the a r m ol a youth picked up the samovar and, voice intones commands: Under his stimulating, leadership single huge body, driven by the raising it above his head, threw "By threes . . . in close formapowerful, mob against w h i c h it to the ground again with all tion . . . at a trot . . . forward!" Revisionism has become a real his might, stamping on it and j J'Throw bricks at the cossacks!" force in Jewish life. His Brith there could be no resistance. Trumpeldor legion of youth, clad High above this savage a n d crushing it with his feet. I someone shouts from above. in brown shirts, has engaged in From the roof came an inhu- I A woman, half naked and cov- Fascist-like' attacks on Laborites. beastly pack a tall, thin Jew clung to the roof of a house. With his man wail -of despair. The crowd • ered with blood, throws herself at Despite his admitted talents his shriveled_ fingers he tore bricks looked up to see a piece of iron ! the feet of the horses. Appearing ; lack of realism dooms him to eterfrom a chimney and threw them fall with a sound of thunder. On ; suddenly from nowhere as though i nal role of. oppositionist. Makes down on the seething mass below, the edge of the roof a large body j the earth had spit her up, s h e I deathless friends and potent enall the time crying out in a voice balanced f o r several seconds, | seizes the leg of the first cossack '-. emies. Is a writer of unusual shrill like a gull. His long white screamed, shrieked, broke away, | she encounters and clings to it genius who is equally at home in beard quivered on his breast and and was cast into the air . . . . [like grim death. Hebrew, Russian, German, Yidhis white trousers were covered Only a scream remained, soft and j Suddenly they rear, snorting. | dish, French and English. Speaks with red splotches. Violent cries disgusting." The crowd, too, pauses, looking [and writes more languages than were hurled at him from below. j any other Zionist. Loves dramatic Hurriedly I left the courtyard at the cossacks. "Shoot him!" pursued by their savage cries of "Dismount!" is the command. ; gestures. Hates physical ease. In"Get a gun! Stone h i m ! " triumph. The surging mob shouts a n d ! tellectually unconven.ional but a "Go up there and get h i m ! " waits.- To the rear, at the other i slave to convention in dress and "Aaaaaah!" The windows of the house were end of the street, detachments of j manner. A passionate Jewish na"That's right!" filled with people. They broke the police and infantry b a r retreat. j tionalist. He is a master "of the "At last we got 'em . . ." window frames with cold fury In the street people were break- Then, at last, people begin to | platform.. An unsurpassed .cpigraand threw a n y object- at hand ing chairs, tables, boxes, gleefully jump fences anS walls, to flee ! matist. Is a better platform perinto the court and into the street. ripping up clothes. Feathers through the courtyards, the cos- ! former than a diplomat. Skilful "Window panes vibrated and shat- floated in the air. From the win- I sacks at their heels. Eef ore, the | at propaganda. Has a phenomenal tered. A big strapping lad with dows of houses facing on the I mob were brutes, who, without j memory and writes prolifieaily. powerful shoulders and curly hair court there came avalanches of | reason or pity, tortured others j His swashbuckling tactics and reappeared in one of- the windows pillows, baskets, furniture, rags. jjust as unhappy as themselves, |fusal t o . b e bound by discipline holding a mirror. A muzhik of incredible stature | and-cow .they, too, a r e beaten ! prevents Ms brilliant talents from "Look out below!" he cried in passed before me, bareheaded, his without reason or pity. Now they j being . accepted' by responsible a lout's voice as he pushed it shirt torn. From his disordered are merely cowards trying to save leaders of world Jewry. Has no through ;the window. Catching hair thick blood', 'almost black, themselves from the lash of the patience with cautious political 180S No. 20TH STREET " " W E . 3041 action. Is an apostle of force and the rays of the sun for one dazz- ran over his cheeks. He waved whips wielded by experts. ling, moment, the mirror somer- his arms, smiling the sickly siairk (Copyright, 1SSB. Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) saulted in midair and fell to the of a glutted animal. ground with a resounding crash. Suddenly he put h i s arms The yoirrig man leaned far out the around a lamp post, and pressing window to see it. On his high the iron pipe against his eliest, check-boned face was a serious, he .began to rock it back and almost pensive, expression, totally forth. The globe tottered, came void of any spitefulness. loose from its socket, and fell to In another window appeared a the ground." robust and black bearded muzhik, "Down with it," cried another a pillow in his hand. With a deft muzhik running up ^to. the sarne movement he ripped it open let- lamp post, which lie too embraced The Pioneer. Paper Supply ting a thick snow of white feath- and began to shake with all his ers float out into the air. force. House of the West, in husinest From Bomewhere, like P. dove "It is snowing! Be careful of in Omaha since 1887, greets iti your noses, you children!" he in a swirl of smoke, a young girl cried as he watched the little plunged into the crowd, her dress many friends among the Jewish white feathers turning over and 1 torn from top to bottom, her hair streaming over her shoulders. She over, falling toward the sea' of societies of this community. human faces below. Meanwhile in ran, head thrown back and in her We are striving for the 'goo'd the courtyard someone was yell- face, pale with misery, her eyes seemed immeasurably nuge. ing at the top of his voice: will of the people of this.com-, "Beat up t h e Yid!" cried a "Come here! We've just found voice and in the blink o" an eye munity and are thankful to cur, some little Yids in a barrel!" "Beat them! Kill the little bas- the young girl disappeared in the friends and customers for their. dense mass of beings as a minute tards!" "Bash their heads against the piece of. sugar vanishes under a long standing loyalty^ to -our cloud of flies. wall!" Company. ~ "Gang-way! Here comes Zel"Listen, you old Yid! Come down and make it quick! We've Tnann! Get back, you!" Shouts came from a group who found yonr b r a t s ! " "Get off that roof .or we'll kill dragged something along t h e them!" . - . ' . . - ' pavement. It was a man, or rathThe terrified shriek of a child er a corpse, half naked, dry, disrent the air like a flash of light- heveled, hacked, covered with ning against a cloudy sky, a blood and mud. By a rope tied s t r e a k of dazzling brilliance to Zelmann's leg they dragged the OMAHA' '"" • * against the dull roar of the crowd. unhappy man the length of the The hubbub softened for a mo- street. A little river of blood ment only to spring up stronger flowed from his mutilated, body, leaving a zigzag trail on the pavethan ever.

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By MAXIM GORKY

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(The famous Russian cuthor paints a portrait, seared in the mind of- a bystander, of . the orgiastic terror In a race-hating inob. "The Pogrom" is presented by the Jewish. Telegraphic Agency by special arrangement "with the publishers of £squire<—T h e Editor.) This was many years ago in one of the towns along the Volga. Beginning at dawn on a hot June day I had been at the bank of the river caulking a raft with, tar, and now it Was time for luncu. Then suddenly, from the outskirts of the town, I became aware of a muffled a n d angry sound, like cattle bellowing with

rage. At first, busy with my work, I paid little attention to this distant hum, though it took on volume and intensity, like smoke at the start of a fire. Over, the village a dense cloud lay suspended in the torrid air. I turned away from t i n river and immediately, seemed to see harsh noises, mixed w i t h dust, rise from the e a r t h ' a n d saturate the air. The dust rolled up in grey spirals, the sounds became

more and more strident, more and more varied, while the air trembled. I shuddered, a prey to lugubrjous ^presentiment, Leaving my work I climbed the sandy bank. Trom the top I saw people running pell-mell from all directions. In an excited m o b they poured like lava down the street toward the town. Dogs and children tagged their h e e l s . Frightened pigeons volplaned over their heads. Cacklins chickens fled from beneath their feet. I, too, touched by the general madness, began' to run, unaware of the cause of the excitements "There's fighting in the Elisabethinska!" one of the c r o w d shouted at me. A carter ran along the unpaved road whipping his horse furiously and crying with all the -force of h i s powerful lungs: "They're fighting us! Come on, you workers!" I squeezed into a narrow alley and stopped. The mob choked the cul-de-sac like a bag full of grain. Again, I heard shouts a n d screams of violence, still far away. Breaking windows tinkled plaintively; heavy blows resounded; something broke, fell and rolled.

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New Tear's Edition—THE" JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935. It was completed shortly before tion of Hebrew works for t h e famous Zionists, not only for dehis death while tinkering w i t h Hebrew National Library at Jer- votion to the cause, but for his JEWISH COLONIAL ; intellectual quality. usalem. spark plugs and tires. That is the one thing that re- BRAXDEIS AXD DEHAAS TRUST REPORTED STRANGE A3EBITIOX Jacob DeHaas iras f o r years deems his life. Without that obA recent writer wrote one of jective, life would be completely the chief lieutenant in the ZionJerusalem (WNS-Palcor Agenhis, greatest stories, about some empty to him. With that ideal, ist field of Justice Brandeis. But man who had some ambition of Klausner walks about as a man one wonders if that relationship cy)—The time is not far off when doing something exceptional with consecrated. Seaching as some it continuing on quite the same the Jewish Colonial Trust, a Zionan egg. Yes, the thing that makes great scientists are searching a basis —and for the following rea- ist financial institution established by Theodor Herzl in 1S9S, will be life living for many is often in- cure for some dreaded disease, so son. able to resume large-scale work deed a very strange thing. Klausner searches f o r just anDeHaas as is generallyn known, Take this man Klausner on other work to add to the great leans to the Revisionistic school under the World Zionist OrganiEast Broadway, for Instance. I collection which he is to leave at of Zionism. And Justice Brandeis zation, it was declared by SiegBy LOUIS PEKARSKY am mutilating h i s name some- his death for the National Li- is known to be visited by every fried Hoofian, managing director Everything you take is o u t of what for obvious reasons, but if brary. Hollywood; Calif.—Rube Gold- JESSEL—ANAUTHOR leading Labor Zionist who comes of the Anglo-Palestine Bank, subGeorge Jessel, (the fellah who focus, anyway, and now the other you are much in the Hebrew book berg, who has turned author, says to this country. Not only do they sidiary of the Jewish Colonial line, you'll know whom I mean. TOMATO ZIOMSM be Is slightly, cucioo from always always calls up his mother on the cameramen are trying to copy it. all visit him and get a royal wel- Trust, according to a report of as think it's art." When MerYes, Klausner runs a Hebrew You have heard of General come, but for t h e past several interview with tim appearing ia being on time for appointments. telephone while he's on the stage) They was at Lasky's Studio workbook store. And he has, it is said, Zionism, of Revisionistic Zionism, years, Justice Brandeis has con- the Palestine press. He suffers severely from this dis- whose popularity with Southern vyn ing as an office boy at $12.50 per California stage and radio audithe largest private Hebrew col- and of Labor Zionism. But if you tributed $15,000 annually to the ease known as promptitis on openMr. Hoofian stated that th« ences is at great height now, has week he ran errands for a numlection of books in America. He's were one of the intimates of the Gewerkshaften campaign. And not Anglo-Palestine Bank is liquidating nights at theatres. He, tells just ber of great stars. Now he is disigned as a writer, not a poor man, today, though once late Dr. Chaim Arlosoroff, y o u only that, but they say that the ing the debts of the Jewish Co1is: ' "I have gone to first night as abeen comedian, for- J o s e p h recting some of them In pictures. he was rich. He lived in Russia would have enjoyed his descrip- Justice can furnish you with the lonial Trust a n d that it would openings for over a store of years Schenck's new 20th Century—Fox He is a native of San Francisco. then. Came the Revolution, and tions of Tomato Zionism, the pet most minute details of the var- soon be able to pay dividends on and have read the'legend, 'Starts Films.- Jessel will now have an the Klausner, who was a-leader philosophy of David Triech. at 8:40." hundreds of times. .Yet opportunity to put his wisecracks ious activities of Labor Zionism. all shares. in the import-export business was Triech is a German Jew, and I have not learned my lesson. and humor for which he is famous RUBIN WONDERS He added that the Trust would 19.15, Jewish Telegraphic It was no fun for Benny Rubin, bereft of his fortune. was a friend of Herzl, and in his (Copyright, Agency, Inc.) then be in a pocition to serve afl Only the other night I received into scripts for someone else. UnKlausner's book store Is not a line of work, Triech is regarded the Zionist financial instrument, Jtwo tickets for a premiere that til now he has always been an popular comedian, when- he had pretty one. It is a shabby one as a most dependable and expert a place which it held until 1933 promised to be the hit of the year. actor. Of course, you recall that a taste pf Jew-baiting and antiI Banned one day this week while even for the Hebrew book stores worker. But outside of that—in when business of the Trust was I tried to take things calmly and Georgie is married to his n e w Semitism a Pacific Coast League of the East Side. And yet people his pet hobby—Zionism, Triech, I Prague — The Czechoslovakian suspended. coolly. B u t ' when . I started. to boss's former wife, Norma Tal- attending game at Wrigley Field in who despair of finding things at in h i s enthusiasm, becomes a j government h a s confiscated an dress the hands of my little watch madge. The deal and signing was baseball Angeles. For no reason at all, the New York Public Library little undependable and over-en- I anti-Semitic v o l u m e entitled wrapped, themselves around my ^handled by another J e w i s h Los Every artist dips his brush in a big husky man became v e r y Jewish'division or even the Jew- thusiastic. It was this over-en- "Moses, Robber Chieftain a n d neck a n d choked me until I f i l m magnate, Darryl Zanuck, abusive and called Benny "a dirty his ovrn soul, and paints his own Bolshevik," in which a German : ish Theological Seminary library thusiastic phase that led Triech screamed to my wife, 'Come "on, Schenck's right-hand man. Nazi. writer, Urgens by name, at- nature into his pictures.—Henry rotten Jew" and another equally never give up until t h e y try to formulate t h e philosophy of come on, let's go.' My temperaWard Beecher. sweet epithet, according to reKlausner's. Tomato Zionism. Roughly speak- tacks the Jews and Judaism. ture, pulse and blood pressureports. Although t h e Jew-baiter They will enter Klausner's and ing, the essence of this Zionism all went up to 8:40. When we OUT OF FOCUS was much' bigger both in height tell him, that they couldn't find is that Jews in Palestine, should reached the theatre it was empty. ' What "Al" Smith and Jimmy and weight, Rubin let go a smashthe work anywhere in America. concentrate their work on growA young woman ushered us down Walker are to New York, Mervyn ing blow to h i s jaw. Rubin's "Have you got it, Mr. Klausner?" ing tomatoes, Triech has it figLeRoy is to Hollywood. .Accordthe aisle and left us alone in a smack was returned, however, and they will ask. ured out t h a t the growing of (Copyright, 1935. by Seven Art* boundless wilderness of empty ing to h i s press agent, LeRoy policemen intervened before any Eeature Syndicate) And the chances are two to one tomatoes offers the quickest way smokes 24 cigars a d a y , )never Beats. I memorized the program, physical damage could be done. that Klausner's face will light up for an economical living for the the names of t h e play's writer, touches a cigarette a n d follows Rubin refused to prefer charges and he will answer, "Sure, two maximum number of J e w s in business staff and cast. I read the race horses. Mervyn is a di- against his assailant. copies," and his face will beam Palestine. rector with Warner Bros. Inciand reread several times over the about the same way, your busiA n d by maximum number, little biographies in the back of dentally, he Is married to Doris WHO'S WHO IN HOLLYWOOD nessman beamed when he learned Triech does not refer to this talk Warner, daughter of Harry M. the program. I counted the cracks his shares went up ten points. of one million or even four milThere are, only four stars of the in the asbestos curtain, the creases* Warner of New-York and Holly- Jewish* faith under contract with But these are after all the petty lion. He poo-poohs such figures. wood; president of Warner Bros. in the drapes. It was four minjoys of Klausner's life. W h a t He has it all figured out that Paramount Productions. They are utes after 9 when the actors spoke First National Pictures. When Sylvia Sydney, Kitty Carlisle, really is the underlying dynamo Palestine- can hold sixty million Mervyn was doing camera work 1102 Howard Street their first lines a n d hordes of —the thing that ever carries him of Jews. It's a question of toMary Ellis and Joe Penncr. Miss By DAVID SCHWARTZ William DeMille, the director people swarmed down the aisles for forward is one great ambition— matoes. to him: "You are a genius, Sydney is a product of "the sideAT. 6947 , . . I missed every word that was said a very strange ambition, as I have And yet let me repeat, Triech, Mervyn. are responsible for walks of New York." She was HE WAS FIXING spoken during the first 15 min- a l l this You noted. It Is this: He wants to outside of these over-enthusiasms born In the Bronx, the daughter AN AUTO soft focus photography utes of the show!" On a certain occasion, I hap- leave at his death a great collec- is greatly esteemed, by world that is going on around here. of a Roumanian father and a Russian mother, and August 8 is her pened to be visiting a friend in birthday anniversary. She h a s Newark. We were walking forth 5^ ; s = just finished the 13th picture she from this friend's home, when we has appeared in since 1931, when passed a gas station. We Thank Our Friends and Patrons and B. P. Shulberg, then managing di"What is there strange about Wish Them a Happy and Prosperous rector of production for Para- that man?" asked my friend. mount, envisioned her as a great New Year I looked at a man quite ad*;1 potential screen star a n d ' per- vanced in years, who was fixing suaded her to forsake the stage. an automobile. "Well," I said, "I can't see anyYes, folks, Sally Eilers Is Jew- thing strange. Seems a little old ish, as Phineas J. Biron, author for such work." of the most popular feature Is- .; "Look closer, Sherlock Holmsued by Seven'Arts- Syndicate, es," continued my friend. guessed in his column last week. "Well," said I, "he looks a litWe checked with the studio and tle too cultured for that sort of this information is c definite.' She work." is a Universal star. She isn't the Fine, Sherlock, but l o o k 1511 FARNAM ST. I 1509 No. 24th St. WE. 2190 only Jewish star and player that again." studio has, either. Binnie Barnes, "Well," I said,, "it Is a little Lupita Tovar, Marta Eggerth and the stranger when one considers June Claywortb. also are of our that he looks like a Jew. I supfaith, although the names easily pose he owns the place and is fool you. just enjoying himself with a litGREETINGS tle dabbling in things mechaniGOOD WILL MARRIAGES cal." Universal, which Is headed by "Your last guess Is all wet," For Genuine Satisfaction a Jew who is the real pioneer of said my friend. "That old Jew Is Buy Your Fur at the motion picture industry, Carl working because he's got to Laemmle, also has Margaret Sul- work." from lavan, an American married to a "Do you know any Aramaic or PETER Swiss Jew, William Wyler, a n d Sanskrit," continued my friend. T. Gloria Stuart, an American marGEORGE RUSHTON BAKING CO. "So what?" I asked. ried to Arthur Sheekman, an "Well, if you did you could go American Jew, on their contract up and talk to him in that lanBakers of the Famous list. While we're at Universal guage. Of course, his native Studios we should mention that tongue is English, but he c a n RUSHTON PIES, BUTTER ROLLS and DOUGHNUTS Fred S. Meyer, formerly a Mil- sling a wicked Aramaic. r waukee exhibitor, Is now the Exe1018 FARNAM ST. JA. 2756 No,"~ I said, "my knowledge cutive Studio Manager. of Aramaic is very limited. "Well," he continued, "try him PROFILE '- ' . , with Hebrew." The newest, youngest and most "N o w listen, Dr. Watson," I attractive screen stylist in Holly- said, "enough of this—who and wood is a young Jewish girl from what Is this man?" San Francisco—Helen Myron. That man," he replied, "is in She Is the daughter of Dan Mar- my opinion, the greatest martyr fcowltz, one of the pioneers in the that Zionism in America has proto our . jj Greetings from motion picture industry. S h e duced. Did you ever hear of Prof. adopted her great grandmother's Margolis and Dr. Malter? Well, maiden name, Myron, for profes- that man is Prof. Caspar Levias, W. L. MASTERMAN & CO. sional use. Like her parents, she who was kicked out. with, them was a member of the Geary Street from- a Jewish: theolpgicar;;school ••THE COFFEE MEN" Temple in San Francisco, and now because^,of . their;,: Zionism! Of she attends Temple Israel of Hol- course, ; today Zionism.vis. quite lywood. kosher; in that school—but fin his JACKSON 2142 Togs for Men 1409 HARNEY ifany Manos, Proprietor jj| Educated at the University of paid -for it with*his poCalifornia, at Berkeley, where she sition—-and -'this'.' great," scholar— 1509 FARNAM STREET Formerly Edwards Hotel Barber Shop JU majored in art. Miss Myron stud- one of the world's"greatest'in his ied painting with t h e Baroness field," In advanced-age,^ was forced W Maria von Riddlestein, singing to learn &,trade, and' he'learned with Harry Wood Brown and El- automobile mechanics—and a n y frieda Wynne, and dancing with day you pass here, you can see Mme. Elvira Moroslnl, premiere him as today, fixing a car or maydanseuso of t h e Moscow Grand be just washing 'a •Tear, for after Opera Company. Twice a week all, he's too-old for-much of phyfor three years she passed on her sical labor.'* ' • '.. terpsichorean knowledge to t h e ..When Caspar•> Levias died reJewish orphans at the old Hayes cently,> there . was hardly enough Street Orphanage in her native Extends Best Wishes for a bury;him—let:alone*to buy a Quiet, Convenient Service Unsurpassed city and between other activities to -'for/him^ ,':.. produced a number of amateur monument 5 But)word:: has) just;come from musical shows at college. Tel Aviv, Palestine,fthatvthey are Following her graduation from erecting a monument to'-him there the San • Francisco Art School, monuments that- will : outlast Turn Off the Heat with Awnings Miss Myron's mezzo-soprano voice many ,a,stone .slat>.< .Word ' h a s 315 So. 16th St. 1 : was heard over the N. B. C. net- just come- in other words t h a t GEO. CROCKER, General Agent S305 Leavenworth work for six months and in the Dvir,. the" noted_publishing firm CHINESE AND AMERICAN CUISINE HArney 46S6 1016 City National Bank BIdff. starring role of "The Geisha" and In- Tel'; Aviv Is publishing ;a- scienother operettas with the Reginald tific work on "Aramaic; which Is Travers Repertory Players before said to be of ^historic'significance. she decided to concentrate on designing fashions. Her work In posing Junior League members in fashion pictures for rotogravure sections caught the attention of a Jewish producer for Fox Films, John Stone, who arranged for her to come to Los Angeles in July, 1933, as a fashion sketch artist. After two months she graduated into the position of studio shopper and in March of this year was given the opportunity of designing frocks for Karen Morley and Rosina Lawrence in "$10 Raise." She proved so successful that she was promptly put under contract as a full-fledged stylist, w i t h gowns designed by her for "Pat" Paterson in "Charlie C h a n in Egypt," Jane Withers and Gloria Roy in "Meal Ticket," Miss Morley in "Thunder In the Night," and for Rita Cansino's costumes for "Ramona" already to h e r credit. Although the gray-eyed young stylist looks fragile, she is an ardent sportswoman w h o plays a good game of golf, rides horseback regularly, swims expertly, and loves to dance. Only five feet, one inch in height, she disproves the theory that only tall women make jood "clothes horses" since she herself wears clothes with the smartness of a Kay. Francis. She is fond of ..the theatre and music, and her bubbling- enthusiastic nature is balanced by a keen mind, quick wit and an amazing flair for sensing style trends.

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935. j at said Court on the FdicJ 5th day of; monuments and ornaments of «».,.•* ADOPTION NOTICE as was once believed. It is nat- every standpoint. They h a v e I October, 10;!5. at !> o'clock A. Jil. to am! other ms>terialp; to own, lepue J-:*.. ural, therefore, that people should built up a remarkably fine repu'contest said petition, the Court may i operete quarries; to issue i In the County Court o* Douglas grant the same end pjrant ndm'niFtre- noies, debentures, bonds, ask whether the national health tation in their own field of serv- County, Nebraska. tion o? said estate to Bernard Friedam] other evidcticp" of lTi<3eKte«li-">R>. „agencies in Denver and elsewhere ice. They have ample justifica- In the matter of The total Riifhorisert esipitnl «!«•• C i man or some other suitable person LEE minor. to a settlement thereof. of thic corporation ehall be Sli; "fi.\ rt have a real reason for existence. tion for pride in their achieve- ToDONA the father of said minor and allE.nd proceed BUYCE divided into 3 00 shares of the : ^ - ' CRAWFORD. other persons interested Sn said 0-lS-r.o—St Another question frequently ments. They cannot accept t h e matter: value of 'S100.OO each, to be p»'' ! '..: County Judge. verdict that they must die. No in OPBh or property £ttc! be nor-*.*"heard relates to. the administraare heerby notified that on the sessable tvhen Issued, The time «'' • • " no organization, no per-You 12th day of September. 1SSS. a petiLOUIS E. LI PP. Attorney tion of these agencies. Tt is charg- agency, commencement Of the cOTpn-rt •; '••r son, no community, c a n accept tion was filed in said court by Aflnlph 504-10 City Natl. Ek, Bicig. shall be the 2Sth day of August, ''<»'• ed that there is no control of such a verdict. William Gebhart, & resident of Dougand its termination nTis.l) be • "I* their work and development. One thereafter. The hiphest »tnn... J nloSV^r^nfr^hlfl^! NOT.CE OF INCORPORATION OF I years But how siiall they secure the of indebtedness to which the hears, similarly, that their colART MEMORIALS, INC. parents of said minor were divorced S ! Notice is hereby 3 « n U at the r n - M ™ ^ anr time rtM. » t .««:. lection costs are excessive. It is funds with which to continue to snil the cat.tody of said minor X a corporation, fhah not exceed two-thlrdR of Stt:^.to Rnth Gebhart, who is the fno?h. ' clersiEned organized charged, with what truth I do not live and function? Rightly or ed _S°1" !! The n . m . of nf the (hi, corporations nnrnnraHntlt Art A rt Jtnl BtOCk. The RffRlVP Of the CO-n.» (.er of said child, and that the whereThe name wrongly, whether the criticisms •emorials Jnc * n ^ the princip- itlon are to he conducted by * +*»•-: abouts of srJG minor's father is mi- ' *"•' know, that in some instances col„..., „. .-._„ .»„,.„. „ • - . . . , , . ... . . . tmuiiujs. iiiL., tilt- ' " ^ I" *",*-''V .'„» . „ ( i-oo then 1\*rn nnr mnro :!i-.-. of them are justified or not, they known: that a hearing- will be had ! P^ce for the transaction of its b™" T ^ l w ' m » V L l eM i r • Any consideration of "Social organizations serves communities most, the enormous pressure on lection costs are as high as thir- will and must go on for the pres- on said petition for the adoption be- i **** is the City of Omaha. P ™ - 1 " : w/nt Viw P r a L n 4 m t a p - i..-.. ty to forty per cent. Service on a National Scale" must and individuals. said Court on the 14th day of, County, Nebraska. The peneral nature: J° e! "u t -1 1^ c e - i resident, feecretarj federations of local needs, especent. Will federations and welfare fore ]t October. 1905, a t 9 o'clock A. M.. at ! °* « business is to buy. sell, e f f n , : » " , . , . _ . oe dealt with on the basis of a I recall a very interesting ex- funds supply the means? Hard- the County Court Room of Douglas I lease and personal property trher- • There is a second large group ially during a depression such as .... rvAFT,A>., County. Nebraska, and unless you ap-I estate and personal property wher\ . HLKNKL.. series of pictures of. the services of national agencies which serve the present.' This pressure is im- perience of my own in Chicago ly. At best they supply only a pear asaid t paidpetition, time and placecourt and consituated; •which the national social service communities only. These might mediate urgent, and compelling. when I came there in 1919. I small fraction of t h e needs of i test the may jI ever i°'°- store and to manufacture, sol)., In presence or; Loutj? K. petition, agencies render, but first we must be termed the co-ordinating agen- There is. second, the pressure | faced the problem of the national It n e E e agencies. At worst they not j adopted answer the question "What is a cies. In this category belong the which the leaders of the local health agencies sending tubercu- only give them nothing but op- by said Adolph TTilliam Gebhart. ' BRTCE CRATSTORD. national agency?" Bureau of Jewish Social Re- agencies bring to bear upon the lar patients to Denver and I want- pose their independent campaigns. County Judse 0-2C-S5-3t It will be obvioua that a defin- search, the Council of Federations federation. The president, the ed to do something about it. I Now if we are honest with ourand Welfare Funds, the Jewish FRADENEURG, WEBB. BEBER, ! >| ition will depend largely upon the treasurer, board members and ex- organized a committee of three i selves we must admit that the KLUT2NICK & KELLY, AUys. | [K point of view of hii i who at- Social Service, and the Graduate ecutives of a local organization physicians; one representing the Federation's unwillingness to give 6=0 Omaha Nst'l Ek. Bide|g School for Jewish Social Work. tempts to define it. Thus, the can make themselves felt in a Denver Hospitals and in general funds to t h e national hospitals NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION I if national agency would say that There is another group of na- thousand -and one ways. The adhering to the view in favor of and for that matter to any na- of L E E KOUKTZE HARDWARE i fe IS It is an organization aiming to tional agencies which serve the pressure which they exercise up- Denver and Los Angeles as the tional agencies is not due solely COMPANY of Omaha. Nebraska. All Men by These Presents: serve all of the needs of the Jewish, community as a whole, in on Federation leaders is such as places to send tubercnlosis pa- to scepticism and criticism of the Know That a t a meeting of the Btockhold- j ers of the Lee Kountae Hardware Com- j Jewish community locally, na- a protective capacity. These are no outside national agency can tients; one representing a local work of these agencies. pany duly held e t the office of the j tionally and overseaas in its chos- the American Jewish Committee, possibly bring to bear. It is an hospital for the tuberculous and In this connect'on the story corporation, on the 21st day of Jan- j is uary. 3SS1. a t which all the stock- jg en field of activity. - -.-_ the American Jewish Congress, effective pressure and the feder- unalterably oppose." to climatic (Continued on next page) holders were present and voting, a I imagine that the Chairman of the B'nai B'rith, especially its ation usually yields to it. A third treatment of tuberculosis; and resolution was duly offered and was unanimously adopted that the Eaid a Federation Budget committee, Anti-Defamation' Service or league factor in the situation is un- one a neutral physiican, a man of corporation cease to do business, and IRVIN C. LEVIN, Atty. who, we are told, is usually a and the Jewish Telegraphic Agen- doubtedly the lack of information very high standing and reputathat the same be dissolved; accord301 Electric Elds. ingly notice of such action and of the hard-headed businessman — al- cy. I • am including the Jewish about the work of national agen- tion in Chicago. PUBLICATION ON PE- I dissolution of the said Lee Kountze j | 1S24 Pierce though I have never been able Telegraphic Agency among the cies in the local community. This committee of three was to NOTICE BY ^{ Hardware Company is hereby driven. FOR SETTLEMENT OF to understand just what hard- national agencies for civic rights Fourth, is the view on the part rule upon every application to the TITION In Testimony Whereof, witness the FINAL ADMINISTRATION signature and the corporate seal of ACCOUNT headedness mean' in this connec- and protection, because without of local communities and their some such service as that which leaders that national agencies are not be quite satistion—would fied with : ly definition. It would the Jewish Telegraphic Agency is intruders; that they have no g • — £ be too long for him. He would rendering or is aiming to render, right in the local community. Un- ences Where all the factors Were aAAll n persons "n saia " CLEE'.KOUXTZE HARDWARE persons "interested interested iin said matter matter O MI N hereby notified notified that that on on the the 14th 14th re hereby . ^ 7?' seek a simpler and briefer defini- the work of these other agencies fortunately this point of view considered and the Situations were are of « September 1D35. *£& Jennie * Rlfkin fa" $ £ * £ gg£ » ^%^. | ? % r z Pr?. tion and would probably define a would be very seriously impair- dominates, controls and motivates handled on their merits. We had •lay filed a 1 petition in said County Court. FORA their attitude and action with re- some very Interesting times a t prayingpraying that her final final administration administration Attest: HAKK\ESS KOIN.ZB, Sec. national agency simply ad a ed, in my judgrmentaaccount pcoun filed herein herein be be settled settled and spect to the national agencies. As those conferences but I must ad* *"•* *na In. Presence of Sam Beber. "nuisance." A fourth group would consist allowed, and that she be discharged her trust a s Administratrix and of those national agencies which a result, federations have in some mit that comparatively f e w pa-from Three Definitions in One will be had on said JRVIN C. LEVIN, Atty. instances ruthlessly reduced their tients were sent to Denver or Los that a hearing render serrice overseas. First before Eaid Court on the 14th 301 Electric Bid The executive directors of fedallowances to national agencies so Angeles by this committee. Alter j day of October 1325, and that if you and foremost among these would erations, -wlio bear.the hrunt of OF ADMiNISTRATION that the latter have had hardly this had gone on for about a year j bef ore f on In NOTICE the County Court of Doug-las Counnegotiations "with national agen- naturally be the Joint Distribu- enough to starve decently. or more, my neutral friend, the ty. .Nebraska: |& o'clock A . M.. and tion Committee. Then would said cies, -will probably want to be physician, came and told me that vemivn, the Court may grant the In the matter of the estate of MOL- i SS come the various Palestinian orNow there is another view of LIE FRIEDMAN, deceased* 1 )* eTen more brief, I think, in their he was obliged to give up All persons interested in said estate j m definition of a national agency. ganizations, the American Friends the situation—that of the nation- work on the committee because | er and further orders, allowances and are hereby notified that a petition! decrees, as to this Court m a r seem j has been filed in said Court alleging j To them, a national agency is just of the Hebrew University, the al agencies. They, too, have It With Flovcn proper, to the end that all ?natters that said deceased died leaving: no last • < a "pest." And sc I suppose that OR.T, OZE and similar organiza- needs and problems which must •was surprised and asked mm "Wcat | pertaining to said estate may fin• • TH-jn a n a praying- for administration i < p g y be tions. be met and they must look to all t U d upon her estate, end thr t a hearing-j; If -we were really to attempt to 1805 Fmrnsm Street Jackson 1501 was going to do there. His re" * a i J « will be had on said petition before j ! Finally there would be a mis- organized Jewish social work to he ERTCE CRAWFORD, define a national agency and its ply was, "My brother contracted said court on the Eth day of October, i! y County JuC:,'e. 1SSS, and that if they fail te appear service we -would have to take cellaneous group of national help them face these needs and tuberculosis and he wants to go -20 sr-st ?&JS3S3SSS3S»a8JS»S3£^^ these three definition;. Into ac- agencies -which are doing cultur- problems. I think that by a n d to Denver. I don't believe in Denal and educational work, such as arge the national agencies would ver much myselt, bnt it is his, count. In other •words, a national agency must serve the needs the Menorah Society, the various be glad if Jewish social wo '; point of view that counts," and ( seminaries and others which we would create the criteria for judg- so lie went to Denver -with his of the local, national and perhaps overseas needs in its field, cannot treat here because our dis-ing the work, the needs and the brother. I thought then a n d I but it can only serve these needs cussion is liimted to the social sffectiveness of national agencies. think now that he was right. The As is well known, there has attitude and point of view of the if it is both a "nuisance" and a service agencies. been some question in some cir- patient are most important, for A Perennial Subject. "pest," because otherwise it canSIXTEENTH k HOWARD STREETS not get the funds with -which to Those who have attended meet- cles about the national health the confidence of the patient is Junction properly. ings of the National Conference of agencies. One occasionally hears half the battle and more. So long ; • It is even more difficult to de- Je-wish Social Service during the the question: Is there really a a3 patients have confidence in and ! want t o go to these hospitals ; fine anil classify the national last ten or fifteen years or other- need for their work? There is a view regarding the there is a need for them regard- j agencies. For this discussion, wise have kept in contact with they m a y be divided into three the subject know that the subject treatment of tuberculosis — held less what anyone else may think classes, national agencies for lo- of the national agencies is peren- I think by a great many if not and say. cal needs, those •which serve local n'al. It came up over and over most of the tuberculosis experts Last year I had the privilege of j OMAHA • U'S -A' purposes; national agencies "which and over again. The conference in the country — that the effect visiting the hospitals in Denver tried for many years to de- of climatic conditions upon tuber- and Los Angeles. They made an serve the entire Jewish communPaston Hotel Bldg. ity ol the United States, that is, velop a modus operand! between culosis is not nearly as important excellent impression en me from the federations and the national those serving national needs; and national agencies which are serv- agencies. It has never succeeded iu this. There is still no satising or. functioning overseas. Were we to classify them by factory understanding between type of service, we would have to the national agencies and the say that there is, first of all, a federations. The difficulty has been that group of agencies which serve communities a n d individuals. thus far each has viewed the We Extend Our Best Wishes for a Happy Among these agencies would be problem from its own viewpoint. included al the national hospitals There are here as everywhere and Prosperous New Year to Our in Denver, Los Angeles and else- else, at leas* two points of view where. We: would have to in- from which this problem must be During Leadership Week, in preparation many Customers and Friends clude also, the national desertion considered. There are, first, the months, you'll find home furnishings of unproblems and viewpoint of the lobureau which, though located in cal community, and second, the flinching quality in good taste, in the widest New York, really serves the entire country. We,would have to problems and viewpoint of the naselection and f,t prices such as you will realize include the national farm school, ticnal agenciesconstitute OPPORTUNITIES. Let us first consider the probthe Hebrew Immigrant Aid So1417 Farnam lem as faced by the local comciety and the National Council of Jewish Women, for each of these munity. There is first and fore-

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New Year's Edition—THE

JEWISH

PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

This group of women has wovlced Workmen's circle, worked with I dent of the auxiliary; Mrs. Ed these, and the last that I shall Deaths, births, and weddings have diligently during the past y?ar to the men's group. Mrs. J. Zelig-i Shafon, treasurer; Mrs. J. D. mention is the Graduate School seemed to occur simultaneously. for Jewish Social Work. I am Mrs. Rivo has three sons and The Brotherhood of Mount provide necessary supplies for theson was secretary and Mrs. 1.1 Maron. vice-president, and Mrs. M. Shulkin succeeds Mrs. G. sure you will forgive me for men- Mrs. Feinstein three sons and a Sinai Temple held regular meet- achcol and to .provide means of Kaplan, treasurer. Levich as treasurer. tioning this institution. transportation for the pupil-* to daughter. ings during the year. I shall not go into the history Their children, too, are Inter- The Annual Father and Sonand from the school. Funds were (Continued from previous page) youth movement and the relation of the School. I shall endeavor to ested in newspaper correspon- Banquet is an important feature raised by the annual picnic and ofthe Jewish Center to the youth separate myself from my official dence columns and they write to of th- year's program. At its the annual Talmud Torah dance. told by a •well known campaignet for funds is \ In point. : According movement, states that the "Jewish capacity as head of t-h e School other children in several foreign regular meetings-, the programs Officers of the Hebrew Mother? Important on the calendar of to him, he and a friend invited a Welfare Board has served as a and write as tersely and as ob-countriesincluded ta ks on timely subjects club were Mrs. Ben Sherman, The Daughterhood of Tiphereth the Ivre club was the Annual gentleman to lunch in an endeav- coordinator, as a stimulator and jectively as I can with regard to and current events of Jewish in- president; Mrs. A. Mazie, vice- Israel meeting in the interests of Conclave held in Sioux City last or to get funds from him tor the as an organizer in t h e Jewish it. president; Mrs. H. HimovitZj the synagogue, held regular meetr month. Guests from Omaha, Des terest. Palestine Jews Retaliate local drive. They let him eat hisCenter field. It has-created a litSome slight beginnings along treasurer, and Mrs. S. Greenstone', ings during the year. The high- Moines and Lincoln attended the The Brotherhood was instruJerusalem—As a result of the lunch iu' peace. For dessert - he erature; it has professionalized these lines have already been light of their program was thesessions, held in the Martin. Mr. in the publishing of the SPCI etary. ordered apple, pie and cheese: and the field; it is indeed creating a made. If they are development, ne wanti-Jewish legislation en- mental Mr. Jack London was president Annual Anniversary D i n n e r , Jack Goldsmith was president of Temple Bulletin, and contributed while he was munching these, Jewishly-cpnscious y o u t h in then it will not be a question .of acted by the German Reichstag, In many xvays toward the welfare of the Board of Education of the which as usual attracted a great the chapter, and Mr. A. M. Gruethey aBked him for a contribution America. Surely it Is doing a most federations against national agen- the Vaad Leumi, Jewish national of :he TemD'e. Talmud Torah. skin was in charge of the connumber of people. to the drive. The man thrust the important work. Surely, also, fed- cies or national agencies against council in Palestine, in a joint clave arrangements. Mrs. M. Lazriowich was presiOfficers for the year were pie and cheese from him and said, erations should support this work. federations. It will be a question meeting with the Anti-Nazi Boy"I -won't give." "Why won't you But the Jewish Welfare Board re- rather of how best to create and cott committee, this week deceded Harry Horwitz, president; Si give?" asked phis host. "Because ceives a comparatively Insignifi- develop a common Jewish life and to withdraw its representatives Krueger, vice-president; Sam CoI don't like the cheese," vraa the cant portion of its budget from an all embracing Jewish commu- from Haavarah, Palestine trustee hen, secrttary, and Lou Agranoff, The Pioneer Women's club met reply.' "What has the cheese', to the federations and welfare funds nity In this country. In this task office for the execution of the reasurer. The board of directors regularly last year, and was inincluded Jce Levin. Joe Slate, M. strumental in bringing several do with your contribution?" ask- in this country. the national agencies are eager to German-Palestine barter pact. E. Skalovsky, Ben Sekt, Abe speakers of note to the city, ed the campaigner in surprise. Closely related in Importance cooperate with the . federations Agranoff, Morris Pill and Morris Ian of Palestine. "Well," If you don't want to give, to' the: youth movement is the and with the local agencies. Only Weiner. a piece of cheese is as good an ex- work carried: on by t h e B'nai through full and honest coopera- Additional Sioux The group worked hand In cuse as any other,"., was the an-B'rith for the Jewish college tion can there be created a rehand with the National Workers City Organizations swer. youth through their Hillel Foun- sponsible Jewish community orDancing Every Wednesday, Alliance and contributed their efThere are national agencies dations. Coming in contact with ganization, one that will be equal forts, time, and funds toward the Saturday and Sunday Jewish education in America is Geverkshaften campaign. They about which there are no ques- most of the universities through- to the need and will be ready and an ever present problem and has tions and few criticisms. Dp .these out the country as I do, I cannot able to assume its responsibilities. took an active part in the Ballroom Available for Private Parties on Other Nights Jewish communal life centers arned the consideration of Amer- also agencies fare better than those but be deeply concerned with Inter Club Council of the city. to a great extent around the acwhich are questioned a n d criti- what is being done for our colica's greatest Jewish leaders and Several card parties were tivities of the synagogue, and therabbis. lege youth. : It is from this group cized? . ; means which the group raised Childhood Letters Mount Sinai Temple has filled an Consider the National Deser- that our leaders of tomorrow In Sioux City, this problem is money by for its Palestinian work. important place in the life of the tion Bureau as a case in point. must come. And yet t h e B'nai being met •with a great deal of Through Young Israel Mrs. Sam Levin was secretary 77th and Dodge Sioux "Cit. Jewish family. WA 6253 B'rith is having a most difficult This agency was organized by the uccess, in its Hebrew school. Brings Friendship Beginning with the opening The Talmud Torah, holding regu- of the group and Mrs. I. Lubman, *V*V^V»3SX*aCVKXS>»att^^ National Conference of Jewish So- time in obtaining the funds it services at I-cosh Hashonah and lar classes in Shaare Zion Syna- treasurer. cial Service. It has rendered sat- needs for carrying-on Its work in More than a quarter of a cen- closing -with tlii Confirmation gogue has by its fine teachers isfactory, and important service to {he Hillel Foundations. The B'nai communities and individuals; and B'rith is the -only organization in tury ago, a little girl's letter ap- services on St.abnruth, the year, and splendid program earned the it has received national and In-this, country that had the vision peared in the children's corre- 5fi95. for, Kount Sinai Temple commendation of the Jewish Comternational recognition. ^Neverthe- and courage to enter the college spondence column of the maga- was replete with f.ctivity. munity. The Workmen's Circle conless, with all that this organiza- campuses and to undertake a pro- zine "Young Israel" which is the Important in latt year's calencluded an active year and contribIn October of l a s t year, Mr. tion, has done, and Is doing, it is gram for our youth so as to bring monthly juvenile publication of dar of the Temple were the serv- Sam Krupnick and Miss Lillian uted to the cultural program of receiving from the federations home to them their relationship the Union of American Hebrew ices conducted by guest rabbin. Romirowsky were brought to the community as well as cononly between 15 and 20 per cent to their people. Stop and think Congregations. Rabbi Philip W. Jaffa of Cincin- Sioux City to assume full charge tributing financially to a number of its total needs. Why is this or- what the Hillel Foundations are It was answered by another lit- nati spoke at the Annual Students of the Hebrew school classes. of charitable hospitals and instiAt the dawning of the New Year, we exganization receiving such meager doing and compare that to the tle girl and many more letters service held in December. Rabbi tutions. Several lectures and B( th teachers have an excep. support from the communities it need! Jacob Ogle of Lincoln, Neb., also followed between the two. A tend to you all our most sincere wishes tionally deep knowedge of the. concerts were on the program of serves? There-are only eleven Hillel warm friendship resulted and, occupied the Temple pulpit at Hebrew language and the history the group last winter, and a picfor happiness, health and prosperity. The National Conference of Foundations in t h i s country. through their letters, the two one service. and customs of the people They nic was the high light of the sumJewish Social Service is an organ- There should be.a Hillel Founda- girls came to be devoted to each The Religious School of Mount also have the ability and person- mer program. ization which social workers need. tion on every campus having a ther. Last week, their friend- Sinai Temple, as in previous ality to Present this material to Mr. I. Singer was financial secUntil very recently no question substantial Jewish student body. ship had its happy culmination in years, was a source of satisfaction he pupils in a satisfactory and retary of the Circle; M. Shiloff, was raised about the need or the But even those Hillel Foundations Buffalo, N. Y., when, for the first to the congregation and to the modern way. recording secretary; J. Victor, desirability of the Conference, and that are in existence a r e very time in the twenty-six years they community. Sessions "were held treasurer, and J. Montrose, hosThe Hebrew school has as yet that Conference has eked out poorly housed, financed and staff- have been corresponding, they each Sunday morning during the lsuai had the splendid co opera- pitaler. a miserable' existence -because of ed. Why do federations and wel- met in personyear, with a staff of trained and ion ol the Hebrew Mothers club. The Ladies Auxiliary of t h e the-inadequate funds it received fare funds not recognize the Im- One of the little girls is nowexperienced teachers. Wholesale Fruits and Vegetables from federations. Indeed,'if it had portance of this national agency Mrs. Maurice Rivo of Buffalo and One of the highlights of the not been for the generous con- by more adequate support? 1010 Howard Street her guest Is Mrs. Louis G. Fein- year was Dr. Julian Morgenstern's tribution which :the Bureau of There are a number of other stein of Winnipeg, Manitoba, visit to the congregation. Dr. : Jewish Social Research has been national agencies which I might anada. Morgenstern, president of the Hemaking to the Conference tor a use as illustrations of the inadebrew Union College, spoke at a In 1909, Mrs. Feinstein, then number of years in the form of quate support -which federations Imelia Selker of Toledo, saw the dinner meeting of the congregapart-time secretarial service, the and welfare funds are giving to tion. ame of Sophie Ein of Glace Bay, Conference would have been ob- national organizations irrespecNova Scotia, Canada, in "Young Services held on Friday eveliged to go out of existence. tive of the value: and quality of Israel." She wrote her a letter, ning and special holiday services their work. But two limitations promptly answered, and thewere wel> attended, and Dr. Welfare Stimulant mo from doing this. One was correspondence continued through Lewis* sermons on timely subjects Mr. Glucksman, the director of prevent is space, the other is t h a t of the - Jewish Welfare. Board, speak- choice since I wanted to cite only he country to another, in times gained the interest and praise of Handling a Full Line of Fine liquors ing' recently about the Jewish those agencies about whose work f happiness and sorrow, through many. there can be no. question. One of all the experiences of their lives. Mr. Hy:nan Fishgall served as 1012 Howard Street JAckson 2663 They exchanged snapshots fre- president of the congregation; quently and knew just how theMike Skalovsky, vice-president; REED, RAMACCIOTTI & ROBIN" other one looked. Their lives have Jack Rob<nson, treasurer, and SON and EPHRAIM L. MARKS, run along the same channels. Herman F. Miller, secretary. Attorneys.

Defense of National Jewish Social Work

Brotherhood

Daughterhood Tiphereth Israel

Ivre Club

Pioneer Women

Accept Our Very Best Wishes fora Most Happy and Prosperous New Year

Talmud Torah

Mount Sinai

PEONY PARK

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Workmen's Circle

Season's Qreetings

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Wishing You a

HAPPY A N D PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR

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SMITH ROBINSON

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NOTICE OF CHATTEL MORTGAGE SALE

Suris Flowers ate Always Fresh! •Omaha's Shop of Quality and Service"; •1621 Farnam St. - JA. 4909

Notice is hereby given that on the 15th" day of October,- 1935. at 1:00" p. m., at 323 Securities Bldg., Omaha, Nebraska, the undersigned will sell at public auction^ to the highest bidder lot cash. the following described articles: One platinum wedding ring, set ith 10 small diamonds covered by chattel mortgage and pledge- agreement in favor of. the undersigned signed by Mrs. Olive Reinans, dated April 19, 1934, on which there Is now due the sum of $20.25. • One diamond- ring -with white gold mounting covered by chattel mortgage and pledge agreement in favor of the undersigned, signed by Herbert 'J; Smith, dated Dec. 11. 1934, on which there is balance due of $36.45. One- Elgin gold filled watch covered by chattel mortgage and pledge agreement in favor of the undersigned, signed by James J. Curtin, dated November 24, 1934, on which there ia balance due of $20.25. One small diamond ring, white gold mounting, covered by chattel mortgage and pledge agreement in favor of the" undersigned," signed" by Louis H. Miller, dated June 6, 1934, on which : there is balance due of $13.00. . One diamond set in white gold mounting, covered by chattel mortgage and pledge agreement in favor of the undersigned, signed by William V. Brown, dated Jan. 6, 1935, on which there is balance due of $60.95. Said sale will be for :the purpose of foreclosing . said chattel mortgages and pledge agreements, for costs of sale and all accruing costs, and for the purpose of satisfying the amounts now due thereon as above stated. UNITED LOAN CO., INC. 9-20-35—3t Mortagee.

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935. The local Council sponsored a sj~nagosues and Saturday morn- compiled a list of books which i An interesting program b;,.Mass Memorial meeting last year ing services have been attended were purchased r.nd placed in theored the mothers and fathsv^ [\JpSI) Y PftY circulation. the chapter in observance "i at which, meeting, Mendel Fisher, by many. The traditional custom [National Director of the J. X. F. of serving Sbalas Ehtifias on Sat- Many of the .finest Jev- Jsfc books, Z. A. Parents Day. Severn! f'f>i and Philip Raskin were speakers. urday was revived, and a Junior includi-ip fiction and. non-fiction, during the year helped rsisf The Council also sponsored a Congregation was formed. are ca this shelf, act' the books funds needed for the cliapt^--, meeting and reception for Mrs. J. I Officers for the yosr wprr- f: hsvp hocr. viclr-;V circulr.tf cl. Rabbi Goldberg has beer, develN. Krueger, who returned from a MR. and MRS. BARXEY BAROX i oping a most intensive End ambiOfficers for t h e year were Phincller, president; Pulnry r*.*wish their friends both far end . tious program End has given ev- Frank Margolin, president; Les- stein, vice-president; Max ?;•:. year in Palestine. near A Happy and Prosperous ; ery synagogue project his person- ter Davidson, vice-president; Dr. i'secretary: TVIoroy Lebowich, "-• Officers of the Council were R. New Year. j al attention. A club was formed L. J. Dimsdale. recording secre- I urer: Abe prsvprmsri, S.->. H. Emlein, chairman; Sam Krup© j for the young people and called tary; Dr. Frank Epstein, corre- : Sergeant-at-arms; Herman •"'> nick, secretary; and Dr. B. CourMR. and MRS. JOHX LAXSBERG i Young Israelites. Officers include sponding secreta-ry; M. E. Ska-Junior Sergeant-af-arms; P: shon, treasurer. a n d family extend to their I Sol Goldberg, president; Herman lovsky, treasurer: Milton Eoi- ' Osncwich, publicity: v.vf, friends sincere wishes for A! Weinstein, vice-president; Betty stein, monitor; Stanley Jacobs, Happy New Year. I Lesser, secretary and treasurer, Guardian; Henry Shulkin, warden; and Barney Baron, Joe Sett, A Mother's Club w a s form eel © ' i With the eager and wholefor the purpose of furthering the and Max Fait, trustee?. MR. and MRS. 31. SATTX take ; hearted co-operation of its mem- this means of extending greet- ; interests of the Hebrew School. bers, the Senior Hadassah chapter ings and hearty good wishes for ' Officers of the Mothers Club are getting their party differences, even greater. Mr. E. N.Grue-! of Sioux City h a s completed a By ANN PILL A Happy and Prosperous New ;Mrs. J . Gorchow, president: Mrs. i Had t h e Ladies AuxiiioV;. Year to their friends far andM. Levich, vice-president: T.Irs. II. successful Glancing back over t h e past and pushing aside obstacles. that skin served as president of, the most Filling almost year. every quota, and near. j Levin, financial secretary: Mrs. It. Since the organization of the Shaare Eion Synagogue il s year, v e find that despite econ- threatened itB unity, the Jews of Inter Club Council; Morey Lip- over-subscribing Its Jewish Naomic stress, and personal worries, Sioux City have worked as. o n e shutz, rice-president; H. Fishgall, C ! Herzoff, recording secretary and local A. Z. A. chapter, Sioux City nothing, move-. than sponsor '• sec- | tional Fund Quota, the Senior HaMrs. I. Wigodsky, treasurer. has always had reason to be proud lectures of Dr. A. L. Sachn-i;v t li e Jewish population of Sioux group toward their goal, cultural treasurer; and Dena Baron, MR. and MRS. H. LAZRIOWICH; I dassah can look back on the year oi the group, and during the year Mar.riee Samuel, llies-e two ' : Officers of the Beth Abraham City, unified as never before, lias and financial. retary. and family wish their friends j 569 5, with the satisfaction of in themselves, would have . i; It is a difficult task in a brief p p met its obligations as Jews and A complete report of the y year's health, happiness and prosper- synagogue were J. Dimsdale, pres- 5 G D 5, the chapter was not conident; Paul Kaplan, vice-presi- tent to rest on its laurels of for-fled 1.11o group's; exigence. '•' has made definite steps forward review to adequately describe the activities was made by Miss Dena j work well done. ity in the coming j-ear. dent; J. Gorchow, secretary and mer years, but made concrete con- ever, the Auxiliary v a s TH>; > in that eternal search for self-ad- work of the organizations that go Baron, superintendent, at the An- | The Purim Bazaar held at the O niial Federation Banquet held last Jewish Community Center; a tributions to the cultural Hie oft e n t 1 t o confine i i s p.c.tivi; ip>. justment and communal harmony. to make up the community.. MR. and MRS. M. A. LAZERE S. Rriv, treasurer. large Card Party given in Novem• fb.es* t w o cv.Hurp! PIPPI'TUTS. • February. Suffice it to say that every orSioux City's young Jewry. Officers of. the Tiphereth IsAn outstanding proof of this is a n d family extend to their c a r r i e r ! Ditt a p r o g r p n " tbr- f . ' In May, the Federation spon- ber and a Dance in July helped In February the chapter was rael synagogue wers H. Lazriothe splendid work the newly or- ganization justified its existence. friends sincere wishes for A raise the various quotas of the wich, president; M. Shulkin. vice- host to the regional tournament a c r e d i t to itself arc? t b r >;;• ganized Inter Club Council h a s Some programs were m o r e in- sored the Annual Allied Jewish chapter. In addition to this, the Happy New Year. president; B. Ginsberg, se.retary and entertained over 150 young' go rue. done during the past year. For- tense and elaborate than other. Campaign. Mr. A. M. Davis was Hadassah gave their annual Linen O : and M. Lazriowich, treasurer. S o m e contributed spiritually, chairman of the campaign, with men from other chapters. T h c The Auxiliary, in fifltiin.'jt some culturally, and some social- Mr. A. J. Galinsky, treasurer. Show, sending a great number of MR. and 3IRS. M. A. LEY1CH j chapter celebrated Internationa! holding several money rni;;iiu take -this means of extending! ly. However, each organization The campaign wap started with a , pieces to the hospitals in PalesA. Z. A. Day with an appropriate fairs, hrlrl regular won I tine. A children's play helped greetings a n d hearty good : had its rightful place and com- Kick-Off dinner, given by Mr. program and conducted services S b P. h b o s meetings; wishes for A Happy and Prosmanded the respect and consid- Lawrence Davidson for the work- ! raise the School Luncheon Fund in the local synagogues, in ob-monthly book reviews j and a recent drive for the Milk In previous years the program servance of A. Z. A. Sabbath. 1 perous Year to their friends far eration of the entire community. ers. (Continued on next of the B'nai E'rith has been based and near. Mr. A. M. Davis served as pres- [ Fund met with success. on the needs of the community. ; g s © ident last year. Other officers in- I 'Women who raised the sum of cluded Mike Skalovsky, treasur- $5.00 were privileged to attend MR. and SIRS. A. SAITLTX and cultural, financial, and social. But ''& The schedule for the Rosh friends during the year 5G95, one out- :~ Hashonah services has heen an-j i f a Jewish Federation of So-er; Max Brodkey,- secretary; and the Donor Luncheon in May. family wish t h e i r A special quota for the Univerhealth, happiness and prosper- standing project of the local lodge § •nounced toy,-, the Rabhis of the c i a i Service and Community Cen- the following as vice-presidents: sity Hospital was raised with the has earned for itself the praise' g. it3T in the coining year. Synagogues and are as follows: ter may be rated according to ItsSi Krueger, J. Kallit, Max Lasen- assistance of Dr. J. N. Lande. and thanks o£ the entire city, both : :§" sky, Barney Baron and H. Laz© At Mount Sinai Temple, Rabbi pivotal importance in its commuJewish and non-Jewish. i !§' Mrs. W. C. Slotsky served as Theodore N. Lewis will speak nity, this organization in Sioux riowich. MR. and MRS. A. MAZIE wish In January of last year, it was j j§: president; Mrs. Joe Levine, viceon Friday evening at 8 o'clock their friends and relatives a called to the attention of t h e . i JCity, may take its place high in president; Mrs. E. N. Grueskin, the subject "The Presence of the ranks. year of Health, Happiness and B'nai B'rith membership that , M secretary; and Mrs. L. S. GoldGod." Saturday morning he will Prosperity. Although the Federation has very few books of Jewish interest g berg, treasurer. speak on "Life or Death" and the heen hampered by inadequate and content were available to : £: A new project last year, sponservice will begin at 10 o'clock. quarters and a limited budget, it With the daily news of Jewish f ° r e d b y « " ?«>i°f Hadassah was and since its organization, classes Sioux City readers. T h e lodge, ;j § At the Kol Nidrei services for has provided a meeting place for ever ready for suggestions, §| 3. Tom Kippur he will spealc on Sioux City Jewry, and has admir- suffering in Hitlerized Germany the .organization of an Ones Shab- have been under the tutelage of promptly donated a sum of money ! jgj o s group which met o n c e a Mr. Joseph Epstein and Mr. Aaron "What "We Can Do for Judaism" ably taken care of the needy in ringing in its ears, Sioux C i t y to the local Public Library for a Tabai. and on Tom Kippur Day his ser- the Jewish Community. Jewry has responded wholeheart- month. Current events, historical Regular Friday evening ser- shelf of Jewish books, and a comsubjects and book reviews were ? COUNCIL BLUFFS' DOMTNAJCT STORE The great number of unemploy- edly in its Zionist activities. mon subject wi' r ' be "What vices have been held in the two j mittee of Sioux Cityan* carefully ed people during the year created -Important in Zionism is t h efeatured on the programs. Judaism Can Do for Vs." work of the Jewish National At Shaare Zion Synagogue^ the j a pressing problem for the Refirst of the Rosh Hashonah serv- lief department of the Federation. Fund, and Sioux City Jewry dur£ • * ices will begin at 6:30 Friday Almost 40 per cent oi the entire ing the year 5695 assumed its Our Jewish community gained ; evening. Rabbi H. R. Rabinowitz Federation budget was allocated share of responsibility in that en\ will speak on "Israel, the Job of to care for the great demand for deavor. The Jewish National Fund considerably when the Tiphereth ; the Ages." Saturday morning relief. The Federation carried a Council is composed of represent- Israel Synagogue and t h e Beth | services will begin at 7:30 andcase load of 45 families; several atives of every Zionist organiza- Abraham synagogue decided to j his subject will be "Filling the of these cases are permanent, de- tion in the city. . During the year combine their efforts last year, j pending on the Federation entire- 5695 the Sioux City Council rais- and brought to Sioux City, Rabbi : Pitcher." Saturday evening, the service ly. Others were taken care of ed approximately §l,0t)0. The Benjamin Goldberg, to fill t h e will again begin at 6:30 o'clock during their time of need until money was raised by means of pulpit of both congregations. Raband- Rabbi Rabinowitz will speak they could again become self-sup- Blue Box collections, Flower Day, bi Goldberg has a keen underporting. Medical aid, legal advice J. N. F. Stamps, Tree Donations standing of the spiritual life and on "Special Prayers." a*.; 6th and Broad-svay Phone S27 Sunday morning. Dr. Kline and untangling family and mari- a n d Dunam Donations. T h e needs of his congregations a n d will blow the Shofar at 9:45 and tal problems were all part of the Shaare Zion Hebrew School class- has done much toward the Jewish COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA at 10 o'clock Rabtl Rabinowitz work of this division of the Fed- es were the first in Sioux City to education of the children. purchase a Dunam of land in Paleration. The Federation also coA west side Hebrew School was will speak on "Which Book • Is YOU SAVE AND ARE SAFE TRADING HERE estinei formed and more than 100 chilYours." Cantor A. Pliskin and operated with the County Relief dren were enrolled in the classes. the | Division, in the cases of five JewThe land acquired by the Jew•f Z his boys* choir will chant ish families. An earnest attempt ish National Fund Is national The school is under t h e direct May Your Only Care be 'for Neighbor ritual at the holiday services. Mr. Leon Dobrofsky is chair- was made to give this aid in anproperty which can never be sold. supervision, o£.. Babbi _< man of the ushering committee at inobstrusive and adequate manShaare Zion Synagogue, and ner. 600 young people between the j New Year Greetings... Messrs. M. Falk and M. Satin, in ages of 6 and 20 were enrolled in charge of the distribution of holi- the 15 clubs and classes sponsorday prayer hooks. ed by the Federation. "Thirty volAt the West Side Synagogues, unteer workers directed their acboth the Beth Abraham and tivities. Tiphereth Israel congregations In January t h e Federation M will hold services on Rosh Campaign was conducted most •5s Hashonah night at te Tiphereth successfully tinder the direction 3 Israel Synagogue. Rabbi Ben- of E. N. Grueskin. Three hun/ / I CHAS. GOKMAX, Manager jamin Goldberg, with an organ- dred new subscribers contributed ized choir will officiate at the and approximately $13,000 w a s Ma'ariv services. raised during the drive. COUXCHL BLUI'FS. IOWA « ~ i 22-24-26 No. Main Street Saturday morning, at 7 a. The Federation Is a member of M ON A M O T O R DIVISION Shachris services will be conthe Sioux City Community Fund, Phone 2S14 ducted by the Tiphereth Israel receiving monthly allotments/ in COUNCIL BLUFFS'FINEST president, Mr. H. Lazriowich. At addition to the money contributed 10:3 0, Rabbi Goldberg will speak by Sioux City Jewry, during the on the subject "Return Oh Federation drive. Twenty-one out Israel." At 11:30, Rabbi Gold- of town organizations, including berg and the choir will officiate hospitals, orphan home, y.eshivahs VBlSl&SS&S^gVSIgySSIiSBliS^^ at the Mussaf services. At 4 received their annual contribuGREETINGS THIS NEW \EAR p. m. Saturday, Rabbi Goldberg tions from t h e Federation last will speak on the subject "Let year. TJs Take Stock of Our Liver." Important on the calendar in Satin-day evening, Rabbi J. 1934 was the first Carnival sponMaron will conduct Ma'ariv serv- sored by the Inter-Club Council. ices. Sunday morning, ths secThis council represents every ond day of Rosh Hashonap, serv- Jewish organization in the city. ices will begin at 7 a. m. and will Last year 35,200 was raised be cor ducted by Mr. J. Dimsdale, through the Carnival. Important president of the Beth Abraham projects of the Carnival were the for a Synagogue. At 10:30 o'clock. raffle of a car, program advertisMr. H. Lazriowich will blow the ing, admission tickets and floor Broadway Theater Bldg. Phone 628 i Economical Tron$porfatlon shofar and at 11 o'clock, Rabbi booths. This year the Carnival •'s Goldberg and the choir will con- scheduled for October, and it is COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA duct the Mnssaf service. hoped that the proceeds would be

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New Year's Edition—THE

JEWISH

PRESS—Friday, September 27, 1935.

synagogues In the city co-operated with t h e Jewish National Fund Council in this project. The next meeting scheduled by the Jewish National Fund Council will be an election meeting.

monthly meetings in the Temple luiuiia Merlin, treasurer, The synagogue EervlceR were Dr. Frank Epstein, recording secand carried out an ambitious pro-' Hutb Jtifkia, recording s^jre'.ary, J well aitended during the year and refary. gram in 5695. The Thanksgiving an* Miss Margaret sermons delivered by Eabbi RaDance, an annual affair sponsored treasurer, bincvJts: were not only educationby the Sisterhood, met with its organization al but icterestingiy satisfying. HUGK P . FINERTT, usual fine success. Several large While the Zionist organization In December, the "Eighth StuMayor of Council Bluffs card parties during the year netvrss not particularly active during clont;i Welcome service was held for the work of the The Poale Zion branch of t h e | a n < i a number of college students the past year, the group was inOn the eve of your Jewish New Junior Hadassah to Workers Alliance h a s ! P a r U r * P a t e d i n the pngram.-Ra.br strumental in calling together Year, 5 69G-1935, I extend cordial BOSH HASHONAH SERVICES New Year's Greetings From | Important in its cultural activ- National . Meet October 2 greetings to all the Jewish people Goldstein of Omaha was several important maps meetings, Appropriate services for Rosh FANNIE B. KATELMAN, fities were the book reviews held!-1 completed a year of activities\ h i The first general meeting of A J5accalaure->nd in keeping the ideals and purof my community. May the New e a c h n i o n t h t b r f w h i c h t h e th Hashonah. will usher in the new Junior Hadassah chaDter~wiu! ° u g h o u t the year. l ° officers and mem-j <= F«est speaker. Your Correspondent Year bring to you and yours a the before the comb a j e i r , 5696, at. t h e Chevra B'nai oe held Wednesday The writer of this column juinur nctaaBsan evening, cnapter OcAVI,1| During j *e service for Central High grad- poses of Zionism w a st h r o u g h t h e e f f o r t s a n d ; e r s may well be proud. tbe course Yisroel synagogue a t 618 Mynster wishes t o take this opportunity year of success in all of your un- tober 2, in the Jewish Com- Ucooperation of the Sisterhood that i of the year they j uates was held in January and j munity. The group sponsored a meeting street, commencing a t 6 o'clock to wish n ' l i n y readers of this dertakings. munity Center. Plans for t h o a Succah was erected and d e c o r -oifb r no au tgihot n atl o s 3 °ux City speakers ! a saiii insynagogue June, The maintained actions, at which time representaI wish all of my Jewish friends this evening, September 27. On colunin, from botli far and ; coming year will be discussed and ated in the Temple during the! . fame, including David Saturday, t h e morning services near, a very Happy New Year. a very joyous Rosh Hashonah j a program has been planed by week of Succoth, and the S i s t e r - 1 P i n s k I ' B - Zuckerman and Mrs.Sanday school during the year i tives of the various divisions exthe platform of their O f t and the Junior congregation serv-j plained will .begin a t .7 o'clock and the May • the coming year bring Holiday. Kaplan. The sum the membership committee. Miss hood assumed the responsibility j Elisheva ices held every Saturday morning.' party. 200 w a s evening. Services a t 4:30 o'clock. about a fulfillment - of your Dorothy Merlin, president, will of seeing that the e d u c a t i o n a l ;d^r u t h L a raised for the Hista- attracted over a hundred children' 1 Dr. H. M. Levin Is president of On Sunday morning, t h e second highest hopes a n d desires, needs of the children of the Re-i aI. o o r Party. The Nationpreside. Council Bluffs Births— j the Zionists, and Dr. J. M. Lande, day of Rosh. Hashonah, services bringing you success and conligipus School were taken care of. < Workers were represented on ca.r-h week. Officers of the congregation j secretary-treasurer. •will start a t 7 o'clock. Rev. A. tentment. Important also on its program 5695 ' i the Jewish, National Fund Coun^ was the annual Mother Diamond of Council Bluffs and n jj || cil, and on the Inter Club Coun- were John Lansberg, president; j B'nai B'rith Dance Mr. and Mrs. Louis H. Katelcil. Daughter Banquet. Rev. A. Gendler of Omaha "will MOTJTS Satin, vice-president; Eli | Additional Sio«x City organiMr. and Mrs. Abe Bear and man, a daughter. Yom Kippur Night ' The 3( dge is composed of Sioux Robinow,-financial secretary, and 1 zatioris'on Page Ten, Officers of. the Sisterhood were conduct the services for the holy- s o n s > Aaron David and Myron Dr. and Mrs/ Isaac Sternblll, a The annual Yom Kippur dance, Mrs. William Lazere, president; City's earnest Zi •r.ist -Koikers and days. Max of Leavenworth, Kan., . a r e ; d a u s h t e r . I sponsored by the B'nai B'rith !j Mrs. A.' M, .-.Davis, vice-president; intcllc-'luals, anJ ranks h*.rh fa Mr. and Mrs. Abe Bear, son. expected to arrive heer today to lodge, will be held this year in Mrs. William Galinsky,'secretary; the esteem of the community. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Roffman, the ball room of the Bellevueiand Mrs. Sam Cohen, treasurer. Miss Shirley Maltz, Creighton spend the holidays visiting Mrs. Officers of t h e group include " 'University freshman; ranked firs Bear's parents, Mr. and Mrs.! s o n apartments. Max Mason, financial secretary; - in t h e mathematics placemen Julius Katelman. j Mr. and Mrs. Leon Frankel, The dance is scheduled for M. Kaplan, recording secretary; j tests which was given to about daughter. Monday evening, October 7, folLouis Shindler. treasurer, and j 300 freshmen last week a t the Mr. and Mrs. B. Saltzman will Mr. and Mrs. Sam Lincoln, lowing the fast of Yom Kippur. Sam Ratner, hospitaler. Meet-! Creighton university in Omaha. have as their house guests, Mr. daughter. Lester Davidson, vice-president A brief glance a t the program \inss are held the last Wednesday! | She Is the, daughter of Mr. andand Mrs. Keith Pelts and daughMr. and Mrs. Leo R. Krasne, of the lodge, is in charge of the carried out by the Junior Hadas-j o f e a c h month. Painter Knox William P. Knox j ig Mrs. A. Maltz of Council Bluffs. ter, Lorraine of Manning, la., and ison. dance arrangements. sah crapter discloses the fact that Ohio Knox Mr. and Mrs. BenCohen and I Mr. and Mrs. Jack Steinberg, the 85 young women, who were! daughter. CLUBS family of Harlan, l a . members fully assumed their i OnSarC REAL ESTATE - - - LOANS Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burton, The new A. Z. A; chapter in shars of responsibility m the up- 1 Shaare Z i o n Congregation Ladies Auxiliary son. Council Bluffs was given a charAt the home of B. Markovitz {reached a significant mile stone - - INSURANCE Mr. and Mrs. Philip Carp, (Continued from previous page) building of Palestine. ter a t a meeting held .Sunday will be Mr. and Mrs. Julius BarThe Junior Hadassah rontrlb-j during the year, 5G95, when the Rabbi Rabinowitz, and celebrated afternoon, September 22, a t theron and son, Herman of Shenan- daughter. to tbe Jewish National its Tenth | 14 Pearl Street , uted u-vu -^ •.•••ooti3u >auwiicii jj synagogue synagogue icelebrated Phone 162 Mr. and Mrs. Leland Goldberg, Chevra B'nai Tisroel synagogue. doah, .la., and Mr. and Mrs. Edthe Jewish holidays w i t h approj p j , oversubscribing its Quota: i anniversary. u n ( To speak of the j j daughter. priate programs. Seventeen young men were for- ward Welner of Villisca. and raised -i good portion of its COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA Officers for the year were Mrs. Palestine. The year. 5C95, was work and activities of the con-! [ mally Initiated Into the organizagregation during its 10 years of;; J. H. Mosow, president; Mesdames tion and will be listed as charter '»Kra^^ with a Membership Tea. existence, it is necessary to em-1 In Memoriam—5695 Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ross of Ruebin Miller and I. Menin, vice- opened members.- A group of prominent A party for paid-UP members was Jerry Yndelson, 18. Manning, la., will spend the holiploy superlatives. I. presidents; Mrs. D. Ginsberg, Omahans, members of t h e SuSol Gross, 55. days visiting Mrs. Ross' parents, The anniversary was adequatetreasurer; Mrs. J. Kutcher, r e - held early in the year. A joint preme Advisory Council of the. Mr. and Mrs. j . Gittle, and also Henry Kathanson, 46. cording secretary and Mrs. Sam meeting with t h e Senior Hadas- ly celebrated during the month of NEW YEAR'S GREETINGS A. Z. A., initiated the new mem-with Mr. Ross' mother, Mrs. Rae Bess Cornbleith, 45. Davidson, corresponding secre- sah group was held and Miss Nell j March with a week's celebration bers. The chapter plans a very E: Ross. :• . •H. R. McGEE Ziff was the guest of the chapter j which ' brought speakers of note Isador Lebovitz, 57. W. G. KEWSOWE EOT S. CtAT tary. active season. ; in t t e spring. Rachel Katleman, 00. to Sioux City. On Friday, eveThe holidays were appropriate-1 ning, March S, the Mount Sinai Fannie Braunstcin, 68. Mrs. S. Gross of St. Louis, Mo., The Chevra. B'nai Yisroel So- left for her home in St. Louis, T\* , o * " C* J. L J ! ly observed with symbolic pro- j congregation and Shaare Zion ciety "will hold a Tegular meeting Mo., after spending several weeks rams and weekly cultural meet- congregation, held a joint service Mount r i»ere held during the —inter.' ceelbrating this anniversary. The next Wednesday: evening, October here a t the home of her son-inAlthoughbmai t h e Sisterhood Sisterhood of u ings SEALERS IS 2, a t 8 o'clock a t t h e Chevra aw aud daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Mount Sinai Temple was organTl^e annual mid-winter dance j following day, the women of the B'nai Yisroel synagogue a t 618 ized to assist in matters pertainand a large card party were j congregation met for an Oneg Louis H. Katelman. Meal Estate First Mortgage Loans Mynster street. - All members are ing to the Temple, it was through cieanp by which the chapter jShabbos meeting, and on that eveurged to attend. the efforts of this organization raised its quotas. An iiis'.aV.a-! ning a Teeth anniversary dance - • INSURANCE Miss Ruth Riseman of Lincoln, Rabbi and Mrs. Theodore N. that Sioux Cityans had the oppor- tion dinner in July closed the was given. The celebration was is spending the holidays Lewis will be at home to their tunity of hearing Ludwig Lewis- sea?on. 105 Pearl Street Phone 197 The Sisterhood of the Talmud a huge banquet in the social hall ; Torah Society will hold a regular here visiting a t the home of her friends Sunday afternoon from 3 ohn in a lecture at the Orpheum • COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA M .'s Rose Pill served a«presi-'on Sun-iay of that week. At this meeting next "Wednesday after- brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and to 6 o'clock, They will receive Theater. d ' n t of the chapter: Miss Ruth j banquet four rabbis were present in their home, 711—23rd street. The Sisterhood held regular Wigo.lsky. vice-president; .Miss and spoke on the program. -noon, October 2,, at 2:30 o'clock Mrs. Millard H. Krasne. ' a t the Chevra B'nai Yisroel synaMr. and Mrs. G. Levich de Mrs. Ike Cohen left Saturday gogue a t 618 Mynster.street. All night, Sept. 21, for her home in parted this week for Milwaukee members are urged to attend. Chicago, 111., following a week's Wis., where they plan to make The Council Bluffs Agudas visit here a t the home of Mr. and their home. Achim Society will hold a regular Mrs. Morris Yudelson, Bernard Lazriowich, son of Mr meeting next Thursday evening, Mr. and Mrs. -Hymie Milder of j a n ^ Mrs. RL Lazriowich, departed October 3. a t 8:30 o'clock a t the >.A Eagles hall. Omaha and Rae Braunstein and last week for Ames, la., where Louis S. Braunstein of Council he is enrolled a t the State Agri The Council Bluffs chapter of Bluffs, have returned home from cultural college. the Senior Hadassah have made Pittsburgh, Pa., where they acMiss Anne Cohen, 922 Twelfth plans to open its. fall season a t companied the' body of the late its October meeting, which will Mrs. Fannie Braunstein of Coun- street, visited with friends in probably be held- on "Wednesday cil Bluffs, who passed away here Minneapolis, last week. afternoon, October 16, ' a t t h elast week, f o r burial in PittsMiss Bess Lipshutz returned Hotel Chieftain. Mrs. Saul Suval- burgh. home last week, after a month's sky, president, will announce visit in California. later a full program of activities Council Bluffs Marriag for t h e coming year. es— Mr. Aaron Tabai departed last 5695 week for Iowa City, where he is SETS WEDDING DATE enrolled as a senior a t the uniMiss Marian Scharf, daughter Miss Sarah Solomonow and Mr. versity. of Mr. and Mrs. J o e Scharf of Ben Rudher. Council Bluffs, has chosen WedMiss Helen Gittle and Mr. nesday, October 9, as the date of Ernest Ross. Jewish National Fund her marriage to Mr. Marvin Miss Hazel Garber and Mr. Roy Jewish National Fund Stamps Bobkey. son of Mrs. Eli Bookey Posenthal. were attached this year to t h e of Des Moines, l a . Miss Tillie Markovitz and Mr. Synagogue Holiday seat tickets, Miss.;Scharf fa being extensive- Edward Weiner; and ticket buyers added five Miss Alice Hirsch and Mr. Leo cents to the price of their tickets ly entertained during this month, Ungar. prior-to her marriage. to cover the stamp. All the

oun cil

News

NEW YEAR'S GREETINGS

By F. R . X

Poale Zion Branch,

A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO A L L !

Knox & • Company

Junior Hadassah

Shaare Zion

H. G.McGEE REAL ESTATE C O M

ADDED SIOUX CITY NEWS

PERSONALS A number of local families •will have their relatives, from both far and near, gathered together again here for the; holidays. At the home of. Mr. B. GIHnsky tor over the holidays -will be Mr. and Mrs. Leo Blank and son. Lane Burton of Minneapolis; Mr. and Mrs. Al Gllinskyand children of Los Angeles, and Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Schlank of Des Moines.

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Mr. and Mrs. H. Saltzman will LOCAL AGENTS have as their house guests, Mr. and Mrs. Abe Marcus and chil537 West Broadway dren of Auburn, Neb., and Mr. COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA and Mrs. Henr: Maduff and family of Anita, l a . Mr. and Mrs. G. Rosenberg and family of Hastings, Neb., will spend the holidays here visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Abe Mrs. H.. Fried entertained 15 .-. children' a t her home .Saturday Gfternopn in honor of her twin BOPS, William Gerald and Orville X>avid, /who celebrated their eighth birthday. • The afternoon was,- spent playing games, follo-wed by refreshinehts. * ,1 Mrs. Abe Leibovitz h a s r e turned homei-following' a week's visit to Iowa City, where her daughter. Miss Maklne Leibovitz, hae recently enrolled ' o r her freshman year a t the University ;b£viowa.; •:.;;;. ;;-. •; : - . . ' . ' . . ', ' The Hague-T-Theiffirst international repercussion-Ato -the 'new ; Nazi law fpW)idding marriages betweeni Jews and:J;Germang occurred here 'When the municipal authorities: refusedn a marriage -license t o a German Jew and a :-;i)utcli1girt.--,;--.i:';--;';r-;'.i'f?--

Phone 5750

"?":« \. % r-.t -\*V * * " v -"•*:

A Happy Isteu/ Year To All! Distributors of

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Phone 353

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A Happy New Year to A l l

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The authorities -based;, their action pn-the 19O2.itreaty between Germany and iHollaiM by -which 5ttt¥^ latter agreed i $ t i o permit any marriages [within its borders Jt»/whicR?theJReich Objected.

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