September 25, 1924: Rosh Hashanah Edition

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I—SECTION 2—THE JEWISH PRESS,-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1924 to Harvard and to Yale, to Columbia Hospital, although its equipment Is sum of money for a new institution, Without Judaism i t has no soul. Jew- schemetoflife In this world. We are and to Cornell, without stint and -with- not new and improvements are needed, but I feel that our old institutions ish philanthropy based on Judaism striving great g for the ^ay y when the g out let-up. .Throughout the country is still a source of pride to us. Would should be repaired at a fraction of makes possible a real philanthropic Isaiah's ' prophesy h will ill jbe jb fulfilled flfilld and d Jews have given magnificently of their that the Federation had more money that expenditure and that the rest cf Jewish endeavor, an endeavor making filled full: "And then htelped eacfe nian means and of their bounty. In <ine for that noble institution. the money be used for more needful the Jew "worth while to himself and ME neighbor and everyone said to his Address Delivered at Temple Israel, Omaha, Neb, city a Jew gives a Cardinal a large purposes. We, social workers, know i to civilization. Friday Evening, September 19, 1924 brother, 'Be of good courage!' " Philanthropic Technique sum of money "just to help those who that it is not more institutions that we 1 Israel's religion is & religion of ByWM. R/BLUMENTHAL Another unique technique of the need it." In another city a -public need for our children. We need more rather than one ©f creed. Our Tciah ! A new cool? may bring many Superintendent, Jewish Welfare Federation school is named for one of its Jewish Jew is that of personal service. It is h o m e s . a r o s e i h e Superintend commands: «Do this and live!" It is written references, but in the end 1! citizens noted in philanthropy. In her Jewish Orphan a religion of optimism optimism, where the * dent of another another «ity the Jew is .the Asylum and exclaimed: "For years emphasis is placed on a practical "the taste tells." It is a privilege to speak from the iy orphans and asylums throughout many development of the Ancient Jewish beloved-"prince of givers" to Jew and pulpit of Dr. Conn, the scholarly the country, and especially in his thought that the best aid that can be Gentile alike. tell you it Rabbi of this Congregation, and i t is home city New Orleans. given the poor is to help them help all a mistake. We must be big an opportunity to address this ConGenius in Philanthropy Adolph Sutro, the great San Franthemselves. The motto of a national enough and frank enough to admit it. We wish to thank our customers and friends for their patronage. gregation so soon after the remarkable cisco Jew, whose monuments today But not alone in general philanOur children must be placed not in address given here by that great ,are the public parks and practically thropy-.has the Jew made his mark. an old Jewish ideal. an old Jewish ideal. ! institutions, but in homes!" That is : philanthropist, David A. Brown. TTig all the publicly owned beauty spots of He is in the foreground of achieveFree Loan Societiesithroughout the address inspires me in the short talk that city. ments in social service almost every- country, introduced by Jews, set a r e a l - „ , « „ o f B e r s o n a i riorv tol I shall make this .evening. Joseph Fels of Philadelphia, whom where, and by some is held to be high example of this idea «i of ueipuis helping tendency is e*ainpie «i mis *u« The greatest modem The Jew occupies a unique position Zangwill calls the second Joseph the twenty years in advance of the main jugn the needy to help themselves. Very •p r e v e n £ v e w o r k . « A • in the qrninlq of the world's philan- Dreamer, the manufacturer and ideal- bodjvof social workers. Today, when py more than a hun-; publicity has been g given to the p£„„,„,«„,-o worth r e v e i l tion is wnrfV, ™™ i in i almost l t every ist, exponent of Henry George's among the most important develop- little thropy, as he occupies Free Loan Soaetym our own city, a ». ^ seemingly the! d r e d f o r x e l i e f vcjther field- On the very first page of political theories, on which he lavished ments in social service are the indus- constituent of our Welfare Federation. s l o g a n . 'Nathan S t r a u s S h a s educed < trial welfare departments of large orthis~Bible before us occurs a social princely sums. , That is became the men who have ^ 1 ^ mortality o n i 9 8 per thou-j ! service question,' although it is stated Simon Guggenheim, the practical ganizations, it. is a cloak and suit been conducting _ that organization sand to less than f r20 per thousand in house in New York owned by Jews negatively. .Cain asks: "Am I my philanthropist.; One of the builders of have felt that the true idea of ork. He has saved thousands N e W Y brother's keeper?" The Jew has con- Colorado, and father of its Schools of that is by far in the vanguard. "gemflotii chesed means that the o f b a l ) e s a n d by tinued to answer in the affirmative: "I Mines and Engineering. There are The Jew has not only given of his recipient of their help should not be wholesome milk. Giving clean am my brother's keeper." ; just a few,—hundreds .-of others could means but; he has developed his na- advertised. j , milk is better for society, for the, Kosher Meats and Delicatessen ""' There have been many tests of tive genius in philanthropy. The Still another technique is the ;? mother and for the children than healcivilization. There is for instance the be enumerated. slogan proposed, during the World Friendly ^Visitor, paid,: im^erpaid or infants. i A Promise Kept A visit to our store will convince you that our prices pre-war German test, that the amount Many an essay on Jewish philan- War: "Give till it hurts,'? has been unpaid, it matters not. The friendly of sulphuric acid used by a nation are reasonable and quality the best. Corrected by our Nathan Strauss to visitor is often an angel on earth and California Personal Service Committee indicates its civilization. There is the thropy has begun with the reminder read: "Gi^e till it feels good." The her visit means more ;than food and! A great movement in social service of the promise made by the Jews of idea that the esteem in which •womanWEBSTER 5488, 1707 NORTH 24TH ST. Jew has yet another characteristic in to the needy. Our friendly which I had the privilege to be con-i kind is held is the test of civilization; Brazil who sought to migrate to New giving^ Jacob Schiff'wasone of those raiment visitors in Omaha are examples of the' n'ected with is the Committee for PerNetherlands-—that promise made to There is the idea that the treatment who "gave away from the public eye." to be found in the United States sonal Service in California, organized accorded the Jew is the test of civiiza- Governor Peter Stuyvesant, that ?The He gave in secret, and even now we best and-their work, though often-intan- by the late Martin A. Meyer and I. poor among us shall not become a tion. But the one unfailing test of learn of the private benefactions of gible, means not only material Irving Lipshitz of San Francisco, and burden". It is such a splendid example civilization is the nature and developof faith kept that one risks recalling which the world knew very little. - rehabilitation, but also moral and at present ably presided over by Rabbi i ment of its philanthropy. spiritual re-birth. i Rudolph I. Coffee. That Committee is the story.; 1The promise was- made in Why Jews Were Appointed Lonesomeness , a pioneer friendly visitor of the JewShall the Jew Survive? April, 1855, two hundred and seventy It was this kind of philanthropy Perhaps moTe than ever before there years ago. Today ihere vare 2,300 and it was this sort of technique that . Lonesomeness iish m w o m e n a n d. children in the is questioning today: "Shall the Jew Jewish charitable organizations in the made Theodore Roosevelt, when Gov- The greatest disease m the _world sixteen state institutions of California, survive, and if so Why?" If. there is United' States. Jewish philanthropic ernor of New York, make the state- today is not tuberculosos; it is not w here there are at present over five one outstanding reason why the Jew organizations in the United States ment:' "You say that, a vacancy has cancer, nor- an. ydisease found in a hundred Jewish inmates. During the of the existence off thi this should survive i t is that he has an had a membership of over 500,000 last occured. in, the State Board of Char- medical text book. The greatest dis- Committee fi two t years i t men fortyf h Jewish and inborn passion for social service. year and expended, more than $15,- ities and Corrections, and that you ease is Lonesomeness. Lonesomeness than -women in the state asylums, state Social service, so to speak, is in his 000,000 for.philanthfopic work. These want a man to fill i t ? You want a Mils more' people every year War. prisons and state reformatories, were did during the World blood. Take the list of the twelve Jewish organizations comprise twenty man of charity ? Well, when you want bullets Only Mils people slow- salcaged and returned to society, O l The llonesomeness Mil l greatest Jews of America, as selected national institutions, sixteen hundred a man of charity, go where charity ly. rich are not exempt from From social liabilities they were conSIXTEENTH by the readers of one of our outstand- relief societies, over : three hundred has its abiding place. Go to the Jews." this disease. Rabbi Martin A. Meyer, verted into social assets. The State ing Jewish • Journals: Louis: D. hospitals and asylums, and more thai And- Simon W. Rosendale was ap- often contended tf.HABNETt that the rich need Board of Charities and Corrections in Brandeis, Stephen Wise, Nathan four hundred educational institutions pointed. When the Postmaster Gen- social service more than the poor. Our California stated officially that in .00 to *3.00 Strauss, Julius Rosenwald, Louis settlements, centers, etc. eral of the United States found r a new institutions, like the Centers, are money alone this Jewish Committee Marshall, Julian Mack, Felix Wardistracted organization in Washing- for all the people. . -.;i Specific Jewish Contribution i saved the State thousands of dollars burg, Samuel Untermeyer, Oscar ton .and asked for. the help of the best The tendency of late in social serva year not to mention the untold savThe specific Jewish contribution to. Strauss, Henry Morgenthau, and (in &FABNAM 3 specialist:in the land to save the Post human suffering. s^place of Steinmetz, who recently died, philanthropy has been the Federation Office Department, advisors of ex- ice has been—Back to 3the Home. The " .SO t o »2.SU idea is to make the home normal and, The Center of Gravity of Jewish Charities, which after substitute) Lee K. Frankel or David twenty years; of experimentation by perience throughout the land directed to place in i t the dependents. The ' . ^-» by far the most important A. Brown. What is the characteristic the Jews has helped pave the way for him to Dr. Lee K. Frankel of the • IXTEEN practice is not to build more development in Jewish philanthropy is common to all these men? Just this the Community Chests of the c jurtry. Metropolitan Insurance Company, and best asylums for children, but to find or t j j e Jewish Center, the old Hebrew FARNAM '—that they are all imbued with the The Jewish union of charities has not formerly f l S r i t e d t off the th U ited create normal homes wherein to place "Beth Am", House of the People. Superintendent United Jo» H, Keeoan Manacrn- A. spirit of service to mankind. ~ own Welfare Fed~ " Hundreds of Jewish Centers sprung been a union so much in givm? ns a Hebrew Charities of New York. . t 'h *' e children. Our union in relieving poverty and destitu- .. Jews have, not only learned to give eration grants aid to the mother, so u p almost over night in America. The Men of Yesterday But the men of yesterday should not tion. The Jewish benefactions during readily and to give magnificently, but that she may keep her children with Jewish Center has taken away the All Fireproof—• Centrally Located be forgotten. .'.Let us take four just at the World War have rounded out the they have learned to build institutions her. We have many more orphaned center of gravity of Jewish philanoa Direct Csr Liae from Depots random: Judah Touro, Adolph Sutro, work of these Federations in com-which are * the pride of the • country, children with their mothers under our thropv from relief and has placed it prehensive clearing houses for beneMount. Sinai Hospital in New-York is care than_we have in the Orphan character building, in "physical Joseph Fels and Simon Guggenheim. Mount.Sinai Hospital in New-York is care than we have ' "' «—•..__ m j betterment, in spiritual growth, in g y Judah Touro flourished in the first volence. generally held to be the model hosHome in Cleveland.Our reputation of twenty years «» back of these hotel*. But the Jew has not merely taken pital of the world. It is a monument •moral progress. Thank God that we half of the 19th century. His magGuest* nay stop st any one of them with the assurance. Present-day Tendencies ia Omaha will soon realize and "cash I nificent charities knew no race nor care of his own, he has generously to the great-heartedness of the Jew, of receiving honest value and courteowe treatment creed. He is: the man who completed and magnificently helped take care of welcoming equally Christian and Jew. This brings to my mind a stirring in" on that latest development in! others. The most important colleges How needless sounds the seventeenth incident at the Conference of Jewish Social Service—The Jewish H l d h t t h the Bunker Hill monument; who dct now: n ngon llastt Center. Speedily it will be built! preserved the old stone mill, a relic of of America have for years been aided century century edict "Provided that the Social ^Workers in Washington CONAKT HOTEL COMPANY, Operators the Norsmaniin Newport, to poster- by Bernard M. Baruch; Julius Rosen- poor among us shall not become a year. The care of children was under Faith and Dcedes ity; who bought at auction a Universal wald has for many years maintained burden." We need not go fifteen discussion. The Superintendent of the •' Jewish philanthropy, however, does church in New Orleans and returned Y. M. C. A's among the colored people hundred miles away to New York to Jewish Orphan Asylum of New York lagi Jacob Schiff and his be proud of a hospital. Right here arose and said in effect: "Our Board J not stand "alone. Jewish philanthropy _T m mm m mm it entirely free. of debt to the wor- of the Sputh. mm shipers, and. who endowed magnificent- son-in-law, Felix Warburg, have-given' in our own <city our Wise Memorial of Directors has just voted us a large without Judaism has no^ meaning.

"THE AMERICAN JEW ffl

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A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR ': . TO ALL

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Three Omaha Hotels of Merit CONANT

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New Year Bank With The

ma All Deposits in This Bank Are Protected by the Depositor's Guarantee Fund of the State of Nebraska f

We Invite Your Business The Largest State Bank In


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We wish you a Joyous Holiday, and aiuE realization dfyonr anticipated progress during the New Year

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You are corcfially invited to visit Omaha^s Snow White Bakery (largest west of Chicago, and third largest in the country) and see how quality Crackers arid Cookies are made in a modern baking plant

Best time to come is between 9 arid 1 1 in the morning, and 1 and 3 in the afternoon, when all departments are running* Just come to the office entrance, 1 3th and Capitol Avenue, and a competent guide will take you through

(Reg. U. S. Patent Office)

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PAGE 4—THE JEWISH PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1924

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mm i m Press the electric button and the mammoth plant of the Nebraska Power Company with its millions dollars worth of machinery ~springs forward to serve you. ; Electricity serves all the people*!

Electricity knows no creed, no race, no religion. . —the rich and the poor; the proud and the humble. It is the servant of both Home and Industry.

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. bringing the life-giving, blood stream from the faest^sQ Ifte Hc&jcasfca. Power Company, with its i Avir^, brings to every part of Omaha a stream oC eleetricjty—-ttie very essence of the city'sTh« life."Ue&tf* o'f iiie KdwcasJai Power Company is its

•_-. is indeed a cosmopolitan servant! In tEe _ Electricity y p home it lights' cooks, washes, irons, sews, sweeps, cleans, •warms, ventilates and cools. I t turns the wheels of faet6ries, mills and elevators. It makes your clothing, your butter, bread and ice; refrigerates your poultry, meat, fnut and produce. It serves jrich and poor alike; all creeds, all religions.

-niant located lrtfof^ on n« the rto banks iionirc of ^f the +v.« Missouri M,'^mi»;- River TJ;™^' ; huge• plant a t the foot of Jones street. F r o m there is s e n t theeyerr lasting flow of electricity to home and factoryi t ""

- The nucleus of the ,present which makes _ . , _ . . . organization o this wide distribution of ejectricity possible in Omaha was laid in 1887—36 years ago. ^ —».---—

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The first electric light plant-was established in Gmaha after mudi ; J effort in 1884 by a group of men who had confidence in the future —-1— mentjpd^owthof the cityv ' '

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Since tHat time, tHrough* constant improvement at A

cost of millions of dollars, the equipment of the Ndbr«&» Power Company stands today one of the finest tn the United States and serves over 47,009 customers. " In a great measure the growth and development of our company is due to the confidence of the people of Omaha in our institution and the faith put in us by the great numbers of men, women and children of this city who own securities of our company, v.

Prior to that time two different groups refused franchises offered .by. the city to establish a light plant here.

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PAGE 5—^TEE JEWISH PRESS; THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1924 an8 "the sestless ssw^QJWs on ?>the speken to them in" a gentle, somewhat recluse, as he •sifsffied along the1' for my mail that evening-she toldMs seclusion -that* €he' eve"•©? ." tbeaeh ibesgan^ttair *leepF chirping. aloof voice, even smiling at them- as- beach hunting <M£fc *rood, and ask me she had $sat her :oe|lhew to *l»e fiasbonsh «ss"i8<taed *pfo?oacbi!?gv &•. an older man will smile a t the prattle him for a donation. He listened littls shack beside the cliff, where tried to comfort Mm. But at 'first "he Then, -throHgh 4he =scented stillness, of a foolish child. But he never patiently to all she had to say of the he had found the old recluse lying in would not listen. "My people wouldn't came a call sweet and clear and cared to chat with them, always look- glory of the boys who had fought bed, weak from hunger and sick with forpive me—how can God forgive?" high—the' note of a trumpet. .The r ing about him fearfully, always alert and died J&ad must he immortalised leyer. A Story for Bosh Hashonah he cried .again and again. "But sick man rose in his bed and itpon as though for sudden flight. in a bronze tablet on the post office •"Hi keeps talking all "kinds of non-maybe if I could hear the shofsr his face cause the look I have never By ELMA EHKLICH UEVINGEB. Copyright 1024. All Bights Beservea. Once a month he went to the post walL His lean hand wandred auto- sense,'^ she told; me, *'and calling -fcof again—hear it as I used to hear it seen upon the face of any living man office, .and it -\ras told on the author- matically toward the pocket of hisa rabbi. A rabbi's a kind of Jewish when he and I were "boys together— —peace snd humility and joy and a ity of the busy-tongued post mistress patched trousers; he withdrew it preacher, ain't he? Seems like if the like that rening before it happened" greaiT gratitude all in one. "SbemE, Nobody in the little fishing village lis few poor purchases at the village herself that he received a single let- empty, smiled qnizically. "I can give poor man is dying tie ought to get—he shuddered and rras silent for aYiroel—" he began—then pitched foron the coast of Maine knew from store; and they remembered, with" ter; perhaps it contained the pittance you nothing but good words," he said; what he wants, don't i t ? " moment—"I -wish I could hear the ward and lay vary still. where the recluse had come or even malicious exactness, how, once his hat on-which he lived, for upon receipt of " T h e memory of the righteous for I did not trouble to explain that shofar before I die!" he said wist- As I closed the tired eyes I TChis name. Themselves of\& perma- had dropped off, showing his head, the long envelope he would turn "to a blessing'," arid passed on, leaving at such a time any Jew might per- fully like a very little child. me^bered that a few of the ?Boy nance that was one with the ".timeless cruelly shaven, as was the custom of the village store and pay the meager her more -than sssx -canxinced that he form the priestly functions. But "• Now laugh and say that the day ofScouts were still in their camp up rocks, they looked upon all visitors shaving the heads of convicts in those bill he had charged during the month. was hopelessly mad.. early the. next morning I persuaded miracles is over! As we talked the in the pine woods. And they always, from the world outside as temporary days. Some had murmured, -"Jail No other letters came, no newspapers. A few days later a tramp, wander- her nephew to accompany me to the sun sank behind the clump -of pines sonneted a trumpet at sunset. sojourners, neighbors only for t&e bird I" but one more charitable than Once when flags were flying and ing oyer the «3iff, broke his ankle old man's bedside. The little rural, summer season; scarcely worth the' the rest had spoken of fevers which fresh-faced boys in khaki marched when -falling 'with jscsne loosened although pitifully bare, was .waxen • dignity of a name. - Unless you <ame left men with naked heads and -weary down the street to martial music/ he stones. 'When he could hohbte sback clean; there was no furniture 'but-a' summer after summer, you •eyes. But no man knew for certain, asked in a bewildered sort of way the to -the tillage again he reported that chair and table, evidently of 'home, would most likely be known as and 'when the stranger's loeks grew meaning • of the strange procession, the *ld man had helped him to hismanufacture, and the bed on sefaich; folks over in the white cottage," or out again they were as" white .as and, learning that there was a war, shack, "fiaced -my ankle -better -rhan the sufferer lay. When -I,entered -itbe: "the- family in the Morton cottage"; snow.* he had- withened ' and muttered: "I any blame doctor you ever saw," eyes he turned to me - were isright; perhaps, after returning for a third Tears passed and the little village did not know." Opposite P. O. 16Ui fits. Shared his .bed £.nd .his jpoor *&eals with fever. or fourth season, the taciturn Ssher fcoys who had begged permission to-' with hha -cn'til he' was -whole and well folk learned to speak to you by name accompany their fathers in the fish-' *'pon't you read fhe papers?" some again. "But he -wouldn't talk to me," I stayed with him all that day, and; in his delirium he told me -many? loafer "on the post office porch had —but not always. < ins boats went off to the great city jibed. complaineti. the -tramp, '"and every _:igs which the curious villagers - a»3 morning ©nd -every time we would have been glad to heas, -bat* • If any man among them Tiad «ver or .stayed at home to set out jn boats" any more,"/he had answered, known the name or history of theof -their own. The summer visitors but once I read many books." Then; gafc -down to -est he used -to matter which neither they nor any one «lse* white-haired alien old man living in came with the July heat and .departed turning his somber eyes to the brown- some outlandish stuff J .-couldrft un- will ever learn. It seems the -oiis: the little shanty in the shadow 'of the with the September chill; little boys clad boys who marched past them, derstand 9. word of. He's balmy on for which he felt his years in a prison' cliff, he had long since forgotten it: and girls who had come in stiff white "They are only boys—and death" is a the bean, all Tight, but he was good cell' could not atone had become in Scgmsits protected by the Depositors1 -•a man who had once known cities, suits and dresses some times return- hard thing for the young. Once I to me* ~ some way associated in his mind with' aGaarantee Fund of the State of Nethat-was still evident by his carefully ing with their own boys and girls in aw a man die." In the early golden days of Sep- the eve of Eosh Hashonah; he spoke braska. modulated voice, his precise speech, the more informal garments of a In those super-patriotic days of the tember, when most of the sunvmer often of a synagogue, a rabbi,, of on a few occasions when he wasmore informal age; old folks to sitgreat war even such vague murmur- visitorsi had'departed, and only ~a. hearings the . shofar blown—"and it Your business appreciated heard to speak; a man with soft, on verandas, young folks to swim and ings might • have cost him dear, but handful of- the Boy Scouts and heir calls you to judgment! That's What white hands that had never known romance under the moon, they came ;_never spoke to .any one again on" masters remained in the camp in thenay father used to say—judgment— labor, but so POOT that the most and went, but the strange old man the subject. When the war was over pine woods, l i e "old man was no and I" haven't atoned for it yet! OFFICERS shiftless lounger among the "fishing remained seemingly unchanged. There was a gird, too—-but no one longer seen wandering over the sands and several energetic "women started F. C. Horacek, President. Emil Ksvalec, Cashier. ^ smacks lived less frugally than he The face of the village changed to raise a fund -to £i£et a in ;ge.greb. of jdrift >£pod. . When_;h_e; knew it -was for her I did it—and Jacob Horacek, Vice-President. E. J . Horacek, Ass't Cashier. did. A bag of meal which he carried somewhat as the years passed on; a the village herioes, with gold stars failed to apply at the little grated now it's Eosh Hasfeonah again—and Harold J. Jones, Ass't Cashier. from the village on his back, some moving picture palace with gaudy 'or the very heroic ones who hadwindew for his- monthly letter, the I can't- hear the shofar telling1 me tunes a bit of salt fish or a handful posters on the one "business street"; 'alien on the field of, glory, one ofpost mistress of-tthe- ever-busy tcngue I'm -forgiven." of dried beans; yet a curious woman a Boy Scout camp in the pine woods; them had the temerity to stop the ihe-alarm, "So w&en J Wondering how he had learned in who had come to his shack once at an artists' colony on the cliff; the mealtime on a trumped-up errand fisher folk saw strange- lands and found the old man eating from a famed romances on the silver screen; cloth of dazzling linen, and reported several of their daughters created ' • t o her gossip? that not the wealthiest some little scandal by donning knick' of the summer boarders could boast ers; progress, as Main Street knows of finer china or silverware. But, it, had come to the little weatherof course, she. -exaggerated,. as allbeaten community on the coast, but gossips must. When" "the old ofim the white-haired old man in his shack died not a bit of fine linen or silver seemed aloof from it all; an alien plate was found in the shack he had among those "with whom he had dwelt called his home for so many y e a r s . , . for so many years. or could some tramp have .stolen Not that he was -unf riendty; no one them, or had he long since converted remembered in the days when they his last few refinements into bread? discussed T"™ after his -death that he S e had not been so old when he had ever failed to respond t o a first came to dwell in the little shack friendly greeting. The fisher folk he in the shelter of the cliff; his-eyes had met in the village store when he pven than had been tired like those had purchased his scanty supplies, bf a very old man,but his hair had the summer visitors who had often Some of the passed him on the beach as he gathnot been white. villagers declared that at first he had ered drift wood for his lonely fire, inrorn a sloudi hat' pulled well over the Boy Scouts who had once stopped fcis forehead whenever he had been at his cabin for a drink vrhile hiking ^forced to come among them to make over the cliff, all agreed that 3ie had

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PAGE 6—THE JEWISH PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1924

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MAYONNATSE'

ORCSSINC

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PAGE 7—THE JEWISH PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1921 JEW'AWAKDED PRIZE FOR. " sympathies' and his Jewish wife. It allied with International Jewry "from "MEXICO WOULD BECOME ~ SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH has even been stated that Dr. Hainthe New York bankers to the GerNEW ZION THROUGH Baltimore, Md. (J. T. A.) Mr. Da- ische himself is of Jewish descent. man pressmen snd th« Moscow mur•CALLES DALLES*" vid Israel Macht, lecturer in pharma- Both these allegations were denied By ABNEB B . KAIJIAX Berlin. (J. T. A.)—The plan to derers," cology a t the John Hopkins Medical from circles closely related to the An Inlsurance agency is judged cot start Jewish colonization work and School, has been awarded one-third President, but the Nationalistic propso much by the vastness of its organ" 'By J. J. SLQSBURG. industrial settlements of Jews in UNIVERSFTY OF CHICAGO of the American Pharmaceutical' Re- aganda, however, is still carried on, ization as by the general service it Soniberg & Siasburg, Omaha real- Mexico did not find favor with the WILL GIVE CEED1T Joe and Dare Greenberg Report search Fund for 1924-25. renders to each, policy holder. Agents tors, stated last week that their first German stnti-Semites. The "Deutsehe with the contention that the president ON JEWISH Success of Policy. year of btuldisg activity totaled 500 The award to Dr. Macht was based is pro-ewish. in. a good many instances are content thousand dollars. This firm. whicrh. Zeitung" published an article today Chicago, (J, T. A.) Credit for on research worfe which he is doing.to to sell the policy, collect the premium has been in the real estate business under the heading, "CaDes Dalles," in courses in subjects Dr. Hainische was elected December Jewish history The Prudential Insurance Company determine a method of standardizing 9, 1920, for a tern of t o w years. and then dismiss the assured from in Omaha for several years, began which the laborite Mexican President- and ethics will beof has come out with a new policy espegiven to Jewish alkaloidal drags. This work is being 1 cially to meet the condition a t this their minds entirely unless perhaps its building operations last year. elect, who is now visiting Germany students in the University of Chicago, Among the buildings- erected by carried on by noting the general ef- PROF. MAX L. MOHGOLIES 1 time. This policy is being handled by a loss occurs. is stesraly criticised for his invitaccording to arrangements made by Soniberg & Slosbarg were the three fect of solutions of these drugs on ; LECTURES IN JERUSALEM the H. A, Wolf Co., and during the Modern. Insurance Service is bring- duplex flat buildings at. tiie southeast ing Jewisli refugees to come and the B'nai B'rith HUM Forodaticm past four months Joe and Dave Greenseedlings of plants. ^ Jerusalem. (JV T / A.) Although many thousands of dollars of this in- ing the client and agent iota closer corner of Forty-eighth and Farnaxn settle in Mexico, as expressed in anwith the university authorities. Jerusalem jn its present status! was surance. You need life Insurance relationship; each is valuable to the streets, two of which wers sold last interview with the Jewisli TelegraCourses will be givers on the fol" to A. L. Blunaentbal fcr 35 AUSTRIAN PRESIDENT pot a purely Jewish city, there:&& for_ the protection of your family. other and BOt only in the matter of week phic Agency. lowing subjects: "History of Juthousand dollarsThe other was jsold MAY LOSE ELECTIONS features of the Jewish National Home You. are in a position by buying a loss but also in an advisory capac- several months ago to Herman "L. daism," "Social Ideals of Judaism," "Mexico would thus become th« tins policy to carry $5,000 for : BECAUSE OF JEWISH WIFE such as the public observance of the, five ity in a general way. The spirit of Lloyd. This also includes the : "Jewish Ethics." The courses will bs r about what you would carry $2,500 New' Zion," through Calks, who is ~ '"Vienna. (J.»T. A.) His Jewish synt-' Sabbath. by:a\i;jeY?s, the Heb,re^ian:- for the first, five years j and then helpfulness and co-operation between duplex flats at the southwest corner given by Dr. Moses Jung, Professor piithies and more so his Jewish wife, guagejand the Hebrew educational if- you were not in a position to agent and assured brings the founda- of Forty-eighth and Chicago streets, "a ' Bolshevik bandit general with'"a of Eeligious Education, and KaW>;, three of which have been purchased Jewish hook-nosed, flat-footed followmay be a great obstacle for Dr. Mich- systemV^ffeclared Prof. Max L» Mar-pay the double premium, you could tion on which the agent builds his by Mrs. Pearl E. Nathison, J-cIm TiBenjamin M. Frankel, who will coning," the 'Deutsche Seitung*" deael- Hainisch, President of the Aus-golies of the Dropsie College, Phila- just pay the same premium you hadclientele. bal and John Lynch. tinue us director of the Foundation. trian Republic a t the Presidential delphia, temporarily Professor of ;the been paying for the first five years The Insurance business has prog- This firm recently comi-letod the clares. Cslles, the paper asserts, is and you would have §2,500 Ordinary Elections next October. ;i r ';'• American Scliool 'of Archaeology in Life, and you could cash in the other ressed to the extent of having sev- La Grata Court Apartment Umkling, which contains twenty-three • apartIn nationalistic, Austrian circles, -Jerusalem, in a lecture which he de- $2,500 or take Paid-up Insrrrance en eral new kinds of Iusurance added ments. This firm has also built three it; but the first five years you .would during the past few years. To render .duplex flats the question has been raised whether livered here 'September 9," , at the southeast corner Hainische shall receive thei support <jf '• .The Professor' expressed tiie. hope have had $5,000 protection instear of proper' service and assist the policy of Forty-ninth and Davenport streets 1 $2,500. We all expect to be in better <• the Party. The Nationalists object to ,that Jerusalem would beeom& the; cen'r ;shape five years from now, and noin obtaining adequate protection, a for Ben Somberg . : Three triplex flats are now;:beinsr r Hainische on account of his Jewish "doubt would be able to continue the compreheasive-'study of various rTof Jewish'and g eneral''culture: : finished by Somberg & Siasburg, at full §5,000 a t the full rate. 'Pays-with a Smile" forms'of insurance' is required on Thirty-third and Jones streets' to', be This policy will fit the needs of a the part of the agent. ready for oceupancy about September man with dependents; a business con1. They have also just finished the cern that is insuring^partners or prin- Service in the proper sense of the SO thousand dollar home for Nathan cipals; to people who are paying off word cannot be given without an in- Bernstein, and last week started a mortgages on homes; to holders of telligent and thorough knowledge of duplex building for Philip Nathan at building and loan stock that will ma- the insurance business and a sincere 1321-23 South Thirty-second street. ture in a few years; to the man whodesire to look out for the interest Ground has been broken for two duexpects an increase of salary during plex flats and one triplex flat at the the five years; and to all generally in of the client. northeast corner of Forty-eighth and that period of life when five years / wishes their . '">-; Farnam streets. usually means a gooa advance o* income. ~ 22,000 JEWISH WORKERS i-'.PROVOCATOR RAISES BED friends and patrons a Happy and LOSE EMPLOYMENT OWING FLAG ON SYNAGOGUE; TO TOBACCO MONOPOLY SEXTON IS ARRESTED MARTIN BROS. I S ONE OF Prosperous New Year Warsaw. (J. T. A.) The sudden OLDEST INSURANCE FIRMS Warsaw. (J. T, A.) Twenty-two The Martin Brothers Insurance thousand Jewish workers, until re- appearance of the red flag on the top Company, whose Agency was organ- cently employed in Poland, were of the synagogne in the city of Bialyized in 1869, is one of Omaha's oldest forced into unemployment as a re-stock was the greatest of surprises anc| most reliable Insurance firms in sult of the Government monopoly in- to the Jews of the city when they :-y •';..- B. HIMELBLOOM, PROPRIETOR " ? 4 i • troduced in the Polish tobacco indus- came to the synagogue recently to AT. 8034 724 W. O. W. BIdg, Omalm ' thel city. „ 1511 No. 24th St. . ; Phone Webstefi 6284; try. say their morning prayers. The sex' T h e firm always renders the most a result of the Government tak- ton (or the shames) immediately went careful and -personal attention to ingAspossession the" industry, many upon the roof and removed the revoits patrons, because they aim to up-factories were of closed. In the larger lutionary flag from the religious hold their slogan "Dependable In- factories which continue to work, the building. surance Since 1869." government employs only those workHe was immediately arrested, howThe present location of the Martin ers whojconsent to. work on Saturday, ever, by the police authorities who Brothers Insurance Company is onthus barring all Jewish workers who suspected him to be also the men who t the third floor of the Barker Block, under, previous I arrangements had had' raised'the flag. After a long I15th and Farnam Streets. their rest day on" Sunday. and severe investigation the shames was released. STANISLAW STEIGER . \ It is stated that the red flag was BEARDED JEWS CANNOT BE PROVEN INNOCENT OF raised by a provocator to incite the CAB DRIVERS, KOWNO BOMB ATTACK; RELEASED populace against the Jews. CHIEF OF POLICE ORDERS Vienna. (J. T. A.) Stanislaw SteiKowno. (J. T. • A.) Cab drivers ger, young Jewish student, graduate cannot cultivate: beards any more in GERMANS CONTEMPLATE of the University of Vienna, who was SOLVING THEIR MINORthe Republic of; Lithuania, in the arrested in Lemberg under the susITY IN POLAND picion that he had hurled the gasopinion of the <3|ie£ of Police Jin the Berlin. (J. T. A.) The plans for bomb at the ^President of the Polish city of Kowno. 4jr&e Chief withdrew the demands and tactics of German Republic, Stanislaw Wojceichowski, the license of B e two Jewish cab Minority in Poland were discussed was proven innocent and released, ac- drivers because they have whiskers. here at the Polish-German Conven[WITH THE renewed assurance that their intercording to a telegram received here It is not permissible for cab drivers tion now taking place. to be bearded, he declared. from Lemberg. ests will in the future always receive the same It is stated that; according to the The Polish Embassy here could not plans an agreement .between the Gercareful and personal attention that it has been confirm this report. man Minority in Poland and the PolDISCUSS TOURIST RESTRICour constant endeavor to render in the past. TION IN PALESTINE ish Government should be arrived at 711 W. D. W. BMg. Jerusalem. (3* T. A.) Much dis- so that the German Minority ,wjll REFUGEES IN LATVIA cussion was aroused here in Jewish leave the Bloc of the National- Mi•ENABLED TO PROCEED TO Omaha, U. S. A. JAcksonl313 .'.'. "" THE UNITED STATES circles over the question of difficul- norities in Poland. Riga! (J. T. A.) A certain, num- ties being made for certain classes of ber of the eighteen hundred Jewish tourists; who wish to remain in the Warsaw. (J. T. A.)—Lieb Boclaii, refugees stranded in Latvia will be country. Until recently tourists who forty-five years of age, owner' of a "Dependable Insurance since '1869" enabled to proceed to the United remained in the country after three large silk business on Nalewki Street, Insurance Surety Bonds States, according to an arrangement months were usually given permission Warsaw, committed' suicide by jumpbetween the Latvian Government and to settle permanently. The Hebrew ing from a window of the fourth Phone 'Atlantic 0435 the American Consul here. Accord- Weekly paper, '^Hator," published an story of a building. It was stated ing to this arrangement, thirty-five editorial in which the government |he was depressed, owing to the ruin of these refugees will be granted vi- policy with this regard is strongly of his business resulting from the attacked. economic condition of the country. sas to America each month...

E A Wolf Co, Having \ Success With New Form of life Insurance

THE CHICAGO

Insurance Service

By Sonlerg & Slosbarg

Y^

Insurance Agency Every Known . Kind of Insurance

. ;

Wishing Our Friends and Patrons

A Very Happy and Prosperous New Year

INSU

That

'Anything Against

Martin Brothers & Co.

OUR FIRST .YEAR OF. BUILDING

Glass Company "Sudden Service"

totaled over Half Million of Dollars. No charge for plans. By buying in large quantities we are able to build for less money. If you are contemplating building a home or investment property see us and save money. ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE WRITTEN. ALSO ALL KINDS OF REAL ESTATE

Take advantage ofthis new plan of The Prudential premium, at age 35 nearest birthday, for $10,000, will be $130.50 for the first five years, less dividends as apportioned. After that the annual premium will be $261, less dividends. This full premium comes "to 3. little more than a regular .Whole Life premium, at your present age but less than the regular premium at age 40. Therefore, not only will you have the protection at the half-rate for five years but your future premiums will then be less than if you waited five years until you could afford the regular ;Whole Life policy. ., Your age rate in proportion to above example. iAiccidental Death Benefit and Disability income provisions for small additional cost, ? T H E ANNUAL

-To* Will Benefit By Calling Onr Insurance Department.

Tel. JA\ '4356 15th and Davenport Sts.

.

, Omahia, Nebr.

SANPLEP,

YOU GAl^ DO THIS

Somberg and Slosburg — REALTORS — 1305 First N a t ! Bank Bldg.

iwork 'At -Reasonable Prices

CaH For Salesman

Omaha-8 Foremost Builders

H. A. Wolf Company Fifth Floor Saunders-Kenaesiy Bliig. ATlantic 3160 J. J. GREENBERG, WAlnut 4?71—DAVID GREENBERG, KEnwood 6063

Micklin Lumber Co. 24TH AND BUSDETTE.

maitrt.ii>. » «

AT. 0785

WEBSTER 5555.


PAGE 8—THE JEWISH PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1924 strictest test. Some of the- groups dollars in Palestine on these immigra- break-up of areas of land for" agri- Wheat King, Patten, predicts two insist upon a period of. not less than tion services. '' cultural . colonization, the opening of dollar, wheat. ««•. Peppe?. VJe six months of manual' labor before The Chalutzim form a very high banks to provide credit for industry, . W. G. Cm. B«cretaor, Solitude frequently surrounds the full membership is granted. For thetype of immigrant. For the most afforestation, the development of man who is alone with Ms thoughts. Omaha Fixture •& most part those who" enrol are well part they are young, their ages rang- sources of electric power, all these ing from 10 to 30. Most o* them are educated and'Jth'ey;beginto prepare for things are necessary to enable PalesSupply C©« f life in Palestine'by* learning Hebrew, well educated. It has been estimated tine * to , provide employment for a ' PAXtON.-MITCHELf CO. COMPLETE STOEE AND by taking up a handicraft or by work- that more than 75% have had a high larger number of immigrants. itth and Blar'tha Sts. " r- •. HA... 1662 OFFICE OUTFITTERS An Intimate Description of the Thrilling Back-to-Pales- ing Mancfaotnrere of Brass,* "Bronjf. as laborers dn. the land and thus school education and nearly half are Dr. Arthur Ruppin, an economist of We occupy 4lsimsnBrci and Soft Gray Iron LCssJliigs. tine Modemerit of the Stalwart Young gaining some " knowledge and ex- college graduates. .Physically they standing and an authority on Pales- Yotu TOOQC t are assured of soft castfnjrs, as Conaet « B machtn* 'some from every hen* in are sound—they must be or they canPioneers, of Eastern Europe. perience of Agriculture. tinian colonization as well'as a leader •nr own efaojj. ;_ . : . tleventh «nd Ooncinp Htreet*. not gain'admittance—and .all of them Standard size' cost Iron and brannr The. .World Zionist, Organization, . \" -*. By-MORRIS ROTHENBERG. of the World Zionist Organization, has with .funds provided -by the Keren are keen to work and build up thecalculated that an annual investment OMAHA. NEB, Hayesod,, <has opened a number of so- country. • No work is too hard or tooof seven and a half million dollars by Nothing is xfioJe 'striking "in the Jewish idealists now look to Palestine called Palestine offices in Eastern and laborious' for them to undertake. the "Keren Hayesod in Palestine would Jewish life of today ,than the* growth as their only hope. Central Europe. The purpose of these Breaking stones , for road-making, in "recent years of tjie back-to-Pales- This, feeling has found .expression offices is to assist suitable;Jewish im- clearing stony hillsides, planting trees, enable the Jews to treble the existing e. 8. MOKEi, Prop. tine . movement, a.mong • the , Jewish in^ a movement for pioneering in migrants to go to" Palestine by giving draining swamps, all these things are rate of. immigration and thus find a Phone Webster 0820 youth in Eastern Wd,,Central TSyrope. Palestine which was "started, by theadvice and information,, helping the taken as part of the day's work. They home for:7,500 families every year. AUDITING AND INCOME THE LAUNDRY THAT Jews have' suHered .more, than -any late Captain Joseph Trumpeldor, who immigrants .toj secure passports and are content to live in tents, to risk Seven thousand five hundred families .. TAX REPORTS' EVERYBODY LIKES. means at-least 30,000 persons per their lives in malaria districts, to subvisas and -assisting in raising funds 208 Karbach BIfc, Atlantic 10S1 mit to the hardships of camp life so annum. Thirty thousand would thus for travelling expenses. Office Phone JAcfcsOD 3128 Unfortunately most of the Chalutzim long as they can contribute by. their be saved from the inferno of Eastern labor to the Renaissance of the Jewish Europe. It only amountscfcfr $1,000 per JOHN FELDMAN come from-* countries in which the Harrv Kononovitch Clothier currency has been very greatly depre- people and the upbuilding of the Jew- family. Every thousand dollars given ish Homeland., . J 1"'. ' . ' , -. to the, Keren Hayesod, means ,that; one ciated -and-;,'hav£ »o means of their Full Dress Saits and Tusedos Moved from 109 No. 16th St. to own ahclifhe Palestine offices in Ber- The volume of immigration which family will be rescued from the danger JOS Karbnrh - Studlo~2l!7 Croimse ISik. Block, tr.th & Dnncias Sts Barney »476, lin, Warsaw, Vienna, Kovno and Palestine can absorb .depends, of of pogroms and .from-the maelstrom OMAHA. NEISU. Bowing for Advanced Pupils. Trieste;" are overwhelmed with applica- course, upon the opportunities for em-of European and anti-Semitism and tions for assistance. ployment which can be provided. The established on a self-supporting basis ' Until the military regime estab- opening up of new enterprises, the in Palestine. THE BRINN & JENSEN CO. lished in Palestine by the British durWholesale paper diStribntors for ing the war was replaced by a civil Northern Toilet Tissue administration under Sir Herbert Samuel no immigration into Palestine 1112 Harney Street • was allowed. It is therefore only AT-lantic 6409 since July 1920 that Chalutzim have been enabled to enter the country. THE ROAD BUILDERS OP PALESTINE When Thinking of Mens* Hats As in other countries, the GovernJewish-Pioneers, Recent Arrivals in the Homeland, Levelling the or Furnishings '• ' ment of Palestine imposes a head tax Groand for a Modern Road Connecting TWo Keren Hayesod Colonies. UEMEMBER of $5 on each immigrant entering the 1307 Howard St. At. 8028 organized, the first groups of country. Moreover owing to the abother people "from post-war, condiOmaha, Nebr. . tions in Europe. Anti-Semitism rages Chalutzim. It is interesting to note sence of a harbor-or modern port in 1421 DOUGLAS ST. all over the continent and has pene- that Captain Trumpeldor, who was a Palestine, the ships, most of which TOE L. WOLF SAM N. WOLF ..trated everywhere. Attempts are made veteran of-the. Russo-Japanese and come to the port of Jaffa, have to •*•-< .to keep Jewish students out of the "World Wars, died a hero's death while anchor, one or two miles from' the Any way you |?et them in any package universities and colleges. Bands of. defending one of the Jewish colonies beach and the immigrants are then ^anti-Semitic students make brutal at- in the North, of Palestine against an brought ashore by boat-men who go GRAHAM CRACKERS Upholstering and Furniture Repairout to the ship in small boats. As tacks upon them. Jewish students attack by Beduins. are g-o-o-d eating for everybody. ing Mattresses Renovated. Ask your grocer for ITEN CRACKERS Buffer social ostracism. Discrimina- Many groups of Chalutzim have very few of the Chalutzim have any by name always. Get the- genuine and Box Springs. • tion of all kinds is practiced against been established all over Eastern and means, these expenses have to be met be satisfied nil ways I Nin 4T-tantlP 2619 1012 North 16th 8t. them. Jewish professional men- and Central Europe. They enrolled young from, other sources. The Keren HayeJewish business men are boycotted. men and women who had made up sod covers this expenditure. More'At any moment they may be attacked, their minds to emigrate to Palestine, over, the Keren Hayesod maintains Carpenter Paper Co. end there is little hope that an appeal not with the idea of making money or two large immigration camps, one at Distributor* oi to the authorities will bring redress. achieving a career, but in order to do Jaffa and the other at Haifa. These Western Bond—-and High It is not surprising therefore that" all in their power to build up theare equipped with adequate sleeping "The Mohi" Grade Stationery emigration is looked upon by millions country and establish the Jewish accommodation and rest rooms. There 1 Rcs!<icn<e, (342 Ho 25th St. WHOLESALE FRUIT AND Utn.iha Nebrnpfea Te». ATlnntir fifiS?. of Jews as the only means by which Homeland on a firm foundation by are t>lso libraries and shower baths. PRODUCE Place of ItusinpNs, $4!T> t'amiiis St. they can save themselves from the the labor of their hands. Accordingly New immigrants are maintained free Tfl. ATtnntir SS-Tl. fate of the many who have been killed, only those who were prepared to do of charge in the camps until employ11th and Howard Sts, \ Telephone AT lantic 4707 in massacres and pojgrpms.. . „ hard manual Jabor were admitted. The ment is1found i:6^ them, which usually PAXTON HOTEL But everywhere the Jew finds all groups submit Jto strict discipline arid happens , uiithe course of a few days. TUKKISH BATHS 'doors locked and barred against him. admit- none , excepting those'"whose Prom March 1921 the Keren Hayesod spend approximately a million now o|'pr»!c(l t>j In the circumstances many young character and record can pass the

*H6w the Modern Exodus to Palestine is Carried Out

Emerson Laundry

W. I Vates. Accounting Co

Wishes For The New Tear

WOLF BROS.

Geldstrem Upholstering Go.

Trimble Brothers

PAX1TJN HOTEL

Steam, Turkish, and Electric Baths. Ail Modern Equipment.

D OBEE ,

SPECIAL

Every Known Kind of Insurance

:

Gate City Fismiture Co.

»a

and

Exceptional beauty now characterizes the car that has earned so enviable a reputation for modest upkeep and long life. fThere are no extras to buy. The Special Touring Car is completely and smartly equipped.

JAckson 1862

209 W. O. W. Bldg. JA. S944.

" W '•

Five Balloon-Type Tixea

Made'-With

LOfE HISKELL.CO. jmtmtmatmrnma

TOURINS CAR

.'

'

WASH AND KEEP WELL A RULE OF HEALTH

Globe Van & Storage Co.

•FRONTIER TOWEL SUPPLT

t>20-2t No. Itilh tit. At. 0230 . •>*. 433H

owned und oijemted by

GROSSMAN./& SONS

.

1S18 California Street.

E. E. Bruce & Co.

whose sweet butter they eat --and ten chances to onethe answer will bet '. /

Dniggtsts and Stationery

BFCICIENT and KESPON8IBLK XACKDBI. NVbere your clothes come bome clenner EC<3 last longer. AT tontS* 6380. 1503-11 Jackson St. H. A. JAOOBBBEGEE, Prss. -

(01-403-4U3 Soutb !(!tb

Certified PubSic Accosrstants Audits Systems Investigations 4S4 to M0 I'rtppc I'rnst Phones. Janhtwn 431S, 4314.

©miEN-DAVIS AUTO CO. '

28th.and Harney Sts. Telephone-^HArney 0123.

Omaha Or3ce: 813 Dooelss Street. Omaha Phone Atlantic tnm

Ford Transfer & Storage O>.

It is - preferred in the New f York Market by those -who want ppre, rich, sweet butter —and. in aIt :oth#r 'markets where sold You,.'will like

'One of America's Great Hotels'

f OCB TKK.4TMEMT WILL CONVIMCP VIHf OP OCB 8INCKRITY. Trost Oepartmeot. Deposit. Boxes.

1A

Service is Our Motto Safe

"Manufactured in Omaha" BAKER ICE MACHINE CO.

FAIRMONT I -

R. A. FORH. President sod General Bisncser. Coonrtl BlnfTs (Iow»> Office ICO Mo. Main Strwt. Ph»^«> 88.V

Deposit

Bozec for

BUTTEK and 1&iUi& Council Bluffs, la.

s

OMAHA SIGN

Uadi

UJMCLE SAM BliEAKFASl FOOD CO.

ISii3si|l3ii, PATRONIZE OUR ADTERTISER&

Ask your Grocer for It and Insist upon having the i

A0VO JELL

COFFEE ADVO FOODS

Brady Co.

• - " - A -? .i*: .V,_- " L , ~ / . r * .-•• * ,*^<ir

"•-

£>r ' - ' . - ' - _ - : \ T V I ,

.?- \ '


Mail in your New Year Greetings-Today

TTT——TCn 4 2

wL TOUT "N'-ey? Year ' Gxeetmgs Todajr ^

•£*»*»»* aa second

jaaU matter on- 3*nnsxy 37th. 1321. at

poatofiUa at OmaWHebaslw. osda tits M ol u u e h 8. WTO

local Organizations

J

Jeid Representatives loIerailavesodCall Keren Hayesod and Theological Seminary Flans to be Discussed MEETING WILL BE HELD WEDNESDAY EVENING. A special meeting of all representatives of every organization in Omaha will meet next. Wednesday evening at the Jewish Community Center to discuss plans of the Keren Hayesod and the Jewish Theological Seminary Fund campaigns."This meeting will he of very much importance and every president of every organization is requested to send delegates to this meeting," said Irvin Stalmaster, chairman. The Keren Hayesod question in Omaha and surrounding territory is very important at this time, owing to the fact that Omaha has not had a campaign for the Keren Hayesod for two years. - The Jewish Theological Seminary has long heen waiting for Omaha to answer with it's campaign. *The million dollar campaign carried on for the Seminary-is Hearing dose. Letters will "be sent to every president of each local organization telling of appointing these representatives for this meeting. -It is the duty of these representatives to attend this meeting so that complete plans can he made as to -what to do and how to carry on the work. The meeting will he held Wednes day evening at the Jewish Community Center.

PROMINENT ANEI-SEMITE EXPELLED FROM BAVARIA Berlin. (J. T. A.) Dr. Arnholdt fiuge, one of the chiefs of the- antiSemitic secret society, the "Bluecher Bund," and the "Overland" Irregular Corps, and a former lecturer at Heidelberg -University, has been served with an expulsion order from Bavaria. Dr. Huge has appealed against the expulsion, to the Bavarian Supreme Court. Huge is among other things concerned in the murder charge against Fritz Baer, who declares that he killed a. fellow member. of the" Overland Corps on the order of a court martial over which Dr.. Huge presided, the charge being betrayal of the secrets of the Overland Corps which had been conducting a secret murder campaign. -.-

Aleph Zadik Aleph National Committees Are Appointed Many Requests Being Received for Chapters.

OMAHA, NEBRASKA, TfiUSSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1924

Highland Comtry Club Continues Dinner Dances Secound Bound of Golf Tournament Now On. . . , The Highland Country -Club will continue its regular Saturday evening | dinner dances every week until | November 1, according to a recent-| announcement made by the committee in charge. Several of ' the regular dinner dances will be featured with specialty program of entertainers. At-the last Saturday evening dinner dance more than one hundred people attended. The large Highland orchestra-has been increased. Last Tuesday evening, more than one hundred members and friends attended the 'pep' stag given by~the club. A very interesting program was held with short talks by the members, featured with several professional dance numbers. The second' round of the handicap championship golf tournament of the Highland Country Club will be played during the week. The matches will be played in the following order: Ben Yousem plays A. B. Alpirn. Paul Schaye plays William Yousem. Abe Herzberg, Jr., plays Joe Wolf. F. B. Heyn plays Phil Yousem.

"Many requests for charters are being received at the headquarters of the Order of Aleph ^adik Aleph. The Order of Aleph Zadife^Aleph endorsed by the B'nai B'rith is rapidly grow-iig and now has chapters in many c>ties in this district and several in other districts. During the past 'week Sam Beber, president of the National Council, appointed the following national comThe City Talmud Torah are launch- i mittees: ing another campaign for new pupils FINANCE COIOUTIEE -Omaha, Neb. during and after the week of the High I. F . Goodman, Chair Omaha, Neb. Holidays. Nathan Bernsteln.j .Kansas City, Mo. Heim Wolberg.^. The board of directors of the TalLEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE Saiil .Arenson, Chairman Cincinnati, Ohio mud Torah, at a recent meeting, deIiOnis Fintelstein T.inrniTi, Neb. Piilip ^ntrH"^ Tvpimim City, Mo. cided to continue the campaign for, GSXEVAXCBCO3DXXXTEE new pupils to enable more pupils to H. I. SUbercnan, Ch&innnn_Des Jlolnes, l a . attend the school. Louis Kate.. Grand Bapltls, Mich. •Abe Bnbior Om&ba, 2?eb. To accommodate more pupils the _:.Kansas City, Mo. Sidney Magazine__Lincoln, Keb. Talmud Tosah recently built a new L G. JSovicoB COMMITTEE ON annex and employed - two more inJiuiry Xapldns, Chairman :O_maha,-2seb. hi -Henry X ilonslry Omaha, 3Xeh.

Our Superintendent, Sir. Blumenthal, tells me three (3) things, to--srit: ONE;—That yre have the most completely Federated Jewish community in the country—that's our Welfare . Federation. TWO—And what is very importantAccording to OUT Census just being completed our Federation membership is 11% of the entire Jewish population of the city. That's leading the banner Federation cities, San Francisco, Baltimore and Cincinnati who have each less than 10%. THREE—Now as to the third matter which is not so good. It we could only lead in that too, why—we would be^the talk of the country. Leading pties of America give about $10 per capita for their Federation, that is $10 for every man, woman aiid child in the city._ Last year our average was §5.00. This year it is running about $5.50. There islhope that during the New Year, we are going to Hut up the percentage to the tune of $6.00, and show them that we can «tand high in everything. And by the way— Did you see the letters that I have been sending out to everybody in the Federation? I made the letter very ' short, with the hope that you will read 'em. Folks, I want to tell you, that this has been a hard year for me as Chairman of the Finance Committee and that I worried a great deaL: But, say, I just love to work, for I know what it means to the sick, the poor, the aged, the widow and the orphan. We have made 'em HAPPY! Those of us who have given to and worked for the Federation and the other charities will surely have a

SUBSRIPTION PSICE, A YEAR, $2.50 ZIONIST EDUCATION HEAD .REMAINS Jerusalem. (J. T. A.) Reports to the contrary notwithstanding, the Education Department of the Palestine Zionist Executive has not resigned in consequence of the decision of the Zionist Actions Committee to reduce the eren Hayesod grant for the Hebrew Schools in Palestine from 60,000 to 58,000 pounds sterling. Following the resignation of the Vaad Hachirraeh as a protest against the reduction, the Education Department, of which Dr. Joseph Luria is head, issued a statement to the press that the Department, while deploring the reductions in thebudget, already fixed at the lowest possible minimum, considers it its duty in view of the undertakings towards the educational system given by the Palestine Zionist Executive, not to withdraw.

SAM WOLF NEWLY ELECTED PRESIDENT OF Y. M. AND Y. W. H. A. Members to Launch Large Membership Campaign.

Seiis feetfigs in

lew Years Message Praises People for Fine Co-operation. MESSAGE TO JEWISH TELE* GRAPHIC AGENCY. New York. (J. T. A.) "The Jewish people have proven their genius for fine co-operation," stated President Calvin Coolidge in his messag* to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency on the occasion of the approaching New Year. . , The message reads as follows: "Eosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, which this year begins on the evening of September 28th, is one of the most notable anniversaries in the Jewish calendar. It is an occasion, too, of much interest to non-Jewish people. To the Jews of this country it brings an eloquent reminder of the good fortune that has attended them under American institutions which assure equality of opportunity to all good citizens. They are to be congratulated on the splendid spirit with which they have assimilated the purposes and aspirations of this country's policy. In a. nation whose laws know no favored race or group or religion, they have won their way because they have proved their genius for fine cooperation in the common interest.

More than 200 members of the Y. M. and Y. W. H. A. attended the regular meeting held last Monday evening. At this meeting election of officers took place and resulted in the follovdng being elected to office: Sam N. Wolf, president; Anne Selicow, vice president; LilliaTi Schiffer, secretary; Bess Hakin, assistant secreMaking others have a SAPPY NEW YEAR does tary; Morris Fine, reporter; Harry just that trick. Kneeter, athletic director; Louis AbCordially,: ••..•_• ramson and Marcus Erasne, sergeant: ' . •• JOE L. WOLF, at-arms; Isaac Stemhin, to the exChairman, Finance Committee, . ecutive board. Jewish Welfare Federation. , The installation of these officers elected will take place st the next •regular'meeting. Coinplete plans are Committees . Appointed to Assist in being made by the new president and j . "Work. PEUSSIANINTEODPCES, P3p.q£ -other .members ef 'the executive,-COTB- | : iiobert Tjpjim T>on Moines, la. " "":.---"NEW ANTI-JEWISH mittee for an extensive membership • The Menorah Society held its ON BESOLCTIONS Berlin. (J.2VA.) Adolf Hitler, fee ..' . AGAINST JEWISH TEACHEES campaign which will be launched soon. Feature Open Meeting to Be Held LouisCO3ISHTTEE Fiokolateln, Chairman—iitnColn, Neb. 10,000 RUSSIAN JEWS Berlin. (J. T. A.), What "is consid- The goal set for will be 1,000 mem- meeting of the season oh September October 2 Ben Bernstein ftmnim, Neb - - HAVE LEFT ROUMANIA" anti-Semitic leader in Bavaria, -vdio 16 at the Jewish Community, Center. Morris Zolat-Lincoln, Neb, is now imprisoned in the fortress of ered to be a decisive-violation -of the bers. Des Moines, J a . Joe Bernstein After several short talks were given Omaha, Neb. Buearest. (J. T. Al) Ten thousand Landsberg for his participation-in the constitutional principle guaranteeing The B'nai B'rith intellectual ad- Myer Freeman. A feature of the coming season will by the new officers a committee, comON BITUAL8 Neb. Kussian Jewish refugees, escaping Bavarian rising last November^ will the equality of rights to all citizens be the educational "program which will vancement committee has adopted the Nathafi COMMITTEE Bernstein, Chatanan._t)maha, posed of I. SternMIl and J. Growar, Omaha, Neb. persecution and starvation in Soviet be released* on October 1, "when he of the German Republic is holding the Jewish Holidays as its educational Bernard Theodore Hyman Evnen ..Lincoln, Neb. Russia and TJkrainia, -who were,-will have completed his sentence of attention of the German Jewish com- be adopted by the new intellectual ad- was appointed to arrange the ritual program for the coming term. 'This vancement committee. The Y dances a n d o t h e r t k t a i l g f w s, formal MEMBERSHIP COMMITTEE munal leaders, particularly -of the will continue throughout the coming program should be more interesting Charles Shane, Chairman—iDes Molnes. la. stranded in. Eoumania,-"have left the' six months' imprisonment. tion to be held soon. Other commitMai G i hv o t — ______Omaha, Neb country in the.last year. ' "' : .. .. \ . Anti-Semitic circles are busy spec- Jewish teacisrs in Berlin. than ever", said Nathan Bernstein, Pnvifl S er —.Omaha, Neb season and should be well attended. tees appointed was a play snd proAn unusually difficult situation was ! ulating on the possibility of Hitler INTELECTCrAI. ADVANCEMENT chairman of the intellectual advanceThe school council of the city of gram committee to be composed of . . ' • • : :; • . C O M M I T T E E •• •_• • --. created in Eoumania, cwing" to the leading a new anti-Jewish movement ment committee. Careful work has Nathan Berlin has elevated one of its staff JEWISH NEWSPAPERMAN Mnookin, Ckairm—Kansas City, Mo. Eose Minkin and Ida Lustgarden, and -Omaha, Neb .David Fellmaninflux of these refugees. The purIn Bavaria on. his release. The press i b e r s , a Jewish teacher, to the been done in the selection of t i e mem • JOINS HEARST PAPER -Chicago, I1L Adolph Goldstone a debating committee will be Messrs. pose of their journey was not to set-, is wondering what attitude he will position of superintendent. Following topics and the speakers for the topics. • " IN BALTIMORE David Beber and Ben 'Slutsky. PUBLICOT COMMITTEE • Samuel Schaefer, Chairman—Denver, -Colo tie in Roumania, but to proceed to the take in regard to the conflict between this appointment, the Prussian MinThe first of these programs will be Nathan Baltimore. (J. T. A.) Arthur D. "F ^ r " " " omnTm, .Neb Mr. William Blumenthal gave a . __Omaha, Neb, United States and other countries.- the two anti-Semitic Parties in Ba- ister of Education, Boelitz, a member Marks has become publisher of the held Thursday evening, October 2, at Lester Lapidua short talk to the members of the or.Des Moines, la. They were unable to go further,, owing varia, the Pan-German anti-Semitic of the anti-Semitic Voelkischer Partei, iegel_ Morris Sie; the Jewish Community Center. The Jacob Finkelstein Lincoln, Neb. Baltimore American, a Hearst news- ganization. Dr. V. E. Levine brought nkels principal speaker will be William E, COMMITTEE ON PHILANTHROPIES to the restriction of immigration to Party and the parliamentary Party instructed all school authorities in paper and one of the two morning up the following suggestions: First, Trustin, Chairman Omaha, Neb. the United States. At the same time led by General Ludendorff. Prussia- not to appoint to such posi- dailies. He was formerly business Blumenthal and his subject will be Harry Max Wolfe KanBas City, Mo. the organisation of a fraternity fer Des .Moines, la, the Roumanian government was untions Jews. "Eosh Hashonah and Yom Kippur". Alfred Ginsberg manager of the Washington Post and the Jewish medical students; second, COMMITTEE ON ADVISOBS willing to permit them to remain in The Jewish teachers in Berlin have before that business manager of the Besides this number there will be William Horowitz, Chairman a definite method oi aiding Jewish j submitted their protest against the Washington Times. Kansas City, Mo, the country. It agreed, however, to several song and playing numbers. Sam Wolf Omaha. Neb, students of Palestine. The committee give them temporary residence after decision, terming it a direct violation The meeting is open to the public Lewis Sutin Mr. Marks long has been an active appointed to act on these points vrete ..Kansas City, Mo. _— the lea had guaranteed that the refuDes Moines, la. of. the constitutional privilege of figure in "the business and financial Abner Kaiman will be chairman of Sherman Kudston __ Harry Wise Omaha, Neb. gees would be afforded facilities to equality. • The Kehilla of Berlin has life of the National Capital, He was Messrs. J. Growar and I. SteraMU for this meeting. emigrate, to their destination. ! taken a great - interest in this case, President of the Washington Botary the former, and Messrs. Emanuel The second number of this set will With the assistance of the lea 6,600 JEWISH STUDENTS FROM and a special meeting was convened club for one term, snd rtovr is a mem- Green and E. Rapkin, and Miss Eose be "Succoth" and will be given by -were able to leave Roumania, of which POLAND AND ITALY ON for the purpose of considering the ber of the board of directors of that MinMn for the latter suggestion. Fred White. J . J. Greenberg will be The next meeting of the organisa5,000 went to the United States and PILGRIMAGES TO PALESTINE course of action to be taken. chairman of this meeting. organization. He is a "director of the tion will be held Thursday evening. Canada, and 1,100 to Palestine.ThirThis issue of THE JE\¥Jerusalem. (J. T. A.) Headed by Other holiday numbers will be given GERMAN JEW-BAITERS ty-four hundred refugees left of their ISH PRESS contains sixand will be announced in later issues followers of the "free professions"— SENTENCED TO PRISON teen pages and is divided Center. lawyers, doctors and engineers^—a own accord for various countries. of The Jewish Press. Berlin. (J. T. A.) The Criminal the Securities Corporation. He is one into two sections. "group of Jewish students and recen Court at Bsmberg has rendered the of the leading figures in the National graduates of Polish universities num- RETURN FROM VISIT GREEK GOVERNMENT. The special New Year verdict against Lieutenant Goetse snd Capital's newspaper world. JEWISH THEATRICAL NEWS bering 76 arrived in Palestine towards TO PALESTINE Born in New Orleans, Mr. Marks THANKS MOKGENTHAU. •'. Greetings are on page S. fifteen soldiers who attacked two JewWILL APPEAR OCTOBER 1 the end of August on a so-called "acareceived his early education in New.FOE REFUGEE. WORK Other G r e e t i n g s are Mr. and Mrs. M. Kulakofsky, who ish families in Altenhawsen. LieutenNew York. (J. T. A.) The Jewish demic tour." York City and went to "Washington, "Geneva. (J. T, A.) Thanks were throughout the paper. have been on an extended trip to Palant Goetze was sentenced to three Theatrical News, the first paper of its Representatives of the Immigration years' imprisonment; seven of his as- in 1898. He entered the newspaper expressed to former American Amkind ever attempted, devoted to the Department of the Palestine Zionis estine, will return Friday morning. The Jewish Press sends sociates to terms of from two to nine profession as a.member of the .staff bassador to Turkey, Henry Horgeninterests of the American stage and Executive met the tourists on disem- They have been gone for five months. greetings to all for a They will be at the home of £beir son months; the other seven were acquit- of the Washington Times more than than, by the representative of the screen, -ivill make its debut on Octo- barking at Jaffa, whence, after spendHappy and P r o s p e r o u s Greek Government at the session of and family, Mr. and Mrs. A. I. Kuted. However, the court imposed upon twenty years ago. ber 1. The paper, a semi-monthly, ing a few days in Tel Aviv, the group 1 New Year. the fourth Commission of thfe League iakofsky, 3154 Lincoln boulevard, durthem the obligation of restoring the will be under the editorship of Aaron proceeded on Sunday,- August, 24, to AGED JEWISH SCULPTOR . . of Nations for his work on behalf of .stolen property to the owners. Singer. It will have for its purpose Jerusalem. A reception for the visit- ing the holidays. HONORED IN -BALTIMORE the <5reelc refugees. the reporting of what American Jews ors was arranged by the Palestine - Baltimore. (J/ T. A.)—Ephraim Mr. Morgenthau is chairman of the are doing towards the development of Zionist Executive at the Beth Ha'Am Keyser, dean of Baltimore sculptors, commission 'appointed-by-the Leagme the arts and the industries associated August 26, where they were wel^^ was given a testimonial dinner on of Nations to supervise, the organiza. with motion pictures, the stage and comed by the heads of the Jerusalem September 16 by friends and ad- tion work of the Greek refugees exmusic. '" Maccabeans and others. After two mirers at the-Baltimore Museum of iled frora Turkey. The publication will also give to its days in Jerusalem the group left for Ait. Mr. Keyser, who said he will readers foreign theatrical news, with ari automobile tour of the country, the be 74 years old on his next birthespecial emphasis on items of Jewish tour covering principally the Keren day, hes given tip his studio, but TO CONDUCT HOLIDAY SERVICES interest and of the development of Hayesod settlements on the Jewish The Congregation B'nai Shokom intends to satisfy his- artistic taste art and music in Palestine. National Fund estates. will conduct Rosh Hoshona and Yom in a smaller workshop in his home. The advisory hoard of the publicaOn Friday, August.30, a group of Kippur Services at Kelpine's AcadeProgress of art in Baltimore has tion includes David Belasco, Irving young Jewish tourists arrived from been coincident with. Mr. Keyspr's my, 2424 Farnam street. Berlin, Eev. Dr. Joel Blau, Ernest Italy and were received by officials' ROPTI Hashona Sen-ices will begin years of study and teaching:, d?clarcd Eloch," Hon. Sol Uloom, Hon. Abram of the Palestine Zionist Executive in former Judge Jacob M. Mores ii Sorday pveninp. September 28, «nd I. Elkus, Morris Gest, Monroe Gold- Jaffa and by the Jewish National expressing lay appreciation of his •trill he he\& Monday morning BH« stein, Sam H. Harris, Julius Kendler, Fund in Jerusalem. c\'cninp and Tuesday morninp, and vrcrfc. Eev. Dr. Clifton, H. Levy, Sophie for Mr. Keyser was instructor in the Yom Epptir Services will b« held all Irene iLoeb and Josiah Zuro. . Rosh Hashonoh Services in the Ilhinehaj-t School of Sculpture for j day Wednesday, October —. Temple wdll be held Sunday night, iwenyt-three consecutive ya&rs. September 28, i t 8-o'clock, and MonWINS TENNIS ATJRNAMENT resigning last year. Among his best A sprcial meeting of the order Miss Ann Gerelick..T??on the cham- day morning, September 29, at 10 works arc the bust of Lsirier, a Aleph Satin? Aleph: will 1>e fteid &mpionship of the girls' tennis matches o'clock. copy of which is &t the John Hopkins day afternoon? September £$» *t 2;30, of .the Y. M. and Y. W. H. A., when Dr. Cohn's subjects will be: In the University; a statue of Baron De at* the Jewish - Comnra&it^ {Uttffltt. she defeated Miss liose Fine by a evening, "The New Year," and in the Kalf, at Axmapolis, Md., and an Important ' business will 1» trluu£* ' score of "4^6, 8-6, ana >-""The"True" Jew.'*" '"." imaginative piece, • "Titania's Drive."

B'uai Bfrith Jbramces First Open .Program Bale

City Talmud Torah Launches Caspsign For New PopHs

Happy New Year!

The Jewish Press

extends to all its readers sincere wishes

Prosperous and Happy Year ^


?AGE 2—THE JEWISH PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1924

',-.",' . . . We, Wish Our. Friejids • . ari4 Patrons

A Happy and Prosperous New Year AAA DUPLICATING COMPANY ANN SBLTCOW SEL1COW SELICOW

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OUB . NEW YORK . LETTER The Shekinah Wanders—Enter: First Annual of Cincinnati Hebrew ' Union College—Orthodox Ycshiva to Erect Mcdern College Building—The Appeal to Help Ihe Refugees.

fbesi&es dollars for the xnaterial relief of distressed - communities, it will send to other .Jewish commnities 'spiritual encouragement £nd highly .learned teaders as well—(Copyright; by Jewish Telegraphic Agency.)

day o£ Lieutenant Goetze and fifteen tence on the heads of the two. fam- beating their victims until they soldiers of the Bavarian Grenzschutz ilies, Emanuel and Adolph Gutmann, appeared to be dead. The verdict is for committing atrocities j against and proceeded to execute sentence by expected • tomorrow. ...... Jews in-Coburgdorf. In November 1928, the Lieutenant and his soldiers forced themselves into the homes of Jewish farmers, JSmanuel Gutmann and Adolph GutTRIAL OF JEJW BAJTEBS Let The New Year Bring BEGINS AT BAMBERG mann, plundered the houses-and mistreated the members of their-famTo Our Friends Berlin. (J. T. A>>—Trial hegan tp- ilies. They "pronounced" death sen-

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A Happy and Prosperous New Year SAM K.

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The Shekinah Wanders—as early as 1700 years ago, one of the Jewish chroniclers recorded with both pride" and resignation the . wanderjs$s of the Shekinah to and from ten successive centers. What is the Shekinah? Every generation has had its own Shekinali, representing in the rinal analysis the' genius . of the nation.' Since the Kabalah, beginning with the Twelfth" Century, became deeply rooted in the i Jewish mind, the Sheldnah grew into a conception of the all-embracing, supreme intelligence of the Universe. | So it happened that the Shekinah was I not satisfied with ten changes of its ; center; it continuously accompanied the Jewish people in their wanderings. Jerusalem, supplanted by gadj Bagdad by. Kordoba, followed by Montpelier,'. Worms,. Lublin, Vilna and again the German Jew- '• ish communities. If Shekinah is to be taken as the expression of the thing which is peculiar to the Jews, it is nothing but the study of the Nation's genius, the search into the past, the understanding of its literature. German Jewry has to its credit the creation of a modern system of Jewish research, the clarification of the darkest" corners in Jewish history, the rendering accessible the sources of old inspiration. It produced men like Geiger, Zunz, and Jost, who laid the foundation for the Wissenschaft des Judenthum. It is owing to the scientific efforts of German Jewry that the monumental building of* Jewish history could be erected and that the romance of Jewish transformations and adaptations could be retold in a precise manner. Much criticism has been voiced against those who. occupy themselves with historical research and confine their interest wholly to the; past. However, no real • • understanding ;- of present-day Jewish life and no possibility for a continuation of Jewish thought is' imaginable if this^vrqrk is neglected. It would seem that in the- last "few ye&rc this has stopped. The war, with its attending impoverishment uprooted the old established Jewish centers.' Scientific research into Jewish learning stopped; publications of this nature were suspended. Tiit- Shekinah of Jewish research has now landed in America through Cincinnati. It should be sincerely welcomed by American Jews. The first Hebrew Union College annual, containing many valuable contributions towards Jewish lore and philosophy has appeared under the editorship of David Philopson, K. Kohler, Jacob Z'. Lauterbach, Julian Morgenstern, David Neumark and William Rosenau. The nature, of the newly issued annuaj cannot better be expressed than in the words of the Chairman of the board of editors. "It offers convincing testimony to the universality of Jewish learning. Here all diversions of opinion and party merge in the friendly fellowship of true scholarly endeavor, and all geographical and national lines are Obliterated." Indeed they are. * * « Both reform and orthodox seem to b@ determined to make rapid steps in the advancement of American Judaism. The Rabbi Isaak Elchanan Seminary, a strictly orthodox rabbinical seminary, now located on the East Side of New York with very poor, accomodations, has boght % site for the erection of a modern college building for its students. It is stated that the Seminary intends to construct a building which will be large enough to accomodate 1,000 students with class rooms, study ropms, an auditorium, a senior high school, a library and a dormitory. There will also be a campus with playgrounds. This should be' encouraged. A Yeshiva with a campus and playgrounds adapted to the tastes and aspirations of American Jewish youth is a promising innovation. Perhaps the time is not distant when the prediction of many close observers of Jewish life in America will come true. American Jens are perhaps approaching the period when,

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PAGE 8—THE JEWISH PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1924

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Krasne, of 106 Frank St, extend their very j best wishes to their many friends and relatives for a very happy and prosperous New Year.

I

•-•-

Mr. and Mrs. Isadora Abramson, 4315 California St., extend their best wishes to their relatives and I friends for a happy and pros} perous year.

Dr. and Mrs. J . M. Erman, 2571' Laurel Ave., extend their best, j wishes to their relatives and i friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

!

Mr. and Mrs. Sam Schwartz, 417 Oakland Ave., Co. Bluffs, la., wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

{ Mr. Morris linsman wishes to ' I extend to his friends and rela- | j tives best wishes for a happy i ' and prosperous New Year. " '

• •

I Mr. and Mrs. A. Theodore and * family, 601 South Sis* Ave., I extend their best wishes for the New Year to all their relatives and friends.

1

Mr. and Mrs. David Greenberg and daughter, Joye Ruth, 2418 Bedick Ave., extend best greetings for the New Year to their relatives and friends.

Mr. and Mrs. Herman Krasne and family, of 208 W. Washington Ave., extend to all tLeir relatives and friends a most happy and prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mslashock, t and family, 5202 Davenport S t , ! extend to all their friends heart- \

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Green-, berg and children, 112 So. 50th Aye., wish their relatives and friends a most happy and prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. L Krasne,- and family, 4I5r South 9th St., Council Bluffs, la., wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Meyerson ]. and family, Council Bluffs, Iowa, i ; wish all their friends and rela- ] 1 tives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

!

Dr. and Mrs. Philip Sher and son, David, wish to their relatives and friends a prosperous and altruistic year.

iest and best wishes for joy and { happiness for the New Year. ]

j I • I !

I ! Mr. Peretz Alexander, 2050 North 19th St., wishes : all his ' :«%iplatives and friends. a Happy New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. N. P. Feil, Ardmore Terrace, extend their best wishes to their friends for the coming year.

Mr. and Mrs. Dave Sherman and family, 127 North 34th St., extend to all their relatives and friends a most happy and pros- ' perous New Year.

I

Mr. and Mrs. Philip Trochten- ] berg, 1611 Avenue C, Council Bluffs, wish their relatives and > friends a happy New Year. •

Mr. and Mrs. M. Turner and family, 1702 North 24th St., wish everyone a Happy and Prosperous New Year,

i Mr. and Mrs,- John Feldman and family, 1319 North 35th St., extend their heartiest greetings to their relatives and friends for happiness and prosperity for the coming year.

Dr. M. Grodinsky, 740 Brandeis Theater Bldg., extends to his friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. Sam Beber, 300 Petaxs Trust Bldg., extends his best wishes for a happy and prosperous New Year to all his relatives and ! friends.

Mr. Dave Freeman, 994 Market St., San Francisco, Calif,, wishes his relatives and friends a happy New Year.

Mr. William Grodinsky, 752 Omaha National Bank Bldg., wishes all his friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year. '

Mr. and Mrs. M. Bernstein, 241 Vine St., Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend to all their friends and relatives their heartiest wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. Jarvis P. Freiden, 1114 So. 35th Aye., wishes all his friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. L. Harris, 2859 "Califprnia St., extend to their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year. .

Mrs. B. Blotcky and family, 3311 Woolworth Ave., wish their rela• .tives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Dr. and Mrs. Benj. T. Freidman and family, 3328 California St., wish to extend to their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year,

Mr. and Mrs. A. Herzberg, 3871 Farnam St., extend to all their friends heartiest greetings for the New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. D. Blumenthal and family, 1023 Mercer Blvd., extend. heartiest and best Greetings to their relatives; and friends for a most joyous and prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Friedman, 2962 Poppleton Ave., extend to all- their friends and relatives best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. •

Mr. and Mrs. M. Herzberg, 4910 Dodge St., take this opportunity to extend best wishes to their friends for Happiness'and Prosperity for the coming New Year.

Mr. William R. Blumenthal ' wishes everybody a Happy New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Max FromMn, 3004 Davenport St., extend their best greetings to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. A. Bonoff, 4811 Farnam St., extend best and heartiest greetings to their relatives and friends for happiness and prosperity for the corning year.

Mr. and Mrs. Emil Ganz, 2960 Harris St., wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

- Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Alpirn and family wish to express to their relatives and friends their best wishes for the coming year.

Mr. and Mrs. J. Krasne and i niece, Miss Ceda Gershun, of 519 Oakland Ave., Co. Bluffs, extend to all their relatives and friends a most happy and prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Sam Meyerson and \

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family,' -600 "Roosevelt "Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, wish all their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

• | Mr. and Mrs. Harry Silvennan, ! 2430 Camden Ave., extend their J j best wishes for a Happy and } Prosperous New Year. {

3154 .Lincoln Blvd., wish all their relatives and friends everywhere a happy and prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. J. Milder, 2860 Capitol Aye^ extend heartiest and best wishes to their relatives and friends for a most joyous and prosperous New Year.

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Mr. and Mrs. -v M. Kulakofsky, 4907 Dodge St., wish all their friends and relatives a most joyous and prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Morris Milder, Fairacres, extend best wishes to their friends and relatives for Happiness and Prosperity for the coming New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Eeuben Kulakofsky I and family wish their relatives and friends a very happy New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. William Milder, 4815 Davenport St^ extend their heartiest wishes to the relatives and friends for a happy and ] prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. A. I. Kulakofsky,

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Mr. and Mrs. J. Slosburg, Jr., and family., 5302 Davenport St., extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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Mr. and Mrs. Barry Weihw'and k family, 2109 Webster St., wish their relatives and friends health, wealth, and happiness for the coming New Year.

I • • \ Mr. and Mrs, Jack J. Weinman, | • 103 Austin Apts., extend heart« iest and best wishes for & happy | and prosperous New Year to all | their relatives and friends. •

| Mr. Irrin Stalmaster wishes to « express to his friends best 5 wishes for a Happy and Pros- < perous New Year. |

i Mr. .and Mrs. L. Stalmaster and t family wish their relatives and j friends a Happy and Prosperous « New Year. |

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Mr. and Mrs. A. Weiss and family, 3335 Hickory St., extend heartiest greetings to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

» " ^ I Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Wolf and <•

I son, Justin, extend to their j i friends best wishes for a Happy * j and Prosperous New Year. \

I Mr. and Mrs. A. Leibowitz and family, 3122 Myrtle Ave., extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends for a most joyful and prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Monsky '; Mr. and Mrs. Dave Stein, 3211 { I Mr. Samuel N. Wolf, 416 North { and family, 5124 Chicago St., St., wish their rela- « 21st St., wishes his friends a j| express to their friends best \ i' Hamilton and friends a Happy and | ! Happy New Year. J wishes for a Happy New Year, j ! tives Prosperous New Year. «

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Mr. and Mrs. S. Hirschberg, 2758 Chicago St., extend best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Leon, and son, Mr. and Mrs. David Potash, 1847 ' !1 Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Steinberg | | Harvey, 505 North 41st Ave., exof 2015 Cass St. extend their 4 *, The Board of Directors of the North 24th S t , wish their rela- ) tend heartiest and best wishes to best wishes to their- relatives ] J Jewish Press extend Greetings j tives and friends joy and hap< their relatives and friends for i I for the New Year. friends for a Happy and Pros• piness for the New Year. * Joy and Happiness for the com- " perous New Year. ing New Year.

Dr. and Mrs. H. Hirschman, 304 North 36th Ave., wish a happy and prosperous New Year to all their relatives and friends.

Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Harry Lesser, Oakland, Calif., extend heartiest and best New Year Greetings to their relatives and , friends. "

Mr. and Mrs. Morris Potash, ] 2109 Webster St., extend heartiest greetings and best wishes to ' their relatives and friends for the coining New Year.

We thank the people of. Council Bluffs for their kind patronage dri the past year. WE WISH THEM ALL A MOST

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Braviroff, i 128 South 36th St., extend to all their relatives and friends a ! most happy and prosperous New. Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Abe Gilinsky and family, of 725 Mynster St^ extend their best wishes to all their relatives and friends for a most happy and prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. William L. Holzman and son, Max L., take this opportunity to express their best wishes to their friends for the coming year.

Mr. and Mrs. A. Levey and family, 1309 South 35th Ave., extend heartiest and best wishes to their relatives and friends for a prosperous and joyous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. M. Potashnik and family, 1537 North 20th S t , extend their heartiest wishes for joy and prosperity to all their ! relatives and friends for the < coining New Year.

Mrs. M. Brodkey and family, 3322 Webster St., extend their best greetings for a Happy New Year to their relatives and friends.

Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Goldman, 4159 Wakeley St., extend their heartiest New Year Greetings to all their relatives and friends.

Mrs. E. Jacobs and family, 2029 North 19th St., wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Dr. Philip Levey, 561 Brandeis Theater Bldg., extends his heartiest wishes for a happy and prosperous New Year to all Ms \ friends and relatives. .

Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Robinson and i family, 3316 Lincoln Blvd., extend to their relatives and friends i a most joyous and prosperous J New Year. |

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Happy and Prosperous New Year. ^

C01EUCO Kosher Meals ani Ddkatessen 619 W. Broadway, Council BlnEs, lows.

A Happy New Year to All our Friends and Patrons

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Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Chapman, 125 South 38th St., wish to extend heartiest and best greetings to their relatives and friends for a most joyous and prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Louis Goldsmith and family, 107 South 38th St., extend their best wishes to relatives and friends for a Happy New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jacobs and son, Allan Joseph, 2447 Browne St., wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New-Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Saul Levey, 4910 ! Dodge St., extend best wishes to their relatives and friends for a happy and prosperous New Year.

Dr.Fh2ip Romanek,4S4 Brandeis Theatre Bldg., extends best and most sincere, wishes that the New ^ Year may bring joy and happiness to all his friends and relatives. Manufacturers. at' Wholesale Only. . "208 SOTtfe. 13th Street,

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Rabbi and Mrs. J, M. Charlop, 124 North 30th St., extend their best wishes to all the members of B'nai Israel, Beth Hamedrosh Hagodol, B'nai Jacob, and Adass Yeshuren for a Happy New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. A. Goldstein and family, 102 North 54th S t , extend most heartiest and best wishes to their relatives and friends for a happy and prosperous New Year.

Mr. Morris E. Jacobs wishes to express to his friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Levey, of • Los Angeles, Calif., wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Dr. and Mrs. A. S. Eubritz, 5016 Burt St, extend best wishes for the coming New Year to all their friends and relatives.

Rabbi and Mrs. Frederick Cokn and family, 5105 Webster Street, take this opportunity of wishing all their friends a Very Happy New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Eyman Goldstein and daughter, Dorothy, 616 So. 32nd Avenue, extend to their relatives and friends best wishes for the New Year.

Mr.- Nathan R. Jacobs, 2029 North 19th St^ extends to all his friends best and heartiest wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mrs. Ida Levin and family wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year. :

Mr. and Mrs. Philip Safe, 615 Benton St., Co. Bluffs, la., wish their relatives and friends a happy and prosperous New Year.

J Dr. Nathan Dansky, 4S2 Brandeis ! Theater Bldg., extends his heart' iest" New Year Greetings to all his friends and relatives.

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Dr. and Mrs. M. I. Gordon extend heartiest and best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dee and family, 5106 California St., extend to all their relatives and friends a most joyous and prosperous New Year.

Mr. Nathan E. Green extends to all his friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous NewYear.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dolgoff and family, 1847 North 24th Street, extend their heartiest and sincerest wishes to their relatives and friends for a most joyful and successful coming New Year.

Dr. and Mrs. A. Greenberg and daughter, Beverly Bamona, 308 North 38th S t , extend to all' their- relatives and friends a most happy and prosperous •New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Abner Kaimsn and family, 129 North 33rd St, wish all their relatives and friends a most happy and prosperous New Year,

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Levinson and family, 104 South 34th S t , wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Saltzman and son, 1602 South 33rd SL, wish their friends and relatives joy and prosperity for the coming New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kay, Berkeley, Calif., wish their relatives and friends a most Joyous and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. J . Lieb and family, 1924 Sahler St., extend most heartiest greetings to their relatives and friends for a happy and successful New Year.

Year.

Mr. and Mrs. J. Katelman and family, 412 Oakland Ave., Council Bluffs, la., wish all their friends and relatives a happy and prosperous New Year.

Harry Liess, 639—18th S t , Milwaukee, Wis., wishes all his friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

2lSr- and Mrs. Charles ScHmmel and family of the Blackstone Hotel wish their friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Schaefer | and son, of Denver, Colorado, < extend best wishes, to all their friends for a rery .happy "Hew •

RABBI LEON I. FEUER ,•

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of the Hebrew Union College -will coMuet the.

High Holiday Sen-ices at DANISH HAIX ? COUXCIL1 BLUFF'S tinder auspices of

Council of Jewish Women

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Rodi Hashona, September 29 and 30 Yom Kippur, October 8 •'\ Everyone is invited -

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Will Sir HHerbert-'Sa Bevete Himself to Literary Work Jerusalem. {J. T. A.)—Sir Herbert Samuel, Hig*t CoBtosjissioBei of has decided not ts remain another term in office, after, his

present term expires in March 1S£S» the Jewish Telegraphic Agency learned from the most reliable sources, It is stated that Sir Herbert wishes to devote himself to lliteraty work j after Me resignation from office,


• -rv PAGE 4—THE JEWISH PRESS, THURSDAY,

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ROSH HASHONAH, THE JEWISH NEW YEAR DAY * - -ihe year 5685 from the creation of the world opens this year on September 28th at sunset. According to tradition, the Jewish religious era begins with the Creation, and still follows the ancient lunar year, each month beginning" with the iiew moon. The New Year festival is thus strictly a religious occasion, as the civil calendar is used hy the Jews,for all ordinary purposes. The New Year is the first day of Tishri, the seventh month in the Hebrew calendar, the month of the high holidays. This great religious occasion is the revival season among Jews. On this day all the synagogs are. crowded with eager worshippers, even the most lax and indifferent coming to service at this time. The .celebration of the New Year is kept for two days in orthodox congregations, and for one in the liberal synagogs. This custom in the orthodox synagogs is to make a distinction between the Jews scattered all over the world, and those living in Palestine, who still observe the ancient custom of keeping only a-single day. . In the beginning the feast was kept with two observances, extra sacrifices in the Temple at Jerusalem, and the blowing of the trumpet. In fact, the name given it in the Bible, in Leviticus 23 and Numbers 29, is "The Day of the Blowing of Trumpets". A solemn assembly was held on this day from most ancient times. But this festival is not connected, as most Jewish celebrations are, with some great historic event. This festival of the New Year, however, has no such special memory. It is a religious festival appealing to the individual soul. It is known as the Day of Memorial and the Day of Judgment, each name typifying one of its central ideas. The Jewish New Year is a day for remembering the events of the past year, both national and personal; a day for the striking of a moral balance; a day for turning over a new leaf and making new resolutions. At the same time, it is realized that the sins of the past carry their punishment with them, and so the New Year is also a Day of Judgment, as the" new course of life implies always taking" one's punishment for faults of the past, and making amends to all whom one has wronged. In ordefto impress upon the worshippers this double conception of memory and of reward and punishment, the service of the New Year is a specially imposing pne. There are solemn prayers, many of them Biblical, others connected with martyrs from the Jewish past. The melodies are haunting and beautiful. The Scriptural lesson for the day is from the life of Abraham, with emphasis on his supreme example of sacrifice and faith, his willingness to sacrifice his son Isaac at the command of God. In liberal synagogs the' English sermon is a prominent .feature, of every service, and on.this day it dwells especially on faith as the foundation of the religious and moral life. Finally, the3 ancient trumpet, the first musical instrument of "the far-off days of the wilderness, is still used as a reminder of ancient times, and as a renewed summons to memory and repentance. Thist ancient instrument is made of a ram's, horn, without a mouthpiece; it requires considerable skill to blow; its highpitched notes are.a reminder of the antiquity of the Jewish religion and the-constant call of God. This horn was used in the wilderness as the bugle to call the people to march or halt on the journey. Thus the Jew enters his new year, not only with feasting and good wishes, but also with prayer and repentance. The wish for the New Year is not "a happy New Year"; it is "May you be inscribed in -the Book of Life for a good year", and this little difference in phrasing points to a great difference-in conception, to a religious teaching and a religious hope... , ON T H E E V E O F 5685 We stand at the threshold of another New. Y< Solemn tones vibrate in our. souL . - <W For, we cannot but speculate what the coming ijjfer may hold for us. . > "^ The future is, of course, veiled from our views, unmercifully screened we must believe. The best attitude towards the unknown future is one of faith and hope. We have ground and justification for trust, for an .all/ righteousness God governs the universe. Either the world is given over to the play of unconscious, irrational forces, or a Divine Mind presides over the destinies of nations and of individuals. Judaism has long ago committed itself to the God-idea. Its t' faith is of the centuries. And it believes, with each New Year more and more, .that an all-wise, an all-just, and an all-loving Providence directs the affairs of men. It has had convincing evidence of this in its own history. Israel has found God very near, therefore Israel believes with all its heart and soul in the Divine Guardian who "sleepeth not and slumbereth, not". This belief gives significance to life; purpose and comfort and consolation. It inspires with courage. It.stimulates to achievement. It fills with' holy optimising" If-is the "source of the greatest happiness. To one imbued with such faith and trust the New Year is bound to be a 'happy' year, and every year and all the year will be filled with sunshine and joy, whatever evils loom, whatever fate portend. God grant to each and every Jew on the eve of Rosh Hashonoh, 5685, such faith and trust that he may be 'written for •a Good Year'. Times moving finger writes 'and though all our piety and wit' may not blot out one word of it; it is given to us to pronounce the words.which God shall have written with faith with reverence and with joy. » With God's will and blessing may the New Year be one of happiness and prosperity to one and all!—Rabbi Frederick Cohn t

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Wilt the day be just a cessation from our round of pleasure? Demand; for Expulsion of Lowenthal, associate editor of the Jerusalem. (J. T. A.) During Aug Or will it carry another meaning? Has it a higher significance? East European Jews Made in Menorah Journal, sailed for England ust, 1,923 persons visited the library; Prussian Parliament to assum his duties as the European 2,750 books were read, 1,380 in HeEaeh member of the house of Israel can interpret this as he pleases, but lest it is a call to duty it means nothing at all. There Berlin. (J. T. A. Mail Service.)— editor of that magazine. brew, 414 German, 880 English, 372 can be no two ways about it. An attack for his alleged -pTo-Jevrish- The Moiorah Journal is establish- Russian, 205 French, 48 Yiddish and We Jews are face to face with serious conditions. There is ness was launched yesterday against ing a European office in response to 26 other languages. disruption-within our. ranks. The fight is against tremendous odds. the Prussian. Minister of the Interior, the great interest manifested in that It is to be expected that our youth shall some day assume the Herr Severing, at the meeting of the magazine in Jewish circles abroad burden and shoulder the responsibilities now born by their elders. Chief Commission of the Prussian Mr. Lowenthal, before settling in MARCELL SHOP But there must be training for that. They must learn and know Diet. England, •will tour the Continent for "TOlt MILADY TAnTlCVLAV.-' and understand Jewish conditions, comprehend the specific prob- In the course of a speech on the the purpose of getting in direct Wavimg, Manicuring, Facial lems of the Jew. They must know what to do. Tliese things estimates for the Ministry of the touch; with Jewish writers and artists, Marveland Scalp Treatments cannot be learned from without. One must be within right in Interior, the German Nationalist to enlist their co-operation. 1320 Douglas St. JA ckson 1132 the thick of things. Deputy Negenborn, said it was high "One Flight Vp" Lip-worship only will not do j mouthing loyalty cannot suffice. time the frontiers of Germany were PATRONIZE OUR closed against the East Etiropean There must be action; there must be- deeds. Jews, and those of them already And so I call to every young man and young woman in the community. What shall you do? Try to organize yourself in in the,country were expelled. The any kind of Jewish activities. Join a Hebrew class, a Jewish Minister of. the Interior, he complainWE WISH EVERYONE history class, a Jewish ethics club. Select any one of these and ed, treated these alien Jews far too favorably. Numerous officials, he try to make it a success. alleged, had fallen victims to bribes A HAPY NEW YEAR Young man, where do you stand? from East European Jews to allow Young woman, where do you stand? Either you are with Jewish, people, your people, or against them to come into t^- country. It was the duty of the Government to them.—Rabbi J. Milton CKarlop. punish these officials and that would put a stop to the practice.

N E W Y E A R M E S S A G E £685 I/SHONO TOVPH TEKAUSAYVOO! MARVIN LOWENTHAL, The High Holy Day season is at hand*andwe Jews are MENORAH EDITOR, SAILS thinking in deeply reverential mood of their solemnity, their FOR ENGLAND meaning and their message to us. Within the next few days Jews New York. (J. T. A.)—Marvin throughout the world will gather in houses of worship to usher • - - - - - - - . . • • - - , . . . . . . . . . , in a new year and to close the record of the departed one. Our New Year's Day, Rosh. Hashonoh, is no secular holiday, We Wish All Our Friends and such as the first day of January. It is a High Holy Day, conPatrons secrated to self-analysis and searching of the soul by everyone who claims adherence to the faith and tenets of Judaism. A Happy Rosh Hashonoh is the soul-inventory day in Israel and dedicatory and re-dedicatory to the eternaT truths which Israel and Prosperous proclaims to the world—the truths ofv 'peace, 'benevolen.ee and New Year justice. On that day Jews dedicate themselves^ anew to the reaKzation of these truths throughout all. the days that will follow during the year. Zodokoh-justice, righteousness, charity—is one ADLER & FORBES of the fundamentals of Judaism. On this Rosh Hashonoh, the BAKING CO. • first day of Tishra, 5685, when we, Jews of Omaha, stand before The Home of Milk Crust Bread our God in devout supplication for a new year, let us think upon the manner in which we have carried out our Torah's admonition 24th and Clark Sts. to perform Zodokoh. 24th and Corby Sts. Have we. in the year just passed, in the midst of our own hapy families, considered the widows and orphans, lonely and destitute? Have we in the vigor of our own God-given health given -thought-to those that lay at death's^-d6or, stricken with SIRS. B. E. ROSS SYLVIA FOX disease and without the means .to fight their way, back to strength and life? - . . . ;> ;, Have we, with the best of life still before us, stopped a bit to think of those aged ones in this community whose few remain- Everything in furs at lowest ing years are happy only if we help to make them so? in the city prices The widows, the orphans, the sick, the aged, the infirm and the destitute—what have we done for them? Wherein, as it conEXPERT REPAIRING cerns them, have we practiced Zodokoh? AND REMODELING Have we Jews done our share to keep the torch of Judaism aflame? Have we thought of the future of our children as Jews? Have, we paid heed to the welfare of those institutions who's work 1520 Doaflas St. JAckson 1132 is that of guiding our children along the pathiof;Judaism? One Up What have we done for our Talmud Torahs, our Y. M. and Y. W. H. A. and our Jewish Community Center? It is upon these things that the heart'of the Jew must dwell this Rosh Hashonoh. If you have given amply to the Jewish Welfare Federation you have practiced Zodokoh and have helped keep Judaism alive. You say you have given,—but have you given amply during the year? Has the contribution been what you should give? Have you given as much as the Federation requires from win conduct you, as much as it has a right to expect from you? Your Federaiton contribution is practical Judaism, provided you give all that you can freely and graciously. The widows, the orphans, the sick,, the aged Jews of this city, hundreds of them need you and you need them, for without the consciousness of having remembered them and having worked ' —at — for them through the Federation during the past year of 5684, your thanks to God for a happy year just ended will be meaningKelpine's Academy less. 2424 Farnam St. As much as it needs your financial contribution, the Federation needs your gift of service. The work that should be born on by every Jew and Jewess in the city has been tarried on, in. the Sunday evening, September 23 past by a few men and women. New workers, filled with enthusiasm for the service of their fellow-men are needed now more than ever before. The Federation work is your work. Won't you do your share of it in this new year that is* just dawning? Monday morning and evening, Re-dedicate your soul to the spirit and deeds of, Zodokoh September 29 and,to a firm.resolve to support the Federation to the limit of Tuesday, September 30 your ability with money and with your service in 5685, so that your prayers for a happy new year may be answered! * and all day Wednesday, Oct. 8. The chief Rosh Hashonoh prayer asks that the name of the suppliant be inscribed in the Book of Life. How much more appealing, how much more powerful will this prayer be if he who offers it has first substantially subscribed himself in another TICKETS can be had from any member of book that means year after year life itself to hundreds of his the congregation or at the door. fellow-Jews—the Year Book of the Jewish Welfare Federation. DR. PHILIP SHER, President, Jewish Welfare Federation. •

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This question is put to the young people. Israel is standing at the cross roads, beset by enemies from, without and by foes from within* The indifference of our young . people is themost insiduousfoe our people has. Let us dedicate the one week of the Aseres Y'mei T'shuvoh .io the Jewish problem. Sunday evening we usher in the New Year. One week from this day we shall observe Yom Kippur the day of days in the Jewish.calendar. The intervening days constitute a period 6i reflection, of inner searching. ; ••'" Monday and Tuesday we shall go to Synagogue. We shall hear the notes of the shtrfar ring out. There will be the shrill ..Will they irfe&n iiothifig?

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FURTHER ARRESTS OF ZIONISTS IN RUSSIA Berlin. (J. T. A.) Further arrests of Zionists were made in-the cities of Kiev, Odessa and Winnitza, according to a report which was received here. The arrests were apparently the enforcement of instructions received from central authority, for Uiey *were all carried out in one evening. The arrested belonged to the "Hitachduth," "Ha Chaluth" and the students group, "Histadruth."

16th & Fsrnam

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SAMPLE FUR SHOP

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WHERE DO YQU STAND?

25, 1924

- CORRECT APPASEL FOR MEN AND WOMEN

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7 PAGE 5—THE JEWISH PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1924 Mr. and Mrs. Joe Sarbach and a position to teach chemistry in the Rabbi and Sirs. Jacob Singer of! granddaughter, Helen Wessel, of Ne- University of Cincinnati, Ohio. Chicago are in the city, ' braska City, spent the week-end in Mrs. Simon and daughters of Texas Mrs. Silverman of Kansas City, Mo., Lincoln visiting relatives. The Jewish women have been asked to co-operate in the "Get Out the are the guests at the home of Mi's. is visiting at the home of L. Hi Baer. Mrs. Weil, mother of Mrs. Eugene Herman Speire. Vote" luncheon which is to be given Saturday, October 11, at one p. m., at Mrs. Henry Wyle, mother of Mrs. ScHoss, is planning to spend the -winthe Hotel Fontenelle. Mrs. J. Shapiro entertained for her Eugene Schloss, is spending the winter in Lincoln. Mrs. Weil's home has This luncheon belongs to no political party but ia given by eighteen coson's fiancee. Miss Helen Robinson, ter in Lincoln. operating organizations who are making this effort to get the women to been in Kentucky. of Omaha, at three tables of bridge. and vote in the coming election. High score was won by Miss Minnie "Hey, pop." lie yelled, "come on Mrs. Morris Friend has returned to The Jewish women will have their own table at this luncheon and Lincoln after an absense of several Greenstone and second prize was won over here and see this bug putting up reservations should be made with Mrs. S. S. Mayer at Walnut 2534 or by weeks. Mr. Friend was visiting in by Miss Sarah. Krechefsky. a wireless." sending a self-addressed envelop with reservation price to her at 4S19Minnesota. Capitol Avenue and ticket for luncheon will be mailed. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arenson have Miss Norma Frosh, who is teaching sold their home End contemplate mov- PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS! enter Pumnock's School of Expres- Mrs. H. Maduff entertained her school in Douglas, Nebr., is spending ing to Portland, Ore., to make their Gesalise U. S, Afternoon bridge club at her home the week-end with her parents, Mr. home. Mr. and Mrs. Arenson have sion". and Mrs. SL Frosh. Quality lived in Lincoln for 35 years. Tuesday. Mr. Louis H. Katelman returned Fabric Mr. J. Harry Diamond spent a week home Sunday after attending the Na- A regular B'n£I B'rith meeting was Mrs. Sarah Greenstone entertained 30x3, S5»»5 tt S0.9 U. S. Cord, 30x81/2, S 7 . 8 5 tional American Legion Convention held Wednesday morning. three tables of bridge in honor of in Chicago and other points on busGuaranteed first class. Save "5 to 8S% at St. Paul. While there he was Mrs. Robert Arenson. High score was iness. KALIAN'S TffiE SHOP the guest of Mr. H. D. Frankel. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cohn, of Harlan, won by Mrs. A. Davidson and Mrs. S. Mr- Bernard Gradwhol,. who is a m Cumins: St. Iowa, will arrive Sunday to spend the Shostak won second- • graduate of the Law College of NeMrs. J. Katelman left Monday eve- holidays with Mr. and Mrs. B. Mr. and Mrs. J. Sarback of Ne- braska, left to attend the Columbia ning for Chicago, to join her daugh- Saltzman. ter, Mrs. Sam Schwartz und Mr. braska City are spending the week- Universitv. DR. FRED. B. BROWN Schwartz. end here as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Hill have DK. CELIA E, BROWN reAeh. turned from their vacation. CIimOPRACTORS Mrs. Henry Karlson and son have 408-40? Paxton Block gone to Los Angeles for an extended Mr. and Mrs. S. Gross, of Council Mr, and Mrs. Philip Greenstone and Mr. Saul B. Arenson, who recently Hours. 10 A. M. to ti P. M. visit with- Mrs. Karlson's sister, Mrs. Bluffs, la., motored to Lincoln to visit received his Ph. D. degree from the family of Omaha are moving to LinPhone. Atlantic 5700. Residence: Morris Aprs., Phone At. S210 EL • Schoenwald. with their daughter, Reva. . University of Nebraska, has accepted coln.

Jewish Women to Co-Operate in "Get Out The Vote' Luncheon

ENGAGEMENTS Mr. and Mrs. M. Warshaw announce the engagement- of their daughter, Sara, to Mr. William Wintronb, son of Mr. and" Mrs. Max Wintroub, of ^3S_city. J«J0 plans have been made for the wedding.

Francisco, Calif., where he is associating himself in business with his uncle, Dr. Linsey, who is also formerly of Omaha. They have opened Men's and Boys' Clothing store there . Mr. and Mrs. D.- Blumenthal have as their guest their daughter, Mrs Carl Studna, of Kansas City, Mo.

Mrs. Julius Kippur, of Chicago, HI., arrived Wednesday to visitfor.several Mrs. S. Greenhouse and daughter days .-with her daughter,' Mrs. Izidor -returned last week from a: month's Ziegler.' visit to California.

_ Miss -Rae R. Bercu has been guest Miss Sara Riseman left Tuesday at a number of parties given in her morning for her home at Elk Creek, honor prior to leaving Omaha for Nebr., after a several weeks' visit Cleveland, O. She has resigned as here. vice-president" and member of ' the Mr. and Mrs. A. Silverman have.as B'nai B'ritb. Auxiliary, and -will leave their guests Mr. and Mrs. Irving Silfor Chicago, September 30, -where she yermann and daughter, of Salt Lake -will spend several -weeks visiting with City, and Mrs. M. Steinberg, of El -her sister, Mrs. M. "Katz, before "leavDorado, Ark, formerly of Omaha. ing for Cleveland. Miss Bertha Leon is expecting to The Misses Fannie Levinson and leave Saturday for Chicago, 111., Kate Goldstein, who are attending the where she will visit with friends and Nebraska University, are spending relatives. the week-end here with their parentE. Mrs. I. S. dayman and small son Mrs. S. Gilinsky is in New York Martin Robert, left Sunday for LinCity. coln, where, they .will visit this week Dr. Max Merritt returned to his with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Snader. i * •. home in Montreal, Canada, after havMiss Ann Weiss has as her hous ing been here to be at the death-bed of his father, John Merritt,"who was guest Miss- Sophie Agranoff, of Sioux City, la. a pioneer Omahan. On Friday evening Rabbi Frederick Messrs. Ben Greenberg and Bennett Cohn will lecture on "The Foundation Cohn left for. Lincoln last week to of Religion" at-Temple Israel, and on attend the University of Nebraska. the following morning he will lecture Miss Minnette Gross returned home on "God's People." this week after a several weeks' visit in Los Angeles, Calif., and Denver and Miss Lottie Hirschberg entertained at five tables of bridge when she was Colorado Springs, Colo. hostess to the Ea Oth Society Sunday. Mrs. David Newman has as her afternoon at her home. The out-ofhouse guest this week Mrs. Louis town guests were the Mesdames Carl Rose, of Chicago, HI., who is enrdute Studna, of Kansas City, Mo., and Louis Spiwak, of St. Louis> Mo. Prizes to California. were won by the Misses Rae WoloMr. Leo Konecky left last week to witz and Lottie Hirschberg and Mesattend tha University of Iowa. dames H. S. Kanieh and M. A. Vann. Mrs. Frank D. Rubel, of Minne- The honored guest at this affair was apolis, Minn., is visiting "with her Miss Flora Biehstock, a bride-to-be. daughter, Mrs. Edwin Kirschbraun. Miss Eosella Verbin, of Fremont, left Sunday for the University of Il""^Miss Freda Goldstein, of Lakoma, , . Wash, is the guest of her. aunt and linois. uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Stone. . Mrs. William L. Holzman is "in Chicago, HI., this week.

CLUBS

J

The fifth class of the City Sunday School organized Sunday, September , Oscar Weinstein left last week for 14,-and the club will be .known as the University of Nebraska."Merry Hearts." . They elected the following officers for the new term: ' The first meeting of the season of Elsie Romm, president; Florence the Omaha Jvmior Hadassah will be Whitebook, secretary; Sara Leon, held October" 2, at the Jewish Comtreasurer; and Gertrude Zier, remunity Center. porter. - Mr. and Mrs. T. Applebaum, of The Ladies' National Progressive Chicago, 111., who spent their honey- club presented Mrs. S. Okun with a moon here at Nathan's Lake with present on Sunday, September 21. Mr. Applebaum's sister, _ Mrs. _ S. Nathan, and Mr. Nathan," motored The Junior Daughters of Zion held back to Chicago this morning. They their first meeting of the season Sunwere entertained at a dinner-dance day afternoon at the Jewish Commuand old-fashioned revelry at Nathan's nity Center. They presented the folLake Wednesday evening by a num- lowing program: Singing and dance ber of friends. number by Mary Calkins and Mary .Mrs. E. I. Kushner, of Oakland,- Moore; violin solo by Harold Miller; Calif., formerly Miss Etta Corenman, vocal solo by Sadye Drevich recitaof this city, is visiting here with her tion by Sylvia Rotkowsky; piano solo partnts, Mr. and Mrs. S. Corenman, by Mildred Shrage; violin solo by Sara Wise., and dance number by . She will visit here for six weeks. Helen Wise. Mr. and Mrs. N. P. Feil returned Class Nd," 4 of the City Sunday Monday morning from an eight weeks' School elected officers for the coming trip to Alaska and the Pacific- coast. term: President, Annie Tretiak; vice The Epsilon Kappa Tau Sorority president, Sam Turpin; secretary, entertained Sunday afternoon at an Rose Kirschenbaum; treasurer, Ruth Orpheum theatre party. Romm; reporter, Ethel Green; serMr. arid Mrs. Isadore Abramson geant-at-anns, George Dolgoff. have moved. into their new home at 4315 California street.

fcOtJNCIL BLUFFS |

Mr. and Mrs. B. Perlman and family are now living in their new home, Miss Sophie Steinberg entertained about forty guests at her home Sunat 3011 Stone avenue. * day evening honoring Miss Ann. Mrs. B. F. Margolin and daughter, Levine, of New York City. The Joye Ruth, of Kansas City, Mo., ar- evening was spent at Bridge and rived this week to visit with Mrs. dancing. Margolin's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Ross. Mrs. Margolin was formerly Miss Gertrude Kroloff, left Sunday for-Los Angeles where she will Miss Celia Ross, of this city. Miss Ida Shirley Adler, formerly of this city, who is now making her home in Chicago, 111., with her sister, MEDICAL STUDENT wishes room with nice quiet family. Write Mrs. Maurice Hershorn, is arriving here this week to visit with her parto Box No. 420, c/o Jewish ents, Mr. and Mrs. L. Adler, and with Press. Miss Esther Davidson.

LINCOLN

DOES

srael MEAN ANYTHING TO YOU? You have already answered PARTLY in the affirmative—What ; is the REST of your answer? Will you answer proudly—as you should—-to the challenge of the Jews by the World Powers?

HERE The International Guarantee

The British Pledge

(The Balfour Declaration, November 2nd, 1917)

(Article 95 of the Treaty of Peace with Turkey)

« O I S MAJESTY'S GOVERNMENT • VIEW **• with favor the establishment in Palestine of a National Home for the Jewish people, and will rise their best endeavors to facilitate the achievement of this object, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which mayprejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country."

ffi-spHE HIGH CONTRACTING PARTIES AGREE TO I entrust, by application of the provisions of Article 22, the administration of Palestine, within such boundaries as may be determined by the Principal Allied • Powers, to a Mandatory to be selected by the said Powers. The Mandatory will be responsible for putting into effect the declaration originally made on November 2nd, 1917, by .the British Government, and adopted by the other Allied Powers, in favor of the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, it being clearly understood that nothing- shall be done -which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country.1"

F

United States Has Plainly Voiced Its Approval ofA Jewish Palestine "RESOLVED, By the Senate and House of Repshall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious resentatives of the United States of America in congress rights of Christian and all other non-Jewish communities in Palestine, and that the holy places and religious "buildassembled, that the United States of America favors the ings and sites in Palestine shall be adequately proestablishment in Palestine of a National Home for th<* tected." Jewish people3 it being clearly understood that nothing (Passed Unanimously by Congress and Signed by President Harding)

To You-

Mr. Lojiis Somberg left Sunday evening- for the University of Illinois. ROOM FOR RENT Mrs, Spiwak, of St. Louis, Mo., i s In refined and.quet home for couple the guest of her parents, Mr. and or young lady. Call ATlantic Mrs. Jarohxn Kulakofsky. 1450 for further particulars. Mr. Dave Freeman, formerly of this city, is now making his home in San

.ENGE

^

To you, who with yorar families live in warm.' anil comfortable homes and in a land of opportunity, To you, whose children have every comfort and luxury arid opportunity, To you, we "say: God has been good to you; you should be good to others; Come, give that others may be given relief and opportunity I

The consciousness of doing good te others must bring you happiness and such happiness as yon alone can feel, -when yosi look upon those to whom your efforts and thrift have brought the good things in life. Come, give, so that some happiness may be given to others!


\, PAGE appearance of the car. Among these Dodge Brothers Reduce are steel disc wheels, five balloon type tires,' nickel-trimmed radiator, Prices on Special TypeCars nickel. - plated- bumpers, > automatic '*"

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windshield wiper, rear view mirror, ;tauscs Surprise as Advances. Seem'to scuff plates, cowl lifhts and motome! . Be in Order. ter with lock. A special body stripe is also provided. - In view 6i the upward trend in Manufacturing and buying these acautomobile prices, considerable , sur,prise was occasioned by Dodge Broth- cessories in quantity, Dodge Brothers ers' recent announcement of a reduc- are naturally able to install them at tion in prices fof .their special type prices considerably below what the v •cars. _ ' owner would have to pay at retail. " Dodge Brothers were able to do the The public was quick to sense this unexpected, according to the factory and the demand for the special types •announcement, on account of the in-' grew steadily from the moment they creased volume of .their- purchases of, were made available. Their convenispecial equipment for the special type ence and appearance has elicited the VBXS:: ,. ., ;,.•/;.-:. ..', ;.-', " . ' / . . ' , ; ', greatest admiration ; everywhere and. |; Dodge Brothers special types con- *thbse who know the volume that has' sist of the 'standard' cars" equipped', been attained can readily understand Jrith accessories which produce the ut-' how Dodge Brothers were able to Shost in comfort and convenience and make a reduction when others were

NEW

-THE'JEWISH PRESS,

YEAR GREETINGS

'•*"• •

TO OUR

;

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. 1924

his face out of town". The "strangtr" is refused admission to the only hotel in the town, but finally compromises by sleeping: in the lobby on a mat with the legend "Welcome" inscribed upon it. From this point the action begins to develop. The "stranger's" ^overtures to many prominent citizens are spurned by the righteous bigots. -Only a poor and friendliness inventor will listen to his proposals to "promote his business projects. Aided by "the girl" (Miss Vidor) whom he has befriended, Salomon and the inventor proceed to wake up the old town. Beautiful Florence Vidor has a most appealing role in this picture.

ably assisted by such sterling actors! question and the claim to the Caliph- bles, who were exiled from there, left as Robert I£deson, Lloyd Hughes^] ate of King Hussein of Hedjas. recently for Hedjas on a steamer sent Virginia Brown Faire and others. A number of" TransJordanian nota- for that purpose by King Hussein. As a whole-"Welcome Stranger" is indeed "a .welcome addition to the week's^ entertainment, and, judging from the reception accorded it Jast 1 night, (Should-crowd them in.-during! its rim., *.'-..Cairb: (J..T. A.) A .Moslem. World Congress' will' be held here "March, 1925^'according "to .a decision of the Moslem Supreme Council. The parpose of the congress will be to make a decision concerning the Caliphate

;-\ Happy New Year We have a beautiful line of

Jewish; New Year Cards aid Booklets ;

BEST "WISHES FOE x.

Mr. J. Himelstein, owner sof the Kialto Music Shop, willMcaye ^fqr New- Yofk'an<£ other .'elasterh- sjropping centers in the near future- on a buying trip. Mr." Himelstein has recently enlarged his store, where he introduces a r t . and musical instruments of "all kinds.- - - J - —'.

A Happy and Prosperous .; New Year -

Our line this year is; well selected for the occasion. Our assortment is the biggest in the city. It isn't proper to have your greeting put in a publication as the very person • .." whom you most desire'to greet, may not see it advertised. If you have any friends or relatives that you wish to remember them by, there is nothing better and much more appreciated by them, than to receive a plain rnd neat

LA SHONA TOVA CARD We have them in plain, goldrimmed, and booklets.

Meyer Coren's Book Store 141.1 Farnam Street

HARRY %

(Across from the Sun Theatre.)

:

" - COUNTY^, ASSESSOR

FRIENDS AND PATRONS

BRODKEY'S JEWELRY AND LOAN CO. I. DANSKY, Manager 1401 DOUGLAS ST. ' PHONE JACKSON 3260 C

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Dore Davidson is Inimitable Funny

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His Portrayal in "Welcome Stranger" Akin to That of Barney Bernard,

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announcing' advances. Four odge Brothers ears are affected by the reduction—the special Touring Car, special Roadster, special "A" Sedan, and special 4-Passenger Coupe. The "B" : Sedan and ; the Business Coupe have also been added to the line of special types.. As the reduction was made possible by economies effected in the purchase of equipment used exclusively oh the special type cars, the standard types are in no way affected, according to Olsen-Davis Auto f Co;, local dealer. The prices of all standard types remain unchanged. ~

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Replete with' humor, effective dramatic stratagems and,.above all, ,that elusive thing known as "entertainment, "Welcome Stranger," which is now showing at the Sun Theatre, is one of the most delightful comedymelodramas which .has been seen here this season. Dore Davidson, as -an ^ old Jewish clothing store proprietor who tries to set up shop in a New England town, where anti-Semitic ^prejudice runs extremely strong, gave a life-like portrayal which kept the comedy at a high ebb. Davidson projected his droll character into the situations inimitably and provoked "spontaneous gales of laughter. In many respects the character of Solomon is* akin to that classic character nortrayal of Barney Bernard in the s'tageplay of • "Potash and Perlmutter," and Davidson has created a screen - role that will takt its place- with that of Bernard. i The "stranger" who comes to the little New England of the first reel is a Hebrew. The townspeople, including the mayor, are.anxious to keep

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AGE 7—THE JEWISH PEESS/^THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1924

Dedicate New Jewish : Temple at Lincoln

REBUILD

Synagogue Is Filled to Overflowing • for Services Friday Evening. Lincoln.—Dedication of the., new temple B'nai Jeshurun at Twentieth and South streets took place Friday evening/ The synagogue was filled and many extra'chairs were placed to seat the members of the congregation, who were present to hear in the consecration of the new edifice. ' The new organ was played for the first time when W. J. Hart, organist, played as voluntaries, Beethoven's *ei!SQnata Pathetique" and Handel's "JLargo" preceding the services. The choir, composed of Miss Vera Upton, Mrs. E. A. Schloss, Homer Compton and James Eeed, sang the anthem, ^Praize Ye the Father." • :Eabbi Starrels, lately of New Orleans, and -now ..resident 'rabbi; »gave the invocation which' was followed by the reading of the evening services by. the rabbi, and responded to by the congregation. This wa- followed by the choir which sang choral responses to the leader, who read the chorals of the old Jewish music. Hear Rabbi Singer. Th6 first address of the evening was given by Rabbi Jacob Singer of Chicago, who for eleven years was -resident rabbi here and who turned the^first shovelful of dirt in the building of the new temple. He was introduced l>y Rabbi Starrels, who told of the work of the former rabbi here. Rabbi Singer in his opening remark^ told of his friendship with the people here and of the encouragement they gave him upon his arrival eleven years before. He then gave his praise to the people for their jwork in building the new synagogue. - He •. compared the old structure, where he first began to hold services, and the pres* ' -eat one. The building of the synagogue is not finished with the completion of the physical structure, the rabbi said, but can be completed only in the hearts of the people, through their worship and faith. The rabbi told of the many things of spiritual life to be attained and of the advantage of the new home toward the developmen of the religion. The rabbi closed his address quoting the words of the seer, "How goodly are thy tents of Jacob, thy tabernacles, O Israel." Following Rabbi Singer, Rabbi Ju-

Is consecrated by this congregation of American Jews." The closing prayer and benediction was given." by the Rabbi Frederick Cohn of Omaha.

THE JEWISH

Berlin. (J. T. A.) Dr. Kopf stein, Chief Rabbi of Beuthen, in Upper Silesia, died of heart attack while on a visit to the health resort of Neuheinu Not long ago Dr." Kopf stein visited Berlin, where he addressed a meeting of the Central Union of German Citizens of the. Jewish. Faith, of which he was one of the leaders, on the position of the-Jews in Upper Silesia. -

At Darmstadt the death of Eabhi the Ludendorff group Is doing thej das," It writer*.' T^ere is no room in Dr. 2Tathan_Cohn occurred. The even- work of France and acting like Ju- [ Bavarian life for such men. * ing" before his death RabbT~Col:n delivered a lecture on the Talmud. He was a son of the famous Rabbi of Fulda and was still a very young man. A Happy and Prosperous He recently succeeded the late Rabbi Dr. Moses Marx as Rabbi of DarmNew Year _. ;. stadt and was to have been married in - a. few days to the, daughter of a IS THE WISH OF prominent German Rabbi. Berlin. (J. T. A.) "General Ludendorff is discredited in Bavaria," declares the "Miesbacher^ .Anzeiger," one of the leading anti-Semitic^ organs in .Bavaria. "Everybody, knows;that

BROWNING'S STYLE SHOP ,- •: >•

S. A . BLISS, M G R . , , ^

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Dr. Morgenstern then traced the lian Morgenstern, head of the Hebrew Union .College at Cincinnati, spoke. history of the Jewish religion, startHe was introduced by Rabbi Starrels ing with its. birthplace. He told how as a friend and teacher and as;one of it had been persecuted, yet lived. the. founders of-modern Judaism. The speaker* traced the migration Dr. Mprgenstern told .of his last to America." He said, that there were visit to Lincoln twelve years ago, how three migrations, the first taking he has kept in touch with the people place in 1653, of the Portugese Jews here, jand of his delight "in taking part who,settled in New Amsterdam. Their delight was expressed in finding a in the dedication of the new temple. "They shall build me a sanctuary, place of freedom and for developthat I may there dwell in," the rabbi ment of their religion. Yet, the speaktook for his text of his address, as he er said, "The young people seemed to declared this was symbolic of the oc- lose interest in the forms and ceremony of the institution, one after the casion of the evening. other, until at last many began to The story of the palm tree, of its fear that Judaism in America was growth and. how it compares .with the doomed." religion of Judaism, was told. As with religion, the palm tree thrives and is • Dr. Morgenstern, in closing his adstunted; is transplanted, and lives dress, said: "It is to the observance through changing its external appear- and the promotion of the living cause of Judaism that this beautiful temple ance.

IS!!

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FAGE,8T-THE

JEWISH PRESS,, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25,-1924

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