June 4, 1925

Page 1

Snobbery is the • PTJ$teL .of those who " are not sure of their . position., — Tiertxm .

I never molce mistake of with 'people for — 2-

whose opinion I have no respect.-—Gibbon.

Bndeys •

VOL W i J . TV—No xv—xv o. 26 -D

a.

Entered poatofflceaaatee"* ^

Three Creeds Meet At Temple Israel For Better Understanding Program Given on Wednesday -Evening by Local B'nai : B'rith Lodge

THREE SPEAKERS PLEAD FOR BROTHERLINESS

isa mall matter on Jannazy 27th, 1B21, at

.^Nebraska, under ttae Act of Unrch & 1878.

KATSKY ELECTED PRESIDENT OF O. B. A. Atlantic City, N. J. (J. T. A.) The forty-eighth Biennial convention of the Order B'rith Abraham came to a close here May 27 with the election of officers. ." •-.-'' Alexander M. Katsky of Brooklyn was elected Grand Master of the Order, Adolph Solomon of Brooklyn was elected First Deputy Grand' Master, Geprge W. Leisersohn of New York City, Secretary, Julius Berliner of Brooklyn, Treasurer, Louis Keller of Brooklyn, Chairman of Finance, Sol Lillienfeld of Atlantic City, Chairman of.-'Bates. • A token of appreciation was presented by the Bride'of Atlantic Lodge to George.W. Leisersohn in recognition of his thirty-seven years' service. as secretary. . . . . .

VJ5&AHA, ^NEBRASKA| THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1025

Baron Rothschild Praises Great Progress Made by Tel Aviv Jews

Joint Distribution Committee Will Benefactor of Colonist's Surprised at Remarkable Achievement of Colonists, Lauds the Work of Sir Herbert Samuel Conduct Campaign Tel Aviv—(J. T. A.)—A spirit of oliday rejoicing resembling that on the occasion of Lord •Balfour's visit, irevailed 'here when Baron. Edmunde de Rothschild, famous patron of the ewish colonies in Palestine, and his wife, arrived here. JU1 the houses were decorated with Brtish and Jewish colors and the entire population turned out to welcome the - baron. An official reception was tendered the visitors at the Main synagogue, where they were greeted with music, prayers and readings from the Holy Icroll. Speeches of welcome were delivered by the^ Mayor of; Tel Aviv, Mr. Dizingoff, and Rabbis Aaronson and TJzeil. • " :. • The baron was deeply moved bythe expressions of love on the", part of

the Jews and in. his reply to the greetings extended him, he declared ' 1 have never before regretted so much as now. that I do not speak Hebrew." The/Baron's address was read to the gathering in Hebrew by the translator. • • " -.. In his speech: which lasted over half an hour, the Baron stated, "I appreciate greatly the work of the first pioneers in Palestine, which began nearly fifty years ago. "I am surprised at the progress which I now observe in the country as a result of the devoted labors of those colonists. I never expected that these things could ,be accomplished. I think all this is due to the British policy and the able administration of Sir Herbert Samuel."

"Overseas Chest" Will Be Used for Colonization Work in Russia WARBURG APPELS TO AMERICAN JEWS

SDBSMFHON PRICE, A YEAR, $2.50 I, F. (Shrolly) Goodman, president of Omaha Lodge I. O. B. E., will personally "cover" the District No. 6 B'nai B'rith convention for The Jewish Press. The fiftyseventh annual convention of District No. 6 will be held at Peoria, 111., June 8-10. At this convention there will be many interesting facts concerning Omahan's. Questions that are of usual importance, are: Who will be the next president ? Where will the next convention be held? Furthering the Hillel Foundation work. The Mexican immigration problem.

Lori f finer lew I g l Comissioiier Appointment Comes as a. Complete Surprise To Jews and Arabs NEW COMMISSIONER IS FAMOUS SOLDIEE

New York (J. T. A.)—Another naLondon.—<J. T. A.)—The appointtion-wide campaign for the purpose of ment of Field Marshal Baron Herbert raising an adequate sum of money for C. O. Plumer as High Commissioner the continuation of certain relief acof Palestine to succeed Sir Herbert Full details of the election and Samuel and • commander-in-chief oJ tivities, including the agricultural colonization' of Jews in Russia, the events of the convention •will ap- the British forces there was approw.f? care of Jewish orphans in that coun- pear in the next issue of The by His Britannic Majesty. King try and the relief of the Jewish re- Jewish Press. eorge, according to &n official anfugees, will be started early next fall, nouncement made known by the according; to an announcement made Wonial Office. : by Felix M. Warburg, chairman of the The Daily. Telegraph in an editorial Joint Distribution Committee, which states: raised over 560,000,000 during the "Sir Herbert Samuel served Palawar period for the: Jewish war sufImportant Reports of Communities tine admirably with those gifts of ferers in Europe and Palestine. To Be Made. Leave on Special Car Saturday Eve- mind and character which have mail? The funds which will be raised durhis career in poltics an unbroken twning for Peoria ing this campaign will also be used Several Omahans will leave Saturees. . His appointment -was at fi~8t. for urgent problems of sanitation and day evening for Denver, Colo., where Omahans will leave Saturday eve- met with som« opposition because hf they will attend the annual conference Forty-Four Boys And Girls Receive Parents to Attend Graduation Exer- education abroad. ning for Peoria, Illinois, where they s a Jew, an opposition which wm; cises, '•-•'.: Diplomas This Month of Jewish ; Social Service workers. The following statement has been will attend the fifty-seventh annual beyond the bounds of decency sind. Those who will leave are: Mr. and issued to ~ the Jewish Telegraphic convention of District No. 6 I.O.B.B. judgment, but Sir Herbert by )UF. Seven Omaha Jewish students will Agency from the. office of the Joint Forty-four Jewish seniors , will Mrs. William Blumenthal, Dr. Philip The convention will begin June 8. work, removed the absurd suspicion*,. Sher, Mr.-and Mrs. R. Kulakofsky. graduate from the Omaha Central be graduated from four different Distribution .Committee: With usual registration of delegates Sir Herbert ruled the country with William L. Holzman, president of the High School and thirty will be grad- universities this June. "On the return to the United States on Sunday, June 7. The Omaha dele- perfect' impartiality and leaves Pales-Miss Helen Kiekes, daughter of Mr. of the Chairman, Mr. Felix M. WarWelfare Federation will probably at- uated from the Omaha Technical High ine completely changed, when School this June. • ' - . . : ' . . and Mrs. S. Riekes, will graduate burg, from his European trip, a meet- gates are leaving on a special car. recalls the times of the Turkish tend the conference. The Omahans going to the convenThis is the twenty-sixth anmial meet- The Central Seniors held their with honors from the University of ing of the Executive Committee of tion are: Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lapi- rule. ing of the Conference. The import- banquet Monday evening, June 1, at Omaha. She will receive her A. B. the Joint Distribution Committee was dus and daughter Estelle; Henry "Lord Plumer, who, like Lord AIant problems confronting Jewish So- the Fontenelle Hotel, and will hold degree at the commencement exer- held on the evening of May 14, at Monsky, Mr. and Mrs. Sam J. Leon, lenby, has had an entirely military which numerous, detailed reports, cial Work are to receive the atten- their commencement exercises Friday cises this evening. career is capable of being loved anr. Miss Lillian "Margolin, daughter of cablegrams and letters describing con- Harry Malashock, Dr. A. Greenberg, trasted and will maintain perfect tion and thorough discussion of not evening, June 12, at Tech High AudiIrvin Stalmaster, Sam Beber, Nathan Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Margolin, and ditions in Europe wexe submitted. The . only professional Jewish social work- ;prium. . ' . - . . Bernstein, Ab Kaiman, I. F. Good- discipline as an administrator STK! The Tech Senior banquet, will be Harry Cohn, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Chairman rendered a report of the man, Esther Kateknan. ers, butalso of the trustees and memleader of armies. He will contimiS' bers of Boards of Directors of many held Monday eveniing, June 15, at the Cohn, are graduating with honors results of his conferences in Europe the great task which Sir Herbert Several Omahans will make reports organizations throughout the country. Omaha Athletic: Club, and: on the fol- from the University of Nebraska. with Dr. Berrihard K.ahn, European Samuels hae already begun." at the convention, HenryMonsky Among the subjects of general in- lowing morning at ten o'clock they Other Omaha students graduating at head of the Joint .Distribution Com- will make his annual report ae a Arabs and Jews Snrprieed terest, concerning which members of will receive their diplomas at the the commencement exercises to be mittee, with Dr. Joseph' Rosen,. the member -of the executive committee, Jerusalem-—(J. T. A.) — The new*; the Conference haveV thought and graduation exercises to be held at the held Saturday morning by the Uni- active head of the Russian wofk-ia flarry Lapidus will make his report of the appointment of Field'Marshals reity.-of.^NebrasSa.-.are; Estejle Lap-MOSCCFW, and with others. -~JEle©ent- i t planned over s period -of-_yearsi~and School Atiditorium. •" with reference to -the successful cam- Baron Herbert C. O. Plumer as Hi£b ports by cablegrams from David A. . Following are • the Central High idus, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry ; which will receive detailed discussion ourselves, 1 am a man, and nothing at this Conference, are the following: School students who will receive their H. Lapidus; Rose Minkin, daughter Brown of Detroit,-now engaged in a paign recently completed by District Commissioner of Palestine came '«# human is beyond my sympathies," he of Mr. and Mrs. M. Minkin, and Louis personal study of Russian conditions, No. 6 for the B'nai B'rith Infirmary a complete surprise to both Arab *r«r7 The relationship of the-Community diplomas this June: . building for the National Jewish Jewish public opinion in the country. said. Somberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. were also discussed. Altee Stem - - ".' Chest to the Jewish Federation, oh Lester Lapidus Hospital. Dr. A.G reenberg- will make Lillian MHler . Somberg. "Great spiritual forces work only which a paper will be presented by Morris Brodkey "After full' consideration the Com- his report as a trustee of the Na- Among all the names of candidate* Harry Wise Berniee Kulukofsky gradually through olng periods of Mr. William J. Shroder, who is pres- Abe Miss Mildred Cohn, daughter of mittee unanimously decided that it is Shafton llymau Shrier mentioned as possible successors uEdward Shafton Irene Rosen time, but our part ought to be to ident of the United Jewish Social Arthnr Rabbi and Mrs. Frederick Cohn, is imperative to make an appeal to the tional Jewish Hospital. Sir Herbert Samuels, the name <>'< Green Louise EoBpntlial • yield ourselves to the idea of fellow Agencies of Cincinnati, and is also Xeona Pollack Harry Freed graduating from the Social Service Jewish public of the United States for Lord Plumer was withheld until thf Kuth Pollack Ethel Riekes love. Love thy neighbor as thyself, chairman of the Executive; Budget .Ann- Jonisch Department of the Chicago Universi- the collection of: an adequate fund very last moment. Mirry-Finer David Fellnian but do not narrow the sense of neigh- Committee of the Community Chest Dorothy Weiner ty. She will receive her B. Ph. de- which is to be regarded as an overseas Opinions are divided as to the Maynard Donovitz Marie Klein bor. He belies his profession of the in that city. gree at the commencement exercises chest, out of which provision may be Alice GinsbDrg Jacob JvoBowsky hig-h commissioner. .-'-.Gertfnae AVintroub Kathan Borsky Christian name who narrows down to be held June 16. Louis • Vintrouu Well-informed political circles Jerome Diamond made for the continuation of agriThe development of the Training Norman Green the extension of the word. Sylvia Adler. " Rabbi Cohn will go to Chicago to cultural work and the care of orphans that the resignation of Lord Allenby. Alice Ginsburg Arthur Goldstein School-for JewiEh • Social Work in the "Understanding has a very broad attend his daughter's graduation. Mr. in Russia, for. the relief of the Jewish Automobiles Needed for June 24th conqueror of Jerusalem and Sol Glazer Fanny Fish Meyer Green meaning and it is my urge to you to organization of which the Conference Sam Minkin for Women Visitors. and Mrs. Harry H. Lapidus and' Mr. refugees and to deal with some urgent commissioner of Egypt, which Sara Morgan Joseph Cohen work to increase and deepen under- played a vital part, will be described Herbert Forman lieo Chaiken • and Mrs. A. Somberg are planning .to problems of sanitation, education and announced the same day as the apIsadore Finer Sam Ban standing. For they who understand by Mr. Maurice J. Karpf, the Director Albert Shrier motor to Lincoln Saturday morning certain other urgent requirements. ... Three local Jewish Women's Or- pointment of Field Marshal PlumA-; of the School. Changing conditions all', forgive all." Technical High School graduates to attend the Nebraska University The campaign will be inaugurated in ganizations will aid the Disabled as High Commissioner of Palestine Hate, suspicion, dislike and accusa- in social service, as a result of the are as follows: graduation exercises. Mr. and Mrs. the early autumn.-Meantime a Budget Veterans' Association when they hold was made known, are closely contion were assailed by Rabbi Freder- changed policy with respect to immiM. Minkin are also planning to leave Committee is engaged in ascertaining their convention here June 20-27 nected. It is being emphasized ths.!: Kicklin Sam Singer ick Cohn, who spoke for the Jews. gration, and the visible effects of the Julius Blumenthal Nelle Snitzer The Jewish Women's Welfare Organ- the strategical importance of FRIP.F for Lincoln this week-end. Lena. Chesno Mollie Steru the minimum requirements. "This work shows that humanity, immigration policy, particularly in Eva Cohn Mamie Temin ization, the Council of Jewish Wo- tine, in the view of the present situaMiss Lillian Rubenstein, daughter Margaret Cohn Ida' Greenhouse "Through the creation of such a after, having lived so long, in the the work of Jewish family agencies Simon of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rubenstein fund, it is believed that the neces- men, and the Temple Israel Sister- tion in the Near East, came into thr Cohn Irving Hoberman depths of hate and even persecution, will also be presented. Anne Coreuman Louis Lnhrman will receive her diploma from the sity of other campaigns for these or hood have been asked to furnish foreground and the cause of th* Sadie Drevich Hymie Milder is standing on the mountain top of David" Mittleman The relationship of Hebrew schools Jerrold Feinstein Chidkgo Art School at the Com- kindred objects will be obviated. It automobiles and women drivers for resignation of Lord Allenby, vho h»>: Fanger Morris Beiss beautiful idealistic endeavor," he said." to the problem of Jewish juvenile de- Kuth mencement Exercises to be held is not planned to re-establish the Wednesday, June 24, in order to con- had a purely military leader, was s. Louis Fellman Anne Klch "There happens to be a discussion linquency, the subject of the delin- Sylvia Friedel Mildred Shrago vey 300 women visitors to Camp June 16. Friedman Harry Sidman machinery which the Joint Distribu- Brewster, where they will be enter- strategic as "well as a political nee.srat present as to the origin of man," quent in child caring organizations, Benjamin ISa Friedman Joseph Silver sity for the "guard on the Suez." tion Committee found it necessary to tained. .Arthur .Simon Eabbi Cohn continued. "But what- and the application of psychological Albert Garber maintain during the war period. It is The opinion is expressed that Lore New York Prominent Woman ever it is, remember all have the research, to the treatment of delin Volnteers for this work should cal Plumer with bis vast experience «* *. contemplated that, the funds secured same, origin. One God has created quency, as well as a symposium on Omaha Hebrew Club to Hold To Speak Here-Next Week will be disbursed through existing Mrs. Nate Mantel at Harney 5711 or leader of armieE and administrator iis regardless of this class or that, community organization, with particElection Sunday, June 7th Mrs. Isy Rosenthal at Walnut 0999. will be • in & position to enforce thf of this character or that. All men ular reference to the synagogue and 7 Omaha Hebrew dul) will hold nom- More than twenty reservations have approved agencies abroad." provisions of the Palestine Mfrnfate were made alike and all will return to the federation will also be dis- ination, and election of officers Sun- already been made for the one o'clock Rabbi Cohn Representative of to the satisfaction of the Mandates;? alike to dust. luncheon to be given by the Omaha cussed. '.'."•" day afternoon, June 7, at 3 o'clock POLISH JEWISH DEPUTIES the State to Social Conference power and the Jewish people. Wftfc "This movement is bound to grow Chapter, of Hadassah Tuesday after- VOTE AGAINST ARMY BUDGET, at the Swedish Auditorium. Governor Adam McMullen appoint- no fear of being suspected as a oneand men will begin to see the valuenoon, June 9, at the Blackstone Hotel, PROTESTING DISCRIMINATION ed Rabbi Frederick Cohn a delegate sided administrator, he will be mt, * and the. blessing of brotherly love. Contribute to Floral Fund preceding the talk to be given by Mrs. to the National-Conference of Socia greater, advantage than Sir Warsaw.. (J. T. A.) The states of There is. a destiny that makes us VIENNA COLLEGES De Solo Poole, of New York City, who Friends of Mr. Frank Greenbefg, brothers; no man goes his - way who died during the past month, CLOSED AS RESULT OF is to be honor guest at the luncheon. Polish Jews in the Polish army was Work to be held at Denver, Colo., Samuel in this respect alone." HANKENKREUZLER RIOTS Mrs. Milton Fuldheim> of Milwaukee, described by Deputy Feldman at the from June 10 to June 17. Rabbi Cohn contributed $68.-to.-the Jewish Free last Sejm session" during the discus- will leave next Tuesday to attend the Cantor ITilek and his choir sang. Vienna. (J. T. A.) AH colleges Wis., will also speak. Loan Society Fund, v HAKENKREUZLEB RENEW convention. here are to be closed - for some time Among those whose reservations sion on the budget of the Ministry of ANTI-JEWISH WOMAN ORATOR SPEAKS -..'--. by an order of the Minister of Edu- have already been turned in are as War. TO HADASSAH MEMBERS NEGOTIATIONS WITH POLISH AUSTRIAN CHANCELLOR Vienna. (J. T. A.) A decision tu "The Polish state maintains two cation. follows: f Jewish History and Work of Ha- GOVERNMENT TO CONTINUE, ISSUES INSTRUCTIONS FOR the Swastika followers, the Hafcflrarmies: one ofofficials and the other The order was issued "as a result Dr. and Mrs. A. Romm. dassah" was the topic of an address ORDER IN COLLEGES kreuiler, to renew their activities in JEWISH DEPUTIES DECIDE of anti-Jewish riots started by the Dr. and Jirs. M. G. WoW. military. Into the-first, Jews are acMr. and Sirs. Mas Promkln. delivered by Mrs. Milton Fuldheim, Vienna. (J. T. A.) An instruction Vienna, resulted in a number of at»fcWarsaw. <J. T. A.) The negotia student members of the anti-Semitic Mrs. Milton Fuldheim, of Milwaukee, Wis. cepted only when they produce a cerof Milwaukee, Wis., at the lecture- tions between - the Club of Jewish Hakehkreuzler organization. A dele- Mrs. Kictlie Baasberg. issued by Chancellor Eamek to th Jewish excesses, The University. ** tificate of apostacy. They are adHenry Monsty. tea given by the Omaha Chapter of Deputies and the Polish Government, gation representing the Jewish Com- Mrs. Mrs. H. A. Wolf. mitted, into the.other without restric- deans of all the colleges in the city well as the Commercial AcademyMrs. Reuben Kulakofsky. .Hadassah Tuesday afternoon, June 2, with a view of finding a solution t munity of Vienna submitted to Chan- Mrs. A. tions. However, in the army Jews urged them to apply the necessary were closed Mey 27 as a result of th* I. Kulakofsky. at the Blackstone Hotel. Mrs. Philip Sher. are subject to secret orders issued by steps to restore peace in the col riots. Several Jewish students w » * "the Jewish problem in the country cellor Ramek a memorandum on the Mrs. B. A. Simon. Mrs. T?uldheini is .the guest of Mrs. are.-'to be continued, according to a situation, protesting against the acts Mrs. General Sosnkowski. Jewish soldiers leges, to punish the turbulent student: injured. A. Silver-man. Ricklie Boasberg iand will be in Oma- decision of the club taken at a session of violence committed in the colleges Mrs. J. Rosenberg. According to official statistics mad? are not admitted -to the sergeants' and to declare the semester closed. C. Levinson. ha for several weeks. She is one of of the club which lasted unti lafte and the discriminatory attitude taken Mrs. Burgermeister Seitz issued an or- known, the Jewish population of ViMrs. A. Theodore. schools- and-are.-treated as secondJ. I.insman. the best .•woman orators in the coun- midnight. The session was calle by the majority of the deans who Mrs. dinance, according to which the po enna consists of 201,000 persons. It class citizens. , • . . Mrs. J. B. Kobinson. try. ;/:•.•-;• . , . . ' - . - .; ; •'• ... Mrs. Krankel. lice are permitted to enter the cam is believed that the. number is still "Jews are not -admitted into the following the stir, "which came afte permitted the distribution of inciting Mrs. H. : M. Solomon. greater, because many have not remilitary bureaus, and Jewish firms pus of the colleges. the news was made known Tthat Lu- leaflets in the colleges. The deputa- MrB. S. Frob.ni. A l l REJECTS TRUCE plied to the question of the cenfto* Reservations for the luncheon can are not granted • military orders for \ :.. WITH WAHIBIS cien" Wolf had left London for War- tion demanded that the government takers regarding religion. be made by calling Harney 55E3 or supplies. Wjth all citi2ens of the ANTI-SEMITIC LEADER saw'in connection' with the rumors issue a. manifesto to pacify the public -, Um&ap." "<J. T. A.) Dr. Naji el Jackson 1042. country, we are interested in the proACQUITTED IN ROUMANU that he would act as mediator betwee •mind and to take the necessary steps Asil, diplomatic representative of tection of the stated and ,we.consider Bucharest. (J. T. A.) Professo FRENCH TEACHEB King Ali of the Hedjas, resigned from the Government and the Jewish lead to insure the safety guaranteed by DISMISSED FOE TEACHING the army necessary, but we deinand Codreanu, anti-Semitic leader, charge* ers Mrs. I. Rosenthal President the constitution. his post, according to a communica-. " BLOOD RITUAL'SITR that we should be treated in a just •wiifa implication in the murder of th of Council of Jewish Women " The Chancellor declared in reply The club also decided at their ses tion he addressed to the British ForAlexandria. (J. T. A.) A delegaMrs. I. Rosenthal is the newly manner," Deputy Feldtnan declared. Jassy Chief of Police, Monschu, ha that the Austrian Government will eign Office. As the motive for his sion not to accept the resignation The Minister of-War, Sikorski, po- been acquitted in Thnrn-Severein tion of Jews, Moslems and Christians, resignation, Dr. Uaji el Asil stated Deputy Isaac Greeribaum and to re take the necessary steps to guarantee elected president of the Council of representing the French Maitoric lemized with -Deputy Feldman, as- where he was being retried. Jewish Women. It was erroneously safety to the Jewish citizens. New that he. had proposed to King Ali to quest him to continue his colloboration Monschu, the Jassy Chief of Po Lodge in Egypt, pleaded with h riots occurred MajE.30 when members stated in the lassue of the Jewish suring the- Sejm .that is .the army arrange for. an armistice with Ibn with the club. lice, was murdered because he "sup French Coi5s«l here for the 'Sand, leader of the Wahabi forces, but It is not altogether impossible'thai of the Hakemkreuzler organization Press that Mrs. L. Rosenthal was .everybody is- treated alike. The Jewpressed too severely" the anti-Jewish of Eather Leonss because of ish deputies voted against the bufiget elected president. Mrs. L«^Rosenthal met in a Iree-for-all fight with the Song. Ali Tefused to accept such a \ Greenbaum. would -withdraw his resagating the blood libel tale. : excesses.! as a sign of protest is treasurer of the Council. Socialist'studen*' • irairircstibn. .igriation, it was stated.

More than three hundred Catholics, Jews- and Protestants attended the. first Better Understanding program given at Temple Israel. Wednesday evening under auspices of the B'nai B'rith. The program -was. apart of the national good will program. - Sara. Beber was chairman of the meeting.. The speakers: were Rabbi Frederick Cohn, for.the Jews; Carl E. Herring, for the Protestants,, and Maurice B. Griffin, for the Knights of Columbus. . Carl E. Herring, who spoke for the Protestants, drew the attention of .his hearers to the need for brotherhood between the three creeds. 'In the midst;of all our progress we have not mastered the art of self-government and of getting along with each other," he declared. "Societies and fraternities have tha tendency to intensify. onr prejudice rather than to dissipate it.- They have merely played at accomplishing the purpose for whcih we are here tonight. You can attend all the lodges in the world, but unless you think and act you cannot gain anything. " "Go back,to your lodges and societies, and don?t be afraid to work for close association with 1 your fellowinen and to strive for brotherly loveDon^ overlook the fact that every reform must come from within us, that charily begins dt home." Maurice B. Griffin,.grand knight of the Knights of,'Columbus,, who spoke for the Catholics, stressed the requi~:"Let tErsay to

Omahans Will Attend Social Service Conference at Denver

Omahan's to Take Active Part in L 0. B. B. Convention

Jewish Students Graduate Seven Local Jewish Students From Local High Schools To Receive College Degrees

Three Jewish Women s Clubs to Aid Veterans


V " PAGE 2—THE JEWISH PRESS—THURSDAY, JUNE 4," 1925

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SIR HERBERT SAMUEL RETIRES - A dispatch from London, dated May 20, conveyed the information that Field Marshal Baron Herbert C. O. Plumer was OB.that day appointed British High Commissioner for Palestine in place of Sir Herbert Samuel, whose term of office had expired. The.dispatch does not mention whether Sir Herbert was a candidate- for reappointment, some reports to the effect that he was having been denied in the press. A number of Jewish organizations in England and. elsewhere had petitioned the British Government for his retention in office. On the other hand, the Jewish Chronicle, as well as the1 Jewish World, of London1, have been for some time past waging a bitter fight against his reappointment, they claiming- that he has not carried out the policy set "forth in the Balfour Declaration, nor given the Zionists in Palestine the chance to;which they are entitled. Whether this opposition had any effect on Sir Herbert's chances or reappointment cannot be-definitely asserted: but i t is certain that it did nofc him if he was willing to remain in office. That the opposition was ill-advised and without justification we firmly believe, as we do that time will show the mistake that has been made. .: Sir Herbert Samuel was the first Jew in more than eighteen centuries to hold the position of head of the government in Palestine. While his high station did not confer on him the powers of an absolute ruler, itdid give him the authority which devolves upon a constitutional chief of a State in the modern sense. He went to his post after a long record in the British Government and Parliament, having won his spurs in the latter body at an early age. As a matter of course, he was obliged in carrying on his office ^s Commissioner, to follow the general policy outlined by the home government, whose representative hewas. As the High Commissioner for Palestine, he was obliged to accept the interpretation of the law and the mandate relating to Palestine placed upon them by the Ministry in London. If he was not prepared to do that, his only course was to resign. He evidently thought it wiser to ho Id his office and carry out his duties, as he was in honor bound to do, in harmony with the policy of the government, not only for the sake of his country, but equally for the sake of the Jews in-Palestine who are-helping to reconstruct and develop that land. It was a judicious and patriotic conclusion, and it should have been accepted by the people of Great Britain, :as well as by the Zionists, in that spirit. It undoubtedly was so accepted by the great majority of his countrymen and of the Zionists in Great Britain. The minority has-exercised its privilege of making things unpleasant for the High Commissioner, but .he leaves his important post with the confidence and high regard of the majority of those concerned, except-the irreconcilable Arabs in Palestine. ; Just how Field Marshal Plumer will handle the duties of the High Commissioner remains to be seen. Many British military commanders have made admirable colonial governors in the past. While the High Commissioner cannot alter the general policy of the home government,, he can do much to make or mar the •Zionist redemption of the land. All that can be done as.to this now is to wait and see. . • :

Monthly Report of the Superintendent of The Jewish Welfare Federation to The Board of Directors Delivered June 1, 1925, by W E R. BLTJMENTHAL As customary, the financial and sta- dently, the lesson he received was not tistical reports showing in figures the well learned. activities of the Federation, have alHowever, much better results were ready been given. And while it is obtained from another transient, a not usual for the Superintendent in weak, sandy looking.man of 34, who his monthly report to dwell on policies sojourned in Arizona, and lately in and programs of the Federation, I Hot Springs, 'Arkansas, "for his will ask your indulgence in. repeating health. * For months and months he a well established-principle of philan- lived as a hermit in a small hut in thropy.-And that is: A relief organ- the desert, but was finally driven out ization, should not be judged by the by hunger. While "Hot Springs was relief given in dollars and cents, fcut good for his health, it was poor for by the amount of constructive work his purse. He came to Omaha literperformed. ; Some of the best social ally in rags, in quest of medicine and work" is' done by means of advice and work, but he did not want money. One guidance, so that, those in need, may of the Federation's physicians, after be placed in ^a a position to help them- a thorough examination, prescribed selves. Teaching a lame man to walk for our transient, three different by using his own limbs is much more kinds of medicine. This made Wn beneficial to him than giving: him partly.happy. Next, came clothes. A crutches.' . member of our Executive Committee I shall take the opportunity of pre- fortunately happened to be in the ofsenting a few social service cases fice \vhen your Superintendent was handled during the month where lit- worrying about clothes for the sick tle money was used, but where re- man, and he immediately offered to sults were accomplished; This is" due. supply one of his suits then at the to the improved facilities and to the cleaners. The suit was a perfect fit, extensive knowledge social work now except that £he -trousers were several has in dealing \vith: these human inches too long, but the effect of this problems. : suit upon our transient was like magLet us go back, if you please, to ic. He immediately regained the selfan unfinished problem mentioned in respect he had lost up to the time he my last month's, report./ Many of came to Omaha. He even forgot about you will perhaps recall the story of the "drug store" upon his person. the recalcitrant transient-lad with the "Now I am going out to get a job," chip on his shoulder who was sure he said. "I have worked for the A. that the world owed him. a living and B. C. Company (a national housethat our Federation in particular owed canvassing concern) before and will him the price of a ticket to Califor- surely- get a job again." Later in the nia. You will recall that we helped afternoon, much to our surprise, he him day after day, gave him cash for returned with a beaming countenance. his promises to get to work or get out "I've got th<*. job," he said. of town. You recall that we were Turning now from the people of forced to seek Mr. Dahbauin's advice. other communities astray in Omaha, This young man, instead" of, talking we want to mention young people to Danbaum like a. man should,, "was from Omaha astray in other cities. very discourteous to the officer. He The first case is that of Miss A, age told Danbaum that ho one could give 17. Several weeks ago Miss A left any advice and that he was" going to her home without her mother's knowldo in Omaha just what he: pleased. edge, in quest of adventure. . Her The officer felt that the best way to home is a very poor one, and the deal W-ith our young man was to treat treatment, she. received:was such that him io a night's lodging at Eleventh the girl could not be blamed, considand I)'odge "City Boarding House." ering her youth and. inexperience in Following his release the next day, life. The mother, almost frantic with our transient called on Dr. Sher and grief and anxiety, appealed to us for told him that he had received a good help. She had a trace of the daughlesson: and that he was now deter- ter in a large eastern city. We immined to earn a living instead, of beg- mediately got; in touch with the soging for it. "What my parents failed cial service agency in that city who to instill into, me, you folks have advised us at once that the girl could done/*.he said, "and I ought to thank not be located at the address given. • you for it." He- was given three dol- We next heard of the girl through lars,- in addition to the money given Dr. Sher. A young lady with a very him the week before. A little later he fanciful moving picture: -name, had returned, saying that he decided not applied to the Telephone Company of to leave-the city, for he obtamed another eastern city for employment, work as salesman for s local chemical giving the Doctor's name as reference. concern"' "Btff x>ur young man could From the description that the telenot stand-prosperity,and he worked phone company gave the girl, wetaew T - --•-* company were pany only only two two at at once once that that she she was was the the one one we we were

phone Company and the Jewish Girls' ] Welfare League under the Council of' Jewish Women of" that city, requesting that they return the girl home at our expense. But evidently the girl liked the place so well that she -• N E W S Prophetic Spirit is Greatest Gift of preferred to remain there. The Supervisor of the Girls' League was so Hebrew Race to America, attracted by the Omaha girl that she MANY ATTEND DINNER. Minister Says. offered to take personal care of her More than two hundred members and to secure for her a job in that Providence (J. T. A.)—Attended by city. But the funny part of it all of the club were served. dinners at is that after we had sent a dozen or the opening night held last Saturday representatives of its thirty-three so wires and had finally found the evening. "The club house was very chapters throughout the country, young lady, the mother accused us crowded and many of the members Zeta Beta Tau, the national Jewish of haying placed the daughter in a were not given the sendee needed, College Fraternity, celebrated its anCatholic Convent. Last Saturday morning, Shevuoth-Decoration Day, but we have remedided this situation nual Roger William Day Saturday at by special "emergency appointment" for the future," said Sidney Manley, Temple Beth El here, with leading the mother came to our office -with a chairman of the entertainment com- citizens of Providence among all picture postal card from her daughter. The girl writes, "I like the home mittee. Through special courtesy of faiths present to honor the pioneer I am in," but on the reverse side is Loyal Cohen, the chief chef of the of religious freedom in America. a colored picture of a horticultural Loyal Coffee Shop, will hereafter Dr. Augustus M. Lord of Provibuilding. On that building is a tower supervise the work of the kitchen on dence, one of the foremost Unitarian with a weather vane. Our poor lady had mistaken the weather vane for a Saturday evenings. Mr. Cohen made ministers of America, Rabbi Samuel cross! I need not tell you that the a thorough inspection of the kitchen M. Gup of Temple Beth-El, and Alvin Council of Jewish Women in that city Wednesday afternoon and many im- T. Sapinsley, former National Execuhave a good home for the girl, but provements have been recommended. tive of the fraternity, who presided, whether she is to remain there or come back to Omaha is still a prob- Reservations have been received at were among the speakers. lem with which we are grappling. "The greatest gift of the Hebrew the club for the regular dinner to be Tac&to the life of men is the prophetic As if we need a young lad to com- held Saturday evening. The regular plete our story, a wire came to us dances will be held every Saturday. spirit," declared Dr. Lord in his adfrom the Jewish Social Service Budress", "out of •which, to successive reau in Chicago, advising that an LADIES' DAY TUESDAY. generations up to the present hour, Omaha boy whom for the present we The Ladies Green's Committee has has been born prophet "after prophet shall call B, was in Cook County Jail awaiting to be sent to the Bridewell been appointed and already made ar- of the gospel of religious liberty in Reformatory. B, scarcely 18, had left rangements for the first Ladies' day various lands at various crises in the a fatherless home in Omaha about a to be held next Tuesday. The events history of civilization. year ago, in. quest of work in great Chicago. There he found work as a of the day will begin at 10 a. m., .-• "It was a fatal day for tyrants, clerk and sent home money at rather with golf, tennis, mah-jong contests religious and political, when the frequent intervals. But the young lad to be held all day. Luncheon will be Hebrew Scriptures were translated could not withstand temptation and served in the club house. The com- into the vernacular and put into the helped himself rather freely to some goods that' he coveted in a depart- mittee who is in charge of ladies' hands of any oppressed and hoodment store.' Although the Chicago so- day: Mrs. Sidney Manley, chairman; winked people, because of these writcial worker had pleaded for the boy Mesdames Nate Mantel, J. Harry ings kindled into a clearer conviction on account of his youth, the Juvenile Kulakofsky, Morton Degen, Harry and compelling purpose the ideal of Court Judge felt that a boy who had ? left his mother should be shown, no A. Wolf, Aaron/Ferer and Herbert liberty." consideration. We quickly got the Heavenrich. « Rabbi Gup declared that were Roger principal of the Omaha school which the boy attended to make.a statement . Joe Dloogtach was the winner of Williams alive today his voice would in favor of the boy and also got the blind bogey contest held Decora- be among the first raised against the narrowness and bigotry seeking to "good words" for him. from those who knew him in Omaha. But still tion Day. Joe has been on the links legislate away the fundamental liberthere was difficulty. Our young-man- for the past three weeks practicing. ties of the people. "Reaction is tryastray, just like our young-girl-astray, Joe now intends to enter every coning to >it in the saddle," he declared. had taken unto himself an impressive test. . .... V/ ..."'•. •.,. :. .. "Back of the Ku Klux Klan, the antiand stately new name. We had to appease the Court even for the difBam Yousenv former city golf evolution law in Tennessee and the ference in names. The Court finally decided to parole the boy to us if we champ, took three of the prizes when attempts to introduce religious educawould obtain work and a good report he won the driving,- proaching and tion into the public schools, is the spirit of reaction and Roger William for him by June 16. The lad is now putting contests, back home and, of course, the mother would give this spirit battle in behalf is overjoyed. We hope that the boy The feature attraction next Sun- of personal "liberty. We Jews have has had his lesson, and are sure that with the help of some of the mem- day will be the handicap match play every reason to be-particularly gratebers of this Board we will be able against par. All members are urged ful to Roger William for we are into make a good citizen out of him. to enter this contest. debted to him, more than to any other man, ; fop. the religious liberty Just one relief case, in addition to these social service cases. Here is a While making an inspection of the we enjoy in America." relief problem that unfortunately does kitchen at the club Wednesday afternot appear to be, of a constructive noon, Loyal Cohen, prominent hotel LUCIEN WOLF LEAVES type. A woman, in her twenties, mar- man, with his chief chef Gus, and FOR POLAND ried, with two babes of 2 and 1 years assistants at the club, the windstorm of age, is almost completely paraLondon. (J. T. A.) Lucien Wolf, lyzed. The husband,could barely eke broke out. The entire party made a secretary of the Joint Foreign Comout an existence, even when the wife quick dash for the.cellar. The storm mittee of the Board of Deputies and •was well and the babes had not yet skipped the club grounds and the arrived. A special nurse is now em- only damage done was disappearance Anglo-Jewish Association, is leaving ployed for the stricken woman. The for Warsaw for the purpose of study"Greatest Mother of the Jewish Peo- of several hats. ing the Jewish situation there. ple in Omaha," our Welfare FederaIn a statement issued by Mr. Wolf tion, is paying the bill, providing med- HUNGARIAN CHIEF RABBI he declared that he has not been inicine for the mother and milk for the NOMINATED MEMBER babes. The Federation is encouragOF UPPER HOUSE vited by the Polish government and ing the -helplessv invalid-mother to that ha has no intention to meditate carry on in her fight for life. Budapest. (J. T. A.) Dr. Simon between the Government and the Kolo, These are grim realities of our Hevesi, Chief Rabbi of Budapest and •work, but you^.men and women, who President of the Federation of Hun- the Club of Jewish Deputies, in the are so much interested in the work garian Rabbis, will be nominated as Polish Sejm, nor to interfere in the of the Federation, who devote so much general questions, of the country. time and energy in supplying the representative of the Jewish populafunds to make this kind of work pos- tion in the House of Magnates, the sible—you ought to be informed* We Upper Chamber, which is to be concannot give you even a small fraction stituted in the Hungarian Parliament. of our case work at any one meeting, This decision was taken by the but we hope from time to time to keep you posted as. to the nature of Hungarian Jewish Cultural Union, our work, our responsibilities ,our fail- the leading organization of Hungarian ures, as well as our successes. Jews in cultural and social activities, But now I regret that I must wind at a meeting held here. Repairs Your Genup our story with another appeal. uine Main Spring or The constitution of the House of Your Federation is again short of Gleaning -funds, very short! Today we checked Magnates, which was recently passed, One-Tear -Written out practically our last dollar, in pay- provides for a special Jewish repreGuarantee ing the allotments to the city institutions and to the local work that we sentative to be nominated by the "Gifts That Last" are supporting. Nearly the first half Jewish population, subject to the apDIAMOND IMPORTERS of the year is over and we haven't proval of the head of the state. The PLATINUM SPECIALISTS sent "a single penny to any of the Union has transmitted its decision to national : institutions to which we are all Jewish religious and social instipledged td'•contribute. Already their CREDIT JEWELERS second half-year's allotment is due, tutions in Hungary for action. 1514 DODGE ST. and we - have not as yet paid our I Established 1894 first. I am confident that, as usual, you will acFnobly and" magnificently, but will you at the same time act quickly and effectively? . We must have at once Six Thousand Dollars to carry on this month's work—Three Thousand locally and Three Thousand nationally. What is your immediate ISADORE ABRAMSON, Pres. answer to the need of your Welfare Federation? Audits and Investigations Conducted

HIGHLAND COUNTRY CLUB

Jewish College Fraternity Celebrates Roger William Day

Mr. Nathan Levitt and Mr. Hermaa Krause. Consolation prize was by Mrs. Dean Davidson.

LINCOLN

Mr. and Mrs. William Epstein and Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Gugenheim enson, and Miss Ethel Green, and the Misses Edith and Ethel Epstein, and tertained at a family dinner at the Messrs. Hyman and Sam Epstein Lincoln hotel in honor of their daughspent Sunday in Lincoln at the home ter's confirmation. of Mr. and Mrs. I. Rosenthal. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Polsky and Mr. and Mrs. Burt Polsky held a Mrs. Lewis Ellis entertained at four joint reception in honor of their sons, tables of bridge at her home Thurs- Bernard and Irving, who were conday evening in honor of Miss Bessie firmed. Levine, who will be married Jane 16. High score was won by Miss Minnie Mr. and Mrs. Sam Simon returned from their honeymoon spent in SulGreenstone and Miss Ruth Bvnen. phur Springs and are making their Mrs. W. Wolf and two daughters, home in Lincoln. Sylvia and Ruth* left Friday for DeMr. Edwin Katskee attended the troit, Mich., where they will attend the wedding of "their cousin, Miss Ida University roundup. He. was the Geren. While in the east they ex- guest of the Diamond home. pert to visit In New York. They will Mr. and Mrs. Sam Greenstone of probably b» gene for several months. Sioux City are the guests of Mrs. Mr. C. Sirinsky left Monday on a Sara Greenstone. two weeks' trip to Chicago to visit Mr. Carl Greenstone of Cincinnati, his son, Koby, who is studying music Ohio, is visiting his mother and famand playing for Radio Station WLS. ily. Mrs. A. H. Diamond of Omaha was Mrs. Ellis entertained at her home in the city on business and visited Sunday in honor of Miss Joan Carson, relatives. who is to be married June 23. Mesdames Friend Oppenheimer enBerlin. (J. T. A.) Professor Altertained at a bridge and lotto party, bert Mosse, well known German jurpreceded by a lunch. ist and brother of the publisher, of Miss Maxine Frosh returned from. the Berlinner Tageolatt," died here at Friend, Nebr., where she has been the age of 79. teaching'. Professor Mosse was for a number Mrs. Lewis Ellis gave a handker- of years counsel of the Japanese govchief shower in honor of Miss Bessie ernment and was the co-author of the new Japanese constitution, being Levine, who is to be a June bride. mainly responsible for the ordinances Mr., and .Mrs. Walter Wessel of of the provinces and communities. Nebraska City "are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Gugenheim. Members of the Merry Mixers club entertained their husbands at a bridge party at the home of Mrs. Sidney Shostak. Prizes were won by Mrs, Lew Ellis and Mrs. J. P. Davidson,

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PALESTINE JEWS WILL SEND NEUTRAL DELEGATION TO ZIONIST-AGUDATH MEETING Jerusalem; (J. T. A.) A decision to send its delegation to the proposed conference between representatives of the.Zionist World: Organization and the ;Agudath Israel, which is to 'take place" shortly in Vienna, has been taken by the - Vaad Leumi, the Council of Palestine Jews, here. . The conference is scheduled to consider the possibilities of reaching an agreement between the Zionist Organization and the . Agudath, including also the much disputed question concerning the'Palestine Communities' Ordinance.in Which the stand of the Agudath Israel is in discord with the prevailing general opinion of Palestinian Jewry. ••-••-..' '. The delegation of the Vaad Leumi "will; .be instructed to act; in the capacity of neutral observers at the conference. A final.decision will be taken by the Council following the return of the delegatesand the hearing of their reports./' . . ; . . :; . .

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PAGE S—THE JEWISH PRESS—THUR5B&Y, JUNE 4,1925

Students Arriving From Out-of-town

.

\ 2 e n i **** STim ™ er ^* i 5 er

Colleges to Spend Vacation at Homel^J^^

SAMUEL PRAISES . ROCKEFELLER ANTIMALARIA WORK IN PALESTINE Jerusalem. (J. T. A.) The contribution of America toward the betterment of conditions in Palestine was the subject of a correspondence between Sir Herbert Samuel, retiring High Commissioner, and John D. Rockefeller, it was learned here. Sir Herbert Samuel wrote to Rockefeller before leaving office, expressing his •warm thanks for the assistance of Rockefeller's international Health

^ S t f J ^

Board in the fight against malaria in Palestine. Jonn D. Rockefeller, Jr., in reply. stated that his father "values highly Sir Herbert Samuel's appreciation of the work of the International Board of Health and hope to complete the elimination of malaria by further cooperation beitween the board and the Palestine government.

Within .the next few weeks schools Bernice Ferer, a student at Ferry j father, Mr. E. P31, who will visit will close their doors for the summer Hall, will visit at Oshkosh, Wis., be- j here for several weeks. fore returning home about June 15; j vacation period. A number of stuMr. Harry Perelmeter, of PlainReva Kulakofsky, Myron Blotcky, Lesdents-attending out-of-town colleges ter Slosburg and Max Guttman, stu- view, Nebr., spent flie week-end here will'be home by the latter part of dents of the University of Michigan, at the M. Nogg home. the week, -while others will not be •tvill be home Saturday; Edward LevioMessrs. Ernest Kogg and Sam son, a Notre Dame student, will be Swarte spent tfee past week-end in home until the middle of June. Your 1925 gnbscription to The JtewMiss Rosaline Goldstein arrived home early part of next week; and Sioux City, Iowa. ish Press is due now. Please mail Nebraska "University students will be liome the early part of this week from it in. Mr. and Mrs. Cbaries CanfieJd and Benjamin College; Miss Ethel Glad- home Friday, they are Kate GoldMiss Molly Brown have as their stein, Fanny Levinson, Sara Somberg stone will be home the latter part of PRE-NUPTICAL AFFAIRS this week from Vassar; Miss Pauline and Gertrude Eomm, Edward Rosen- guest, Mrs. Ralph Boweman, oj WEDDINGS Hostesses are busy this month en- Herzberg, who is attending Mount De thai, Oscar Weinstein, Lester Simon, Valleyo, Calif. Many affairs are beHORN.LENTZKER. ing planned in her honor. As a surprise to their friends and tertaining the June brides. It is these Chantel College at Wheeling, W. Va., David Sher, Bennett Cohn, Ben Ravitz and Joe Stern. affairs that keep the social calendar is expected home abont June 15; Miss relatives here, was the •wedding of Miss Ray Lentzner, of Kansas City, filled this month. ANTI-SEMITIC PARTY ~ % A board meeting of the Council of to investigate the desirability of purFor Miss Rebecca Azorin, who is FORMED IN BOUMANIA Mo., to Mr. Fred Horn, of Kansas chasing lots at King's Lake. The dub UNDER SIGN OF SWASTIKA City, formerly of Omaha, and son of to become the bride of Mr. Samuel Jewish Women was held Tuesday will probably purchase five lots. Keep your home or office filled with morning at the Jewish Community Wolf, on Sunday, Ju-c 21, at the FonBucharest. <J. T. A.) A united Mr. and- Mrs. M. Horn, of this city. breezes of cool air during the hojt months tvitk, Isaac Sternhill was unanimously anti-Semitic party of Roumania was The wedding was solemnized Thursday tenelle Hotel, a r.u.r *— of pre-nup- Center. Plans were made for the admitted nito the club last week. • ? > ^ •' next winter's activities. a fan formed at a conference of all the at Kansas City, Rabbi Herman Cohn tial affairs are being given. Plans are being made for the anMr. and Mrs. Joe Wolf entertained officiating:. Mrs. M. Polonsky entertained six- nual Thorpeian picnic to be held soon. anti-Semitic organizations in the country held at Jassy. Mr. Horn and his bride spent the at dinner party Wednesday evening, teen at bridge at her home Tuesday The new party will be called "Acpast week-end in Omaha with Mr. and June 3, at their home for twelve afternoon. Prizes were won by Hie tiunoa N^tionale Crestine." The ExMrs. M. Horn, and left Omaha the couples. The table was beautifully Mesdames H. Wohlner and M. Perelecutive of the new party consists of early part of the week for Denver, decorated with bride and groom floral Mr. Art Snyder, son of Mr. and Professor Alexander Cuza, leader of ^Colorado Springs, and Manitou, Colo., decorations. Monday, June 1, Mrs. man. Mr. and Mrs. Harris'Levey are ex- S. Snyder, will be graduated from the the Roumanian anti-Semites, Dr. "where they will spend several weeks Mark Leon was hostess at a one after which they will return to Kan- o'clock luncheon followed by ten ta- pected home Sunday evening from a Law School of the Creighton Uni- Paliescu, Dr. Samuleanu, Zelea Codbles of bridge a t their home, and month's stay at Excelsior Springs, versity at the exercises to be held reanu and Messrs. Began, Ene and sas City to make their home. this week. Naum. The organ of the party will Miss Sara Brodkey is entertaining MORRIES-ROSEN. at her home Sunday afternoon. A 1 Mr. Millard Krasne, son of Mr. and appear with the Swastina as its emMrs. David Goldman, of St. Louis, Miss Irene Rosen, daughter of Mr. number of other hostesses are planblem. and Mrs. David Rosen, has set Sun- ning social affairs for this popular Mo., is the guest of i e r parents, Mr. Mrs. Herman Krasne, will' be graduand Mrs. A. Herzberg. Mrs.; Gold- ated from the Law school at the Uniday, June 21, as her wedding day to June bride. Mr. Sidney Morris, formerly of this man expects to return to her home versity of Michigan this month. Commencement exercises will be held city, son of Mrs. Anna Goodman, of J: Miss Ruth Wilinsky and her fiance, Monday evening. Westinghouse or June 15. San TTrancisco, Calif. Invitations Mr. Arthur Snyder, wh.o are to be General Electric •'•• Mrs. Louis Kulakofsky was Kostjess have been issued only to the immedi- married Tuesday evening, June 9, have Done in perfect comfort. Only 7 Mr. Isaac Solzman, son of Mr. and to a luncheon at the Fontenelle Hotel minutee beat. Leaves natural life ate relatives of the couple. The cere- been honored guests at a number of Mrs. M. Solzman, will graduate Tuesand inster in hair. Water shampoo Tuesday afternoon in honor of Mrs. mony will be solemnized at the Blackperspiration makes curl more beautisocial affairs during the past several J. H. Lesser, of Oakland, Calif., the day from the University of Iowa. fnl. Expert operators trained in stone Hotel, Rabbi Frederick Cohn Nestle factory. Soft water shampoo. weeks. guest of Mrs. R. Kulakofsky. Sundried, 50c; Marcel, 73c. officiating. A card party to raise money for Mrs. K. Weinberg was hostess at ft The young couple are planning to dinner at her home Monday evening, charity will be given by the Jewish Coturtesy—Service—£oro 'Rates spend their honeymoon at Denver and May 25, for Miss Wilinsky and her Women's Benevolent Society Monday JHlc—AT. 4818. Salt Lake City before going to San' fiance. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bonoff The Hatikvow Girls' club will hold evening, June 8, at the K. C Hall, Francisco, Calif., where they will entertained at the Brandeis Tea Rooms a meeting Sunday, June 7, at the at 8th and Broadway* make their home. last Saturday evening. Monday aft- Jewish Community Center. Plans for Mrs. Joe Levey, of Chicago, DL, ar-: Miss Rosen returned Friday from ernoon Miss Janet Gilinsky gave a a picnic to be held Sunday, June 14, rived last week to visit with her; St. Joseph and Kansas City, Mo., luncheon at the Brandeis Tea Rooms at Valley, Nebr., will be discussed. daughter, Mrs. Phil Friedman. where she was extensively enter- for Miss Wilinsky. Miss Rina Snyder The Jewish National Ladies' Protained. Her hostess here since her re- entertained the following afternoon at Mr. and Mrs. Herman" Krasne and turn was Miss Edith Kenyon, who a luncheon at her home. The Mes- gressive club will meet this Saturday entertained at a bridge at her home dames Ed. Abraham and H. Greene at the home of Mrs. M. J. 'Cohen, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hirsch are leaving Sunday evening for Ann Arbor, Sunday afternoon, May 31. This were hostesses at a luncheon at the 2116 North Twenty-first street. • Mich., where they will attend the Sunday afternoon Miss Esther Brown Brandeis Tea Rooms Wednesday aftis entertaining at her home, honoring ernoon. Wednesday evening Mrs. I*' The local Poali-Zion club are mak- graduation of Mr. and Mrs. Krasne's Miss Rosen. Other hostesses who are Kulakofsky entertained at a buffet ing' plans to give the four-act play, son, Millard Krasne, from the Uniplanning affairs for this June bride supper at her home. This afternoon "Everybody With His God," during versity of Michigan, on June 15. are the Mesdames Sam Leon and A. the Mesdames Morris and Harry Ru- the month of September. The PoaliMrs. Max Darling entertained at Marowitz, who will entertain at a tea benstein will entertain at a luncheon Zion club meet every Wednesday even- four tables of bridge Sunday evening ing at the Jewish Community Center. at the Blackstone "Hotel on Wednes- at the Brandeis Tea Rooms, and this in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Abe Friedday afternoo4J^JjmeJL7r- Monday aft- evening Mr. and-Mrs. A. Jinn off will The Junior Daughters of Zion held of Harlan, Iowa. ernoon, June .15, Mrs. Sam Appleman entertain at a dinner at their home an election of officers Sunday after- man, is giving a bridge luncheon at her honoring Miss. Wilinsky and her fi- noon, May 31, at the Jewish CommuMr. Milton Marcus, a Junior at the '••••'-.••' home, complimentary to Miss Rosen. ance. nity Center. The following were Abraham Lincoln High School, left elected to office: Sophie Ban, pres- Tuesday for Gary, Indiana, to comident; Mildred Shrago, vice president; pete in the National Bank Contest. Numerous affairs are being given Mrs.. M. Tatle and daughter, Gertrude, 'left~Sjffiaay afternoon for: St. for Miss Rose Fellman, who is soon Freda Weiner, secretary; Mary Claire Miss Helen Whitebook, Mr. Heimie Josephj Mo., where they will visit with to become the bride of Mr, Robert; I. Shames, reporter; Mamie Temin and Brown, students of the Thomas JefHattie Grolnick, sergeant-at-arms; ferson High School, are leaving this Mrs. Tatle's daughter, Mrs. Joseph Marer, of this city. and Sophie Spar and Sadie Drevich, evening also to compete in the conW. Iaebowitz, and Mr. Liebowitz. A series of luncheons are being givAfter visiting jn St. Joseph they will en jn her honor by Mrs.'Charles Lev- members of the executive committee. test. leave for > Excelsior Springs, Mo., inson at her home. The first of the Sunday afternoon, June 7, the club Miss Gertrude Kroloff will arrive •where they will spend several weeks. I s e r i e s w a s g i v e n l a s t Thursday after- will entertain at a party in honor of home Sunday from Los Angeles, CaL, seven members who are graduating ? r . Barney M. Kully is leaving Sun- noon. noon. On Wednesday afternoon Mrs. from High School -this June. The where she attended school. She will day for Europe. He will return to Levinson was hostess at the second party will be held at the home of Miss of her series, and is again entertain- Dorothy Abrams. Those who are Omaha August 15. ing the coming week. Miss Helen graduating are Rose Ginsburg, Sadie -The dosing exercises of the Temple Marer, of Indianapolis, Ind., sister of Drevich, Mamie Temin, Jennie KosGIFTS THAT LAST Israel Sunday School will be held this Mrs. Levinson, shared honors with owsky, and Mildred Shrago. Sunday morning at ten o'clock at the Miss Fellman at the luncheon WednesTemple. The children of the Sunday day afternoon. Miss Ann Fanger is School will hold the annual Flower entertaining at a luncheon at the THORPEIAN NEWS. Serviee. Pupils who-have been high Brandeis Tea Rooms Saturday noon Diamond Importers Next Thursday, June 11, the Thoriir attendance during the past semes- complimentary to Miss Fellman, and peian Athletic club will Hold its third Platinum Specialists ter will be awarded gold buttons. also for Miss Marer. Sunday after- of a series of dances at the Hanscom ]\TEW LOCATION Miss Bernice Kully will entertain noon Miss Sara Brodkey will be hos- Park Pavilion. Mr. A. Meyers has 214-15-16 City Nat. Bank Bldg. secured the "Y" orchestra to furnish tess at Mah Jong at her home in the T. E. D. club of Lincoln. The Ja. 5619—Est. 1894. one sees smartly dressed women -weani recent hostesses for the members of honor of Miss Fellman, and on the the music. The club has appointed a committee the T. E. D. were the Misses Ida Fine following Saturday afternoon Miss considered correct for those -who are not enHelen Levinsn is giving a tea at her and Rebecca Siegel. home for Miss Fellman and Miss Magaged in the out-of-door sports they watch. Hiss Rhea Nackinoff was hostess rer. . - ' • ' • • to the Hajobls" Bridge club at her NEW MODERATE PRICED DEPT. Hostesses during the past week for home Tuesday evening. Prizes were won by the Misses Ann Rosenbluzn Miss Pearl Wintroub, who is to be worn by the fasb.ioik»l>!t married June 14 to Mr. Jack Harwich, and Jennie Krestul. The jumper dress, left above, is one of the smartwilk •••ery type of (Ujrtiu* were Miss Ruth Wintroub, who enest of youthful sports models. Of soft blue washMrs. Harry. M. Levin and daugh- tertained the bridal party at her home costHtne; -white ailks and able silk broadcloths with tie and other trimmings ter, Harriet Phyllis, of Sioux City, Tuesday evening at bridge; Mr. and cotton*, with short sleeves presents la., spent the week-end in Omaha Mrs. I. Gerber entertained at four taor long, -wiih sports clothes of light gray; of narrow striped crepe de chine, With Mrs. Levin's parents, Mr. and bles of bridge at their home last kn<3 street app &r«l. The white and pink, blue and white, or red and black, Mrs. M. Horn. : •mart slip-oa style with tk« Thursday evening complimentary to the skirt striped vertically, the blouse horizontally. edge acallope<5, of B U H O Miss Wintroub and Mr. Hurwich, and Miss Rose Fellman and fiance, Mr. «ju»litj- -which really 4o«* on Sunday evening Miss Ida Cahn Robert I. Marer, are entertaining at wash. Also washable white entertained at five tables of bridge a dancing party Wednesday evening, doeskin. • at her home. June 10, at the Hanscom Park Pavilion, in honor of Miss Helen Marer, Very Lone Priced QJianson, of Indianapolis, Ind., who is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Morris Cohn had as here. ' : their past week-end visitors, Mr. and —at— Blue dotted tan with Irish lace dyed to match the Mrs. H. Garson and Miss Lillian" Seiddots, and front fullness in the skirt—such a frock Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Skalowsky, of —short, wide and unfringed, "Norfolk, Nebr., announce the birth of man, of Lincoln, Nebr. may be worn on practically any informal daytime these new crepe de chine baby son, born Tuesday, May 26. Mrs. scarfs of vivid coloring in occasion. Many of these crepe frocks will appear Mr. and Mrs. J. Goodbinder will Skalowsky was formerly Miss Grace receive at -their, home Sunday afterconventionalized patterns. at the races. _ _ ^ j l : Landi, of Omaha. noon from 2 to 5, and in the evening Mr» and Mrs. G. Berg will celebrate from 7 to 10, at their home in honor their twenty-fifth -wedding anniver- of their son, Hyman, who is being •A. slender pump that is flattering sary Sunday evening, June 7, at the confirmed Saturday at the B*nai to the foot. A bit of Boring cleverIsrael Synagogue. l y concealed for tailored bow griT«« Labor Lyceum. More than fifty inThe smart fashion of wearing tailored white coats These. Three Prices Only i t a suns, trim i i t . The quality *>I vitations have been issued. A num"Wlrite Kid is utmsTjal in m t h a lowover vivid prints, or frocks of plain colored crepe, Mr. Max Morris, accompanied by priced modsL Obtainable with hich Two large, fiat pearls, apJn This Department ber of out-of-town guests are exik or demi-Slisnish his granddaughter, Charlotte Heyn, is a smart ene that began at the winter resorts parently without settingsr pected to arrive the latter part of this 1 leave Omaha Saturday, June 6, to •re smartly worn ©n pUi* and has been taken up for the summertime. Donweek-to attend the entertainment. spend the summer with Mr. Morris' small felt and batkgkok ble breasted white coats of basket weave doth, Carriage Paid on Catii Mail hat*. A white pearl with Mrs. . Elizabeth Pearlman enter- daughters, Mrs. Charles Kay and Mrs. and of "white flannel, with black velvet collar. Orders, Prompt Service A»one of rout, orchid, blue, tained, at a luncheon at the Brandeis Louis M. Levy, at Minneapolis, Minn. sured. mauve or peach. Tea Rooms Wednesday afternoon in Mrs. A. Levin entertained at a farehonor of her- daughter, Mrs. J. D. 1.00 . . . . . . Tkird Floor. Kendis, of Sadalia, Mo-, who with, her well party Monday afternoon at her 307 South 16th St—Take Elevator home in honor of Mrs. M. Chasson, daughter, Evelyn Rosalie, are visiting here' for several weeks at the Pearl- who is leaving next Sunday to make *TkeBest Plate toShop.'Atfer AlV* her home in- G&CK. man, home, .

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JEWISH PRESS—THURSDAY, JUNE-4, "How big is babyr Selina would demand, senselessly. *^How Wg'Is my

It

devolving ujpon'the adult*jplnd. - She nlng as'to smile. In the investment two hundred Jewish settlers in the selected clothes.- She-ruled her fath- business, he explained. Stocks and neighborhood be taken away from that kind of thing. A widower. Miss them. Similar meetings were held in the villages of Meschtscente.and.TarFlster said, yes, she understood. Simeon Peake had tad nothing of nawate. These decisions are accomth* look of the professional gambler, of panied by a general anti-Semitic agithe day. The wide slouch hat, the flow- tation against the Jewish settlers. ing moustache, the glittering eye, the Groups of Ukrainian peasants aptoo-bright boots, the gay cravat, ail were missing In Simeon. Peake's make- peared in the fields and settlements up. True, he did sport a singularly of the Jewish colonists. clear white diamond pin in his shirt front; and his hat he wore Jnst a little on one side. But then, these both were W. R. Weaver Ben Clvln in the male mode and quite commonly Web. 1011 Ja. 1263 seen. For the rest he seemed a mild WEAVER & CIVIN and suave man, slim, a trifle diffident, At. 807? speaking Beldom and then with a New 723 W. O. \V. Bldg. England drawl by which he had come Architects and Engineers honestly enough, Vermont Peake that | "Let us plan your home or building". Plans Estimates he was. (To be concluded next week.)

"Tne child would momentarily' ceswe to poke plump fingers into the rich black loam. He would smile a gummyBy HARBYCONZTEL •• though slightly weary smile and stretch (Copyrtgtrt lU2s' by- Be fen Arti' ' 'wide his arms. She, too; would open Feature, Syndicate.). her tired arms wide, wide. Then they would say in a duet, his month ^:pucfc-, ered pink petal, hers quivering > with •&N O P E N tenderness and, a certain - amusement, "So-o-o-o big!" with the voice Boarlng T O T H E BASE ALL on the prolonged vowel and dropping M A G N A T E S y; ' • ••'; -•": : ; suddenly with thejsecond word. Part Gentlemen: ' ' ' of the game.., She.,would run to him, There ate rumors among Jewish and swoop down up*n him, and bury baseball. fans that Jewishv baseballher flushed face in the warm moist players. are being discrijB?nated creases of his neck, and make as , against in the Major leagues. I have though to devour him. "So big!" ...received^ a number of letters from ILLUSTRATIONS ..various parts of the country, in which But of course he wasn't He wasn't BY CLARK AQNEW. ^ the ."same cry of "where are :the Jewas big as that. In fact, he never betish ballplayers?" is repeated — in Copyright by came as big as the wide-stretched arms -practically theh same language. of her love and imagination would have Doubleday, Fags & Co. : ; Claims are put forward! that basehad him. Ton would have thought she SOUTH RUSSIAN PEASANTS "WNU Service. ,:ball;magnates' do not care to carryshould have been satisfied when, in OPPOSE JEWISH SETTLERS • Jewish names on their club rosters, It is a great distinction for Miss DeJong. in all its Jeon'sbnqotftl dishar- later years, he was the Dirk DeJong Riga- (J. T. A.) Disquieting re- ] that; players with Jewish!names Jare as "the female O. mony, he had remained -until. he was whose name you saw (engraved) at the :!v indirectly-forced to change them," that Ferber to be known Jlenr.y," ports with regard to the safety of because team managers are oppqaed to Jewt h e r e probably a ten-year-old schoolboy,, iix, that In- top of heavy cream linen paper, so Jewish settlers in oviet Russia were n e v e r w a s a credibly Dutch district soutWest of rich and thick and stiff as to Jiave the ish players, on the ground that the greater writer "of Chicago known first &4 New. Holland effect of-being starched and ironed by received Iiere. According to these reother members of the team wo,uld obshort stories In ports, a special meeting of Ukrainject,: that these discriminations are America than O. and later as High Prairie. A-t ten, by some coBtly American business process; Henry. When the dint of fists, teeth," copper-toed boots, whose clothes were made by Peter well known to the semi-rprofessional ian peasants assembled in the vilworld was shocked •ranks, and that the Jewish college by his untimely and temper, Dirk DeJong. ''. \1 : Peel, the English tailor; whose roadlage of Inskowo in the neighborhood death, it became •or semi-professional players are^"thereThe nickname ;hadvrEpriing.;tip from ster ran on a French chassis; whose She Read Abeorbedly Books Found^In of Odessa and decided to send a delea favorite subject forenot even trying to break into of discussion of dscusson in he early and idiotic question invariably wants were served by a - Japanese gation to the Communist authorities, the big leagues, knowing that it is a di d pubBoaniinsf House Parlors. reading and lishing: circles as put to babies and: answered by- them, houseman; whose life, in short, was hopeless task. • :-•,'-• demanding that the soil granted to that of a successful citizen of the to- the a u t h o r . I am enumerating these charges as worthy to;fillhis with infinite patience, "through the republic. . But she wasn't. Not only er.: She read absorbedly books fcnmd In boarding-house parlors, In hotels; in place. The whole years of their Infancy. '.'. . they have reached me—{without venwas she dissatisfied: she was at once such public libraries as tile times aflist of male writ-Sellna DeJong,' darting Expertly turing any opinion. Personally,-1 am t era was reviewed Temptation Besets You without settling about her kitchen/,from rwashtub to remorseful and indignant, as through forded. She was alone for hours a inclined to-discount alLthese accusawith any degree baking board, from-stove ;to taUle, or, she, Sellna DeJong, the vegetable ped- day,- ""daily-i. Frequently her father, tions, as childish, and unfounded. It When You Enter of unanimity upon had been, partly to blame for this fearful of loneliness for her, brought, ,is known to me that John McGraw, one big enough in if at work In the fields of the truck ler, Edna Ferber. success of his,, and partly cheated a literary way to the sterling leader of -the New. York her an armful of books and she had an CANDIES ICE CREAM the O.- Henry mantle. Someone farm, straightening-the-numbed back National League Baseball Club, has wear orgy, dipping and swooping about suggested that the list of women be for a moment's respit'srfrom*'thVclose- by it. LUNCHES : at some, time officially '-declared that tried, and immediately the name of set rows of carrots, turnips," "spinach, When Selina DeJong had been Selina among'them" in a sort of gourmand's Ferber sprang into many minds. he is after a Jewish player, because Edna Peake she had lived in Chicago with ecstasy of indecision. In this way, at Hundreds of critics, editors and other! or beets over which, she" was" laboring, he considered it a very gopd proposi- authorities agreed that she came nearher father. They had lived in many she knew tbe writings of Bytion, to attract the Jewish, fans to the er representing the O. Henry type of would wipe,the sweat'beads-from nose .other cities as well. In Denver during fifteen, ron, Jane Austen, Dickens, Charlotte genius than any other American writer. and forehead with'aquick dock of her park. This "Wisconsin woman, still youngr, the rampant '80s. In New York when Bronte, Felicia Hemans. 16th and Farnam Streets Other reasons also prompt me to Is an educational product of the pub- head In the crock >of her 'jient arm. Selina was twelve. In Milwaukee Those great fine dark t eyes of hers lic schools and of newspaper offices. Her three dark years—from nine to believe 'that Major League clubs She was born In Kalamazoo and was There was even a San Fran- twelve—wei;e spent with her two maidCrystal Candy Company T should rather welcome Jewish play- a reporter on the Appleton (Wis.) Dally would regard the child perched taper- briefly. at seventeen. She must have manently on a little :heap of:empty po- cisco interlude which was always a lit- en aunts, the Misses Sarah and Abble \ ers'as assets. .,'-., ,/: Crescent 16th and Capitol Ave. an unusually capable city editor, tle sketchy in Selina's mind and which However, I do riot take any stand. had because she learned first of all to be a tato sacks, one of whieh- comprised had ended in a departure so hurried Peake, to the dim, prim Vermont I believe that it is up*to you gentle- good reporter. Writing ability she had his costume. Selina' D,eJ6ng-had little Peake house from which her father, but all stories show more time for the egression-of-affection. as to bewilder even Selina who had the,black sheep, had run away whenmen to solve the puzzle of ."where naturally, than anything else the keen observer are the .Jewish baseball- players?" and reporter. Her fertility of ideas Is The work was always hot at-her heels. learned to accept sudden comings and a boy. • After her mother's death Simamazing and, like O. Henry, she can abrupt-goings without question. "BusiThe floor is yours. take a simple Incident and weave a You saw a young jyoman/^ln-a blue ness," her father-always said. "Little eon Peake had sent his little daughter - '•' ' ' Sincerely yours, "•"• calico dress, faded and^earth'girimed. back east: in a fit of remorse and temfascinating tale around it. . HARRY CONZEL. She extended her newspaper experiher eyes was. a driven look deal." She never'Tsnew until the day of porary helplessness on his part and a OCK TKfiATJttJtNT WIUL ence on the Milwaukee Journal and Between CONVINCE: YOU O F OCK the Chicago Tribune and then decided as of one who walks always a little his death how literally, tbe word deal spurt of-" forgiveness and churchly SINCBRITX. to write for the magazines. Her in- ahead of herself in her baste; Her :Was applicable to? his business transac- charity on the part of his two sisters. dustry seems to be Indefatigable. At dark abundant hair was skewered into tions. Simeon Peake, traveling the counTrust Department. The two. wemen were incredibly drawn one time she was writing short stories Safety Deposit BaXes. King Solomoni-the Jewish-heavy- for'practically every important maga- a utilitarian knob from- which soft try .with his lftlleitfaughter, was a gam- in' the pattern of tbe New England in the United States. Her output loops and strands were. constantly es- bler by profession, .temperament, and spinster • of' fiction. Mitts, preserves, weight, boxer, is confident, to say the zine during the paist ten or twelve years 1 least. In the midst of shis training indicates about ft. story a day, and all chilly"best room, solemn and ones, too; stories which the edi- caplng, to be pushed back by that same !-natural, talents.-!;AVhen in luck they Bible,"" for his fight against. Jack; Renault; gopd kltteijless cat, order, little-girls-mustn't. harried ducking gesture of head andi|.lived, royally, stopping,at the best tors were glad to get and pay good on June 19, he has decided thai he money for. And during this remark' eating strange, succulent sea- They smelled -of apples—of withered THE BRINK & JENSEN CO. needs immediate action. No "sooner ably prolific, period she found time to bent arm. Her hands, for mch use, tel's. Wnolesale paper were 'usually too crusted and inground viands, going to the. play, driving in appl'es that have rotted at the core. eight or ten novels. resolved-than he has signed to meet write distributors for Knowing ones among the critics of hired rigs (always with two horses. If with' tbe soil Into which she was delvthe dangerous Romero Rojas fr<Jm .novels have been saying for several Something "of this she must havaf Simeon Peake had not enough money Northern ToHet Tissue Chile, on June.5. :So the match, Sol- - years, "Watch Edna Ferber." Her nov- ing. You saw a child of perhaps two el. "Cheertul^-By •Request," attracted "years,''dirt-streaked, sunburned, and foe a two-horse, equipage he walked). conveyed, in her • desperation, to her omon, vs. Eojas, is on. 'nn> Haraey Street father,in an xmcensored letter. "Withwide attention. "The Girls." was hailed • What will happen if Solomon loses? as a genuine achievement. There was generally" otherwise defaces by those When fortune hid her face they lived out warning'he had come for her,-and AT-lantic 6409 It-will mean no Renault fighfand no a continued forward movement In bumps, bttee, scratches, and contusions in boarding houses, ate boarding-house at sight of him she had been guilty of "Gigolo" and "Half Portions." In 1924 other purses in .American dollars., came "So Big."- which "has been greeted that are the common lot of the farm meals, wore the. clothes bought when : We spoke to Solomon thebthefday. with superlative praise on all sides. child of a mother harried by work. fortune's breath .was balmy. During all the only fit of hysterja that marked her- life,-before or after the episode. It developed into about the most He is. a quiet, unassuming/fine'-lopk- That novel of the year occasioned Yet, - In- that mo jnent, a* the woman this time Sellna.pttended schools, good, " SOj then, from twelve to nineteen ing-giant. English is, not;his forte, successful no surprise among those who had been looked at the child there In the warm bad, private, public, with surprising she was happy. They had come to so he does not speak much.- Solomon devoted followers of "the female Q; regularity considering her nomadic ex. ',/ ^ . . : ', . iholstsflprinfj of'the Illinois prairie land, is very much Jewish. "He has been in Henry."'. She had.a beautiful time. Ex- Chicago in 1SS5, 'when she was sixteen. or In the cluttered kitchen of the farm- istence. ..-. Palestine, and knows all about Jewish, "Manufactured in Omaha" cept for three years, to recall which There'they remained. Selina attended hduseVthere quivered and vibrated be- was to her questions.- He told us: ' : Miss Pister's Select School for Young like entering a sombre icy Chqpter• J . tweenY them' and all abount them an room OD leaving, a warm and glowing Ladtes. .-AVh/en her father brought her BAKER ICE MACHINE CO. " I know that the Jews of/this'counaura, a glow, that imparted to them try, are very-much interested in my he had raised quite a flutter in Until /he was'almost ten the name and their surroundings a mystery, a one, her life was free, interesting, there debut. It must be because I have the TiSter, breast^-so soft-spoken was v varied. She made decisions usually stuck to hlm. He had literally to fight come out plainly and frankly ""as" a beauty, a radiance. ' __ he, so gentle, so sad-appearing, so winJewish boxer. I feel that my racial his Av«y free of. it. Froni So Btg (of attributes are essentially Jewish, and fond and Infantile derivation) -It had EXPERT ACCOUNTANTS I want to stand or fall as a Jewish been condensed into Soblg. Apd Sobig INCOME REPORTS fighter. -; ; 1 "No, I do not; claim to be the bestknocked out in a" boxing bout, but fighter in; the world. .All I.' say is be it- is doubly or trebly exasperating that I can make it hot for ariybodyr when 403 Karbacb Block Phone AT. 1892 victor is a puny little Heand after a few American fights in brew your legionnaire. ' I had never been my belt, I/will be ready for the bat-in the ring, but I thought the thing tle of my life—be it against Demp- looked easy when 'during division sey or Wills." •.:••• ^ behind the Somme front,;in Of course, these.wordsidid not come sports 1916, a little Jewish boversent out fluently. They had to;be dragged an challenge to all Belforth in Spanish, French and "English. gianunqualified troops in the neighborhood. We saw Solomon go through his daily "I don't recall the Jewish boy's training, and after which we came to name, but I still" see his smiling face ^WEBSTER the conclusion that King Solomon,has U2O a lot to learn yet, but he is a hard as he danced around me like a-young man to beat. Solomon ;may. not whirlwind; There was .not the remotknock out Rojas or Renault} before- est chance i of landing one punch. -To long, however, he will be very., much this day-1 believe I could have given in demand by the many boxing clubs him becoming punishment, if he had of this country, because the Jewish only stayed put. Fate had a differ"Kean Keeps Klothes Klean" "would be champion" is colorfql and ent trick in store for me. To the KEAN KLEANERS rousing cheers of about 10,000 Canahas a big-"fighting heart.' BAKNEX K3E3AN, Mgr. dians and as many Belgians I entered the ring. I advanced boldly to meet 306 South Eighteenth Street BRAVO— ' m y opponent, and received a punch T i e Coort House Is Opposite behind the 'ears.. Whirling; around HARRY CONZEL O rhone JA ckson 1187—We'll CaU One of the mopt active, and erudite with what T- thought- was lightning journalists in this, country sentr-us a y speed, I_prepared to-meet my oppoletter which deserves attention, even I nentf' That ^fellow did not need'any if itronly. confirms ''what., we have been] preparation, apparently, for^ I ; w a s saying for a;long time:' ''•'-•" •:-> • *•rudely '| shocked into - a sense of ap^ "Dear Mr;, .Conzelr. , -, . . proaching -disaster when... I, got .'.anr WHOLESALE "I follow your sport column, and other staggering- blow. Fortunately,' find it very interesting indeed. * It is the agony .was not prolonged. -A: merDruggists and Stationers interesting to read about young Jews ciful iippercut sent "me\down .for the M1-403-4W SOBtb 10tb Btnwt and , Jewesses displaying- "physical count to the'. eternal degradation of strength and' athletic .skill,, who .thus the Belgian army.. I made some .in3 disprove the claims • of the 'anti^Se^ quiry; later in lijfe and learned that mitea that ye are, an'inferior race,' myi.opponent, was a student "in a - physically, and a cowardly people. If Western. Canad^n, College, - but has the,.column. youso ably-conduct-will since'gone t^Palestine as a pioneer.; contributed to. arousing ,the- interest of Pit^;tBe:.A'ra^or Turk'that getsJ'in Distributors of the Jew in.sport, you;^will.no* doubt, render ai great 'service to r our people, Western Bond-^and High AT Untie 5242 '; for :what, we now need inost>'for -otfr SPORT BREVITIES ^ 20th and Harney i Grade Stationery < struggle . for existence; is' physical -A. Michelson of the; Cignet^A. G,, Omaha. Nebraska. strength. ^ We have a superabundance New Ydrk, hasl: graduated-as one'of of-mind; -we have plenty of intellec- the best marathon runners of the tual and artistic talent^bu.t not enough New York district. In the Evening developed physical strength. :AriS; now Graphic Marathon "race won by W. ' wevneed j t more than ever.. ;In.this Eitola, A. Michelson finished fifth in country we need-it for our ownigoojl the splendid.time, of .1-hour, 11 min'and health j . in Europe !;wev need^it 1» utes, 26 seconds. This is -the first •. be': able to defend ourselves "in case of important race in which Michelson attack; whiles in Palestine -w<e nee_d| it participated. 350 Rooms—350 Baths to^be : able to build «j>' the couptry. Bates 52^0 to $4.50 "Louis" Shulman; is the Ohio State ; The more, we cultivate; the sportp.the University champion swimmer. ' Rebetterfor bur present and future. cently he won the hjgh-point score in -- : Grant/P. Ward's annual acquatic car: , : > ;r Yours cordially, W -~-.. "DR~ S." M. :MEtAM^p."i •' nival. 'He won the 40 yard breast stroke and the 4O.yard umbrella race. JEOTSHt S^ORT ASH Shulman should -be • ready to • enter some national competition. ^i^SBEN^B^'-A-lSX^N-, Harold M. Abrahams,, the Olympic •••i:r''>-1>Ker»'-y^^':'"Pa^seni---;tlie-vfaSpous' winner, is in- hard luck. After • a long, ^tolnromHt of; thi? New 'Yorkl'Evening and much .heeded rest, he re-entered •^?W6rld • aiid a •number of bthe|* im- competition several weeks rago and : injured his right leg,Hwhile competing %o1-tarit^dai^ in the .running; broad; jump: "event c t i -VS'Sy; sieii^s-xis an mtere^tmg;item;rVan Stamford Bridge. Abrahams, besides ; ^Paassehv? a^^npn^eW'" whose m>lunin, ib'eiii^Qie: world^^ cKahipion^^"sprint^rv is a jnild sensation- day-by-day; iilnk a.ffee ittl^aroxmd a^ieteV^^w S tioSatfy *^hft ^Worlo?s is.: crepine . 1307 Howard St. At. 8028 -known«Winapw^'; - for his* liberal an* ways^.Jhe! high-poiiit- scorezr pf^th' wthbritative. views ; m European, and l:Cai^$ria^a^fetic;t^]m^'!j>=-r*--': <^ Omaha, Xcor. jgaetJcan politics* literature, art.and "Jwfia^iiefciii ture= Syndicate.)

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f OURS AND EIGHTS

chief consideration for 16

T determination to so buikl the -Hupmobile that it will do the very utmost that a good car should do, ^rilliantly, and over the longest possible period—at the lowest possible outlay.

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7^T accounts for the Hupmobile as . r i-vilt is today—that is why the public ':^believes and says that "itpays to own h : 'a Jfjupmobile."

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HllBwart Motor

.

Allowing 20 days in Holy" Land and Egypt STOPOVER AT NAPLES. NEXT SAILINGS

MAY

11 — JULY 9

HISTORICAL U. S. MAIL S. S.

"PRESIDENT ARTHUR" FARE—ROUND TRIP Second Class

First Class

$325 Up

$550

Up

Strictly Kosher — Synagogue — Movies

AMERICAN PALESTINE 1493 Broadway, N. Y (at 43rd St.)

Call us for good

LUMBER mCKLIN LUMBER CO. 24th & Burdette Sts.

WE. 5555

WASH AND KEEP WELL A RULE OF HEALTH FRONTIER TOWEL SUPPLY 1818 California Street.

MRB C8EAMERY CO. BUTTER and EGGS..^ Council Bluffs, Is* ?• - W

Dayton Scales and Slicers LOUIS ADLER, Mgr. 510 So. 10th St. Jackson S332

BEE ENGRAVING COMPANY E. SCHERER

AT-1000

MET.

E. E. Bruce & Co.

Carpenter Paper Co.

HOTEL FONTENELLE

We Print

—Effectively .—Accurately —Promptly Interstate Printing Co.

unpleasant experience *°"

K-

Phone JA ckson 0043

SAM NEWMAN Painting and Decorating LET TJS BED FOR XOTJ OUR WORK GUARANTEED

214 South 18th St.

Omaha, Nebr.

NAT MEISTER writes all kinds of

INSURANCE SERVICE WITH EACH PO1.ICX. 711 W. O. VT. Bids:. Jackson 131S.

HULSE & RIEPEN Funeral Directors 2224 Cuming St. Phone JA ckson 1226.

PAXTON-MITCHELL CO.

k

27th and MartliB S{». BA. ^ atanntsntarvre of Brass, Bron««>; Alnmlnnm and Soft Gray Iron Casting*, we machine notn« from evnry '"•"* tn Ion are assnred at eoft castings, «• >nr ewn shop, Standard size cast Iron and bronm> ooshtnrro tn stock.

PPepper, er, Vl«*-P»«l«ss*. C M Becrrtarr. T. G. C

Omaha Fixture & Supply Co. COMPLETE STORES AND OFFICE OUTFITTERS TO,0(W

BnOv

tQaam that

E1<!TcsKtt> a n d tTZ*

OMAHA. NT5B.


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