September 17, 1925: Rosh Hashanah Edition

Page 1

_ Success or.failure In "business is <aused more : by mental attitude even .than by mental capac-. ities. — Walter Dill Scott.

The cynic is one who knows -the pr%e of jr t h i n g and the « e of nothing.— i}scnr Wilde.

II VOL. IV—No. 41

Entete m postofii o

High Holiday Services W t Be Observed h Synagogues and Temple Services Will Begin On Friday ,':.'••' Evening SPECIAL SERMONS PREPABED BY RABBIS

cond-claat mall amtter on January 27th, UJ21, at n b JS'ebratfca,untlei me Act ol March 8. 1878.

VGUE OF NATIONAL MINORITIES, REPRESENTING 30,000,000, PLANNED Geneva. (J..T. A.) A league of National minorities, representing not lessthatt' 30,000;000 people, living in various European countries, will be established - here -by the leaders - of the various national minorities. The; inaugural meeting of the League of Minorities will take place herer after the assembly of the League of Nations will be closed. The League of Minorities will, establish offices in Geneva in ordei to keep jn dose touch with-the League of Nations. Whether the Jews will participate in this League hat not yet been decided.

OMAHA, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1925

British Secretary Denies Anti-Semitism Moulds His Policies Denies Charges That There Is Discrimination Against Jews SECRETARY ADDRESSES COMMANDER KEN WORTHY

Dr. Gamoran Says Jewish EducatioR Centers Changing This fesue of "THE JEWISH PRESS" contains sixteen,pages and is divMed into two sections. " The special New Year Greetings are on page 6. Other Greetings are throughout the paper. "The Jewish Press" sends greetings to all for a Happy and Prosperous NewYear. • -

Moving From Eastern Europe to America and Palestine IMPOSES DUTY ON JEWRY OF AMERICA

SUBSKIPTION PRICE. A YEAR, $2.50 MKRACHI AND HITACHDUTH MAY HAVE REPRESENTATION IN THE ZIONIST EXECUTIVE London. (J. T. A.) The new Zionist Executive which is to be formed by Dr. Weizmaim and Nshum Solokow may include representatives of the Hituchduth and the Mizrachi, the two groups which caused the deadlock at the Congress. The Hitachduth and Mizrachi previously decided not to send their represenatives to the Executive. At the last meeting, however, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency learns, the organizationsdecided to reconsider their previous decision and instructed their representatives to act in accordance with the situation.

Cincinnati,—(J. T. A.)—The center London. (J. T. A.). Sir Joynspnof Jewish education is moving from Hicks, British Home Secretary, again Central and Eastern Europe to Amerdisovowed the assertion that "he is ica and Palestine, according to Dr. influenced by anti-Semitic reasons in Emanuel Gamoran, educational direcquestions of naturalization ^nd -treattor of the Union of American Hebrew ment of foreigners in Great Britain.. Congregations, who has Just returned The statement of the Home Secreform a year's travel through! Europe, tary came as a result, of an article Palestine," Asia "and Africa;; On his on the "Alien Question in England" trip, Dr. Gamoran, who wak^accomby lieutenant Commander J.M. Kenpanied by his wife, made observation worthy, M. P., son of Lord Straboigi, on the progress of Jewish education in which was "released* through the Jewthe lands u-here Jewish populations Travelling the Country Soliciting Letter To Menorah by Famous Poet ish' Telegraphic Agency in Great Bri-were once large, and it is his opinion Shows Discrinination Money from Jews. tain and'in America. that the burden of solving the problem "My attention has been drawn to of Je-wish education.will rest largely New York—la a letter to the editor your article released by the Jewish Omaha Lodge No. S54, I. O. B. B., is of the Menorah Journal, John Gould Telegraphic Agency," the Home Sec- Appointed Members to Serve on on American Jewry. in receipt of a notice from headCommittees. ,FJ|etcher, English poet and critic, de- retary •wrote in his letter to Lieu"Eeven a casual observation of Jew- quarters of District Grand Lodge No. clares that the Encyclopedia Brittani- tenant Ken-worthy. "Where the. articish life in Eastern Europe and Pales- 6 informing the members of the local At the annual election of officers of tine has far reaching implications for B'nai B'rith to be aware of two colca publications intentionally omit' all references to Jewish achievement He les is not offensive it is incorrect, and the Temple Israel .Congregation! held us in America, "Dr. Gamoran stated, ored men who are travelling throughis the author of a section on "New where it is not incorrect, it i$ offen- Sunday afternoon,^September 13, Mr. "For the last century especially, we out the country as rabbis and who . Harry Z, Rosenfeld nras elected pres- have been accustomed to look to EastPoetry" in "These Eventful Years," a sive," it says. The Home. Secretary denies abso- ident. He succeeds5 Mr. J. B. Ratz. ern Europe a s : the place where the are collecting funds for a synagogue book recently published by the BrifcIn New' Jersey. According to the tanica Co. Referring to the protest lutely the "charge made by lieutenant Mr. Henry Rosenthal was elected vice- most intensive Jewish life is to be notice, representatives of this order that was made by Jews upon the ap- Kenworthy that "it is to be feared in president; Mr. Louis'Hiller, treasurer; found. Anyone who wanted to study "were refused a permit to collect pearance of the volume, Fletcher some cases that there is religious Mr. Emil Ganz, secretary; and Messrs. Jewish Religion Life where it is in- funds in New Jersey and the Newsays: "In my original article I men- discrimination against those* profess- Herbert Heavetricb,- Sol Degen, Sel- tensive would go to Russia or Poland York charities have ordered them not wyn Jacobs, Dave Rosenstock, Harry or Galicia. The intensive system of tioned the names of at least a dozen ing the Jewish faith." to solicit there. "There is no discrimination against Jews who had written poetry of imRachman, and Herbert A m s t e ^ l Jewish education under the Heder, These colored men have Jewish portance in -France, Germany, Eng- those prdfessing the Jewish faith' In trustees. • .•/:'{ > ' Talmud Torah and Yeshibah was a names and can read and translate land, ;and America.- After my article th& -administration of the law with Mr. Rosenfetd appointed the follow- source of inspiration to those who felt was accepted, and paid for, I learned regard to the admission of aliens. ing committees to. serve this! year: . that Western Europe and America both Hebrew and Yiddish. On some witE surprise that it was to be short- No- question °* religious persuasion \V«Mr»hip—Henry•-" Eosenthal, Chairman: have been neglecting their duties yn&i occasions they have women solicitors. They were recently in a Chicago Hea-reBTich, Harry Bachmau and ened, and as J parted with the CSPJJ- has ever arisen. Whether the alien Herbert Dr. Frederick -Coin. ; regard to Jewish education. court in defense ©f a "Miss Miller". right, I could notfprotest. Practiealjy professes, the Jewish faith or any Sunday Scboo]—Herbert Heavenricb, Ciiair- •"Of late,, however, important' H y iiesfeatial aiul n i H i ul LouJs Hiller. Hir. colored solicitor, who was arrested every jew was/cut' but'ofthe article. other faith, rit iiever influences - the Finance—Dave E Eu«e«Btoct, Cbninuaut changes: have ta^ea place in Eastern on protest of several Jewish men, but XiOUig X i O g Hlller aand Herbert e -ArnEtein.r Perhaps this gives some Tigh,t on the decision in the slightest degree. I Building—Herbert i ATM stein, Cliatrmaji; JSarope. Jewish'schooling la Warsa through a technicality they wtsre ail question why the pobiication-says lit- have emphasized these -facts in the Selwjn Jacobs a«8 SoL Bi anid V3na as well" as in importEnt House PC fkainntms. .- JDo^ yoa suggest S 4 to the notice Dagtn,;„Chairman;:that I liejd- to the Hou^e of Commons tion in question has 'been extensively to be. The modern Schools may lisv& eoBcited many B'nai B'rith lodges A new Tule prevails this ^ Jacobs and I TJi>ler. 61.that,my staff disobeys my clear p advertised in; America a>/$bt edited*?' fshem Appointed—MUfon Abrahams, I>r. improved on tiie. ancient educational fjnust have cards «£ admittance. t throughout the country. Ala B l o c k , Leslie These cards may be securedsifrx>m ^ot.censored," and so foTth,i sfioald instructions?" the Home Secretary Kalph Cahn, Victor Buttemoid, na, Wm. Degen, institutions as fgr es'curriculum and some addressed himself to Lieutenant Ken- Max Holzman, Alfred iliixer." Morton method are concerfilii, BoF*ihe*^aiifthe; Secretary Mr. Ganz, 2690 Harris be very glad if you could give , Eosenstock, Harry Silverrt r . ._•.;. r ' £^cita£*b thisi staTiiae:a£ '' ~" • ' !» worthy. culty is in the political affects thfe edStreet,' Phone Hamey 5406, Rabbi man and Leo. tinrar. f ucational one; - In spite of all guaranU fie'i^memberedi ^that "These ohn or from any member -of- the ? ; tees of minority;rights by the Ltttgue U Y - e ^ ' p t^^ b r t & to give a Joard. : - -; ' §f Officers of Nations, Poland is unmindful 6f its It is important to arrange for? your short history of the important events The opening meeting .of the season obligations. Taldng'advantage of the its ahead of time as our space is of the twentieth century. . In this re: of the Independent Order of the B'nai easy excuse that the Jews are divided ^cbntri^irfib "of the "J^e lited. / ' " [ 'eord, the^cbntri^irfibns B'rith Lodge No. 688 was heid Public Invited to Attend Services amongst themselves, some d&ifciing Harry Kneeter Elected President Tickets .can" also be had at the 'were' minimized or "deleted,'_ and^the Wednesday evening, Sept. 9, at the support for a Hebrew School,' others Jewish world became incensed at the fleinple'until services begin. The Omaha Hebrew Club will hold seeking to maintain -Yiddish schools, Danish Hall. Mr. Harry Lapidus At the election of officers- of the its annual memorial meeting in reYoung Israel Synagogue,T the con- misrepresentations under which the and Mr. Max Fromkin of Omaha were Igregation for young men and women, book was being sold. A review of the Y. M. and Y. W. H. A. held -on- Mon- verance of its departed members on the Government fails to support in charge of the installation of of1 book in The Menorah Journal brought. either. It is difficult to foretell just day evening, September 14y -Harry Tuesday evening, September 22, at | hold High Holiday •Services at ficers The new officers are: Presi[the Talmud Torah Building beginning "John'Fletciier's'attention to the^mat- Kneeter.was elected president for the eight-o'clock at the B'nai Israel Syna- now what is going to happen to Jew- dent, Maurice Gilinsky; Vice Presiish Education in Poland. . Where Pocoming term. ; I Friday evening at 7 o'clock, and on ter.and he'explained accordingly. gogue, 18 and Chicago streets. lish. Jewry financially well off, the dent, Nate Adler; Secretary, Harry Besides Mr. - Kneeter, the : following rSaturday and Sunday morning arid A carefully selected program will problem would be less dificult. Since Kubby; Financial Secretary, Ben I. now hold offices in the organization: be presented suitable to the occasion. levelling. Before services Saturday Oze, Society to Protect Health ,> the whole of Eastern European Jewry Seldin; Treasurer, Max Steinberg. [evening, Rabbi Charlop will speak, Vice-president, Janet Levinson. of ^ Jewish. Population, Seeks Cantor Joseph Malek and his choir is poor and since Poland has imposed Sam Steinberg, Monitor; Phil Friedland a talk will be given by Mr. E. Secretary, Leone Novitsky. ..- Legalization in Soviet Russia Assistant-secretary, will sing. The principal speakers for Jews economically, little can be ex- man, Ass. Monitor; Board of Trustees, Ida Sidraan. Block after the services. On Sunthis memorial service will be Henry pected without financial support from Installed were: Louis H. Katleman ;: Moscow, (J. T. A^)—Attempts to Reporter, Marion Graetz. day, Mr. -Max Fromikin wfll deliver Monsky, Maurice Civin and Max the government. and S. Shyken. Athletic director, David E. Beber. legalize the work of the Oze, the i.n address. Ass't athletic director, Iz Rosenblatt. Fromkin. An initiation of new A. Z. A. memsociety':for the protection of the Jew"Bearing these facts in mind," Dr. Sergeants-at-Arms, ' According to the committee in bers was also conducted at the same ish population, are being made by Dr. Gertrude Horwich and Max Givot. charge, the public is invited to this Gamoran stated iartherfc "intelligent REMAINS OF DR. HERZL time in connection with the B'nai Gran, member "of tHe Oze Committee Executive members, ; American Jews will realize how imWILL BE TRANSFERRED TO memorial service. Ella Marcus and Leon Mendelson. portant it is that the three and a half B'rith meeting. PALESTINE WITHIN YEAR -wh» just returned' here from 'the TJnited?States. Dr.Gran in an interPresident Kneeter says: "The TP MELAMD1M WILL BE TRIED million Jews in America should give a Jewish education to their children. POLISH ZIONISTS DEMAND Vienna, (J. T- A.)—-The remains iof view; with" the correspondent of • the -is about to enter upon the most imFOR ILLEGALLY TEACHING The Center of gravity which has REMOVAL OF RESTRICTIONS Dr. Theodore Herzl, founder and first Jewish Telegraphic Agency praised portant stage of its history in OmaOF BIBLE IN SOVIET RUSSIA hitherto been in Eastern Europe, it ON PALESTINE IMMIGRATION leader of the World Zionist Organ- l i e generous support of the American Tia. 'Activity^ will be the watch-word ization, will be transferred to" Pales- Jewish press for its support. Dr. of this term as we are making pre- Riga. (J.T.A.) A sensational trial may be -well guesed,' will be divided Warsaw,—(J. T. A.)—A strong tine within the next' year, according Gran proposed to the Soviet author- parations for entering our new Home of two Melamdim, Hebrew teachers between American Jewry and Palesto the decision of a special commis- ities that the Oze work be -legalized a stronger and better organization of the old school, will take place in tinian Jewry. If, therefore, Jewish protest against the limitation of imsion appointed by the Zionist Execu- on the same lines as the AgroJoint to than ever bef ore.^* , . - Nikolajeff shortly, according to re- education as a means of preserving migration to Palestine of the cateJewish life has always been an im- gory termed capitalists (immigration tive. Mr. Joseph Cowen, Dr. David work independently with the superports received here. Yellin, Dr. Arthur Klee, Johann vision of the Soviet authorities. The THE JEWISH ARTISANS IN The two teachers were arrested on portant concern of the Jew in Ameri- gory termed capalists (immigrans Kremenetzky and Messrs. Plaschkes Oze, together with the Medical comPOLAND HOLD CONFERENCE the charge of having taught the ca, it should be more important now, possesing $2,500 or more) was cabled behalf of the Zionist Organiand Chalit are members of the -com- mission of the Joint Distribution , Warsaw. (J..T. A.) The first general Bible to children under eighteen when our country is becoming on of oday on Compjitte^now-maintains over-80 Jew- conference of Jewish artisans in Po- years years of age. the two chief centers "of Jewish life. zationv of Poland and the Palestine mission. iish Tncdical sanitary institutions in land •will be opened here on October Office to the Zionist leaders in LonThe; commission alsodecided to The trustees of the two syhagogs don, Geneva and Jerusalem. transfer the remains of the wife and Soviet Bitesiav Accordirig.to Dr. Gran, 5., The conference -will .last four where the Melamdim were arrested Have you renewed your subscripThe cable demands'that the leaders parents of Dr. Herzl to Palestine. A •projni5es:were^given»by the leaders of days. will also be tried. . tion? take immediate steps with the British family grave is to be erected on the Joint Distribution.Committee that and Palestine governments to remove Mount Carmel. The commission has out of the $15,000,000 fund which is the restrictions. also undertaken to make thenecessary to be raised, a proportionate amount relief in preparations for the transfer of the will'be/assigned for medical The innovation that the application ; remains of the family of David Wolf- Russia, which will be conducted of such immigrants be forwarded to sohn, the second presidend of the through the Oze. Jerusalem resulted in the temporary World Zionist Organization, who successation of this class of immigrants ceeded Dr. Herzl. to Palestine. KING FEISUL GUEST IN LONDON OF INTERNATIONAL FUND %O ELIEZER • S. KAD0ORD3 JEWISH COLONIES IN RUSSIA _ASSIST CHILDREN WILL BE , SUFFER^FROM BAD CROP London,—(J. T. A.)—Emir Feisul CREATED, CONGRESS DECIDES -i ' king of Mesopothamia, is the^uest in Riga,—(J. T. A.)—Additional cases Geneva, (J, T. A.)—The first inter- London of Eliezer S. Kadoorie, Angloof suffering are reported from Jewish national Congress of Children Wel- Jewish philanthropist, who is a native colonies due to the badcrops, accordextends to all its readeis sincere wishes fare was concluded here when a num- of Mesopothamia. ing to reports received here. b3r of resolutions were adopted. One-, • The King accepted Kadoorie's inviThe entire sammer-crop -was defor a of the resolutions calls for the ^crear. tation to stay at bis home in- London stroyed in the Jewish colony Isralltion of an international fund to assist .during his visit- to the British capital owka in the district • of Zinowjev, sk. . i children in all countries in .time of He. is- accompanied by -his «rae> de Three-four&B of the population of /distress. The Jewish World' Relief i <f»hysician and his^ personal atthe rcoldmy is • wstJUHlr^breaar^ueiJui Conference was represented -jafc. 4ie tendant. -. The- fiihg moved-, fnwn compelled t« selr "their cattle. The . congress. Mrs. A. J. Freimaq of Ot- hotel to Kadoorie's house-this-SaturJewish colony of Jefinhor, district of towa, Canada, was one of-.tfee~ day. Nikohse, in addition to * poor crop -|ate8 of the Jewish World Relief -•Mr.-Kadoorie-is-.not in London at Buffered from a Hood which spread Terence. •-present. over hundreds of desiatin land. :

Special Rosh Hoshonah services will be held a t all Synagogues and at the Temple begin p Israel. Services St Friday evening, September 18, " on Saturday and Sunday morningB, September 19 and 20. At the B'nai Israel Synagogue, 18th and Chicago Sts., the Beth Hapedrosb.' Hagodo, 19th and Burt Sts., the Adass YeBhuren Synagogue, 25th & Seward Bts., and the B^oai Jacob; Synagogae, tilth, and Nicholas Sts., services -will begin at 6 o'clock Friday evening, and at 7 o'clock Saturday and-Sunday mornings. Cantor Joseph Malek and his choir •will chant Holiday Hymns at the B'nai Israel Synagogue. .Oh Saturday morning, Rabbi J. M. Charr lop -will speak at the Beth Hamedrosh Bagodol Synagogue on "A Jewish Conception of New Year." That ifternoon, Rabbi Charlop will speak ; at the B'nai Jacob Synagogue on ["Bosh Hoshonah also a bay of I Memorial".; Sunday morning, he will |address the members of the B'nai [Israel Synagogue in "The True Call (vSL the Shofer", and on Sunday afternoon, Rabbi Charlop will speak St the |Adass Yeshuren Synagogue on "Is[rael's - Three Greatest Principles, ^Penetance, Prayer, and Benevolence". Rosh Hoshonah services will be ield|at:tha Temple Israel Friday evening, Iseptember 18, a t 8 o'clock and Saturfday morning, September 19; at Hi ; Rabbi Frederick Coha wfll sak in tiie f vening on "The Ney? fools' and in, the morning on ."The

Brittamca Publications Omits Jewish Efforts

Gmakns Warned of Giving Funds to Colored Rabbis

Harry Rosenfeld Elected President of Temple Israel

m

Y.M.andY.W.fl.A.floUs Omaha Hebrew Chb to Hold Semi-Annual Election Memorial Services Tuesday -

'

-

.

-

.

>

*-*.-• "•"

us amMisppy Year

Women Begin Campaign To Equip New Jewish Representatives of All Jewish Women's Clubs Met Toesday Afternoon PLAN HOUSE CANVASS WEEK OF OCTOBER 19 A very important and enthusiastic meeting of the Ladies. Auxiliary of the Jewish Community Center was held Tuesday afternoon, Septcmfcei 15, at the Jewish Community Centex to start the campaign for $35,000.00 for equipment of the new Community Center. The meeting was addressed by Mr. Harry- H. Lapidus, President of the Jewish Community Center. Mr. Henry Monsky, Vice-president, Mr. Joe L. Wolf, Secretary and Mr. Wm. Holzman, President of the Jewish Welfare Federation. In addition to the President of the Auxiliary, Mrs. Reuben Kulakofsky and Secretary, Mrs. Wm. R. Bluir.enthal, elected at the last meeting:, other officers electedat this meeting were; Mrs. Nathan Mantel, First Vice President, Mrs. Harry A. Wolf, Second Vice President, Mrs. David Rosenstock, Third Vice President, Mrs, Harry Malashock, Fouth Vice President, Mrs. Wm. L. Holzman Treasurer. Every Jewish W7oman's Organization in the city will be represented on the Board of Directors, Mrs. Kulakofsky, President, announced. A number of pledges were made at this meeting, totalling several thousand dollars. Every woman-'present vblunteered to help with the Campaign. Mrs. Kulakofsky announced that each member of the Board will be made Captain of a team of workers in charge of a certain district in scriptfons to this fund when the women will be asked to contribute. The week ©f October 19th wag decided on as Campaign Week and all women were -asked to avoid all social functions during that week, • and devote all the time to helping in this most important'work the women of Omaha have ever undertaken. The equipment for the Center will consist of furniture for the Offices, Auditorium, Lounging Rooms, Meeting Rooms, Gymnasium, Kitchen and Serving Kitchens. "Raising the money for the equipment is most essential to complete the building, and now is the time when the women of Omaha can show what sacrifices they can make for the Jewish Community Home", said Henry Monsky. '

Jewish Players to Play at Brandeis September 28th The Betty Kcnig Co., eastern Jewish players will be in Omaha Monday evening, September 28, to play at the The Betty Kenig Co., is under'the management of Mr. H. Weisgman, who announces that the company Will make Hmr home in Omaha, and are also to pity in nearby cities. The company Jconsists of ten players, the leading roles ope taken by lime. Betty Kenig and. Miss Pauline Shaffer, wellkno-vm actresses. L Drnze Rebellion Causes Uncertainty on PnlestineSyrian Frontier

Jerusalem,—(J. T. A.)~-The Druze revolution "in Syria created a feeling of uncertainty on the Syrian Palestine frontier. British aeroplanes are continually watching ever Metulah, the most northern point of the Jewish colonies onthe Syrian frontier and in the neighborhood of Jebei. The Palestine government hut- announced its intention of arming the population of Metulah in yiew of the. danger. A radio station for broadcasting to Jerusalem and other points in Palestine wae promptly arected. REFORM TEMPLE WILL BE DEDICATED IN LONDON TODAY London,—(J, T. A,)-—The larfest synagogue in; Greet Britain, built by the Jewish liberal Association, the dedicated this -Sondjiy. The services in the liberal Synagogue will be conducted on Sunday "instead of Saturday and will taatnly in the EagUsb. language


:SS/^

-

•«-

* • » . » .

j

.

-

*."»

.

:

.

"

.

.

A...

- :

-

.

.

,

PRESS-^-THTJRSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 192b

.;; .„..

lite New Era in .

The Jewish newspaper did not need lies in the fact that it has performed perfection as much PS it needed com-. ;wonders in the art c_i condensation— plete revision. "the most vital necessity in journalism As an American journalist—a non- today. Were I to review Jewish his Jew—who has made a study of the tory of the twentieth century, I would Jewish Press of the last quarter of a speak of the establishment of thhe century, I marvel at the success of the Jewissh Telegraphic Agency, achieved Jewish Telegraphic Agency and the in a period and under circumstances Jewish Daily Bulletin ss one of the that make, the accomplishment seem most important achievement of that a miracle. Its greatest achievement period.

JPRQGRESS O F WORK ON JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER BUILDING

JL.

By PIERRE VAN PAASEN

Noted columnist "New York Evening World" "Copyright 1025 by of the editor on that message was SEVEN' ARTS FEATUKE SYNDICATE stressed rather than the actual news The author of this article is a promi- content. nent non-Jewish journalist, who has While Jewish life was thus handicome to be, known as the standardbearer of liberalism in American news- capped, and*-chaos reigned,*and proper paner.dom. His articles which appear in developement cf. Jewish knowJedgemost of the- important dailies of this and culture was impeded, the general country, stamp him as one familiar with and versed In all problems affecting the press wass scoring- ahead -in 'flying Jeivish people.—THE EDITOR. machines arid on radio "waves, taking

^iiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiummiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiuiuiiiiiiiiiiiu

Truly A Service

II

advantage of all the latest mechanical other inventions which' acceleratOne can hardly conceive what the and ed the and completeness of Yiddish newspapers and the English- the art rapidity of newsgathering. Jewish periodicals were a few years « * • For You-—the Seller— ago. Fifteen, ten years ago, what Six years ago, two young men reconstituted the Jewish news in those We offer in addition to pc: :c::al repapers? How did they receive news volted against this apathy in the state tention, satisfaction, and service, the of important events in Jewish life •of Jewish affairs; they determined to throughout the world? How many make an end of the humiliation which advantage of having your p ; ^ ..Ly months intervened between an inci- j Jewish life was actually suffering. sold on ah all cash basis to you, at purpose, dent of historic importance in Pales- '•With such an ambitious 7 s , .•.. the same time allowing easy terms to knowing that the* indifference of the tine, for example, and the report of i ':•:,. suit the buyer. that occurrence in the Jewish papers past was against -them, and the difficulty of every pioneering venture facof America? Whatever was the; state of Jewish journalism, its unor- | ing them in the future, they opened ganization was reflected in Jewish life i the first office of the Jewish Telein the country. There was a certain i graphic Agency in October 1919. disunity, a sad unacquaintance on the jWithout capital, facing the sceptiTo you we offer the assistance of buypart of one section of America Jewry cism and indifference of the Jewish publishers, they started .the laying of with the affairs of another section. ing the desired property at the lowest In modern times, when it is admit- the foundation of the world-wide se, possible cash price, at the same time ted that newspapers have become the | vice of the Jewish Telegraphic "allowing you to pay in convenient greatest harmonizing and •unifying I Agency, opening one office after anmonthly payments. other, until—today, that newsgatherfactors in the life of mankind, the i tance of an authoritative and exhaus- tine. The Jewish Daily Bulleton is Daily Bulletin in America. In Palesmost powerful instrument in national i ing organization known as the Jewish tive agency which- has dedicated itself the first Jewish daily publication tine, too, there is the Palestine Buland international communication, it j Telegraphic Agency, through its net- to the gathering of Jewish news. .Not-printed in the English language. It lethumust indeed have been a sorry plight work of offices and correspondents only. isHt of ' significance to 'Jewish contains news " that "has" been called This Palestine newspaper the only in which American Jewry found itself. covering every important center in life among Jews, but has incalculable" from all over the world; and day by English daily in tliat country, is of the world is serving as an invaluable There could be no recognition .of naramifications into general life. Here- day it keeps Jews informed of events importance in view of tional leaders, no broadcasting of a unifying force in Jewish world affairs. tofore the general press had carried that occur in every land. The Bul-tremendous activities in the homeland. At message vital to the statues of Ju- Within an inconceivably short space Jewish news only infrequently, and letin is a vital factor in retaining Jewish when the country is in need of DEAL WITH US daism. Up until the period of the of time, events of Jewish importance even then there was great danger Jews for Judaism. Jews, who other athetime greatest unity of purpose and harare flashed from one end of the world War, and even during that period, wise would be out of touch withh Jewthat the news was inaccurate or inof action, a newspaper which is some of1 the bitterness and misunder- to the other. There need be no ex-complete, giving only one side of an ish life and affairs are kept informed mony accessible to and readable by a great standing which characterized phase? ageration nor misinterpretation of issue or incident. But with the estab- of the activities of their fellow Jews. number of the Jewissh and non-Jewof Jewish life were certainly attribu- [ any occurrence of importance. Serv- lishment of an exclusive Jewish Agen- Their interest in their people is thus population is of considerable intable to lack-of adequate journalistic ing papers, subscribing: - to various cy, non-Jews have the opportunity of maintained and enchanced The Bul-ish Investment Brokers facilities. It!must not be understood shades of political belief, J. T. A. con- seeing Jewish life accurately and com- letin also serves to solidify Jewish fluence. that this handicap was shared only by fines its news reports strictly to facus, tion on one hand is counteracted by opinion, and gives basis for the for- When viewing the achievement of 632 Brandeis Theatre Bldg. At. 1024. American Jewry. World Jewry also recording them without bias. It has the report of a truly humanitarian mation of Judgements on any partic- Meer Grossman and Jacob Landau, it strikes me as equally impressive as suffored from this inability to com- understood the purpose and function deed or sentiment on the other. Race ular question. that of a Pulitzer or an Ochs. The municate, one community with anoth- , of a newspaper agency, and it is liv-prejudice and religious antipathy will The bulletin in Paris, printed in difficultiess were greater; the field er, one faction with another. Euro- j ing up to that understanding. It is begin .to,.shift into the-.-background French, of.course, serve-the same pur- smaller. They;had to reshape the gnvv-•the'^fuller . , dispersion••Vnetfrjij' . k r' of; pean Jewry, to cite an illustration,' interesting to note that the Jewish with "ppsse in .that. country, as _lhe. Jewish psychological makeup of /generations. ftllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUIIlllIllllllllllllIIllllIllUllllllliIUIIllIlllrs must have been woefully ignorant of jTelegraphic Agency supplied the test with -•the'^fuller dispersion••Vn of the Palestine Mandate to the New Jewish''Ufe":\' V : ' the status and composition of Jews ' and Judaism; iri America. Whatever York Times, fully 24 hours before .T^xe>.existencer of-a world-wide-^Jewconception Jews on the Continent any other agency or newspaper car- ish jpQri)SEiisnr,:cKref among.wnicK was might have formed, it m y ! necessari- rried the story. In the newspaper the'»es;tai3ishinent.of-Jewish, dailies in ly have been inadequate, and certainly world, I have ofteorheard the Agency the.language'of.i.he, countries in'^yhJch; referred -.%o as'the 'Jewish 'Associated theyrapp%f;:V,T3ie past twelve rdokths not thorough. •••;..." .. ;• . , O F T H E \ - : - V ' : ^ : ' - " • • : . : : . haverser — — — The situation in Jewish journalism • was particularly regrettable, because j One can hardly calcula^the impor£ X^feu Insurance Jewish newspapers hold an entirely! different position from general period- ' «asonable Priices icais. Considering that Jews have no state, and no official pronoun ciamentos, of interest to the world Jewry, wh'^L emanate from some central boC% ihe Jewish newspaper must accordingly supply that deficiaency. Its pagfe J * transriiit the message of one Omaha's element in :-Jewry to another, In Foremost genferaji, the Jewish newspaper is ,the only jjnd most potent organ for the That is the reason "why Garage fostering of tolerance and understandmore than just a thought to \ ing in the Jewis-h world. Builders it action! ;.: .... •••' ....._.-' ; p£ __ Jewish newspapers, then, can and should serve; this purpose, but it is Investigate immediatdy you^^^^ only within the last six years that you are carrying the kind of insurance that meets such an ambition on the part of Jewry has been realized. Formerly, Jewish with your personal requirements. I will be glad to newspapermen, in the true and techaid you-in this. nical sense of the word, did not exist; men who were versed in the intricacies of our multi-colored life were a rarity. • It is true that Jewish journa24TH AND BUHDETTE. WEBSTER 5555. lism boasted of brilliant publicists, charming feuilletonists, biting polemicists—tout soon men who knew how and where and why to gather actual >ETCSONAL 8 ER.V1 C E news were ait unknown genus. Jew^iiHiiiiiiniiiiuiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiuiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuuiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu ish news was a relatively unheard of Penn Mutual life Insurance Co. 53 * ' *m word. Newspapers and their editors • Organized 1847 considered it their function to comment on news rather than to report Jfa. 1817 720 Peters Trust Bide* AT. 8034 724 W. O. W. BLDG. that news. When cables were received from foreign parts, the opinion •

For You—the Buyer—

A. Somberg & Son

JUDAH L. WOLFSQN

For Lumber & Hillwork

Kaiman

Micklin Lumber Co.

Insurance Agency

B.G.$hapitt)

* Every Known Kind of Insurance -

3

:

S ' 3 S

A Simple Little Flower Pot

Kennard Glas

SIMPLE LITTLE FLOWER POT fell from the Vrindow sill. It was. the one with the pretty pink geranium. The baby girl had been shaking out the spread of her doll bed and somehow the flower pot had tilted a moment and then, before she could catch it, it had fallen. In its fall it struck the grocerboy below. An ambulance had drawn up and had taken him to the hospital. That was the reason the grocerboy had sued her father for §20,000 damages. Her big brother Charles was to have gone to the Harvard in the fall. Mother was to have had the much needed maid. There was talk about a little car so they could go riding in the evenings. The accumulated ambitions, hopes, dreams of years had been built upon a foundation of a carefully saved $7,847. But the flower pot had fallen from the window sill I And it had hit the grocerboy! And the verdict that the court gave granted him $7,500 damages and costs. <• Charles didn't go to Harvard; he went to work. ' ' Mother didn't get her maid. There was no little car to take them out in the evenings. The bank account no longer existed. All because father had failed to fortify his family, their hopes and ambitlons» with an 'Ocean General Liability Policy that would have cost so little and have meant so much.

A

!

Y O U — i

'

-.

You're always the exception, until

.

.

r

S

Company

Pioneer Glass and Paint Company ' •

'

- "

II

S

The best place to buy high-grade paintss varnishes, and all kinds of glass

"Sudden Service"

' ' :•/ ,

;1

i

. ' i

You Wjll Benefit By Calling Our Insurance Department.

H. A. Wolf Company

Tel._

5.... • mm

J. I. GREENBEEG, WAlnut 4371—DAVID GREENBERG, KEnwood 6063.

I

15th and Davenport Sts.

Omaha, Nebr.

MB

mm •M ••• •M

-^-,

Omaha * .'. .. . .

MM

......-».«.*

V.


PAGE 3—THE JEWISH T ' ESS—THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1925

, ».

V -

t .: i ; -. J

- .

•«•*-.,*-

<,.:

'.'.[v l «--..~i ;

i.*^

.?;-:. •

^4

--4?

r

•>*•

v

4

'i£

J

s. • . ^r

f

v .,>

***

., -I

*

J -

r

•'- *" * ».-»V s : , ^ * ' / <;* -

*-i

SI

^wisK you a Jdyous Holiday, and a full realization of your anticipated progress during the New Year

-»-• * »' \ ••*

»,

1

^ .

•-•

J

- .

•-

•-•

OMAHA'S SNOW WHITE BAKEBT

- -<-..'

j . .

You are cordially invited to visit Omaha's Snow \ITiite Baker> (largest west of Chicago) and see how ITEN quality Crackers, Cakes and Cookies are made in a modern baking plant. Best time to come is between 9 and 11 in the morning, or 1 and 3 in the afternoon, when all departments are running. Just come to the office entrance, 13th Street and Capitol Avenue, "\ » 4

co

• #

>•*•

*

T ' "

.

.-

>, -

• i..

- - i

-

•J '-.

-~

> .

+

. " • ' " -

K


PAGE 4—THE JEWISH PEESS—THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1925

JEWISH PRESS

rubllsbeO every Thursday at Oiunha. Nebraska, by

'JBJvi'.'lSJa. PUESS PUBLISHING COMPANY "Office: 7'JO Branitei*-l>eatre Building—Telephone: ATlantic 1450. VNATHAJS B.GKEEN. Managed; Subscription Price, one. year_ Advertising rates furnished on application.

-§2.50.

CHANGE OF AUDKISSS— flense give Doth tbe old and Dew address: tie sure uod give yon* outne.

The Jewish Press is supplied by the Jewish I'elegraphic Agency (Jewish Correspondence Bureau) with cabled and telegraphic Jewish news, in addition i<> feature articles and correspondences from all important Jewish centres, inquiries regarding news items credited to this Agency will be giadly answered U addressed to Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 621 Broadway, New York City.

ROSH-HASHANAH—THE JEWISH NEW YEAR The Jewish people" will on Friday evening, September the Eighteenth, enter their houses of worship, to usher in their Rosh Hashanah, or New Year, 5686, which marks the beginning of the cycle of sacred observances held during the month of Tishri, the seventh month ef the Jewish calendar. While every New Moon, in ancient1.times,"•••was greeted by the sounds of the Shofar (trumpet), the seventh month or New Moon, coming after six months =of work in the field, was welcomed with religious exercises as a month of rest and recreation by the agricultural inhabitants of Palestine. (Numbers x. 10). The Jewish New Year is known by different names, and each expresses something of its spiritual significance. Numbers xxix.'l, designates as "The Day of Blowing the Trumpet (Shofar)." New Year occurs in the'autumn, when the falling leaf and fading flower turn man's mind to serious reflection, and sounds the admonitory message: "Awake, and ponder your deeds; remember your creator, return to Him in penitence. Be not of those who reach out after shadows, and waste years seeking vain things which cannot profit or deliver. Look well to your souls and consider your acts; forsake each of you his evil ways and thoughts, and return to God, that He may have mercy upon you." Rosh Hashanah is also known as The Day of Memorial, The Day of;Judgment, of self-examination. Tradition tells us that on this Day the Ruler of Life weighs the doings of man, and allots to each1 his destiny, as it were, for the coming year, for weal or woe, for life or death. "Shall a trumpet be blown in the city, and the people not tremble?" (Amos, iii, 6). "For the Lord is our judge; the Lord is our law-giver; the Lord is our king; He will save us;" Its~ message to man is threefold: (1) to contemplate all experiences of the year—joyful and sorrowful—in the light of discipline, by the ruler of human destiny, and to renew our trust in Him; (2)-to' scrutinize our conduct, conscious that God, the Just Judge of the world, searches the heart, and to consecrate the new year to a nobler life; (8) and to look upon the life story of Israel as of one's self in the light of God's revelation on Sinai, Moriah and Zion. • ,. Special music and prayers mark the observance of the Feast, which though solemn.is-nevertheless replete with the spirit of joy and optimism. While Orthodox Jewry devotes two days, Reform Judaism observes only one day.

r

_

NEW YEAR 5686

We; stand again at threshold of another 'New Year*. Every Jewish heart is asking, "What does it hold for me?" It v is quite natural, that; Rosh Hashona should arouse this ostion within us if or "*to every'true Jew it is a-time ©f deep, jmnj'anxious reflection. He^recalls the past (it is beyond recall)* He looks forward the;-future, earnestly, and yet hopefully.1 There are problems in Judaism, religious, philanthropatic, .ucatipnal, social. Everyone besides has his own individual ^oblems, 'The heart knoweth its own bitterness.' And yet there have been problems before, and these problems have always been met and mastered. And so it will be again. The Jew has faith. "The Keeper of Israel sleepeth not nor slumbei-eth". All through the centuries in all the vastitudes of their checkered history, He has watched over Israel. He will not desert him now. He will be with him still and help him and guide him. At this sublime religious season the Jew rallies his religious forces, marshals "all the faith there is within him. He will have need of it in the coping year. We all need faith. We cannot live truly and nobly without, it. A sincere, intelligent faith in God and m. the worthwhile men of a religious life are necessary to every man, :who..wouldJive rationally, contentedly and happily Faith is indeed a salvation. Let,us then face bravely and confidently the coming year Like snowflakes from heaven, events, one by one, will fall from the hand of God. Not as an avalanche will they come to overwhelm us but gradually, gently, so that we may be prepared to meet them. Faith m God, and in His Goodness and Wisdom, and Justice, is the best preparation. God give us this faith in the coming year, and it will indeed be a happy new year, filled with the deepest, divinest happiness, with happiness ot the spirilla happiness that will also cause and inspire us to bring happiness into the lives of our fellows thus increasing the amount of happiness in the world, making earth heaven, and the Republic,of,Man the Kingdom of God sp ro u ™A all!—Rabbi ^ , b r X I h u ' u ^Frederick l - ? ' Gohn. 5 a p p y a n d blessed 'New Year' to one and

THE NEW LIFE, THE NEW HOPE • J .,. L ' if J i i - s a b i O o m i n g

child or maiden whose breast is a flower with a thousand springs, and yet one faded flower in her fadeless bouquet, like one snapped chord in a harp, one broken spring in Fagawm s violin or discordant note in a symphony, marring its music; breaks the heart with its poignant pathos, making it hard to suppress tears. . • A; man of 365 days is an infant, but 365 days of time make ths yqar seem old and gray. For what can age as more than the day's struggle, the day's tears? There is hardly, one uplifted face praying for new joy on the ne\v year, out bear some of the old burdens of the year that is gone. ,It ia Cod's providential care to have given us the word' New, #ew; ..v.-hat a, dower of dream and of hope, what flags of triumph lie furled in that one word, New! What joy beams from a new;bonnet, what a thrill trembles in the folds of a new dress! It malces the very atmosphere of God's house robed in Joy! New God gave the hew year were it only for the joy of the New! Heinrieh Heine in the lyrictells a legend of a castle that was once magnificent and happy, with fair ladies and brave knights when suddenly a magician; turned the castle into ruin; but any man or woman can rebuild this castle of joy, and because its Lord or Lady,if in the right time and the right place, that man or woman speak the right word of power. Is not the House of God the most auspicious place, and the new year the most auspicious time, Is hot the word new: in that time and place, the word of 1-ower and enchantment that can rebuild our castle of joy? Light is ever light, the old;light and the new light are always bright," ^It:is ^hat^we:«e^ by the light that makes it new. The old light w^'^rjieji:,onjy; ; -on^ religions,and nations"have" hitherto' turned their lights only on others, not on themselves. They always sought to find how wrong the other was, and therefore'they saw only the star Mars. War was in their vision.' '

A Prayer for the New Year Over the crest of the russet hill, The slender new moon,,clear and still, Peered at the world awaiting night, * Though the west still gleamed with crimson light; And it said to the guardian evening star, "You send your peering darts so far., Perchance you know why so many eyes To-night are watching the dark blue s k i e s It seems to me that a prayer I see In the wistful eyes that are watching me!" And the evening star in clear tone cried, "G little bright moon in the sky so wide. There's a prayer in the souls of men tonight For a new year lies in your chalice white! And they know not if it bring good or ill! ' But with tender faith in the Father still, They pray for strength to live it through With courage high and with purpose true*

J

New.moon of Tishri, so silvery bright, Shine clear, to cheer men's hearts tonight!" So it shone in the dark of the dusky sky Like a crescent of diamonds set on high, And the weary folk who saw it there Moved tired lips in a little prayer: "God grant that for all the year be bright As the new moon that brought the year tonight!" ISABELLA R. HESS (The Ark.)

But now a new light should dawn on us. We should now turn, a radium light upon our ownselves, and proud and haughty nations should begin to ask not how wrong the other is, but how right they are. A new cry is coming from the old world, a half smothered cry that we of the new world are hearing, it is, are we right or are we wrong? This question is not new to Israel, Israel ever denounced the wrong in its own midst before he condemned the wrong in others. Indeed the Jewish people always painted themselves blacker than they were by having a prayer, confessing to wrongs, of which they were never guilty. To the Hebrews, the cry of international justice is like giving the physician his own medicine. But this new light which the world will begin to see now is the true light. And on this, our New Year, we would frame a gulden rule for religions, for nations, and for individuals, namely—Love to do that which you would another should do. Demand of yourself the noble things you expect in another. Turn on your own heart the x-ray you loveto|urnjon your neighbor, and t&atwill become the 3n3gicjword th8&Nj?ill rQb^ilsJ^the^orliJ'c^tiQlpJ£$&' th© viJorld palace?of happiness;- the Wwld-feputilic of peaw-*Kabbi J. M. Charlop.

L'SHONOHABOH IN OUR NEW HOME

Quite unusual is the greeting of the New Yeai^ Ordinarily we approach the coining year with the hope, thanks, and prayer for the anticipated goodness which we believe is our portion. In this particular vein we find some room for sympathy; But all the more is our thanks and greater is our happiness that we end this year with as much thanks for the goodness of the Almighty as we could hope to thank and pray to Him for all we desire in the coming New Year. Our unlimited thanks comes from our hearts because we are able to usher in with the New Year our almost completed Jewish Community Center for which many years have been spent in the effort to realize it. Despite the unusual conditions of the times and the constant demand that has been made; upon our people we have with much labor and perhaps with some small sacrifice realized what may to some have seemed an impossible task. But our hopes and ambitions have been but partially realized thus far. The' great work of completing the Jewish Community Center Building is not yet done and cannot be finished until every dollar that has been pledged is paid by the subscribers. We may hope, dream, and wish without limit, but the accomplishment of the fact can only be found in the prompt response and payment by the subscribers of their pledges; in reliance upon which the work was commenced and with which funds alone the building can be_ completed. May we, therefore, hope, that as the subscribers to the Jewish Community Center Building fund will assume their part in .this great project, so will they also readily complete their payments that the work for which their money is given may soon bear witness to the success of our endeavor. We must be in our new home in January, 1926. Each subscriber must complete payment in full of his pledge before that time. Our hope, "ambition, and wish is that each and every subscriber will start the NEW YEAR right by paying his or her pledge in full immediately, so that our GREAT DREAM will be a realization and that-the coming year will permit ..every Jewish man, woman, and child to enjoy the benefits which will be ours in the Jewish Community Center in our own home at 20th and Dodge Streets.—Harry H. Lapidus. '

Have we paid heed to the welfare of those institutions whose work is that of guiding our children along the paths of Judaism? What have we done for our Talmud Torahs, and our Jewish Community Center? It is upon these things that the heart of the Jew must dwell Rosh Hashonoh. .... If you have given amply to the Jewish Welfare Federation, you have practiced Zodokoh and have helped keep Judaism alive. Have you given as much as the Federation required from you, as much as it has a right to expect from you? Your Federation 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 need you and you need them, for without'the consciousness of having remembered them and having worked for them through the Federation during the past year of 5685 your thanks to God for a happy year just ended will be meaningless. As much as it needs your financial contribution, the Federation needs your gift of service. The work that should be born by every Jew and Jewess in the city has been carried on in the past by* a few1 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? Re-dedicate your soul to the spirit and deeds of Zodokoh and to a firm resolve to support the Federation to the limit of your ability with money and with your service in 5686 so that your prayers for a happy new year may be answered! 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 book that means year after year-life itself to hundreds of his fellowJews—the Year Book of the Jewish Welfare Federation—Dr. Philip Sher.

PRUSSIAN DIET VOTES 510,00 MARKS FOR SUPPORTING JEWISH COMMUNITIES Berlin, (J. T. A.)—The sum of 510,000 gold marks was voted for th« support of Jewish communities it Prussia by the main committee o1 the Prussian Diet yesterday. The motion was made by the Jewish Socialist Deputy Badt and supported by the Prussian Minister of Religions, Becker.

. Regular Meeting of

Omaha Lodge No. 354

Every Thursday Evening at Jewish " Community Center Building. J. M. MALASHOCK, President. ISAUORE ABRAMSON, Secretary.

Experienced Salesladies

THE APPEAL OF THE "YOMIM NOROIM" Rosh Hashonoh and Yom Kippur are called the Yomim Noroim,—the Days of Awe. They are our most sacred Holy Days. The observance of Rosh Hashonoh as a Holy season is commanded in two passages of the Five Books of Moses, namely: Levicitus, XXIII; 24-25 and Number XXIX; 1. In neither passage is there any special command as to how the day is to be observed, save the injunctions, (1) to blow the trumpet, (2) to hold a holy convocation, and (3) to engage in no occupation. Rosh Hashonoh differs vastly from the 1st of January. Rosh Hashonoh is a day set apart for introspection and self-examination, not for self-indulgence. It does not simply mark the beginning of the Jewish New Year. Rosh Hashonoh does not stress the change of year, it stresses the need for the change of spirit and the change of heart. Rosh Hashonoh and Yom Kippur have a grip on the Jew that no other festivals possess. These Hcly Days are the great link that unite Jew and Jew the world over. Upon the sacredness of these days all Jews are in accord. In tradition as well as in religion, Rosh Hashonoh is known as the Yom Hadin,—the Day of Judgment. It is inventory day, reckoning day; the day when the spiritual balance sheets are struck. The sacred character of the day is implied in the two names by which it is known,—"The Day of Memorial" and the "Day of Blowing the Trumpet." Its purpose is to arouse Israel from his smug complacency and to stir him to better resolves and to nobler deeds. The Shofer that ushers in Rosh Hashonoh intends to proclaim to all mankind Peace, Freedom, Humanity. Further significance of Rosh Hashonoh lies in its being- the introduction to the Day of Atonement, which follows ten days later. Before one can realize the need for atonement, our Sages say, it is necessary that one become conscious of his shortcomings. As long as one imagines himself in good health it never occurs to him that he is in need of a physician. Rosh Hashonoh, so to speak, acts as the physician to the soul. In the passing of centuries the Jewish New Year Day has become to embody great religious ideas of divine justice and human responsibility. At the beginning of the year is manifest the religius uniqueness of the Jewish people, Children of the One Common Father and servants of one common brotherhood. Atonement and forgiveness go hand in hand. One cannot expect to be forgiven unless one forgives. Hence the ten days between Rosh fiashonoh and Yom Kippur are set aside for special acts of human love, and for prayers for divine guidance. Too many of us bear grudges, thus violating the command and the spirit of our faith. . The underlying thought of Yom.Kippur is expressed in the scriptural words: "On this day He will atone for you to purify you from all your sins." Yom Kippur is therefore a day of reconciliation between God and man. Our rabbis taught that Yom Kippur may bring pardon for sins between man and God but that sins committed by man against his fellowmen can be pardoned, only upon righting the wrong done. This idea is the basis of the effort made on the eve of the Day of Atonement to bring peace j between friends who have become estranged or those who are on! unfriendly terms with one another. Yom Kippur calls for "at-one-ment" with our brethren ere we seek atonement from our God. Yom Kippur, the High Holy Day, shows that Judaim is unique in that it has no intermediaries between man on earth and his Creator in Heaven. Each Jew on this Day of Judgment is his own lawyer, his own ambassador. In the words of the Prophet Isaiah he harkens to the appeal: "Oh, Israel, return unto the Lord Thy God!"—William R. Blumenthal.

for general Department Store. Must be experienced in Dry Goods and Reay-to-Wear. STAR STORE, the big store, — North Omaha's Greatest Department Store.

The Tunberg Piano Studios Best Location and Equipment Superior Instruction Reasonable Rates ASSISTANT TEACHERS: CI.ARA A. MA1ES GLADYS MCCA1ST* REGINA LEONE FRANKLIN R. MARGUERITE KJENNER Lyric Bldg., : 9th and Farnam Sts. Phone ATlantic 2015.

.• GIFTS THAT LAST

MLASHOCK JEWELRY CO. Diamond Importers Platinum Specialists

NEW LOCATION 214-15-16 City Nat. Bank Bldg. Ja. 5619—Est. 1894.

J. E. BRILL formerly Teacher of Violin, Municipal Conservatory. Hanover, Germany; Director Conservatory of Music, Eisenach, Germany; Professor of Violin and Head of Violin Department, Conservatory of Drury College j Springfield, Mo, 4219 Farnam Street Telephone Walnut 5647 Folder sent on request.

We thank our customers for their kind patronage during the past year, and wish them and all our friends

A Bright, Happy and Prosperous New Year. B. BALABAN

ABRAMSON AUDIT CO. ISADORE ABRAMSON

Public Accountants and Auditors Income Tax Consultants

Mfg. of Suitcases and Bags

SYSTEMS—AUDITS—INVESTIGATIONS 490 BRANDE1S THEATER BLDG. Phone ATlantic 1450

I. O. B. B.

900-904 North Eighth Street COUNCIL BLUFFS, IA.

Omaha

NEW YEAR MESSAGE 5686; The High Holy Day season is at hand, and we are thinking in deeply reverential mood of their solemnity, and their message to us% Within the next few days Jews 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 not like the-first day of January. It is a High Holy Day, consecrated to self -analysis and searching of the soul by everyone who claims adherence to the faith and tenets of Judaism. , Rosh Hashonoh is the soul-inventory day in Israel and dedicatory to the eternal truths which Israel proclaims to the world— the truths of peace, benevolence and justice. Zodokoh is one of the fundamentals of Judaism. On this Rosh Hashonoh, 5686, when we, Jews of Omaha, stand before our God in devout supplication for a new year, let us think upon the manner in which we have carried out ourr'Zodokoh. . . iTSxewidowsr the* orphans, the^sick, the aged, the infirm andthe destitute-—what have we done for them? Wherein, as it concerns'them, have we practiced Zodokoh? Have we Jews done our share to keep the torch of Judaism aflame? Have' we "thought of the~future of -mnr children as-Jews?

i

New Year Greetings TO

* James D. Reed L. D. Cowan I Byron J. Reed

oua

Friends and Patrons

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

1

NEBRASKA & IOWA WHOLESALE GROCERY CO. S21-823 Howard St. Phone Ja. 1066 OMAHA, NEBRASKA


PAGE 5—THE

fSB3SSS—5HDESDAY,

THE KESHTTiL DF "must Tie one mmSrefl irercent Ger-jPaliestine labor organisations tD in= sentence imposed nn the urcnt UETTERS T!EDM PALESTINE man," ^ie lesftet declares. jtErvcne against t h e interference on S^osaiaBwrlJachoweizky, known a^ "ihc STAMPS UE3SIAXD OF ARABS the part .of the grovernment in in-I little Azeff". -wa; commuted by tlic Mr. Morris Fiiend returned last ARABS "WISH TO CEEATE dnstria] disputes. UkrainiETS Zifc. the Central Executive Jerusalem. (J.T.A.) The demanS -week irom Europe, -where lie spent ~5HOE3E BA3X" TO SATE "CnmmitttfF of the Gommunim -piv.ty, that the Palestine Jrovernment abolish ro. rmonfhs touring I^brance, GerPAXT.SUKE FEOM 230KBTS COMMUTE DEATH SENTENCE to tor. ycarF confinement. the two Bebrew letters, Aleph and any, ana Italy, with a party of OF AGENT PEOTOCATEUE Tud, the two initials of Eretz Israel, iriends. JernsalEm. (J.T. A ) Saving Paleson the Palestine post stamps was tine through not smoking is the lat- Moscow, (J. T. A.) — The death PATRONIZE ADVEIITlSEPvS. TVTr. and "Mrs. Sam "Wessel .srs made by the Palestine Arab executive est idea of some of the Aral) leatterB Jrom an estEndsd trip to in a TppmnTTmHTTTn submitted to the -who decided to conform wiQi the and the Hawaimn Islands. Palestine ^igli Court. commandment of the Horan which The memorandum demands that prohibits Moslems from smoking. WE WliM EVERYONE Ifirs. "J. R>mpirli»r entertmnefl at either these two initials be lemovEd The marriage of Miss Pearl GorTive Arab notableE decided to COUNCIL BLUFFS four four tables of bridge JastThurs- or that the -words Syria Genovia, -Bnn, Df -this city, formerly of "Wiimecontinue smoking for the A HAPPY NEW YEAR day eiveninE innoring Tipr guest, TVffn2>eg, Canada, ID Mr. Pixilip Eirsch^Eunice Uicbman left .Sunday nie Khneider, of Des 3flnines, Iowa. ineaning SoutbEm Syria, he added in of estaolishing a iund fox a nani to" Arabic Commissioner, requesting "SSVE Palestine from the Taonist msn, .Bon DI Mr. and Mrs. J. Eircsh- i or ZLdncoln, ^Nehraska, -where she enthat amnesty i e granted to a number menace." The bank is to ~be inown as man, of "this city, -was solemnized tered her ireshman year a t "the TJni"Mr. "Hyman BrickEr i a s of Arab ^Troths -who were arrested in the "smote bank." Monday Evening, August Bl, at Den-,-versity of ^Nebraska to take a Doctor from - trip to Kew Tori. ; connection wi$h "&? strike which oc- The Arab paper "El Cernrnl"-waxxn•ver, Colo. The parents oj the groom of Medicine course. &L "Wassennsn left -Sunday curred on the arrival of X-ord Balf OUT ly iiuppurlt; "flie idea vn& "urge* "were the only attendants at the cer- "Miss Uichman came to this city Block "The Store of Individual Shape" ICtb & Farnam .New York, whers shp will epencl to Palestine. The Arab exeeufiro al- tD Ebandon smoking and emony.. just three years ngo Ixom Hussia, -and several -weeks "visiting relatives. so addressed a memorandum to Gen- «'T"g saved 2£r. Errschnran -and MB Ijfide spent in this short time, l a s attended both .a "week a t Colorado Springs, and public and "high school, and l a s gradMrs. -David CpfmiRP and BOH, 3r-eral SairraH, Tb*encn Sigh ComniiEuated -with Juniors also, l a s t year, Manitow, Colo., and ;sre rnuw making win, nf Coimril Bluffs, Iowa, left ior Einner of Syria, asking lor fhe xe~thFJrr name "with "£he groom's parents, she won the .D. A. H. litesay Contest •ffrpir hamB after Bpsnfling two "weeks lssse JJ£ a anxmber of Sjiian leaderE •6F HSKOf OF TWO JEWISH in lumor of their .son's jnarrmge, -when .she wrote an essy comparing "the x± the 3iome of 3Sr. anfl ~Xtr$. A.who vterB arrested in connection "with ULBOK the IMr. anS Mrs. Jorschman entertained Did Country -with JLtnerlGa, .and -wasArenson. (3. T. at a deception last SaturSjry evening awarded 3. une lundred dollar cash prize and also a trip to ^Earltm, 1B.., Hlx. anfl ISEEB. Perry .Axensim ietween the Poale Zion sod the 3feire at fheir -home. v?« mm ±0 speak "before fhe Judges. iWren, x£ I>es IdanneB, Iwwa, anofcATTACK thmal Socialist Congress, -wnicn 3s 3ffiHS Sichman 3B HOW nineteen •j'Bars ored iD Xiincoln last -wsek t o spend Mr. Jfcrthnr HtDsenblum Tetnrned Isemg Iffilfl nere. old. She is the daughter of 3ttr. and several days -with Mr. ArEnson's parVienna. (J.T.A.) The spirit of several flays ago from a two ^weeks' Palestine labor delegates Teported room TVTTS. HL D. Hichman, 152B AvEnpe 2 . ents, Mr. and Mrs. B . Arenson. anti-2ionist opposition -wai "business ±rg> So Chicago ;and Miami, a t *be Congress that mass mwrtangs in a leaflet distributed in Tilenna by ITla. Mrs. Eosenblum rretumed lireakfast uodk. F^fgm^y «ram lilxs. X Josephs of Chicago, Illinois, Mary Tahrnff, of ^Wichita, Thursday ±rom a three -weeks -visit -visiting a -weee; l e r e -wdth lier sister, Xansas, xeturnefl to limcoln to attend the 'Vertand IsationaldeutscheT Juden tnnk place jecenijy jn PaliBHtine m "Wiens, a :newly formed aasimllation- -pruLest agGLn*ist "the ^^alcstnie Govern-with relatives a t Cheyenne ;and laisk, Ifiirs. E . Gilinsky, and Mr. JSilinsky. the Nebraska University. She -wasist tody. ment's breaking uf its -neutrality .in "Wyoming. •locafeo—:Wcsft Wmaaam raccompanied lay lier Isrother, David, indostrial disputEs. The British liaThe leaflet issued by this organizaISIauxice and ATthnx Priedtaict—<iose ito -osx line sod sane lilodk from Mrs. Ju, B. JOpirn and daughter, man and Joyce ^breiden left Tuesday who -will also enter HIE University. tion declares that the reconstruction, bor Party i a s Teceived a-eguests from i IDva,, jetnrned Thursday 3rnm :a * r a work in Palestine has suffered shipior .Iowa jCSljy-, to •fyttpr ^fhcir Slanders Sdaocl. Ceaxage. The -weeks -vjpit in "iyrinrni., 13a., where they AS POEM OF "WTBek. I t attacks Zionism and the yfiat iat "£hs *DnivBHsity :of -were -ositing -with Mrs. ^ 3S TE&BOZ1B&I&E1ED TO Zionist CnngseBB and appeals to Iova. GF JEWISH ABTLTIH INMATE daughter, "Mrs. David P . ITeaer, WATCH, Austrian Jews to support the Mr. Feder. Tffy. and Sirs. I. Wansrov/ T?3Enna. (J, T. A.) Anti-Semitism a s ization in its rfyrbt against "fhe OE JEWELSY Scnnyler, Nfibr,, SBudey ]ta spend fwy^ BJ unsanity W^E .iTJSjJWffiiDle. £ign Zionism just as well as aeshist litrwest Tiices in <3ty Mr. H. Meten Haumsn :re±urnen cotiple nfflayE"wiSi 35i. auftlttrs. '•3mm Iwntal anuraer cninmittefl i n thethe •foreign Sakenkreuzler. ZionJKm Sunday from TTulfia, Qkliu, "where l e Gecshun. insane asylum of Szegetiin, ^Hungary, and Germanism cannot agree. I t TB -wns -^siting lor the -past -three months Ijomast according1 t o Teports "received IETE. necessary to protect the Viemm Jew•with Sis sisters, Mrs. I. Uerriisand Smarts, Ofdii The isylum "has an innate l?y theish youth against ICanist talk. He Mrs. A. S. Pdps. -who claims to be a native .GeTman 3iame nf Alexander Acs ~wha -was days 3n Chicago, HifainiB. Mrs. "Mas ISrscheribanm .and rhflrlrfnrmerly a merchant. TTIK ifnrm of xen left "Wednesday Spr IDes -MoineE, "Mrs. JL IE. Schlank of I D S Angfiles, insanity expressed itself in liiE coulast Thfuley 3or a tinaBB Bhouting, "I am iing. Among ^a., where they "will spend the -with l e r pffirente, 3ir. any subjects there must ~b& ia> ?0WB." flnys •visiting -with Mrs. Tbeatrr Bldp. and Mrs. B. GiKnik^. Jlany hamn's aunt and cousin. Acs 7WHE in "ihe hpb^- nf lectmiiig on sre ^jeing planned • H n t i ~ S s m x t i c Trpffit^iffy *rt^^«iv^. • -TIJIS .lei— A "baljy daughter -was 3jom ia> "Mrr. Schlanlu low inmates. and Mrs. 'N. S.Hothenberg on WednesHjast -week the son of a Jewisii -Snydcr is learJing' -Setday September 2, -at -the Iffletnoaist 3ninixifactnrEr, Singer, -was irougLt anght lor 3few 'Sork JSty, -KttrpHospital. •".:.'•••• 4D "HIE EBylmn auffcring irnm -juelanIVIrs. A. 3i. Golden anii Mrs. A. X jEhoIia. ~3& was & e fcst Jevdan 3nAllen 01 "Winnepeg, Canada, SUB -^nmtmate of ihe asylum. Hn fear uf an ing in. Omaha Trifh I2r. scad. Mrs. X attack on the part of Acs, Singer Urschman. While i e r e they attend-was placed in a separate Toom. IiBSt ed the reception of their sister, Pearl, Tnght Acs brnke into Singer's Tomn -whose -marriap to "Mr. PhD. Tvrrscn- two -wfififes ago, -was taken lunne Sun- and choked nim tD death snouilug, man took place August SI. A jnoriber day snfl J3B aiow aionvHlRBnng a t i e r "1 i s v e gotten 3dd E£ the only Jewish of affairs liEve Tjeen given :in lonor of snlgect in any iingdom." these out-oi-tcwn guests. Joe 3£rasn£ left Sunday evemng iar POOR CEOP ^EPOKTED I N jffiiss jffindred Cdhn, daughter ;of "Lincoln, ^Nebraska, -v&ere las srteTed COLO3SIES WE&B. OUESSA ^abnl and Mrs. Frederick' Cohn, left i i s freshman year at & E Ujuversity Ph^rV"^- (3.T. A ) A poor larvest Sunday i o r Chicago, HI., -where she of . is jejmrtefl in the Jewish colmiifis i n %vill be connected ~vrith the Jevrish Sothe District of Odessa, accmrnnig "to Ifix. anfllMrs. 25athan liicharfls liave rial Service IBureau. . ' . .. amoved this '•week and are now a t "home the Conimunist paper, 4CDer Stem,''': Pour Inmared settlers' families ooeed ' Dr. Sam Gerson, -who\3s connected a t 35 3sfnrfh Seventh Street. irnmsdiate assistance and seed i e r -with the Jewish "Welfare Board :in Mr. Al Gilinsky i a s Tetmnefl iome fhe winter sowing. Pittsburjgh, Pa., -will arrive 3n Omaha the latter part of the month to -visit from a -week's trip out ISast. 2553 Famam St. -with Ids cousin, l i r s . George Isewand'Mrs.Sam HosEntnal spent laus. j the jiast -week-end !in Chicago, THrnniK, SAM TAKNOFF where ikey -vusjteS relatives. ISx. Meyer -Beber Teturned inme Sunday ±com the Sarvara Hrfiversite, ! 3ffir."and^Mrs. 3 . 1 . Cohan nf Chicago * ^airrtang and •where i e attended t h e .summer ses- j IHinnis arrivfid Monday and spent a (Sew days iere Tjimting Mr. anS Mrs. sion. I Saxry Xiibby. The Gohans iave now .1314 Sooth 28tfa Street 12r. Jack W, Marer left Tuesday jTtwTvFn an apartment in the El Bnednr evening on a three -weeks' trip tD [ Court 3n Dmaha -where they -will make Hansas City, .St. X.riis, Chicago, In- I "their intnre 3aonie. TJs aianapolis, 3nd., Cincinnati, Ohio, Detroit, :Mienv anfl develanil, Ohio. He The Council Blufis Talmud "Torah -will .return October -A. Snmiay Scnool will jiot start the JiBW season Tintil about the 3tiifl31e of Dc"Mis, -S.- 3lEviiz returned lome ftober, on acconnt c£ the Solidays. "VTedn^iiiay ±rom s. fhree -weeks' "visit j Plans aits mow "being- anefle ita a. Con-with i e r idaughter, Mis. M. Gendler, j.ment •wfltfirmation -Class this/yaai. Fonrteen ¥ears in Is m. Convenience Note and Will and -with relatives in St. Icmis, Mo. Purther annonncements >wHl be snade ^Europe Miss K o Shames returned Iinme Sn the Jewish Press. Be M Nscesdtu a Lottie Later on Sunday ±rom a two months' -risit dn ENTERED PALESTINE Xos Angeles and San JPrandscD, Calif. IDUBING AUGUST Gladys MeyET is leaving Mon5 Cxonmg St. lOlfi Mamey St. day evening ior Chicagp, HI., -where j Jerusalem^-J. T . A.)—Jewish imshe will enter l i e Chicago A-H-. Xnsti- priigrBtion t o Palestine -contintied 3n 3IDE3HB CDH3S"—-DATTD COHK Teacber of Piano tntfi. She -will "be acnompanien :by Jher j the month Df Angust^,B95 immigrants l i e Isig^est assortment of etsntlarfi another, Mrs. IE. Meyer, -who will Tdsit i landed in August according to figures Granfl Piano Used Top Coats in the west—atnS— made known "here today. •Chicago i o r ^several

LINCOLN

I

i

i

I

FOR RENT

A. SOMBERG & SON

NewYear

& SMS, he.

Good IDEAL BUTTER

A Happy

New Year to AH Our Patrons and Friends

Staiislav Jan

Happy New Year

Is the wish of Motor Company

GARDNER

A Top Coat

Mraska Ait§ Parts

Select Yours

Mr. and TVTfg. M. Enlakofsliy iave WANT as their inuse guest Mr. 3£ulakofE- i i iy!s cousin, Mrs. Julia Xovin, of \ Couple to share B iorne in I jBrooklyn, 3 t 1T., who will visit ierD ]Minne Iiusa. Home for several twseks n£ker which she j I"or iurfher information call ~Wsb-} I -will leave 5or Ivansas City, Mo., to 1 ster 057D. ;• -yisit lef ore Teturriing "to i e r iome. I . -ana1 Mrs. Morris Mirikin cele•farated "QiBir rtwenty-fiffli •wedding anniversBTy a t a jecepiaon ield a t tieir lome Sunday, September 13. Mi. find Mrs. Morris Banm an3inance 'fhe lurth Df-a iaby oaughter, Setty Bufh, ibnrn Saturday, SeptEmIJSP ;5, a t "flfce Wise Memorial -hospital. The Misses Sybil »nd 333nma Merlin, of Sioux '"Ciiy, Iowa, are iti 3)Drofby J'.nrmanSymie lEhlQip MilSer -will enter :the CJreignton. -university this Thnxsaay. TVTT. Urnest Meyer is lezving for Siorac "City, Iowa, Saturday ±0 join 3Bas. M>eyer, TvhD Ihus "been -visiting •rofh Ibsr parents. They -will Jetnrn

in

snfl ComposiiiDD jjj 309-iD Batteiscm AT 318S Pigmlar Songs

B. HIMELBLOOM

Battery and Electrical Service

VESTA 1 BATTERIES WE Service All 31akes &f Butteries Free of Charge

•Wishes Ms IFrienik

1511 :NB. 24fh St.—"Webster B2B4.

Jim® than 500 Top Coats—BO esirawnaiiiaiy "wortis -of -descriptive intent.

*25

Cost Less Per Montli of Seirice

BAKER A Hcrpw and Prosperous New

arauember please, that fox the amount you to pay you v2i get the of Top Coat -mine in the

Fabrik. ~Everr Ssnght for

OMAHA BATTERY CO. m: 2212

St. C0EEECT APFAEBL


x'AGE 6—THE JEWISH PRESS—THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1925 -*•

Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Abramson and daughter, Lorraine, .4815. . California St., extend their best •wishes to their relatives and; friends for a-happy and prosperous year. - , • - • •

Mr. and Mrs. William L. Holzman extend their best wishes to their friends, for a Happy New Year.

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

Mr. and Mrs. Herman Meyerson Dr. and Mrs. A. S. Rubnitz, 5016 and family, of 127 South 8th St., St., extend best wishes for Council Bluffs, la., wish all their 1 » Burt the coming New Year to all friends and relatives a Happy j their friends and relatives. and Prosperous New Year.

Mrs. £ . Jacobs and family, 4910 j Dodge St., wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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

Mr. and Mrs. Sam Meyerson and ] family, 600 Roosevelt Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, wish all their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

l

<............••».......•..t

It is with pleasure that we extend New Year Greetings to our Friends. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Z. Kosenfeld and family, 405 North 40th, Omaha,

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Mr. and Mrs. Max Froirikin and son; Milton Robert, 140 North 38th St., extend their, best greetings to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Chapman and family, 308 South 49th Ave., wish to extend heartiest and best greetings to their relatives and friends for a most joyous and prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. E. Meyer and fam- i ily, 2919 Florence Blvd., extend S heartiest and best wishes for a j Happy and Prosperous New Year \ to all their relatives and friends.

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

Personal New Year Greetings +•

Mr. and Mrs. A.' I. Kulakofsky, 3154 Lincoln Blvd., wish all their relatives and friends everywhere , a Happy and Prosperous New j Year.

, t . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . . „

. . . . . • . . . • . . . . . ; .

—4 +•

+•

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

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

Mr. and Mrs. Fred B. Cherniss, 1314 South 25th- Street, extend heartiest and best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy j : and Prosperous. New ••Year.:

Mr. and Mrs. A. Goldstein and family, 102 North 54th St., extend most heartiest and best wishes to their .relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Alpirn and family extend their best wishes ' to their relatives and friends for , a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

:••'

•'.'•"

'•'

"'

• -•'

+'"••

t +•

Mr. Morris ArMn, 610 North 21st St., extends heartiest New • Year Greetings to his friends .and relatives.

Mr. and Mrs. Philip Saks and family of 615 Benton streets extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lapidus and family, 2205 Hanscom Blvd., extend heartiest Greetings to their friends and relatives for a Happy. , and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Abe Jacobs, of Norfolk, Nebr., wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wilder and { family, of Manhattan, Kas., wish their relatives and friends a Happy New Year.

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

-•• 4-

'—1 •+

+•

Mr. Irving Chernow, of Bradley, Merriam & Smith, takes this opportunity to wish his friends j a, -Happy and Prosperous New. Year. .. . "

Mrs. Sarah Arldn, 610 North 21st St., takes this opportunity to wish all her friends and rela-, tives a Happy' and Prosperous New Year. < , • • •* -.

Mr. and Mrs. H. Goldstein and daughter, Dorothy, 616 So. 32nd Avenue, extend heartiest greetings for a. Happy ; New Year to j their relatives and friends.

Mr. and Mrs. A. Saxe and famMr. and Mrs. J. Milder, 2860 ily, 3557 Jackson St., extend best Capitol Aye., extend heartiest | j and best wishes to their relatives greetings to their relatives and and friends for a most joyous j I friends for a happy and prosperand prosperous New Year. j ous New Year,

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. Joseph Jacobs and son, Allan Joseph, 2447 Browne Street, wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year,

4 Rabbi and Mrs. Frederick Cohn and family, 5105 Webster Street, take this opportunity of wishing1 all their friends a Very Happy New Year.

Mr. M. M. Beitel, of Midwest Cap Company of Des Moines, wishes all his customers and friends a Happy New Year.

Dr. and Mrs. M. I. Gordon extend heartiest and best wishes to their relatives and friends'f or 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 very liappy New Year.

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

Mrs. Harris Levey and family, 111 South 34th. Street, wish their friends and relatives a Happy New Year,.

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

HiMr. and Mrs. J. Berek and family, 1348 No. Broad St., Fremont, Nebr., wish their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous, New Year.

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

Mr. and Mrs. J. Cohn, 301 North 36th Ave., wish their friends Happiness and Prosperity for the coming New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bernstein and family, of 222 Frank Street, Council Bluffs, la., extend their, best wishes to their relatives and ; friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. •

Mr. and Mrs. Meyer Green and family, 2047 North 19th St., extend best wishes to their -relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. .

Mr. and Mrs. Max Crounse, 1514 North 24 St., wish their patrons, friends, and relatives a happy and prosperous New Year.

Mr. Nathan E. Jacobs, 4910 Dodge St., extends to all his friends best and -heartiest wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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

Mr. and Mrs. William Milder, 4815 Davenport St., extend their J heartiest wishes to the relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Abner Kaimen and family, 129 North 33rd St., wish all their relatives and friends a most Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Saul Levey, 4910 Dodge St., xtend best wishes to their relatives and friends for a- Happy and ^Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. S. Nathan and fam- J Mr. and Mrs. I. Schwartz a n d ily, of Nathan's Lake, extend family , 4920 Capital Ave., wish heartiest greetings to their relaj their friends and relatives a tives and friends for a Happy happy and prosperous New Year. and Prosperous New Year. «

Mr, and Mrs. Charles Schimmel and family of the Blackstone Hotel wish their friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

1 1

t

•f-

-f

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.

Dr. Nathan Dansky, 482 Brandeis Theater Bldg., extends his heart- | iest New Year Greetings to all his friends and relatives.

Dr. and Mrs. A. Greenberg and daughters, Beverly Ramona and Renee, 308 North 38th St.v extend to all their relatives and friends a most Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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

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

Mr. and Mrs. David Potash, 5831 5 North 24th St., wish their relatives and friends joy and happiness for the New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. David Greenberg and children, 2418 Redick Ave., extend their best greetings for the New Year to their relatives and friends.

Mr. CarlJKatleman^ 750 Omaha National Bank Bldg., extends l heartiest and best wishes to his friends and relatives for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

"Mr. and Mrs.- Charles Levinson and family, 104 South 34th St., wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New • Year. .;,

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

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

-*•

Mr. and Mrs. Sam A. Bliss, Princeton Apts., wish their relatives and friends happiness and prosperity for the coming New, Year.

Mr. Sam Dansky wishes all his friends and relatives a Happy . and Prosperous New Year.-! -•*-,

Mr. nnd Mrs. Dave Sherman and I family, 127 North 34th Street, extend to all their relatives and' friends a most happy and pros-. | perous 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. , I• .

. . . . . • , • • • . • • • .

•+. •*

. i

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.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Greenberg and children, 112 So. 50th Aye., wish their relatives and friends a most Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. J. Katelman and family, 412 Oakland Ave., Coun- j cil Bluffs, la., wish all their j friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. M. Potashnifc and family, 1537 North 20th St., extend their heartiest wishes for joy and prosperity to all their j relatives and friends for the coming New Year.

-Mr. and Mrs. Morris Levinson, 3107 Mason St., wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. Israel Shomer, of Bradley, Merriam & Smith, extends best wishes to his friends for E happy and prosperous New Year.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Mr. and Mrs. Michel Katelman and daughter, Isobel Rita, 111 South 34th Street, wish their friends and relatives a Happy New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Nathias F.Leyenson and son, Judith, Milton Apartments, wish all their friends success and contentment for the New Year.

Dr. and Mrs. S. E. Ravitz, j Melrose Apts., 33rd and California Sts., extend heartiest and best wishes to their friends and relatives for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kavich and , son, Lawrence, 138 North 38th 1. St., extend best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy 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.

Mr. and Mrs. L. Richards and family, of San Jose, California, extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year,

..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.

Mr. Morris Linsman wishes to extend to his friends and relatives best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Richman and family, of 1528 Avenue B, wish j their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. Irvin Stalmaster wishes to express to his friends best wishes J for a Happy and Prosperous j New Year.

' Rabbi and Mrs. H. Grodinsky and family, of 2689 Davenport Street, extend their best wishes to their relatives arid friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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

Mr. and Mrs. William R. Blnmenthal wish everybody a Happy New Year.

•4-

4~

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . i

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Silverman, 2430 Camden Ave., extend their best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

4-

Mr. and Mrs..JosephJBonbff, 120'. North 31st St:,.:wish their relatives and friends happiness and prosperity for "the: coming New Year.

Dr. vand^ Mrs. M. Grodinsky, Nottingham. Apts., extend to their friends- best wishes for a Happy and- Prosperous New Year. «•

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Elkin, 1712' North 28th St., wish their rela• tives and friends, a Happy Prosperous New. Year.-: ..•

-f 4-

4-

Mr. and Mrs. David P. Feder and daughter, Aileen Phyllis, 1038 Euclid Ave., Miami Beach, Fla.-, extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy' and Prosperous. New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Brodkey. wish to extend to their relatives and friends best wishes for a Happy New Year.

-r -4-

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

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

-*•

4- 4-

-*. +. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Brodkey and family, 2812 Dodge St.,. extend heartiest and best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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

Mr. and Mrs. George Krasne and family, of rJ25 South Eighth St., extend best.*wishes and heartiest New Year Greetings to their relatives and friends.

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

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lipsey and family, 122 North 35th St., wish their - relatives . and friends joy and prosperity for the coming 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. 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.

Messrs. Dave A , Jos. H. and Meyer Freeman, 2869 Dapenport Street, wish their relatives and friends a happy New Year.

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

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Krasne and family, of 2119 Avenue D, take this opportunity to wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. Reuben Maizel, 2031 North 20th St., extends heartiest greetings and best wishes to his friends and relatives for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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

Mr. and Mrs. Dave Stein, 3211 Hamilton St., wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. M. Herzberg, 106 South 52nd St., take. t ¥ a . opportunity to extend* best wishes to their friends for Happine'ssand j Prosperity for the coming New ' Year. -

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

Mr. and Mrs. Jake Malashock and son, Edwin Marvin, 3320 California St., extend to all their friends heartiest and best wishes for joy and Happiness for the New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Sam L. Robinson j and family, 823 North 50th Ave., j take this opportunity to wish ] their friends and relatives a happy and prosperous New Year.

Dr. A. A. Steinberg, 430 Worlds Herald Bldg., takes this oppor;1 tunity to extend heartiest greetings and best wishes to his relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. '

Dr. Philip Romanek, 434 Brandeis Theatre Bldg., extends best and most sincere wishes that the New Year may bring joy and happiness to all his friends and relatives.

Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Steinberg of 2015 Cass St. extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. . ;

•4+•

Bfc and M W ^ ^ i ^ i ^ * < 1035 North 32-street wish their. < relives and, friends A' Happy J •New:Year.y•'.;>;.-;-:':} •' • -vvv - / :

Mr. and Mrs. L. Stalmaster and family wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

-*• -f

•+-

Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Brodkey and family, 3429 Webster St., extend heartiest New Year Greetings to their relatives and friends.

Mr. and Mrs. J. Robinson and family, of Norfolk, Nebraska, extend best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy New Year.

Dr. and Mrs/Benj. T. Freidman. and family, 5106 'Capitol ,:Ave«V wish to extend to their friends" and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

Mr.-.- and Mrjs. S. Hirschberg, 2758: Chicago; St., extend heartiest wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. •• +•

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

Mr. and. Mrs. Harry Malashock and family, 5202 Davenport St., extend to all their friends heartiest and best wishes for joy and happiness for the New Year.


-:—~~—^AGE.:7=--$HE-3EWISH PRESS—THURSDAY,

17,-1925

WILL ASK RESULTS OF Poland, are preparing -what , was CONVERTS T W I C E EXCILED" ized in 1869, is one of Omaha's oldest according to Mr. Powers, manager of service is that in making a repair on j ares which have made Vesta Batteries and'most reliable insurance firms/ In the local station. ?" "^ POLISH-JEWISH AGREEMENT termed an offensive oh \ Dr. Leon MISSIONARY COMPLAINS AT any battery "we/.usc the patented feat-1 famous.' Reich, initiator of -the agreement, .*Thij5 policy included 4!ideftnite price INTERNATIONAL GATHERING the "city. Warsaw. (J.T. A.) The working of urging him to call for this week a The firm- always renders the most in advance'oh every "repair.''Vesta the Polish-Jewish agreement will be general meeting of the Club of Jew- London. (J.T.A.) Twice exciled careful and personaly attention to service stations do not work on a a matter of renewed discussion in the ish deputies to explain the results of and twice scattered" was the phrase its patrons, because they aim to up- 'charge for time' basis. The motorist 1 near future in Polish-Jewish parlia- the agreement. Rumors are also applied by Max Reich, president of hoVd their slogan, "Dependable In- knows before hand just what the rementary circles, the Jewish Telegra- afloat that Dr. Reich will be asked the "Hebrew Christian association in surance Since 1869." pair will cost, and the price is always Our Quality phic Agency correspondent learns. by the Club to explain the purpose the United States," groups of conThe present location of the Martin reasonable. • Members of the Club of Jewish De- of his proposed journey to America verted Jews, in addressing the con- Brothers Insurance Company is on Brands: 36th and "It is also part of the Vesta policy ference of the, Hebrew Christian Alli- the third flood of the Barker Block, puties, mainly coming from Congress' and possibly to postpone it. never to open a battery without the ance which opened here Sunday. Farnam Sts. 15th and Farnam Streets. Ice Creams motorist's permission, and then only RUSSIAN JEWISH REFUGEES The conference, which is an interafter every effort hag been made to and Candies ARE TO RECEIVE TWELVE national gathering of converted Jews, Aristo Confectionary Proves charge i t AMERICAN VISES MONTHLY and missionaries was presided over Light launches Phone Ideal Meeting Place "This square basis of dealing has by Sandor Samuel, missionary, who earned the good-will of all motorists. Warsaw. (J. T. A.) Russian Jewish pointed to the blood kinship of nil Harney 1276 PROMPT SERVICE Peter Domincus Proprietor of the I believe," said Mr. Powers, that one refugees stranded in Poland on their the delegates. Mr. Newgewirtz of way to America will have a slight Montreal, Canada, stated that he be- Aristo Confectionary 33rd and Cali- reason for this satisfaction with Vesta chance of proceeding to the United lieves in the progress of a "Hebrew fornia Street states that you can alStates during the coming fiscal year. Christianity." The Hebrew Christi- ways see someone that you know in jiititiiiiiiiuuuiuiiiiiiuuiHuiiuiiiiiiiuuiiitiiniiiiiiiiitiiffiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuu The American Consulate here has ans, he stated, are now fulfiilling the Aristo. The writer, to te?t the proof of this statement, remained in Mr. and Mrs. Sam Tarnoff and started to issue vises for those re- their mission. The conference will this popular sweet shop for thirty family wish their relatives and fugees who were given permission last a week. friends a Happy and Prosperous minutes one evening,.and saw twelve by the government to remain in the New Year. v people that he knew. country provisionally. Twelve vises Peter Domincus. or "Pete" as he is ] will be issued each month for Rus- ARABS ASK FLUMER TO STOP JEWISH IMMIGRATION. better known by, is very popular with sian Jewish refugees, according to a everyone that patronizes Us sweet statement of the Consulate, Jerusalem,—(J. T. A.)—The re- shap. Mr. and Mrs. A. Theodore and striction of Jewish immigration to LORD PLUMER GIVEN Pete extends a personal invitation family,. 601 South 31st Avenue, Palestine was the subject of another to everyone in Omaha that has not FIRST PUBLIC RECEPTION extend their best wishes for the New Year to all their, relatives • IN JERUSALEM memorandum of the Palestine Arab seen his candy palace to pay him a and friends. Executive submitted to the new High visit. Jerusalem,—(J. T. A.—The first ommissioner. public reception in honor of Lord The memorandum complains that Plumer, new High Commissioner of all officials in the Palestine Immigra- Tourists Express Appreciation Palestine, was given today in the tion Department are Zionists and re- of Local Battery Service Station municipal gardens for the purpose of quests the restriction of Jewish "Local motorists will be interested Mr. and Mrs. M. Turner and family, 1702 North 24th St., wish introducing to the new High Commis- migration. in the comments of many tourists who everyone a Happy and Prospersioner the community leaders Heads have stopped at the local Vesta Serous New Year. . of the various communities, profesvice Station which show the high sional and business men were present. MARTIN BROS. IS ONE OF grade of battery service to be had in OLDEST INSURANCE FIRMS To the right of Lord Plumer was the city, seated Mussa Kazim Pasha, the presi"All these tourists, are enthusiastic The Martin Brothers Insurance dent of the Palestine Arab Executive, Company, whose Agency was organ- in praise of the Vesta service policy,** Mr. and Mrs. Harry Weiner and and to his left was CoL Frederick H. family, 2109 Webster St., wish their relatives and friends health, Kish, head of the department of the sass wealth, and: happiness for the Palestine Zionist Executive. Lord coming New Year. . . We thank the people of Council Bluffs for their kind patronage Planner's greeting to the assembled during the past year. '••'•"' guests was simple and courteous in manner. The new High Commissioner went WE WISH THEM ALL A MOST Mr. and Mrs. A. Weiss and fam- by areoplane yesterday to Amman, ily, of 8335 Hickory Street, exHappy and Prosperous New Year. the capital of Transjordania. It is tend best wishes to their relatives believed that the purpose of his trip and friends for a Happy and was the straightening out of the unProsperous New Year. favorable relations between Emir Abullah, ruler of Transjordania, and 619 W. Broadway, Council Bluffs, Iowa. Rikabi Pasha Transjordanian Prime Minister. airo-asS Mr. Fred White, 906 First NaBritish Labor Paper Accuses tional Bank Bldg., extends the season's greetings to his relatives Palestine Administration of ^iniiiiitiiHiniiiiniiiHtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitniiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimriAinHiiimiitt and friends.

Just Opened

f

Sweet Shop

I Additional Personal i New Year Greetings

NTENELLE 350 Rooms 350 Baths

GORELICPS Kosher Heats and Delicatessen

.,

Surpressing Unions

London,—(J. T. A.)—The suppression of labor unions by the Palestine

Dr. and Mrs. M. G." Wonl, 210 North 49th St., extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy.and Prosperous New YeaT. -,

Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Wolf and son, Justin, extend to their family and friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

administration is charged by the Jerusalem" corres'pdndeht' of the "Daily Herald", British labor organ. The correspondent attacks the Palestine administration for what he terms to be "a war on Palestine unions". He accuses the government of having a deliberate policy to destroy the unions and cites facts of worldngman thrown into prison without trial. He also charges that arrested workingmen were beaten in Haifa prisons and were led through the streets in chains.

sliliifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliililiiiiiiililiiltllilllilililili^

ARISTO CONFECTIONERY "The AwsTO-crat of Omaha Sweet Shops"

SUN" PRINTING COMPANY -AND

SHOAL K. FREED, WISH THEIR FRIENDS AND PATRONS -

A Happy and Prosperous New Year

BEST WISHES

FOR THE NEW YEAR TO ALL OUR JEWISH PATRONS 83rd at California

Ttiiiimiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiintiliiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiin:

Har. 5467

Wishing Our Friends and Patrons Lionberger Service Satisfies

Why Experiment? Take Your Tire and Battery Troubles to

ERGER 1

Every Transaction Guaranteed Satisfactory 2220 Harnev—At. 1373

Best Service

Best Values

Your Ne&* Tire From Lionberger

Reflecting the Spirit of Hospitality in Omaha

A Very Happy and Prosperous New Year W I T H THE renewed

assurance that their interests will in the future always receive the same careful and personal attention that it has been our constant endeavor to render in the past.

250 Rooms 200 Baths and the

ROME CAFETERIA

—' "Dependable Insurance since 1869" . Insurance Surety Bonds v Phone Atlantic 0135 -

I 5

Always Open

Operated for Your Comfort by

JWARTIN BROS. & CO.

H

2* 3

Eppley Hotels Company •SB

^uiuiiiiiiiiitiitiiiiutuiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiititiiiiiiiiiniunuiniuiiuiiuuiiiiiiiunniiiuiiiituiiiiiitiiiiiiitiuiitiiiiiiiiuttir.


PAGE; 1—THE.JEWISBPPRESS—THDRSDAT, SEPTEMBER 17,. 1925-rrSECTlON, TWO domestic communal problems, sight Jewish colonization possibilities in the World War that she welcomes darker, for in Germany, Austria, Hunwas lost "for a time of the fact that Mexico, President Calles of that coun- additions to her productfee population. gary, and Roumania, there were no the , condition of "Jews in Eastern try have extended a most cordial invi- In Italy, a new school law did not find riots. The saddest feature of the picEurope was still unstable and unsat- tation to Jews to avail ihemsehres of favor with Jews because it prescribed ture is that the younger generation, isfactory, but the visits to this countryt its rich agricultural tjpportunities. religious teaching in the elementary especially the students at Universities, of various lelagatioiis brought about The report of these experts has not schools according to Catholic beliefs; a. pears to have assumed active leaa revival of interest in overseas prob- yet been published. As for Sooth peril to Jews harks also in the cam- dership in (his vicious and shameful lems, leading to the proposal for the America, the only item of interest is paign of Mussolini and his followers movement. In Austria, students riotBY HAEKY SCHNEEDEBMANST launching of-a drive for $15,000,000 a sad one—the ape range in Brazil- against Freemasonry, with which, ed against Jewish lecturers, in one for a sor* of overseas chest, for-the of a Portuguese edition of "The Jew- some Facisti Newspapers falsely case against a professor whose family (EDITOR, AMERICAN JEWISH TEAS BOOK) benefit especially of the Jews of Rus- ish Peril', that fiendisTt "English pas- charge, Jews -are in alliance. A move- has been Christian since the middle sia. quil in which the, notorious forger ment to collect a fund for the erection of the eighteenth century. In Gerof a monument to Moses Maimonides, many, cemetary vandalism was per"The Protocols of Russia. ^Illlllfllllllillliilliiiiiiiiiillllllllllliilliiiiiiffitiiliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiliiiiiiitiiiiiiiliiii^ FOREIGN COUNTRIES In England, due to the anti-Jewish the 12th. century Jewish roumanist petrated, and fanaticism rose to such Seven Arts Feature Syndicate I and in the chairman of the Committee lege, went forward successfully. In- - We come now to consider the most propaganda of 1920-22 and to thewas inaugurated in Spain, the govern- a pitch that even a monument erected an in Postdam by Emperor Frederick of the House of rep- terest in Jewish music was lively; the significant events exacting Jews in widespread unemployment, an anti- ment of which also promulgated Copyrighted. -, t 1 Toe Jewish Press, by special arrange- j Hebrew Union College a t Cincinnati foreign countries. We may dismiss alien psychology, analagous to that of interesting decree offering Spanish William in 1852 in honor of the gifted ment -with the Seven Arts Feature Syii-! very briefly the "two American cout- the United States, prevails to such an citizenship to all those descendants of French-Jewish actress, Rachel Felix, Anu-aiien feeling' has gone so far established a special department in tinents dicnte, presents the ouly authoritative and the move enlightened coun- extent, that Jewish organizations felt former Spanish subjects who care was pulled down and shattered. Stuthat subject, and a national society tries Of Western Europe. In Canada, called upon to send a delegation to enough about it to comply with a few dents at the University of Frankfort for the advancement of synagogue Women s Clubs year Book. Harry SchneiAemann not year Book. Harry SchneiAemanntnot music organized. The Jewish Educa- communally speaking, the most note- the Home Secretary in order to en- simple formalities. It is not yet cavalierly decided to exclude foreign ly xeviews i th outstanding ttdi f last February on favor of an on only the events of amendthe year 5CS5, but analyzes and, intion Association in New-3foTk-J»d-» worthy event was the opening of the deavor to prove to him the baseless- known how this invitation has been Jewish applicants; in another univerdicates the reflex of these events on ment to the constitution-which would successful year in its endeavor to country to 5,00fr Jewish refugees, ness of this sentiment. "But this ac- received by the hundreds of thousands sity the students forced a Jewish JevriBh life.—THE KDITOR. provide that "no person except a na- bring to more young people the ad- upon the guarantee of Jewish organi- tion was futile. The campaign of of Jews in the Medtitteranean basin teacher to resign; and the Prussian tural-born citizen of the "United States vantages of education in Jewish reli- zations that they would not become some extremists' among the suppor- who trace their ancestry to Spanish Minister of Education ordered school INTBODUCTION be eligible to the'position of a justice gion and history, and -similar work public charges. 'Tins action was part- ters of human societies against forebears and who still speak the lan-authorities not to appoint Jews as Because of the Jewish r people, r^_t the of the Supreme Court,.a member of was begun on a city-wide scale in ly finahcSd" Tiy the Emergency Com- Shehitah, the Jewish method of guage of Cervantes. The Jewish school superintendents. Because the only'large national" group "m" exist- . the Cabinet, or a speaker of the House Cleveland. mittee for Jewish Refugees in the slaughtering animals was not re-community of Lisbon, Portugal, has poetic genius Heine was a Jew, his A national * Training ence -which has no national home, al-! of Representatives", forgetting that School for Jewish Social Work was United States. This Committee also sumed, and two non-Jewish experts inaai^jrated a movement to reclaim works are banned in many of the high though one is now in the remaking^ ' the present Secretary of Labor, an also- established during the past year. took over tbar problems of thefiveorafter an exhaustive inquiry declared for Judalism the children of theschools and colleges. In both Austria occupies the unique position of en- ardent immigration restrictionist, is Yiddish theatres were prosperous six thousand" Jews .who were induced the method unexceptionable. thousands of Marannos or crypto- and Germany, a movement is afoot to deavoring in almost every country of himself of foreign birth. by unscrupulous steamship agents to Jews, and has appealed to foreign estahlish "Aryan" theatres, from and artistically successful. There are France loomed up, during the past the world to maintain Non-Political j The anti-alien movement is not indications that the time is not* far go to Cuba* an the false promise that Jewish communities for help in this which all tracks of "Semitic" influence features of a nationhood indissolubly openly anti-Jewish, although evidence distant when these Trill become Eng- their entry into the United States year", as a possible country of immi- direction. are to "be avoided like the past. gration for Jews who desire to engage bound up with a distinct. religious of a suppressed anti-Jewish .animus lish-Jewish theatres. I would be thus facililatr I. The Com-in agriculture, France's man-power Coming now to the countries of faith, an annual review of envents re- are not rare. Who knows how-the /Continued on pa«« 3.) In the midst of their attention to I mittee also sent experts to investigate having been-so tragically depleted by Central Europe, the picture becomes lating to the Jewish people may prove eight thousand ' emigrant refugees, both interesting and useful. Just as stranded in European ports,-might the review of a year's history of a po- have fared at the hands of Congress litical Nation would naturally devide had they not all been Jews? Only itself into a survey of domestic hap- ignorance and bigorty can account for penings, on the one hand, and events this feeling, for the achievements jgf abroad which have affected the Na^ Jews in the upbuilding of America are tion, on • the - other, a review of thewrit so large that even those of weakJewish year must logically cover first est sight can see. And yet, Prof.the most significant tendencies within Philip: Marshall Brown of Princeton the various communities, as such, and, University, heart vuc va.x-iuu.0 LuuuuuiuuciSi s&o o u w i « u \ i j i^.uAVGxaA(Or, could t u u i u find u u u it xu in Xll his ilia u c « £ It second, an appraisal of the meaning of i to revive the anti-Semitic charge those outside happenings which have divided allegiance, that the Jew deofa impinged in one way ;or another upon wanderer who does riot send his roots scattered Israel. deep down into the soil of .the country To ignore geographical bemndries in which he may settle. And Dean and consider Jewry as a whole/would Inge of St. Paul's, London, in the be artificial and strained. Each course of his wanderings in this country has its own Jews,—as some- country, last spring, must have been one has well said "the Jew it de- infected by the anti-Jewish virus, for serves." Both the internal communal otherwise how could he, who had not problems and those arising from the hesitated to attack anti-Semitism in impact of outside forces are different England, have said, even in jest that" in every land. But for all useful he would "advise the Jews to rebuild purposes, the various communities the temple of Solomon in New York, may be dealt with in a few groups. where they have the largest number The Jewish year has been most event- of Jews—and plenty of Gentiles to ful in the United States, in the middle fleece"? European Lands, * in Russia,' and in Other disquieting signs that there Palestine, and the greater part of our are Americans who are backsliding bird's eyeview wm^thertfore, deal ££•"the'homage paldto theGrani with events of Jewish significance in Duchess Victoria Feodorevna, wife these countries. Duke Boris, one of the In a general way, it may be said of the Grand pretenders, and the shabby that the year has not been a happy Russian treatment of Count Karolyi, Chamone insofar as the attitude of non- pion of Hungarian republicanism, Jews towards Jews is concerned. As upon their visits to the United States. respects Jewish communal life, prono aid or comfort was given to gress or its absence has been largely theBut of this nativist philosdetermined by the economic conditions ophyexponents by the Chief Magistrate of the in the various countries. In the In the United States, for example, United States. Although he was sithere have been signs of growth; lent on the subject during the 1924 while our information of communal Presidential campaign, Mr- Coolidge graciously accepted an invitation to events in other western lands is mearge, such data as we do posess deliver an address a t the laying of; appear to_ indicate a more or less sta- the cornerstone of the Jewish comtic" jcomjition-j in-Eastern Europe,' the munity eenter- in Washington;-!}-^.;' communities are struggling; in Bus-* and in the address he Jet .it he,, known sia, the Jewish community has fallen; in no unmistakable terms that hefwas upon evil days; Palestine, the young- .not .at ill in sympathy with thfe -new est of Jewish communities is natural- nativism, that he disagreed wholly ly growing most rapidly and most in- with those who held Professor. Brown's views, and that he recognized terestingly. the debt whichvAmerica owes to i& THE UNITED STATES Jews. .> "' _. In the United States, Jews were Examples of- Jewish contributions vitally interested in the various to American civilization were not symptoms of continuing reaction of lacking during the year. In the realm which the Ku Klux Klan is the-sym- of economic life,, for example, p , J Jews bol. The most noteworthy and wide- have h made d greatt strides trid iin tth ehbetbt spread symptom was the attempt to terment of working conditions, and, introduce religion into public educa- during the year, .the organization of tional institutions. Endeavors in this ladies' garment' workers, under Jewdirection in various parts of the ish leadership, .pioneered in -the- field country were so similar, that it may of unemployment insurance. Although • be safely assumed that they were in- despite a mistaken notion, the richest spired by some central source probab- Jews are merely well-to-do when com ly the Klan. They took" four forms, pared with non-Jewish men of great namely, (1) to have the Bible read in wealth, as the recent publication of the public schools, (2) to have pupils income tax returns clearly shows, the excused from school for a part of the contribution of the former to philanweek to enable them to receive reli- thropic objects were not insignificent. gious instructions outside of theThe contributions of Arthur Lehman, Jesse, Percy, and Herbert, the sons school, (3) to bar as teachers those of of Isidor Straus, of the Sachs broth~i - ; - : who are not orthodox Christians, and ers, of Goldman Sachs and Company,' (4) to bar the teaching of any theory and of Mortimer L. Schuff for various human origin which differed from the departments at Harvard University, biblical account alone totaled three quarters of a milAttempts in the first three move- lion dollars. Then there was the ments met with failure everywhere. establishment by Simon Guggenheim The fatal blow against them was of a $3,000,000 foundation for scholarstruck when the United States Su- ships for advanced study abroad; 'the preme Court declared unconstitutional gifts of Julius Rosenwald and Felix the Oregon School Law of 1923, which M. Warburg to John Hopkins UniverUsabilities , Resources sought to abolish all private and pa- sity, the $100,00 donation of Simon rochial schools. An active part in N. Stein to the University of RochesCapital Stock 1 3005000.00 Ijoans and Discounts .$4,486,438.40 fighting this vicious measure was ter, the $500,000 trust fund establish130,000.00 Surplus taken by Louis Marshall, president of ed by Mr. and Mrs. Felix M. Warbarg Bonds 1,071,650.34 the American Jewish Committee. ror the support of the ••asiting nurse 30,742.05 Undivided Profits Heal Estate - 104,286.55 Even in Tennessee, seat of the famous service of the Henry Street Settle"Evolution " trial, the general as- ment in New York, and the gift of 24,366.86 Depositors Guarantee Fund 30,000.00 furniture and Fixtures sembly rejected a bill providing that Daniel and Murray Guggenheim of a series of free band concerts to'the None boards of education shall not employ Bills Papable 11.01 Overdrafts any teacher "who does not believe in people of New York City, and of $500, 6,491,965.34 Deposits 1,284,687.95 the existence of God and the deity of 000 to New York University for a Cash his son, Jesus Christ." Jews followed school of aeronautics. Simon LevI the evolution case with so much in- of Terre Haute, Indiana, bequested $6,917,074.25 5,977,074.25 terest because upon its outcome may in its parks. These an» many more depend the fate of that vital principles princely gifts came trofh men fend of religious liberty, the seperation of womenn who were generous also in their support of Jewish communal Church and State. Another indication that a spirit of undertakings. - . 'i- '• illiberal reaction is still abroad in the What Jews have meant and are land was the public attitude toward aliens and the immigration question. meaning in American life was perhaps How different is the spirit of America most strictingly indicated by some of today from what it was in 1881 when the names on last year's necrology: anti-Jewish massacres ' took- -place in Arnold W. Brunner, architect; Sam AU Deposits war hero; Julius Goldzier, Bussia, when, at a public meeting, a Dreben, Congressman; Samuel Gomprominent public man was wildly ap- former by the In This Bank Are Protected labor leader; Julius Eahn, father plauded when he said:"Let them pers, of the war-time selective draft law; Depositor's Guarantee Fund of the come! ..I would to heaven i t were in Gus Karger. Dean of Washington * our power to take the whole three newspaper men, to mention the most State of Nebraska million Jewsjof Eussia!** During the past year, repeated ap- prominent. Turning now to internal communal peals for the'admission of about eight thousand Jews, who could not come in agairs we cannot fail to.note a perunder the old immigration law be- ceptible trend toward cooperation cause of the exhaustion of the nation- among Jewish organizations. There al quotos, nor under the new because was for one thing, the meeting last of the drastic reduction of these im-_ June-of representatives of the various migration almost to the vanishing wings of Judaism who determined to into a conference to further , point, anti-alien fanatics, who would unite common interests. In April ' if they could banish from the country their ten national bodies interested in Jewall who are not descendants of those ish education, met in council at Camhere in 1789, are crying for still more Mass., and discussed the prodrastic restrictions, for the universal bridge, of religious and welfare work registration 'of- aliens, and for aboli- motion for Jewish tion of any: time-limitations in the universities. students a t colleges and matter of deportation of aliens. In The various institutions of higher .all these directions,, these doctrinaire nativists have enthusiastic allies in Jewish learning- were in"~a flourishin several States of the Department high -officials.of -*>£ -United Labor t o establish a yeshiva, a Jewish col-

THE JEWISH YEAR IN REVIEW

2?

STATEMENT

)

of Omaha

-I I-

REPORT OF CONDITION AT CLOSE OF BUSINESS JUNfe 30TH, 1925

. *••.- i

-

*••

T ^ E L A R G K S T

S T A T E

B A N K

IN

N E B R A S K A

<.•','--.


PAGE 2—THE JEWISH PRESS—THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1925 -l-SECTIONTWd

Our We welcome this oGcasion to wisn you A Happy and Prosperous New Year and to thank you for your generous patronage and support e invite you to open a charge account at any of our filling stations: [ 25th and Fumam Streets 25ii*>ild drWitig ^treejtkfSl 10th and Pierce Streets Bluffs • ^ It'

I -

"<je*

24th and Charles Streets r 24th and Fowler Ave., ;; 24th and Q Streets, South OnSaha Elk City, Nebr. '" $ ;

>•

We know our products are of the highest qualities and oixr service to you is the same

N *T POV^ERFUL GASOLINE Top Notch 100% Pure Pennsylvania Oil

t '

'- * '•'•I

32-36

For h o m e

c o n 8 u m p t i o n

AGENTS FOR

KLEAN HEAT AUTOMATIC OIL BURNER U. S. GRAVITY OIL BURNER

Is.

fe

^

rV-,.


PAGE 3—THE JEWISH PRESS—THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1925—SECTION TWC nomic field. That section of political tory- workers, and peasants., In the be scrapped, but of actual help there not due almost entirely to the idealism, "Our branch factory will be operat- the main depots. A3! Baker Compres5»^Si«H5^Biaeore;;the_war, held the various upheavals that have shaken has been nothing. Quite the reverse self-sacrifice, and toil of a compara- ed under the old name Northwest Ice sors sold in the NortV -est will be •instead of facilitating' the immigraview that Poland was not big enough Eussia to its foundations, the agricultively small section of the Jewish to afford a living for both Poles and tural worker has always come out on tion of Jews, this is restricted by ad- people? Is there not good ground for Machine Company, branch of Baker manufactured in Omaha then shipped . •; (Continued from page 1) Jews,; or that Poles could never com- top. Besides, only the most naive can ministrative red tape, the close settle- the hope that progress will continue Ice Machine Company, of Omaha, be- in carload lots to Seattle where comland has not been even without the active encourage- cause of the important position our plete plants will be assembled a la on equal terms with Jews, has still hold the view that the present re- ment of Jews.^n the Next to Russia, Hungary is perhaps pete encouraged'-in any:-way, norhave state ment of the- Mandatory ? Much is ex- agents formerly held in the North- Ford style." gime is on the eve of overthrow—its been in power since the foundation of he darkest spot in the Jewish picture the new republic. The exponents of "expectation of life" increases annual- ox waste lands been given over for pected from the enlistment of non>f the past year. The Education time to reclamation by Jews, as.stipulated in Zionist: in the work. An enlarged west. theory have sedulously cultivated ly, so that for an indefinite ; Law of 1920, embodying the shameful this come Russia will be no place for the the Mandate;. Then, again, the Co-Jewish Agency, representative of "Our Seattle branch factory has Your 1925 subscription to The Jewa trade and professional boycott of Numerous clauses, is still in effect, the small trader or petty merchant. lonial office has practically ignored both Zionists and non-Zionists is about about 10,000 square feet of floor space ish Press is due now. Please mail Jews, and have even succeeded ind the government instituded pro- in effecting their aim by statutory Many Jews have found, and more will the Zionist Organization. Though to be formed. Perhaps, the new body teedings against the Jewish find their way into industry, but this few would have expected the Govern- may "obtain greater support for and and is located only four blocks from it in. branch of state houskeeping was never ment to appoint a successor to Sir may be taken more into the confidence articles of manufacture and comin other countries for funds for the tain highly developed in Russia. Agricul- Herbert Samuel of Zionist choice, yet of the British Goverment. merce which Jews controlled to be tdctims of this barbaric device. government monopolies, and substitu- ture appears to be the one way out it would have been a graceful gesture The work has only begun and alThough this suit was withdrawn, one ting for the Jews who had been gain- for the Jew, and the Soviet govern- if the Organization had at least been ready is much of which Jews of those reponsible for the appeal in ing a livellihood from them, non-Jew- ment appears to be sincerely trying to consulted. Even the League of Na-may bethere proud. As Dr. Weizmann inwhich the numerous clauses was just- ish veterans of the wars. Anti-Jew- help him economically, if it is destroy- tions appears to have grown lukewarm timated at the recent Congress better ly called"a mockery of all culture and ish discriminination was practised also ing him spiritually, and there is a to the Jewish cause. The comments times, a more favorablestimmung are all human rights", was found guilty of in the army and. in the civil, service. distinctmovement of Jews toward the of the Pernament Mandates Commis- sure to come. In the meantime, Jews having insulted the Hungarian nation These measures^ have resulted in theland. /This has been investigated and sion on the annual report of the Pales- all over the world, in taking stock of and was sentenced to a year's im- financial ruin- of many, long-estab prohed by representatives of the tine Admistration were quite unsym- their position and their future fate, prisonment. I t is any wonder then Jewish Joint Distribution pathetic. And yet, despite these po- should bear in their hearts the words ' by American that students in one University went Committee, who have found it worthy litical* setbacks; Jewish work in Pales~ spoken by God to Joshua, on the eve on strike against the admission of of the encouragement and the support tine has gained momentum. The He- of the passing of the Israelites into Jews, or that Jews attacked during era and: smalL traders have turned of Jews in other countries, and Amer- brew University ; was dedicated, and the land of Promise. their eyes toward Palestine, and it is devine worship on Yom Kipper, the ican Jews are now discussing various there has been notable progress in the strong and of good courage; be Day of Atonement, or that a Cabinet from .'Poland- that the, holy Land is phases of. this problem. Anxious to rehabilitation of the land, as shown noe"Beaffrighted, neither be thou disdrawing the bulk of its middle-class help their Russian brethren,.they are by the memorandum, which the Zionmayed; for the Lord thy God is with the selfconfessed perpetrators of;the \ emigration. _ , . , - , , , • yet skeptical as to the permanence ist Organization submitted to the thee whithersoever thou goest". r Csongrad outrage'of December t24;1 This condition has had a deleter- of such results as may be achieved. League of Nations last spring. ' 1923, who threw a bomb into-the midst! i°us effect upon Poland's , financial The fact that the defacto government The progress'of the past five years of the dancers at a charity ball,;kil- i standing' abroad;'arid jseyeralof^ her has not been recognized by the United was summed up by Sir Her- EXPANSION OF BAKER enlightened statesmen have ling two and wounding forty, more, or States, and that it is suppressing the bert succintly Samuel in farewell message ICE MACHINE COMPANY that the government granted amnesty come to realize that the enforced mi- Jewish religion and culture, are the the following his words: to sixty-four "Awakening Magyars" gration of upwords of three million two chief stumbling blocks in the way in The Further expansion of the Baker Ice population is rapidly increaswho in 1919 mudered as many Jews of people is not a practical possibility, of an agreement among American ing. There is an accumulated balance Machine Company was announced tothat Jews, too, must live in Poland, Kesckemet, paradoning them on the Jews. There are also that wing of of revenue over expenditure of more day by J. L. Baker, President, in conground that they "acted under; patrio- and that no country can prosper in the Zionists who hold that the Russian than 600,000 pounds. It has been poswMch antagonism is continually fonection with the new branch office and tic excitement? colonization scheme is a waste of ef- .sible to reduce the taxation that lay I t would be unfair to the vast ma- mented as between the various ele- fort, and that all such settlements heavily upon the cultivator. The rail- assembly plant purchased by the Comjority of good men and women in ments of the population. As a result should be made in Palestine. But the way and postal services are efficient pany at Seattle, Washington. This Europe to allow -the Impression to of this realization, a sort of Modus recent Zionist Congress took no posi- and remunerative to the State. Near- step was necessary to take care of the prevail that these outrages went on vivendi has been agreed upon by thetion in this question. ly a thousand kilometers of new roads increasing Northwest trade and also without protest. Both the Swiss and government, on the one hand, and the have been built. Public security is to facilitate the company in its efforts Jewish representatives in the Sejm PALESTINE German sections of the International completely maintained. Progress has WHOLESALE FRUIT AND Women's League for Peace and Free- or Parliment, on the other. This been made in the elimination of Ma- to obtain greater Orient business. The past year has shown, we bePRODUCE dom condemned' anti-Semitism as "treaty", which has been greeted al- lieve, that in the rebuilding of a na- laria, and other diseases that affected "We were formerly represented in "The sin of the/civilization of the! most everywhere^ in Jewish circles tional home for Jews in Palestine, lit- the population. Nearly two hundred 11th and Howard Sts. Telephone ATlantic 'Vltil twentieth century", a Hungarian Ro- with sk epticism and. suspicion, has tle tangible help is to be expected new village schools have been opened. Seattle by the North West Ice Mabe man Catholic cardinal thundred ; en. in force so short a tune that no from the Mandatory Power. Some- The government has taken every op- chine Company," said Mr. Baker, against the anti-Semitics; a Hungar- estimate of its successor failure can one has aptly dubbed Great Britain's portunity to promote a greater spirit "which was owned by a former emian deputy scored the numerous claus-; y e t be made. attitude "benevolent neutrality" of harmony between the many reli- ployee and Omahan, Mr. Herbert. He eg, and a Cabinet Minister resigned j Wecome now to the lowest stage British statesmen have not been nig- gious communities which are com-has retired from the business so as to because of the gross miscarriage of "; of the Jewish purgatory-—Russia. gardly in their praise , of Jewish prised within,, this .varied population, devote more of his time to his various Justice in the Csongrad ease. But, j This is the only land in which Jews achievement or in their assurances and those efforts had results. oil drilling interests. • these protests were futile, because, as suffer from Religion persecution, that the. Balfour Declaration will not These splendid results, are they the homely Jewish proverb puts it, Bolshevik theory is opposed to any" "i"" a • fool -fivni .'rtnivwTci o rock fnnV- into inf/i the +Vi«! thing that smacks of of nationalism, "when throws a garden, not even ten'wise men can re- and the Soviets, therefore/suppress move it". Zionism and the Hebrew language. In Roumania, the Jews seem to be At the same time, Jewish communists in the same bad case as.in Hungary, do everything in their power to dewith the difference that in the former stroy Judaism as religion. They incountry, the Government is not on the stigate the confiscation of synagogues side of the Jew-baiters—at least not which are turned inao workmens clubs openly. But even in Rumania, the or are used for other secular purposes. government is either so weak or so Last fall,, during the high holydays, indulgent that a university student many Jews of Kiev were compelled to who assassinated a--police prefect f<v worship in the open air. Jewish comdoing his duty and apprehending sev- munists also hold anti-religiouns demonstrations and carnivals on Yom eral students who mudered two Jews " in high stations, was acquitted by the Kippur in various cities. court and permitted to go up and As Soviet law prohibits the teachdown the land and incite the populace ing of religion to children, clandestine to perpetrate new outrages. Several schools have sprung up. But severe university professors lead the youth , punishment awaits those who are disin rntk the "nnlir" "holy" •voa-r \?ar nirainBT. against rthe in n o Jews, -Toitra ' covered *j to .»__ be u * conducting i :A* AT m i_ them. Teachand quite recently,-police authorities ers are arrested and imprisoned, and 1 discovered that these pernicious mal- one Rabbi was expelled for conducting contents were laying plans for a sort a secret Yeshibah (seminary). of St. Bartholomew's night, upon Added to these spiritual sufferings **. >.* which all Jews^were to be extermin- is the precarious economic condition ated. of the bulk of Russia's Jews. Only Student anti-Semitism exists also in three categories of people can exist Poland, but in that country the great- in Russia , today—governmental, or est suering of the Jews is in the eco- quasi-governmental employees, fac-

IHE JEWISH IN REVIEW

Best Wishes For The New Year

Trimble Brothers

a-

j~

We Wish You

AND PROSPEROUS I NEW YEAR

CROWN GASOLINE

t.

\

for Power

; - » ", , - ' *

POLARINE

' '"A

V-"-'- "

" * ' . " •"•

Union Stock Yards Company of Omaha

for Perfect Lubric&' &'dcri d

(Limited) t•

i

i

Standard of


PAGE C—THE JEWISH PRESS—THURSDAY,

'

»

• * . - , • *

, < •

7

**??*-."

i

^Sfr ' > ' ! 'r

% r-.\<.;"-»

%^

Vt

'tiVfrT-VI"!

X

Vi

• • * ' • • " . " ' »

&

v

»«/ J

,(<

i

•*

•A

->.« J

- ; .

i\\V

m.

^

if

iyr%

- i-*1

f^M 'Pr

L4KI1

!i tJ31 rii^»unJbi3*M«rxjeBnc»S»czjeeS^«^»

*m

<& — #

^5"'

L4.fi.

-I3> SS5

m t.

IS

•P';n»*:!

?aSffi-g^"-•.

JS^

n

5K

K^^ fs>

Wild Horses

TS^

• r•

Harnessed to Serve You! .,(,

V 1

One/hundred thousand wild horses are harnessed to that the $2,000,00*0 addition to our plant

'•-.'/

This plant, one of the most modern and efficient in ,^ America, has a capacity of 100,000 horsepower, to take ^ n K ' f f atcare of Qmgha's present pteeds and- future-grjOAvth.*- . •**-, &~ * .

Just ten years ago the horsepower capacity of:^our^plantmoas .

sss

T • >- —

•*

This comparison is a striking testimonial of Omaha's -- marvelous growth.

a,

r

\.Sr'+,-- . - .^Y e iy minute of the day^nd. night, 365 days of thQ ? '"' *" "'^C: ^y.^ftfe Sunday alnd- holiday^HISese 100,000 wild "horses ^'- --: .:,... ,?. stand;harnessed to serve"yba. All you have to do is ^ {f ---- -to press the.hutton and they leap to do your bidding.

^'^{^f'pmahq

f

Is d Great Place In Which tv Live" - *

Power®. Courtesy—Service*—Low Rates --. -, ^^ *v

• i,i •

-

-

-

:

^

-

-

'

-

m \


PAGE 5—THE J E W l / . PRESS^-TSUBSDAY] SEPTEMBER 17, 1925 —SECTION TWO

r/:

Omaha Branch of the Sunshine BakeHe8 operating from coast to coast. Located at 12th and; Davenport Sts. and built to • serre the good people of Omaiva and the nearby trade-territory^'

Greetings

Loose for a

Biscuit Co* and r New Year!

this opportunity to express our appreciation for the distinction conferred upon us by Rabbi Herbert S. Goldstein (New York), President oi* tHe^Jhion of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America. You probably know that he selected our Company to bake certain va-. rieties of Sunshiny Biscuits under KOSHER regulations. MAY WE TAKE

i

Accordingly, we set aside a special department in our New York , Bakery which is under the superyisjon-of Ilabbi B. Goeli^h, appointed by Rabbi S. Margolies. In this depart- • ment several varieties d£*t*ackers ahtl^eebkies^ are ^jaked st^ltly KOSHER* < These KOSHER biscuits may be • > purchased from'your grocer right here in Omaha. If he does not carry them, ask him to telephone us and we will supply him promptly. In the regular line of Sunshine Biscuits, we have a great many varieties of Cakes and Cookies made with vegetable shortening, so that they may be served either with "Milch" or "Flaish" dishes. Ours is a nation-wide business selling Sunshine Biscuits in every state in the Union and maintaining branch offices in over tOO cities. , We also bake those famous - SUNSHINfi KRISPY KRACKERS, to which Mrs. Brown, Mrs. Smith and thousands-of others are changing!

.#: • * »

SUNSHINE BAKERY LONG ISLAIO) CITY, N. Y.

/• ,

kl


PAGE 6—THE JEWISH PRESS, THURSDAY,

%£y

*

Omaha, Nebraska

&AYONNAISE


JEWISH PRESS—THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17r 1925—SECTION TWO the eager clerk reassured Tier: "Oh,; her that she had at last reached a with a rush of color to her cheeks. a bit too loud, ma'am. The very safe port after a long and dangerous A card? What for? "1 have no "THERE IS NO FORGETFULNESS...' not latest thing. All the rich ladles up- voyage. And when Ehe saw the im-card. Boti y«u see " A NEW YEAR STORY. town . wear them like that" That posing white building with its digniShe •wanted to tell him of her fied ushers at the door, she lifted her settled it. And it was such a beautiMoishele, That he was her boy. That By MARTHA NEUMARK ful dress. Perhaps a bit too tight— head bravely. Was this not all herhe wanted her there. But why were CdPSEIGHT 1025 by SEVEN ASTS " Alone in the vague twilight, Alte but then, she could lace her corset Moishele's now? Ah how ' -ppy she those people tittering? And what was FKATURE SYNDICATE Yetta dreamed, and longed and longed more tightly. What was a little dis- would be to see in all his splendor. the man saying? The SEVEN ABUTS KEATUUE SYNDICATE Is introducing n new Jewish story for her son. There was a lifeless, out- comfort? Just so her Moishele would "I beg your pardon ?" and the "You have no card? Then you teller in Martha Neuraurls, a daughter of grown familiarity about her, yet she be proud of her. usher stared haughtily at tbe incon- can't come in. I'm afraid you came the- inte Prof. Vnvta Neuniarfc, Hiss Neumark has a distinct literary was -naively at peace with herself. gruous "figure stending- there at the to the wrong place, anyhow, didn't personality, and will brlns fresh color and Early in the morning of the great: new 'tone to the English-Jewish fiction, Moishele had been to see her only you?" top of the steps. •world. once or twice in the months that had day, Alte Yetta arose to be greeted The wrong place? But this was "You wish to attend the services ? passed—but, then, he was so busy. by the rumble and roar of a thunder- May T please see your1 card?" her Moishele's Temple. And surely She knew she most dress up, so she That was why he had forgotten ta -clap —then another —then a swift She had forgotten for a moment be wanted her, But he had rot send journeyed forth, not so far a w a y - mention the New Year to her. But it ['flash, of lightning. A white coldness down on the east side of New York, was still some days off. And when !!sei*e<i hold of her, an apprehensive her shyness in her ardor, but the cold for her. But surely—surely.... and purchased a new dress, gorgeous, -' " " - •----••• - •-- - -shiver swept over her body. But in supercilious tones brought it back She did not answer the man. Slowmagnificent—all for five dollars. The he remembered, he -.must find, her ,&-'• moment the simling sun shone -.::-• • • <•. precious burden displayed a trend to- ready; • -. . Ready? That would mean a new forth, banishing all signs of the apward, a quaintness and charm in deproaching storm clouds. Alte Yetto sign and color, not likely to be appre- dress this year. There was the black was ; reassured. She forgot again tjs ciated by the twentieth century. Which lace .'dress that, Bhe" had worn first on thai; New Year .of long ago—her Very that'.Moishele had not remembered brings us to Moishele. to send for her, and felt only that he When Moishele became Rabbi Mau- best drees, which she had preserved needed her, that he wanted her, that exclusively for the following New rice Schonberg, he met all the passershe wimld be glad for her presence. by With''full fellowship. He was still Years,' and ^r-weddings and -fuueT- | ^;Ccintentedly, she laced herself living with Alte Yetta, who loved him als£ -She- had' made* 'that dress-with; itljgatly, tightly, tni she could hardly and" was proud, of him because she bad loving '-'care,' partly because of; the' borne him and slaved for him these grand occasion, but partly,' too, b'e^* 'breathe. She had never done that many years. But -when he was of- cause she knew that it would have to before. But this was different. In fered the position of assistant Rabbi be her best" for some years to come. her excitement she did not even noat the Big Temple, where all the men And she still thought it beautiful— tice her discomfort. Nor the fact —OT perhaps, to be more accurate, but, of course, she must have a new that the 'dress bulged in in the wrong women*—of mpney and power -were i dress in which to go to the Big Tem- spots. But her costume "was not yet comwont to congregate, be felt that, in ple. She must not shame her Moijustice to himself, he must live fur- shele—her boy of a hundred dear plete. Tenderly, almost reverently, she ther uptown-^-alone. Alte Yetta nothings, as potent as any most gran- brought from the trunk the marvelneither copied • nor assimilated. She doise act. ously embroidered shawl that Mot•was primitive in the sense that she She had plenty of money, now— shele had once given her. Carefully \{'as berself—isolated and ignorant. but the habits of long years of en- she drapped it over her head, and One day he came to her. "Mam-- forced thrift "were not to be denied. let its soft folds fall gently over her mele," he began. But it was difficult' She must buy the dress ready made shoulders. -Smilingly she surveyed to continue. The first step is always —her oldfashioned fingers could herself in the mirror, and s the hardest. She did not realize that never fashion a stylish dress* And thrill of pride shot through her bid for long he had been plotting to get this dress must be of the best. She body. She had "never imagined that rid • of her. .This unconsciousness wandered up and down many streets. she" could look so well. "Ah, Moishele, marked her conduct always. She had She would buy nothing but a real •now-you will not have to be ashamed of me." the intentness ,of a child, incapable of bargain. Understanding -Hie condescension of its At last she espied i t A glorious She was not sure gust how she elders, and too absorbed in its play to bargain. A multi-colored vision. — iould reach the Big Temple. She had take note. And all for five dollars. True, she never been there before. And when But it must be done—as gently as had a certain misgiving—but quickly she, finally arrived there it seemed to possible, indeed; but he felt that he could delay the moment no longer. He had found himself sailing, -with r_ the aid of neither compass, sun nor Authorized Electrical Service stars, an exceedingly capricious vessel over an uncharted sea. He found himON ALL ••;•• self" faced with the choice between charting the "whole course for himself, MOTOR CARS orifoundefing'on the first submerged rock. And Alte Yetta became the AUTO first danger to;be avoided. How could he* ever retain his position, nay, inRADIO deed, the respect of those whom he met, if he carried this bit of old-worldPine's . Winterfront \ j Lsm-with himf" Perfection Heaters I So: "Mammele, I must move uptown." Radia Sets. and^Supplies "But of course, Moishele. "We must live near the Big Temple now. And I -shall wear that beautiful new shawl you gave me—it's much too fine to •wear down here. And all your new, rfeh" friends^-" "But, Mammenu, you don't under-. stand. Up there, you see, III have to live alone. Nu, nu," catching up^ her 2813 Harney St. hand and stroking it, "it won't be so bad. You wouldn't like to move away from here from all your friends. And I'll be able "to give you plenty of jnoney, so you'll never have to work again. And 111 come to see you often. Oh,, it'll be splendid—you'll like i t Just wait" /Alte Yetta made no outcry. What if-1 her eyes glistened strangely, and her hands trembled? Moishele wanted, it, so it must be right ^_He had told her to wait and "see. . So., she waited through uncounted hours, unconscious, beyond the bare facts, that a world of contentious interests was shutting through time and space just over the edge of her horizon. She visited her old friends. Of course she would not want to leave them. Of course she could not be happy without them. Of course—of course. ;pf a sudden the clearness of the days, the chill of the nights reminded . her. The summer days were fast slipping by; the New Year was approaching—and she had as yet made no "preparations. She ..must make haste. Why, how could she have forgotten that the day of days was approaching'—that Moishele would need " her? How well she remembered that first New Year's day, which had been at .the same time' Moishele's first day as Rabbi. He had led her in himself, long before the service started. And before the-others came she had kissed him and blessed him. How proud she had been us he stood there, 'Straight and slim, his Made in Omaha for 55 years black eyes'ow flashing, now subdued, big.deep voice vibrant with feeling. And afterwards, at home, he had knelt by her side, and' whispered: "Dear Mammele, dear one. How good yotr are. Everything I owe to you. New Year's day without you. I could nojfc live through i t " Always she would remember that At-first, each New Year's day she -had gone to the service by his side. i But after a while he became' too busy toi%o along with her—but in the morning he would remember to say, "Don't forget, little mother. Make - ha&te.f-;$ocL will not inspire me:unless i you are there." Did he know, she won-1 ''sred, how that pleased her? j

ly she turned away. Her silences KIEF COMMUNITY COMMEMMOKATES DEATH OF were never less eloquent than her SELF-DEFENSE MEMBERS speech. A tide was carrying her away •among1 bitter vr&ters, away, Kief. (J.T. A.) September"7 was a , away. Joy died imsemblj ior her day of fast end mourning for tbe and doubt was born in agony. • Jewish community of Kief which Back in her own room, love brought commemorated the seventh anniverhope again into her wcrkl. Di4 shesary of the death- of thirty-seven perhaps sense the mist that swam members of the Jewish self-defense before Moishele's eyes, as he stood body. on the pulpit, and softly rea^: The members of the self-defense "Thou, O Lord knowest all the body were killed by Ukrainian forces works of the past—There is no for-by the Kief rabbnnate getfulness before the throne of thy and a pilgrimage to the cemetery was made. A platform was erected glory." near the graves of the martyrs and fATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS1 speeches vere delivered.

't 7 >

Street Railway Service aNecessity

Have you ever thought what a street railway means to a city?

When you stop to think about it you realize very quickly that the street railway not only renders a useful and necessary service but that it is in fact indispensable. Without street railway service a city as large as Qmaha would be impossible. Instead of a; large city there would be a number of smaller settlements. None of these smaller settlements would offer the advantages of a metropolitan city in the way of libraries, theatres, parks, educational institutions, nor would they offer much in the way of business opportunity.

EXIDE

AUTO ELECTRIC & RADIO CORP.

No other single industry or institution is more vital to the city than the street railway. Everybody should be interested in itssuccess. Employers, real estate owners, retailers and business men generally are affected by the street railway and the kind of service it furnishes.

Highest Quality

Vinegar Pickles

That being the case is it not to everybody's interest to accord it proper support?

Mustard and

Condiments

Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railway Company

Haannann Vinegar & Pickle Co.

' • • • >

r^-rJ/V.

.? i

r>


PAGE 8—THE JEWISH PRESS—THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1925—SECTION TWO '-

I

no two. Then: "Mother, what would w a y through. She bathes with -'her -wouldn't naturally* prefer pretty young li-uh geometrical situation of the uh- fun. huh?" she said, wistfully, "you hecftiand quickly to her mouth to, hide jou think of mjr going e a s t next fall, girls of ycrur.-oVri >S« to go around a sroiJer-v'lIke.Cleopatra.... ;Her leyui. and Boelf. You make fun." A i d onion suit and white stockings on to uh-uh-uh— are big and kind of slanting—not to take a course in architecture'?" sarerlaojidry soap. Scrubs 'em on herl with, and all. It "•would be queer If He shifted restlessly In-his chair, Koelf;" the dark vivid boy, misunder- squlnty I don't mean, but slanting np "Would you like that. Dirk?" you didn't. But this Mattle—why, stood. Roelf, 'the genius. He was 'S'ttie God's trnth." found his hands- clenched into fists, "Tes, I think so—yes." a little at the corners. Cut out. kind she's life. Do you remember that story •• Into Dirk's mind .there flashed a picand took refuge in watching the shad- always one of the company. "Then I'd like It better than anyof, so that they look bigger than most ture of this large giri in her tight of when she washed dishes In the ow cast by»jin oak branch cjtside the Oh, Selina DeJong never was lonely people's." thing in the world. I—it makes me kosher restaurant over on Twelfth knitted union suit and her white sfockwindow on a patch of sunlight against on these winter evenings before her "My eyes used to be considered rath- happy just to think of It" ingsisitting in a tub half full of water street and the proprietor used to rent the blackboard behind her.' •' • fire. " • • • " . " • "It would—cost an awful lot" and scrubbing them andvherself sim- out dishes, and cutlery ,,for* Irish and She and' Dirk sat there one fine er fine,", said Sellna, mischievously; During the. early spring Dirk an"d "I'll manage. I'll manage. . . , ultaneously. A comic picture,.and a Italian neighborhood weddings where Selina talked things over again, seated sharp evening In early April.. it was bat he did not hear. revolting one. Pathetic, too, but he they had pork and goodness knows before their.-own fireplace in the High Saturday. Of'late Dirk had not al- "She makes all the other girls look •What made you decide on architecwhat all, and then use them next day ture?" would not admit that. .• t ways come to the farm for the week- sort of blowzy." He was silent a mo"In the restaurant, again for the kosher ment. Selina was silent, too, and it "I don't know, exactly. The new "Imagine!" the frat brother-to-be c u s t o m e r s ! " ' • ' . • • • end. Eugene and Paula Arnold had was not a happy silence. Dirk spoke buildings at the university—Gothic, ' was • saying. "Well, we can't have a Iseen home for the Easter holidays. Sellna wrote Mattle, Inviting .her fellow who goes around with a girl Julie .Arnold had invited Dirk to the again, suddenly, as though continuing you know—are such a contrast to the to the farm for Thanksgiving, and Matlike that. You got to cut her out, see! jjajr parties at the Prairie avenue aloud a train of thought, "—all but her old. Then PanJa and I were talking the other day. She hates their house Completely. The fellahs won't stand tie answered gratefully, declining. "I hpn.se. He had even spent two entire hands." shall always remember you," she wrote on Prairie—terrible old lumpy, gray Selina made her voice sound natural, for it." week-ends there. After the brocaded Dirk had a mental picture of himself in that letter, "with love." luxury-of- the' Prairie avenue house not sharply inquisitive. "What's the stone pile, with the black of the I. C. trains all over it. She wants her fastriking a noble attitude and saying:. his farnjjbedroom seemed almost star- matter with her hands, Dirk?" Chapter XI He pondered a moment, his brows ther to build north—an Italian villa or "Won't stand for It, huh! She's worth tllngly stark and bare. knitted At last, slowly, "Well, 1 don'f French chateau. Something of that more than the whole caboodle of you Seltoa frankly enjoyed Dirk's some- know. They're brown, and awfully sort. So many of her friends are movput together. And you can all go to Throughout Dirk's Freshman year what fragmentary accounts of these thin ana sort of—gTabby. I mean It ing to the North shore, a-way from h—1!" there were, for him, no heartening, visits; extracted from.them, as much makes me nervous to watch them. these hideous South-side and North«B, Doubloday. F&«e & Co.) Instead he said, vaguely, "Oh. Well. Informal. ' mellow talks before tne" •WNU B«rrteo. vicarious pleasure as he had had in And when the rest of her is cool side Chicago houses with their stoops, Uh—" wood-fire In the book-lined study of the reality—more, probably. and their bay windows, and their terthey're hot when you touch them." Dirk changed his seat in the class- some professor whose wisdom was "Now, tell me what you had to eat," He looked at his mother's hands rible turrets. TTs;li:% room, avoided Mattie's eyes, shot out such a mixture of classic lore and she would" say, sociably, like a child. that were busy with some sewing. The SYNOPSIS of the door the minute class was over. modernism as to be an inspiration to (To Be Continued Next Week) "What did you have for dinner, for stuff on which she vr&s working was a One day he saw her coming toward his listeners. Midwest professors deCHAPTER I.—Introducing "So Big" example? Was It grand?. .Julie tells bit of satin ribbon; part of a hood (Dirk DeJoDg) In bis Infancy. And. bis him on the campus and he sensed thot livered their lectures In the classroom me they have a bifJer how. Well £ I intended to grace the head of Geertje DR. HENRY MOSKOWITZ mother, Selina DeJong, daughter of Simeon she Intended to stop and speak to as they had been delivering them In Peake, gambler and gentleman of fortune. can't wait till I hear Aug HempeCon Pool Vander Sijde's second baby. She Her life, to young womanhood'in Chicago him—chide him laughingly, perhaps. the past ten or twenty years and as ARRIVES IN WARSAW the subject." '•• In 1888, has been unconventional; somewhat He quickened his pace, swerved a lit- they would deliver them until death had difficulty in keeping her rough Warsaw,—(J. T. A.)-r-Dr. Henry seamy, but generally enjoyable. At school He would tell her of the grandeurs fingers from catching on the soft surher chnm is Julie Hempe), daughter of tle to one side, and as he passed lifted •or a trustees* meeting should remove of the'Arnold menage. She would in- face ef the satin. Manual work, wa- Moskowitz, chairman of the American Augnst Hempel, butcher. Simeon ''killed his cap and nodded, keeping his eyes them. The younger professors and interrupt and exclaim: "Mayonnaise! ter, .i snn, and -wind had tanned those -Ort Association, arrived hereon his In a quarrel that Is .not bis own, and Selina. nineteen years old and practically straight ahead. Out of the tail of his structors in natty gray suits and On fruit! Oh, I don't believe I'd like hands, - hardened them, enlarged the way to Soviet Russia where he will destitute, becomes a schoolteacher, eye- he could see her standing a mo- brightly colored ties made a point of that. Tou did! Well, I'll have it for knuckles, spread • them, roughened study the Jewish situation and the CHAPTER II.—Selina secures a position ment irresolutely in the path. being unpedantlc in the classroom and you next' week when you come home. them. Yet.how sure they were, and activities of the Ort in that country. as teacher at the High Prairie school, in) rather overdid it. They posed as bethe OTrtakirts of Chicago, living at the home] He got Into the fraternity/ The felI'll get-the recipe from Julie." strong-, and, cool and reliable—and tenof a tract farmer, Klaaa Poo). In Roelf. lahs liked him from the first Selina ing one of the fellows; would dashingHe didn't think he'd be home next der." Suddenly,"looking at them, Dirk iBiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuimiin^ twelve years old, son of KtaaB, Sellnn said _once or twice, "Why don't you ly- use a bitiof slane to create a laugh perceives a kindred > spirit, a lorer of •week. One of the fellows he'd met at Eaid, J<Now your hands. I love your beauty, like herself. , bring'that nice Hattle home with you from the boy» and an adoring titter the Arnolds* had invited him to their hands. Mother." CHAPTBK IIL—The monotonous life of again some time soon? Such, a nice from the glrla. Dirk, somehow preplace out north, on the lake. He had She put down her work hastily, yet a. country school-teacher at that time, is girl—woman, rather. A fine mind, too. ferred the pedants to' these. When Selina'B, brightened somewhat by the coma boat. quietly, so that the sudden rush of panionship ot the sensitive, artistic boy She'll make something of hetself. these had to'give an informal talk to During the; Early Spring Dirk and "That'll be lovely!" SeHna exclaimed, happy grateful tears In her eyes 1 Eoeit the men before some university event You'll see. Bring her next week, h'm?' ; Selina Talked Things Over Again, after an^alinost unnoticeable moment should not stilly the pink satin ribbon. CHAP'JJEB IV.—Selina hears gossip con.by saying, "Now lisDirk shuffled, coughed, looked away. they would.-start 1 cerning the affection of the "Widow Seated Before Their Own Fireplace of silence—silence with panic In it. She was flushed, like a girl. "Do you, ten, fellafis^* At the dances they Paarlenberg," rich and good-looking, for "Oh, I dunno. Haven't seen her lately. Jn the Hiflh\ Prairie Farmhouse. ?T11 try. not to fuss.1 and-be worried Sobig?'' she said. = Mr. Harry Braviroff = Ferrus DeJong, poor truck farmer, who is Guess she's busy with another crowd, were not above "rushing" the pretty Insensible to the widow's attractions. For like an old hen every minute of the coeds. • After a moment she took up her a community "sbciablo" SeHna prepared a or something." Prairie farmhouse. Selina had hadtime I think you're on the water. . . . ri announces reopening of his 5 Inncb basket, dainty but not of ample He tried not to think of what he had Two of JDirk's classes were con- that fireplace built five years before Xow, do so on, Sobig. First frnit sewing again. Her face looked young, = PIANO STUDIO, Suite 14, 5 proportions, which Is "anctloned," according to custom. The smallness of the done, for he was honestly ashamed. ducted by--women professors. They, and her love .of Jt amounted to worship. .with mayonnaise, h'm? What kind of eager, fresh, like the face of the girl 5 Baldridge Building, 20th and 5 lunch box eexdtes derision, and i s a sense Terribly ashamed. So he said to himwho had found cabbages so beautiful on winter were well on toward middle age, or She had itillglvted'always of fun the bidding becomes spirited, : 1 Farnam Streets. AT-S162. = that night when she bounced along evenings and In the spring when the DeJong finally securing it for $10, a ridic- self, "Oh. what of if!" and hid his past It; desiccated women. Only their He was nota naturally.-talkative perulously high price. Over their lunch baBket, shame. nights were sharp. In Dirk's absence son. -There wae nothing surly about the rutty Halsted road with Klaas eyes were alive. Their clothes were which Selina and DeJong share. together, A month later Sellna again said, "I of some indefinite dark stuff, brown or she would sit before it at night long his silence. It was a taciturn streak Pool, many years ago. It came Into the school-teacher arranges to instruct the her face,' that look, when she was good-natured- farmer, whose education has wish you'd Invite Mattie for Thanks- drab-gray; their hair lifeless; their after the rest of the weary household Inherited from his Dutch ancestry. happy, exhilarated, excited. been neglected. ' . That had gone to bed. High Prairie never giving dinner. Unless she's going hands long, bony, unvital. They had .This time, though, he was more volu- was why those who loved her and CHAPTER V.—Propinquity, Jn their home, which I doubt. We'll have turCall us for good knew how many guests Sellna enterseen classes and classes and classes. ble than usual. "Paula . . ." carne positions of "teacher" and "pupil," and Selina's loneliness in her uncongenial sur- key and pumpkin pie and all the rest A roomful of fresh young faces that tained there before her fire those win- ;again and again Jnt'o his conversation. brought that look Into her face roundings, lead to mutual affection. Pervus of.lt. She'll love it." appeared briefly only • to be replaced ter evenings—old friends and new. So- "Paula . . . Paula . . ." " and thought her beautiful, while those DeJong wins Selina'a consent to be bis who did not love her never saw the wife. "Mattie?'.' He had actually forgot- by another, roomful of fresh, young big was there, the plump earth-grimed again ". . . Paula." He did- not look and consequently considered her baby who rolled and tumbled in the MUCKLIN LUMBER1 CO. CHAPTER VI.—Selina becomes Mrs. ten her name. faces like, round white pencil marks seem conscious of the repetition, but a plain woman. DeJong, a "farmer's wife," with all the fields while his young mother wiped 24th & Burdette Sts. WE. 5555 "Tes, of course. Isn't that right? manipulated momentariiy'on a slate, . Selina's, quick ear caught It. hardships unavoidable at that time. Dirk There was another silence between orijy to be sponged oft to give way to the sweat from her face to look at him Is born. Selina (of Vermont stock, busi- Mattle Schwengauer?" "I haven't seen her," Selina said, nesslike and shrewd) has plans for build"Oh, her. Uh—well—I haven't been other round white marks. Of the two with fond eyes. Dirk DeJong of ,.ten "since she went, away, to school the ing up the farm, which are ridiculed by women one—-the elder—was occasion- yenrs hence was there. Simeon Peake, first year. She must be—let's see her husband. Maartje Pool. Klaas" wife, seeing her lately." dies, and after the requisite decent interval ally likely to flare into sudden life; dapper, soft-spoten, ironic, in his shiny —she's a year older than you are. She's "Oh, Dirk, you haven't quarrelev Klaas marries the "Widow Paarlenberg." A RULE OF HEALTH a flame, in the ashes .of a burned-out boots and his ha? always a little on one nineteen going on twenty. Last time The boy Koelf, sixteen. years old now,•with that nice girl!" . side. Pervus DeJong, a blue-shirted WASH AND KEEP WELL leaves his home, to make his way to France grateShe had humor and a certain He decided to have It out. "Listen, she was a dark Prompt Service Soft Water and study, bis ambition being to become giant with strong tender hands and I saw her I thought 1 caustic wit, qualities that had manmother. There are a lot of different a sculptor. FRONTIER TOWEL SUPPLI little fine golden iiairs on the backs of scrawny little thing. - Too bad she Wet wash, semi-fiat, CHAPTER VII.—Dirk is eight years old crowds at the,.TL see? And Mattie aged' miractlausly,'t9.,|U5flve even "the them'. In strange contrast to these clida't Inherit Julie's lovely gold colorrough-dry. 1819 California Street. when hla father dies.,-SeUna. faced with doesn't belong,to any of. ,',em. . You deadly i n d *numb&\gveffects, of thirtV ing- and" good looks, -Instead ot- Euthe necessity of making a- living for her years in the, c^asspjpnj,,. J^ £np mind, was the patient, tireless figure of gene, who doesn't heed 'em." 2808 Cuming St. Harney 0881. boy and herself,'rises'to the occasion, and, •wouldn't understand, but-it's lj.ke this. ; with Dirk, takes a truckload of vegetables Sber-sbe's smart an.d jolly, and every- and" lnoclastlc,.,bamperea" by th'e re*She isn't J" said ;DIrk, hofly. ^She's to the Chicago market. A woman selling thing, but she just doesn't belong.. .Be- strictions, of aconv'entional community !-.?;• arms ru;dark and "slim and Sort 'of—Hh—sensw-f Hoclf's in the market. place, is an innovation frowned upon. . • ing friends with a giri like tfiat doesn't and the sojil at a congenital spinster. !''h. "You tr ous"—Selinn stnrted'vlsiblyr and . Under''the guidance of these Dirk CHAPTER VIII.—rAs a disposer of . the get.you anywhere. Besides, she isn't vegetables from her truck Selina is a flat a girt chafed and grerr restless. jflljw EuShtfa a middle-aged woman, failure, buyers being shy of dealing with phemia Holllngswood had a %ay ot her. To a commission dealer she sells when you come to think of it." BUTTEK and KGGS every third "or fifth syllapart of her stock. On the way home <he "Doesn't get you. anywhere!" ..Se- emphasizing peddles from door to door, with indifferent ble, bringing her voice down hard 6n Council Bluffs, la. 1342 South 25th St. AT. 6637 success. A policeman demands her license. Iina's tone was cool and even. Then, it. She has none, and . during the ensuing as the boy's gaze did not meet hers: altercation Selina'g girlhood chum, Julie Hempel, now Julie Arnold, recognizes her. "Why, Dirk DeJong, Mattle SchwenHe found himself waiting for that 1615 North 24th St. WE. 6006. CHAPTER IX.—August Hempel, risen to gauer Is one of my reasons for sending emphasis, and shrinking from it as prominence and wealth in the business you to a.university. She's what I call from a sledge-hammer blow. It hurt world, arranges to assist Selina in making part of a university education. Just his head. the farm something more of a playing proposition. Selina gratefully accepts his talking to her Is learning something Miss Lodge droned. She approached help, for Dirk's sake. valuable. I don't mean that you a word with a maddening tih-uh-uh-uh. WHOLESALE Mattle came one Friday night It AT-1000 E. SCHERER was the end of October, and Indian Druggists and Stationers summer, the most' beautiful time of Mer. *01-403-*U5 Sootb lotb Street the year on the Illinois prairie. About the countryside for miles, was the look of bounteousneas, of plenty, of Phone JA ckson 0043 prophecy fulfilled.as when a beautiful and fertile woman having borne her children and found them good, now Dlstrlbnror* ot Painting and Decorating (sits serene-eyed, gracious, ample Western Bond—and High LET DS BID POK SOU bosomed, satisfied. OUK WORK GUARANTEED Grade Stationery Into the face of Mattie Schwengauer 214 South 18th St. Omaha, Nebr. Omaba Nebraska. there came a certain glory. When i!5 •he and Selina clasped hands Sellna Ask for stared at her rather curiously, as ! though startl.ed. Afterward she said Gesundheit at all Grocery to Dirk, aside: "But I thought you and Drug Stores writes all kinds of "paid she was ugly!" ' "Well, she is, or—well, Isn't sher li "A Smile in Every Can" •took at her!" • SERVICE WITH EACH POJL.1CX. Mattle Sfewengauer was talking to Ttl W. O. W. Bldp. .Inckiion ISIS. "OUR BEST AD IS INSIDE THE CAN" | Meena Bras, the houseworker. She ' was standing with her hands on her ample hips, her fine head thrown back, her eyes alight, her lips smiling so that yon saw. her strong square teeth. LOCAL DISTRIBUTORS U Something had amused Hattle. She laughed. It was the laugh of a young girl, care-free, relaxed, at ease. PAXTON-MITCHELL CO. SHERMAN MERCANTILE CO. . | For two days Mattle did as she 2"th and Martha Sts. Hnrney 1663 S O L E "WESTERN D I S T R I B U T O R S • '§ pleased, which meant she helped pull Omaha, Nebr. ' • • • I vegetables in the garden, milk the Soft gray iron, brhss, bronze and Binmlnum castings. Standard sizes bronze r.Sn?::H:n:r:5::KHUU3:r:S^ cows, saddle the horses; rode them iron bushings, sewer manholes, cistern without a saddle in .the pasture. rings, and cover"! in stock. "It;got'•-so-iiy hated to do all those things on the farm," she said, laugh1307 Howard St. At, 8028 Ing a little, shamefacedly. "I guess Omaha, Nebr. It was because I had to. But now it eomes back to'me and I enjoy it because If s natural to me, I suppose. Anyway, I'm having a grand time. "Manufactured in Omaha" Mrs. DeJong. The grandest time I ever had.In my life." Her face was BAKEH ICE MACHINE CO. radiant and almost beautiful. " K you want me to believe that," Bald Sellnat "you'll cojne again." 2224 Cuming St. But Tkfattie Schwengauer never did Phone JA ckson 1226. : come again. Early the next week one of the unii versity students appraacned Dirk. He was a Junior, very influential In his SSS? class, and a member of the fraternity n, Secretary. 350 Rooms—350 Baths to which Dirk was practically pledged. t A decidedly desirable frat "Say, look here, DeJong, I want to talK to you a minute. Uh, you've got to cat out that girl—Swlnegour or COMPLETE STORE AND whatever her name is—or it's all off OFFICB OUTFITTERS with the fellows In the frat." ""What- d'yon mean! Cut out! 16th and Farnam St. -What's the matter with her?'' MITCHEL GIANNOW NICHOLAS PETROW Eleventh an A (tenets* Htrceu. "Matter! She's Unclassified, isn't NMEBSTER * 11*2.0 Fb»n»i 4f«cks»n MM she 1 A i d do you know what toe story O7Z0 OMAHA. NEB. is? She told it herself as an. economy

By EDNA FERBER

I

OPENS

|

STUDIO

S

American Wet Wash

. E Fleishman "MOHL"

Fleishman's Kosher Kut Market

. E. Bruce & Co.

I

malt

I!

Syrup

ill

Carpenter Paper Co.

whose sv/eet butter they eat | --"and ten chances to one the answer will be;

m n

THE JERPE COMMISSION CO.

BEE ENGRAVING COMPANY

SAM NEWMAN

NATMEISTER

|

III

It is preferred in the New York Market by those who want pure, rich, sweet butter —and in all other markets where sold. You will like

Let The New Year Bring To Our Friends

,' —Accurately ) —Promptly Interstate Printing Co..

Baker Ice HacMnes

HOLSE & RIEPER

Happiness and Contentment

FAIRMONTS

is the wish of

CANDYLAND

J

to a- girl who was -woriuns her

Omaha Fixture & Supply Co.

I

Ask your Grocer for it and insist upon having the G en uine

OMAHA SIGN

|


THE JEWISH PRESS, THIJRSDAY, SEPTEMBER

iiltfl^VIgilg^l^li^f^^ \

4M

:

::i^;;<sa^^i:s^

cAduch depends on the coffete / res-*'

fSaiifech^

11 1

S * ® *k?

K • • Eyer>> hostess knows man^ delightful sandwich recipes. But much depends on the coffee. Your choice o f rich, mellow Byttter-Hut will win the approval of even the?most, critical ; There is a never changing quality, aroma arid ^flavor to Butternut that has made it; the preference in over a Kalf pillion homes;

Delicious" |AXTON AND GAtLAGHER

* i


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.