July 18, 1930

Page 1

^Interesting and Entertaining

, " In the s~~\ * Interests of The . Jewish Community I

«s^TOcona-clasB mill matter on January 21, van, »t e at Omaha, Aebranltn. nnfler tfre Act or March 3. lWtf

OMAHA, NEBRASKA, TRIDAY, JULY 18, 1930

PLAYSCHOOL "Baby Contest" Feature PLANS EXHIBIT of Hebrew Club Picnic OF I W WORK

A "baby contest" with two splendid prizes awarded to Omaha Jewry's most beautiful and physically perfect Over 200 Children Enjoying a babies will feature the annual Omaha Hebrew Club picnic to be held at Most Successful School Lakeview Park on Sunday, August ;, at J. C. C. * 10th. The Jewish Community Center is There will be two divisions, one ithe scene of unusual activity each for babies from the ages of six 1 [morning as over two hundred children months to a year and a half, and 'enjoy the many and varied features another for those ranging from the offered them this month at the Center age of a year and a half to two and Play School. a half. According to Louis Shanok, director All babies must be registered •'• of the school, the Play School is even before the picnic "Parents may , a greater success than last year. An register their baby by calling 1 open exhibit of the work done by the The Jewish Press, ATlantic 1450, children will be held Sunday morning, giving the baby's name and age, | July 17, at 10 a. m. at the Center, and the name and address of the with the public invited to attend. parents. Every morning each room in the A registration fee of fifty cents is /building is overflowing with happy being charged for each entry. This children, who relish the treats offered is payable at the Park before the by the Play School, from a dip in the contest starts. According to John po»l in the morning to making toys Feldman, who is in charge of the and beautiful useful articles. baby contest, prominent judges will Wooden horses, flying ducks, boats impartially choose the winners on and toy airplanes are ready for dis- the basis of health and pulchritude. play at the exhibit. In addition there A gala day has been planned for .are a number of art objects, tea those attending the Hebrew Club towels, dollies, etc The kindergarten is the object of the admiration of all visitors. The •' tiny tots seat about their teachers playing games, singing, or drawing. - New songs have been written to the ] music of popular tunes for the assemblies. Among the programs thus ,far were a movie show, an entertainPetition Being Circulated Askment by Ted Mack, and a talk by ing For Change of ReMayor Metcalfe. „

picnic There -will be games and races for all,. young and old, - with appropriate prizes awarded the winners. A dance will be held in the evening. A popular orchestra, not yet selected, will furnish the- music. There will also be concessions and stands. Admission to tbe picnic will be one dollar per family and fifty cents per person. The committee chosen by Sam E. Klaver, president of the organization, will meet next Monday evening to complete all arrangements to make the event the most successful in the club's history. .

REBBE RECEIVED AT WHITE HOOSE Tells President of Appreciation for Attitude of^This Country

Urges Jews to Cease Building Synagogues New York, (J. T. A.).—American Jewish communities should refrain from building new synagogues for the next five • years, according to Rabbi Nachman H. £ibin, president of the Rabbinical Association of the Rabbi Isaac Kichanan Theological Seminary. -•In discussing the synagogue building activities of American Jews during recent years, Rabbi Ebin said: 'Since the financial crash communities have been overtaxed by the building of new and large synagogues. We have forgotten that the name was not made by towers and pyramids. We therefore call upon American Jewish communities to refrain from building enterprises for a. period of five years. Let us turn to building Jewish consciousness here and a homeland in Palestine."

VOL.

Vni.—No. 27

Mandates Commission Blames Spread of Riots on British Government Report Says England Had Inadequate Protection; Has Failed in Carrying Out Its Obligation for Jewish National Homeland

Washington, D. C, (J. T. A.).— Rabbi Joseph. Schneussohn, better known as the .Lubawitscher Kebbe, his son-in-la,w ^Rabbi Gourary, together •wiflx H- Kramer, president of London, <J» T, A.).—The limited of the Arab leaders is justified. Althe Agudath Habad, H. Fogenson, number of British troops in Palest- though the report, according to,the vice-president and Arthur Rabinovitz ine and the inadequacy of the police Daily Telegraph, agrees that the of Boston were received at the White force were the principal causes for Arab attacks were directed only House by President Hoover last the spread of last Summer's dist- against the Jevrs: the Mandates Comweek. urbances and for the serious conse- mission regards as unjustified the The President appeared to be imquences which followed the report view that the Palestine movement pressed with the modernism and inof the Mandates Commission of the was not directed against British telligence of the Lubawitscher and League of Nations holds, according authority. his son-in-law. toL the Daily Telegraph. The ManThe source of the Arabs' resentThe Lubawitscher Rebbe told the dates Commission is of the opinion ment is political conditions for President that he was anxious to pay that the Palestine troubles did not •which the British government is rehis respects to Mr. Hoover to tell arise suddenly but were preceded by sponsible and all the demonstrations him how much he appreciated the a series of warning events, of which of Arab leaders, societies and reprefact that the Jews have found a real at the Wailing Wall was sentatives made clear that the Arab asylum in this country with full removement tends to resist the Manthe evident eenter. ligious liberty. Regarding the premeditated aspects datory's policy, the report points out, After thanking the President for of the riots the Commission is not remarking that the British governaL the liberties and equalities that Miss Belkin Is a Great Success satisfied that the merciful view taken ment should have taken action before Market Site Shifted; Jews Oust- Jews enjoy in the United States, in Her European bj the majority of the Palestine In- September 1929. ed from Fascist Concerts Rabbi Gourary said to Mr. Hoover: While agreeing with the Inquiry quiry Commission as to the attitude Party "We are especially thankful for Commission as to the state of mind Lawrence, Kans. (J. T. A.) — and appreciate the stand this great in the country maintained by conKovno. (J. T. A.)—ELovno Jewry country of yours took in the recent Jewish girl whose father is a local tinual propaganda in the Arab press, was attacked on two fronts, the po- unfortunate uprising , against the clothier, through her own achievethe Mandates Commission holds that litical and economic. The Jews of the Jewish people that took place in ments and ability, has attained the the Palestine administration did not country face an economic crisis" by Palestine. The attitude on the part honor coveted by every ambitious sinmake timely use of the press law by virtue of a government decision trans- of this government in a most lament- ger—she has just signed with the suspending the seditious publications. ferring the market places from the able and trying situation again Metropolitan Opera in New York to The Mandates Commission, accordJewish sections to the non-Jewish. strengthened our* admiration for the sing in a number of leading operatic Land Fund Receives §63,000 ing to the Daily Telegraph in its reThe bulk of the Jews of Kovno are justice and principles that underlie roles next season. During the Month of port, regrets that the Mandatory traders and artisans whose business this country." VMiss Belkin, who is 24 years of age, June power has not succeeded in the total gistration Dates is concentrated in the vicinity of the came to New York six years ago. execution of the Mandate, has not market where they make a, living by She was obliged to work as a salesNew. York.—Interest among Amer- carried out its obligation to encour.Baltimore. (J. T. A.)—To make it supplying the needs of the- peasants. girl in department stores wWle she ican Jews in the acquisition of land possible for Baltimore's 15,000 Jew- When the market is shifted to a non•studied music. In the meantime, on for "Jewish settlement in Palestine, 3ige the establishment of a Jewish ish voters to cast their ballots in the Jewish quarter this trade will be lost. National Home and has also failed Sunday mornings, she sang At Tempte one of the burning problems in to assure the conditions essential1 for fall election and- still, jobserve their On the political side, a decision of Emanuel. At present Bhe- is one of iiie Palestine government policy, is religions, holidays, a petition request- the Facist Nationalist party- ordered "Roxy's: Gang" and will -continue to •mounting, according to a report is- the development of a national center ing GovernorHitchie to take steps to the expulsion of •all Jews. The Hafor the Jewish race—security for sing, at the Roxy theater-until she i 5jy Mr. change the dates of registration i s "thmalist partyirwhich .since. $$s coup presenters- the Metropolitan-next season. ideaf of the Jewish; National Fund life and property. By studying the economic problem being circulated throughout synagcA d'etat of 1926 has been in control of Last fall she gave two "concerts in of America, giving figures concernMontreal, (J. T. A.).—The possiCambridge; Mass, (J. T. affecting the inhabitants the Mandagues and Jewish organizations of the the government, began as a progresBerlin and Amsterdam, In bcth, of bility of a ban on European immiteen Jews of "the two hundred fifty • c i t y / ; ; • . - . ' * : : ; - ; " : ; ; : ^ ; . i ~ ; r teg the "Fund's collections during the tr.ry power brought the two elements sive Iparty with many Jewish mem- gration to Canada is seen.in.a state- -which cities she .was gi*en/ ~;gHtt national known leaders of American ifionta of" June. cf the population into close relations, All .four of the registration days ' industry and commerce who have fixed for' this" year will"'fall uporf^ im- bers. The present order instructs .the ment made here by Premier Macken- ovation. In her Berlin debut she 1B ' The figures show that the American the Mandates Commission says. 7 local party groups to remove all Jews, said to have received sixteen re-calls. | united to organize a foundation to portant Jewish "holidays,' Uosh Hashzie King during a campaign address.: branch of the Palestine Land Fund, It expresses hope that the necessity In face »of these two. adverse .rul- Asked whether he favored the proCritics enthusiastic in their praise which acquires land areas in Palestine ' aid the scientific study of business onah", or ith'e 'Jewish ^ew"""Year, "win for action against hostile elements ings the Jews .of Lithuania are condolproclaim that she will soon be numunder the guidance of the Harvard fall on September "23 and" 24; and ihe ing themselves with the publication hibition of immigration to Canada bered' along with Alma Gluck and as the property of the Jewish people will not prevent the Palestine govern'Business School are Jews. until such time as those people in for the settlement of Jewish pioneers Feast of Tabernacles will be observed of instructions slightly modifying . Rosa Raisa as a great Jewish oper- has received during the month of June ment from carrying a constructive i-i The new foundation will be called Canada who are willing and able to program with more vigor than it has on October 7 and'-'8. " Sunday closing law. The changes work find employment, the Liberal atic star. the Two Hundred and Fifty Assothe sum cf $63,000. This total re- done. Saying the situation will result* m permit the opening of Bhops in the ciates of the Harvard Business leader replied in the affirmative.presents the result of collections made a "practical : disfranchisement" K The Commission's report aleo holds suburbs of Kovno for three hours po* He added that in the future the School in all parts of the United States. The thai the obligation of the Mandate thousands of Jewish voters,'the peti- Sunday, but in Kovno itself they must nine thousand dollars contribution of favors two sections of th»? population, Dt minion government proposed to let The sixteen Jews invited to join tion urges" the Governor to "take "such remain closed. the Hadassah, the American Women's equally important and by no means the provincial government say • more the Two Hundred and Fifty are steps as may be necessary to change and :nore what immigration they Louis E. Kirstein of Boston, Herbert the registration dates in Baltimore New Haven, Conn. (J. T. A.)—A Zionist Organization, heads the co- irreconciliable. wanted. . N. Straus of New York, Jesse I. so that the Jewish people of the city search is being conducted throughout lumn. Straus of New York, Gerard Swope may be afforded ample opportunity to Stoppage of immigration was also Connecticut for the thieves who broke An interesting feature of the Jewof New York, A. Lincoln Fliene of have their names placed on'tKe"re-" advocated by E. W. Beatty, president in and looted three synagogues in ish National Fund collections in the Boston, Herbert Fleischhacker of gistration books".- • • of t!,e Canadian Pacific Railways. Bridgeport and New Haven, taking United States is the transfer of land San Francisco, "Col. Michael FriedMoscow. (J. T. A.)—The Soviet In an interview here he said that im- gold and silver amounting to $1,500. purchased by American Jews through of New York, Henry Ittelson of Abraham Cahan at-Seventy / Besides causing damage by break- the American Zion Commonwealth, to cabinet approved t h e decision of the migration to the United States New York, Otto H. Kahn of New and Canada must be stopped for the ing and otherwise desecrating proper- the Jewish National Fund. Land land commissariat t o grant 100,000 New York.—Abraham Cahan, for 33 York, Arthur Lehman of New York, time bei? g at least. ties in the synagogues, the Bridge- parcels in various parts of Palestine new hectares of land in Crimea for years editor of the Forward, the bigAdolph S. Ochs of New York, Carl gest Yiddish daily newspaper in the Jewish "'colonization. • The- Crimean . • In the meantime Canadian labor, port congregation, Ad&th Yeshurun in the value of $12,000 were transPforzheimer of New York, Julius world, and a veteran of Yiddish journ- government -will be instructed by. the .which has always supported the atti- Synagogue is considering the necessity ferred during the month of June. Eosenwald of Chicago, Lessing L Vienna.—(J. T. A.) — The long exalism and the Jewish Socialism move- Soviet:cabinet to-allot this land with- tude of the American Federation of of having to burn their Torah since it Rosenwald of . Philadelphia, Walter Labor regarding immigration, is also is likely to have been touched by - •> -•--•• ploded and legendary protocols of the ment in the United States was seventy in "thirty days. N. Rothschild of Brooklyn, David Eiders of Zion has again made ite years old Sunday, but no celebrations A huge plan t o irrigate the Cri- demanding r*at Canada closes its hands other than those of believers in Sarnoff of New York and Percy S. appearance, this time as part of an of the event took place, in accordance mean fields with -water from t h e doors to immigrants owing to the the faith. The value of the Torah is Straus of New York. placed at $200. official textbook which is being used with the wishes of Mr. Cahan. Dneiper river by building channels unemploymer.t situation. as a book on general history for Auethrough t h e Sivash "was considered totrian gendarmes, guards, police, and day by t h e Central Russian governgovernment officials, according to s, m e n t in Moscow which h a s decided t o Cleveland.—Junior Hadassah ansend a special engineering commis? nounced the plans for the buildings of story in the Vienna Arbeiter Zeitung, sion to Crimea this week to investithe Pardess Anna agricultural colony the organ of the Social-Democratic g a i t e . " •".".•" ' . - • • • : in Palestine, which involve an invest- party. Inquiries at the headquarters of thc ment of $50,000, at its Eighth Annual The plan involves 200,000 roubles police department by the Jewish TeConvention held here. and when completed will make posDetroit.—(J. T. A.) The breaking wedding ceremony. On account oof New York, (J. T. A.).—A photo- possession of the Grand- Mufti - of sible the development of large cotton This fourth and latest Palestinian legraphic Agency brought a statement static copy of a writte . pledge by Jerusalem who obtained it;from King fields, rice plantations, vineyards arid of the glass at Jewish weddings is Catholic observance of Ash Wednes- obligation on the part of the young that the textbook is not xised in Vienthe late Lord Balfour to King Hus- Hussein last March -before the Arab sugar beets plantations in Crimea a superstition which ought to be day however, this practice was Jewish women who are members of na and is entirely unknown there. sein, former ruler of the Hedjaz, con- delegation went to London .where its where sufficient quantities Of these abolished, and to remember Jeru- abondoned as "chukas ha-goyim", as this natural organization will solve Eemarking that the book war firming the promises of independence contents . were made known, to Pre- coinmidities can be raised for' export salem and the destruction of the a.non-Jewish law not to be practiced the problem of the graduates who printed at the state publishing Temple, for which this ceremony is by Jews. Mr. Lamport objects to leave the Children's Village in Meier of the Austrian province of Styria in made to the Arabs by Sir Henry mier MacDonald and Lord Passfield. abroad. intended, a more dignified, and a the retention of all similar practices Shfeyah at the age of fourteen. Here, Granz, the Arbeiter Zeitung gives thf> The petition to which, the letter., is MacMahon has been received by the more practical custom ought to be retained as "zecher le-churban", as a on this farm and orange plantation, following astounding quotations from League of Nations as a part of peti- attached asks . the general secretary substituted. •- • y remembrance of tne Temple's de- located in the district of Rabia, Pal- lhat so-called history textbook: "Jewtion from the Syrian-Palestine Cong- of the League of Nations to transThis sentiment was expressed here) struction. As a substitute for **ze- estine, will be trained those graduates ry is the only European profiteers — ress dated July 11, according, to a mit it to the Council of the League by Solomon Lamport, national treas- cher le-churban", Mr. Lampert urges who are particularly interested in the until the l«th century it was COP.Geneva dispatch to the New York of Nations and the Assembly of the League. - In a letter accompanying urer of the American Jewish Na- the Jewish people to adopt a "zecher pursuit of agriculture for their life fined in Eastern Europe to dirty qua World. l tional Fund, during a conference le-binyan", a symbol of upbuilding vocation. powerful, livIt seems that after the Balf our the petition the Syrian-Palestine ters but latelyy it i with Detroit Zionist leaders. Mr. and reconstruction, and he pointed Declaration was promulgated a coun- Congress points out "that-since the In addition to this responsibility in ing on the income from other peoples New York.—Through her Lamport quoted Jewish authorities to the Jewish National Fund as of- Palestine, Junior Hadassah maintains ter agitation was started among the \ Palestine Mandate is -based largely Jewish capital rules the victormarriage it was revealed that to point out that centuries ago the fering a means for such subsitution. ^ 5,,^™^ the Children's Village in ious and conquered nations alike RTKI Arabs by the Turks, the latter point- upon the execution of- the Balfour Miss Doris Doscher, whose face ing out to the present ruler of Iraq, j pledge and was conferred by the Albridegroom was called upon to Mr. Lampert displayed a "Ketu- Meier Shfeyah with 104 children controls the world press and the most adorns the.new twenty-five cent King, Feisal that the Allies were lied Supreme Council, -which no Ion-; repeat the excerpt from Psalms: "I bah", or traditional marriage con- housed, fed, and educated, at an an- important means of communication pieces issued by the National planning to partition the Arab terri- ger exists, the' League; which is com-, I forget thee, O Jerusalem, may my tract, to be printed on parchment in nual expenditure of $35,000. It also like bloody vampires at the throate Treasury,.is a Jewess. She was tory among themselves. King Hus- posed" of these powers, the only logright hand forget its cunning, may seven colors, with illustrations and supports the Nurses' Training School of cultural nations _ The Elder* married Sunday to Dr. JL Wilsein informed the British of these ical agency through which abrogation my tongue cleave to the roof of my drawings having modern significance.. in Jerusalem, which supplies the nurs- of Zion for centuries prepared for th» liam JJaum, at the Jewish InTurkish activities and the document or revision can be effected." mouth if I do not remember thee, This "Ketubah" will be presented to es to the Hadassah hospitals in Pales- World War against the Central Powstitute of Religion. now submitted to the League of NaThe photostatic xopy of Lord Balif.I. place not Jerusalem at the head newlyweds "with the compliments of tine, at an annual expenditure of ers Clemenceau, Lloyd Georj^e tions is said to be Lord Balfour's four's letter is in Arabic and is Miss Doscher was selected of all my joys." In this way, he the Jewish national Fund, at the $20,000. and the others are either Jews or re several years ago by governreply to Hussein, according to the signed by Colonel Pabst, British repsaid, the cradle-land of Israel was same time serving as propaganda to lated to Jews or belong- to Masonic ment representatives as the World's cable. resentative in Jeddah, according to then remembered at weddings. lodges under Jewish influence ~ remind the young people of the ex- Lewisohn Concert Series model for the new twenty-five The World says that the document the World which says that in conNew York.—The Philharmonic-Sym- the revolutions in Russia, Hungary, Quoting from the Shulchan. Aruch, istence of this fund which they will cent pieces because she characis dated • February 8, 1918, • three veying the note Pabst explains that phony Orchestra began its series of and Bavaria were directed against Mr. Lamport said that at one time terized "the" 'highest" type of months after the Balfour Declaration- he" was instructed by • the Britishit was the custom to invoke the be asked to remember frith their con- open-air concerts at the Lewisohn Aryans while Jewish capital remained V 2fcmerican- Womanhood". was fgfceh' to the Jews, and the orig- foreign" secretary to ^deliver the letter tragedy of Jewish dispersion by plac- tributions on every wedding .annivers- Stadium last night, at which approx- intact and the same thing Mil happen inal *£ J-nrrf Balfon«->« lafctgr JS III' to King Hussein; imately 15,000 perBonB attended. when the world revolution comes ,.«" ing ashes on the groom's head at the ary

LITHUANIA JEWS FACE ECONOMIC, POLITICAL CRISIS

JEWISH GIRL FROM KANSAS SINS WAY TO OPERA CONTRACT

INTEREST IN LAND FUND OF PALESTINE MOUNTING STEADILY

15,000 BALTIMORE JEWS UNABLE TO VOTETHEFALL

SIXTEEN JEWS TO LEND AID IN TRADE RESEARCH

OFPLAONGBAN

New Haven Police Seek Synagogue Desecrators

Lands for Crimean Jewish Colonization

SAYS PROTOCOL , TEXT BOOK FOR AUSTRIAN POLICE

JR. HADASSAH TO SUPPORT COLOM IN HOLY LAND

Wants Substitute for "Glass'Breaking" Custom

Says Document Pledges iendence to Arabs

Jewish Girl's Face Is on New Coins

„•*(*•


. JE&GE 2—THE JEWISH PRESS; TKIDAY, JULY 18, 1930

HENRY F. MEYERS MAKING HOUSE TO Weighty Evidence Given HOUSE CANVASS toWailing Wall Group

copies. The moving' picture producers set out on the trail of Remarque. It looked like a sure box office success. The story itself was generally regarded, in the movie trade, as any«thing but box-office material—but the title was thereV and; iWlth sonlfe;;skflr ful jazzing up a goj>d •scenalfiai;cbsld Meyers Is Seeking Republican Jerusalem, (J. T. A.).—The interThis edict was renewed with the. Nomination for County be made of it. However, the movie national Wailing Wall Commission confirmation of succeeding chief rab: men came up against a snag: Re-: which has been taking evidence on bis as late as 1893. The edict, of Assessor marque insisted* that he 'would 'not Henry F. Meyers, candidate on thethe Moslem and Jewish claims to theSailtan Abdul Mejid is considered, permit the screening^-hie wa»book"republican ticket for county assessor, Wall is likely to conclude its sessions perhaps the most significant piece of unless he obtained—an-~iiondad is making a house to" house and store today when the final speeches of the evidence presented by the Jews beguarantee that the^prorJucer.'rwotfid to store canvass to impress Ton the Arab and Jewish advocates will' be cause it shows the Turkish attitude adhere rigidly to t&eVtext. No'jawvoters of Douglas county that he be-delivered. The Commission began its towards the Jewish religious sites, ing up—the story had to be taken as including the Wailing Wall. lieves in the old motto, "why be* as- public sessions June 25. is. The movie producers, '* wert An edict of Sultan Abdul Mejid These documents were unearthed sessed to excess." stunned by his obstinacy, and doubled dated 1841 which conferred the rights by a former Jewish magistrate whom Mr. Meyers it will be recalled was their offers. But Remarque remained and privileges of a chief rabbi on tin Jewish Agency had sent to Conon the war draft board and became obdurate. „ . „... . i By GRACE JAFFE ^ V personally acquainted with many of Rabbi Abraham Gagin and which or- stantinople to search the Turkish ardered non-interference with the chives. In addition to producing these And then, v suddenly, it became .the young men of the city. . Following the story x>f Milzic Green, this story—as the personality that- wag Junior's "Collegians" that started the greatest child actress of America, best symbolizes the rise of/ Shadow- \ the tremendous TOgue of pictures on known that Laemmle, Jr., . had - "I have known Mr. Meyers for a Jews "in the synagogues, at places documents from the times of Abdul of devotional visits and pilgrimages Mejid and Abdul Hamid he "also Miss Jaffe here tells of a Jewish | collegiate life. At Jhe age-of eigfc- acquired the screen rights to "Allnumber of years",- said Abner Kaiyouth of twenty-one who to-day is land. and .during . the ' practice of Jewish found that certificates issued to other Quiet on the Western Front".; The man. "I know him to be a man of Bot, as I said .before, .this tale\teeni'he-~had opened a new chapter acknowledged one of the master •ritual"' was /produced f;his week be- chief rabbis in the Ottoman Empire trade merely shrugged its shoulder! the highest type and well qualified to; minds of the American Motion picture concerns 'Carl Laemmle, "Jiv, known | in movie production. "The Colleg•fore. the(-Wailu>g /Wfall Commission. contained the identical formula and .industry. The story of Carl Laemmle, to his friends and business associates] iaris"- was- a tremendous hox office and whispered: "That boy is riding bangle the duties of the county Jr., producer of the outstandingsuC' as "Junior." Junior never attended a* success, the cost being comparatively for a heavy fall.?)There is rip plot sessdr."- -:'-rh^i;"-: were always granted with the' apcess of J930, "All Quiet on. the Westor box office interest in the book un- • •• -Durftig th^pfc&~week many volun'4 : : proval of the Imperial Council on ern Front," reads like one of those college, although at one time he was low.' Carl Laemmle, Jtinior, had be* : less it is put tMre." As "for the which the Supreme Mufti of the Emfantastic scenarios one enjoys "with- preparing to enter" tnje "University of 1 gun his amazing career. ' ' pire set. . out believing. —THE EDITOR. Pennsylvania. As a high schoolladi Other successes followed. After executives of Universal—they" were of the' Meiers1 'td? •assessor- club ae-i bi-dly scared, and for oiicV "agreed 1 His rank was similar to a prime The screen usually tells extravagant he never amaafed his teachers with; 'We Americans", "Lonesome'* and with their competitors. Juniorj Jiow? minister and the edicts' could not bt tales—the dashing youth in a. shin- his mental brilliance; his achieve-1 "The Last Warning"- Laemmle,."Sh, ever, said nothing and s e t to work, the;Meyers'cTub,"i's^io'as onte of Oma->1 disregarded. ha's-leading? rae.mbe'rs of-Ihe Omaha ing roadster racing to easy success ments belonged to the athletic field, j who had miraculously recuperated, investing millions m*liis venture. B&r A.ssoci&wOHr'1*^"' and a happy ending. Reel life and He was a first-dass basketball player * appointed his son associate producer, i: The rest is history..."All Quiet on "I believe in jjtiie equalization of Candidate Is Well Qualified for real life differ considerably; this is and quite a decent baseball pitcher.' Junior had just celebrated his ninethe Western Front* 'was produced/ taxes", said Mr£JMeyers. "1 know; thts:Position Which a commonplace that heeds no elabor- He was liked all around. As the son^ teenth birthday. The-father had'to : Carl Laemmle, Jr., SdKering strictly just what the. home owner is up' . He Seeks ation. Bat sometimes life does 6utdo~ of the Laemmle lie "enjoyed someiTecognize that during his prolonged touch had nof;to Remarque's condition that the against and my office will be open' Wt! the screen. Just think of" the Trot"z;- rather embarrassing prominence, but: illness the Laemmle 1 story must not be changed. And-^ all times to anyone " having any ' Itjie first meeting, ^of-the "Granden • ky- career, the Lindbergh flight, the somehow he managed, to make his j been. missing .' The youngster*- had Call Onr Fhone 'for Service youth triumphed. .33i£ film became grievaneces."; j - »• pals forget that he was the son of > earned the respect' and a'dmirationjoiF ; fpi Register of Dee^s Glub" was held recent dramatic coup d'etat of King the biggest success.urf th|s "yeajr, Carl Ideal Letter Advertising ^ g r t ^ V i i j e Elks Club, i the entire staff, from errand boys to In the organization vformed for Carol of ^Rumania.. These have all a rictf arid'famous father.;Lcemmle, the twenty^one-year-old Meyers are ;raen ih all -walks of life.i ."is.- estimated, |hat; one hundred AT. 29S6 307 Paxton Block The movies always'attracted him.'stais._ '...'.'. . ..../. . the glamor of fantastic romance and ; movie producer, "J#d demonstrated About three hundred men and women! of Charges Granden atsurpass the achievments of screen And small wofider^ 1% is said that] When Jumor, in collaboration with that the Americaa'-eublic ;was; sick' .form the e.xecutivp. ^epjnmittee that heroes. But if I were to tell you the inside workings of the big pro-1 Paul Fejoa,. produced ^"Broadway^r ant', tired of box oftce formulas and will direct the campaign that is ex- .; <5<l<«pgre-I. Boss,: -vvell^kno-wn Omaha that a twenty-one-year-old youth, who duction companies are more thrilling J one of. Univeisal's. most. ambitious v. anted real life for a change. pected to nominate Mr. Meyers for! grocer, "was oiecte' president of the in this jazz age is supposed to be than' their ^ screen produete. At the'and successful productions,, his father organization last week; Max I. WalTo-day junior is virtually the head county assessor. THE MODE PLEATING told him: j'Tfour apprenticeship i s one of the rah-rah boys and hip-age of ten, I am told,'Junior ker, vice-president; Walter Cattin, of one of the largest business organiacted in, cut and subtitled a singleended. Go ahead, and don't let your flask artists, has achieved a business Mr. Meyers has been identified with Custom Designing a Specialty zations in the United States. Believe the republican party In executive secretary; and Sam Leon, treasurer. Without Extra Cost or Obligation t position which in responsibility riv- reel picture.' His father did not pay youth stop you* Follow my impulse." Charles .A. Granden, lice-president 412-17 Paxton Blk. Phone Ja. 3109 als -that of a cabinet minister, you much attention to the boy's movie And young Laemmle surely did.fol* it or not, Carl Laemmle, Sr., is boast- capacities for a number of years. might, feel. tempted to laugh it off production, but merely smiled_at his; low hi* impulse, frightened the. ex* ing these days-that-he is the father He was assistant supervisor of the •of thf> Grand pn Electric Company, an 1930 census and with his family live old established firm of Omaha, was and retort: "Tell me another!" young son's earnestnesK'tJne of'ecutive board of Universal to such' o" Carl Laemmle, Jr. born and reared in Omaha. He has Yet Carl Laemmle, Junior, i s that' Laemmle's intimates, however, called j an extent that they wanted to stop TCopyright 1930'by Seven Arts Feat- in the north part of the city. •Syndieate.) : " been in the electrical business in the very man; at the age of twenty-onp attention to:. Junior's one-reel film, him, for ihey believed that "Junior he is the general studio manager and and said: "Junior'already knows more had gone wild." Evil, once.manfully, fronted, ceases city since 1886. Mr. Granden has " ; *••"". been verjf active in many of the associate producer of the Universal about the movies than several of'our to be It happened about a year ago. civic organizations of Omaha and is Picture Corporation. ; *twenty-thousand-a-year ; men. The Remarque's iiovel, "AH Quiet on the well known throughout Douglas The American motion picture in-' boy made his picture "according to a Western Front", was setting the litCounty. Mr. Granden has been a dustry is a very sober and grim planned schedule, and it isn't: any; erary world agog. Published in almember of Ak-Sar-Ben for twentybusiness. Some of the best minds worse than some of our regular: re- mosX. every' <?***&*& language^-ini five years. He is a member of the in American business are directing leases." The most interesting thing, chiding Hebrew,.: by the way—it "had Chamber of Commerce and Kiwanis. its affairs. Despite European oppo- about,Junior^ first picture was that shattered all records with a sale^of The installation of 2 sporty • Both Mr. and Mrs. Granden were sition it has actually cornered he- he : had hot'trie^d to imitate other more than two and a" ljillr millioh active in Red Cross -work during the Mashie Shots and a new i. world film market. Jewish ability, films. It", was all his own. Seek to Have Christians Join war. They have worked untiringly as is commonly known, has played Junioifs' jfwishiie^^did not ^jpause Driving Net "••>With Them in Their on the many drives and projects a most prominent part in this con- him any difficulties." "Se was, appar-| IBattle Perfect Putting Greens .and sponsored by that organization for tinually mounting v success. .The ently, 4 typicat^Amefixian youth^j'whoj Unique Hazards t h e past-ten yeart. > Loews, Foxes,. Zukors,;' J<aemmles Just l^pp>Wd:to-bf>feei of Jewish] hav« made motion "picture history.. parentage. rjOne"r;cnj(rac5enstic, ;HPOW-^ ''STr. Grfaiden lias irtdltf••& busineSB +—.BHng; the Family—Zifews- of-ctftis^icjtyv are protesting They have developed the screen from everv'set hito.^a.jiart;from the |»ther; based' on good business principles; against the plan of the local board its "nickelodeon stage to a top-price boys: he was'lalways. on the mirtjority; County Commissioner He is an honest man and has an enof education to- introduce religious entertainment. All this is well side and fitting for the underdogj •^-th D i s t r i c t viable reputation among Omaha busi«ducatiqn; in the :public schools, known, the Jewish movie • dynasty Besides, he.-: showed a remarkable ness men",, said. Mr.. Boss. "He is v A reque&t tha^. the city • board of having been written up a number of grasp for-LpracKcal things and an a man of courage, and fearless." •+ education reconsider its action in pertimes. Only recently, when John uncanny..^ faculty for organization. mitting religious instruction to be Mr. Granden started bis company TAYLOR GRAIN 24th and Harney Drinkwater, the eminent biographer, Whenever \the students of his; preyisen school children during school on the old site at 15th and Howard decided to write the epic of the paratory school wanted to put; over 737-38 Grain Exchange hours was drawn up at the meeting Street, where the Mickel Brothers Organist at Temple Israel movie art, he selected the Jew Carl a show or some other undertaking SUGAR — GRAIN of the board of education of the Hebmusic house now stands. From that Junior was put-in charge. The easyLaemmle-rthe father of the hero of STOCKS and BONDS Instructor in Pipe Organ rew • Institute last week, and plans small institution, which was known going schoolboy then suddenly re^—Private WJres— / and Piano were started f « a mass-meeting of as the Bussel Fixture ompany, Mr. vealed himself a stern executive, a 3403—ATr 20QS". protest, in -wfhicn' representatives of .Granden, has built one of the most very good listener and an untiring 2808-10 tlie Christian 'population of Waterprogressive businesses in Omaha. worker. Cuuinpf St." bury are expected to join, In 1909. the company became the HA 0881 Just as he was about to enter upon j "We Jews r.o ^ot want to make a Bussel Granden Company and in his collegiate career his father fell Jewish issue of; it", declared Rabbi 1920. was changed to the Granden almost- fatally ill. On the spur of Moses D. SheinkopT of the Beth IsElectric Company, with Charles A. the moment ; the , eighteen-year-old rael and Shearith Israel synagogues. Granden as vice-president. youth packed his trunks and rushed "We feel it is a matter of general Mr. Granaen is a member of some to Hollywood. "I'm' going to ; help public interest "and for the general For 50 Years of the most prominent clubs . in you out, Dad", he said* very seriouspublic to settle. We know that fnany Yottr Towil Man Omaha. He is a member of the LAUNDERS & DRY CLEANERS ly.' The sick father smiled. wanly Christians as Weil as Jews feel as Miniature Golf Links 2401 No. 24—WE. 6035 Omaha Electrical League. He is a Omaha Towel Supply Co. and advised him to return to college. we do about it.", mason and • takes a deep interest in Farnam. and ._3.3ttl But the young Laemmle meant,busi209 So. lith'St, , JJL Q5t8, "The action of the board of eduthe "atfSfs' of the order. He is a Harney Streets Telephone JA; 5005 ness ;. .; '; '•'•-. cation providing that the public member of the Woodmen of the World, On the very-first-day, he told the schools should give time and opporOrftaha 'Auto Club, North Omaha or JA. 5880 executive •' board of " Universal PictJtuWty'ferr outside religious instruc* Athletic Club, Fontenelle Improveures: "I want you to forget that I. Ifc'ionis to be greatly regretted. I ment Club. Mr. Granden was a forAND .. am my father's son. I don't«want cannot say anything definite as to the mer member of the Carter Lake Club. you to 'yes' me just becausfe| my steps the Jews will take to defeat He is a-great sportsman and took RICH—CUEAMY father is the President of the jinn.'' it, but I am "sure that the Waterbury part in many of the major sports in." Awnlncs, Canvns Cover*, Tents. Ar.d Junior immediately plunged into AT ALL GROCERS Jewish community is strongly opearlier days. ~ Cimp SuppIlP*. All Kinds ' •tfprJsM.-.Be;-looked^around the lot, r posed to it.' " .PLEASES PARTICULAR PEOPLE 15 and Howard AT. U92 I . Made by watchedv^ome of t^|ie7 jpurrent. proPhone JA. 4373 JACK W*. 3IABBB. Aitorner. duc^o^i.fheja\Jc,oiiferett?es with the Uncle Sam Breakfast Food County Court House, City STALMASTER A BBBEK, Attorneys Company various . technical - experts and an850 Omaha Matl*nal Bank Bldg. >'oti«e by Publication 'en" ipetltien for 8eU Nebraska nounced that :.heT was.-goinar to. proOmaha tl«met>> of; FJsal -AdnilnlgWatl««. -Account. NOTICE OF ISCOKPORAT1OX duce a series"o£,twelve''pictures. In the* Ce-unty-Court 'of Dougln8_County, NOTICE is hereby given that the under.Kebiaska,,% . . p i j j v r vr Hnre again the young Jewish lad NATIONAL Blgnetf hate: :Iorjne5' a corporatiou under the Nebraska la\v»v: lind have adoi>ted Ar'MUfrliHS'^deceased-: Ay persons interestwg.s wary of following." in the>foot4420 Dodge Sti-eet ticles o( Incorporation as follows i ACCESSORIES, INC. dd Vn -said matteffrte-liereby Notified that - The jnnme ot this corporation shall be steps if his seniors and of attempt<tu tUe Mh day of •July;4i«0 Blanche Berry east • of Saddle "Nebraska Cnambefs Optical Co." with Its liled a petition in said County Court, pra}Creek Boad "Everything for the Auto" ing to wiprk on.material unfamiliar 1619'Fainani St.—AT. 8481 irlnclpnl place of bugincss hi Omahn, inff tti'aT her nnali ;fdmii»13t*atton account .I'ebrnskn. The general nature of the busilil£d herein he settled, npd. allowed and to him. -He had seen little of real 2501 Farnam—AT^' 1 ness to be trnnsacted and the object und 'that she be discharged from her trust as purpose for which this corporatiou is orlife. Ajt.he knew was,the campus administratrix nnd that a hearing willrt be ganized and established shall be to buy, had en said petition before said <-°" . °" life of r the Clark School and, of sell and repair optical goods, watches mid {he 2nd dny of August, 1»3<_>, and that if jewelry of every nature and description,) RUNNERS AND SNAGS vou f«il to appear before said Court on he course,-^ tjie, collegiate atmosjphere. *nd to dd itrty and all things pertaining to j said petition, the Court may grant the REMOVED SALES, LETTERS the carrying on of said business including His .idea, was a series of pictures on prayer of said.petition enter a ,lecreer of the right to own uud lease real estate. The teirship, and make such othtr and i " ^ r MUttiGRAPHING collegiate life, which, he called "The Harry H.triipidus. President* Trcas, authorized capital stock shall be $10,000.00 Bolt Hose Mending Shop orders, allowantes and-deorees' as to this MIMEOGRAPHING and oil of «aid stock; shall be common and Court mar seem proper, .to the end that Collegians". He wrote the stories, One-day service'pr ^tvhjle^ you-wait of the par value of fHKMX) per share. «nd PRINTING nil matters pertaining to tSfiUr estate maj ull of said -Stock shall be fully paid up and selected the cast, supervised the pro—Marl/Orders' Promptly -Serviced Commercial Duplicating Co. 'non-agsessable. Said capital stock rany be be nnany l S c u l t u R Y P E CKAWFOKP. duction, edited the films and actually Issued for cash, real estate, personal prop1011 - ••• County Judge. erty or personal services. The corporation succeaded in transplanting the camshall •commence doing business upon the COMPLETE? STORE AND aiins of its articles with the County Clerk pus atmosphere onto the screen. It ABRAHAMS * OCO

An Incredible, Interesting Narrative of the Phenomenal Rise of Carl Laemle, Jr*, a Cognized Master Mind of the Movies

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! CLUB IS ORGANIZED TO ELECT GRANDEN REGISTER OF DEEDS

Multigraph Letters Mailing

DRESS MAKING

fixtures 6 Supplies Electrical Contractors

WATERBURY JEWS FIGHT RELIGION IN Announcing PUBLIC SCHOOLS

i

WEBSTER.

Vorr for

WH^LLWEBER

i

Links

VERNON C. BENNETT

| American Laundry]

Spend an Enjoyable Hour at THE JUNIOR COUNTRY CLUB

Violin Teacher

••••••••••HB»r

Uncle Sam Laxative Food

SCOn-OMAHA TENT AND AWNING CO.

GRAHAM'S

Okay Bran Flakes

ICE CREAM

DUNDEE MINIATURE LINKS'

\ OMAHA H FIXTURE F E AND \ SUPPLY CO,

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ii

OFFICE OUTFITTERS. r W« Occupy l.9*Mt10.800 Hcjtinre Feet

.

Southwest Corner Eleventh and Douglas Streets Phone JAckson 2724 Omaha N b

epair Co.

JACK- W,- BL&KER, Attorney, County Court MoUi*. City. t Al>Ml>H8*BATiON III the CduIUjr Court it Dbttfflai County, eWifca eWoifca. • In tfae matter ot the estate of AMPliBlL d.««atod. AMPliBljL, d«tod . All persons lnlerented in «»i(] estpte arc hereby nOIIHeit tint n petition has IHWH filml tti aiiia Court ulletiiiS thit said decenEed Uletl leaving no last will oujlpfUyIngfor ntlinJnlsiriitjpn uRoi» hts e*l(Wp. iind tlint a henrltiR willJit! Bad on snid petition before sntd court on tfa» 2nU Unjr of August, 1030, nntjliiit If fhfey tail 1o ajnwnf «t Bftld COtirtoii the «nld Uuil day at August, 1030, at » o'clock A. M.. to contest «tilu petlMon, 1 lie Court tn«y gjunt. file gfljneiinil (rant •ndmi»t»lh»!Jon""of'~-?ot!l-re8tnte •&>• Qrace Hhetvr. or tome titlirf stiltnMe pefgoii ftttd e d 10 ft «t»(tli>m«iit t b d ^ 7-11-1)1

C6unty Joflfe.

PEERLESStEEANERS 442(J Fforence

of Douglas County Nebraska, and shall continue for. a period of fifty years from said date.. The highest amount of indebtedness Shall not Exceed two-thirds of Its capital stock but-this restriction shall not apply to Indebtedness secured by moi-tgtocts:Or,litrns ttptAi any of the corporate property. The nffnirs of this corpornrion shftll be martriged by • Board of Oirectore cow«i6tlng.of .not/less than two members. The annual " iii'eetliig of the Corporation /shall1 te.held oo the flrat voelc day bl Jan•j uary of each year at which meeting the | stockholders shall'elect u 1'resldent, a I Secretary ttnd a" Treasurer. Any two" of • said ,"offices nwy 1^ held by one and the S tatna pt*son."iTliesi< nrtlclets itiajr lie smeml; ed at ajDy-reeular* or ppecial meeting of the ' itoCkholdefs Siy ;« |t*-tfilfils vote of the Jatea

CHARLES SIMOJJ"

toe Satjitkry Laundry ' Best -of All1 Laundry Service"

MID WEST

at ' Omnhii' Nebraska, tills IBrd

iflajr tffJtiner IMB.f

'

*••-..

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313 SO-

400 Bninael* Theater WOTirE OF TROBATE OF WII<I* In tleCounU Court o£ Douelas County. i f 4 «km a t t e r of- the, estate of Rebecca Castleman, deceased.

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prdbnte of ,a • certain iMtrument now on file, in said Court, purporting to be the last ViH and testament^o£ sa.a /^c'eaRe , ind that .a hearing will be had on said petition Defbfp said Court on the .(ith day of:, July. 3930. and that if , they fail to aRpear at said Court on the said 2bih flay Of .Tuly. 3B3O. at 0 o'clock n, m. to eontest the probate of said will, the Court may allow and probate said will and grant aanlittJstration. of said estate to Cecil Bleicher and Edith Eubenstein. or gotte other suitable persois and .proceed •W'tf S et« e l n e a t H , ^ o | St-7-Z

RFO

County Judge.

SPRAGUE FURNACES JOB FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORK REINFORCING STEEL

Katelman Foundry & Mfg. Company Third Ave. and l l t h Street Phones: 89 and SI9 COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA

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PAGE S-^THE JEWISH PEESS, FRIDAY, JtJLY 18, 1930

WELL-CONSIDERED P O i p ESSENTIAL London.—A •well-considered and carefully framed policy by the British government is the one essential to the Jewish National Home in Palestine, declared Sir Herbert Samuel, first High Commissioner of Palestine, speaking at a dinner given by the Maccabeans in honor of the Jewish members of Parlament. Deploring the distressing events of last year in Palestine, Sir Herbert •said he was not one of those who held that the Jewish National Home was imperilled because although the] events there had given rise to very serious considerations and were tragic in their effects yet they need • not be taken tragically in view of the Palestine enterprise as a whole. Pointing out that the matter of the British policy in. Palestine was controversial he declined to go into de-j tails but expressed the hope that he would have an opportunity at this session of Parliament to speak on the matter. Sir Herbert expressed admiration for the Pioneer's work in Palestine both on the land and in industry. He said "they must command universal admiration and it is for their sake that we continue our labors so that their efforts are supported. •" They are a very remarkable people, redeeming the soil and simultaneously interested in all forms of intellectuality. This combination indicates a most helpful future, for the march of civilization. "Mankind in its historical advance has brought us through the phase of sophistication and is now coming out on the other side. The combination of intellectuality can develop itself fruitfully in the sight of the whole •world in Palestine for the 15,000,000 Jews who cannot concentrate themselves in Palestine we must play our allotted parts as best we can in promoting the progress of human wel. fare".

Do You Know That?

By Al Myers

Council Bluffs News

'Rudolph Schildkraut, Famed Actor, Dies

Rudolph Schildkraut, 65, one of the greatest Jewish thespians • of stage and screen^jdied Tuesday from The Council Bluffs Chapter No. 7 a heart attack while making a new of the A. Z. A. will hold a meeting picture >iinder the kleig lights. . ne*t Thursday evening, July 24, at the home of Max and Hymie Kramer, 724 West Broadway. All members are urged to attend. Plans are being made for a joint picnic with the Omaha chapters, which will be held in the near future. By P. R.

Two decades ago Schildkraut was starring in the Jewish theatres, of Europe and later became famous as a celebrity of - Biblical pictures in thr movies. Schildkraut, who was born in Oilstantinople, entered the theatrical field at an early age. POLITICAL ADVKRTISKSIKNT

ROBERT SMITH

Mrs. Ben Mehl, 25, formerly of Omaha, died Saturday at a Wichita, Kansas, hospital following an opera- | tion. She is survived by her husband; j her father, Charles Leibowitz, now | in Poland; three brothers, Abe and] Sam Leibowitz of Council Bluffs, and Louis Leibowitz of Grand Island, Nebr.; and three sisters, Mrs. Dave Bernsteinof Chicago, HI.; Mrs. Jack Burns of Lorraine, Ohio, and Miss Clara Leibowitz of Chicago. Funeral services were held Tuesday morning] in Omaha with burial in the Fischer Farm Cemetery.

W IS 30 PIEX WH, AW THE EACH 1 3 >EET HIG.H

Mrs. M. Levitan and children, Leonore and Milton, of Chicago, I1L, left Tuesday for home following a two week's visit here at the home of their cousins, Mr. and Mrs. J. Mendelson. Miss Beva Goldberg of Chicago, IIL, arrived here last Friday to spend the remainder of the summer visiting her siater, Mrs. Saul Suvalsky.

CAMERA

0 B 6 C W A (FfCTURW

,.

1NQ LANDSCAPES AMD OTHER L A ^ E <*OECTS , &UT IT IS SELDOM UStb XOW "*"• *" AS A T O y .

RoumaniaSeeks to End All And Jewish Attacks

HOTEL FONTENELLE Bucharest, (J. T. A.}.—Stern meas- plans to put an end to the anti-Semto put to an end to the: recur- itic troubles a new attack on Jews OFFERS BEAUTIFUL, ures ring attacks on Jews in various parts occurred in Balaceana where the attacked Jewish shops and NEW GARDEN ROOM of the country have: been taken by'peasants houses. Order was {restored by the

the Roumanian: Government. Following a conference between police who arrested many of the -A cool oasis of summery charm an^l beauty has just been introduced high government officials, it was de- disturbers. to the ""discriminatinfi diners of cided to send Professor Cadere, chief \, y A OmaVrs, under the- name df the Gar- of-the- state police, to-Suceava-where i /L A L den Room. In reality it is the sum- 2,000 peasants last week attacked j ' ' A . p at- transformation of the famous Jews and demolished Jewish shops. Professor Cadere was sent to SuFlorentine Restaurant of Hotel FonThe Omaha Chapter No. 1 of the ceava with instructions to restore tenelle. '. • A. Z. A. will sponsor- an informal, Always a. tight and airy room of order. A number of-detachments of private dance Wednesday evening, transcending beauty, this popular •gendarmeries have also been sent. July 23, at the Highland Country As a result of the conference the Club. restaurant has now been invested with the atmosphere and appeal of war ministry ordered the- commandThe dance is in honor of homecoma Country Club setting. An awning ant in Bukowina to put his complete ing delegates passing through Omaha canopy projecting into the main lob- force at the disposal of the local from the' national convention of the by graces the entrance which is pro- military authorities while the minister order, according to Elmer Shamberg, fuse with ferneries and palms. of justice instructed the district at- president of the local group. . The The interior is a revelation of sum- torneys throughout the country to conclave was held the early part of !h;er charm and coolness suggestive arrest immediately all .anti-Semitic this; w£ek at Oakland, California^ 'of a woodland glade. Green is the. agitators and to begin proceedings 'The committee in charge' of r ar' predominating color motif and is car- against them. rangements for the affair i M. Angelescu, minister of justice, mer Shamberg, Leo Marks, xied out in the outdoor murals, the lattice background of the orchestra declared, after the conference, that Ferber, Milton Altshuler, and''Milton et-.ge, the exotic-toned table linens, these measures would result in i!:s Frohm. chair covers and menus and even in restoration of complete order within Through love the world becomes' the balloon-like transparencies which a few days. While the conference was making' free; through deeds great.—Goethe. cover the light fixtures and swing (gracefully in the breeres that blow through the deep French windows off HAVE YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED AT "Omaha's Coolest Comer". Tie Fontenelle is often referred to a.z the crown jewel of the middle west group of Eppley hotels which DAVID KLINE, Prop.—S, E. Corner 18th and Dodge Sts.—AT. 8541 now extend from Pittsburgh to the —FREE, PROMPT DELIVERY SERVK Pacific. ; A visiting Chicago hotelier of note recently paid this compliment to Eugene C. Eppley, owner of this famous Omaha hotel: "The Fontenelle is the closest approach to the perfect hotel' that I have seen any"where in my travels. Its perpetual modernity, beauty, dignity and charm combined with its intimate atmosphere of fine service and true hospitality impress me as no other hotel ever has. I can readily understand why experienced travelers carry away such a lasting remembrance of their

at Highland Wednesday

Warburg, Roseawald Back Enterprise

Mrs. Sam Lincoln and children, accompanied by Mr. Lester Lincoln of Raiston, Nebr., left Wednesday by motor to Excelsior Springs,. Mo. They expect to be gone about a month.

Athletics of Play School of Interest The swimming pool at the Jewish Community Center is now being used to capacity, according to E. M. Segel, physical director. He and Leo Fried, assistant physical director, are teaching : over 150 boys and girls of the Play Sschool the rudiments of the aquatic sport. The circus league of the Play School is arousing considerable interest. The Flying Eagles,* the Monkeys, and the Tigers have established their supremacy over the Beavers, the Ponies, and the Lions in "mush ball". Practice track meets are preparing the embryo speedsters for the come-tition which will feature the J. C. C. picnic on August 4.

Milton Perlmmn of Chicago, HL, is visiting at the home of his cousin, New York.—Frilx IE Warburg,' his Henry Mendelson. brother Paul M. Warburg and Julius Rosenwald, three of the outstanding Mrs. S. Spectre of Indiana Harbor, Jews in the United States, are the Indiana, is spending a couple of moving spirits in* the Carl Scburz weeks here visiting at the home of Memorial Foundation, Inc., which has Mr. and Mrs. M. Hoffman. Several just been organized to promote culaffairs are being given in her honor. tural relations between the United States and Germany.. Saul Suvalsky is spending the week The Organization will hold up the in Excelsior Springs,. Mo.-........... life work of Schurz, statesman, dipomat and journalist as an example of 'Mrs. ; how loyalty to great ideals xan ..serve twenty-four ^guests at her the best" interests of Germany and the Tuesday afternoon ur h HP United States. • S. Spectre .of Indiana Harbor,:2n£.

•Milk / Vetter~inmase

Member Omaha Board of Education, 1900-01-02 Served on committee of investigation and recommended the expulsion of four members of the Board for taking bribes, since which time our School Board has enjoyed the confidence of the community.

County Auditor, 1905-1906-1907 As County Auditor, instituted methods and system of accounting saving the taxpayers over $25,000.00 annually.

Clerk of the District Court, 1908— As Clerk of the District Court, prepared and secured passage of Simplified Fee Bill, whereby the Clerk's office was placed on a cash basis. Put the jury warrant shavers out of business by personally paying jurors' fees in full, and in cooperation with the Bar Association, Stamped our jury bribing. For this service, he was presented with a resolution of thanks from the Bar Association; and on December 18, 1911, the World-Herald said, editoriaUyT^The thanks of the community are due Robert Smith, Clerk of the District Court"

The Monday Morning Mountain

LUGGAGE VALUES THAT SHOUT; "See The Nebraska's Luggage Before You Spend a Dollar for Traveling Needs"-—

Level It With the New

DECKER Electric

Gladstone Cases Deliberately Selling at a Record Low Price *v

A Revelation in Luggage at Such Low Price

Washer There it is on Monday morning:, looming above every o t h e r household task . . . a mountain of dirty clothes to be washed. The new DECKER Electric Washer will wash them all spotlessly clean and in less time.

Week-End Cases AVer fee tTood fbrEverybody

His Public Record

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Made of genuine cowhide in shark seal grain. "Dolors: Mahogany or Black. Fall leather lined; 22 and 34-ineh size; ideal for men or women. Never before guch quaKty appearance and quality workmanship la Gladstone Cases at $ 9 . 8 5 . Other Gladstone Cases to

•With

For Clerk ofthe District Court

Mrs. Harry Cohen and children, Irving and Betty, returned home Sunday following a month's visit with relatives in St. Paul and Minneapolis, r Minn.

KLINE'S PHARMACY

visit to The Fontenelle."

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

85

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DOWN Balance Easy Terms

FREE!

TWO DRAIN TUBS

"Electric SAops" 17th and Hstrmey Streets.

2S14MSU

Nebraska Power Courtesy * Scrvioe • ham

-,1-.-* Jc4hU'*L~' ?%**%• - --"f r-

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PAGE 4—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1930

THE 1;

JEWISH PRESS

HAS BRITAIN LOST HER ART OF RULING?

Published everylFridayat Qmahaj Nebraska, by

As Written by Candidus in the"Daily Sketch", THE JEWISH PRESSOTBLISHING COMPANY of London on June 14, 1930 •

'

Office: 490 Brahdeia Theater Building Telephone: ATlantic 1450

DAVID BLACKER - - - - Business and Managing Editor FRANK ,R, ACKERMAN Editor FANNIE KATELMAN, Council Bluffs, la., Correspondent SIOUX QTY OFFICE JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER—808 Pierce Street Subscription Price, o n e y e a r - - - - - - - - - - $2.50 A d v e r t i s i n g rates furnished on application CHANGE OF ADDRESS—Please give both the old and new address; be sure to give your name. T?

HEBRAIC CALENDAR 5690-1930 Rosh Chodesh Ab ^Saturday, July 26 Fast bf Ah™.—', ...Sunday, August 3 Rosh Chodesh Allul.... Monday, August 25 Rosh Hashanah .Tuesday, September 23 Yom Kippur—„ Thursday, October 2 1st Day Succoth.^—..:-. .Tuesday, October 7 Shemirii Atzereth . Tuesday, October 14 Simchath Torah. Wednesday, October 15 Rosh Chodesh Cheshvan Thursday, Oct. 23 Rosh Chodesh Kislev^__._____Friday, Nov. 21 1st Day Chanukah Monday, December 15 Rosh Chodesh Tebeth...Sunday, December 21 Fast of Tebeth™™ Sunday, December 28 •Also observed the day previous as Rosh Chodesh.

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ZIONISM AND HERZL

In 1898 Theodor Herzl stated: "One thing is to me certain, high above any doubt: the movemjent will continue. I know not when I will die, but Zionism will never die." During this past week Jews throughout the world observed by various meetings and programs the twenty-sixth anniversary of the death of Herzl, noble liberator of the Jewish soul. These celebrations were concrete proofs that the words uttered by this prince of Israel thirty .'two years back were only partially right. Zionism, it is true, keeps growing in strength and vitality. Zionism will never die; but neither will Herzl. As long as Jewish people survive, his name will be inseparably linked with Zionism and will everlastingly serve as a reminder of the Jewish National Renaissance of which he was the creator. He truly loved his people. His literary talent he devoted to his ideal. His prof essionat work ho neglected, for his race. His friends, his family, his prided indeed his very life he sacrificed for his people. He pointed the way to transfering hopes into realities; his eloquence and fervor awoke the Jews from centuries of sleep to a Zionism which is today giving us a Jewish National Homeland.

terrorization of the Jewish population, according to the Borschoy Lapok, a Barscha daily newspaper. This report conflicts with the official government statement issued by the ministry of the interior which said the Ela Rabi Bank and its purpose is that the fire was due to negligence to provide credits to small merchants and was not caused by anti-Semites. in the urban areas of Palestine. Though the bank has an authorized Appeal for Protection Bucharest.—An appeal to King Carcapital of $75,000, only $20,000 has been paid in thus far, and it is there- ol to take under his protection the fore, expected that its limited funds Jew* of Roumania was made in a telewill not enable it to carry on activities gram sent to the King by a meeting of the Bucharest Jews under the ausoh a large scale. pices of the Jewish National Party The new Arab Bank does not expect protesting Against the anti-Semitic to give any credit to fanners. Among disturbances. the Arab financiers who have helped Pointing out that the Jews of Routo establish the new bank is Abdul mania are a peaceful and industrious Hamid Shamaan, who formerly lived element of the population, the telein the United States and became an gram says that "in times of difficulty American citizen. and crisis we demand an opportunity to assist with other parts of the popSir Boyd Merriam Coming Montreal.—Sir Frank Boyd Mer- ulation in the reconstruction. riman, who wan. counsel for the Jewish Agency before the Palestine Inquiry Commission, will be in the party of eminent English lawyers who will visit Montreal before attending ihe annual meeting of the Canadian Bar Association at Toronto on August 15 and 16. Later on he will visit Chicago as the guest of the American Bar As-! sociation. j

tion, Mr. Ochs, owner of the Times must be worth more than one hundred millions. This, I believe, would make him next to Julius Rosenwald, probably the wealthiest Jew in America. And to have made it all in journalism—and from one newspaper—not a chain. Old Rothschild, or was it Napoleon, must have been right, when he advised putting all your eggs in one basket.

•was seven million. The item furnishes feed for thought. A statistician would probably say that any business netting that much annual revenue would be worth at least fifteen times that much. If there is anything to this calcula-

another schnorrer a dollar. What's the matter with me? Is he any better than I am ? The idea you can't give me anything. I am surprised at you." Its difficult to convey the humor of (Continued on Page 6)

WORLD -WIDE

United States The Government seems to be making a sad botch of the national home for Jews in Palestine. Mayor Third Time Ever since the late Lord Balfour made his cele- Atlantic City, N. J.-—Harry Bachbrated promise; there is hardly an important arach became Mayor of Atlantic City HOW HE SUCCEEDED British Minister who has not advocated the idea for the third time Friday when he You remember the story they used took the oath of office. Mr. Bacharof the national home. It has been the official ach, who ig a brother of Congressto tell about the newspaperman who policy of every successive British Government, it man Isaac Bacharach, is a banker and accumulated a fortune of one hundred thousand dollars. is the subject of a solemn international Treaty is State Public Utility Commissioner. He was interviewed on the secret committing the execution of the idea to this coun- The new mayor took the oath before of his success. a large crowd and afterward received try; and the United States, because their Govern"Well, I'll tell you," he said. "I many floral tributes. Walter Edge, ment was not a signatory of the Treaty, went out American worked hard, never looked at the Ambassador to France, was of their way to pass a resolution of support among those who sent cables of conclock, stayed up late, rose early, never took a vacation, saved my penthrough Congress. Moreover, this country has gratulations to Mayor Bacharach. nies and my uncle died in Africa, leavderived advantage from the Mandate to make the Scholarship Winners Jews ing me $99,500.00." national home. The Balfour promise helped to Albany.—More than a fifth of the But evidently in view of Mr. Och's bring America into the war on our side, the Man- total number of candidates who have success, the story needs revision. date has made us much easier about the safety of received State scholarships at Cornell HE KNEW BETTER the Suez Canal, and we have had the international University as a result of the competTalking about Mr. Ochs reminds me prestige of being the vehicle of the oldest national itive examinatipn conducted last June of a story I recently heard about his are Jews. Out of 148 who have been ideal in the world. A dozen years have passed selected father-in-law, the late Rabbi Isaac M. for the scholarships, more Wise, founder of Reform Judaism in and we are being assailed in the quarters that than thirty Jewish names appear. America. formerly praised us. All over the world there One candidate is selected from each One day, one of the members of his have been indignant meetings of protest against Assembly district in the State and the congregation came to Rabbi Wise and the recent actions of the British Government, and holders of these scholarships receive Attempt Demonstration asked him to officiate at the marriage | on Wednesday last the British Embassy in War- tuition at a price reduced to $100 a Bucharest—Under the leadership of of hi« son. By DAVID SCHWARTZ saw, the capital of Poland, had to be guarded year. Colonel Niculcea, an officer in the re"And I'll ask you, as a favor, RabA DISH OF PEACE bi," said the member, "to give a little serves, a crowd of peasants attempted against a mob of 50,000 Zionist demonstrators. On California Supreme Bernard G. Richards tells it and boost to marriage in your speech. to organize demonstrations in SucCourt Bench says its authentic, but I have me You know my son is not very enthuSan Francisco.—Judge Isadore Har- eava against bankers and Jews. "doots," its a good story though. ARABS HAVE DONE WELL siastic about marriage, and we had to While Colonel Niculcea was on his a member of the Municipal Court It was at the recent Zionist conven- persuade him to take this step." I happened to be on the inside of events that ris, way to Radautz he was arrested and of San Francisco county, today was led to the Balfour promise, and I have on doubt promoted to the superior bench 'by the planned meeting of anti-Semites tion. Talk of peace floated through •TO tell you" replied Rabbi Wise. the air like rumors on a boom day at "Why don't you get Rabbi G.—to perthat what was in the mind of the Government at Governor C. C. Young to fill a vacancy prohibited. Nevertheless the crowd of the Stock Exchange. numbering about 2,000 demform the ceremony. He can make a the time was to found a Jewish state in Palestine. caused by the death of Judge Frank peasants Delegate X in particular was much better speech of that kind, He*s -not onstrated against the Jews and bankIt was not a wild idea, for though there were J. Muraaky. perturbed about peace. All day he married." Judge Harris has practised law in ers.. talked of peace—all night he dreamt Arabs already in the country, Palestine was only California An official communique from the for many years and was apTHE FURIOUS SCHNORRER a tiny corner—about the area of Wales compared pointed to the bench several years ago. Ministry of the Interior states that of peace. Worn out by the peace maneuvers, Lipsky has that Jewish streak with the area of France and Germany combined— He and Governor Young were class- no meeting took place in Suceava at noontime, he went into a restaur- of Louis mercy which makes it impossible of the vast tracts of territory that we had freed mates at the University of California. where the assembled peasants waited ant. for him to turn down a "schnorrer", all day in vain. According to the govfrom the Turks for the Arabs. An immense Arab Hebrew in St. Louis Schools and the the "schnorrers" know it will yon have" asked the "What statement the demonstrastate of Mesopotamia, twenty or thirty times the St. Louis.—The recommendation.of ernment's and take advantage of it." tion passed without serious clashes waiter? size of Palestine, has been founded by our efforts, Dr. Henry J. Gerling, superintendent and the crowd was finally dispersed 'Teace' ' replied the Zionist abstract- But sometimes even Lipsky can be and it is not doing badly. In addition, we have of schools in St. Louis, that Hebrew and order re-established. The police edly: The waiter brought him a dish irritated by them. One schnorrer found Mr. Lipsky in such a mood. ruled off all Palestine east of Jordan as a virtually: be introduced as an accredited lan- took all necessary measures while the of peas. "Go away," said Mr. Lipsky, "I guage in the high schools of the City general secretary of the .district diindependent Arab principality. If the French had was approved at a regular meeting of NEXT TO ROSENWALD can't give you anything—I haven't a rectorate and police from Czernowitz allowed it, Syria, too, might have been an Arab the Board of Education. Dr. Gertin also watched. Last week, in this department, we cent with me now." "What do you mean?" asked the noted the fact that the net profit of state. The Arabs have done exceedingly well cut said that the new course would be inthe New York Times for the past year schnorrer furiously. "You just gave troduced in recognition of its historic- Devastataing Fire of us, and they know it.

Scanning orizon

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Bucharest.—The fire in the village al and cultural significance and will of Borcha that destroyed 250 houses, lead to credits on a par with Latin and four synagogues, three churches and the modem languages. Dr. David Reiss, superintendent of left 3,500 Jews homeless was set by an the Associate Hebrew Schools and) Orthodox priest and a teacher who head of the Hebrew department at! tipon the return of the notorious antiWashington University, was appoint- Semitic agitator Danila revived the ed by the Board of Education as head of the new city Hebrew department and instructed" to work out a curriculum for the high schools.

COLD WATER ON ENTHUSIASM * How have the Jews done in the tiny little country of Palestine that remains? Let us not talk of a Jewish state. But have they got their national home? Hardly, unless home is"a place where you get murdered} as the Jews were in Hebron and elsewhere last year. Have they got their free right of immigration into the new Zion? Why, the recent suspension of this right is the ocasion Guggenheim Aids Experiments of the hostile demonstrations in Poland and else-! New York.—With the financing aid where against what is regarded as ^ breach of of Daniel Guggenheim, the experitrust on our part. Legislation is preparing which ments which have been carried on for will prevent Jews buying land. I have not a drop the past seven years by Professor Herzl gave the Zionist movement form and of Jewish blood in me, and I know the faults as Robert H. Goddard of Clark University, Worcester, Mass., to develop rockcontent. But the movement itself was born outj well as or better than the virtues of the race. ets for the purpose of exploring the of revolt of Jewry against spiritual and physical But I know that they are the only people in the atmosphere of extreme altitudes will continued, according to an anoppression. Zionism is the lineal descendant of world who really love Palestine as a country or be who can make anything of it. I know that poor nouncement by Clark University this; the attachment to Zion which led the Babylonian Jews in Poland and elsewhere—when all is said, week. exiles under Zerabbabel to rebuild the Temple and there is more poverty among Jews than among The exact amount of Mr. Guggenheim's contribution to this work has which flamed up in the heroism of the Macabees most civilised races—have scraped together their not been disclosed. It is hoped that against Antiochus. Throughout our history and shekels to help make a new country in Palestine. this work will produce data which will of practical value to aviation and even today the Jewish people throughout the I know that they trusted in the word of this be to radio communication. i world are resolved that our common Judaism shall country and believed, as they had a right to believe, that Zion would be reibuilded. Palestine has, Roth Decorated not be obliterated, either by external foes or local in consequence of their efforts, gone ahead* as far Washington, D. C—Master Sergshorted-sighted fanatics; and insofar as Zionism in the last ten years as it had slipped back in t^ie eant Benjamin Roth of the Air Corps stresses this solidarity of our common Judaism, previous five hundred years. But if I asked what was among the three members of the Byrd Antartic Expedition who were the British Government in Palestine, as distinct decorated by Secretary of War Hurley we are all Zionists. As Zionists-we rededicate ourselves to the from the Jews who have gone there, has done 4n for heroism, in connection with the last five years for the national home, I am. at expedition. In awarding the Soldiers' ideal for which Herzl lived and spent hig lifei We the a loss to think of a single "helpful action of real Medal to Sergeant Roth, Major Fechare pledged to the rehabilitation of Palestine as importance. All the time it has poured a steady et, chief of the Air Corps, who read our Homeland, for a land focuses a people and stream of cold water on the enthusiasm of Zion- the citations, said: "For heroism while serving as a calls forth,. as nothing else can, their spiritual ists. This is not discharging our Mandate in Pa- member of the 1928-30 Byrd Antartic : Expedition. Sergeant Roth performpotentialities. And by remaining faithful to the lestine: ed his duties as airplane mechanic in dream of a restoration of our national life we shall a most meritorious manner and by his ^ ^ SENTIMENTAL PRICE some day again assume our place in the sun among conduct and, devotion to duty in the Eveif people ordinarily well-inform iX have the face of great danger, even after havthe powers of the world. . strangest ideas of what is being done in Palestine. ing nearly lost his life when a part of They imagine a country in which Jewish immi- the barrier cliff collapsed, gained sev'Prayer is a means of identifying the conscious- grants are squeezing out the Arabs. In fa«t, the eral commendations and recommendatness with the spiritual aspect of life. The cons, Arab population is increasing fast with the new ions for promotion from the expedition and brought great credit tant repetition of prayer tends to wean the con- prosperity of the country. They think the Jews commander to himself, the expedition and the sciousness from the materialistic clutch in which are dispossessing them of their laiids. Not an United States Army." it is held. Until the consciousness is definitely acre of lands is held by Jews in Palestine th^t has anchored on the plane of spirit, man does not real- not been bought by them from the Arabs, usually Other Countries ly begin to evolve as Man. at an extravagant and sentimental price^ For years no Jew has been allowed into the "country 98-Year-Old-Jew Decorated Warsaw.'—One of the highest disSome folks think and say that they are through except under licence and when he has a job to go tinctions which can be conferred upon with religion. • The real fact is they have never to. No Jew costs the country a penny in relief. a Polish citizen "by Poland, the order We are in the fortunate position of being able to of Polonia Restituta, was bestowed really begun with true religion. . develop the country without any expense "simply upon Salomea Chawat, a 98-year old of funds contributed by the pure sentimental Jew who participated in the Polish JHe who flies at the right time can fight again. out attachment of the race to the land of Abraham, revolution of 1863. Chawat was dec—Ifenippee. Isaac, and Jacob. The problem is an easy one orated following a visit to the Jewish given goodwill and courage. Have we lost the art Home for the Aged by M. Hubicki, Extreme remedies are appropriate for extreme of ruling? Are we afraid of doing a big thing minister of Labor and M. Szubarto^ wic*. diseases.—Hippocrates. in a big way? Arab Bank •

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PAGE 5—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1980 and Miss Marjory Arnstein,. daughter Miss Roselle Handler is visiting spend several weeks at the lakes cation in Colorado Springs and ManMr. Harry Ackerman who recently of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Arnstein, ir Clarinda, Iowa, with her brother- and to visit with Mrs. Newman's itou. suffered a paralytic stroke, is being are spending the. summer at a camp in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. H. brothers, Messrs. Ed and Harry Snatreated at Rochester, Minnesota. Miss Dorothy Cohen and Miss Soin Wisconsin. ; M. Korbholz. der, and families. . ... ,... phie Handler will leave Saturday to CLUBS Buddy and Buster Slosburg, sons Mr. Leon E. Ferer plans to spend Mr. Edward Cluck left Monday for spend two weeks in Chicago, MilChapter Number I of the A. Z. A. of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Slosburg, are a week at the Broadmore Hotel in a motor trip to Minneapolis, Detroit, waukee and Waukegan, 111. will give a dance at the Highland on at a camp in Minnesota. Colorado Spring?. Chicago and Buftalo. He will be Wednesday, July 23, in honor of the BIRTHS , gonevabout three weeks. (Continued on Page 6.) Mr. Solomon Freshman of Parsons, PERSONALS Mr. and "Sirs. Philip Gilinsky anKansas, spent a few days in Omaha Mr. and MTS. A. Forman and nounce the birth of a daughter on Miss Annette Riklin, Omaha danc- last week with-Mr. and Mrs. David daughters,. Betty and Rose, returned Saturday,;. July 12, at the Omaha When in Need of ing instructor, will leave next week Green. Monday from a ten day visit in Maternity Hospital. Mrs. Gilinsky for Chicago where she will study was formerly Miss Hannah Sommers. under several wellknown dancing Mr. Sandy Steinbach motored to Troutdale-in-the-Pines, Colorado. masters to secure new material and St. Louis last Week where he visited The Misses Bess and Sylvia BernMr. and Mrs. M. G. Gerard of New WITH THE SICK VISITORS ideas for the fall season. She will for a few days. From there he went stein have just returned-from a two York; announce the marriage of their Miss Helen Waxman of St. Louis is open her^ studio in September. Mrs. Bella Bolker is at the St. to the Ozarks where he will spend weeks visit with friends In St. Louis Call on Us daughter, Elsie Florence, to Mr. visiting with Mr. and Mrs. D. Gerber Miss Celia Raife of Chicago who two weeks before returning to and Kansas City. They were accom- Catharine Hospital. Our Service Comes as a Blessing Ralph Frederick Cohri of Dixon, Illi- and family. has been visiting with, Miss Riklin, Omaha. panied by Miss Ethel Greengard of to Those Pestered by Among those at the Wise Memorial nois, son of Rabbi and Mrs. Frederick will accompany her. Miss Riklin will BED BUGS, Hospital this week are Mr. Joseph Mr. Manuel Leve of Indianapolis, St. Louis who is their house guest. Miss Louise Stern of Memphis, be the house guest of Miss Raife Cohn of Omaha. ROACHES, RATS Pepper, Mrs. Yetta Wirthsafter, Mr. Indiana, who has been visiting in Mrs. Frederick Rosenstock and The wedding took place at high Tenn., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. while in Chicago. ANTS, PLEAS, Omaha, left for Chicago where he children, Ruth and Buddy, are visit- Max Kurtzman, Mr. Emanuel Vaks, , noon, Thursday, July 17, at the Park Jack Glick and family. MOTHS, ETC. Miss Rose Silver, Miss Esther Pollay, Miss Kate Goldstein of Pittsburgh, will spend a few days before return- ing in Milwaukee. Royal Hotel, New York, the father 8«rvlc« Id Effective Mrs.. Ira Rosenblum. and daughters formerly of Omaha, who has been in ing to Indianapolis. Mrs. Nathan Schlaifer, and Mrs. Prices Are Keagonable of the groom, Rabbi Cohn, officiating. Work Is Guaranteed of Kansas City are the house guests Europe for two' weeks, is now ir Mrs. Joseph Salzman and son, Philip Katzman. Mr. Milton Malashock returned last Stanley, returned Saturday from ChiMr. and Mrs. M. Cohen of Chicago of Mrs. Rosenblum's parents, Mr. Hamburg, Germany. Miss Rae Borsky, buyer at a local week from Los Angeles where he cago where they have been visiting announce the engagement of their and Mrs. Harry Gross, and of her store, is at her home recovering from Mr. and Mrs, Samuel Cohen and spent the last two'months. CHEMICAL CO. daughter, Sophie, to. Mr. Stanley S. brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and with Mrs. Salztnan's parents. a broken ankle, suffered when she children. Ruth, Robert, and Josephine, Mrs. J. M. Malashock. AT. 3507 Marks, of this city. Mr. and MM. A. Wolf are in Colwill motor to Lake Okoboji for. a Messrs. Sam Zacharia, Nate Reiss, was thrown from a horse while on 1727 Leavemvorth Street The wedding will be a January Miss Hannah Sperling of Sioux two weeks vacation. They, will be orado where, they will, spend three and Hyman Shrier, and Dr.- D. C. her vacation in Colorado. event. City, Iowa, has been the house guest accompanied by Mrs. I. Sherman and weeks at Colorado Springs, Denver Platt are" camping in a cabin on the Mr. and Mrs. Harry Nyatrom an- of Miss Ruth Marks - for the past daughter, Dorothy, of Blair, Mr. and and Manitou. Platte River about thirty miles west Mrs. Morris Pill of Sioux City, and nounce the engagement of their week. Mr. and Mrs. -Herman Franklin of Fremont. daughter, Miss. Dorothy Burroughs, Miss Esther Budesky of Philadel- Miss Marian Freiden of Omaha. gave a family dinner for twentyto Mr. Earl Sisgel, son of Mr. and phia, Pennsylvania, is visiting with Mrs. S. S. Green of Norfolk, Nebr., four at Elmwood Park followed by a Mr. and Mrs. Samuel H. Stern have Mrs. S. Siegel. No date has been Mr. and Mrs. M. Forbes. spent a few days in Omaha last Siccteenth and Farnam returned from an extended honey- bridge at their home on Sunday, June week. set for the wedding. '' 29, in honor of their 20th wedding moon on the West Coast and are at BAR MITZVAH . Mr. and Mrs. Sam Katz announce anniversary. ' They' received many Among those who are going down home at 342 North 86th Avenue. Mr. and Mrs. I. Forbes celebrated beautiful gifts. the engagement of their daughter, to Sioux City for the midsummer Mr. and Mrs. Ben Shapiro have reSara, to Mr. E. N. Zalkin, son of the Bar Mitzvah of their son, HerMiss Dorothea Greenblatt and formal of the Pi Epsilon Tau Sorority"; Mrs. tabby Zalkin. Mr. and Mrs. bert, last Saturday at the Beth- Ha- turned from their honeymoon in Chiare the Misses •- Bemice Sherman, of brother, Heimer, who have been viscago and Madison. Katz will, give a reception on Sun- medrosh. Hagodol Synagogue. Marian Goldner,-Rae Bernstein, and, iting In Omaha since April with their Sunday afternoon Herbert enterday, July 20, honoring the engaged Messrs. Marvin Treller, Ernie grandparents,. Mr. and Mrs. A. Mons- Frieda Brodkey, and Messrs. Eddie tained fifteen boys at a theatre parcouple. y, Paul Grossman, Meyer I Nogg, and Al Mayor spent the week ky, returned Tuesday to their home Brodkey, No date has been set for the wed- ty, and Sunday evening Mr. and Mrs. end at the Inn at Lake Okoboji. Goldner, Harold Kroloff, Eddie Somin New York. Forbes entertained for fifty guests mers and Al Harding. ding. . '* ~ in his honor. Msr. H. Wohlner who has been Misses Evelyn and Gloria Wolk Messrs. Meyer and Julius Goldner visiting in Schenectady, New York spent the past Week in Fremont as ENTERTAINMENTS have returned from a six weeks vaTO CALIFORNIA with her son, Mr. David Wohlner, house guests of Miss Shiiley Rosen. H. Meyergon of Council BluffB and with relatives in New York City Mr. and Mrs* Jacob Slosburg and The Misses Fannie and Anne Berwas hostess to eleven guests at a daughter, Miss Ramona Slosburg, left Lake Luxerne, and Fort Wayne, Inluncheon at the Fontenelle hotel Thursday for California where they diana, returned to Omaha last week man and Rebecca Yelin of Kansas Let Us Make the Sandwiches and Salads for Your Parties last Monday. will spend the remainder of the sum- She was accompanied by her daugh- City, Missouri, who have been guests Delivery Service for Tour Convenience ter, Mrs. H. Okun of Fort Wayne of relatives and friends in Fremont Mrs. F. H. Roddy entertained at a mer. for a week, returned home last week. Dundee Delicatessen and her granddaughter, Miss Shirley bridge luncheon for twelve guests at Mr. Herman Franklin left last Albert, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Numerous swimming, theatre | and 112 N. 50th Street—GLendale 0T78 her home Wednesday, complimenting Tuesday for California. Louis Albert of this city, who had bridge parties, "and dinners were j Open Sundays and Evenings Until 12 Mrs. Herman Zoote of Chicago, her given in their honor. Mr*. Sarah Kohn of Omaha and ^ e e n v i s i t i n & w i t h h e r a U n t ' M r s house guest, and also Miss Louise" Miss Pearl Wolf of Fremont acStern of Memphis, Tenn., guest of her sister, Mrs. Esther Rosenberg, Okun. companied Miss Yelin and the Misses HONESTY Mr. and Mrs. Jack Glick. of Chicago, are spending the summer Miss Francys Smookler who has Berman -to Kansas City where she in California. been visiting her brother-in-law and will visit a few weeks. Mrs. David Newman will entertain sister, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Ferer; at a bridge party at her home«next Mrs. Julius Nftwinan and little AT CAMP left Sunday for her home' in*Los AnTuesday in honor of Mrs. Herman Painting Contractors Miss Jane Rosenstock, daughter of geles, California. Miss Smookler was daughter, Harriett Rosalie, and mothZoote. " er, Mrs. R. Snader motored to MilMr. and Mrs. Frederick Rosenstock, extensively entertained while here. 1314 No. 24th St. . WE. 4211 waukee and Sheboygan, Wisconsin, to A t THE ATHLETIC CLUB Among the reservations at the Athletic Club' for Ia3t "Friday night w£e'"ffiosT of 'Mrr-amTMrSTir: AT Wolf for 27 guests; Mr. and Mrs. Morris Ferer, 16; Mr. and Mrs. David Feder,'4; Mr. and Mrs. Nate Mantel, 4; Mr. and Mrs. Leo Blank, 4; Mr. and Mrs.. Morris Miklin, 4; Mr. Al Mayer, 4; Mr. and Mrs. S. G. SaltzOrpheum Opposite man, 4; and Mr. and .Mrs. L. Cherniack of Council Bluffs, 4.It was erroneously stated in last week's Jewish Press that among the reservations at the Athletic Club for the previous Friday was that of Of Over 1,600 Mrs. A. E. Krasne of Council Bluffs for a bridge luncheon.

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PAGE 6—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRn>AY,JULY 18, 1980

Interesting t

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Sidelights

As Seen Through the Non*Partisan Eyes of L L B . 7. L. B. is none other than Dr. I. L. Bril, former editor of the' English section of the now defunct New York Yiddish daily, Dos Tageblatt. He is known throughout the country for his independence of opinion, his pungent comment and his fearless criticism. The Jewish Press does not always share his vieivs, yet present them as interesting observations on interesting events by a veteran English-Jewish editor. —THE EDITOR. Before'commenting upon the recent Zionist convention at Cleveland, 0., I have -waited until all the shouting •was over, until all the post mortems have been made.- I have read everything that the Yiddish papers and the English-Jewish weeklies have had to say. I have read Isaac Landman and Charles H. Joseph. I have read Samuel Margoshes of The' Day, who sits on the fence, as usual—it all depends on whether or not he is a member of the inner council, I have read Jacob Fishman, of the Jewish ; Morning Journal; Dr. Coralnik, one. time editor of Die Welt, Herzl's organ, and now of The Day; S. Rosenfeld, and even The Jewish Tribune, which is afraid to express an opinion. I have spoken to de Haas. I have not seen Lipsky, but have heard.from him. I have had a speech with Abraham Goldberg. I have been up at the Zionist Offices at 111 Fifth Avenue and have seen the hordes of job-seekers and bandwagon-climbers. Not even in the days when Louis D. Brandeis was first at the helm of the Zionist ship have I met so many Brandeis "adherents." • < V .

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I am just now recovering from all that I have heard, read and see. *

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What I am writing now is not in the nature of a post mortem, I don't like post mortems. The corpse is dead, and that is all there is to. it.

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•Don't make any mistake about this. Lipsky is not dead—I' mean Zionistically—any more than de Haas was defunct "all these nine years. . '•I have always been a Brandeis man in the sense that, since the Supreme Court Justice stood for political Zionism - and- since • that is what I have always believed • in, I agreed with him. - I have • always been an anti-Weizmann-policy man. B.ut I have never been an anti-Pipsky man in the personal sense. I have known Lipsky.almost from the first day I arrived-on-these ^shores, in 1901. Lipsky has been and is a dfevoted Zionist. He is what I may term 'the theoretician of the Zionist movement in this country. He deals with principles. Personally he has gained nothing materially from the Zionist movement. He could have made more money as a journalist, as a' dramatic critic. I know that he has brought personal sacrifices for the movement. He liked it. .Lipsky likes to move the masses. He is a shrewd manipulator of human beings. He always has the crowd with him. '

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What is true is this; From the very first day that de Haas came to this country, in 1902, there has been some antagonism between him and Ldpsky. Lipsky resented de Haas' coming here and taking charge of the Zionist work. Lipsky was the editor of The Maccabean at that time; he was also with The American Hebrew, which he was most anxious to leave, and de Haas' arrival on the American scene completely changed the situation.. »

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I have said all this by way of preamble, so that the reader may get some insight into the real situation.

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All this has' been''confusing. I had to get my bearings, especially since the Central Cqference of American Rabbis" has decided ,to_ include in the new Union Hymnal Kol Nidre—that is, the first two words and the haunting melody, although Bialik may write the new words—as well as Imber's Hatikvah; the latter in honor of the Jewish Agency. I have been told that the Central Conference has turned Orthodox and that I ;may expect the Reform rabbis to appear in beards and payoth next year. I have just sat in a two day's convention of the Rabbinical Association of the Yeshiva Graduates, and I saw mighty few beards and payoth there; but, then, they are not converts to traditional JudaiEm.

called Pirchei Zion—Flowers of Zion —-and I invited de Haas to come to us. He was then one of the staff of the London Jewish World. From the Pirchei Zion I brought him to the London B'nei Zion—that was in the pre-Herzl days—and since then de Haas has been a Zionist. I have differed with him as I have on occasion differed with Lipsky; I have scrapped with both of them. But I want to say that de Haas, like l i p s ky, has gained little profit from Zionism. I recall that just at the moment when de Haas could have gained control of the London Jewish World, in which I, too, was to have had a share, a telegram from Herzl summoned de Haas to Vienna, and during his absence some one else stepped in and got hold of the paper. I mention these things because of the unfortunate habit so many of us have of ascribing selfish motives to those who lead.

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Now we return to the convention. •

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I am not concerned about unity. I am -almost sick of the word. I like • a scrap, I like differences of opinion, the clash of principles.. This return of the Brandeis group carries with it far greater implications than a united front in American • Zionism. This change in Cleveland means, in my opinion, the elimination of Chaim Weizman as the leader of world Zionism and with that the end of Ahad Ha-am Zionism and the return to political Zionist—to Herzlism, if you please. i

ADVERTISEMENT

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RAZZBERRY TOURNAMENT

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POMTICAt, ADVERTISEMENT

VOTE FOR

HOWARD KENNEDY FOR CLERK DISTRICT COURT DOUGLAS COUNTY PRIMARY AUGUST 12,1930

THE ORCHESTRA IS BURNING Yesterday to see Julius Nathanson, Yiddish vaudevillian off to the station. Nathan is westward bound on a stage contract. Second Avenue tells a good story about Nathanson, in days, when as a boy, he worked in box office of the Yiddish theatre. One day, when the house was empty and Nathan and the manager of the theater were alone in the boxofBce, a fire broke out in the orchestra. The fire department was summoned. As the firemen were working away at the blaze, the telephone in the box office rang. "Will, you reserve me two seats in the orchestra for this afternoon ?" came a voice. « "Sorry" replied Nathanson, "but the orchestra is burning. I can give you two seats in the balcony."

NOT LESS THAN TEN Walter Winchell tells one about a Jew, who during the last drop of the stock exchange was worriedly scanning the ticker tape. "This Is terrible—ai weh," he muttered: "Millions are being wiped out in a minute. I wish I had just ten percent of. what is being lost today." "Yes, and I guess you'd take one

percent too," said a friend standing A GOOD AMERICAN NAME beside him. The foregoing is all by way of pre"No, no,—I couldn't afford to. I liminary to a story coming to me from got partners." L. Minsky, Jewish newspaperman, A SECOND MAN who, via the London Jewish Chronicle, He's a Second Ave. character and he keeps John Bull posted on all Yankee has a weakness for the bottle. Doodle Jewish events. The other day he came running into This, too, concerns a Japanese the Cafe Royal. "Well, I'm on the youth, named Jacob Levy. He workwater wagon. Off the strong stuff for good. And wnen l say for good, be- ed for a year in downtown New York lieve me—irs for good. No monkey when he decided he needed more schooling. He went to his neighborbusiness." hood school house to be registered. "Of course, I'm not such a big fool "Name" queried the teacher. as to think after all these years I "Jacob Levy" replied the Japenese. should stop altogether abruptly. No The teacher was thunderstruck.. that's foolish. But 111 tell you one "Aren't you Japanese?" she querthing—I'll just take one drink with every meal—that's all, you understand ied. "Yes." —just one drink." "Where did you get the name Jacob Partaking of the one drink, he Levy then?" slipped the bottle back into bis hip "Well," replied the Jap, "when 1 pocket. "You know, "he continued after a pause, "there is an old saying came to America, I decided to take a that when you take a drink, you be- good American name, s o l looked Into come really a new man—and the new the telephone book and saw BO many Levys, I decided it must be a good tnan is entitled to a drink too. American name.'' And once again the bottle kissed his lips. (Copyright 1930 by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) JUST A LITTLE MISTAKE You have heard the story of the Japanese youth who came to America Seek Reform :. to learn English. He decided the Tennersville, N. Y.—An appeal for <juickest way was to get a job as a the reform of the Jewish law regardservant in some American family. ing marriage and divorce to bring: Accordingly, he secured a position them into conformity with the dewith a family on the Grand Concourse mands of modern life was made here —the Bronx. at the 13th annual convention of the A year later, a Japanese friend of Rabbinical Assembly by Rabbi Louis his, who had been going to Harvard Epstein of Boston in presenting the came to see him—and found him talk- report of the committeeon the intering a perfect Yiddish. pretation of Jewish law.

A

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of Qood Standard American

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FRIDAY

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The battle of and for Zionism can only be won on a political basis. It may be that as a result of this the Jewish Agency will have to be remoulded; it may be that there will be some withdrawals. That cannot be helped. Unless there is a return to the cardinal principles of Zionism the entire movement will fail. •

(Continued from Page 4.) homecoming delegates from the national convention who will be pas- the situation, but. it struck almost speechless at least this onlooker of sing through Omaha' at that time.

All rules of golf etiquette were I am not going to get excited over the Hatikvah- being; sung at the ses-' done away with, the. players were sions of the Central Conference of allowed to do everything which is American Rabbis. To us political; forbidden among golf players. In Zionists the Hatikvah means a great! fact it was the one day when the deal more than a Jewish Agency.' one who knew the least about the We are Jewish nationalists. And. rules of golf received the most that is why Brandeis is coming back, credit and was given prizes for his and that is why Lipsky delivered faux pax. over to him the Cleveland convention I This was the razzberry tournament of 1930. I am not at all concerned at the Highland Country Club last with the petty squabbles that have [ Wednesday afternoon, which was made themselves felt in the Yiddish topped off with a stag dinner and press during the past couple of auction of players for the Highland weeks. There are bigger issues at Fling, the real golf tournament of stake. the club. Prize winners of the iarce were: Low Gross Score, Sam Leon; Low The reversal of 1921 had to come, and Lipsky was big enough to see Net Score, Dr. B. T. Friedman; Most it. For if it had not come, within Balls in the Rough, Louis Sommers; six months or a year at the utmost, Most Strokes on Holes 2, 5, 9, Sam the Zionist organization would have Robinson; Getting the Most Strokes, Sam Leon; Throwing the Most Cigarbeen a thing of the past. rette Stubs and Matches on the There is little to hope from the Greens, Sam Herzberg; Shortest Drive Labor Government of England. The Off Number 1, Dave Ferer; Fanning only thing that McDonald and his] Most Tee Shots, Dave Goldman; Getcolleagues understand is powerful, ting Most Balls in the Lake, Ben political action; this they did not get Stiefler; Crookedest Drive Off Numfrom Weizmann, and so they re- ber 1 Tee, Bud Wolf; Cussing the spected him little. It is my-impres- i Most, Rube Brown; Missing Most sion that, if anything, both Mac- JPuts, Louis .Kulakofsky; Driving a Donald and Lord Passfield laugh at Divot the Farthest, Sam Appelman; Talking Golf Most, Harry Rachmah; him. Looking Longest for Lost Balls and Tees, Jake Spiesberger; High Score, I have the highest regard for Felix 18 Holes, L. L. Rood; Using the Most M. Warburg* But he doesn't underAlibies, Sam.Swartz; Greatest Numstand Zionism, nor do* those who are ber of Putts, Any Hole, I. B. Zimhis closest advisors. man; Running Ahead of the Rest of the Match, Dr. A. Greenberg. So I hail the \ Peace of Cleveland as Mr. Jerome Heyn was chairman of the beginning of,the war to end the the tournament and Mr. Morris whittling down of,> Zionism, as the Ferer of the auction. commencement -of the" fight for the :

I have known de Haas for forty years. I was instrumental in bringThe British Irish Home Rulers won ing him into the Zionist movement. because there was a strong Irish poWe had, in London, a youth society litical party. South Africa gained POMTICAIJ

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SCAIMING TBE HORIZON

(Continued from Page 5.)

A successful benefit bridge sponsored by the Sigma Delta Tau of the University of Nebraska, was given Wednesday in the LodgeRoora of the Community Center. A prize was given for the highest score at independence because of a strong each table; the two door prizes were political force. India will gain a | won by Mrs. R. Schlaes and Mrs. great measure of freedom—the in-, L. J. Richards of Council Bluffs. dications are already to be seen—j because of political action. The LINCOLN same must be true of Zionism. I Mrs. H. Marx and children, Celia look to a man like Lord Melchett in the place of Weizmann, who. is and Paul, motored to Milwaukee and weak, to whom political action means Sheboygan, Wisconsin, and Chicago, accepting a White Paper and yield- to visit for several weeks. ing. -

I met Lipsky a week or two before the convention and bluntly asked him: "Where do you stand?" And he answered: "I want peace; _they can have the organization". I went away and said to Joseph Brainin: "Lipsky is going to hand the organization over to the Brandeis bunch". Brainin laughed and scoffed, but I insisted that I was right. The only national point on which we, agreed was that supremacy of ther Jewishi; ; : ;\ . .; I was not to say what I thought in ideal in Israel.: "'••'•••• ;' ; . ;,- - . * \ > — I . L . . B r i L the public prints then. (Copyright 1930 by Seven Arts FeatI met de Haas at the Ephraim ure Syndicate.). Deinard funeral a few days before the convention. "Are you going?" I ask him. ''I am not", he replied. Largest Movie Palace New York.—A seventy-two story And again I said to Brainin: "De Haas, will be at Cleveland.1' "But luilding is planned by Eugene Zukor, he says he won't," Brainin protested. in charge of building for the^ ParaThat's all right", I countered. "He mount-Publix Corporation. The new will be there anyhow. And so will theatre will be: located diagonally Robert Szold." And so it was. It across Broadway from the Paramount Theatre on the corner of Forty-Fourth was. inevitable. Street. • • • Work on the construction for the Lipsky had the convention in his building will start in January, 1932. hands. He could do with it whatThe theatre will have room f o r 6,000 ever he pleased. I ' am going to leave Dr. Wise out of the picture people. for the .moment,, except to say .that Stephen S. Wise .has acquired the habit of flying off the handle. *

Social News

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rAGE.7—THE JEWISH PR£SS, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1930 Sir William, it will be remembered, latter city, being still a part of the! bors; but,'in matters of .drinking and and religious instruction is imparted was Ambassador to the United Prov- British "Crown, may consider them- the' like, the Jew has* always shown to the boys in the Writlf B'ivrHih inces of the Netherlands, and the selves English rather than Irish) himself to be most temperate. system, and to the girls in the vertheory is that either he ©r his pre- might" well be that of any of the The Adelaide Road Synagogue, nacular. The younger generation is decessor, in'their obvious association principal cities of the world. As to Dublin, erected in 1892 and extended showing a decided awakening in ftwith leading Deutch Jews of the per- appearance, speech, and manner they in 1925, of which Rabbi Gudansky is EgioUE matters. They manifest great iod, persuaded many of our people are no different from their fellow the minister, is tite first specially zeal in the affairs of a University to visit Ireland. "Furthermore, it Jews the world over. built Jewish place of worship in Ire- Students' Organization, a Debating: would appear that Yadner was one Instances of inter-marriage in Ire- land since the Resettlement. In ad- Society, and the Mizratchi." of the many Dutch favorites—first land are extremely rare. Now and dition to conducting the services at Rabbi Gudansky stresses the harof Charles II and afterwards of the then a case does crop out, but such the Adelaide Road Synagogue (the mony which exists between Jews and Prince of Orange-Nassau—who were instances are so small numerically largest in the city), Rabbi Gudansky Gentile throughout the Irish Free t&e recipients of high honors and as. to be almost negligible—-Miss also served in the years prior to the State, declaring that in civic and emoluments in Ireland from the Anne Nichols and her feflow-fiction- appointment of the Chief Rabbi, Dr. communal affairs- they hav- frequent hands of these royal adventurers." ists notwithstanding! Isaac Herzog, to represent the Jew- occasion to collaborate. -He also took Abraham Yadner, grandson of Sir Among famous Irish Jews who ish community in all matters affect(Continued on page 8) Abraham, was a legal luminary at have deserted the faith, bat continue in£ the intercourse of the Jews with about 1710; he was likewise a boon to aid Jews as well as non-Jews, may their Gentile neighbors. He still concompanion of Beaa Swift. The first be mentioned Mrs. William O'Brien, tinues to do so, ably assisting his By GEORGE ALEXANDER * conforming Jew to hold high civic wife of the noted Irish veteran pat- chief rabbi in so doing. "The Jewish population of Dublin," During' the a protecting wall artrad it. This office in Southern Ireland was Lewis jriot of Cork; and the Dowager Lady R&bbi Abraham Gudansky, for about a century later. nearly, three decade* spiritual, leader reign of Henry the Second, that man-; cemetery i s still in existence, but no Harris, a leading merchant of Dub- Desart. The latter was born Ellen he said, on his arrival in New York, of -the Dublin Hebrew Congregation arch issued a decree prohibiting a longer in use. lin. He Ijecarfie" an alderman In 1874. Bishoffsheim and since her marriage *enjoy the full rights and privileges and an important communal factor, His election may be said ^o have lives in Kilkenny. She is spoken of of citizens of the city. They identify : However, the Jews in Ireland did proposed expedition about to Bet out has' just arrived in this- country'to acquaint Americans ivith the-status for Ireland, across the water. He not enjoy equal rights with their some historic significance in that, reverentially, by the people, as the f-hemselves with all the general needs cm Jews and Judaism in Ireland. In feared the establishment of a separate neighbors. In the Irish Naturaliza- whilst the Jews : were prior to that "great Jewish lady." of the community, their representaa special statement contributed to this kingdom there, which might embarrass tion Act. of .1788 they were express- immune to anti*Jewish outbursts in Sir Matthew Nathan, a professing tives are invited to attend the various story, the distinguished cleric from : Ireland, the candidacy of Lewis Har- Jew, who has served the British Em- State functions and they form :an inthe Irish Free State stresses the com- the existing political situation in Eng- ly excepted from lie 'lights and beneplete harmony which exists between land. Restrictions were made, how- fits conferred thereunder.' This in- ris engendered .tfre first symptoms of pire in various important capacities, tegral part of the State." Jews and Gentiles throughout the ever, to be ignored; for, in defiance of justice lasted for over sixty years religious prejudice in the p^itace of held virtually the.highest administra-: Rabbi Gudansky, eagerly discussing communities in- which Jews reside in the edict went Strongbow, who suffer- until, in the year 1846, the excep-" Dublin. But Mr. Harris met this tive rank at Dublin Castle -during. for The American Hebrew the status considerable nurnbers..,. ed confiscation of his lands and estates' tions in the Naturalization. Act,, as ogre in a thoroughly valiant and the most crucial period of Anglo- of Judaism in his country, declared: "Speaking specifically • about Dublin, Tkete are",'in' this imperfect-world at home,-for his disobedience. The they affected the Jews, were finally statesmanlike manner, which not only Irish, relationship. routed his enemies but raised the Sir Otto Jaffe, who died a year I may say that Judaism is by no abolished/ \AJrt it -was just two years records show that Strongbow was asI of ours, la multitude of self-contradictory terms: But few sSem BO devast- sisted financially in this venture by a previously that in the Irish Marriage prestige of his fellow Jews "in the ago, was the first Jewish Lord Mayor means on a decline there. The inatingly Belf-contradictory, so paradox- -wealthy English Jew of the day. Ace express-provision: -was made for eyes of their non-Jewish neighbors. of Belfast and twice re-elected to flux of immigrants is very small, owand friends ical, as that most singular phenom- Whether such participation resulted in marriages ftilly in' accordance with' A spirit of increased toleration fol- that post. He was also at one time ing to stringent immigration laws. enjoy a penanal gwet* lowed this episode. In August, 187f, High Sheriff of the County af the There is no sort of organized or acenon—the Irish Jew. any Jews being made members of the 'Jewish" law and custom, - provided, Lewis Harris was slated for the post ing most... an idfttl City of Belfast. The Jaffe family is tive anti-Semitism in -our city. JewThat there may be English Jews, xpedition, cannot T»e definitely ascer-however, that such law or custom did of Lord Mayor, of Dublin, but unforknown for its mercantile achieveish students experience no difficulty remembrance *- otie not conflict -witii, or ran counter to, American Jews, Spanish Jews and tained. tunately he died virtually on the eve ments as well as for deep interest at all in entering the two universities It would appear, then, that the act-, the laws of the land, other, often more or less hyphenated, •that evefjroae apIsraelites, the world will readily grant ual establishment of a Jewish eom-j During these sixty years, life in of being offered ine appointment. The in philanthropic movements. Sir Ot- in Dublin." preciates is * Call The senior minister of the Dublin But let the unwary Jew proclaim him- munity in Ireland occurred around the the Jewish community did not run population of. Dublin turned out en. to was among other things, founder self to be Irish",. and r he becomes at. year 1200, for;i.on Jul$rj28th, l?2o^ a along smsothly.. rTiere -were; years masse at the funeral, testifying to of an elementary model school, chief- Hebrew Congregation further pointed out that Jewish life is well organonce ah object of no little curiosity. was issued to one Peter de EiV"( of trials and vicissitudes, "during the popularity of this sterling Irish ly for Jewish children. ..-.*..The Jews in Ireland live in a man- ized and pulsating in Dublin. This, Third, granting, whichthe* Dublin deKi Henry the h Thid tii bli congregation t d citizen. The writer, himself one of the bd- all by King Descendants .ofjLewis. Harris have ner that might well serve as an ex- he avers, is equally evident in the dittes, finds it a source of wonderment ±he former;the office of Treasurer; and| dined steadily,.. the,!synagogue disbeen almost equally. outstanding in ample for the Irish people them-: two major and three minor syna'-"— --•" xtthe — TIrish — -1- jbccheoqpier.J coritiniied «md.the^>6ixowed scrolls of •wherevejr.. he goes,; and-/whenever lie mSiancellor^of You can talk 4 0 airlift* fflilM for Jbceheojuer. 3 » C * ; 7 0 airline mitoc f*t < • « * ; is rash enough to divulge his;incr.ed- 'hie gran^,- among o t h » things, »pro-1 : and other • articles were returned many fields of endeavor, especially in selves. There is little of actual pau- gogues, "all of which are under the ami 1OO (Mine miUs for M t > . perism or beggary. Whatever need aegis of the ecclesiastical authorities yided ible identity. ided for-the for "the "custody, "custody pf the. Kangls Kingis j to their sources 'of acquisition in the scholastic sphere. Long distance telephone rate* ara however, Among other Important figures there is, is taken care of by the in London. And, of course, evidence bawd en aii-line miles and are l**t "What! You're xeally -an. .Xrieh,Judaism in Ireland*" and?contained in-(London. " "Reorganization, per mile at th* distance incrM«*w> Jew?"—th^y exclaim in astonishment; structions to the said Judaism, was effected in 1822, since." which who nave played prominent roles in Jews themselves through their Board of this is also ample in the activiand, being further assured that such evidently, that "all Jews in Ireland time the community has flourished, thj early and contemporary day of of Guardians and other organizations, ties of various organizations affiliated ^t TM» i« the dcy «tc*on-to-iio« iron tote from *:3O A. M. to f ;is the case, they cock their heads to shall be intentive and. responsive to attracting many hundreds of their Ireland may be ; mentioned Henry jso that in no case does maintenance with the congregations. Our prinP. M. for o threr-mifllrt* con» VTTsation unA vppltee rtUmn yoo one *ider; the better to observe this 'eter de Rivall as their Keeper in all fellow Jews ffomthe different count* Eosenthal and Ids -son J. D. Rosen- of the Jewish poor devolve on the cipal institutions are the Board of oih to talk rrith anyone avail* Schechita, Board of Guardians, Loan okW at tho -telephone cptJed. strange! creature. lies of Europe, principally from Rus- thai, SL'C; E.'iSolomons, J. P.; Ab- Irish authorities. matters affecting the Crown," Fund Society, Holy Burial Society, raham <3ohen,'i3avid-"Gohen, and'Jasia and Poland. In -18M^the total The prisons rarely include any In feet, theyjseem generally diBap- _ The Established glff Judaism E NORTHWESTERN BELL '•••"' - •• Jews among their inmates. This Ladies' Benevolent Society, Ladies' tpointed, and even slightly bewildered; apparently, in or ; near; Dublin, the Jewish population" was~lesstnan 500. cob Myan. TELEPHONE COMPANY The'^^ increase, sincejthat"time has |that he does; not disport himself-in a principal' city. The}jireferehce of .the A cross sectiwi' of -the Jews in does not necessarily mean that the' Dorcas Society, and the Talmud To-; i ;in the Dublin and Belfast (the Jews -of the Jews are better than their .neigh-. rah for boys. And fpirls, ;whei» Hebrewmanner tyjicsiliy Hibernian. They Jews- fo£rsticking^fe) the^: cities,| so I look him over; inwardly, no do^bt, finalf dfecade^"oj" the..nineteenth cen4 they must sejt-Wm down as a most%n- had its evidence in those far-off daysii ttiry _Aey numbeirea about eighteen kosher -Irishman wheri 'he does" not iidfltine jfirn of "the eenThe '\Ualendar of Documents Reflaunt the national oolox, go into a ating to Ireland" contains no referthe ntH^e* pimped to over jig or reel or e v e n i come-all-ye,ence to Jews- after ^i£. year: 1286. three thousand/ ^ j « cofliWiied Our ^eppelin, according to latest interperse his speech with frequent Their expulsion in 1290 must have ulation at the- present-time-r-in the and expressive "Acushla's" and "Be- taken place sinraltaneously with that Free State and Northern Government reports, is in v ^...*ji itii gobs" and "Begorrahs,"vor-Bdnie such apjiroximttely 6 ^ D J lisl af^Xhe Its squadron. s no, * '~*T approxxmKely expressions credited to 13ie Irish by a itt evKence o% any iwar4 Elman B Jew# gullible world. ~"i%y ar^pamed, too, during thi# periodi Jewish to learn^hat he has not been in the ^Resettlement of^, ouriprethten iit to iwell-tnown-irish nobiemaa whose habit of'partaking of Tcorned'beef and Ireland would seem to nave occurred f&miiy history claims Jewish? ancestcabbagei f or' breakfast, blintzas and under Cromwell, at which time a ry. He says: "This ancest&r was trips foriuncheon, loksken and gefilte number of Portuguese Jews banded the distinguished Sir Abraham Yadfish for.tea. At such embarrassing themselves together in ggri organiza- ner, who was appointed,? for* life as moments the = writer doe's, it is true tion, known as City--Merchants -of MusterjMasier-General for ^Ireland experience temporary qualms of selfDublin. Next we find record of a in the middle of the seventeenth cendepredatidn in the painful knowledge plot of: ground made by Michael Phil- tury- In 1661 his .son (whq joined that he i s not all what he might be, ips in 1728. He presented this-to his father in the Muster-Master-Genthat he" is ruthlessly and heartlessly Hdp as and we'll help you! the Driblin congregation to be used eralship) married ^a "niece of' the ilshattering another of the world's tendas a Jewish cemetery. lustrious Sir William Temple, and erest credos. \\ Lowest Summer Prices in history—and the finest Goodyeari About twenty-five years aftef- daughter of Sir,. John Temple (the ever biiilt—backed by our all-year service. Leading in proOf course, there are Jews in Ireland wards, the Bevis Marks Congregation first Palmerston) who at tKe time —thougSlfew and far* between. Ac- of London assisted them in erecting was Attorney' General for ''Ireland. duction by millions of tires annually, Goodeordmgj%o;the official Census figures of year enjoys lowest costs and offers the the irisK Tree State, the Jewish popgreatest values. Get our Zeppelin Race ulationfas widely scattered totalling Specials on All-Weathers and D o u b l e not ovei 5,000 souls. There, are no Eagles, too. Jews aft alHin North Cork, jGalway, WexforSj Roscommon, and only one : each in^ West Cork, Donegal; and North Therevfare a negligible number of : Jews at'Gavan (6), Clare (7), limerick (33)^ and>iouth.(19). The largCombined with the ^: • est Jewish population is to be found in Dublin/the leading rabbi of which, Abraham Gudansky, has just arrived in this /country. This, spiritual leader, who is 5on his first visit to America in twenty-five years, has been minister of the Dublin Hebrew Congregation lifetime guaranteed firsts—fresh stocK — carefully, , arid Scientifically Blended . ' for the, past twenty-nine years. r mounted free. Superior to many high-priced brands. m&mahcL . There are five Jewish congregation w f in that "city with a total population o See them! approximately 4,000; .most of these live in 'Dublin .South Cork. Borough 2 numbers'359 Jews. Among the curious revelations in the Irish census are: Balloons High Pressure - *;i i Every? tire; or'-tube ..we-sell that in'the whole of the Free State ^:$ means we move -nearer the there are four Jews and five Jewesses IS v: -'i twinning port in' the world* working;on farms; there is one Jewivide' Zeppelin Race between ish fisherman; the age of eight Jews ranges •'from 85 to 94 years. Goodyear dealers this Summer. Do you want to see our One Is naturally curious as to when " *" • town win? We'll reward you and under what circumstances Jews and first migrated to Ireland ? And from ' for your help with the greatwhere? •' : r -'" "" ": : est values you ever soi. If none of these may be gathered Tubes also low priced from James, Harrington's curious There is no other Coffee . book, "Oceana," published during th seventeenth century, we do learn thai to be compared with it he had proposed to sell Ireland to th< Jews. ; To fix the, exact. date of the first Heavy Duty lifetime Guaranteed Goodyear Pathfinder 5 Jewish migration to Ireland would be rather difficult, due to the non-availSold by aU Ask for it ability of authentic records. First d a n Grocers Insist on Advo Perhaps the first, or earliest, mention of'Jews in Ireland'occurs awaj Everywhere "Famous fat Flavor" back in .the eleventh century. In thi year 10/9, or thereabouts, we find ai item to .the effect that--"five -Jews cariu over- thevsea\bearing gifts" to • Fairdelbach (Hna.-..Brian,, ^Brjen^JILinj^ -.. • --- ..- -Blended, Rosted, Ground and" Packed by MunsteT)'and were sent back over th< sea." Where they were sent, however, seems unknown. HOBERMAN BROS. 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PAGE 8—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1980 JI don't intend for*yduJto"haVe" Miltoni, was such as to discourage the too. I've thought it all over and all young Jew and force' him to seek a you have to do is explain it casually future elsewhere whenever unable to to mother and it will work out all go into business, or to study for one right. Milton knows I've an adopted of the professions. For example: sister. Once he asked me if you .were (Continued from Page 7.) attractive and I told him not terribly. In conclusion he assured us that to the Irish Jews the iuea of a JewNow, Adele, that's what you have to occasion to mention some of the lead- the Jewish community in Ireland does is! policeman or mechanic or fireMISS ANNA PILL, Correspondent do. Wear my old dresses that I left ing Jews in Dublin, saying: not lag behind its coreligionists in man was inconceivable.which foolish home last term if you haven't any "The present master of the famous England and abroad in responding to notion drove many a youn,r man to enigrate who had neither the means old, faded things of your own. Comb Rotunda Hospital is a coreligionist, the call of their brethren. nor the inclination to become a docyour hair back tightly with a part in Dr. Bethel Solomons, an eminent Pi lEpsilon Tau To say that there are no instances the middle and if you haven't entirely gynecologist, and his brother, Edwin of * anti-Semitism would not be alto- er, a dentist, a chemist or a merchDance on Sunday effaced that deadly charm which has Solomons, is president of the Dublin gether true. There are; but the in ant. In the realm of business, of course, Miss Mildred Ruth.Baron left Satgotten you so far, you'd better get a Hebrew Congregation and has been stances are negligible. Forty couples, including many out urday evening for a visit in Kansas pair of tortoise shell glasses." The brutal murder of a young Jew, the Irish Jew more than holds his elected a Warden by the members of of town guests>'are expected to atCity, with friends. Ida ended her letter with the same the Dublin Stock Exchange. Another some years ago, during the days af- own. ;' tend the Pi Epsilon Tau Mid Sum- Gala Event Is Being Planned ; m « Formal, wjluch is scheduled for The Jew is ever loyal to the flag for Festivity at Miss Gladys Weinberg is enjoying threats she had used so effectively on eminent physician, Professor Dr. ter harrowing fighting, caused a sad and serious note to intrude. It j was Adele throughout the years. And Leonard Abrahamson, is president of Sunday: evening!,- July-20." The Dance under whose protection he lives and , Riverview an extended trip up Lake Superior deplored by Jew and Gentile alike, Adele prepared for the homecoming. the Biological Society. The legal j will be held in the Marble Room of moves. This loyalty is present amand West to Spokane, Washington. Mr. Stern went to the station to profession includes several co-relig- and was perhaps not so much an in- ong the Jews of Ireland. They now i the West Hotel, which will' be decor- With the promise of the Weather Miss Esther Levitan will leave meet Ida and Milton. Mrs. Stern ionists, most prominent among them stance of anti-Semitism as j it was a make their allegiance to the Irish ated in the t colors of the Sorority, Man for a bright and sunny day for silver and green. Larry Burkle's the Annual Talmud Torah Picnic Sunday for Rockingham, North Car- hovered anxiously over stove and din- are Lionel Rosenthal, King's Coun- defiance of authority as then consti- Free State as sincere as it was to Orchestra will furnish music for the committees are putting the finishing olina, where she will spend the sum- ing room table. Adele waited in her sellor; Dr. Ernest W. Harris, L.L.D.; tuted: the post-war acts of bands of the English crown jn the days when dancing. .. touches to the plans for a gala event, mer visiting at the home of her Bist- room. When the guests arrived, she Michael Moyk, L.L.B.; Herman Gu- young men not yet attuned to the Ireland was a part of the Mother waited until the first effervescence of dansky, L.L.B.; and Bernard Schili- new era of peace and rehabilitation. Country. During the stormy days which is scheduled for Sunday after- er, Mrs. Sam Stein. Mjss Ida, Levey will be hostess to greetings were over, until Mrs. Stem man, Barrister at Lr.w. The latter The Hebrew congregation in Bel- of rebellion and uprising aginst Britthe., members . of the sorority and noon, July 20, at Riverview Park. Miss Frieda Albert, left last week; had embraced her daughter and been fast (the capital of Northern Ire- ain, the Jews had of necessity to Circulars were mailed to every their oat of town guests at a tea in distinguished Shakesperian is a her home 3301 Jackson Street, Sun- Jewish home in the city and neigh- for Los Angeles, California, where properly, introduced to Milton. Then scholar and an able journalist. A land) was founded some 60 years ago embrace absolute neutrality, being, day afternoon. She will be assisted boring small towns, advising of the she plans to spend the summer she went slowly down the steps, coreligionist named Robert Briscoe and its synagogue was erected in as it were, strangers within a etrange reaching the landing just as the is member of the Dail (Irish Free 1904. The present minister). of the land. There can be no question, by. Misses Rogie Kozberg and Ber- Picnic .and asking for the general months. support for the undertaking. The Mrs. and Mrs. Eli Robinow have others came in from the porch. nice Levin. State Parliament), representing a Belfast community and of North of however, of the fact that their symIreland Jewry in general is Rabbi pathies were all with the Irish in She wore a white organdie that Republican constituency." Committees .in charge of the ar- letter contained the following mes- returned after spending two weeks fitted snugly about her small bosom rangements for. the dance include, sage: visiting relatives in Minneapolis. Speaking1 of other Jewishly impor- Jacob Schechter (formerly..Rabbi in their great struggle for freedom, Manchester) w and then billowed to her feet in sweep- tant places, Rabbi Gudansky said: even though the Prayer for the King "The Talmud Torah i Picnic is a Misses Rogie Kozberg- and .Bernice Dublin, Belfast, Cork, Limerick was recited every Saturday during Levin, co-chairman, Serene Barrent, get-together for the Jewish people Miss Ida Sacks, has returned to her jj,g folds. Her hair glowed in deep "The second large Jewish center is decoration committee; Ida Levy, Be- of Sioux City and Vicinity. The home in Chicago, after a visit at the waves and nestled in a soft roll at the Belfast in Ulster, It also abounds in and Londonderry, are the only cities the regular services. Indeed, there nape of her white neck. Her eyes many institutions tending to foster in Ireland which have more or less were, among the rebels in 1916 a few atrice Levitt, and Louise Herzoff, En- yearly Talmud Torah picnic will take home of her brother L. D. Sacks. scattered young Jews, of whom the sparkled with her old joy and zest for and maintain the Jewish spirit. The organized Jewish communities. tertainment; and Margie Kozberg, pjace. on Sunday, July 20, at RiverMiss Rhea Finsod is a.guest at the M a n d Jewish community hardly boasted. Despite their numerical paucity, view Park. No Jew who is interestElizabeth Passman and Neomi Hurhome of her mother,, Mrs. M.D«on. f on her checks two spots of city of Cork has also a small Jewish Thus the Irish Jews manage to live the Jews in Ireland are noted for ed in. .the Jewish training of our color burned. Her lips were framed community which is doing its best witz, Hospitality. younger generation will fail to join Add Society News in a turmulous smile. Mr. Stem fol- to maintain the tradition of our t h e relatively high proportion of aca- in harmony and peace with their his fellow Jewish people by coming The Cabaret Dinner Dance at lowed his wife into the living room, people." I demic distinctions which some of Irish neighbors; and, if they refuse out and taking part in this great Barlow Manor last Sunday evening unconcerned with the little drama, enf their youth have gained at the Um> to inter-marry, they gurely do anymid-summer Jewish festival." you had such a raving beauty for a'];yersities, while some Jews have al- thing but hold aloof from the Irish was given by the Sigma Alpha Mu acted behind him. Ida stopped suddenly. Her hand sister? So this is Adele, is it ? Well, ready made their mark in the learned^ life about them. fraternity members of Sioux "Remember, that Judaism has no flew up as if she would strike someI hope you like me as much as I'm' professions, particularly in medicine, The Jew owes much to the Irish future without proper Jewish train- and attracted many young people one. Adele continued to smile and going to like you. Something tells me j The Jews, of Ireland go in, as elge- Free State; the latter, too, owes Miss Prances Emlein, one of Sioux ing of our children. It is WE of the f*?m <«t of town. Arrangements for City's younger-musicians, will broad- present generation who are respon- the Roadhouse Party were in the Milton whistled softly as he ran up we're made for each other. I tell you, j where, for business or the profes- much to the Jew. For the Irish have cast ;an. organ program over the sible for the Jewish future. Come; hands of Fred Sherman and Morris the few steps to meet, her, greeting Ida, Firi not one bit sorry I came." j sions. The old and archaic abhor? learnt, as have the nations before Adele's hand rested lightly on his rence of that which is other than them, that where the Jew is, there station KSCJ of the Sioux City with your entire family. Bring your Gordon. In the afternoon the young her with the collegiate banter that had beneath it a serious note. arm as they followed Ida into the liv-1 work of. the brain, or work which is prosperity; that the Jew adds ladies who were the guests at the Journal, Tuesday morning, at 8:30, friends, and BOOST FOR THE TAL* ing room. 'the Jews before them have not •been .more than he takes away. "Why didn't you tell me, Ida, that party were entertained at a tea in under the direction of the Sioux MUD TORAH PICNIC. the Martin Hotel. Miss Vivian City Music School. A 400 day Imported Clock will be 'Miss Emlein who has studied organ given away as a door prize and there Mosow was hostess. During the same for the * past year under Edith will be a program of. sports, games, hours a smoker was held for the Burlingin Boss at Nebraska Univer- and entertainment. Food Stands un- men in the Martin. Out of town guests included Sid sity will include the following num- der the supervision of an efficient bers in her program: committee, will be in operation on the Epstein, Harold. Pollack, Al Batt, H. B. Cohen! Mike Freeman, Herbert I." March Slav _...Tchaikowsky picnic grounds. jleveloff, Al Fidler, Sam Bender, 2. Fairyland Suite .. ......Stoughton Announcement has, been made by Morrie Zplot, Max Glazer, Heiiry a) In "Fairyland. the chairman* Mrs., R. H. Emlein, Hess, Xeo Hill, Max Kramer, H ^ b> Idyl. ^ .., that in case of rain, the picnic will Kramer, Seymour Cohen, Leo Nogff, c) March of the Gnomes. be postponed' "until ' the following Milton Adelson, Frank Nevinson, 3'. Sonata Pathetique _ ~ .Tom Sunday. ,'f Ruth RiSkes, Ruth Cohen, Gene Zinn,' Dorothy ' Silverman, Evelyn Goldberg, Rose Steinberg, Sylvia \~; Chait, ahtflilKan Haykiiu, ••'• •< : >

What of Our Brethren of the Emerald Isle?

SIOHX CITY NEWS Society News

LOCAL MUSICIAN W i l l BROADCAST

A Request

By •o*o<

From the first Mrs. Stern saw that adopting her husband's orphaned niece was not a wise step. She had thought of Adele as a companion for her own little girl, Ida, and agreed with her husband that it would be almost as easy to bring up two' girls as one. > Besides, Adele was such a charming- child, with her chestnut curls and flashing eyes, that she couldn't help taking to herrright away, in fact, everybody fell in love with Adele at sight. And that was just where the. trouble began. For people didn't feel the same toward Ida. Dark, with an overhanging brow and brooding eyes, Ida greeted her cousin with suspicion. . She regarded d ^ an.'interloper, a thief who had stolen'her parent's love. Often, When Mrs. Stern thought the two children were playing quietly together, Ida had Adele cornered out of her mother's sight and was silently torturing her with pinches; her baleful glance warning the timid child of furj&er punishment if she would cry

Jack Slotsky of Moline, HI., visited at the home • of his parents* Mr. and "Mrs. Sam Slotsky this week. Mr. Slotsky was at one time associated with The Jewish Press.

.Often Adele received a book or gift fephermeral we must voice theta if from one of her teachers who, with all they are to be recognized. Neither the world except Ida, desired only to her aunt nor her uncle could be "explease her and win her favor. But pected to know that all her longing once outside the classroom, Ida would was centered in this one thing Ida had silently wrench the book from her wrenched from her. . cohsin's hand asd display it at home Ida knew that Adele wanted to go as her own. to college, feeling as she did that she When Adele rounded into the per- had her ' own way to make in the fect young womanhood which had world. Adele didn't want to rely on been so richly promised, it seemed the inevitable marriage as the way that Ida would fain have taken this out. from her as well. At any rate, she _ For the four years that Ida was at prepared to reap whatever benefits college, the inevitable marriage did were to accrue from Adele's loveli- not come for Adele. There were alness. It was not long before the boys ways young men to take her out. in school, emerging from their chrys- There was always someone on whom alis, discovered Adele. At recess, she Mrs. Stern could pin her hopes. But held court on.the steps of the high she confessed her doubts to her husschool building, budding youths band. • _ crouching in adoration about her. And "Sometimes," she said across the inIda was always there. Seated beside timate darkness which made her feel her charming cousin, she accepted as if she were talking to herself, sallies directed at Adele, she took the "sometimes, the most popular girls arm of the youth Adele preferred, an are the ones that get left. Almost all invitation to a party was taken to the girls that graduated together with mean Ida as well as Adele. Adele and Ida are married. And I To everything, Adele submitted. wouldn't be Surprised if our Ida- was As they grew older and Ida could She had never forgotten that she owed before Adele." not help seeing that, for all the adora- a debt to her aunt and uncle. PerStern's words were in the nation which was a tribute to Adele's haps, too, she hadn't" forgdtten the ture of a prophesy. A telegram answeetness and beauty, her parents did pinches which has been her portion as nounced that Ida, was going to bring not forget; that Ida was their own, all a child. Or maybe she had been con- home-a guest for the spring holiday. her secret, burning venom turned to vinced by Ida that she had usurped Letter follows. a. fierce jealousy j Whatever Adele got her place, that even her beauty and Ida's letter to Mrs. Stern was filled was nicer than her own. Yet, no charm would have been Ida's if she with demands and explicit commands. sooner had she forced her cousin to had not come to live: with them. No She even indicated what she desired declare that she preferred Ida's and one could have told. Quiet, delicately served at meals. As to her guest, she the change effected, than she was sure sensitive, she continued to shed hap- stated laconically that his name was Adele had profited by the bargain and piness to all about her. Whatever Milton Browne, that his people were she demanded her own back.' rancor might have burned within her awfully particular and that she hoped never bubbled to the surface. Milton wouldn't find anything to disPerhaps that is why Mrs. Stern please him. came to feel that she had been unjust To Adele, Ida wrote, more fully. to her own child. Adele seemed per- But Adele dared not show the letter petually happy, to move through life to her aunt. For in it, imperious as "We feed the multitude" with the golden apple always falling ever, Ida had issued commands to her With Tasty Foods in her lap, while Ida was ever discon- cousin. tented. Mrs; Stern began, impercept- "I hope you realize (Ida wrote) just ibly she thought, to accede "more and what this visit means to me. It will Established in 1918 more,to Ida's ever growing demands. clinch matters that have been hanging CHAS. G. LOWERY CO. Inc. When,-at graduation, Adele was voted fire since my sophomore days. Miltthe prettiest girl in the class and Ida on's an awfully nice,boy, but he cant Investments the smartest,.it'was-only natural that seem to make up his mind. Of course, Phone 57120—£01-2 Frances Bids. talk of college referred only to Ida. at college we've been going around toSioux City. Town Both Mrs. Stern and her husband gether, but he keeps talking about tacitly, agreed that to- send Adele to what he's going to do after commencecollege ..would be a waste of money. ment, riot what we'll do. That's why She was sure to marry before the year I invited,him.home. • And he couldn't was out. They/did not recall that it very well refuse. DELICATESSEN was Ida who- originally presented.this "New, Adele'(Ida continued) I don't """• ""AND ftct. ..Nor, did they .see the longing, in intend for you to,spoil.it'all.for.me. SANDWICH SHOP "AdelVs eyes 'whin Ida left for the Ever since we were children' you've TRY - Ol&B P . I C J Q C .LUNCHES State University. Breams are so always gotten -what I wanted. - And O U t .

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