: -'i\Interesting and Entertaining
^
*
In-the
-• '*'""')
Interests of The * Jewish Community
as eecond-dass mall matter on January 27,. 193, at pMtoffiec Ut Omaha, Nebraska, under the Act of March J, 1870.
Robert Szold Named Administrative Head of American Zionists
OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1930
Heads Zionist ^Administration
VOL. VIII—No. 28
States Arab-Jewish IPYDIftfTfAN AT Hebrew Club Picnic Friendships Is Solution LAI11D11 Illll A l Will Be Gala Event PLAY SCHOOL 1
Stockholm, (J. T. A.).—The future of Palestine would be assured by an Mr. Robert Szold, prominent New effort on on the part of the Jewish York attorney, long associated with Father Flanagan's Boys will also A gala day to which "Omaha Jewthe Zionist movement in this country, people for comradeship with the Jewwas elected Chairman of the Adminis- ry may look forward with keen be on hand. This band proved so ish and Arab workers in Palestine anticipation .has been promised by popular at the last picnic that num- and the sympathy of British and inthe committee in sjharge of the an- erous requests were - made to Presi- ternational labor declared Salman Work of Children Will Be Shown Alack, Lipsky, Silver Are Other Officers Chosen at Jewish Community nual picnic of tii* Omaha Hebrew dent Sam Klaver for their appearance Rubashor, a leader of the General Center again." Club to be held a i Lakeview Park on Federation of Jewish Labor in PalestatFirst Meeting of Coalition Races and games will again hold ine, speaking today before the InterSunday, August'^^ The second annual Jewish ComThe outstanding feature will be a prominent place on the day's pro- national Federation of Trade Unions Executive Body. munity Center Summer Play School gram. The games will be soarthe baby contest-Many parents have Congress. The other Palestine deleNew York.—(J. T. A.)—Robert elected administration is seen in the already called 'the Jewish Press and ranged that there will be events for gate was David Ben Gurion, president exhibit will be held Sunday morning, Szold, New York attorney, head of appointment of a. considerable number Chairman Albert: .Kaplan - to enter "the old, the young, and the middle of the General Federation of Jewish July 27, at the Center, starting at Szold, Perkins and Brandwen, and for of committees, whose purpose is to ex10. a.m. . \ their* aspirant fear the coveted title aged; for boys, for girls, and for the 1 .ibor. some vears connected •with the Gov- pand the operations of the OrganizaThe exhibition of classes will be tired business man; games that all of the most perfect baby. Mr. Rubashov expressed the fear ernment legal service, was elected tion. Considerable interest is attachLocal physicians will examine each can play", according to those in that the awakening of the Arab mas- held from 10 to 11 a.m. The various chairman of the Administrative Com- ed to the election of Rabbi Stephen S. entrant from" the" standpoints of at- charge. mittee of- the Zionist Organization of Wise as Chairman of the Committee ses by the Arab effendis might cause divisions will be shown in the following rooms: Kindergarten, room C-D; Messrs. S. Altschuler and A. Rich- disturbances. tractive features, normalcy and America at a meeting of the Commit- on Political Affairs,, which will dehealth. Thus, in addition to the ards have promised to have cold tee at the organization's headquarters. termine the American Zionist attitude He said that the hope in the Labor sewing, room E-F; artcraft, room prizes to be awarded, each entrant is drinks in convenient places for the government of England had not been K-L; toymaking, room M-N; swimThis was the first meeting of the coal- to Great Britain. The committee on i benefited by the phj^sical examination refreshment of those present. ition: committee which was recently- Public information, which; will be enfulfilled, the Colonial officials not be- mirg, natatorium; dancing, gymnasir ; dramatics, lodge room; Finished An evening of entertainment fol-» iag"- marked by a spirit of labor. [to be tendered. • ' ' , ' " : elected at the thirty-third annual cbn- trusted with acquainting the general handcraft articles will be displayed lowed by dancing is also on the - vention of the Zionist Organization at public with Zionist aims and achievein the lobby. program. Several popular orchestras Cleveland. ments in Palestine, is headed by Mr are under consideration, and Irvin A general entertainment will be Other officers elected were Federal Emanuel Neumann. Levin, in charge of this phase of the held in the Center auditorium at 11 Judge Julian W. Mack,. Honorary The chairman of the other importwork, has announced that several Mr. Robert Szold ©'•clock, with William L. Holzman Chairman; Louis Lipsky, former Pres- ant committees are as follows: Comprize dances will be held. chairman. The program: ident of the Zionist Organization, mittee on Relations with the World trative Committee of the Zionist OrWhile the identity and nature of Honorary Vice-Chairman; and Rabbi Zionist Organization and the. Jewish ganization of America, at the . first 1. Community Singing, Audience. the greater part of the entertainment Abba Hillel Silver of Cleveland, Vice- Agency, Judge Julian W. Mack, Chair- meeting of that body in New York. 2. Violin Selection, Myron Qbhen. is being closely guarded, the comChairman. Accompanied by Abraham Dansky. man; Committee' on Liquidation of Mr. Szold served in 1919 as a memPaterson Jewry Finally Wins An indication of the intensification Deficit, Dr. Nathan Ratnoff, Chairman; ber of the Zionist Commission in Pal- Annual Highland Fling Will Be mittee announces that, they have 3. The Summer Play School, Its After a Six-Year been most fortunate in engaging of Zionist activity in this conntry Finance Committee, S. J. Rosensohn, estine, which was the predecessor of Value, Irvin Stalmaster. Struggle Held ill Near Russian opera star—Joseph Tkachak which is being planned by the newly- Chairman; Jewish National Fund the present Palestine Zionist Execu4. Pyramid Building, Mr. Segel Future —-who is gifted in putting into melCommittee, Abraham Goldberg, Chair- tive. At the present time, Mr. Szold Paterson, N. J., (J. T. A.).—All a-id boys. man; Palestine Economic Committee, is also Vice-President of the Palestine First matches in the Highland ody old Russian folk-lore. He als Jewish teachers in the public schools 5. The Safety First Train, PlayIsrael D. Brodiej Chairman; Commit- Economic Council, and Treasurer of Country Club golf tourney brought plays the accordian and has proven of this city will in the future be let. Cast: Robert Ferer, Albert Wolf-' : quite an attraction at Jewish gathertee on Gift Funds, Judge Wm. M. the Palestine Endowment Funds. given three days off with half-pay son, Milton Saylin, Rose Miller, Helen out some superb stroking, as many Lewis, Chairman; Organization Com- Mr. Szold's position at the bar has hardfought battles caused several ings elsewhere. on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, Prizes for the various games and according to a resolution passed by Shryer, Ida Gerelick, Morton Soref. mittee, Jacob de Haas, Chairman; been equally, distinguished. He was upsets. The second round matches awards in adequate numbers has al- the Paterson Board of Education last Coached bv Mrs. Sara Rae SekerCommittee on Cultural Activities, the Assistant Attorney General of must be played by-Sunday. man. ready been assured by John Feld- week. Rabbi James" G. Heller, Chairman; Porto Rico in. l&Io, and assistant to First round results: 6. Tiller Girls Dance Routine, man. The rest of the committee Committee on Publications, Abraham Solicitor General John W. Davis, from Championship flight: Jake Mala- consists of Goodman Meyerson, M. This ends a six-year fight which Miriam Girls. Vocal Chorus by BerTulin, Chairman; and Committee on 1915 to 1919. shock beat Louis: Hiller, 4 and 8; Talpitsky, D. and H. Oruch, Jerome has been carried on by the Jewish nice Silverman. Lemberg, (J. T. A.)-—A resolution Hebrew University, Rabbi Abba HilDr. Ben Friedmait beat Harry Trust- Kulakofsky, "M. Blank, J. Crounse, teachers of Paterson against the deexpressing non-confidence in the lel Silver, ChairmanPiano Selection, Abraham in, 6 and 5; Bnd'Wolf beat Harold M. Brandeis, L. Friedman, A. Kats- duction of substitutes* pay on Jewish Dansky. world Zionist Executive and demand- I t is understood "that a number of High Holidays. Farber by default; Bill Yousem beat ing a change" in Zionist policy and a The Stolen Prince, Playlet. Feeling that fee matter could not Earl Kulakofsky, 2 and 1; Sam J. kee, and J. Freed. S a d e l s h V w a s n m a ^ o u s l 7 " a d o p t e d | o t h e r committees are still to be apCast: Abraham Dansky, Bernice mted Leon beat Micky .Krupinsky, 1 up; be treated as a Jewish problem since al the world conference of Radical P ° - The chairman and members Silverman, Lena Zollotus'hun, Mildred these wel1 Marvin Treller beat "Ben Posley, 4 it might smack of discrimination, the Zionists here. The resolution was K «• . as-the members of e Laytin, Martin Sternberg, Edward and *3r Manny Iseman beat Elmerspecial committee of the Board of moved-and voted-after, a heated d e - p other. *ommiitees are-j» be *nn0Tnlced later Milder. Education presented a resolution , bate between Eobert Strieker, radical j ' Polish League Representative Rood by default; Jerry Heyn beat AH. Brodkey, 3 and 2. which established three "merit days" Chorus: Helene Alberts, Ann PolZionist Leader from Austria on one Will Support This Side of by whiclv every" teather will be per- lay, Arlene Solomon, Elaine Lagman. hand and the Deputy Isaac GruenPresident's flight: Jake Spiesberger r Question mitted that number of days of ab- Coached by Miss Ida Zoe Tennenbaum of Poland, Dr. Nahnm Goldbeat Manny Handler, 2 and 1; Carl Warsaw, (J. T. A.).—The orthodox sence by application to the superin- baum. Xatleman beat Bob Shless, 4 and 3; •mnTin of Germany and Dr. Max SolThe play school staff includes: Jewish, point of view against the Alpha Epsilon Phi Giv«s Scholartor dent with the loss of half-pay. Lou Sogolow beat Joe Cohn, 1 up oweitchek of Germany on the other. Samuel Gerson, Executive Director proposed calendar reform which is to nineteen holes; Dr. Morris L Gordon' Charles H. Roemer, city attorney, The conference also elected a cenship to Four Young J. C. C; Louis M. Shanok, Director come up before the League of Nabeat Max Chapman by default; Harry has been the main figure behind the tral committee consisting of Mr. Women tions this Fall will be supported by of Play J.School, Kulokofsky beat Micky Katleman, 21 Strieker, Deputy Gruenbaum and-Dr. teachers' agitation against the de- rector, C. C Asst. Executive DiBoston, Mass., (J. T. A.).—Im- the Polish delegate to the League, and 1; Rueben Kulakofsky beat Abe | Omaha members of the Alpha EpS. J. Stern of Roumania. A decision duction of substitutes' pay on Jewish ]dramatics: Mrs. Herman Jahr.Mrs. pelled by his own experience, Harry Franciszek SokaL This promise was Joe Bonoff, Naomi Cohen, Jeanette was adopted to establish a central Ehrlich, 26, a Jewish attorney of made today by the Police vice-minist- Goldstein by default; Lester Simon I silon Phi Sorority have received word holidays. Levinson, Mrs. Sarah Rae Sekerman, office in Berlin tinder the direction of Chelsea, has filed a bill in the legis- er of foreign affairs, Dr. Wysocki, to beat Sam Green, 5 and 4; Shrolly that four young women from rural Ida Tennenbaum, Mrs. P. Wintroub. Drs. Goldman and Soloweitchek. lature for a state university to be a delegation from the central council Goodman beat Hvman Ferer, 1 up.' communities are now attending the Special Edition in Sewing: Grace Dansky, Mrs. J. B, Plans were made looking to the uni- situated in Boston with free tuition of the Agudath Israel, orthodox or- Vice-President's flight: A. B. Al- summer school of the Hebrew Union Memory of Berger Robinson, pirn beat Bill Grodinsky, 2 and 1; College at Cincinnati through scholarAnne Tretiak. fication of the Radical Zionist move- for all Massachusetts girls and boys. ganization. ships provided by their Sorority. Morris Miklin beat Ben Stiefler, 5 Artcraft: Mrs. Fred Larkin, Char™ Milwaukee, Wise.—A memorial ediment in Poland. The proposed university, with The : delegation consisted of Rabbi and 4; Harry Rosenfeld beat Charles The four young women were chosen tion in honor of the late Victor L.' lotte Heyn, Helen Janger, Leota, Sharp condemnation of the activi- courses in law, medicine, liberal arts Lewin, president of the council and Reisman, 5 and 4; Mose Yousem beat from a list submitted by the DepartBerger, Socialist Congressman, will Rohlfs, Eunice Rosenstein. ties of the Brith Shalom Society in and technical subjects, would, under former senator Mendelsohn. Dave Goldman, 3 and 2; R. H. Brown ment of Farm and Rural Work of the be published by the "Milwaukee Assembly Programs: Ruth Barieh, Palestine and a demand for a viger- Ehrlich's plan, be similar to the big In presenting the orthodox Jewish Council of Jewish Women. Leader" on August 7th, the first anDancing: Shirley Janoff, Accompanous attitude towards the British gov- state universities in other parts of attitude toward the calendar reform beat Reo Barish 4 and S; Dave Ferer National The scholarships cover the expense niversary of Mr. Berger's death. Mr. ist, Rose Brandeis. beat Abe Venger 2 and 1; Morris ernmest were voiced in a message to the country. plan the delegation showed that if Milder beat Fred White 3 and 2; Ed of tuition and maintenance. Berger, who was one of the ablest Kindergarten: Alice Rothsack, Ls. the conference from Rabbi Stephen It is his idea that if it is a good it was adopted it would threaten the Treller beat Morris Ferer 4 and 2. These young women will spend six leaders the Socialist Party in Athis Verne Feblowitz, Cyril Leon. GertS. Wise. The conference was attended investment to provide free grammar fixity of the Jewish Sabbath. The annual Highland Fling will weeks at the Hebrew Union College, country has produced, was the found- rude Oruch, Esther Stein. Adele Wilby 149 delegates from eleven count- and high schools, why is it not equalin a course of instruction that includes er of the "Leader". The memorial Dr. Wysocki informed the delega- I be announced shortly. ries. ly as necessary to establish a de- tion that he understood and appreciaBible, Jewish history, Jewish literat- edition •will be published in tabloid insky. Toymaking: Rose Eosenstein, Hamgree-granting university, where ted the Jewish point of view and he ure and methods of religious school form and will carry articles and ilton Anderson, Anne Lintzfnan. young men and women could glean assured the delegation that Poland'* teaching. They have pledged to de- editorials by leading Socialists and Swimming: Emanuel M. Segel, Asan education without worrying about representative would not support any vote the knowledge and experience labor leaders throughout the United sistant, Wm. J. Rose. the cost and how to obtain the where- movement for calendar reform that they gain through attendance at this Games: Leo Fried. withal for their-college expenses. course, to the advancement of Jewish j States, would effect the Jewish religion. educational activities in the rural distriits. Rt. Hon. Harry Snell to Be The four young women who secured Principal Speaker at Session these scholarships are Rose and AnMoscow, (J. T..A.).—Noah London, in October nie Jarmack of Ansonia, Connecticut; a young American Jewish engineer, May Chesnof and, Rebecca Katzowitz was appointed the directing head of New York, (J. T. A.).—The call of Montville, Connecticut. a gigantic industrial and. economic fo- the election of delegates to the body in- the Soviet Union. London, Jerusalem, (J. T. A.).—"Under no ling of religious tolerance were mad? A vivid, concrete illustration of the vention were a barbecue, two dances, eighth session of the American Jewwho is a graduate of Cooper Union ish Congress which will be held at circumstances does the Palestine na- by Dr. Mordecai Eiiash, chief JewInstitute of New York, worked as a healthy and phenomenal growth of a .sightseeing tour, presentation of the Hotel Willard, Washington, Octotion, meaning the Arabs, recognize ish counsel in his closing address tailor in the daytime and studied en- the Aleph Zadik Aleph, born seven the Judas Maccabeus ritual, and a ber 19 to 20 has been issued. the Palestine Mandate nor does it at the hearings of the Wailing Wall years ago in. Omaha through the ef- mammoth banquet. Several importgineering at night. bind itself to any law derived there- Commission. As previously announced the Rt. Schenectady, N. Y., (J. T. A.).— The industrial plan over which he forts of Sam Beber, was portrayed ant measures were decided upon. Hon. Harry Snell, Labor member of from nor does it recognize the JewPointing out that the Jews have Louis Waldman, Jewish attorney of by the seventh international convenThe group took steps toward the will have charge involves an expenish National Home." not introduced politics into the questthe British Parliament and a member diture of two hundred million roub- tion of the' Order concluded at Oak- sponsoring of Boy Scout troops by of the Palestine Inquiry Commission Brooklyn, was nominated as Socialist This statement was made by Ahmed ion of the Wailing Wall and saving candidate for Governor of New York A.Z.A. chapters as part of the organles and will, it is said, revolutionize land, California, last week. will be the principal speaker. State at the annual convention of Zaki Pasha, prominent Moslem dig- that they are frank and want the the coal industry in the Don Basin. The A. Z. A. now boasts of a mem- zation's program. A.Z.A. Mothers' nitary and scholar from Egypt, in commissioners to feel their frankIn addition to acting on the reLondon, who was active in the la- bership of 3,700 young men in 125 Day was changed to- A.Z.A. Parents' ports of the work of the Congress the State Socialist Party here. Mrs. beginning the summing up of the ness, Dr. Eiiash declared that "ths bor movement in New York, came chapters. About five hundred at- Day, and efforts will be made to or- to be submitted by the officers the Charles H. Roth of Buffalo, a school Arab case before the Wailing Wall Wall is the eternal sign of the Jew* teacher, was nominated as Socialist ganize districts of A.Z.A. modelled to Russia in 1926. Shortly after he tended the conclave. Washington session will deal with candidate for Lieutenant-Governor; Commission. own preservation and & promise for after the B'nai B'rith. The Shofer Sam Beber, who is president, of the was offered employment as . an enproblems affecting the Jews in Eastthe future. Wrherein is there any Saving that he had discussed the William Karlin of New York was gineer in the government works at governing body of the organization, is to be enlarged, including limited ern Europe, the Jewish National named for Attorney General; and matter with his colleagues, Zaki irreverence in this attitude? WhfcJ, the Don Basin. There he developed the Supreme Advisory "Council, made advertising. Home in Palestine and the various William Hillsodorff of Rochester was. Pasha then submitted a series of re- grievance can the Arab juxtapose? a plan whereby the electrical, chemi- the principal address at the banquet International awards were won as forms of discrimination practiced servations in which he stated that What can the Moslems lose?" nominated for Comptroller. follows: Sam Beber award of $50 to against Jews in the United States in cai and metallurgical plants of the the final evening. the Arabs cannot recognize the ManDr. Eiiash vigorously stated that Mr. Waldman was also Socialist region could be furnished with elec- Philip Klutrnick, executive secre- the Aleph doing the most to promote the fields of education and employdate or the Jewish National Home. if fear motivated the Arab opposicandidate for Governor of N. Y. two tric power from the water turbines, tary of the order, was the main A.Z.A, ideals, Dan Krause, Braddock; ment, and the proposed alien registyears ago. He is 38 years old. He Ht said that his defence will not tion to Jewish rights at the Walt and after an examination of his • plan speaker at the open meeting, at- Dr. Boris D. Bogen award of $50 to ration bills. was one of the Socialist Assembly- change any of the rights which the "this ghost has now been laid. Th* by a commisiion of experts the cew- tended by over 700 people. Julius the Aleph doing the most toward the men at Albany who were ejected Arabs possess because they are ex- sacredness of the Wall prevents our Bisrio, who is assistant executive revival of Hebrew, Benjamin Weintral government approved it. soon after the war. He is now clusively entitled to decide their own claiming ownership. We believe with Fifty thousand workers will be secretary, was in a large part, re- stein of South Bend, Ind.j Helen E. Bar Anti-Semitic Prayers destiny. Any dispute regarding the the Moslems that things vested in ... working under London's supervision sponsible for the arrangements in Cohn award of ?50 for the most out- Leipzig.—The anti-Semitic "hate chairman of the Socialist Party's ownership of the places of worship Allah are too sacred for ownership," prayers" introduced into the public committee on public affairs in N. Y. must be submitted to a competent making the convention- so successful. when the project gets under way. standing religious work, Adriel Strikingly, if indirectly, he atLondon is the second American The, Omaha contingent present at Fried; San Francisco; Essay contest, schools of Thuringia by the National authority, he declared. tacked the Moslem building operaIn putting Mr. Waldman's name in Socialist minister of education, Dr. the' conclave included Mr. :ahd Mis. Jewish labor leader who has come to Russia and, been entrusted by the So- 5am Beber, Mr. arid Mrs. Philip Charles Feinberg of Pittsbiirg; Best Wilhelm Frick, were yesterday de- nomination before the convention, A moving plea to the Moslems to tions in the vicinity of the Well. viet vgovernment with the direction Klutznick, Julius Bisno, Saul Graetz; Ali-around-chapter, Milwaukee. The clared unconstitutional and prohibited Morris Hillquit declared that Mr. n-aintain a humanitarian view of the "It is only right", he said, "that w new president of the Order is Aaron by the State Tribunal here, the high- Waldman combined socialistic ideal- Jewish position with regard to the claim that the Wall be inviolable and . and^ management of such a huge in- and Miss Ida Babior. «n»t court in Germany.Man with practical realism. and a .p te extol- "unchangeable-** 5^« Among the features 6£ the con- Tollin of Chester, Pa. . dustrial operation.
THISSDNDAY
TO LET JEWISH TEACHERS OFF FOR HOLIDAYS
H1GEAND GOLF TOURNEY INTO SECOND ROUND •' • M
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•
RADICALS VOTE AGAINST ZIONIST \ EXECUTIVE BODY]
DELEGATE FAVORS JEWpVIEWON
JEWISH ATTORNEY FILES A BILL FOR STATEUNIVERSITY
ATTEND SCHOOL THROUGH AID OF SORORITY
CALL FOR ELECTION NEW YORKER IS OF DELEGATES TO HEAD OF HUGE JEWISH CONGRESS SOVIET PROJECT A«--Z» AA 7th Convention Shows Order's Qrowth
Arab Defiant in Ending Wailing Wall Summary
JEW IS NAMED AS SOCIALIST CANDIDATE
PAGE 2—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1980 tained that his version of the char • r" ":, r~^—~—~— \ acter of the High, Priest was a gencourt horise in an eSoit to obtain !a ^ , uine piece, of dramatic artistry and fair assessment on their home^. ' lie X that the anti-Semitic interpretation said further that he was satisfied that was only in the captions, for it was a Mr. Meyers would do all in his power silent picture. He protested that he to removfe the burden of unfair taxes was unaware of the captions until from the small home owner and from after the picture had been completed Speakers Praise Civic Work of Henry F. Meyers, Republican can- the small taxpayer. Candidate for Register of didate for county assessor, addressed and when he saw them felt extremely The club went on record indorsing Deeds the American Night Club, Tuesday Mr. Meyers's platform, and promised bitter towards the producer and dievening.- Mr.- Meyers stated that him all aid and coorperation to furrector. The storm of protests over A meeting of the Granden for Re-his platform was "Equalization of ther his candidacy. "The King of Kings" and particularly \ his share in it, nearly broke Schild- gister of Deeds Club was held Thurs- taxes for all," and that his aim Mrs. C. C. McDonald is president "J[ kraut's heart. To his dying day heday night r , the Elks Club. Two would be to"have an economic and. ef- of the organization, and Mrs. Jenkins regretted having had any part in that hundred supporters of Charles A. ficient office that would serve all tax- acted as chairman of the meeting. George Rose, payers alike. He also stated in his film. Oddly enough he disapproved of Granden attended. president of the Organization, presid- speech that he had no favorites, and the movies, believing that they made would strive to do justice for all the Jewish Communists an actor mechanical, yet he died in ed at the meeting. the midst of his work on another pic- ' Mr. Granden Was cited by the speak- people in administering the duties of Present Aeroplane • ers for the civic Work he has done in the office. ture. Moscow, (J. TV A.).—An aeroplane Irvin Levin, attorney, who also Despite his phenomenal stage suc- Omaha and Douglas County. named Bira Bidjan after the Jewish spoke in behalf of Mr. Meyers, said cesses he was never a wealthy man. "Charles Granden has always been state in the Far Eastern Republic that he has known Mr. Meyers for a active and keenly interested in every He was terrifically naive and simple. By BERNARD POSTAL • After being on the stage for twopublic enterprise," said George Boss. number of years, and that he could v/as officially presented to the Soviet generations he still, ^maintained every "He has been a member of Ak-Sar- assure the people of Omaha that, if government by the Jewish Commotengaged by the then fledging but alIn the death of Rudolph Schild- dramas Schildkraut began to comeiijto semblance of stage fright usually at- Ben for twenty-five years. His name Mr. .Meyers were elected county asses- ists as a present to the Sixteenth kraut, eminent Shakespearean actor his own as a dramatic satellite of real ready important Theatre Guild. His tributated to a.novice. After each is on the Chamber of Commerce roll sor, it would not be necessary for Congress of the Communist Party. and moving- picture atari -Apierican distinction. Under the direction of success with the Guild W«IB instantan- opening he would go about asking and Kiwanis, Everyone that knows thousands of taxpayers to storm the The aeroplane was built with the drama has lost one of its powerful earnings of -those v/ho worked last character portrayers. Schildkraut the great Reinhardt, Schildkraut be- eous and phenomenal. In 1922 he ap- everyone, including-the porter if they Charles Granden as I do will agree JACK W. MAKBK, Attorney, Sosh ' Hashonah and Yosi Klppur, •whose characterizations of Shylock gan to play in the leading works of peared at the Provincetown Theatre thought he had. done justice to hiswith me when J say he is one of Connty Court House, City Omaha's outstanding citizens," conhave been hailed as second to none Schiller, Lessing, Hauptmann, Ibsen, in Greenwich Village ^.in Scholem role. Much of his.income was spent Notice by Publication on Petition for Set- donating their wages for the spseifel was one of the real immortals of the Goethe and Shakespeaxe. During the Asch's great work. : "The God ofon his library in;.which he took a tinued Mr. Ilossv tlement «f Final AdmlnUtrfttUn Aeeoant. Jewish aeroplane fund. ' modern drama. —The Editor. IB the County Court of Douglas Conntr. six years he spent with • Reinhardt, Vengeance." Although; when appear- great pride. He was an omnivourous "Mr. Granden is an honest, capable Nebraska. . The last of a titanic school of actors Schildkraut became known as one of,ing,in this piece he was .sufficing from reader. His extensive library which business man," said Mr. Ross. "His In the matter of the estate of FKANK W. In Palestine they say: "Wii& is deceased: Ail persons interestand one of the Teal immortals of; the the finest Shakespearean actors of his asthma the difficulty he had in breath- contained many rare theatrical items record in the city speaks for itself. I MULLJN, ed In enid matter ore hereby notified that first silent in a quarrel springs from theatre answered his last curtain call day. . Particularly notable were his ing could not dampen his dramatic was almost, entirely destroyed by a am confident that the office of Register on the 8th day of July. 1030. Blanche Berry a good family." filed a petition In saW Connty Court, praywhen • Rudolph Schildkraut died last characterizations of Shylock and King ardor or the. passionate living of thefire six years.ago. .-.-..,.. that her flnai ntlininisirntion account of Deeds would | e one of the most lAg tiled herein be settled nad ctlowfed. and week. Unlike most actors who areLear. ~v, I role of Yankel ShabshowitZj the ., In his twenty years, of intimate,con- efficient departments in the. Court that Bhe be dischnrged from her trust as content to achieve success in one lan- In 1911 he came to America to plfty brothel-keeper who tried desperately tact with the-American stage he witf House, under the supervision of administratrix nn<l tlmt n henrtrtff -will be had en said petition before said Court on guage, Schildkraut won fame',on-the his great Shjylock at Gustav Amberg's to raise his daughter without having neaped the rapid decline of the.YicU Charles Granden." , 2nd dny of AnCnst. 1930. arid that "If ', the you fctir to appear before Bald Court oh the German, Yiddish and'English-Speak^ ^IrAdrigv/Place- Theatre.;:' While in this the stigma of his trade besmirch her. dish theatre .here, and he was one. of said petition, tbe Court may crnnt ^A ing states. In each of these tongues country'helmet Boris-Thorhashefsky The play was a great sensation. a number of noted Jewish actors.who ; Mr. Granden is vice-president, of the •ppftyer >of shid petitioh. enter ii decree of Jielrship, nnd make such ether and further Granden Electric Company, an old he contributed something of his rare who persuaded^Schildkraut to appear Though Schildkraut had appeared in {in the last decade turned from the orders, allowances and decrees, as to thig A Jewish man of neat &p-" Court mny seem proper, to the end ihni genius to modern drama which is the in a reportoire* of Yiddish 'plays. In it on the East Side in Yiddish on folk theatre t& the motion pictures or established: firm in Omaha. He hasall matters pertaining to said estate may pearance and aggressive perbeen in business here since 1886. be finally settled and determined. " poorer for his passing. sonality to sell and handle fourteen weeks he learned Yiddish and many occasions without interference, the English speaking stage. In hisStarting in V small building at 15th men who are selling the Schildkraut's notable career may be began his career as a Yiddish actor. when the production shifted to. Broad- death the stage loses a sincere, cap- and Howard ^treete, .Mr. Granden has 7-11—3T , County STERLING PENNt-A-DAY way the police stepped-in and closed divided into -four acts, so to- speak. For a time he also appeared at Kessable and versatile performer while the built one of the most progressive Policy. This is dignified Work, . 3. FKIBDMAK. Attorney The first, wds his youthful days as a ler's Theatre and at Sarah Adler's it down as an immoral play. Schild- Jews have lost an interpreter of pro-* business houses in the city. offering to the man selected . SW Peters Trart Bld». member of a traveling comic opera Theatre in I Brooklyn. After_ a_ long kraut and the producer and several found power. /Thesecret of his great excellent remuneration, over* . PKOBATE NOTICE Flans for the next meeting were writing commission, renewtroupe in Europe which he joined as stay in Germany where he repeated other members of the .cast were ar- dramatic power was. his knack of als, bonus and a remarkable, a young man shortly after he had left his earlier triumphs and had his first rested and fined but in 1924 the de^creating before the eyes of his aud-•discussed. It is believed that more than three hundred will attend the z opportunity to "get somehome jn, Rpumania. Born in Con-taste of .the moving pictures under cision was reversed. . iences prototypes. where" with the livest ornext meeting of the Granden Club. stantinople 65 years ago he was edu-the auspices of the UFAj Schitctkraut ganization in this field. The second scene of the fourth and When a-critkal estimate is made of cated in the schools of Aust.ria-.and 'returned to the United States iri.1920. last act began with his career as a Schildkraut as, an artist. it may_ be References required. Do Roumania and trained for a..business '-<r Thevopening of the third act ifound moving picture star in which field his that he will not sank with the Booths, not write or phone. Personal interviews only. Ask for D. career. At 21 he was.axall boy> in;a 4iim;-the'Btar-of Yiddish Art Theatre, son Joseph, a talented actor in his own Barrymores, Sothers and others of the Furnished Room for Rent L. Rose, 666 Brahdeis Theatre • •-.•,• to Bucharest theatre., . i,.l-l .:. ; then-housed-in the old Madison Square right, had preceded him. Thcprin- stage's elite but it,is certain that his Buildings. ; Couple, elderly man or From this brief contact-with/stage ..Garden* r: Sis.first:vehicle was "Silent cipal pictures in which the elder irresistable dramatic fervor, his fervthe woman day of people, grew his de3ire to be anractor". •Forees."; This:-was. followed by hisSchildkraut appeared - were "Young ent realism, Tus,, expressiveness and CBATFOBD, All conveniences and Reasonable When a travelling troupe came -fo -famMiar—role -of;..Shylock in-""The April," "A Ship Comes In," ?Th% Main above all his ? Shylock, from which . Connty . . Rates Bucharest young Schildkraut-ijoine'dit .Merchant ^fiVenJ.^"-;Few things he Event," "Christiana," "The Country there cried out the; pain of the Jewish 1715 Charles . . WE. 4323 •iias ever; aone TecBived such unstintAACK W. MABEK.. Attorney. and went up ;ahd down the European Doctor" and"The King of-,Kings.", It people, will not s<*on be forgotten, by County Court HOOK, Ctty. capitals playing minor • comic -roles ingJ praisevas.;bis,wcirk in this Yiddish will be recalledthat -the latter picture the thousands- who sat tensely -and OF ADMINISTRATION until Max Reinhardt recognized 'his - - ' - Y of; the famous ^Shakespearean was roundly scored by the"'Jews as watched his mafTSTand versatile perCantor from talent and took hirri under his."Viang.'.!" being. anti-Semitic. Schildkraut bore formances on innumerable stages. WINNIPEG, CANADA The second act'thSt-was tH&';li£& oj- .Schildkiaut's 'Stiyioick^was the;; most the brunt of the criticism. He played (Copyright .by the Jewish wm give A CONCERT VtMti'Jiad ever-heen the role of Caiaphas, the High Priest. All persons interested In said estate are Schildkraut began : with;his training,' One or-two furnished rooms Telegraph^ 1 Agency, Inc.) hereby notified thnt a petition hag bi^a h-slnltf Shylock left ^ for. gentlflmsn, lady or couple. r at the under the critical' eya. of Reinhardt, lip On the basis of his chaflrattemaj^onj/n filed fn sa d Court alleeing that said de.^BaijM, 'Ifyjdesired. Reasonable. based died lenrinjr no Iagt irtll and praythey this part he was ^ g « ^ **"*** ^ " ^ BETH HAMEDROSH the -school of eoh^rie]itai;ir^e.rt<)|^. a~5ros«. iv^SEt Welter St. — HA. 8296 « « f f o r ° ( l l n i n i str<;tion npon his estate, niid that a heann B vrm be'had on snld petition HAGODEL SYNAGOGUE, fari sciously aiding th&^antiAftqr an apprenticeship ln'corfliCpp^i'^ the queer man- terptation of the Crucifixion^^; roleS and minor .'parts:iTn;;cJassicaiJ:i Sunday, July 27,1&30 , •.and that If they fnll to ipp^"p1iri.Ma I 2nd day of August."1930, but were meeting Men would not live long in society 7:45 P. M. Schildkraut himself always Triain... to contest said petition, ifiua .familiar-'Jew of the Polish and "v- .•-""*~ ">'*J ftrint the same and zr&nt were they 'hot mutual dupes of each ADMISSION 50 Cents nnministratiim of gnid eetnte to Qraca Lithuanian towns with his air of perbherer. or some other suitable person and other.—Eouchefoucauld. Multigraph Letters . H i g h Grade Delicatessen a n d proceed to a settlement thpwof. secution and stubborness. His role as „ .,,• „BRXCE CRAWFORD. F a n c y Groceries ' \' .,• Shylock was dafingly modern and Mailing 8TAXMA8TER2* BEBER, Attorners (-11—oT County Jndge ; Vote/or 030 Omaha Xational Bank Bldg T r y o u r home-made dill pickles . •Call Our Hione for Service showed the corrtradictions and dissonNotice by publication on Petition for ances of human character as perhaps Ideal Letter/Advertising ^ A S T E f t * BKBER. Attom Settlement of Final Administration AcDundee Delicatessen Omaha National Bank Bide. count, i-, ".. •-. no former portraya.1 had. So powerAT. 2936 • 307 Paxton Block 112 N. 00th Street—QLendale 0779 •: ^In the County C«ji?t of Douglas^ Conntj, • Organist at Temple Israel L • £ptice by publication on petition for ful, and true was he to the idiom of County Commissioner '"••'. In the matter or* "the" estate of'VGEOEGE Open Sunfloys-.'ana Evenings Until 12 settlement of final Administration Account y C U t t f Den 8 the classical drama that for years he Instructor in Pipe Organ Nebraska. ° ° &« County, 'A.'.LANG, deceased:, fAH person* interested -4-th District: ;in said matter, arej-Bereby notified that:, on had a fame all his own on the East and Piano of the estate oi. i>c> -the 18th d a y of' JTtly, 1030. Bertha -pang ---.-.• • All persons Interested ter filed a petitioh in »((id Connty Court, praySide. : ... . c v ^ " . >"». hereby notifiprt that on —Special Summer Rates— ing that her ^finali'iadmlnistration account ^•••••••••••••k The fourth act has two scenes, the 2808-10 the ISth dny of July. 1930. Irvin Stalmnste" (-filed herein be'. settled and allowed. • and filed a petition in said County Court, pray.that she be discharged from her trust as g St. 516 Karbach Blk. AT. 2318 ing that his finnle t tadministration account first his debut on the English-speaking administratrix mttl .that a hearing will be Spend t w ***£ iT" ? l e d n n d allowed, nnd HA 0881 Tiad on Bald petitioh before said Court on stage and subsequent repitition of his that he be discharge from his trust ns the 10th day. 6i.~August, ]!)30, and .that if administrator nnd thnt n hpnring will be an Enjoyable Hour previous triumphs on'the German and you fail to-appear :before said Court on the had on said petition before said Court on .said 10th day of Angust, 11)30, at !)-o'clock the Iflth dny of August, 1030, nnd that if : Yiddish stages, and the second his enA- M., and contest said petition. the^Court you fail to appear before snid Court on at .-j^»y grant; ?;the'- JjrayiT of said .petition;, the said 16th day of August. 1030. nt 9 trance into the movies. The man who jenter a decree of heirship, and make 7 such n clock A. M.. and contest said petition, had mastered half a dozen languages 'Other nnd;further;-Orders, allowances .nnd t i e Court mny grant the prayer of gni<l THE JUNIOR | petition, enter a decree of heirship, and decrees, as to^thiB'<Jourt mny seem proper* f^und. the transition from the Yiddish J make such other nnd further orders, al. For ^9 Years to the ena'thaC nllVmntters pertainftfg "to lownnces and decrees, ns to this Court COUNTRY CLUB .*ald estate ipay.'b^Clihnlly settled and• de? stage to the English no difficulty. His l^our Jowel Man ( mny seem proper, to the end thnt nil mat- LAUNDERS & DRY CLEANERS termined.; •',. "_ _ , *•'* ~ debut on the English-speaking stage • tex* pertaining to said estate mny be finnllv Miniature Golf Links 2401 N o . 2 4 — W E . flO-oo settled and determined. T-35-3T •':. .-•,.. ; : ? County ..Judge, was in. "King Lear" for which he was Omaha Towel Supply Co.
CITE CHARLES AMERICAN NIGHT GRANDEN FOR HIS CLUB ENDORSES COMMUNAL WORK > i HENRY F. MEYERS
In the Death of This Well*Known Thespian of Stage and Screen, American Bfcantat Has Suffered a Great and Irreparable Loss THE
STORY OF HIS SUCCESS
Wanted at Once!
1
3f
REV. JACOB WA1D
FOR
RENT
VERNON C. BENNETT
sW.H.WALLWEBER
I American Laundry
Violin Teacher
Farnam and 33rd and Harney Streets •
NOTICE OK DI8SOJVCTION OF . PARTNERSHIP
NOTICE is hereby given thnt on this
15th. day of. July, .1030, the partnership doing business its the Eastern . Textile Company, consisting-, of Nathnn Grossman nnd Julius Samnelson has been dissolved and all of the liabilities of said wirtnerBhip have been assumed by the TSastern Textile Co., a corporation. NATHAN GROSSMAN, JtJtrlUS . SAMUELSON
NATIONAL \. ACCESSORIES,.-INC.
:
f Everything for the Auto" I'
2501 Farnam—AT. 5524 :
•:. GRAHAM'S 1
KICH—CUKAMY
J ICE CREAM ..PLEASES PARTICULAR PEOPLE
Phone JA. 4$73 . . •
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Barry H. Litpidus. President- Trcas.
OMAHA FIXTURE AND SUPPLY CO.
I5
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COMPLETE STORE AND OFFICE OUTFITTERS We Occupy • Over 70.000 Square Feet
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Southwest Corner ' ' K Eleventh and Douglas Streets Phone JAckson 2724 • Omaha. Nebr. ..
JACK W. MAKER. Attorney Cotinty Conrt: Homo Kotlce ..bj— publication -:on Petition for Settlement 'of final administration account. -•-Nn the County Court of Douglas County, Nebraska. ' In the matter of the estate of IKE FISHEU, deceased: All persons interested in said matter are hereby notified thnt on" the l"th day.of July, 1930, Jack W. JIarer filed a petition in mild County Court, praying that his final administration account tiled herein be settled and allowed, and that he be discharged from his trust as administrator nnd that n hearing will be had on said petition before said Court on the 16th day of August. 1030. and that if- you fail to-npnear before said Court on the said 16th day of August. 1030, nt 0 o'clock A. M.. nnd contest snld .petition, the Court may grant the prayer of said petition, enter a decree of heirship. and make such other nnd further orders, allowances nnd decrees, as to this Court may seem proper, to the end that all matters pertaining to said estate may be finally settled a n ' "-"' 7-25—3T
Telephone JA. 5005 or JA. 5880
Play Golf on the DUNDEE MINIATURE LINKS 4420 Dodge Street just east of Saddle Creek Road
SALES LETTERS MULTIGRAPH1NG MIMEOGRAPHING PRINTING Commercial Duplicating Co. 1511 Dodge St.—JAs •W54
County Judge.
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ABRAHAMS * O'CONNOR 400 Brandels Theater Bide. ^NOTICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In the County Court of Douglas County. ,*„ .„„ matter of the estate of Rebecca Custleman. deceased. : •' All persons liUersteu" In said estate, are hereby notined that a petition hns been filed in said Court, praying for the probate ',J)f > a eertnin instrument now on 'file in,.said Court.'purporting to be the Inst" w»l and-'testament of said deceased, ami that a henrinpr will be had on said petition -before said Court on the SHth day of July. 1830. nnd that if they fail to nppcnr at said Court on the said 2flth day of July. 1930, at t> o'clock, a: m. to contest the prohate of said will, the Court may allow and probate suhl Kill and Brant adniintstrnftou qt -.«tfd estate to Cecil Blelcher nnd Kdlth Hubensfeln. or some other suit n pie person and proceed to a settlement thereof.^ •."., . .-. 3t.-.3
County Judge.
PEERLESS CLEANERS 4420 Florence Blvd. KE. 1500 Tbe House With A Reputation
iBIQHftg SMOOTH!
SATIN ICE CREAM!CO.
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AIiMASTER* t r B E B E R , Attorneys,' 650 Omaha National Bank Bldgr. Omaha, Nebr. XOTICK OF INCORPORATION OF "EASTERN TEXTILE CO." KNOW ALL MES. BY THESE PRESENTS, that the "tijidersigiaed have formed A corporation under the laws of the state "of Nebraska. The name of this corpor.itioii -shall^ be ,"Eastern Textile Co." .witfe.atB principal place ' of buslrtess "at" Omaha; Nebraska. The general nature of the business to be transacted and the object and JJurnose for which, this corporation is organised nnd established shall be to lease, own, ^control or operate the business or businesses , of wtolesnlins or retailing clothing and general merchandise or to carry on the trade or business of manufacturing, producing, buying, selling, importing, exporting and otherwise dealing in any and all kinds of clothing nnd merchandise; to buy. own, sell, lease, imp.rovB or otherwise (leal in and with renl estate of every kind' or character and with personal property including the stocks and securities of other corporations; to loan and to borrow money and to make, execute and deliver mortgages, bonds and other securities, to secure the repayment of any money borrowed and to take as security for the payment of any money loaned mortgages, bonds and other securities, and to do any and all other tilings necessary to the carrying out o£ the principal purpose above enumerated. The authorized capital stock shall be $25,000.00 and all of said stock shall be common and of the par value of $100.00 per.«hnre, and all of said stock shall be fully, paid for when issued nnd shall be uon-assessnble. haid stock may be issued for -cash or for real or personal property af-the reasonable value thereof. The corporation shall commence business upon the filing of its articles with the County Clerk of Douglas County, Nebraska, and shall continue for a Period of fifty years from said date. The highest amount of indebtedness s tshall not exceed two-thirds of its capirn! o c k , b " t . t 1 h i , 8 , r e : striction shall not npplr to indebtedness secured by mortgages upon any of the corporate property. The affairs of this corporation shall be managed by a Bonrd of Directors consisting of not less than two members. The annual meeting Of the corporation-shall be held on the first week day of January of each year at which meeting the stockholders shall elect a Boar.d of Directors and thereupon the Board shall elect a President, a vice-President, a Secretary .and a Treasurer. Any two of Rnid offices'may be held by Iaa ene ami the same person. These articles S "e nmended at any regular or special meetlnK Of the stockholders only by the unanimous \ote of all of the ontstandinff stock. IN WITNESS WHEKEOK. the parties hnvo hereunto set their hands this Oth, day of J u l y , 1030. • • •
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NATHAN GROSSMAN, JUI.ICS PAMUELSON. IN* THE PIIESEXCK OF: IRVIN STALilASTEK.
209 So: iiti : St=.
JA. 0528
<-25—3T
STAtMASTER * feEBER, Attornoj-g 050 Omaha National Bank Bide. Omaha, >"ebr. NOTICK OF INCORPORATION OF "SERTT-U-TRANSFER CO." KNOW ALTi MEN BT THESE PRESENTS, that the undersigned have formed a corporation under the laws ot-tbe state of Nebraska. The name of this corporation shnll be "Eastern Textile Co." vritts its principal place Of business-at Omaha, Nebr. The seneral nature of the business to ."Tie traiiRacted and the object and purpose-for which this corporation is organized and established shall be to haul, '-carry, transt fet. transport-, truck, conver, ship, or to contract,^ urranpe or otherwise neKotiat? for the hauling, carrying, transferring, transporting, trucking, conveying, or shipping of'nny and all kinds and character of goods, wares, mprchnmlise, products and any. and all other kinds of personal property from points originating in the State of Nebraska or the Strife of Iowa, nnd ending at points in the State o£ Iowa
SCOH-OMAHA TENT ANDAWNING CO. Awnings, Convns Covers, Tents, Camp Supplies. All Kind* 13 and Howard AT. 1492
Standard Shoe Repair Co. J. L. KRAGE, Proprietor
"NEW
FOR OLD"
1619 Farnam St—AT. S481
RUNNERS AND SNAGS REMOVED Bolt Hose Mending Shop One-day service or while you wait Mail Orders Promptly Serviced 533 Securities BldR.— AT. 3821
CHARLES SIMON Itecbmmends
The Sanitary Laundry •The Best ot All Laundry Serrice" 2815 Farnam
AT-2815
MID, WEST ENCRAV1NC:C<UMC. ' s*>»
ARTISTS
/»v\
Ftone ATLAN TfCv 0 0 3 $ 313 S O . I 4 T H . S T . OMAHA
BRYCE CRAWFORD. County Judge.
Uncle Sam Laxative Food Okay Bran Flakes AND
AT ALL GROCERS Made by
Uncle Sam Breakfast Food Company Omaha
Nebraska
or the State of Nehrnska: and te lease,
buy. osvn or rent any and all kinds of renl estate nnd to mortgage tor encumber the same in any manner whatsoever or ns the same may be necessary to the carrying out of the principal purposes above enumerated and to do any and all things pertaining to the carrying on of the business nbiM-edescribed. The authorized capital stock shnll be ?10,000.00 nncl nil of said stock shnll be common and of the pnr value oC $100.00 per share, nnd nil of said stock Bhjill be fully paid for when issued and shall be non-nssessable. Said stock may be issued for cash or for renl or personal property at the reasonable value thereof. The corporation shall commence business upon the filing of its articles with the County Clerk of Douglas County, Nebraska, nnd shall continue for a period of fifty years from said date. The highest amount of indebtedness shall not exceed two-thirds of 1its capital stock bnt this restriction.shall not apply to indebtedness secured b y mortgages upon any of the corporate: property. The nffairs of this corporation shall be "managed by a Board of Directors. consisting of not leeg than two members. The nnnunl meeting of the corporation shall be held on the first week day of January of each year at which me'efing the stockholders shall elect a Ttonrtl of Directors and thereupon the Board shall elect a President, a vlee-President. a Secretary nnd a Treasurer. Any two of Bald offices may be held by one and the same person. These articles may be amended nt any regular or -special meeting of the stockholders only by. the unanimous vote of all of the outstanding stock. t IN : WITNESS - WHEREOF, the imrties, 1 have hereunto set their hands this 16th > dnv of July, 1830. j I I
R. J. HOL.DSEEBG. "• WILLIAM STALMASTBR. IN THE PRESENCE OF; J u v t K STAT.MAKTEtJ,
SPRAGDE FURNACES JOB POUNDKY AND MACHINE WORK REINFORCING STEEL
KateSman Foundry & Mfg. Company Third Ave. and 11th Street Phones: 89 and 519 COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA
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not permit itself 'the dubious tnx-| f o r TJUTE -is the age of ?1BO to the Free Loan Society; $100 Trry of setting up a fiasco of .a petty! in-The-Open," of "whoopee Judaism,"] to the town of iris birth in Russia; little college in a dingy down-town as some one has derisively nicknamed! $25 to the City Talmud Toiah; -f26 office building, to oe exploited by a 'it. It is the day of the 1'eshivnth in' for BnokE for J.C.C. libraTj-; $25 lot HARRY FREEMAK few ambitious men and second rate {the ghettoes of the Bronx and of beoks ior the Wise JIcmoTial HosphHarry Freeman, FI librar\. scholars—and call this 'The American Brownsville: of Hillel Foundations on I oo. a. retired mer- j Jewish University." And another. the campus and of synagogue renters thing should be remembered—once we everyrrhere; of Cliristian-reir, Masonic jnant, died at his EAKEY put up one .nniversitj-, more will fol- lodges and all-Jewish golf clubs; of nome Monday fol-1 Harrj- Ackerman. 48, B resident xfi. 3ow,as any one who knows the temper Jewish hospitals, with both koshei lowing a brief ill- j Omaha f OT the past thirty years and of the American Jew- is well aware, and traifa kitchens; even of "mik ness. He was prom- j prominent in local activities, died « t Thus millions of dollars will be re- vahs," kosher baths, in Christian reinent in local activi- his home Monday afternoon followquired for buildings, equipment and -sidential sections—ami American Jewties, being a mem- ing E. paralytic stroke suffered thr*e endowment, .ish universities are next on .fee prober of the Zionist weeks ago. He had just been a»organization, of the ! turnsd that day from Rochester, And :yet it should be -passible t o ' .gram. B'nai Israel syna-1 IMinn. take neven a t the time the initial step .gogue, the Jewish in -establishing at .New lYoxk City t h e Wiflial it would -be, t o say the least, He is surrnreti by hi? widow; three National Fund and daughters, Mrs. Philip Levey and nucleus of the American Jewish uni- curiouB xo hear "what the"thousandE of die Philosophical Bo- the Misses Fan ami Ethel Ackerraan; •versity on rather ambitious Tines, 3ewish college alumni have to say on ABEI • Trwnntn. ciety. S e was also two brothers, Louis and Morris; his just merely good will as the rhiei this -subject, which should IK nearest ~" -JOff Hate 'there has imn XL gavd Heale .have, a s a matter of fact, already . ica,-fee late President ifitanley fiall -of ;set. Tf only the active heads xrf trar *±o "their 'hearts. Borae way might to lover of nature and a skilled mother, Mrs. Ida Ackermari of HXSB•nf discussion about -the -need -for and, -with us t h e American Jewish TIni- QarkTJi theological te fnanH 1» make 13»n voic^ artic- xros •possibility of an -Anierican .Jewish^ sia; and two sisters, also of Kusaia. University. In -tfiis article "Rabbi -versity in the-making, in the colteg- i t e project for fully -thirteen years,' orthodox and conservative — I t » a task which JHoirrrah came to "in Jnneral sen-ices were held at the Spits .traces -the value t>/ such an in- late division ol the Teshivafa. But it ever since "he tirst came out in its a ^ e to form the several dhnraty and Avukaii leaHers, wrbieh "Hue Heace- .ecamtry act a n agE. home Tuesday afternoon, with burial stitution and -then points out that the i s patently dear that an ultra-OTtho-jtfavor in the "Menorah Journal" in! s L o o i s ^ ^ n e Training v"ihoo] :fbr cntrves of oarr Jewish Tratnmal college xgv he ccame t o Omaha from in the Golden Hill cemeterv. nucleus for it already ezists if only dox -seat of .learning .cannot expect t o , 1913. He based nis argument on two j Ti^^ish Social Service might 3it i 3 e T C i s l l S o d a l Service n u g h t S t m>E -fraternities should undertake, i/ie leaders of American Jeiorj/ vouWL be tonvinved of -its feasibility and iiSureEeTiously:m.itelar^iinplica- grounds, both negative and positive;; i h e philanthropy department; -the =sev- should p u t it •Jip *(jna3?ely t o their xan- B e :3B survived i>y stinaee SOBS, UavIn Golden Book tions of a central university of -Amer- -first, the necessity of combating anti- j e r a i j g ^ i ^ pedagogical institutes i -stituencies, and -then acquaint the irest brought a-rowid to advocating it. id, Joe, AIUI 34?yfir; three daughters, Cleveland.—Th" Jewish National ican Jewry-. j; Jewish discrimination in our colleges, \;cc aa uu ll dd f u iun —THE EDITOR. n c t i o D ^ -paraUel divisions -of nf American . J«wry -wltJi their E. Davis, jand the Misses _Ami Council of Cleveland, a t its meeting There are those who leel that the and second, th. value of fostering a > e d u c a t i o n t TIT orthodox; our and uBviews. laliian freeman; * liruther, here, unanimously decided to inscribe -The signs x& the^times are unmis- imtial Hteps t h a t hav£-.rartU hav£-rartU now i e e n i Jewish milieu -favorablD to the * e e ' hospitals—"Mount h i l ^mai. {Gnnyrigfat 1930 i& fee 3«wish takEahly gnrintmg to the advent of taken for t h e establishment x£ a n . development nf the Jewish Bturient^ of .Louis D. Brandeis and Beth Israel and others • tDetegrapfaiE AjgPTicy, 3nc.) Jewish 'universities .upon -the -Ameri- American Jewish university have j intellect In -this last view he is Lipsky in the Golden Book of lfl a medical .can scene, and this despite an appar- been, t o say -fee "Least, curious, .and joined l y the radical Jewish publicist, -pTest0< there emerges the Jewish JSiational Fund, in connecfuD-gxown t h s Surial took pktee in the Golden tion with the thirty-third annual ent •niHfffprmr'p t o .the question in have operated adversely. I n one in-j Waldo Prank, author of "America," J - J J ^ York Jewish "Dniveraite. 33BE 7 Hill -ceraetexy TEnesriay afternoon, convention of the Zionist OrganizaJewish xdllegxate circles, division of stance -several politicians announced; who opposes the ''meliingpot 'theory, other deparimente-^caaemir^ernaps. im h^ tion of America. opinion among Jewish *mri Christian a conditional anonymous gift from a 'even though 'his -fellow-liberals, both _ ^ . ^ commerce Sands at'Gentile friend to set the -project Jewish and Gentile, such as Walter Educators and the lack follow ae a ^natter vl i.going; at another time it is the Jew- liiypman, Mencken and aeven Broun, | thifi -moment. when desired* {f A local oxganiaation hi JJfibraska Earner from Ever?fitting" lEhe significant fact is that already . ^ Theatrical Guild that is-called up- are not sympathetic to "Qiis "'Judaism-j CT ^ ^ ^ ^ i i f a a - been making remarkable -progiesv -. <m io Sfty thousand Jewish stuoents nave I sponsor it. Our Jewish Con- la-The-Open" tendency. 13ss adherents of a -sepuralie Jewish | ovej- ^^ entire proposition, -for a J s w i . j _ . Q < .lj^ir - n _ _ , i - r w zrowded : into nur ^American xmivertill- gressmen at Washrngton, -when xe^ Jes, a u d i t JEBn ppen jaecret that they xently interviewed, were divided on unrversity in -the Tfnitad States can drawn to the goyim,^.nfl pernapE subject of its desirability along also pomt ont that tb£ CathdlicB main- ! "not waited for rnvitations. SevpropeT,y Hral .years ago t h e Harvard uproar j.geographical lines. "The ^Easterners, tain many collegiate institutions and tion t o withdraw any of -our Jewish Occident Jk Health Association o1 Imore than broadly hinted at this i """ho represent the large Jewish . con- that practically every university of. undergraduates from the various t state of atrairs; .uid rnoie recently the | stituencies, were -far it, v/hile the standiur, has been iounded by some. American universities. All-thatmay Dean uf the Heights branch of ^New | "Westerners :were opposed. The heads ecclesiastical denomination or nther—| \^ hoped-for is to somewnat rrelieve TEhey .havs nsuie Teraarkabte strittes TFork "Ehiiversity placed it on Tecordj *& 'the Babbmical seminaries do not Baptist, Congregational, "Msihodist, the congestion m those iitatituiiuns since they IKIVE come "to Omaha •in nis ofacial report that the college 1 s e e m *> b e quite prepared t o take a EpiscopauanandtheJike. "The^founr}-j a m ] t o 3 ^ 0 ^ facilities ^for more Jfewr •mostly due t o "the -fact that they 'Eoldid not wish, as a matter of policy,!! decisive stand jsince they d i i t d att this thi time, ti i th ing of the Sebrew Ijniversity in Jer- j ^ students under more hospitable low 'WworwartfajS '-and Jxird^ idea of a .product that, the moment preoccupied with, usalem has also lent COIOT t o ths vis- ; auspices, _nd -perSianee i n ~& more •to enroll too large a percentage of | a r e $*>* ; ieir e s to assure the financial lor of one ur rnorp Jewish univsrsit-; rarefied Jewish -atmosphsre. One people -want -a ja -pTiae they ran afstudents irora any one racial group. ^ permanency of the institutions over ies •nearer home, m America, TThe tnav await with candour a snXCciently iEord to pay. TTbBrr entire xontract Dnly a few months ago an investigapreside. Our outstanding ^renaissance tif Jewish nationalism the influx trf Jewish ^tudantSTn- j easts but tion TBvealed that there is very little -who have aiready -world over, jand gaotiEulatly in each .and every mniveraiv.v that may ! a T633" ftxr R .room far Jewish students in our med- [ leamed t o endow our _American ica, has ocertainly i Thefacniaesj The ^terlbiE nreaiiixation Seal schools. a time when Jewish j varsities, are not yet "sold" on tiiis ZThere p with alacrity, y 5Event-jj written -over one handwd and -fifty too will fill jrp look forward to "the | Jipposition. Dux -moneyed men ihave ^Nevertheless Tthere a r e ^till ^fiertain aially money ~will also -now iinto i&e j-fhanranri jroiicifis ^ t e 3»astt -twelve j i i i JJ n ^te t l Jsmained xcld :«ven t o Tw«rt"T¥ t h a t must «ven iin ;thE pnantbs pnantbs. 3 n e Board ^Boatd'gf rFiTrprntivga .inTjrnnpect of gomg to the mnre famous \ mt^ftTTWTTfcrii Jacturs xiuist ~4xs' .coffieis roffiets tr£ trf tneas -colleges, colleges seven *gf TnW-tiLiVga inbid for a "Louis Jfcrsball Uni.A, X. IRosentbal, wlio is -the and Ber- i ;in-thfe rtmnggtion- wake of t h e ^Wall ?Btreet srastoes, once medi=al instittrres a t -Vienna e it -of Sterling, JLauis i l i n t o "specialize." But noTTadsys our j versity" by the mgenitras editor of These'revolvfijnpontheffollovdng-thTfie /.it is generally Tenognizedtttot ai-chain : jft.. Breskm, who is -Ute National items: personnel, :money and JC0-oper—' of Jewish unrvnjsities m •collsgians ahntily invade even the lit- j the Befiex. r .ronducted ation. For -3ewry, parts of the country is inevitabte—j eetar of ^Agtauaes, ^and Donald IRose, m Belja S ; tie Maim Bel-jian and Scandinavian'; -A symposium that 1 who is the m i schools in quest nf a profes- i some thne ago by the 'gewish over 3our Tnillion strong, cannot and and inevitable it'.
Cywwing Need
Deaths
These Are Uiimisrakable Signs Bomtihig Ton^ad r Adrant of Jewish Uufversitaes UJpsm iSie;:: • American College Scene
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sional training, and not infrequently! bane" Teveated :an oveTwhelmhxgly -they gates even [[ negative ^reaction onthepETt.of .Amerthey Btrihs against barred bar g i ^therefore t h f b i i 1 ican xollege -presidents to this projectproject there. I t is becoming in-1 treasingly understandable -why -rksionsj Several others frankly evaded the of ^mericm Jewish universities loom} question, and only a small minarity }ur^r and larger on tjur Ametisan. was willing to ocountenance it. lilast Jewish ihorizon. of the objectionE -roere Tiased on the everyone is aware of the fact' dahn -that such an 'institution that iiie notion off a Jewish a sseparatistic J i h TJniversT J i 1 j foster f t r a t i s t i c tendency. tendency ZPro-
ity in America is already a :hundred| fessor George Foots Ittoare of "Har•yesrs old. -Ac E matter :of record, i t s j vard, :famous .Semitic jschokir, felt in yrotagouist -vras major Ulordecai ~NL. j addition to this that Jewish profess3Toah, 'that -V£T«=.tile and spectacular j ars, who have already established individual 01 the early ninetEsnth j themselves at distinguished -imericaii centnry, soldier, adventurer, pdliticiEr., jTraiversities, would be loathe t o give •playwright, "shul" president, duellixrt, j up fheirplaces and involve themselves neWBpTErjsTman and projsctor of "Ax- in an untried -venture. A •centrally arat, the Jewish City of Hefuge," j located univensity, intended t o serve 2. which -was supposed to be located on j nation-wide clientele, would also, it an island -within the sound of ^Tiagara \ was thought, work naTdships far the Tails. Bis scheniE Temainsd on paper; j average Jewish student who must supbut not so very long thereafter came jport himself through college and who "Jlaimonides College," and then f ol-j formerly boarded -with his parentB.lowed .in quid: succsssion one IRab-j But "both nf these objections ran be imical school after the other, in INew j readily met. There are available ~toTTork, jPhibidelphia, Chicago. "W£ also! day any number of :farillknt imt iobi a v e today tfcs l>ropsie College, a ! less Jewish scholars, -who wouid be -non-sectsrian graduate school of Sera- i only too happy t o identify themselves itics at IPhilatlelphia; iiie Jewish' with a Jewish university. "Ths zplan School for Eocis.1 Science at zNewjalso looks to -&e establishment TW± "YarJc; -and ^several Jewish, pedagogical' of a single, but of B chain, of institutes of collegiate rrank. In a universities :in the populous Jewish certain sense, all of these can be'centers, East and West, though of called Jewish Colleges, rthough they 'course the central institution would be may, -more accurately be designated .as situated at 3?ew Tank City. "Jewish ^Departments." | TChe outstanding non-Jewish pTop-
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Co&k a Complete Mmal for Person, Electrically! "See, anQy m. iwmry per 3»ersmi j e r meal gvrm S jeooter, deaner, better method, tsf cookIhe jjleasstres you vrill get out of an ibis snowy-wMte rang-e . . . so easy t o ckmi and keep clean. And so cool . . . your 3rito3ien is sever heated Tip 'with an electric Sengs. AH xft I&E i e a t is iraefi lonr :anme is 'wasted, "to make the house
TDiere are those who assure u s ^ i a t anent of Jewish -universities in J
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PAGE 4—THG JEWISH PEESS, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1930
THE
JEWISH PRESS
BIBLE AND PUBLIC SCHOOLS
WORLD -WIDE
Scanning orizon
funny with him—Why do rabbinical students have such a strong penchant in that direction?—and asked Dr. Neumark, if he had a gun in his home, in case a burglar came. "I expect every respectable burglar to carry his own gun" replied the philosophy teacher."
The ever recurring question of Bible reading in the public schools of New York is again having Published every Friday at Omaha, Nebraska, by its day in court. • TBE JEWISH P^ESS PUBLISHING COMPANY It is regrettable that the right side of the case Office: 490 Brandeis Theater Building is being championed in the present instance by I Other Countries | United States ' Telephone: ATlantic 1450 . the arch anti-religionist Joseph Lewis. T i s gives COME AND TRY DAVID BLACKER - i - - Business and Managing Editor the impression that all who oppose secretarian Jewish Novelists' Works Named Honored by Scientific Academy The weather is hot, and I am afraid FRANK' fiV ACKERMAN ACKERMAN Edit Editor religion in the secular schools are, like Lewis, New Brunswick, N. J.—Jacob WasWarsaw.—The Academy of Science By DAVID SCHWARTZ my customers won't stand for any FANNIE KA.TELMAN, Council Bluffs, la., Correspondent avowed Atheists. sermann's "World's Illusion" and at Cracow, the highest scientific inserious thinking in such weather, AlStefan Zweig's "Case of Sergeant stitution in Poland, today accepted THOSE JEWISH BLUES The fact is that the vast majority of the people Grischa" though just now, I feel like discussing SIOUX CITY OFFICE are included among the Dr. Edward Platau, a Jewish physiThis department has received a both Jews and Gentiles who have been resisting "Sixty great novels of all time", cian from Warsaw, as a regular number of strange requests, but the the higher realities—but the customer JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER—308 Pierce Street the encroachment of sectarianism into the public chosen by Professor William H. F. member. He is the second Jew to oddest by far is one this week from nro*t be served, so I will tell the one that Bernard S. Deutsch, president of Subscription Price, one year - - - - - - - - - - $2.50 schools are themselves thoroughly committed to Lamont of the English department be elected to membership in the a young damsel, who is blue and asks the American Jewish Congress tells me • « Advertising rates furnished on application for our counsel. I don't know whether —and he tells me its honest-to-goodreligion as an indispensable factor in human life. of Rutgers University, who is a Academy. lecturer on the novel. Prof. A few years ago Dr. Platau was "blueness" comes in the Jewish purIt is precisely because we believe in religion and noted CHANGE OF ADDRESS—Please give both the old Lamont made his selection at the re- offered a professorship at the Uni- view. If it does not, of course, I most ne*« authentic• and new address; be sure to give your name. want it to flourish effectively and beneficently in quest of many librarians in all parts versity of Warsaw on condition that refrain from dealing with it, but I It appears that recently a delegate society that we are against Bible instruction of of the country. ie became a convert to Christianity, presume, I may classify it as Jewish ot three came over from Russia to make «ome purchase from a great any kind in the public schools. It is our consider- "The Case of Sergeant Grischa" an offer which he indignantly re- blueness and-it will be kosher. American factory. Traditionally, we have a simple ed judgment that such instruction, by reason of was published only two year's ago fused. HEBRAIC CALENDAR When they *nire4 at flie office, the remedy for it—a good cry. I once accentuating sharp differences of opinion in an and is the most recent book on Prof. Sir Samuel Mentioned president w « in s dOemtna. He knew 5690-1930 asked Max Gabet why he stocked his Lamont's entire list. "The World's London.—Sir Herbert Samuel, forno Russian— few cmM they underinstitution devoted to the well being of people of Rosh Chodesh Ab-^. .^.Saturday, July 26 Illusion" was published in 1920. mer High Commissioner of Palestine plays with so much sadness and he stand each other? all creeds, leads inevitably to bitterness, encouFast of Ab „ ......Sunday, August 3 and secretary of state for home af- told me—"Jews like to cry" He nestled that he h&d a Hungarian The crying remedy too, is borne out , New York Charities Rosh Chodesh Allul .Monday, August 25 rages bigotry and thus makes for irreligion. fairs in the Lloyd George cabinet of Jew working tor Mm, He went to York.—The budgetary needs by a song, I used to hear down south, Fanatics, church zealots and professional soul- of New Rosh Hashanah.-. Tuesday, September 23 New York's federated Jewish 1916, will be the next Viceroy of In- in the days when I played marbles see him at onee, Yom Kippur „ .Thursday, October 2 savers like the proverbial bull in the china shop charities for the current year will dia after the retirement of Lord Ir- and ate crab apples. You may re- '"Come on up—fo» know Russian." according to the Daily Herald, "O, cgtat on and try-" 1st Day Succoth, , -Tuesday, October 7 try to force the Bible into the public schools. But total $10,519,683, to which sum the win, member it: organ of the British Labor Party. What could Hxe poor fellow do—he Shemini Atzereth Tuesday, October 14 all right thinking, liberty loving citizens of Amer- Federation for the Support of the In the meantime, the Daily Herald "When a man has the blues—when a came up ie the office. Tbe Russians Jewish Philanthropic Societies of man has the blues Simchatli, Torah Wednesday, October 15 ica insists that the public schools are the public says, Sir Herbert, is Lloyd George's were there. He tried Hungarian on N.Y.C., will contribute $5,078,863, the He takes the train and rides Rosh Chodesh Cheshvan__Thursday, Oct. 23 property Of the State and dare not be subverted remainder accruing to the institutions rival for the Liberal leadership. the Russians. There was no response. But when a woman has the blues— He recalled that be knew a little Rosh Chodesh Kislev Friday, Nov. 21 to any sect or class for the propagation of any in the form of bequests, city grants, In 1900 Sir Herbert was aide-dewhen a woman has the blues Slavic dialect. He tried that. No 1st Day Chanukah Monday, December 15 special creedor doctrine. fees from patients and other funds, camp to the Indian viceroy. She sits down and she cries." "Pollyvou,*1 as they say in French. The argument against the teaching of the Bible according to an announcement yester- Tel Aviv Post office Rosh Chodesh Tebeth...Sunday, December 21 The woman, it appears, has the adHungary borders Czecho-Slovakia, •Fast of Tebeth__ -..Sunday, December 28 and religion in the public schools is so clear and day by Samuel D. Leidesdorf, chair- Tel Aviv.—In officiating at the lay- vantage. It required no train fare and the Hungarian knew a little of logical that only a very blind bigot can fail to man of the Business Men's Council ing of the corner-stone for the new to cry. •"•Also observed the day previous as Rosh Chodesh. that lingo. He tried that—negative the Federation, in his annual re- two-story postoffice that the PalesReally, I am afraid, I can not be understand. Simply stated it is this—the public of port to the executive committee of tine government is building in Tel very helpful in the emergency. Per- results again. He had about given up, when he bethought himself: schools are free schools built and maintained by the Council. -•;...:. I ND I R E N E E D Aviv, W. Foster, acting-postmaster haps, Dr. Joshua Bloch or some rabbi "Vershtehen sie Deutsch?" he exthe equal taxation of all and administered for the iln dire distress Hias, the Hebrew Immigrant ;eneral of Palestine recalled the time 1 will let me know What the rabbinical claimed. Jewish Philanthropist Gives to when all communication between Tel authorities counsel in such a dilemma. arid Aid Society, has broadcast an appeal for help equal benefit of all citizens. Their primary pur- Negro Institution Their faces beamed. which should strike a responding note in the pose is to provide knowledge and such moral in- Chicago.—Max Epstein, noted Jew- Aviv and abroad will be by air mail.' In the hope of aiding the young lady "Avady—gewiss." indeed, all of us—for whose* And they broke into a steam of Yidhearts of American Jewry. So great is the or- struction as will eventuate in good citizenship; ish capitalist and philanthropist of Rabbi Ben Zion, chief rabbi of Tel —and sides are not overcast at times—I Aviv, expressed the hope that com• There is no division of opinion as to the facts of this city, has through the University dish. ganization's plight that unless immediate aid is munications in the future would tell throw open this column for sugges"See" exclaimed the President to forthcoming this benevolent institution for good secular knowledge; AH men are agreed that 2 of Chicago made a contribution of of peace and tranquility among all \ tions. $50,000 to the Provident Hospital and the Hungarian Jew, "I told you—you plus 2 make 4. But religion is necessarily a demay be forced to temporarily close its doors or at the inhabitants of the country. I Perhaps, if the young lady reads my could speak Russian." Training School, a negro institution column oftener—so filled is it with least-have its wondex-ful work seriously courtailed. nominational, sectarian matter. All men are not for the purpose of establishing an Greece to Compensate Jews humor—It would help. One man from FRANKLIN'S ADVICE in accord as to the facts of religion. Therefore Such forced action would work a tremendous outpatient department of the hospital. Salonica, Greece.—Many Jews here Alaska wrote me that since reading hardship on thousands of our people, for both the the reading of the Bible or religious sectarianism This is the third gift of the kind are among those who will receive my column and drinking three quarts TO THIEF Many and many years ago, the wife compensation from the Greek govern- of milk.a day, he has gained twelve immigrant and the emigrant has learned to turn of any kind in the public schools is as wrong in that Mr. Epsein has made. of Benjamin Franklin had a beautiful principle as would be the giving over of the public Mr. Epstein who is the president ment for land which was taken away pounds and now feels like a two year to Hias when in trouble. Formerly Hias lent its' Bible which belonged to her, Stolen. of the General American Tan: Car from them several years ago by the old baby on a frosty morning. schools to partisan politics. -^-Brooklyn Examiner. helping hand only to American immigrants. But The canny Franklin thereupon inCorporation, was chairman of the government in order to be used for recently when the thousands of Jewish people serted an advertisement in the paper Draft board during the World War. colonizing Greek refugees from Tur- NO €UNS FURNISHED A good one comes to me told about which he edited, which ran something who could not possibly stay in the European counHe is the donor of the Max Epstein key. Much gratification has been exPIOUS BUT HOPELESS Dispensary and Social Hall of the pressed in Jewish circles here at the the late Professor Neumark of the like this: tries flocked in large numbers to new centers of Philosophy Department of the Hebrew "Will the party who stole gilt edge Jewish immigration—to Argentine, Brazil, Uru- The Lubkwischer Rebbe fascinated us during University of Chicago and established government's announcement that it Union College. is making ready to indemnify the the Max Epstein Loan Fund at HarBible with letters D. F. (initials of his visit in this city and inspired us with his deguay, Cuba, and similiar countries—the calls made Jews for these lands. vard Law School. One of his students tried to get (Continued on Page 6) upon the Society for its service both here and in votion to the best interests of his people, wher-i Fills Bench Vacancy .. foi-eign countries were constant and continuous. ever they may be. In spite of being a ChasisAnd most of these anxious wanderers were en- dic leader, he rose above factionalism in his "wish New York.—Justice Bernard L. of the City Court has been abled to settle in their new homes and make their for the advancement of the highest ideals in Ju- Sheintag appointed by Governor Roosevelt AS daism; / family life, again prosper through th efforts of justice of the Supreme Court in the -justice H^as. Relatives and friends of Jews throughout But at the Isaac Elcharian Rabbinical Associ- First Judicial District to fill a vaEastern Europe who are resident here apply fre- ation convention the Rebbe expressed a wish cancy due to the recent death of quently for advice and guidance in respect to their which, in spite of its sincerity, 'is nevertheless Supreme Court Justice Nathan Bijur, people on the other side. These relatives would be hopeless. Urging the young Orthodox rabbis to The term.fdr which Justice Sheintag following comparison of manufactured gas costs been appointed expires, at the Utterly helpless were it not for Hias/and the re- talk Yiddish and to teach it to the growing gen- has end of the year, but it is expected in Several large cities which have been picked at random* eration of American Jews, he said: "Without that he will receive the Democratic sults overseas would be even more disastrous. is far more eloquent than any words we might p r i n t . . . ' As more and more of the Old World Jewry were th£ Yiddish language you won't go very far in im- nomination for a full term of fourteen years, beginning Jan. 1 next. it is mute evidence of the efficiency, and ability of forced by surrounding conditions to move their planting Judaism in the country." tents, the work of Hias continued in ever increas- Forgetting for the moment the impossibility of Justice Sheintag is a member of Oriiaha's municipal gas management: r ing extension. And when the business depres- foisting upon bur youth a languagewhich, regret- the executive committee of the AmerOrt and the American Jewish sion caused hundreds of homeless and unemployed fully nevertheless actually, is more and more be- ican Cost per 4*000 cu. ft. of Gas Cbhgress and a director of the ConJews to seek the Hias offices for food and shelter* coming a strange tongue for adults as well as -suihers' League arid of the American OMAHA, NEBRASKA - * 1 3 » the financial machinery of the organization was youths, the Rebbe failed to learn from historic Association, for Labor Legislation Oskaloosa, Iowa 6.8? overtaxed. But such noble work is needed today experience. In many lands, in successive genera- and has served at various times as a Iowa City, Iowa .-6,40 mjore than ever.and cannot and will not be dis- tions, Judaism, Jewish lore and Jewish idealism,: member of and counsel to the State Housing Commission, the Child WelFort Dodge, Iowa — 6.10 continued. has been taught and studied In many languages. fare Commission, anc! the Cloak and Council Bluffs, Iowa 5.60 In Spain it was the Spanish and Arabic tongues in Suit Mediation Commission. Before Cedar Rapids, Iowa -, 5.40 Which have been written and spoken the words of his appointment to the bench, he was i THE JEWS OF IRELAND 5.20 Davenport, Iowa Director of Employment of The Jew is a citizen of the world and a stranger great and loyal Jewish scholars. In. Greek and La- Federal 5,16 Richmond, Virginia the State of New York. , in no port or clime. He is at home everywhere. tin, in Russian, French and English, Jewish 4.60 D&t Moines, Iowa _ Major Namm Named You find him in all lands. Even in Ireland. There thought lived and thrived. 4.00 Sioux City, Iowa are well authenticated records to show that Jews But the rallying language for all movements Albany, N. Y.—Major Benjamin N 4.60 New York City, New York have been in Ireland since the eleventh century and in all lands was always Hebrew. It was neither Ni.mm is among the members of the OT Lincoln, Nebraska , . whom Governor Roosethey may have come there earlier. Indeed some the Germanic language which became the tongue commission, 4.52 Syracuse, New York velt has just appointed to select and early writers attempted to identify the Irish with of millions of Jews, nor the languages of natio- acquire a site for a State World War 4.00 Rochester, New York •—. theso-called "Lost Ten Tribes". There is thus no nalities among Avhom Jews lived. It was always Memorial. Major Namm, who is 42 3.84 Chicago, Illinois ' reasion why the mention of an Irish Jew should the mother tongue which inspired and was at the was born in Brooklyn. He is presi(Some ot onr nelchbortncr cities, such as Kansas City, Denver, Topcka, St. Joe, etc., provoke our risibilities other than the popular center of all revival movements. Much therefore dent of the A. I. Namm &• Son Dept. • a n not osrd In (he nbor* table becaoM they have natural ras and arc not comfancy which finds an amusing paradox in this aC- as we regret the decline of Yiddish we are Store of Brooklyn, and was president putable). Sord of seeming opposites. This may account for i nevertheless not affected by the scare that its of the Brooklyn Federation of Jewish the incredible success of Anne Nichol's shallow death will injure the Jewish soul. The original Chraities from 1914 to 1916. He is It has been a process of work, drive, conserve and fight tot. Hebraic tongue ever emits of hope to our people. the author of a book, "Advertising play. : every single penny of the seven times that Omaha's fas the Retail Store", containing a forRecently a distinguished emissary from the — D e t r o i t Chronicle. ward by Arthur Brisbane. rate has been reduced during ten years of municipal operaJews of the Irish Free State arrived in America "tion. .'••**-r^ Oh Saratoga Springs Board and we are happy to welcome him to these shores. F o l k s are compelled to run the gauntlet of cri- Albany, N. Y.—Bernard M. Baruch And while we have been steadily battering down the cost For 29 years he has been the religious leader of jticism whenever theyfeeak a convention^ or step may become chairman of the com. . . down to the place where we can now boast that Omaha the Dublin Hebrew Congregation—an historic in- beyond the normal bonds of nationality or re- mission which is to make recommenenjoys the 2nd lowest manufactured gas rate in the United stitution which is said to date back to the days iigiOn. dations for the development of SarStates . . . the city which charges the lowest rate has been of William III and Queen Anne. Interviewed in atoga Springs as a health spa when This protective habit that society uses, compels he returns from his trip abrcad, acforced to recently raise its rates to some classes of users. New York, our visitor reports tb^e complete har- those within conventional bounds or within mony which exists in Ireland between Jews and groups, to be thoroughly saturated with con- cording to indications by Governor Roosevelt here yesterday. Mr. Ba This fact serves to place Omaha's gas rate even closer to non-Jews. ventional values, or the group consciousness, with ruch was chairman of the .War Inthe point where we may some day proudly claim "the lowest The coming of this Irish Rabbi has sent jour- its attending values.' The daring ones either pos- dustries Board during 1918, was later manufactured gas rate in the entire country!" nalists: scurrying to encyclopedias for information sess these values or as a result of isolation, cri- connected with the American Comabout Jews in Ireland. Although never materially ticism and publicity usually gain some of them, mission to negotiate peace, was a member of the President's Agricullarge/the Jews of Erin have made notable;contri- besides a revaluation of society and its laws. tural Confernece in 1922. Mr. Ba; butions in the fields of government, medicine and * * » ruch, who was intimately associated law. There are at present some 5,000 Jews in the with President Wilson during the Irish Free State, most of whom live in Dublin. The A divine attitude towards life brings profitable war, was decorated by the Belgian, Rabbi states that they enjoy the full rights and values from every experience. French and Italian governments. privileges.of citizens of the city. American Israel Among the six members of the extends a hearty greeting to the Irish Rabbi, A lot of folks weigh everything—body, mind commission to survey the possibilities Directors: F.J.BURKU-Y ALIANTUKIY CW.WILHELM Abraham Gudansky* and hopes that the Jews of and soul, in terms of monetary value. We do not of Saratoga Springs who have alRANDALLK.BROWN W.R*ACT1R HARlRTGMOORHEAD been appointed is Henry Morthe Irish Free State may continue to live in peace begin to live until we learn to weigh all things in ready General Manoqet: T.A.LEISEN genthau, former American Ambassawith their fellow-citizens and contribute to the terms of humane value, character value, spiritual dor to Turkey. George Foster Peawelfare of their courageous- and colorful country, value and also have a recognition of practical body has been teiw^' a rily named as —* A *— l u a >• « • • X*v«««•« **1V4>A. ^7*3 III A : chairman.American Jsraelitp. . value.
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PAGE 5—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1930 Miss Esther Bainer of Kansas City {Mr. and Mrs. Leo Rosenthal, has refined for the past two weeks in the government is determined to is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. J turned from Ames, Iowa, where she Mercy Hospital where lie had under- rialize 150,000 unemployed Jew* and Sells. : j was graduated last Friday from Iowa gone an operation for hernia, was to find means of supplying the neces1 State college. sary raw materials for Jewish artisremoved to his home Wednesday. Miss Rosemary Bachrach of Ply-1 ans for the lack of which they are mouth, Ohio, is the guest of Mr. andj Miss Nell Marks has just Returned Misses Sarah and Muriel Pine of suffering greatly, the correspondent . By P. R. K. Mrs. Samuel Gerson. Chicago, 111., arrived Sunday to visit of the-Jewish Telegraphic Agency is from a two weeks visit to Chicago, The-Council Bluffs Lodge No. 688 their cousin, Miss Eudice Richman. officially informed. while thiere sEe was the guest of Mrs. Arthur Snyder of Hutchinson, of the independent Order of the Miss Sophie Cohen, fiance of Stanley Kansas and son, Jimmie, are visiting Mrs. Jack Burnstein of Lorraine, B'nai Brith will hold a meeting •with Mrs. Snyder's parents, Mr. and F. Marks of Omaha. Ohio, left Wednesday evening for ? Monday evening, July 28, at the When in Need of Mrs. H. Wilinsky. Many affairs are her home after a ten day stay at Eagles Hall. Mr. and Mrs. D. Giventer are in being given in her honor. the home of Mr. and Mrs. Max Conn. Chicago, where they will attend a The Council Bluffs Agudas Achim Mrs. Herman Smehoff: and , child- reception Jionoring their son and ren, Hanice and Sandor, of Chicago, daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- Society held a meeting last Thurs- Soviet Appropriation Mr. and Mrs. L. Ceaser announce Mr. and Mrs. Louis Simon and day evening at which time a disthe mirraige of their daughter, Hen- children plan to motor very shortly are visiting in South Omaha with liam Giventer who were married July cussion was held in regard to the for Industrialization Call on Us Mrs. Smehoff's parents, Mr. and Mrs. 13. rietta,", to Mr. William Giventer, son to Los Angeles. club's annual . picnic. A committee ; Oar Service Comes as a Blessing H. Dubnoff, and sister, Miss Fanny Moscow, (J. T. A.).—Three million af Mr. and Mrs. D. Giventer of Oma- Lake Okoboji is popular too. to Those Pestered by by Ben Seldin, Miss Cyril Leon and Miss Ruth was appointed roubles were assigned by the Soviet ha, on Sunday, July 13, at Chicago, Mr. Joe Krasne and Mr. Paul Dubnoff. BED BUGS, President, to make plans for the Romm motored to Des Moines where government as a special fond for the ROACHES, RATS Rabbi M. Taxon officiating. Grossman left Thursday for a week's Miss Dorothy Ruth Rose of St. they i spent last weak-end with Mir. picnic which will be held next mouth. establishment of industrial enterprise ANTS, FLEAS, , A reception will be given in their sojourn at OkobojV Mrj and Mrs- Joseph, Missouri, is visiting her and Mrs. J. S. Slate. Mrs. B. Wolpa and Mrs. E. Hoff- in fourteen Jewish villages of UkraiMOTHS, ETC. ' honor at the home of the bride's par- Harry Malashock and family have grandmother, Mrs. Mamie Kneeter. nii_ These undertakings will offer Service In Effective ents on August 3. Mr. and Mrs. been at Okoboji for about two weeks She plans to remain here for several Mr. William Upsman, son of .Mr. man entertained forty-six guests at employment to the poor and declassed Prices Are Reasonable their home last Monday evening in Work Is Guaranteed Giventer will make their home in and plan to stay there for the rest weeks. and Mrs. A. Ii'pSman, a student in honor of Mrs. S. Spectre of Chicago, Jews in the villages selected. of the summer. Mrs.. Sam Herzberg Omaha. Philadelphia, spent two weeks in New This sum does not include previous Miss Fanny Diamond of Lincoln is York City visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. 111., and Miss Eose Shyken, a brideand the Misses Minnie and Florence elect. Mr. and Mrs. H. Novey of Chicago, Wolf spent last weekend there. allotments for the industrialization visiting friends in Omaha. She is Tetpler and other relatives. CHEMICAL CO. formerly of Omaha, announce the Mrs. B. Blotcky and son, Mr. Frank being extensively entertained. of the declassed Jews ; in various AT. 3507 Mrs. Dave Bernstein and her marriage of their daughter, Bose, to Blotcky, will leave in the near future Mr. Harry M. Ferer returned the sister, Miss Clara Leibjwitr of Chi- parts of Ukrainia. 17S7 leaven worth Messrs. Max and Julius Wolf of Mr. Sol Aaronson, son of Mr. and for Manitou, Colorado, where they Within the next year the Soviet latter part of this week from a busiMrs. B. Aaronson, of Chicago. The will spend about six weeks at .the Albion, Nebraska, were at the Pax- ness trip to Chicago and St. Louis. cago, HI., left for their home Saturday evening. Mrs. Bernstein was a marriage will be a September event. CUE House. Mr. and Mrs. Harold ton hotel while transacting business guest of Mr. and Mrs. Max Cohn in the city last week. Mr. Ralph Gross returned Tuesday W. Brandt are taking a six week's for the past six weeks, and Miss Mr. and Mrs. Philip Kutznick returned last Friday from a six week eastern motor trip. Tfcey are plan- Aaron Tollin of Chester, Pa., from Shenahdoah where he has been Leibowitz for one week. honeymoon along the west coast and ing to take a beautiful trip from newly-elected president of the A, Z. on business this last week. Miss Cylia Gershun of Chicago, Detroit to Buffalo by boat. A., and Sol Lebow of Monesses, in Mexico. The local chapter of the A. Z. A. Sixteenth and Farnam HI., who has been' visiting relatives Miss Libby Blacker will leave to- the new secretary, will spend this Mr. and Mrs. S. Elmer Gross have morrow to spend two weeks in Chi- week-end in Omaha enroute home sponsored a dance at the Highland here for the past two weeks, left Tuesday for Schuyler, Nebr., to visit returned from their honeymoon .at cago with friends, and Miss Lucille from the international conclave in Country Club Wednesday evening. her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. the Broadmoor in Colorado Springs Isaacson is leaving Sunday for a California. and Mrs. Ben Gershun, before reand Troutdale-in-the-Pines, and are three weeks vacation in Davenport In their party will be Dan Krause Entire Remaining Summer turning to Chicago. at home at the Glenarlo Apartments. and Muscatine, Iowa, and Chicago, and Bernhardt Blujnenfeld of Brad- Canada Cantor to Give Stock of Exquisite Fashion Concert Sunday Eve Harold Wolpa, who has been conclock, Pa-i Joe Finegold arid Al ObIllinois. Floor a n d Prench Room AT THE ATHLETIC CLUB Miss Sophie Hander attended the ringer of Pitsburgh, Va~, Sidney Dr. and Mrs. Philip Romonek en- Pi Epsilon Tau Mid Summer For- Yecies of McKeesport, Pa., and Meyer Rev. Jacob Waid, prominent cantor "from Wintnpeg, Canada, will tertained at dinner at the Athletic jnal while in Sioux City last week- Meyerowitz of Alliqnippa, Pa. HONESTY -duct the services at the Beth Hameclub last Friday honoring Dr. and end. The Misses Euth Riekes, Mardrosh Hagodol Synagogue tonight Mrs. Henry B. Lemere -who leave ion Goldner, and Bernice Sherman, BIRTHS August 3 to make their home near also went down, for the sorority parMr. and Mrs. John Faier announce and Saturday morning. Painting Contractors Los Angeles, California. ty,, and are visiting there with friends. the birth of a son at the Methodist On Sunday, July 27, he will give a concert at the synagogue, starting The guests were Dr. and Mrs. Le- Miss Eiekes plans to return the end Hospital July 18. 1314 No. 24th St. WE. 4211 at 7J45 mere, Dr. and Mrs. C. W. M. Poyn- of this week, and Miss Goldner and Reduced to these Three Give-Away Prices! WITH THE SICK ter, Dr. and Mrs. John B. Potts, Dr. Miss Sherman, who are guests of Mrs. Abe Milder, -who has been and Mrs. Walter P. Wherry, D R and Miss Beatrice Leavitt, the week after seriously ill at the Methodist EpiscoMrs. Frank Conlin, Dr. and Mrs. next. pal hospital for the past "three weeks, Charles F. Moon, Dr. and Mrs. Manis improving. She has had two blood Omahtts Style Center uel Grodinsky, Dr. and Mrs. Clyde VISITORS transfusions, one from her sister-inMoore, Dr. J. H. Judd, and Dr. and Your Choice at Mrs. Max Rosen of Chicago, forMrs. J. J. Keegan. merly of Omaha, left Sunday for law, Mrs. Rose Milder, and another from her sister, Esther Steinberg. Among the other reservations at home after visiting for two weeks with her sister, Mrs. M. White, the Athletic Club were those of Mr. Mr. A. I. Kulakofsky and daughtand Mrs. W. S. Degan for four; Mr. while here, she was extensively en- ers, Ruth and Dorothy, have recov16th and Barney and Mrs. H. Silverman, 8; Mr. and tertained by relatives and friends. ered from the slight injuries susMrs. I. Schlaifer, 4; Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Jules Shapiro and tained -when they were in an autoMorris Miklin, 8; Mr. and Mrs/ Louis Mr. Irvin Rnbihow of Lincoln mo- mobile accident last Friday. Somberg, 7; Mr. and Mrs. Katleman, tored to Omaha for the weekend. 4. PERSONAL Third Floor Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Solomon and Mr. Saul Graetz returned Wednesson, Marshall, of Waukegan, Illinois, day from California where he was VACATION The vacation bug ha? infected who have been visiting- - with Mrs. a delegate to the A. Z. A. conjSolomon's mother, Mrs. HsUa Bolker, vention., . . _ jtVsi .•»£;*. everyone^with. "vacationitis". returned home by motor last Monday. ;or is 'either .going" somewhere Miss Grace Rosenthal, daughter .o Your Choice at wishing they inight go. Everyone is Miss Eva Llpton of Sioux City, dreaming- about the mountains, lakes, j and the Misses Jeanette and Esther seashores, or metropolises. I Peariman of Chicago, were the Many Omahans are taking unique guests of Miss Lucille Isaacson last and interesting vacations. Mr. Philip week. Greenberg and his son, Sam Greenberg, are at present in Europe where Rev. Jacob Waid, prominent cantor they plan to remain about two from Winnipeg, is in Omaha to conmonths longer. duct services at the, Beth Hamedrosh Third Floor The mountains and rustic life ap- Hagodol Synagogue tonight and Sapeal to Messrs. Harold Farber, Jack turday morning. Sunday evening he Marer, Philip Feldman, and Paul will give a concert. Goldstein. They left last week for Anywhere — Anytime a dude ranch in Estes Park, Colora- Mrs.. Mose Buck and small daughtAnything Tuesday do, where they can ride, swim, fish; er, Betty Ruth, arrived Your Choice at : and what not. Sandy Steinbach is from Luflrin, Texas, and are the also in the mountains, the Ozarks. guests of Mrs. Buck's parents, Mr. California holds special charm for and Mrs. A. Weiss. Omahans. Dr. and Mrs. B. M. Kully Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Krelstein land and daughter, Nancy, returned last daughter, Miss Roselle Krelstein, of Sunday after a month's sojourn in Chicago motored to Omaha last 24 and Decatur, Pp°ne||E # |0O0 Los Angeles, Santa Barbara,. and Wednesday. other California points. Miss Anne 1,600 FASC3NATIK& NEW STYLES—ASLintzman departed last Friday for a Fourth Floor SEMBLED FOR THIS FEATURE SELLING five weeks trip during which she will OF * Madds for daytime and nighttime . •. . forasl visit with friends in Denver, and Los informal occasions . . . Chiffons, Georgettes, Laees, Angeles, and with her cousin, Dr. Flat Crepes. Sports Silks . . . Every one is a midRose Lintzman, in San Francisco, summer model of extreme smartness. and Dr. and Mrs. Edward Kushner in Oakland. En route home she will stop off in Salt Lake City. Miss iaa Batrior who is visiting in Los *g_ For many years these sale:?—the values—the character of Angeles, took the boat up to Oakland merchandise—the selection^—have been the talk of this and San Francisco for the A. Z. A. convention. section of the country, but FRIDAY, AUGUST 1st, we Do not confuse these smart frocks with orstart a sale where dinary Bouse dresses—the materials and styling will positively amaze you at this price.
Council Bluffs
V
Neivs
PEST EXTERMINATION
y
LEVENSON
s
GOL DSTEINC HAPM4NS CHOICE OF THE HOUSE
Max Shrier's Sons
AH $35,00 to $79-75 Models
Ait $,1930 to $29,75 Models
For Your Convenience
$8^5
FREE DELIVERY
All 4th Floor $15.00 Models
Prescription Specialists
ROBINSON DRUG CO.
Our August Sale Starts Friday, August 1st
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Malashocks' 1 FOR YOUR
K
Jewelry Needs
I
16th and Howard
CONDITIONS HAVE PLAYED RIGHT INTO YOUR HANDS Never did OUR money buy such good furniture; never did YOUR money go as far as it will in this sale. Hundreds of suites and pieces are offered at under factory production costs—a ridiculous situation brought about by heavy factory inventories. These conditions are now fading out of the picture, and with them go the values that will make this furniture sale
E-X-T-R-A-O-R-D-I-N-A-R-Y Kaplan Says—
FOR LAUNDRY SERVICE —CALL—
THE NATIONAL HArney 7545 Because "Your Laundry is.Our Business"
You can buy everything you need for every kind of: home. -—Attend the sale and profit by it. EXCHANGE Old for New;—we will offer you the same fair prices for your old furniture as at any other time. You can CHARGE any purchase. TERMS will be arranged for payments by the month.
Cotton Street
FROCKS
A Safe Deposit
On Sale at
with a higK rate of tnierttt accruing daily. That's what Size* 12 to 52 Plenty of Large Sizes
Second Floer Center
Sow, when the season's at its height, we managed a bit of clever buying (and reduced many higher-priced dresses from our regular stock) that makes it possible to offer such smart little dresses at this economical price! Colorful rayons, broadcloths, printed and plain voiles or batistes, piques, cotton shantungs, plain or dotted handkerchief lawns—all in new and becoming styles to every type of figure.
Scandal Frocks and Frolic Frocks Included in This Feature Selling
Neat, Tasty
PRINTING means to you. I t costs no more — it's worth money in actual dollars and cents—and can be obtained quickly by asking for our representative.
Telephone ATlantic 8028
INTERSTATE PRINTINGCO. 1307-JS09 Howard Street, Omaba
Jt*2, fliSRAi' t o t
PAGE 6—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1930
MOST OF JEWISH JEWISH MARKET OFFERS GREAT IMMIGRANTS TO BUYING POWER UNITED STATES
Do You Know That?
This 1Country Still Leads as Article Reveals Recogition Accorded to Jewish Purchas-. Largest Immigrant r , ing Power 0-.-*~, Center New^York—Contrary to an opinion that is prevailing in some circles, the Unitect States of America is still the largest Jewish immigration country, Official figures just issued by the Bureau of Immigration of the U. S. Department of Labor, and which has been carefully analyzed by the Hebrew Sheltering and Immigrant Aid Society (Hias).'.most conclusively show that the number.of Jewish immigrants arriving, in this country is considerably •larger than the number of non-Jewish immigrants coming from the same countries in Europe from which these •Jews hail, such as Poles, Russians, Lithuanians, Roumanians, Latvians. In the month of May, there arrived to these shores 913 Jews, 439 Poles, jlOO: Russians and 362 from all uther j nationalities which are not enumerated i separately, such as Lithuania, Latvia I and Roumania because, of the. small j quotas. The official figures also ' §tate- that from July, • 1929 • to May, 11930, there came to this country 10,J800 Jews, 4,607 Poles, 1,527 Russians |4nd 5,743 of all other nationalities not Enumerated separately. This means ihat during the period referred to the pumber of Jewish immigrants was approximately 1,000 less than- all the I other nationalities mentioned. ! j When, in addition, the fact is taken I into account that in the same period, ! that is from July, 1929, to May, 1930, ihere departed, from this country i f 1,726 Poles, 451 Russians, 3,018 of all j other nationalities and that only 277 lews returned to their respective nai tive countries, the number of Jewish | immigrants who remained in the • Country is hence twice as large as the number of immigrants of all other 'nationalities mentioned which have 1 settled here permanently. \ \ ', These figures not only verify the •fact so-often stated by Hias that the United States is still the largest Jewish immigration center but also emphasizes the urgency of Hias continuing its activities on behalf of these immigrants, particularly in view of the restrictive laws and the difficulties encountered in coming to this country.
EXPEDITION TO ANOENT CITY BEING PLANNED Cleveland Art Museum to Participate in Study of Seleucia Cleveland, (J. T.. A.).—The Cleveland Museum of Art will participate in a joint expedition which Will be conducted during the coming-year on the site of the ancient Greek city of Seleucia on' the Tigris River; according to an' announcement "just' made. Excavations on the. site of. Seleucia, which was once conquered 'by the Maccabejas .and became a Jewish city time were begun a few yeafs fov a g o .
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New York, (J. T. A.).—Recognition of the purchasing powe of. the Jewish market and the story of successful • efforts on the part of manufacturers and distributors of nationally sold products to reach the Jewish market are told in an article by Hammond Edward Franklin in the current issue of "Editor and Publisher". The special methods required in merchandising in the Jewish market and the means used to popularize products among Jewish purchasers are detailed by Mr. Edward Franklin. He points out that while the Jewish market like many other foreign language groups in this country has been overlooked by otherwise wellinformed advertising experts manufacturers have found it to be sound business to spend thousands of dollars a year advertising their products in the papers and magazines that reach the Jewish market. One 40-year old firm with a line of grocery goods spends more than $60,000 for advertising in the Jewish market alone. Mr. Franklin tells of one salesmanager for a nationally known cleanser who could not understand why his product was not selling in sections of large cities where the Jewish population predominated. After an investigation he found that the Jewish purchasers strongly suspected the presence af animal fat in the cleanser which would have made the product non-kosher. • He found that in the New York market which served 1,750,000 Jews through 6,500 grocery, dairy and delicatessen stores, with purchases aggregating millions of dollars each year, firm religious customs and fixed habits were barring him from a highly profitable market. Even more annoying was the fact that the product contained no animal fat. To quote Mr. Franklin: "At the suggestion of a member of the Jewish press, a prominent rabbi was called in to investigate. He ordered a chemical analysis made of several dozen boxes of goods bought at random.. The analysis showed negative, so the rabbi visited the factory and gave the product! his certificate—it was, kosher." Whenrthe/ fact was widely advertised, especially in Jewish newspapers, increases in sales were remarkable in Jewish neighborhoods. .; A biscuit concern went into a kosher, cracker project, with a special box created, mostly printed in Yiddish, which brought dominance to the field. Special attention to Passover trade is stressed, especially as to the activity • of two large milk companies, which before such activity found a record drop in sales because of the Passover holidays. Since going in for special Passover labeled milk, that week brings actually more business • than any other week of the year. Recent activity on the part of a large department store to stock Passover goods, especially in an entire department and subsequent success of the Venture is described. .
The present expedition will aim to unearth art and archeological "treasures of the ancient city, which will have a bearing not only upon the Babylonian and Greek phases ..of-its history, but also upon the period when it was within the ancient Jewish domain. Seleucia, which' in 'more ancient times was the Opis of Babylonia, and which was-flater conquered by Alexander th&TGreat, was conquered by Alexander- Jannai, who succeeded his brother Anstobulus, as King of Judea in 103KB.. C. He forced its inhabitants 'to abandon idolatry and adopt thermites of Judaism, Seleucia:;was one of many conquered cities whose inhabitants were forced bjcilthe Hasmonean power to adopt JudaiBm. • As rule*; of the Greek people in Seleucia, .'Alexander Jannai ordered coins to Ibe; struck off bearing the inscription: : "King Alexander" in Greek characters upon one side/ and the inscription "Jehoriathan" ha-Melech" (Jonathan the King) in Hebrew characters> on the other. His Hebrew title as s£t>forth on earlier; Hebrew coins hadV^been "The High Priest Jonathan, jthe Commonwealth of the ; Judeans." v. '
Region Named Stalindorf ; Moscow^—The newly proclaimed third autonomous Jewish region-centering around Islutchista in Ukrainia . was officially named the Stalindorf Region. The Jewish administration for the region was elected at a regional Soviet, conference addressed by A. Merezhin, Jeader of the Comzet, government department for setting Jewa on the land;. He pointed out that 63 percent ofythe region's population are Jews 35 'pf.rcent Ukrainians and the xest JRussiaite and Germans. .
SM mt yoRK c n y , TWO RWEKS- ARE f W l » fcy
Jolson watched until he had finished and then rushed out of the theatre to the stage door. When the actor stepped out, Jolson was waiting Tor him. Al, his temper at the boiling point, let a stiff punch go and struck the English actor on the jaw. The Englishman stepped back, his hand to bis face. "I say", he cried. "What's the idea?" "I'm Al Jolson", be replied furiously. "Everything you're doing in your act ic mine." "I know that, Mr. JOIMH", replied the Englishman, "but 1 dont »ee why you should be so confoundedly angry. I'm doing your stuff much bet^ ter than all the other actors over here."
By Al Myers
AT
yowf >wwj£ /w> mm OWNER OF 1HE " »
JUST GREAT Even some of the yex-men find it hard at times to be so thoroughly "yessish". And not to be that in the movie world is the unpardonable sin. There was the case recently of the Jewish director, who called bis assistants about him to listen to their ecstatic "yes's". "How is the picture?" he asked. • "Magnificent", replied one of the assistants. "Stupendous", replied the other. "And you", said the director, to another assistant, j who reserved decision. . "Will you forgive me", he replied, ,"if I only say it is great?"
THE OCCASION OF
HAS SINCE
TO "WE.
Ar?IX£»
TALKING ABOUT COLUMNISTS
"of those that did cheat, a greater CLAIMS MORRIS SCANNING TBE HORIZON number of Jewish children confessed to cheating than did children of ProHARBOR REALTORS (Continued from Page 4.) testant and Catholic faith." ARE ANTI-SEMITIC his wife) open it up to the Ten Com- DOING IT BETTER They are telling of a recent visit of "Jewish Chronicle" Carries Com- mandment?" Al Jolson to a London vaudeville plaint of DiscrimminaFor the benefit of such readers who house when he heard an actor doing tion There are not on intimate terms with the an exact duplicate of one of Jolson's Newark, N. J., (J. T. A.).—That antisemitism is rife on the part of realty operators at Morris Harbor, near. Clfewoo4 Beach in this state, is the complaint .made.^to" the . local "Jewish" Chronicle" by Mrs. Jennie elevens, of Irvihgton, a local suburb. According to Mrs. elevens, she went to Morris Harbor to obtain an available homesite wherein to reside during the weeks she suffered from hay fever. When she made inquiry from a realty agent who was unknown to her, he hesitatingly informed her "there are no vacancies." When she inquired as to the reason for his hesitancy, she declares that after making his definite statement, the agent half-heartedly added that if she "insisted", "we will of course rent you; this place". Mrs. levens, distracted by the experience, immediately declined the offer and after several days made known the incident to the local weekly.
American Jewish Committee, sailed for Europe on the S..S. Bremen. Mr. Warburg is going for a rest. Dr. Adler is going to Geneva where' he hopes to be in time for the return of the Wailing Wall Commission and London, (J. T. A.)^—The Jews will will be at its call should it hold attain their goai in Palestine if they hearings in Geneva. exercise patience, Lord Plumer, former High Commissioner of Palestine told M. Nurock, a Jewish deputy! from Latvia who was delegate to .'the. i Interparliamentary Congress. Speak- I ing to M. Nurock during a reception' given to the delegates by the head,' of the Latvian delegation, Lord Pul- mer said that the Jews have no reason to despair. Pointing out that Dr. Weizmann, understood that the Jews must have] patience, Lord Plumer said that he, believed progress will be slow but nevertheless the Jews will attain their goal.
SAYS JEWS TO GAIN COAL WITH PATIENCE
Jewish Bullfighter May Receive Spanish Medal Madrid. (J. T. A.)—Sydney Franklin, the Jewish matador, who saved the life of a-drowning boy, may receive a medal, if the petitions which are being circulated in Madrid take effect. Franklin, who has proven himself a hero many times in the ring, was passing when he saw the boy struggl-i ing. He threw off bis clothes, leaped in, and rescued the youngster.
Warburg, Adler to Europe New York.—Felix M. Warburg, chairman of the Administrative Committee of the Jewish Agency, and Dr. Cyrus Adler, president of the
•Milk/ AVer feet Tood fbrEverybody
Eighth Commandment, I may say that own acts. it reads: "Thou shalt not steal."
i
Jewish Engineer Honored Cleveland.—Morris Goodkind, Jewish bridge engineer of the New Jersey Highway Commission, was among the five members of the American Society of Civil Engineers who received medals this week at the convention of the Society. Mr. Goodkind, who now lives in New Brunzwick, New Jersey, received the "Peck Hobson Fowler Medal" for his design of the Haritan River Bridge. Mr. Goodkind was born on the East Side of New York and is a member of a Jewish temple. He has received several prizes and medals for bridge engineering and was awarded the Pulitzer Prize by Columbia in 1908.
There are a number of very prominent Jewish columnists, but the real top-notchers, if income is a criterion, are not the Jewish ones. The three who net the largest sums are Arthur Brisbane, Will Rogers, and the latest addition to the ranks—Calvin Coolidge. If thou hast never been a fool, be Brisbane's column, "Today" is said sure thou wilt never be a wise man.
THE JEV /4S THE MEMM, IT IS l>r\O^LL THAT WJMNQ THE ( W U AQE$ 11W1AM CHkSS WAS PlKST INTWUCH> TO T H L ARABIC W 0 M > , ALONQ VffH IN-
mandments and read the eighth com-
to net the editor no less than a quarter of a million yearly. Will Rogers draws about $3,000 a week, which amounts to $150,000.00 yearly. Coolidge is said to net around §2400 a week from his colmun. Now for the Jewish ones: F. P. A. veteran columnist of the New York World is under salary for $13,500.00 a year; Winchell, leader of the tabloid columnists nets about $1,000 •weekly from his column and his broadcasting; Mark Hollinger, draws $500 a week for his Mirror Column and recently has been getting $1,500 a week from the Loewe circuit. No one has made a survey of the columnists for the Jewish papers, but I shoald say that speaking roughly, my distinguished friends, Professor Bernard Postal, George Joel, Dr. Charie* Joseph, Frieda Bienstock and lastly your obedient servant net a som at least several hundred dollars a week less than Mr. Coolidge. Of coarse, we haven't been President, so gire us a chance. (Copyright 1930 by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.)
VOTE FOR HOWARD KENNEDY FOR CLERK DISTRICT COURT DOUGLAS COUNTY PRIMARY AUGUST 12,1930
JEWISH CHILDREN MONEY-HONEST The story coraes^ to mind just now— that some tests made at Teachers College, New York," reveal that Jewish children are above the average in honesty as far as money matters are concerned. The test was made by means of some coins which the children are supposed to arrange after odd designs. "By an ingenious arrangement, Dr. Julius B. Mailer explains," "It is possible to trace whether a child withheld part of the money and the exact amount taken." ,' Only the small fraction of two per cent of the Jewish as compared against 13 per cent of the non-Jewish children were dishonest. Well, we Jews have been familiar with.the Eighth Commandment longer than other peoples. However, let.us not take too much unction to our souls. For in tests in honesty in school work, Jewish children were shown to be slightly less worthy than non-Jewish. Probably, says - Dr.1 Mailer "because of their greater anxiety to do good work in •school and greater interest in the test material." And there is the further balm that
Omaha Hebrew Club
PIC-NLC Lakeview ParkAll Day-Aug. 10,1930 Bring the Whole Family Games and Entertainment for the Old and Young Baby Contest for the Infants Dancing in the Evening
A GALA DAY FOR OMAHA JEWRY
i
TAffF, 7—TfTfl JEWISH JEEESS, TTrrnA-y JULY 25,1930
Again a Jeu Rules Lightweight Roost Singer -Ascends to Throne by Knocking 'O Sammy Mandell in Record Breaking Time
On Ak Board
ON "AK" BOARD to Fill Vacancies on Board of Governors
o est^umtes, ^tbe GoverTtor said, Uwnj ^re from 26,000 to 30,t)00 voting .Jews in Baltimore, and <of tiese it is estimated that 20,000 j or inure are orthodox. The others "are Reformed. The cost of a one-day «essran of the.Legislature as provided by law would be something over rnor Calfe LegfeJatnre Ses- JS.G60 the Governor stated.
DATECHANffi
sion to Enafite Jews to
the Jewish membcTB trf Jerusalem municipal council resigned last March, Jewish interests in the council have been at e disadvantage and this present movement dates from then. The Jewish members resigned, because, a.- they said, in the three years since their election they had striven to no avail to improve municipal affairs ar.ci to protect infringed Jewish rights, owing to the opposition of the Arab majorty.
JERUSALEM JEWRY SEEKING SELF-RULE TO HOLD HOLIDAY SERVICES
George Brandeis of -the Brandeis Baltiir«npe, (J. T. A.).—A TirodaStares and James E. Ztavidson, presmation calling the General Assembly (J. T. A.), Kepresente- IN CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH ident of the Nebraska Power Co. of Marvland - into extranrdinarv sesses £n -.& record-breaking victory Al of 2>avid—it brings him lack." "Will "were elected to membership on the' tiTes aJ1 Jewisil sion on*"July * 29* t o amend 1fce* dates | •* 5 ™ ^ ™ Jerasa•Stnger? a .-Jetdish youngster from the it work against other Jewish "fbjjhtfor registration' was issued on Jury ftem h s n v****** t o ^aiss legal «teps New york, (3. T. A.).—The Com~Brtmx, tadUced off with the world's ers?" somebody asked. The question knights of Ak-Ear-Ben board of governors at a -meeting of -the group lightweight championship by knocking 21 by Governor Albert C. Ritchie j"Lto:- separate the Jewish community munity Ueform Temple of Brooklyn out tthe iitlrholder in less than one wasn't answered in the excitement, Monday. They were elected to Jill from rths Trest of Ute Epted the 'offer of the £Jn£fs of Maryland, H3ie Governor noted .round. Singer is the first Jewish but it was announced by Hinge*^him- the vacancies caused by -Use aesignar a week's investtga}'fPP«»teaai nod wbtain Congregational Church to after -more champion in this division since J2enny self that he was ready to fight another iions of T. •:C. 3Jy±ae and Gould Dietz. tion of a situation ereated'^yrfee con- }*•••"•» »ow "the -case in Tel Aviv, an hoM its Rosh Hashonah and TLeonnr'd retired undefeated—Editor. Jewish boy—Jackie -Berg xfi. .London. sity. 3Joth Mr. JJrandeis :and :Mr. 3yjj}{Hir services in the church bofWflict of tne registration dates Trith. Once again a Jew rules the light- The only catch was—first Jackie must ing. The hnlh holiday services trill members off dfciie board "tiiis purpose there ont two of the most important religions. [ taTry weight roost. Not since the famous beat Sid Chocolate. James E. Davidson governors. 3ffr. Brandeis served i orgamased ran association be conducted by Rabbi Samtrei Peiper holidays of the 3fewish calendar, j -Benny Leonard Trailed his boxing And so after a 'hectic -evening :an- ifrom H9I5 rto 1920, inclusive, ferring 4'ratltod Hatoshar whidi has for its who cooperated in the movement that Rosh Bashonah anc\ Succoih. •'..gloves-to :the-wall has a Jew held the other Jewish boy irom NewlYork- City -which dime he was chairman of the f-cbiei" aim tfee safegraardin^ of all made the "Kings Hijrhway Community The Governor said he has taken title in this Division. The other night moved into the place df,1ie Damons— amusement committee of rfche JJnights interests in Jerusalem. church building a reality. the "proper steps to assnre himself ( at :the Polo Grounds in New "York nothing more than a pair xtf dstover trf Ak-Bar-Ben, and he -aerwr. as that the legislators will limit them- ! City, Abraham Singer, "Al" to you, hands and feet aided him, lart witii 'Chairman of the building committee selves to the one subject and -that it broiight the title -back to his people these natural instrumente he has been during the construction of the Akcan and will meet, pass the necessary by.knocking out the .reigning champ, able to gather t o himself sa fortune in Sar-Ben Exposition company grounds, law and adjeum in one day. Sammy Mandell, in the first round of dollars and a Tjermanentname in the grand stand and race track. After consideration of the terms a scheduled fifteen session bout. annals of sport. ACTIVE of the law in the case, the Governor The iise of Al Singer to fistic Jame (Copyright 5930 ajy<tne Jewish -explained lie i a s found two or three! ."Mr. Davfdson ^rcas a member of the was an unusually fast journey. . In Telegraphic .Agency, Inc.) alternatives, and believes the best board 2xom 1918 rto_ 1925, inclusive, tliree short years Singer came out of course to follow would be an amendduring ±hftj:tiine helselpredlaB chairthe amateur class into the big money msnt of the jexisting law, .providing man -Of p and the crown. The new champion and parade ctrnifflti^s of the Enighte for the substitution this year of new is a product of the east.side of New of ^&k-Ear-Ben." IDtmng the organiregistration days for September 28 York City, that once crowded section Reported 'by 'Misses Ella Cohen zation of iKej&fc^SfeBen Exposition and 34 and October 7 and 8, which j • of "the .city .that has-given Ameiica so company, iff; Davidson ^ras chair.and Mildred are set -by statute. The farmer two many leaders in all fields of endeavor. nsan of the committee organized to coincide vrrth the observance of Uosh Born on Uroone near Pitt Street in •fHashoaah, -and the latter dates are the";heaTt.ox:the\Ghetto, Al lived "there Mrs. Abe Davidson and children finance -.the ^original comnany. •'• tbe same as Saccotfa, -the Feast of •until .fae :was Tfour ;years old» "when he are visiting ^trs. Sarah Adelson ior Both .Mr. Brarttieis and "Mr. ^DavidTabernacles. son have been tacfave "in "all .AfeSarmoved, with ;his ^family tto Trinity several weeks. .Tointing ont that the State shonM Ben "affairs-ssiirce "tiieir . retiieiiwii I in the3Jronx. The moving spirit was •not permit -atny .iarger group of its Brandeis. strong in ;the Singer family and be- !Mr. and .'.Sirs. Jack Chesen -an- from the aboard, ..Mr. .iBxanuexs t people to be disfranchised by circumfore long Al ifound himself in a fiat nounce the 'iarth of a daughter, a "very active ipart"in 3tfr. IDavidson served New Tork.—TOT the first time since stances "wholly exceptional and nnon XtOth Street and TJenox Avenue, Barbara Jane: TMxs. Chesen was :for- horse show -and as • cp^n'nmn iof .Llit^ committee that Bennie "Leonard relinquished the title foreseen and beyond their control, but the Singers -were soon back in the merly Sara "Somberg -of • Omaha. Bronx where they lived on Caldwell Ttfrs. EamueltNefaky mdfdttPghters, raised the finances for 'the Diamond undefeated a Jewish boxer won the as is the case in the coincidence of Jubilee and Ak-Sar-Ben stock show. Avemie—there the^family stayed until | M . l dl rreid a n dd .^ ^H^i ^t ^t -en^tamed lightweight championship of the the registration dates •with the xiays trtid the sudden'acquisition of wealth by W w t a a s d a v . ^ t . t t e Co wotKl ytimi Jtl "SingEi-,_-.-a youthful sacred to -the Jewish people, the GovIPEEASED Al made it possible for the boy to o+ _ ^SZtrtZSAZir, "Diesing, -presEdeirt o"f -the fi^rter from -the B^onx, knocked out ernoT declared he has not acted toe-; move his family into the sumptuous at one o'clock Enights of Ak-Sar-Ben, arri "W. S. Sammy JMandel of Chicago in less cause • of any jgreat demand Of quarters in Pelham they now occupy. which forty-seven guests-- were Schellberg, president of the Ak-Sartwo Tninutes" of the first round sure rfrom any sonree. Brought 'Jip on the streets of the present. Ben Exposition company , expressed city Al was different •from other boys The luncheon was jjiven-; in honor iiemselves as delighted in having of -Miss 5Helen -•Sherman fwhose enin Ms ability to use his fists. B e a t JHefsky was ^Messrs. brandeis and Uavfason as oftended jmHic school in the Bronx arid gagement-?to .D.-CDavid v recently •announced. ' Ont"""<af' town ~Scials an tfce A^Sar-Ben organizait was -at that .institution that he tion. guests included 3Irs. Dave'-'Sherman learned howtr» box. At onetime he k—Sar—Ben war bom during a and ~Hxs. H. A. Wolf itjf '-Omaha, held i l l the boxing championships in lieriod of depression," said "Mr. SchellMrs. S. Galitzki of Topeka, £ans., the .school. A rgood athlete" generally, Al -played the great Jewish game— Mrs. A. Davidson of Kansas City, berg. "It has lived and jprospereQ and Miss Esther Treshman of these 36 years "Hirough some very basketball and was considered ;a star .Angeles, -Calif^ u - r - - - irying^a*a^well jas irresperons on the school five. ^^aP#en t^a^isaunfcfionm on a school -Al used rtafdxtsp'-U' uccutilonaliy• - -Mrs. 4-1. itTTTTgy~~»Trwwg'tiiwi' *fi than sever be.at a. ,neighboriE^ ..gymnasium which tables of bridge :for Mrs. Jules more constructive * i nroaoer and -was the trainbSjj. quarters for fighters. Shapiro at her home iTiday, July 11- fore. "We have He soon ahiWT^d'nimself adept with the A irworcourse hmcheon 'was .served. more intensive activities than ^ver, gloves akd.liefore long was fighting Prizes were won by Misses Bess and we are expecting consfderableimfor dubiously :gold watches and with- Cohen, Helen Garson, and Fannie Tpetus to Tesult from "the '.additions i;o our board of MrBrandftis tand TMr. out delay he entered the ^professional Wolff, Davioson." •ring. rHis first fight brought him $75. Ble was only supposed-to have.received "Miss Dorothy Diamond entertained forty butihe sold so jnany?tickets,.that four tables of bridge at her home ^Palestine's the jnromxjters gave 'him a .bonus, The for -Miss ^Esther .Freshman of Los bout was caginst TTomniy 3ielliy, ^whom Angeles, Calif. A. ttwo xourse lunchDhief he '.knocked out. 3wo years rafter this eon -was served. Prizes were won S75 bouft'jSJ drew 2. purse of $44^27 by .Miss Norman IFrosh, Jklxs. chief Diamond, and for a. ^glit with IKid Chocolate. Bernice Xieber- secretaTy tif -fee Palestine ment will he 'Mark JUtcbison "Ytnmg, • J&braham (Al) -Singer is the young- man. now colonial secretary ^rr Sierra ••st-fighterrever to hold-the'-lightweight -crown. ^He will not ibe twenty one A one o'clock luncheon .and bridge Xeonc,thea3ritish Golonial»Office anuntil :ne3ct jrear. >His youth,-'his good was given, -by. !Mrs. U. yZplat ainl TiouneKd Ttoday. S e succeeds Harry -nature, itis -willingness to -."fight has Mrs. J. Goldberg of Beatrice. Tifes Charles Taike who :as acting Bigh-made him a great ^favorite 'not only Evelyn 'Goldberg -of Des Moines, 2a^ Commission of ^Palestine "during the with thetfight :fans but' his neighbors. at the Shrine Country -rlub. Prizes riots was Beverely criticiseH by "the TT-is old (grammar .school principal re- were won by Mrs. -Eli "Evnen and Jews for -^^s -faHiTTp -to prevent the disturbances. members rnhn. interviewed about Al TSITS. Frank Cohen. . Xuke was recently promoted to he :said,r'll-Al was always a good boy IMr. -and .Mrs. Abe Polick and JSIrs. andisetta^fine example for his school- D. Kerchesky of • Tampa, -Flo., aie the'lieutenant-governoTsbipTbf "Malta. mates:"!: . -visiting here :ya& .relatives -'and There Js a comcidence in the xcp-pointment of Mr. "Young in -that "Mr. All ^New iYork turned out to see one friends for several -weeks. , iirior to becoming chief jsecreof theiriiown fight. lEven APs father disobeyed ^Doctor's orders and risked Urs. Dean Davidson of Tails City, tary of the "Palestine government-was a heart attack to see his'boy perform. Nebr., Tvisited .here for several days also colonial secretary of Sierra -" > Xieone. .'Mr. Toung, who -is a -Cam"When -Singer heard .about it, :he said with/relatives. ' "brftige graduate, served in-fiie Ceylon in a perturbed voice, jrGee,"I was surprised when J saw him. He's 57 (Al lilrs. Ben Polick and "Mrs. Charles civil service from 1909 to 1928. entertained forty quests in During the World WaT he was in t h i k tthat's h t ' old ld age)) andd should h l d hhave Po3ki thinks }.____ f TVT - A. Polick and IMrs. stayed ibme. I sent him back right D. Kerchefsky of . Tampa, Fla., .at -the army. away "fcSth my brother." The older the President Party House on July Mr. Singer didn't have to wait long 17. The evening was spent in playbecause rthe whole fight was over in 1 ing bridge. A two course luncheon minute smd forty-five seconds. was served. Prizes were won by Mrs. The knockout of the champion by J. Schneider, Mrs. Frank Cohen and Singer teought great excitement and Mrs. Wm. Wolff. Out of town guests confusion to the ringside, but the first were Jilrs. Dean Davidson of Falls man to gjet to Al's side was his boy- City and Tlirs. "Joe Goldberg of Jkmft Ut anyone ttll yau te hood idol—Benny Xeonard, who was Beatrice. line BE grad as a Goodyear." covering the fray for a New Tork demonstrate-the V^ newspaper. Benny has always had: M K . 31. Poaster and 3Irs. Ben Mad szebuire Good year great faith in Singer and has done • Eosenberg entertained sis tables of cities "which tmly Goodyear TizsE xsn Tiot a little in encouraging him. The bridge at the home of Mrs. M. upbringing of "these "frvo boys was al- Poaster July 21 ifor Mrs. A. Polick I Chalk stealc bought .at all-year service, now fe ^ e most identical. Both east side bom and Mrs. D. Kerchefsky of Tampa, i the store _J2©£ per pound get TOURS of religious Jewish parents, both Fla. A two course .luncheon was Chalk steak moved to upper New York, both rose j served. Prizes were wm by Mrs. J. delivered S5c per pound quickly ;and both earned the title of j Schneider and IMrs. Barley Davidson. .!Hib and -sckcailder lightweight champion off the worid. j * Interviewed in his dressing room after 1 m ijaw of Famed v Chops _____a:Oc per pound the fight, A I was too excited rto be! coherent. 3tte jumped around, mauled i Disraeli Dies JLH Xiver 25c «pripound liis Jewisli~managei-Bymie Caplin and i t>oup meat — - ^ V I>erpQund danced with; his handlers. I t could be jj London, (J. T. sister-in- • plainly seen that iie was very, much, Jaw _of^ JLord Beaconfield, Mrs. Ealph , en IP A -AlSO bEll f pleased with himself. Bis manager Disraeli, died here in iier ninetyless exumurant hut eloquent -iis third year. Mrs. Disraeli, -whose Fish Daily usual. "Tell the Jewish boys that.Al maiden name -vras Katherine Trevor, wants to thank them ^for their good was married ;in 1861 -to 'JEalph, "the wishes. 33e will'Jbe .a ,fighting champ .younger brother of the famous Jewand 'rwlll aneet all- comers:and do noth- isEIPfime-ZMniister of Ereat-IBritain^tS . ing -to hurt "the staildiiig ;6"f rthe -Jews5 wiibii in 'America. ATs not superstitious by Disraeli and ;four daughters surbut he iiasta-birth inatk" which "he be- vive her. lieves isia !good;iuck -talisman—it is a Q267 2 j r—it's Al's star "PATRONIZE DUR AUVEliTlSERfi
"By GEOKGE JOEL
TLincoln
OGCA
PRICE
BOUPT
We Announce to the Omaha Jews, That We f Ire Selling Our Meats at The lowest f rices
• Compare These Prices:
\
17th and
i-.^.;~^.» ,i, : -,*-fS;^.3'--:r^;^; i y,|}SJ:'*-SS;aft
PAGE 8—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1980 the rest of them. I wonder what began noticing the change that had more boldly, "of course, I could have Jean would say about his not being come over Jean. While everybody managed things in a much more usual interested in girls?'' talked of vacation plans, she. smiled way.-: Dinner invitations and.:connect "Oh," Pauline replied, "She'd prob- wanly and refused to go away. Grad- tions through my father. ' I'm sure ually, the town emptied of all the you know the usual procedure And ably say, 'Wait till he meets me." Jean stole guiltily out. On her way young people except those held at then, there's always someone r- _dy to home she scarcely heard Ted Auer- home by business. Jean's mother be matchmaker. But I chose to be * .' MISS ANNA PILL, Correspondent bach's witticisms and laughed a little hovered over her, insisted that change more open, to come out directly .with would do her good. Jean persisted .what I mean. Mr. Simonson, don't va'antly at his rallies. SSB and af last Mrs. Baum, in search of you think you've been rather unfair It was not^ Jean told herself as the ever fleeting health, had to go without days dragged by without a call from her. Mr. Baum went only for the to me, not even tried to know me, Daniel Simonson, that she was piqued week-end, to drive his wife to her when I certainly did not fail to show you I was interested in you." . by his indifference—to all girls in gen- favorite watering place. She turned to him and saw his eral and to her in particular. GradPencils, paper and Hebrew books She knew she had It was when she suddenly realized amazed stare. ually* as one day of waiting followed The members of the Pi Epsilon were laid aside Wednesday afterthe great emptiness of the house, startled him. She had expected to another, 6he realized that all her Over 1000 people attended the thoughts were of him. What had, un- which re-echoed the emptiness of her startle him. Tau Sorority .were hostesses at their noon by over 125 Hebrew School first Summer Formal which was held pupils when the annual picnic for A-inual Talmud Torah Picnic last til the .Center dance, been the essence own heart, that Jean decided on a "There isn't anything wrong with last Sunday, evening in the* marble the children was held at Riverside Sunday afternoon and evening, at of her existence, suddenly became bold, wild sceme. She was not one me," she reassured him. "Only I'm room of the West Hotel. Many out Park. The school bus transported Riverview Park. A program of stale. The men she knew said the to pine away in secret. .not the old-fashioned, pining kind of of town, guests were present at the the children from the school to the sports and games held the limelight same old things in the same old way. She telephoned Pollack's Departgirl." Though she, didn't say it, what dance. The ball room was recorated park, and took them home after a during the afternoon. Boots, stands She was tired of all the places they ment Store, asked to be connected -she meant was that she knew what and a lunch counter helped make with the sorority colors and Larry day of games and frolicking. took her. She, who was usually ac- with the manager and, despite a wild she wanted and how to get it. BurkePs Orchestra furnished the Ice Cream, cookies, and lemonade the affair a social success. A report tive, spent long days on the porch fluttering in her throat, asked . Mr.j Jean leaned forward, clasping her music for dancing from 9 to .12. were served to the children by the of the amount of money realized by swing dreaming. Simonson to call at her home that hands about her chiffon clad knee. After the dance, the guests ad- school officials. Mr. J. Aizenberg and the event will be announced at a Jean recognized the symptons. She evening "on a matter of business."4("There's no reason why we two can't journed to Barlow Manor where a Mr. Joseph Bell, instructors in the final check-up meeting of the comwas in love. At last, she was in love! She gave no hint that her parents befriends—and more, if you find you midnight supper was served. Out of school, were in charge of the ar- mittees some time" this week, acBut the experience, new to her, did were out of town. In fact, she let-like me as much as I do you." • cording to Mrs. R. H. Emlein, chairtown guests included Dorothy Cohen, rangements. Daniel Simonson stood not bring the ecstasy she had expect- him understand t h a t t h e ^matter of - up. ,. His face man' of the event. Freda Brodkey, Marion Goldner, I was flushed. He stared down at her, "I do want to thank the committee ed. It made her weak and limp. I t ' business" concerned her father. Bernice Sherman, Dorothy. Muskin, Junior Hadassah Is It was nearly dark when he came up tried to speak and could not. and the members of the Jewish Com- left her without her old initiative. Helen Cherniak, Ida and Lucille If you had suggested to Jean that the steps. Jean did not rise from the Jean gazed at him fondly and tried who attended the Picnic, for Krasne, Marion Scharf, Ray BernPlanning Breakfast munity her love was based on the entirely deck chair in which she was reclin- to «alm him with her clear airy voice. their co-operation in this affair," said stein, Dan Greenhouse, Bill Gerelick, Members of the Junior Hadassah Mrs. Emlein in commenting on the novel experience of having her will ing, but with a sweeping gesture of Already she was happy. "There isn't Ed Brodkey, Laser Kaplan, Sol any reason.why not, is there?" she Michnick, Edwin Brodkey, and Harold Chapter are planning an out door outcome. "Although the arrangements thwarted, she would have withered her graceful 'arm indicated a seat for asked, gayly. him. .... ' •'•'-.- • .-:. . „ •.-.* . • .; you with a scornful stare. Yet the "breakfast, for Sunday morning; Aug. for the Picnic took much time, worry Kroloff of Omaha, Mildred Sherman, He . sat down indifferently and : Daniel Simonson spoke gravely, Harold Goldman, Marvin Bookey of 3r at Riverside Park. This will com- and work, the work was made much fact remained that Daniel Simonson waited with businesslike expectancy T*ith deep sympathy in -his voice. '"No aloof. For him she did not Des Moines, Bill Rosen and John prise the regular out door meeting lighter and very pleasant by the continued contir for what she had to say. reason at all,. Miss Baum, as far as Brodkey of Cedar Rapids and Leo which is held once a month during kindness and consideration of all j exist, you're concerned. But there's my But what was there she could do "I know you'll think it strange to the summer by the organization. Skalovsky of Norfolk. those who helped." •wife, you see.'. I planned to bring her about it? At last Jean understood be called here like this,'.' she began in Miss Sadie Shulkin is in charge of Miss Rogie Kozberg and Miss The proceds of the picnic will be Bernice Levin, co-chairman of the the arrangements for the breakfast. turned over to the Hebrew Mother's the whispered yearnings of the other a low, husky tone, "especially when here; as soon as I was established at dance, were assisted by Serene Bar- Over 40 girls are expected to attend. club, for use in the Talmud Torah. girls. She -was as helpless as if she my father and mother are away. But Pollack's. I thought we'd be settled rent, Ida Levy, Beatrice ' Levitt, This club which is composed of were the dowdiest wallflower instead I'm not like everybody else and I here in town by the "fall at the latest" Mr. and Mrs. S. Pizer and daughLouise 'Herzoff, Margie Kozberg, Elim-.thers of the children . who - attend of the most popular, the most sought don't act like everybody else." ^She He went slowly down the steps, laughed shakily and then, as if "tak- Jean watched him until he was lost in zabeth Passman and Neomi Hofwits. ter Rosalie visited at the home of the Talmud Torah has been organized after girl in town. By the middle of the summer, people ing a firm grip on herself went on the gathering dusk. Then her firm A lovely tea was held in the after- Mr. and. Mrs. M. Lipshutz this week for the welfare of the school. It is noon for the sorority members and enroute to their home in Omaha maintaining a bus which takes the guests at the home of Miss Ida after a western trip. children from their homes directly to Levy, 3301 Jackson St. the Talmud Torah and returns them Mrs. J. L. Levitt and children, home after the school session. Dave, Lois and Helen, departed for Mrs. A. Slutsky was the treasurer a month's stay at Manitou, Colo. for the picnic and Mrs. A. I. Sacks Miss Rose Finsod and. Miss Sadie wa- the secretary of the committee. Mrs. Prank Gorchow and daughter Dimsdale left Saturday for MinneSally Gorchow have returned, home apolis where they plan to visit this He who hath a forgiving spirit is after spending two weeks in Chicago week. himself forgiven.—Talmud. where they went to attend the wedding of Miss Ida Kaplan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. Kaplan of Chicago, to Mr. Max Deriberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Denberg of this city. .
SIOPX CITY NEWS
MANY PRESENT AT PI Cheder" Lessons Are | PICNIC OF TALMUD stopped fQr Picmc EPSltONTAU PARTY TORAH SUCCESSFUL
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New Hea J Says Unification Will Give Courage to Palestinians New York, (J. T. A.).—Confidence that the action of the Zionist convention in Cleveland in approving a coalition government which brought peace to American Zionism would strengthen the determination of the Jews in Palestine was expressed in a statement issued by Robert Szold, newly elected head of the Administtrative Committee of the Zionist Organization of America. Mr Szold also said that as a result of plans discussed at an organization meeting Zionists in the United States would awaken to a new enthusiasm and follow a more definite policy of economic' development. Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, chairman of the committee on political affairs, which will determine the attitude of the Z.O.A. toward Great Britain, declared that the Zionists the world over are agreed that there must be no yielding of Jewish rights in Palestine. Rabbi Wise said that nothing was to be gained by yielding or purporting to yield the right of access to Palestine through orderly immigration and the right to purchase and cultivate land there. lips and determined chin began to quiver and she cried softly in the darkness. (Copy 1930 by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.)
Society News
Girls Will Do
^2/NINAKAYE Mr. Abe Bass of Cedar Rapids is visiting at the home of his parents Mr, and Mrs. Sam Bass. Mr. Bass, Jean Baum knew she would, meet her- friends t to bring him over. She who is a graduate of Iowa U. is Daniel Simonson at the Community prepared, in her determined fashion, practicing law in Cedar Rapids. Center dance. , As she. powdered her to draw him to her. By subtle manMrs. Morey Lipshutz is visiting nose in front of the long mirror, she euvering she found herself standing relatives at Stephenspoint, Wis. took . stock of herself. Her -hair alone near the punch bowl. By tne Miss Frances Rutstein is visiting caught glints from the lights, her cool simple art of staring she managed to in Omaha with friends and relatives. eyes were shaded by lashes long and catch his eye across the ballroom and fine. Her eyebrows arched perfectly. when she did, she raised a dainty foreMrs. Jack Segal and son Lawrence When she smiled, her iips were soft as: finger and beckoned to him. He amof Los Angeles, Calif., visited at the a- young girl's should be and Jean bled leisurely over and addressed her home of ' Mr. and Mrs.. I. Merlin chose to smile often.j It was only in with a tantalizingly polite,,?Yes?" over last week end. Thursday eve- intimate converse with her mirror "Oh," Jean affected a fluster, "I'm ning Mrs. Merlin was hostess at a that she; permitted them to take the sa sorry. I thought you were someparty in honor of her guest, and Mrs. firm line that, with her pointed chin, one 1 knew. But I do know you," she Max Merlin entertained at a bridge bespoke a determination and tenacity continued, flashing her smile, "you're party honoring Mrs. Segal, on Satur- not easily shaken. Daniel Simonson, Pollack's new manday evening. She tossed her head in approval. ager. I'm Jean Baum. But I suppose you know that, too." Miss Rhea Finsod has returned to Perhaps it was just an accident that "Yes," he said for the. second time, she hadn't met Daniel Simonson beher home in Chicago after visiting with scarcely more show of interest. fore. Usually, when a new man came at the home of her mother, Mrs. M. to town, he lost no time in becoming For once in her life Jean was at a Dizon. acquainted with Jean. It was on loss for words. She did not know The Misses Bluma and Sybil Mer- Jean's porch that young men gathered how to go on with this stranger who lin and Ida Feldman left Saturday to chat away the idle hours on Sunday maintained an attitude of cool indifAny other man in town for a week's visit with friends in or dance to dreamy music from the ference. Minneapolis. From there they will radio on long summer evenings. It would have considered himself flatspend several days at Lake Minne- was- in Jean's car that they all piled tered if Jean Baum called him to her when they" set off on the excursions across the ballroom. tonka before returning home. that make up a small town's social But Jean was not to be outdone by Miss Hannah Rocklin has departed life. It was Jean who ran most of his silence. "Well," she laughed, for a visit with friends in Chicago, the parties, kept the crowd gay arid i "since you know my name, don't you where she will • remain for three moving, and basked in enviable want my telephone number?" weeks. ularity. "I haven't a pencil," he answered. Jean's lips closed tightly. In Mr. Leo Skalovsky has returned Except fox her mother's occasional to his home in Norfolk, Nebr., after prodding, Jean never thought of settl- moment she answered him, her voice spending a week in Sioux City visit- ing down. As she .saw it, the world light and airy as ever. "Isn't that ing friends. was made for little Jean and she was too bad? But this will do," she adhaving too good a time to think of any ded quickly, Deftly she opened her Mr. and Mrs. Morris • Pill and change. Of course, in her heart of vanity case. With her lipstick she children are vacationing at Lak& hearts, she felt that she could have wrote the number in carmine letters Okoboji. any boy in town. Not only because on her handkerchief, let the delicate her father was one of the richest men, square flutter over his arm and moved Mr. and Mrs. Abe Pred of Kings-, away before he could return it. ley, Iowa, announce the birth of a but" because she was the vivacious, For the rest of the evening, Jean's lovely creature that she was. And daughter on Monday, July 21; being so sure of them, they failed to gay laugh rang out just as before, she Mrs. Max Bergen and son,' Berten, interest her, except as " playfellows. danced and went to sit on the balcony have returned home after a three Yearly, she saw some of her following and even for an automobile ride to week visit with friends and relatives fall by the wayside, marry other girls cool off. No one could have told that in New -York. of the crowd and settle down to obliv- behind her clear eyes there was a ion. Jean always laughed at them puzzled look and that her brain was derisively and widly honked her horn busy, busy wondering about: this as she tore by their neat bungalows; strange man, Daniel Simonson. her car filled as usual, for there were In the dressing room, when she went to claim her wrap, Jean paid always new recruits. "We feed the multitude" As Jean emerged from the dressing little attention to the breathless gosWith,Tasty Foods room, she was immediately surround- sip that grew out of the evening's ed. She was not the kind of girl who events. She considered herself above attracts girls., But the men gravitat- the petty jealousies and fond desires v ^'Established In 1918 ed to her and she handled them effi- of the other girls. But •when,.as she CHAS^JGW LGWERY CO. Inc. ciently. Yet, her sharp eye told her was ready to leave, . she; heard the that Daniel Simonson was not in the name mentioned, she paused, un)-•:, drvvestntehts : •circle blushingly, to listen. of her admirers. - Phone 57120—i."01-2 Frances Bldg. Throughout the evening, as she "If he's not interested in girls,' Sioux City. Iowa flitted from the arms of one .young Pauline Hexter was saying, "why did man to those of another, never with- he come to the dance? It's my opinout a dance, never without a throng ion this Daniel Simonson gave out .about her, she saw that he was not that statement just to keep himself S E F F ' S coming^ effort safe from the usual small town pestf ^ near,;; that he made-no 1 "to'be introduced to herV" ' " Hence" girlsYaTtfng all Over him" Hence", him." ; ' "to'be introduced to herV AN0 used to this and .Jean -Helen Reines shrugged a perfect ting wnat what sne h wanteo; w a t d ^nouiaer. ' • ~~ _v-» . v , ' fW ". TTKrnxiva was useu w K«""g wnai s *ne ^noulder." "What's the use use?i Hell be wanted; TRY O U R nP I C Nv I C LUNCHES N w W o u I d : s h e d e j g n t Q ashe s k o n e Qf W n n i n g a f t e r J f 5 a n B a u n i j j
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