August 15, 1930

Page 1

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in the V

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Entertaining

Jewish Community \

Elntcred as second-class mall matter on January 27, IBS, at pbstoffiCe at Omaha. Nebraska, under the Act ot March 8.187a.

JEWISH AGENCY

VOL. VIIL—No. SO

OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 15,19S0

SAYS™ IS Hebrew Club's Picnic PLWNGFOR

i L,arge Crowd Enjoys

Shanghai Jews Not Worried At Conflict

7 Jewish Composers In "Fifty Best List"

New York, (J. T. A.).—The works of seven Jewish composers are included in a list of the "best fifty Williamstown, Mass., (J. T. | musical compositions" that bas been Many and varied were the activit- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dave BolA.).—The 3,500 Jews of Shangsubmitted this week to the N. Y. • ies which entertained, a crowd of ap- ker, triumphed over her rivals for - Berlin. - (J. T. A.)—Although he hai, most of whom are of Se'lo Be Elected to Consider Pro- proximately 4,000 picnickers at the the title for babies under 1% years. "Evening Post" by Albert Coates, stated that he knew. nothing of the phardic origin and well-to-do, posals Made by Agency distinguished Russian-English com- 11,526 of These are Immigrants, annual Omaha Hebrew Club picnic Second place winner was Barbara reported plan of the. Peruvian govare not at all perturbed at the poser aond orchestra conductor, who Members Decline in Number held at Lakeview Park all day Sun- Jean lanclon, 7 months old daughter ernment to grant 2^)00,000 hectares internal jSSeulties t h a t China is how "appearing as guest conductor Debarred day. '•'."-.-, of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Lincoln. of land in Eastern Peru for exclui a s been, expeiiencmg- *£ late, of the Stadium sympathy concerts. Over one hundred prizes were London, (J. T. A.).—Special comJack Steinberg, 3 year old son of sive Jewish cofoaization.- Alberto Sadeclared -George Sokolsky, editThe Jewish composers and their. Washington.—(J. T. A.)—A total missions will be elected at the forth- awarded- to the winners of the num- Mrs. Mary Steinberg, upheld the hon- lomon^ Peruvian foreign'--minister, I oi of the Shanghai English workes named by MT. •Coates are as of 15,225 Jews were admitted to the erous events, which ranged from coming session of the administrative or of the males by capturing, first who is visiting; feer^ said today that weekly, '"Far-Eastern Review", follows: United States during the fiscal year committee of the Jewish Agency for watermelon-eating • contests to a. prize in the division for babies between the if the means :are available.for larg«. and himself a." New "York Jew. The oratorio "Elijah", Felix Mener.tiing June 1930, according to the Palestine in order to consider the waltz competition. ages -of 1% and 3 years. The run- scale Jewish colonization Peru is unMr. Sokoisky has spent twelve delsohn (1809—1847); "Das lied von figures made public by Harry E. "The Hebrew Cluhi picnic was a proposals contained in the reports ner-up was Rodnee Sadofsky, doubtedly - the most suitable place years in China. Erde", Gufflave Mahler (1860—1911); Hull, commissioner general of immitremendous success, from every and he pointed out that his governto be ^submitted to the meeting by daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alex SadMr. * Sokoisky said that the "Gurre-Lieder", Arnold Schonberg, gration. Of this number 11,526 ment is . already negotiating with Felix M. Warburg, Dr. Chaim Weiz- standpoint", President Sam JB. Klaver ofsky. majority of the Jews in Shang(1S74—); "Carmen", Georges Alex- were immigrants and the others were stated following the festival. " I mann and Dr. Arthur Euppin. All kinds of jnovelty games, races various immigration and. .colonization hai are engaged in the fur ander C. L. Bizet (1838—1875); "U- non-immigrant aliens. In the fiscal hope that all present enjoyed themsocieties. He pointed out that and entertainment for young and old, The agenda for the meeting,- which trade and real estate. Most of Henre Espagnole",. Maurice Ravel year ending June 1929 12,479 Jews opens in Berlin August 29, states selves to the fullest "TExtent, and on men and women, occupied the after- many Polish families had immigratthem came from Bagdad in (1875—); "Samson et Dalila", were admitted. that Felix M. Warburg, chairman of behalf of the organization I wish to noon. Father Flanagan's boys bandjed to Pera .in recent years through 1845. In recent years Jewish Charles Camille Saint-Saens (18S5— During the nscal year ending June thank Omaha Jewry for their splendid played. In the evening Carl Lamp's the efforts of the Warsaw ~coloniza~ the administrative committee, -will immigrants have been coming 1921); and "Concerto in F", George 1930 a total of 2,210 Jewish aliens er -operation and support in making tion Association. recording orchestra furnished the open the meeting with the chairinto Shanghai from Russia. Gershwin (1898—). Mr. Gershwin a left this country, 299 being emithe affair so perfect". Last week in a communication to music for dancing. man's address. He will be followed In recent years the Zionist young New York Jewish composer grants. This made an increase its The families began pouring into the Peruvian embassy in Washington by Dr. Chaim Weizmann, president movement has won a large folwho has achieved fame for his com- the Jewish alien population of the the park early and when the day's the ministry of public works of Peof the Jewish Agency and by Dr. lowing in Shanghai, he stated. positions daring the last few years, Lnited States of 13,015. program began at the scheduled hour ru; denied that negotiations had been Arthur Euppin who will render a reis the only American The Jews admitted for the fiscal of 2 p-m., the lawns were well dotundertaken in Germany for Jewish port on Palestine. • year closing June 1830 were font ted. Their number was steadily augcolonization in Pera as had been reThe second session, will be devoted mented during the. afternoon and ana a half percent of the total mimported last May. to election of committees, discussions evening. bcx of 241,700 admission. In Junr> Senor Salomon's reference to neon political affairs, the budget of the 1930, 726 Jews were admitted. The feature attraction was the gotiations is believed to refer; to the Jewish Agency, economic-affairs and widely-heralded baby contest. ChairThe figures of the bureau of imefforts -of a-German group to 'obtain problems of organization. M. M. man Albert Kaplan, Iryin Levine, migration for the fiscal year ending a concession for colonizing in Peru, Ushishkin will report on the Jewish and John Feldmah had charge, with June 1930 show a sharp drop in thf: With this group there is cooperating New York.—The Zionist Organiza- undertakings in Palestine promoted number of Jews debarred from ers~ National Fund, and Oscar Wasser- Miss Pearl Hurwitz, Mrs. Tobye Sil- Plans Being Formulated For a certain Dr. Kirschberg, a Jewish Gigantic Jubilee in man, chairman of the Board of verman, and Hugh Drake acting as tering the country and a slight inlawyer, who is seeking to enlist ' n tion of America demands the fulfill- by American Zionist effort. "Referring to the union of Zionist crease in the number of Jews Directors, will report on the Keren judges. November support - of Jewish immigration or- ment in letter and spirit of the Balfour Declaration and the Palestine forces that was created at the last p o r t e d < ^ ^ m b e r of Jews deHayesod. Dr. Werner Senator, treasganizations. Little Louise Bolker, one-year old Mandate, -and has accordingly in- Zionist convention at Cleveland, the b a r r e d f o r t h e y e a r e n d i n g urer of the Jewish Agency, will Jerusalem, (J. T. A.).—The headstructed its delegates who will at- document goes on to state that the 1903 was 275 as compared with 610 present the budget for the coming quarters of the Keren Hayesod. the tend the meeting of the Administra-j Zionist. Organization expects the co- in the previous year. year. ' • • ' • . • < chief financial instrumentality-of the tive Committee of the Jewish Agency j operation not only of enrolled Zion- j A tote! of 164 Jews were deported The meeting will conclude its sesJewish Agency, has called, • on the at Berlin on August 29th to stand] ists but of all American Jews sym- for the year ending June 19S0 «s sions the following Tuesday after Keren Hayesod committee throughfor a "firm and positive policy", ac-, pathetic to Zionist aims but not compared with 153 in the. year beadopting the resolutions to be subout the world to organize • for the cording "to the immediate offidal pro-1 actually registered in the ranks. fore. mitted by the committee on resolutenth anniversary jubilee campaign gram which has just besn adopted I This section reads: " We are enJerusalem.—(J, T. A.)—Following tions. in November. Th& Keren Hayesod the newly-elected Administration couraged to believe that not only the Marvin Treller retained the golf was established- in London in 1920 as out the suggssfens made in a recent championship of the Highland Coun- a. Jewish Foundation Fund. Oscar letter by. Harry; Snell, Labor •member trf the Zionist Organization and enrolled Zionists but great masses of try Club by downing Jake Malashock, Waserman, president of the Deutsche of the Parliament and of the Pales- which was made public in the form Jews in sympathy with Zionism axe the Britfe of-a letter addressed, to oScers of prepared to stand up and "be counted titlist in 1928, by a & and 4 count in Bank in, Berlin, is chairman of the tine Inquiry Commission, 1 Zionist Regions and Dis- l-for_ the ' cfflcse. We have therefore -Shalom;Society to^ay idii3t* the 36-hole final. last Sunday. Board of JDirectors. tnets throughout the United States by -aavised osr- "dslegstss to the tablish ^ .' Malashock started" out. '-stfbng and • Widespread activities are planned Berlin (J. T. A.)—-The. Jewish cons~~a™-—- that *v_* they + * . „can „ ^ labor munity of Berlin has ,decided. to bwiifi held a one hole lead at the^ha^| ;way to celebrate ten years of the Keren ber of subjects with s view to estab- Mir; Robert SzoM, Chairman of the- pean gatherings for a fan and positive policy in all its.. Jjfcrwn- stadium for sports anc! markj-but-intheafteEnDoaAound last Hayesod's work in financing the econ- lishing closer relations between Jews Administration, . r - " '•"••'.' * things relating to the Jewish Nation- •games. -The- proposed stadium wili and Arabs. •year's winner made,"a strong come- omic and agricultural rebuilding of ;: The communication is-tie first ofThe seminars will offer study cours- ficial document issued by the new al 'Home with the assurance that occupy an area of 40,000 quadroit»cback to capture the match. Palestine. World-famous Jewish and English Paper Praises These In the president's flight.J. H. Ku- non-Jewish,,personalities are expected es in Palestine polities,- Jewish coloni- Administration of American Zionists American Zionists will rally to the ters and will be located near GruncJewish Financiers for lakofsky won the cup by winning to participate in the celebration which I zation and Arab cultivation,-, health and states the ideological program cause and make whatever sacrifices wald, a fashionable suburb of Ber.,;."•, j -,. .v • L- x i t I and educational development among as well as the prospective activities of time, effort and money that may lin. The executive board of the JewStand over Jake Spiesberger, 6 .and 5. .'; will include meetings throughout the _ . , . . ,, - - .. ,_, •% •••"*.' • i Jews and Arabs, self-governing xnsti- of the Organization. Ah indication be required". ish community has already advanwx': The -finals of the vice-president's world, .press conferences, 'special London, (J. T. A.).—So far as fi"We- need not tell that all of us $12,500 Jor the preliminary work, tutions, bi-national government, a of a firmer policy, with respect to nanciers are concerned the Roth- flight were' postponed ' when' Mose films showing achievements of the. practical scheme for the improvement Great Brifian is §een in the terms should stand squarely behind the BalThe bulk of the funds for the stsschild and the French government Yousem, one of th&, contenders, was Jews in Palestine, lectures, syna- of " Arab-Jewish relations and the of the program, as well as the prob- four Declaration, the Mandate, and dium, which will cost about $50,000, called out -of-the city.gogue gatherings, and special news-, are as one, writes the Sunday Refhistory of the Arab national move- ability of. more extensive commercial all that which, in letter and spirit, will be obtained by voluntary conAn intensive program for im- paper and magazine issues. eree in a full front page article enment. is involved in the development of a tributions of from one mark and up. The Jubilee month's activities will titled "The Triumph of the Roth- proving the fairways and the greens In a recently published letter Mr. real Jewish National Home in Pales- one mark being equivalent to the cost was begun last Monday and will be be the forerunner, of ttie ;intfensive Snell suggested the establishment of schilds". tine." of one brick. work designed to secure.exceptionally bi-national committees of Jews and After revealing that on fiTinnoinl completed about Novembe? L This is probably the first time that large results for the Seren Hayesod Arabs in all towns and villages in Palmatters there are now considerable a Jewish communal in 5691 which starts Eosh Hashonah estine where the two peoples live as a differences between the English and anywhere has undertaken such a pro (September 23). While the first de- step toward mutual selZ -respect and French members of the famous Jew[ ject. The entire Jewish youth o! cade of the Keren Hayesod has ralNew York.—Sir Arthur Pinero's good will. ish banking house, the Referee says lied large sections of the Jewish "Mid-Channel" is included in a list of The children of the- Jewish Com- Berlin is now working to make tbx that the Rothschilds "who up to the people, had demonstrated the power "the fifty best plays" which have been munity Center Summer Play School project a success. The Stadium plliint! present have been controlling French radiating from Palestine and the fer-. selected by Hatcher Hughes, assistant were the guests of the Orpheum call for special fields to be devoted finances, are advising the French vent interest of theJewish masses professor of English at Columbia Theatre management Thursday, Au- to football, hockey, and hard court* government not to finance foreign in its upbuildingj unprecedented efUniversity and author of the Pulitzer gust 7, at a Theatre party, which and grass courts for tennis BE well s* Duluth, Minn., (J. T. A.).—A. B. loans but to concentrate instead on conveniences for boxing aiid swimforts are needed to overcome all obPrize play, "Hell Bent Fer Heaven." | officially closed the School. Kapphn, Jewish newspaperman of an increase in the French supply of stacles. Chapters to Launch MemberThe list is published in the New York' One hundred and fifty children ming. Dulutiy was elected commander of gold which is causing considerable ship Campaigns Prior to the.' The constructions will be so planmarched in the procession OrpheumThe jubilee month will serve as a the American Legion of Minnesota "Evening Post.r annoyance to other international Pinero, famous British-Jewish dra- j ward and there spent a comfortable, ned as to make the stadium Annual Convention call to spur world Jewry to strenghen at the closing session of the legionfinanciers." '..'-.[ matist, was born in London in 1855 j delightful afternoon. naires convention here. in Winter as well as in Summer. the Jewish population in Palestine. The Referee approves of the policy and is descended from a Sephardic : — • which the Rothschilds advise for New York.—Hadassah, the Womfamily. He started out as a lawyer, —^ * % s-*^ t /* <* ( , France as protection • for the inter- en's Zionist Organization of America, ests of small French investors and has announced that it will hold its but soon kft the legal profession for P a S STIC I Cl O t 1 6 X 6 0 . cites as a similar example Paul sixteenth annual convention on Octothe stage. As an actor Pinero was j Warburg; prominent American finan- b -19. not successful, and he soon turned His cier and brother of Felix M. Warthoughts to play-writing. Since then During the months prior to the burg, who warned the American pub- convention the organization will conJerusalem, (J. T. A.).—While re-j demands, the government believing Cleveland, (J. T. A.).—A new nav the Avukah is confined to the aca- he has had a phenomenal success as a lic before the Wall Street debacle of centrate its efforts on increasing its playwright, bis plays being produced jecting the demand of the Arab dele- that the Arabs did not feally ask tional Zionist youth organization demic youth,, the Junior Hadassah is last October against financial trusts membership. The wherever English is spoken. Some gation for a parliament, Lord Pass- for much. 304 chapters Masada will be launched here' limited to- young women and within which he said were merely stock throughout the country are conduct-' of his best-known dramas include i n the course of his report at thj: British colonial secretary, did The of tthe the Zionists districts • themselves ; ^ ^ tthis g FalL e aaim m of L pools. ' - . • • ' . • "The Second Mrs. Tanqueray," "Trel- field, equivalent of meeting, according to the Alif Rfc. the Arabs the there is too diversified a group to offer Should world credit collapse the campaigns to secure new mem- m o T e m e n t ^ t 0 enroH" young men awrcey of the Wells," and "Mid-Chanoffer a congenial, social' atmosphere j nel," "Sweet Lavender" and "Lady the Jewish Agency or a restricted I Auni Bey, quoting Georges ClfemeivRothschilds and France alone would membership ^ t C°mawards Zetat!011 at ^ the ^ Zannual J! between the ages of 20 and Sfr in; Legislative body, Auni Bey, reported c a u a s sa ymg, "'Woe unto the nation the Zionist organization bT Aitierica.: to young people, and; to admit of a 1 Bountiful." escape unscathed as a result of the convention. to the last meeting of the Palestine electing silence", declared that tnt These young men as a~ group.will Rothschild's policy, the Referee con"The discouragement in Zionist participate in all of the activities of Arab Executive, according to & full i "hesitation of the British was (hit cludes. . circles owing to the breach among the Zionist districts &n& pay their report of the proceedings of the j t 0 a fear o f giotiist propagsjul* the leaders has been dispelled by the dues to the Z.O.A: but will retain- a meeting contained in the Syrian Even France is unwilling to union of forces effected by the last corporate existence of their own and paper, Alif Ba, supplementing the the anger of the Zionists." Zionist convention," Miss Benjamin enact their own program of activifragmentary items in the local ArNew York, (J. T. A.).—A call for says Kabbi Goldstein further, "I abic press. said, "and Jewish women througout ties which is to be chiefly cultural.. deem it highly desirable that a Conthe country, as well as men, are A local chapter of Masada is al- a conference of all the Orthodox The British governmen t refused | Favor Remarriage Right The Sam Beber Chapter. Number showing a renewed interest in ZionJewish Feedrations in this country ference composed of the representaready functioning in Cleveland. At the request for a democratic govern100 sponsored a. successful outing ist aims. - Hadassah is the largest tives of the Directors or Executive the last convention of the Z.O.A.* held ment in Palestine, Auni Bey told the Sunday at Venice. The outing, which national, body of women Zionists in Committee of the Yehiva, the Union unifying Orthodox Judaism in Amerin Cleveland a resolution recognizing Executive, according to the report was a couple affair, was attended by the world. In conducting a broad ica has been issued by Rabbi Her- of Orthodox Rabbis, the Union of in the Alif Ba, because it feared it New York, <J. T. A.).—The thmpthe Masada as an integral part of thirty-four. Orthodox Jewish Congregations of program of medical and public health the Z.O.A. and pledging support to bert S. Goldstein. ands of Jewish women whose hut*would cause conflicts. The day was spent in swimming, work in Palestine for all creeds it is "I believe that around the Yeshi- America, the Union of Sephardic it was adopted. ^ _ . r "We did not petition but vigorous- bands have disappeared during th* picnicking, and indoor baseball. A doing a constructive .work that has va, a united Orthodox Jewry in this Congregations, the Rabbinical CounThe name Maijada comes from the ly demanded that Lord Passfield as- late World War should not be confeature of the day was the initation received worldwide praise. Our activcountry can be established, compris- iV the Rabbinical Association, and sidered as "Agunoihs" and shon?£ on the Venice beach of the newly ad- ities have a'special appeal to women, name of a town which was the" last ing all our diverse elements," says Young Israel be held as soon as pos- sured us of a fresh offer not to be free to remarry, declares & resolufortress in Palestine.to yield to the disappoint oar hopes," Atmi Bey demitted members to the chapter. Rabbi Goldstein. "This does not im- sible. and we hope during the present camtion adopted recently by the t . - ply the absorption of one organiza"In my opinion a conference of clared. The South Omaha contingent and paign, to add thousands of active battering rams of Borne.'.-. ence of the World Union for The organizers of the jiew Zionist tion by another, nor the loss of iden- tikis kind, for which arrangements their "dates" were too strong on the workers." Alfred Roch, the Christian Arab gressive Judaism in London, Each chapter has a special mem-1 EK>up point out that there is a tity on the part of any of the con- shall shortly be made, can make member of the delegation that went I s r e s s l v e , * T ? T ' " ^ Z T " ^ diamond for the Omahans, capturing J gave _ a me differentA version a closely contested game, 8 to 4. f suchh a movement t because b e stituent bodies, but-that each group powerful strides bership chairman and a corps of as- 5 l for . to i . TLondon, „., „;„„ I was submitted to that body by towards bringing World Organization of Jewish Wowi of Lord Passfield's statement, nameHenry Sterling was in charge < of sistants to'| carry;^oirt jjiemlbershipV* ^:..;«dstent-.Zionist- '«roops:-do. not in the party shall do the work outor'er out of the chios existing in ly that the institution that the Brit- en, of which Mrs. Alexander Kolit;; the* .activity. Following the picnic, programs. Bailies, 'roass meetings,'.»«** **« creeds of those interested lined for it by the United counsel, ear casip, and strec£then the cause ish government vras prepared to is President and Miss "E«tell# U, h£7 group: /went to the Omaha Heb- a .variety of Bocial events and per- .^ **** ^Sasaaa. numbers, -unity and harmony. " ?" : ", <, grant did not fall short of the Arab Stexnberger is Secretary. V" Citfb "affair. "In order to accomplish this aim," of religion in America." sonal canvases Dfffll be heldV • | The Young Jodeans sise too yonn|r,

STODYjiEPORTS

KEREN HAYESOD TO CELEBRATE TENTH BIRTHDAY

MARVIN TRELLER RETAINS HIGHLAND CLUB COlf tROWN

Neu> Zionist Administration Issues Statement of Aims

STUDY

JO PAIBTlrlAN CHEATED

rDUCYOFpNCH

ATHLETIC STADIUM

F M B FINANCES

HADASSAH WILL CONCLAVE ON OCTOBER 19

WOES IS ffl "50 BEST PLAF LIST Orpheum Party Brings

Play School to Close

Jewish Newspaper Man Heads Minnesota Legion

Masada, New Zionist Youth Group, Is to Be Launclied

Century Chapter of A. Z. A. Holds Outing

Jewish Agency Equivalent

Rabbi Issues Call for Conference of all Orthodox Jewish Groups

For Abandoned Jewesses


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PAGES^THE, JEWISH PRESS,ffclDAtf, AUGUST 15, 1930 ^

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tail shines, out £lea?l^; Judaism is and his Judsnsrh, \tf an unfair attack. Prayer, 'how ttjfcefr th& Christian outspoken in its ' assertion ' that it We say of it that >hat attack is; the world' would be. If 1 quoted a pas- stone^, "Ai it is writt?n'% and ^hich as ex-eryone knows^ tneans in the l j th i h It >has i no creed most pathetic thing that has hapwelcomes the llight. sage of Shakespeare and said that I "written books", the Old Tectament. behind which it can hide when it pened to the Jewish cause. It is had read it in The tlibune this wants to assume a dictatorship. Ju-pathetic that when a people lias lived morning aft attributed it/ therefore, To that have we ..in |his day been subjected! * ; / " : daisntis urgent that they who accept its life a s ' the Jewish people has J to The Tribune, that would be paralAnd so Judaism meets the intelit shall know' ami' corfsiderj "that they lived it, with a tremendous heroism, lel to Walter Lipman, a son x>i Islectual world with he necessity of who would live it shall study it day with a fine loyalty to certain ideals after day, because Judaism does not ar.d has in the preservation of those rael, an intellectual of today, quoting facing two attacks; it faces the fair even make the attempt to define it- iutals literally gone through fire and from the Book of Psalms but attrib- attack, the attack which the intelself, it rather lives itself. This is torture—it is pathetic, I say, that uting it to the Boob of Luke. If he lectual today makes upon religion in C. the ideal of Judaism during the tbe children of this people should be had read Luke and I hope he did,general, and then faces the unfair but that makes it worse—'if he had course of its history. so ignorant of the entire past, of the read Luke he would have seen that attack of JeveE in the midst of Israei Of course it has been attacked ancestry, as to lay charges against Luke was a juster gentleman than himself who are ignorant of their fairly and many times unfairly. It Judaism which cannot in all fairness Walter Lipman because Luke saye Jewish sources end their traditions has been attacked fairly—we cannot be laid against it; or, what is even when he quotes this passage "Theand their history, and then re-echo 1 the words of other groupe seemingly resent it—by those who had their worse, pass the whole example of tbe : own philosophy of life. They would putt by—leave it and be satisfied stone which the builderB have reject- emphasise them. turn to Judaism and would say of the w'th an ignorance of its past. That ed hath become the chief corner(Continued on page 7) religion of the Jew that it has ahas happened to us; we have been By DR. GERSON B. LEVI of Temple Issiah Israel,. Chicago JACK W. MAKER, Attorney Court House God who is cold; he.is an embodi- condemned unheard, unknown. LEGAL NOTICE The, story of Judaism a s i t de- In other words, the school of rabbis iiig "phrasd the- hope for a-universal ment of justice-and justice is cold. we-have taken 'special They would say, for example, when D What else shall we say about Lipveloped out of t h e experiences of the had life as its laboratory and hadmankind' andm t r i ?£ c t ) u r t , o * Douglas County, To Harry Fitshugh I'aj-nc whose and;wlde- considerable^ enthus- they talk , fairly,, that; Judaism and man's "Preface to Morals" but that Nebraska. Jewish people i s a long one to.tell f humanity as an achievement in view. effort,-" place of residence is unknown nnd upon T ; ; i m * w i r t o s e e that/theije^ish -whom personal sen-ices of snmihonB enniasm a*s weir,-to-see that/t it is a slap in the face of an ancestry And when we come to the middle b u t if it-.were necessary t o . p o t t h a t its God are not interested, in fact, in not be had, defendant: : ; bjt a child who has kept bis .hand igages we find the same cry for knowl-. Mft^PHil^ t i)e You are hereby notified that on the 3rd . story into, not .more, than a hundred the individual soul; they have little day of May, 1030, Sarnh Margaret Pnviie words , I would say that, beginning gdge; the old philosophies were beingher petitionbaBalnBt you t£, therefore, the mark of intellect tc say -.about tha salvation of the norant? . What else can we say ?nS fWiFlJX*the 1 s t f l r t v i , " Court O f Douglng County, about the book which talks about resurrected, Out of the shadows, with-rtbe striving and t h e struggle is the ability to give and to take soul, but:they have very much to say Nchrnskn, Docket SMS, No. 331. the oliject prayer of -which petition is to ol.tain of a people, finding expression in the Plato and Aristotle were speaking and the- instruments of the intellect about the community,- about social Imorals, talks about the striving of nnd a divorce from you on the Wounds of legislation for a n agricultural folk, again; out of the halls long forgotten an open eye with an open but a dis- responsibility* Always they say, thethe human race, talks about the fight, desertion, extreme cruelty nnd non-siiDr but, carrying t h e message of justice the* feet of the philosophers were cerning mind, of Judaism we ought Jew speaks in the tesm "We", rarely of the human race for justice, for poft. You are required to answer Enid petition with i t s Jresult, peace, and going on coming forth and men were compar- to ba able to say that it has been does the Jew Bay in his prayers " I " fairness, for/ equality, for the chance ?" o r b e f ore the 22nd day of September, or snid petition ngainst rou will be t o a n adjustment for t h e commercial ing their present belief and knowl- characterized by the intellect. If you and rarely does he say in his prayers to live, and does not quote or does 3830, taken as true. the opening of s Moodern s rfll n » Margnret I'aync, Plaintiff. life -and for a scattered community edge with the beliefs and the knowl- want an example, if you want to see"What becomes cf me?" We have not know one single book which a Jew in this day has written. And edge that the masters of old had Hebrew School at b u t retaining and heightening t h e cry how the whole attitude of Judaism answers to these things, which upon then the book passes the Jew by as beautifully and, may we say, everABRAHAMS * O'COSJrOR, Attorneys for justice and equality,; then going . 3509 Dodge St. works out, let me in. a fey/, words in many occasions yre have .made. They 499 Brandels Theatre Bide. on t o a- statement in a new adjust- lastingly phrased,.. Jewish teachers a parenthesis put the difference be- who have their, own opinions and thsy if the Jew had no share in this inPBOBATE >"OTICE For children 0 to JH—clrsses nccord-' ment for a n industrial life and a g ewere among the * first to welcome tween • a sermon as it is preached in who live by .their- opinions must be tellectual world Which was being In the matter Ing to tho school i:ge of eaob child. of the estate of JtEBKCC built up? How pathetic it is when ^hese old masters with an age-long CASTLEMAN, rtecenBed. and still bearing-the ideal Of justice, a Christian pulpit and a. sermon^.as j-eady to be criticized by thosa who Advanced Notice is hereby given; Thnt the cred-^fot contlrmants of •fairness, equality and humanity, tradition of inquisitiveness. The Jew- it is preached in a Jewish pulpit. have other opinions and choose to an author quotes a passage from the Iters of snld decenned will meet the exe- : '•".) to 17 yeurB of nge. eutrices of sairt estate, before me. Conntv I arid then shot through in all i t s ish teachers -asked- the ..Greek-teachr A Christian sermon is given by - one live by them. Judaism-would,be theBook of Psalms as an introduction Judge of Douglas County, Nebraska, at tho j iKinif in time l>r tcr.cliiup in County Court IJoom. lu snid cWntv mi I I he luntriintce th« children ini(lerstory with a longing for a united ers: What have, you to say and what who has one personality to exalt, and. last :t6 resent thisj because as I say,printed in special type to the second the 2(ith day of September, 1030, nn'd on stnnd nnd pn'scnting H •lnotltru vtcv.' of Isrnel's crentipii. mankind, w e would then have t h e have you to give? What have you having exalted hepleads that they it prefers the -open mind . and the volume in ths "Preface to Morals" the 2fltn dny of Kovember, 3031). at 5) o'clock A. M.. each day, for the purpose of preand quotes it as a passage from the senting their clnims for examination, ndstory of t h e Jewish people and Itsto tell and what have you to con-who hear him might follow the pat-discriminating, mind. Applying the latest Book of Luke. If anyone tried to do lustment Bnd nllownnce. Three months are religion. - '••-;, struct? And Jewish teachers list- tern, of that personality. That per-; cMowed for the creditors to present, their methods of Psychology and jjeii. tut's; ami "With™ But in these tiays we have been that thing in general literature—if claims, from the 23rd dny of August, 1930. soliality in itself is splendid, but But if you will consider these huntlr BEYCE CKAWFORP, I, for example, quoted a passage of Pedogogy confronted in the House of Israel, piea"ding and exhorting and exalting S-l—3T County Judge. red words, you will find t h a t back «£Psalms from the Book of Common when we discuss what ails ths Jew the qualities of the Jewish KEOISTEIt YOl'K CHILDULI.' them, perhaps better, surrouhdiug- suit, a rieWtfdftl^nientin VvhichJUda STAL5IASTER i BEBER, AttorncyB IMMEOIATELV G50 Omaha National Bank Bldg. and going through the entire wording,J sta. tqok^by: nght. of* its being^apart pulpit. For he who stands in the 8TALMA8TEK *• BKBEB, Attorneys ; Omaha. Kebr. there i s . one ideal. That ideial->'I bf.* humanity's' birthnght tfieyachieve- Jewish pulpit is not a preacher, in 650 Omaha National Bank B i d e XOTICE OF INC0KrORAT10> OF Omaha, Jfebr. should like to emphasize a s •jm$itjroi£t^^ i f "tftV outside world he is not even a - ' ••". "SEBV-C-TRASSFEB CO." j NOTICE OV -CHATSXf MORTGAGE SALE pastor. He stands in the pulpit as a sider t h e clash.of intellectuals": Graduate of the TTiiivcvsity of KNOW ALL MEN BT THESE PKES-J is hereby ^givemthan on the 13tli I teacher and his relationship with the1 •day Notice ENTS. thnt the niiderslgned have formed n | NebrnEka and its Teachers College Judaism. In t h e early period when: Fixtures 6 Supplies of September. 1830. at 10 30 o'clock' corporation nnder the laws of the state of f 'outside is also as teacher, and ! A. M., at the Capitol Garage, 202 North i the biblical writers finally i Nebraska. The name of this corporation ! pe2n5ed;:tdr;be p<it!of.r.aHgnmeBfe'withWEbster 331S Electrical Contractors | 19th Street. Omaha. Nebraska, the under-' shall be "Serv-U-Transfer Co." with its I in stating their thought about tts; "~, own"^'glorious ^traditions; ;• One "fo'rtpthat reason Ms title is not pas-signed will Bell at pnMic auction, to the i principal place of business at Omaha, Nebr. { highest bidder for "cash:-' • The general nature of the business to be > religion there was t h e clear span |thinki^ ; of?that' pa^fcurarjpeVibd'ta' tor,snof reverend, is not father, even, One Essex Sedan, 1929. Serial No. transacted and the object and purpose for • ; l< call: "Thou shalt know} thou 'shalt i • 1043743; "MotorNo. 1112G77. which fills corporation is organized nnd Ufe -ithhiks'-of' though We should not complain if we 'covered by a, chattel mortgage in favor established eball be to haul, carry, transl turn these things over steadily a n d ' lot Midland National Life Insurance Comfer, transport, truck, convey, ship, or to I were called that—but his title is | pauy, sigued by William A. Anderson-; said contract, arrange or otherwise negotiate. continually' in t h y heart" and rrifnd p'dur their coriiiibuticm:--ThiB'' Rabbi, "teacher. And sometimes vvejj mortgage being dated September 11, 192!) for the hnuling, carrying, transferring, I ! > t iV< and thou shalt understand!" und having been filed'W'the office of the transporting, trucking, conveying, or ship-1 accepts them:'ai|; fldw^.f **' * forget "ihijsydistinction and we quote' County Clerk of Douglas County. Nebraska ping of any and all kinde and character I Organist at Temple Israel surV^of kno^texige~:^ets of goodB, wares, merchandise, products j When we come uponVthe second irj Jewish groups that old saying of,, on October 2. 1029. and any and all Other kinds of personal ! • SaW snte will be fee the purpose of foreperiod surely we o u g | t to -know t h a t wpflld: impair* its^fimrrty'fill J jth> fate Charles Eliot "of Harvard closing said mortgage for costs of sale and property fronl' points originating in the! Instructor in Pipe Organ State of Nebraska or the Stnte of Iowa. I , nil accruing costs and for the purpose of < there emerged out; of-the striving of: Tyniferslty, that to his knowledge nd| and Piano and ending lit points in the Staie of Iowa | I satisfying, the amount -..now due thereon, i or the State of Nebraska; -and to leasp, j that period and7its~rrren t h e one inr, JIJO.OO; that no suit or other pro-j soul-bad'b^een saved the first ,to-wu: buy. own or runt nuy and nil kinds of i at law hare; been instituted to i WEBSTER. Fall Season Starts Sept. 1 stitutirai upon w-hichrhumahity todays real esinte nnd to mortgage or encumber t twenty'fminutes. Well, feKt^e Jewish ceedings recover said debt or any part thereof. j the Kime in any manner whatsoever or as lays iias greatieJ8t Ihope, t h e ^ s c h o ^ . MIDLAND NATIONAL LIFE \ 516 Karbach Blk. AT. 2318 not anisftus: to save the same may be hecessnry to the carrying XXJsDRANCE ,CO— Mortcrasee out of the princlpnl pnrposPR above enFor ifcl:was jjgHtt^^^rabbi^c;;: period? , '. i»us««- I teach 8-8—3T umerated nnd to do nny nnd all things ! that fo^.the-fir>t;;tfeie in h t t o a n hist-fj pertaining to the cufrylng on Of the busimay MONSKY, KATLIillAN * GBODlNSKf

The Clash of Jxidg^m ana trie Intetleem

Jewish P e o p l e Have Stood Out for Justice, Ecjuality, and Fairness and H a v e Longed , c , for a United Mankind j . . v.

Gire Y m ChiM A Modern, Enlightened Jewish Education

Announcing

H.MENDELSON

VERNON C. BENNEH

-

ory thejpnbjyig^^cltooli was jjpenfjd-end childrenr.^kwfc'gf ^yniipiswere.' expected to come 1 i^^feSfit^Btt.'tJQ' KtioW. 'JSfhen" in additipn-we - iionBider thei-detaitsof t h a t &bWnie; period a i i d ' t h d ' j i % terials aPtrVe^tabbihic learning we ''. _5B5»,Oina1ia Rational 'Bohk SOSfL : will know'^h'at-the'education'that was called fbr l ;was not a n education-fn theology.' I t was a n educatioon in the Notice i;s hereby given that on 'thfe 1st way of life, in t h e relationships b e - . day of'August,-1D30,'the partnership doing business ua the Omahn tobacco Company, tween man and man, t h e relationships( consisting of Max Venger, Moses A. Venger { and Abe Veneer, has been dissolved nnd of m a n and t h e community, the rela- ' all of the liabilities of said partnership tionships of t h e rich a n d t h e poor. havee assumed by "31. Veuger & t'

PLAY GOLF at THE JUNIOR COUNTRY CLUB Miniature Golf Links flarney Streets Farnam and 33rd and

TO! NATIONAL ACCESSORIES, INC.

"Everything for the Auto" -

2501 farnam—AT. 6524

GRAHAM'S RICH—CltEAMt

ICE CREAM iuticbLAit I'EOPLE : Phone JA. 437S

Harry H. Lnpldtis. President- 'Xreas.

OMAHA FIXTURE AND

SUPPLY CO.

COMPLEtE STORE AND OFFICE OUTFITTERS Vtt> Occupy Over T»,eOO Kqiiare Ftet_

Southwest Corner. Eleventh and DbiiRlas Stfeets , . Phone

St—8*13-30

• -

• •

• • -

-

-

-

• >

-

' • • ' • '

^JaBoat all can^^ d,f|^ott(^th^tSfeharles Eliot ' In the County Court of Douglas County, 3 N tti^ptV.ye^fs^ fnsrvHarvard Univer- Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of ELLEN i^, -cai^culuni- and say that man liAWLESS, decen«ed: -AH-persons interin snld matter ere hereby notified, shi&'^teach^t^t' twenty minute per-estea thnt on the cth day of ^ucust, is>3o, Nemuiods:' We teach in the Jewish pulpit, S ' n g " ? ^ *&?%$^miSSSJfio?0^ <o»int tiled herein be settled and allotted, they may preach in the Christian and that she be dlscbnrged front.her-trust as executrix nnd that n hearing wilF be pulpit. Bad. on eald petition before enid Contt'oU 30th. dny of August. 1030, and that if Through this whole matter one de^ the yon fail to appear before said Conrt on the v

MAX VENGKH, MOSRS A. VENGEK, ABE VENGEK.

STAL.UABTEHfirDEBER, Attomeyi 650 Omaha Nat'l Bank Bids. NOTICE OF I In the County Court of Douglas County, , Nebraska. j In the matter of the estate of ALEX LIFSMAN, deceased. ! All persons interested in said estate are Hereby notified that n petition line been tiled iii said Court alleging thnt sattf dee'eused died leaving no lust will and pray* Ing for administration, upop his estate, HU<1 that u hearing will be had on snid petition before tmid court on the 20th (lay of Auguse. 1030, and that if they fail to appeat at said Court on the said 201 h day of August, 1030, nt 0 o'clock A. M.. to contest saitl petition, the Court mny^ grant the same nnd grant lulniiiilgfratidn of snid estate to Philip 11. Klutzulct or eome'offier suitable person and proceed to a settle' ment thereof. BK1CB CRAWFOflD. TS-8—3TCounty Judge. Law Offices STALMASTEK & Bt9BER, Attorneys 630 Omahft National Bank Bide. Omahn, Nebraska NtftlCE OF irtCOItFORATION OF "M. VJSSGEtt & SONS, INC." KNOW ALL MKN BY TllESE PUESBNTS that the undersigned hare formed u eotporotfon under the laws of the State of Nebraska. The name of this cofporatlou shall be "M. Venger & Sons. Inc.", With its principal place of business at Omnhii, Nebraska. The general nature -of the business to be transacted and the object and purpose fof which this corporation Is brrfdiilied nnd established shall be to buy. Bell and distribute cigars, tobaccos, cigarettes, dandies, soft drinks, smokffs' tu])plleR, novelties and miscellaneous Items of personal property of all sorts and to do any &hd AH things pertaining td the carrying on of the snid business including the rlcfit fo own rtiitl hold rval estate. The authorized capital stock shall be $150,000.00 nhd all of said stocE shhll be tomriibti and of the pa* rnltte of S100.00 ier sharp, and all of sakl stock shall be JttJly ttaid Up and non-nssessable. SAla stock ihay be Issued for Oasli, real estate, personal property or personal services. The corporation shall commenre doing business upon the filing of its articles •flrltn the County;C!t»fS of Douglas County, Nebraska, nnd shall continue lor a. period of fifty ye-afS ffont Bald dAlfe. TBe hlRhtst ftniodnt of irt'lebrednesa shnll not exceed two-thirds of its cubital stock but this restriction sh.-ill not ap^y to indelitedness secured by mortgaged or liens upon any of the corporate property. - The affairs of this Corporation shall he managed by n Board of Directors consistIng bt not less ihnn ttvd mejfibere. The annual meeting of the corporatibn Shall be lieid oft tfie eEcortd Tirtfetlay in Janunry ttf j •nclj rca*. at which meeting .the stock-1 joldera shall elc*t a Boartl of Dlftctofe ftHd therenpori the. Board shall elect aj Ptesldent, a Vlc6 President, a Secfetrify And n Treasurer. Any two of said Offices may be held by one and the same person. ThPSe nttlelM rtinf be ftltiihdeil at nny " Ot special .roeetlnp of thp stockb y !t Vwb-JMrQs vftte of t h e Otot-

ABE SKLAR

Bald SOth day of August. 11330, at 0 o'clock A. M., and contest said petition, the Court may grant the prayer of said petition, enter n decree of.heirshlp, and iri&Ke such othtr and further orders, allowances nird decrees, an td this-Court inay seem proper,

ness nbovedescribed. The authorized enp.Ital stock tJhnll be $10,000.00 and nil of said stock shall be common end ot tbe T>«r j value of $100.00 per share, and nil of said Stock ehnll l>e fully pnid for when issued and shall be non-asseKsable. Said stock j

termln«d.

r

8-8—3T

BodyVand Radiator Sfiop 1919 Clark St.-^W£. 0200 Jbody frqrit, fehder ght g, r'ftdlnloi" repaying, fecoflng

and fecaeriweldlng. ^11 work guarnntced. Keasonnlils rates,

SALES LETl'EitS MULTIGRAPH1NG MIMEOGRAPHING PRINTING Commercial Duplicating Co,

Coifilty Judge.

. KATLEMAX * O«OBIJf8Kl' t«raey 737 OmahaAtNat'I BanU Hid p. NOTICE OF PROBATE « I L L In the County CourVo't POougltis County, NeUrnsfca. x In the matter of the estate of ACKBKMAN, deceased. All persons interested in said estate are hereby notified thnt. a petition has been Hied in said Court, prnylng tar the prbtmte of n Certain instrument now on tile in said Court, purporting to be the last will and testament of snid deceased, nnd that a hearing will be had on said petition before Bnld Court on the 2t>ih dny -of Aujfitcf, 193«, nnd that if they foil to appear ht said Couft on the said 20th day 6f AugHfit. a»30, nt 0 o'clock A. M., to contest the probate of said will the Court mny nllow and probate said will aiid grant adnilniB-' trntion of said estate to Esther Ackennan or some other suitable person and proceed to a settlement thereof.

BKVCE CKAWFOHB,

1311 Dodge 8t!—JA. 4854

-s

BLUE LINE Express & Transfer Co. ' - lAll-kins of Hauling H So, 10th : ^St.

-.-.. A T . 6405

TAYLOR GRAIN CO. 737-38 Grain Exchange BIdg.

SUGAR — GRAIN STOCKS and BONDS —Private Wfres— JAckson 3403—AT. 2008

PEERLESS CLEANERS "4420 Florence Blvd. . KE. 1500 Tha Home Wlln A Ret>etatSon

1 American Laundry 2808-10 Ouminff St. HA 0881

8-8—3T

County Judge. * GttODMfSKY NOTICE OF ISCOHPOKATIOX OF .

Standard Shoe Repair Co. J..L. KRAGE, Proprietor " N E W FOR OLD" 1619 Farftarri St.—AT. 8481

SCOTT-OMAHA TENT AND AWNING CO.

.», Canva* Covers, Tents. Cdtlip snppllf*- All RihSi IS «nrt Hiwnfd AT. 14»S

S AND REMOVED Bolt Hose Mending Shop Uiie-iMy servlt<e ef while y e s wait — Moll Order* I'fomptly Serriced—533 BecuritleB UldRi—AT. 3921

MSD WEST ENGHAViNG COTIHC AT» ANT'C 313 SC

For 50 Years Your Towel Man Omaha Towel Supply Co;

may be issued for cash or for renl or per- j

to the end .that.all matters pertaining to eitid estate may Tie "ESMin?" settledfindfle-

Announces tjie opening of a

n p h e r t n l i t o fe«bfecH!W<1 tfiBlr nftmei) t h i s Ut flay o f A ^ ^

4ft tbp r*we»ce eft SAM BKBKK. 4T—8-15-30.

-

787 Omaha KrtHftink B U [ , ^ o t R e "by Pubiicafion'onr ifet ltion for weSeHlcment Of Final Administration Acconnt

Iuc."i a corporation.

illlHH

*

K F E I I 2 A N COMPANI

Notice^ is-.hereby 23ve'tfthflt the undersigned hnTe formed n porporntion.. The name of the cofpftjatiotr is•" ur.iAt.-KHl»SriLMAN' COMPANY and its principal place of. business shiill be the City of Ulnnhii. Tho ebfttdrution is nuthdtized to Call Our Phone for Service maintain and operate n lumber nnd coal iihd Building matertiil businpss ami to buy Weal, letter Advertising and Bell nil itehiB haWlled in connection with such a business;'either wholesale or AT. 2936 307 JPaxton Block retail. It is niUhorieed ro etignge in <he contracting and building business, and to bay. sell, lease iind deal in all kinds of reaL of personal property in order to carry out the corporate objects. The total ntithotirWl cnpitrtl stock is STiCMKXWK), pnr vnltie $100.00 per shnfe: $30 000.(K) shall be comtndn nml ?20,000.00 jshali be preferred, to. be fully pnltl -when IBBUPII and non-eswssable. Prpferrtd stock shall receive divid- , are using Silhouette fof Reducing, Arthritis, and ends nt the rate of 0% per annum. These I dividends Shall life cumulative and nil Bnc.h i : , Rheumatism dividends shnli be pnid 1)efore nny dividAT. 3635 ends nrv paid Cn the ee«im<$h s'tocrfet After Elks Club payment, of dividends to ttw preferred, the AT. 3911 Third Floor balance of the eltfuings shnil lie payable to, tne holdef* of the comnjon stock,.; In^thej ctent of liquidation or dissolution^owncrSj 6t the prefefWd feteclt shall he' nflia Befoteany payments nre made to holder*, of. the commoii sfdt-ti The corporntWrt shaH commence business upon theflHh^oV2t,1l6t a i ' tides with the County Clerk «"d S? n l i:i : b n ; liftnte.•iiftJIl lKfc. tit> hlChfst «**»«*?. ?* tmtebtednes* Bhall not exrwil two-thiras The/Sanitary Laandry l o t the1 flUtho*is«a cnpltiil. This *h«ll not Of All mtr\ct? •aUlily tor nnr Iftrtebtraness Secnred^by;.Pjgrt* Bilge. The affairs of the corporation, snail 1H* ntlntlhtst*fetl by n BdaM of;-not. Wsa thnn three »"•?*» oiherwise-nrovidwl.fof* The Bdnfrt Bhnll elect front jhrif 'ntttoj** tt 1'fMlthMiti VlcS-Preildenti••*&*# Treasurer., Annual meetings *hn e fhe secb«d Wedhestl&v IH J«U)»tt?3f, lowiiifijiame the Directors shall elect onicerS. Tfte Vote of « % « . atttftilih* stock 1* r«ililrcd to »ni pose of all or n *»'\i*Hiiflnl P * ^ °

M ultlgfaph Letters Mailing

PELVAY BATHS

Fonal property nt the reasonable vnlne) thereof. The corporation shftll <wnittience business lipOn the fillliC Of HH (lTticlPS With the County Clerk of Douglas County. Ne»>ra8kn, and nhall continue for n period of fifty years from said date. The highest amount of Indebtedness shall not rxceed two-third* of Its cnpitnl stock b«t this re^ striction shall not apply to indebtedness •ecufed by mortgages upon nny of tha corporate property. The affairs of this corporation shall be uinnaged by n Board of Directors consisting of not less thnn two members. The annnnl meeting of the corporation shall be held on the first week day of January of each year nt which meeting the stockholders Khali elect a TSonrd of Directors and thereupon the Board shall elect a President, « vice-PreBldent, a Secretary and a Treasurer. Any two of snid Offices may be held by one find the same person. These nrticlPB may _ be nmended ot any regular or specinl meeting of the 8tockfiorders only by tne unanimous vote of nil of the outstanding stock. IN WITNESS WHEUBOF. the ,T»«rtiee have hereunto set their hands this 18th j day of July. ltto. fl0LDSBJBK<s WILLIAM STALMASTEK. IN THE PHESKNCK OF: •

IUVIN STALMASTEE. 4T—7-23

209 So. 11th SL

JA. 052S

Popular Uniform Shoppe Dressmaking—Alterations Uniforms to Order Sophia Monovitz, JAckson 1328 328 Brandeie Theatre BIdg.

LAUNDERS & DRY CLEANERS 2401 No. 24—WE. 60W

ALltfA8*ER * BEBKK, Attorneys, 656 Omaha National Bank Hldg. Omaha, r>cbr. NOTICE OF IKCORPORATION OF "KASTEttS *KXTII-E CO.*' KNOW AfcL SiEN BT THKSE PltESENTS, that the undersigned have formed a corporation Hnder the law* of the state of Nebraska. The t n e of this corporation shull be "Eastern Textile Co." with its principal place of business nt Omnhn, Nebraska. The general nature of the business to lie transacted nnd the object nnd purpose for which this corporation 18 orcaniked nnd established shiill. be to. lease, own. control or operate the business or businesses of wholesaling or retailing clothing nnd. general merchandise or to carry on the trade or business or tmimllocturinc, pcoducing, buj-ing, selllngi Importing, exporting and otherwise denting in any and nil kinds of clothing nnd merchandise; to buy. own, sell, lease, improve or otherwise denl in anrt with rent estate of every Kind or character nnd with personal property including the stocks and securities Of other Corporation*; to lonn and to borrow money and to make, execute nnd deliver mortgages, botids nna other .securities* to secure the repayment of nny money borrowed and to take as fteennty for the payment of any money lonncd mortgages, bonds and other securities, nnd to do nny and all other thingsftevessarj"to H«S enrrying ottt of th« principal pumpse jibove enumerated. The authorized tflpitnl stock shall be $35,000.00 ftnrt nil of enid Btoclt sbftU be common and of the par value of $100.00 per satire, and nil ot snltl Btoelc Bhall be f«lly imid for wBen issued nnfl BhaH be non-nssesgnble. Snld stock ma* be issued for CttBh o t for wal or Uefeonal property at the rensonaMe value thereof. The edrpBrnflofl shall comfnenee fcnfcin«>M upon the fiUng vt its nrticles with the County Clerk of Douglas County, Nebrasfen, and shnii «>nfin«c tot a twriod of Bfts years from said dote. 'Xhe highest amount ot indebteflness shtill ttot exceed tWo»tn!fdB of It! eapitftl stock but tots restriction sliall not apply to indebteanoss secored by mortgage* apon m»y of the Corporate property. The affairs of this corporation snail be Hinnaltsd by n Contd of IJireCTffrt ccntrttinif ef not less than two members. The nnnual moeting Of the cofporntiot! shall tm Ijeld o« the ftrst week 4atr• vt January of pnch year at Which meeting the stoMthoiderg Bhlill elect a Bonril ot tatector* ondl tfeerewpon the Board shall elect n Presidenr. a vfce-PreStaenti a Secwtnry andftTr*ststi*©r. Any two of Rnid eiScp* tnny be held by one nnd the same person. These afncleft d a y be amended nt nny regular or specinl meeting «f the Btockhohlers only by the unanimous vote of nil ot the ottt«tniWllne Stock, IN WITNESS WHBRBOF, tne putties have hereunto Bet their Btifcds this ftth day *•* »-»-, 1580.

Uncle Sam Laxative Food Okay Bran Flakes AND

AT ALL GROCERS Made by

Uncle Sam Breakfast Food Company Omaha

Nebraska

ininiiuiiiir

IN

HAMUBLSOS.

i T R H v F iK r tl2Sar^

4T—7-2T.

SPRAGUE FURNACES JOB FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORK BEltf FORCING STEEL

Katelman Foucdry & Mfg. Company Third Av«u and llth Street Phonee: 89 and 519 COUNCIL BLUFFS. TOWA


PAGE 3^-THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 15* 1930

BUSHMAN ACHIEVES

Just

WITH U. S. OH CO.

Cosden Liquid Gas have shown a decided gain since he took his position on bur executive staff." Bushman, throughout his sales-territory hai complete charge of thir-

Gains Made by the Company's Superintendent of Service Stations Williams- Bushman, superintendent of service stations for the U. S. Oil Company, has made a name for himself in the' oil industry, according to A- W. Anderson, sales manager of the organization. "Mr. Bushman has done exceedingly well since we placed him in the By PHILIP RUBIN capacity of superintendent of staThe seven million inhabitants of to his innate "hickishness." like a j movie or concert around Broadway, tions," said Mr. Anderson. "Although ~lhe-~-fiye- boroughs which. constitutetrue villager, the New York Jew is in-1 Thus Queens and Flatbush are only quite young, he has done very well A.meri/ca?j?^metropolis are. usually re.saraed~_ds Being the most cbsvwpol- capable of visualizing Jewish life in bed-rooms for him, places to which and our receipts for the sale of '•Han-minded on this continent. Mr. any part of the world but Gotham, and he goes to sleep, places in which he Rubin think? differently. Arguing , so when he reads in the press or when really doesn't live, sections which he that because New York is so big it\ speakers tell him of Jewish "tsores" never really-gets to know and which but the average New York Jew teaUy, is.forcedto resolve itself into hasn't the remotest idea about a a series yof innumerable villages, he, in Poland or Palestine or Russia* -he never get to know him. (If only type of Jew different from his own endeavors to show this "hickishness" regards such descriptions as mainly there weren't a million theatres and as he calls Ht,Hs affecting the Jewish "a lot of boloney." The Jewish im- other things to keep the New Yor- who is living in his own city. There communal life of the metropolis. migrant in New York who arrived ker "on the go" and to make him are about fifty thousand "Sephardic Jews, that is, Jews of Spanish-Por—EDITOR. here from the Old County but a few forget human things!) ; New York, ;N; Y.,.(population seven years ago Temembers, and therefore And so, when the New Yorker tuguese origin who come from Turkey, Greece and surrounding countmillipn, ^census.; of, 1930) has often does visualize, Jewish .conditions on been-attacked in the press and pulpit the other side. But by far the great-] really does decide to spend a Sun- ries, in New York City. Once in a1 of America, as. a city of-extravagance est number of New York Jews have* day at home and wants company, blue moon some of the "Ashkenazi" and sin-r-a veritable Sodom or Gom- by'this time.become sufficiently Amer- people, sociability, he is forced, time leaders become interested in them orrah, a city of masses of undigested icanized to have forgotten the Old and again, to fall, back on, the same and talk about them-as if they were or unassimilated, or un-Americanized World, and their American-born child- little group which he has known some "lost tribe in Israel". And foreigners, a city of perpetual rush ren—even» greater hicks than their for many years. In the course of the New York Sephardim on their \ and noise, a selfish, heartless city, parents—aavent had Anything' to bis business activities in Manhattan part seldom get aquainted with any he may be introduced to any number of the "Ashkonazim," though I must where one becomes spiritually lost in forget. of. people, but if he invites them, or the mob and can't find his way out. The Americanized, or even Ameri- they invite him, anywhere, it may s5>w that they, perhaps because they are a small minority in comparison Little Old New York has had to can-born, Jew who lives' outside of suffer and endure all of these attacks. New York and who feels at all Jew- be that they will go to a restaurant, with the Ashkonazim, and also perTo some of these it has given effec- ishly, does not think that Jewish life a theatre, a cabaret—but never to haps because they most of them are tive replies, while to others, more dif- begins and ends with his particular each, other's. . home. In Europe, more recent immigrants, are more ficult to deny,,,such as the accusations city. Evert" Chicago Jews—and there where they sit around for hours at interested in the Ashkonazim, than dealing with its noise, its rush and its are 850,000 of them—have no illusions a stretch, in cafes sipping beer and the Ashkonazim are in them. slums, it has had to admit and apolo- about Chicago being the "new Jeru- wine and "shmoosing", people can Thus New Yorkers in a spiritual gize for. It has proven by facts and salem," as have the Jews of-the East just as easily get acquainted in cafes sense really live in villages and have figures that it Is no more immoral Side, Bronx> Brownsville and Coney as in homes. But Childs Restaurant, really less of the- innate characterthan the. rest; of the country—as a Island. They regard their Jewish ac- though it may be a good place for istics of city people than have the matter of'fact, even better in this re- tivities as^ important—and I don't see •griddle cakes, is not, to my mind, inhabitants of even such moderatespect than many other American city why they shouldn't—but not as all-im- any' sort of substitute for a home sizes cities as • Seattle or Denver or or village and it consists in the main portant for Jewish -.life, everywhere atmosphere. Though you' may. be Houston. The New Yorker, in so of hard-working people who, though else, as New York -Jews seem to re- prepared to indulge in a two-hour far as his social contacts and his they may not be of old-stock-Puritan gard their expensive synagogues tete-a-tete in a New York restau- psychology are concerned, really or" Nordic"1 •'ancestry/ go to school, community centers* hospitals, orphan j rant. , t h e waiters there will lives in a small Polishr-Jewish vilspeak,. English (even though they do asylums, etc. and because they haven't make you feel, after you had gulped lage or in a small Italian village, or : say" "woise," and "hoid" and "Thoity- such a "swelled head" about their own down your meal, that as a.decent, in some hick town in the Irish Free respectable, God-fearing State. What's happening outside of thoid; 5tree^?'i.'and.knowvat least as local Jewish institutions, Jews of Chi- honest, much about American institutions as cago, Philadelphia, Detroit, and other American citizen arid New ' Yorker his small,' narrow," limited communthe average Protestant farmer boy cities contribute proportionately far you really ought to pay your tip ity interests him about as much as and girl in the South and in the West. more not-only to foreign .Jewish re- immediately ,and yield your table to it interests the people of Squeedunk But of one thing New York is seld- lief, but also to national Jewish insti- another customer. New York has neither the American home-life nor or Tallahassee. And. all because he om accused, and that is, that out of tutions in this country.'. .; is so impressed with the bigness of the European cafe-life. ' . " •_its seven• million inhabitants,'-at least Of course when X am speaking of his town that he thinks there isn't 6,900,000 consist of pure and unadul- the contributions of New York Jew- [ a thing in the world which it can '•> There must .be nundreds of thousturated; hicks. And I think that if ry to foreign and out-of-town Jewands of New York Jews who have learn from any other place on earth. writers," preachers' andT orators " of ish work, I also have iri mind such never seen the inside of a"'Gentile (Copyright 1930 by the Jewish Teleother cities really- want to get New princely contributors, as: Felix. War- home; and vice versa; -Not'only., that graphic'Agency, Inc.) 'York's goat, they ought.to continual- burg,'the Lehmans- and-"many other ly hurl this accusation in the face of who are a credit to-World'Jewry. America's prdud" metropolis, which But considering the vast number of "Jtisi'Arouruliht Corner from Everything** looks disdaiirfully upon, the other Jewish millionaires in New York, large.cities of the United States as such men can only be regarded as I 'part of the "profinces," or, even the. exceptions, few and far between, worse, as the "hinterland." All the which prove the rule. New York other accusations put together couldn't Jews have within the past'few years insult New Yorkers as much "as Ihis been spending millions••<of dollars one, that of. being bigger and ; better upon new and magnificent temples hicks than the inhabitants of any and community centers, and only the other American city. , It surprises me other day they opened a new two therefore that those who dislike New and a half million dollar Y.M.H.A. York don't speak oftener about this structure. Very igoocL But. how mental trait of New Yorkers. 1413 Douglas much have New York Jews contribAnd I can- give them plenty of uted for out-of-town Jewish pur-! points that will make their arguments poses during those very. years. If seem quite plausible. Americans in it weren't for a. very tiny group of general are accused by Europeans of which has the interests of the Jews being provincial-minded, that is, of all over the world at heart, the sum not being interested in, or curious raised by New York for foreign about, other parts of the world but Jewish philanthropies would be so their Own, and this is true to: a large small as to be ridiculous. As it is, . extent, in spite of the' enormous in- considering the size and wealth, of crease in foreign travel by Americans New York Jewry, its efforts in this within recent years. But at least all respect are nothing-to brag about. ,. America • is ; interested in, or curious Combined with the ,about, New York City. Is New York Though it may Eouna paradoxical Interested in the rest of the country? and like a studied effort to be smart, ^Hardly. The average New Yorker has I.nevertheless make bold to.say that •>Ifcn idea that the civilized worid ends one of the main reasons, why New - at the Hudson River, and that beyond \ York is such a "hick" town is be;lie only rural places, fields, meadows cause it. is too big; top...big and too .and ^pastures to which you go to cool busy. In such a huge, bustling comand Scientifically Blended :- off irom the terrific New York summer munity as New York, people have no in Omaha :heat. I know hundreds of New York- opportunity and no time to go out • era who think;they would be the most of their way to make new acquaint/miserable creatures on God's green ances, so that their actual social .footstool if they,had to live anywhere relations are confined to a very nar'; outside' of New. York, including such row circle of relatives and friends, "awfully lonesome*' places as Chicago, (and even this narrow circle never , (poor Chicago has only three and a really gets to" know one another is half million :• people)": Detroit, Los well). Practically every New YorAngeles, Sail Francisco,' New Orleans, ker that I know is, socially speaking, Denver, etc! Even the so-called in- always "stewing in his own juice." telligentsia of New York have: an New Yorkers, though they may be idea "that outside of. the:T metropolis neighbors living' next door to each there are no worth-while symphonies, other for- • years, never really get I - and ' no theatres, no operas, no museums, aquainted. Two. New Yorkers may no culture to speak of. meet in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, and be~ Our two inUUra brothers and sisters come friends for life. In the metin Israel,the Jews of New'York, are ropolis itself they never would have There is no other Coffee typicaL It is well-known that New bumped across each other. Or if W. -jto be compared with it York Jewry contributes, in proportion they did, they would have been too to its numbers and weath, proportion- suspicious of each other to strike ately less to Zionism, foreign Jewish up an acquaintance. relief and other causes that are not And this is true even of the solocal in their scope than almost any called "suburban areas" of New other large Jewish community in the York, where the air is a bit freer world. The 150,000 Jews of Canada and the homes are a little less have during the past few years been cramped. A New Yorker who lives Taising more for Palestine than the in the Borough of Queens or in the two-million Israelites of the metro- more or less "countrified" Lections polis. I think this is due not to the of Brooklyn usually must travel fact that, the New Yorker is more | every morning to his work in Manhard-hearted and less charitable ajhattan. Several times a week he Rested, Ground and Packed by person than the Jew of any other! will prefer eating his evening meal American or foreign city (as a matter'in a Manhattan restaurant, instead of fact-most local New York Jewish., of going directly home for dinner .charities are very well supported), .but; and he will also "take in" a theatre

important positions in our Compa- the statement of Dr. Dochelli a meeting of. protest, such as was ny.1 Bushman is only 30 years of age planned several weeks ago but which and has been connected with the U. was field off until the answer of th£ board of education became known, S. Oil Company since 1922. will soon be held here. While the idea of a mass metting of protest has been sponsored by many Jewish leaders of Waterhury, it is not -planned to limit it to "*ev;s atone,"as many Christians here P,TSS also opposed to the plan for religious education during school hours.,, Will Introduce Religious Train- and consequently the Jewish lenders will invite other groups to join thorn ing into Their Public in the" protest. Schools ' In its letter to the board of edWaterbury, Conn. (J. T. A.)— The ucation three weeks ago, the Heprotest of Waterbury Jews against brew Institute had declared that thfc the introduction of religious train- use of public schools time for sectaing during school hours in the public- rian instruction is unconstitutional schools of this city during the com- and most inadvisable. The problem ing school year will be ignored by of religious instruction, it deciarsul, the local board of education. The can best be solved by providing U protest, which was formally present- after school hours. ed by the Waterbury Hebrew Institute, was received by the board at its Under Palestinian Control meeting three weeks ago, and it was | New York,—The possibility of placgenerally expected that some answer ] ing the Judea Insurance Company,: would be made at the meeting of the Ltd. of Palestine under the control of boai-d this week. Palestine will be taken up with Pales^Ve are not going to answer it", tinian leaders and members of tbe declared Dr. A. H. Dochelli, chair- Zionist Executive by Mr. Louis Lipsky, man of the committee on rules of the President of the Judea Life Insurance board of education. "We are going Company of America, when he nr*to ignore it. The matter hsis been rives in Berlin to attend the sessions* settled with the apprwal of th« plan of the Zionist Actions Committee on voted by the board some time ago. August 24th, according to an ReThere will be religious education next nouncement made on the eve of Mr, year for all school children vrhose Lipsky'p departure for Europe, parents wish it." Falsehood has a perennial spring? It is believed that as a result of

WATERBURY SCHOOL

PROTEST OF JEWS

Rubin Argues That Circumstances Make Them Live in "Villages," I^smglTte Characteristics of City People

photo by Heyn . . Mr. William. Bushman teen service stations. These staticas employ between sixty-five and seventy men and represent a payroll of approximately $15,000 monthly. "He has worked early and late to gain the position he now holds", said Anderson. "His interest in the U. S. Oil. Works is evident when we look back and see the strides he has made. Bushman started with our organization in a minor capacity in the office. Today he holds one of the most

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PAGE 4—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 15; 1930 is contemplating an income tax, kind of restaurant, where yoB drop according to information conveyed to three nickles in a slot, and s door the Jewish National Council by its opens and reveals a plate of beef Revisionist members. They point out stew. 7- .Published every Friday ak.Qm.aha, Nebraska, by that such a tax would be a particular He was in the employ at the time hardship on industrialists and profes- of a Jewish charity organization, but THE JEWISH PRESS'PUBLISHING COMPANY been engaged in the banking and sional people who are already bearing was dismissed and after that, he Office: 490 Brandeis Theater Building August 16 marks the 150th anniversary of brokerage business here since he was a heavy burden in indirect taxation. stopped visiting the three slots and •' ' • Telephone: ATIantic 1450 graduated from the University of The neighboring countries of Iraq used to put in two nickles and a the battle of Carnden, South Carolina in the War DA.VTO BLACKER - . . . Business and Managing Editor for Independence, a battle in which brave Baron 2 Jewesses Among "50 Best" Pennsylvania. He is active in various and Egypt have been considering the Swiss cheese sandvrich would come FfANK. FBfANK. ifc; ACKERMAN Editor De Kalb received a mortal wound. New York.—Two Jewesses, Sarah | Jewish affairs and is a; generous con- imposition of an income tax but have forth. FANNIE T^ATELMAN, Coundl Bluffs, la., Correspondent thus far hesitated to carry it into efBernhardt and Ada Isaacs Menken,! tributor to Jewish philanthropies. Today, Harris counts his fortune It was Major Benjamin Nones, together with are included in a list of the "Fifty! fect. above the million mark. He finds it 1 Captain Jacob De La Motta and Captain Jacob De best actors" that ever lived which has Charges Officials Mulct SIOUX CITY OFFICE difficult to locate a restaurant expenKosher Butchers sive enough to eat. And Harris himJEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER~-308 Pierce Street Leon who bore the stricken leader from the field. been prepared by David Belasco, vet- New York.—For years supervisors self admits that he does his best Major Nones was the leader, of a Hebrew eran American-Jewish producer, play- of the New York City Department of "Bubscnp'tioh'Price, one year • • .».• • • - • • -52.50 wright and director, and which was work between midnight and four Legion of 400 men attached to the command of Advertising rates furnished on application Marketshave been collecting thouso'clock in the morning. published in Tuesday's issue of the Baron De Ealb. . Arriving in America from France ands of dollars a month in petty graft New York . « . -.T , ,, , • • i "Evening Post." ^ ADDIiESS—Please give both the old from Jewish butchers and delicatessen THAT SECOND WIND m 1877i Nones immediately enlisted for service i n | S a r a h Bernhardt was bom in 1844 dealers in Brooklyn and Queens acNot only does working in the agd aew address; be sure to give your name; the American cause and participated in many bat- of Dutch-Jewish parentage and died to charges laid before Mayor moonlight period spare you from the tles. For gallantry on the battlefield he wasin 1&23. She was received into the) cording Walker by Oscar Glassberg, who has summer heat, but it has always been made a major and served on the staff of Lafayette Roman Catholic Church at the request j been a butcher for the past twentytay contention that that is the time HEBRAIC CALENDAR of her father. Her early years were five years. and later on that of Washington. when one is at the peak of his 5690-1930 spent at a convent in Versailles, Mr. Glassberg stated that four difenergy. He took part in most of the battles in Caro- France. By DAVID SCHWARTZ «osh Chodesh Allnl... Monday, August 25 lina and was with Pulaski at Savannah. ferent times in the last few years True enough after a day's work, Ada Isaacs Menken was born in , &osh Hashanah ...„ ..Tuesday, September 23 supervisors of the Department of A NEW MOVEMENT we are all supposed to be tired, but On December 15, 1779 Captain Verdier wrote 1835 at Mflneburg, La., of Gentile Markets have brought him to court on I i^om Kippur__, Thqrsday, October 2 of Major any good pschycolccist vrill tell you Down deep in us has always been parentage and died in 1868 in Paris, Nones: charges of violating the law applying the ambition to lead some great that after the initial fatigue there 11st Day Snccoth Tuesday, October 7 France. At the age of 21 she mar"It is but just that I should render an ac-ried Alexander Isaacs Menken and to the sale of kosher and non-kosher cause. We h&ve always envied F. P. sets in what in known more popular^ h i i A __.Tuesday, October 14 At2ereth count of the conduct of those who have most publicly embraced Judaism. She hadmeat, after he decided to discontinue A^, colmnist of the New York World ly as "the second vrind". In other ,' Simchath Torah .Wednesday, October 15 distinguished themselves for bravery in the great success as an actress both in periodical payments of $5 and $10.for his rare fortune in being able to words, new reserves of energy beI «osh Chodesh Cheshvan_Thursday, Oct. 23 Legion. I take advantage of the occasion, and this country and abroad, and just be- Glassberg alleges that his repeated lead at once two great causes—the come available. And if you are a $osh Chodesh Kislev___«__-JFriday, Nov. 21 with much pleasure, in my capacity of captain of fore her death in Europe she attract- arrests were the result of an an- movement for risible house signs brain worker, thssa new reserves are Day Charrakah___Mbnday, December 15 ed considerable attention among Eng- nounced determination on the part of and the movement to put an end to fa: superior to the ordinary supply. volunteers attached to the suite of General Pul•Hosh Chodesh Tebeth_Sunday, December 21 i lish and French men of letters, in- tin supervisors whom he names to dry sweeping. 1 aski, to certify that Benjamin Nones has served J ^ ^ S £ s X b ^ "get him," and that Commissioner At last, we have found the cause. THE REVISED VERSION "Fa^t of T^beth. .Sunday, December 28 as a volunteer m my company during the cam- t h e e I d e r D u m a S ( Gauthier and Hugo. Thomas V Dwyer himself appeared in It is really a simple idea, as all I of course, am familiar with the ^Also1: observed the day previous as Bosh Chodesh. on the last occasion and told arguments against it. Old Ben paign of this year, and at the siege of Savannah She published two books of poetry, court the justices that his department was great ideas are. We call it moon- Franklin you remember argued: in Georgia, and his behavior under fire in all the one of which was dedicated "by per-very much interested in pressing the light saving time. "Eearly to bed and early to rise You have heard of daylight sav- Makes a man, healthy, wealthy and bloody actions we fought has been marked by themission" to Dickens. case against Glassberg. ing time of course. Well, this is just wise." IAs if in fulfillment of the frequent predic- bravery and courage which a military man is ex- $107,000 for Orthodox Hospital Boom for Bloomfield the opposite. But really that's not true. A conSt, Louis.—Mrs. Paul Epstein, tions we have made that the proposed Jewish re- pectedi to'show for the liberties of this country, Washington.—The boom for Meyer temporary Jev.-ish wit was far more died a few days ago at the Jewpublic in Soviet Bira Bidjan could not compete and which acts of said Nones gained in his favor who Bloomfield, authority on industrial MOONLIGHT SAVING TIME correct when he wrote: ish. Hospital, willed the sum of $107,with Palestine as a National Home for our people, the esteem of General Pulaski, as well as that of 000 to the establishment of a mem- problems and New York attorney, for! If you are a student, a brain work- "Eearly to bed and early to rise er, or belong to any of the profesreports emanating from Moscow reveal that the all the officers." orial wing to be added to an "Ortho- secretary of labor, took & new turn sions, my movement may prove your And you'll never meet any of the here when it became known that he prominent guys." In a letter to a newspaper of the day, reply- dox Jewish Hospital or Orphans plan; of the Far Eastern Republic have been had an interview with President salvation. Let me explain it. Home," according to the probated The prominent "guys" always stay ing to an attack that had been made upon him beabandoned in leading Soviet circles, though they Daylight saving time is intended Hoover. The position of secretary of will. up late and generally sleep late. to give you the full benefit of the will still attempt colonization aiid settlement of cause he was a Jew, because he was a follower of labor is expected to become vacant Mrs. Epstein left an estate of summer sunshine. Now, that is all THE WILNA GAON this area,. It has taken a long span of time, Jefferson and because he was poor, Major Nones approximately $108,000. Memorial j this Fall when Secretary Davis re- very well if you happen to be one of The Gaon of Wilna, you remember but eventually even these Russian rulers realize stated that he gloried in his Judaism and had noWing" in memory of her first hus- signs to devote himself to his cam-those fortunate enough to be able to the traditional stories, always had his for United States Senator in the unfeasibility of a Jewish state there, a move- desire to change either his religious or his political band who died in 1919. Prior to her paign play during the summer. But sup-candle burning to the wee end of the Pennsylvania. second marriage, Mrs. Epstein entered ment which has been found to be unwise and'im- feelings. Mr. Bloomfield, who has been highly pose you have to work, as so many night, and by its light he did his .into a pre-nuptial agreement with her of us do. The one thing you want studying. Ar-d today, besides Jed Loyal American patriot, devoted adherent of practical. ' second husbajid with an understand- recommended for the post by Roger to avoid then is the hot summer Harris, I have myself come on Mauthe ancient faith of his fathers, Major Benjamin Babson, eminent statistician, is exBira Bidjan could not become a real Jewish ing that the money left to her by her to have another conference with sunshine. Now- even in the hottest rice Schwartz, Jewish Art theatre state because the entire scheme was psychologic- Nones fully merited the respect and esteem of his first husband should be used exclusive- pected President Hoover shortly. Mr. Bloom- periods of summer, there is a bit of star, working away quite casually ally and physically unsound. A republic t>uliton fellow Americans for his steadfast allegiance to ly for the purpose of building a wing field who is considered an authority a respite after midnight. If you at two in the morning. of the Jewish Hospital or Orphan are a architect and want to make a commercial foundation only is a republic built his principles and his faith and for his service to Home. There is another advantage to j on industrial disputes, has been con- that drawing, a lawyer and want to his country in war and in peace. midnight toils, which I have not yet on quicksand. It is a physical impossibility for nected with many developments in the • *.i' ' —-Jewish Independent. Nominated field of organized labor. He has been draw that brief, an artist and want enumerated: at that hour, you are a people to become a political entity upon a St. Louis.—Two Jews were nomin- head of the industrial service depart- to paint that picture, or a writer, never disturbed by any one interforeign soil by means of colonization,; for- that the thing to do in summer, is to do 'The*iabbi's personality is not merely that ated for judgeships here and one for ment of the Emergency Fleet Corpor- your sleeping during the day and af- rupting you to try to sell you a vital, "creative spark—the animating^ spirit '•Of a sweeper. And we ourself, attorney in the primaries, the ation. The late President Harding ter a littla breakfast at midnight, vacuum people—is lacking/ And withputfithis^funda- of any aM every Jew. Much has been entrusted district of which are now sent him to Russia on a confidential by the light of the silvery moon, get spend at least five minutes every day, returns complete mental force Bira; Bidjan was^ ;^!K»ii^d ;tc»;:f^. to our keeping asirabbis. . T h e synagogue with its available show City County Judge mission. declining to buy vacuum sweepers. busy. Torah Ka&'made us what-wearer and whiatwe have, Harry P. Rosec$n_iras returned the For THE PRONUNCIATION what w^do and Avhat we enjoy. The synagogue victor in his campaign for the Repubtheft THE CASE OF JED HARRIS WAS DIFFICULT gives us?<>ur congregation to work with, anad our lican nomination for presecuting atThis is not purely theory. I may Have just been visiting that new ed to a secondary -role, rae audienc|jfcr speaH to. And in all gratitude, in all j t° yHe carried 27 of the 28 wards point to my friend, the famous theat92nd St. Y.M.H.A. which cost close to eke out a livelihood, Me for Judge Rosecan is the first Freud Wins Scientific Prize rical producer, Jed Harris. to three millions and which I believe decency, we should honesty, Vienna.—(J. T. A.)—Professor Sigtairied little, if any, of the cultural and spiritual honor, , Louis to be nominated for Four years ago, Harris took his is the most thoroughly equipped our step, guard our mund Freud, world-famous psychiatvalues which a successful republic must have for shape our'conduct, watch this office. meals at "the Automat. That is the (Continued on Page 7) rist and scientist, was informed that its sustenance. Nor could there be a feeling of tongue, bfijrare of our teaching, lest we do or say, Judge Moses Hartman of the cir- he has been awarded the Goethe unity and cohesion between a people sparsely or think;-anything that may detract from the good cuit was renominated by the Republi- prize, the greatest scientific and litto succeed himself. He will be settled on almostbarren land, lying fsrr back in name, honor and glory of Israel, the efficiency of cans opposed in the November elections by erary distinction in Germany. The the rabbinate, the usefulness of Jewry, or the the less civilized parts of Eastern Europe and another Jew, Samuel Rosenfeld, who prize will be given Dr. Freud at ceremonies in Frankfurt at the end of Dr. Joseph Stolz. * truth of Judaism.' Western Asia. won the Democratic nomination. this month. It is best that all of us come to the real-

THE JEWISH PRESS

From Contemporary Pens ;

MAJOR NONES

WORLD -WIDE United States

Scannin ...the...

orizon

;

OUR STRONGHOLD

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ization that Bira Bidjan is not and cannot become a Jewish -state. Instead, let us all concentrate ouriinterests and activity upon Palestine, where in contrast the idealism of a new type of spirited Jewish Chalutz is making history. '• The soulstirring heroism of these hardy Jewish pioneers with their undying, unflinching courage in the face of great odds should be the stimulus spurring us on to greater efforts in,upbuilding and fostering Jewish culture, education, and revivification in our stronghold, the Holy Land.

"Fifty Best" It is easy to function /from the inspiration of ;Screen's New York.—Six moving pictures a great personality in things religious. It is very directed by three Jewish directors are difficult to function from the principles of, religion, included in the screen's "Fifty Best" independent of those great souls that have found- of all time as selected by David Wark ed religions. This is because the great souls have Griffity, famous directors, for the N. made a vital contact with the power house of the Y. Evening Post. Ernest-Lubitsch of the Paramount Company, and Lewis great religious influences active in life. Milestone of the Universal Company,

Other Countries

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Name Streets for Herzl, Weizmann

Bucharest.—(J. T. A.)—The city of Vashkovith, in the Bukowina district, decided to name 2 of its streets after Theodore Herzl, founder of political Zionism, and Dr. Chahn Weizmann, president of the Jewish Agency for and Charles Chaplin of First National Palestine. Truth is a very lively guest in your heart and are the three Jews honored. March of Jewish Musician life. It will always be on the mpve._ I t unsettles Of. the pictures three were directed Bucharest.—(J. T. A.)—A military ones opinions, ones habits, ones relationships and by Lubitsch and one each by Mile- march composed by Chaim Kopelman, stone and Chaplin. Those directed a Jewish musician from Kishinev, in it gets us into many difficulties with folks who are by Lubitsch that were selected are: honor of the coronation ceremonies comfortable-minded. "Passion," "The Marriage Circle," and for King Carol this September has "The Patriot." The picture directed been accepted by the King. The King by Chaplin that won Griffith's praise notified Kopelman that he was touchHappiness is gradually achieved when every !The Jewish people with their unquenchable was "The Kid" and Milestone's was ed by this attention of one of his subthir'st for beautiful self-expression; rand their j expression of one's life is a life-giving influence to "All Quiet on-the •Wfestern Front." jects and would permit the march to striving for harmony of soul have always been others.jvln other words, every motive, thought, be named the "March of King Carol Named to Minnesota Board music lovers. Their seeking of blissful, soothing feeling aiid action must be a producer of dividends II.1" Minneapolis.—Mrs. Arthur Brin of melody has been the creating force in producing of life. The King has submitted the new Minneapolis has been appointed by suclx geniuses as Felix Mendeissohn, Gustave Governor Chrisfcianson of Minnesota march to the ceremonial committee The enkindlement of your inner life is ad- as a member of the Board of the •with the expressed desire that it be Maliker, Maurice Ravel, Charles Canaille Saintvanced most by keeping in the company of illum- State Kormal! School. Mrs. Brin was played during the coronation ceremonSaens, George Bizet, and in our own day, George ined, spiritual-mmded souls.: The company of the formerly chairman of the Peape Com- ies. Gershwin, Ernest Bloch, and Lazare Saminsky. mittee of the National Council of Denies Wagner was Hitlerite These Jewish artists have made immortal baser-minded people tends to quench tl:e spiritual Jewish Women and is now second Berlin.—(J. T. A.)—The reports In contributions to the music of masters, music flame. vice-president of that organization. foreign newspapers characterizing the whiqh outlives man. Their niche in history is Mrs. Brin was a classmate of the late Siegfried Wagner, son of the It makes a big difference as to what you see governor at the University of Min- famous composer Richard Wagner, assured. But it remained for three Jewish philanthropists to during the past month accomp- in others, when you look at them in the light of nesota, winning second prize in the and manager of the Vagnerian festlish'wonders in popularizing superior musical brotherhood, in the light of religions, in the light j Pillsbury oratorical contest when the ival plays at Bayreuth, as an antigovernor won the first prize. She is Semite and a member of the National programs of the calibre produced by our imme- of nationality or in the light of personality. the first woman in Minnesota to re- "Socialist party, are untrue, the Jewish morial composers. In New York Adolph LewiTelegraphic Agency was informed The divine elements of our soul can only come ceive this honor. solmj donated the Lewisohn stadium and through here by Bruno Weil, vice-president of the Central Association of German his generosity concerts are given by the famed into vital refreshment through use. Many folks Heads Philadelphia Exchange Philadelphia.—Frank L. Newburger, Newj York Philharmonic Orchestra* Emulating study religion, few use these values as the domin- senior member of Newbnrger, Hender- Citizens of the Jewish Faith, and a friend of the Wagner family. thisjmost worth—while example the Hon. Louis ant wealth of life. son and Loeb, was named president of E. Kirstein through magnanimous gifts has made the Philadelphia Stock Exchange by Honored Folks who have "no time" should ponder this the board of governors. possible the broadcasting of the Boston EsplaWarsaw.—(J. T. A.)—Meyer Zetttl, ; Mr. Newburger has been vice-presi-: a seventy year old Jewish poultry nade concerts. And now. Mrs, Felix Fuld is spon- thought: ..Truth is more valuable than time. dent of the Exchange. As one of the' dealer from Kielces, was decorated soring through her , benevolent donations the When you have more truth you will have more organizers of his firm he has been ec-j here with a silver service medal and time! Newark Symphony Orchestra. tively engaged in a general broker- granted a government concession and frhe munificence of these Jewish philanthr. age business in Philadelphia for 30 monopoly in the sale of certain commercial articles. The award was made We normally feel a vital sense of kinship only years. pists: is a wonderful contribution to spiritual and He is well known in financial circles for Zettel's rescue of three Polish legcultural values in. our country. Through their'with fine folks. When we understand life we and his election is due to the high reionnaires in 1914 during the retreat of thoukbtfulness an elevating type of music is be-realize that We are equally related to ill lives. spect his associates have for him as the army and tbe Cossack march. ing . . _. . . • ,, i , well as the recognition of his: execuing /given prominent expression, and through 4 i Jewish race is being a noble force in Mattfer is a n aspect of t h e substance aspect t i v e ability. Mr? Newburger, who is Palestine Income Tax the ^rwholTon of happiness by musicalart. of Omnipresence. • *7> i s a n a t i v e Fhttadelphian. He has Jerusalem.—The Palestine govern-

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PAGE 5—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1930 will arrive tomorrow to be the guest Miss Helen \ Castleman will leave of Miss Lilyan Haykin. tomorrow to be the guest of Miss Ann Lebowich in Sioux City for a Mrs. J. Slate of Des Moines is week. visiting with her sister and brotherin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Leon. Miss Bessie Swartz has returned from Chicago after visiting there for Mrs. Arthur Snyder and son, who a month. have been visiting with Mrs. BorMr. and Mrs. Moe Linsman motder's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wilinsky, has returned to her home ored to Okoboji and are stopping at the inn near Omaha Beach, in Hutchinson, Kansas.

son Sisters' Trio, are now touring j< the western states as members of a I girls' band. They have been touring all summer and expect to be gone for several weeks.

Junior Hadassah to Hold Swimming Party

Kitchen Chats Mrs.

By Darid M, Newman

Mr. and Mrs. L Rosenthal left Orange Cup Cakes yesterday morning on a six weeks 4 tablespoons butter, 1 cup sugary motor trip to the Northwest and one-third cup of milk, 2 cups flour, California. 3 teaspoons baking powder, one third cup orange juice, line of one orange, WISE MEMORIAL % teaspoon, salt. Cream butter, add Mr. Joel Simon of Lincoln is the Miss Esther Silverman will leave Among the patients at the Wise sugar, beaten egg. Sift flour, bakguest of Mr. Hubert Summer. tomorrow to visit with relatives in Memorial hospital this week are Mrs. ing powder, salt, add alternately with Morris Potash, Miss Josephine Rub- milk. Add rine of orange and juice. Sioux City. Mr. Bernard Polsky of Lincoln -Announcement has been made of ion September 10, when fifty Sunnitz, Mrs. J. Wolf of Fremont, and Mix well. Bake in muffin pans— Mr. and Mrs. Sam Elewitz and Mr. Morris Aridn. thj engagement of Miss Lillian Salle, day and holiday prizes will be pres- visited in Omaha last week with 380 dsgrees—15 to 20 minutes. children, Lou, Isadore, libby, and daughter of Mrs. Fannie Salle, of ented to the winners of the -weekly friends. Al, have moved into their new hoine Ironton, Ohio, to Mr. Arthur Levy of golf competitions. BIRTHS Maple Cup Cakes at 3039 Marcy Street. Lincoln, son-of -Mr. and Mrs. Saul PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Joe Krestul announce One third cup butter, 1 cup light Levy of Omaha. Mr. and Mrs. Max L. Holzman the birth of a son in a Sioux City brown sugar, 2 eggs, W'2 teaspoon VISITORS left Saturday evening on a trip to Miss Lucille Isaacson has returned hospital. Mrs. Erestul was' former- maple syrup, Vs cup milk, 1% cup The wedding will take place on Miss Esther Zusman has as - her from a two weeks' vacation in DavWednesday, August 2C, at the bride's guests the Misses Eose and Edythe Honolulu. Upon their return to San enport and Muscatine, Iowa. ly Miss Ethel Robin of Sioux City. flour, % teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons Francisco they will go to Yosemite home and will be attended by Mr. Schwartz of Chicago. ,' baking- powder, 1 cup chopped waland Mrs. Levy,, their son-in-law and Mr. and Mrs. L Givot stopped at Miss Zusman honored her guests Valley. CLUB NOTES nuts. Proceed as in making the daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kula- at a dancing party on Thursday the Montdair hotel •while in New orange cup cakes. When baked, Sigma Alpha Mn Mrs. Rose Wolfe and son, Harry, koft<ky of Omaha, and Mr. and Mrs. evening at her home -for fifteen York last week. A gala affair is being planned by Spread tops with the following icing have just returned from a week's Abe Davidson of Minneapolis. couples. Mr. Cuscaden and his or- visit with Mrs. Wolfe's daughter and the University of Nebraska chapter and sprinkle with the chopped nuts: Miss Salle is a graduate of the chestra furnished music for dancing. son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Abe Sher- Miss Libby Blacker has returned of Sigma Alpha Mu for their annual Icing: 1 teaspoon butter, 1% cups from a two weeks' vacation in ChiUniversity of Ohio where she was -a Mrs. Daniel Schwartz entertained man and baby daughter, Gertrude cago. dinner dance which will be given at powderer sugar, 1 teaspoon maple member of. Alpha Epsilon Phi. Mr. last Monday evening for the Misses Zelma, of Onawa, Iowa. Olive Crest on Sunday, August 24. syrup, 2 tablespoons hot milk, add Levy is a member of the Pi Tan Pi Schwartz, and Mrs. I. Dloogoff on Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Simon and Many fraternity brothers from New butter to hot milk. Add sugar slowfraternity. Mr. Victor. Shapiro has left for son, Lester, spent last weekend in York City, Chicago, Sioux City, and ly to make paste of right consistTuesday. The Misses Mary and Gertrude Korney are entertaining for San Antonio, Texas, to join Mrs. Sioux City visiting with Mr. and Lincoln are expected to attend, the ency to spread. Add maple syrup. " Mr. and Mrs, I. Walters of Kansas them on _ Friday evening at their Shapiro who has been there for the Mrs. A. Mazie. dinner dance serving as an annual Spread on cake. City announce the marriage of their past two months. They will remain roundup of the members from all daughter, Betty, to Mr. Ben SosMn, Mrs. J. Kirschenbaum and daught- parts of the country. another month. Upon their return The day was spent in swimming:, sot.- of Mr- and Mrs. H. Soskin, of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Bleicher of they will make Omaha their home. er, Miss Bess Kirschenbaum, will picnicking, and initiating new memThe fraternity colors of purple and this city, on Wednesday, August 8. Flint, Michigan, are visiting here for spend two weeks in Rochester and white will be used in ball room dec- >ers. Miss Nelly Ferer has just returned Minneapolis, Minnesota. The young couple are now on their two weeks with Mr. and Mrs. It. A. orations. Novel entertainment has from a two weeks vacation in Chihoneymoon in Chicago. Bleicher. Mrs. Bleicher was Miss Mr. Jerome Heyn and mother, Mrs. been planned for the evening, and Rachel Fagan of Cleveland, Ohio, be- cago. Heyn-Unverzagt, left today for a a host of surprises are in store ENTERTAINMENTS fore her marriage. Mr. Bleicher will Miss Annie Tretiak is spending a three weeks sojourn in Minnesota for the guests. Mrs. Charles^ Schimmel enter- be remembered as a former Central week at Camp Brewster. The committee in charge consists and Wisconsin. tained 22 guests at luncheon at the High School base ball star. of Al Batt, Sid Epstein, Harold Blackstone Monday to honor her Mr. and Mrs. I. Fiedler and childPollack, Milton Berkowitz, and Carl Mrs. S. Katsky is the guest of Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Mortis Hurwich of guest, Miss Marian Fantle of Jackren, Shirley, Merriam, and Alfred, and Mrs. Ed Baron in Sioux City. Sokolot son, South Dakota; Miss Sallie Charleston, West Virginia, are visit- have departed on an extended eastern Ftesham of Chicago, guest of Mr. ing in Omaha with Mr. Hurwich's trip. They will tour through CanaTheta Phi Sigm* Mr. Irving Janger was the winner and Mrs. Edward Schimmel; Miss parents. da, take the boat trip down the Hud- of the $100 Omaha area prize in the Kappa Chapter of Theta Phi SigDorothy Goldman of SL Louis, guest Miss Shirley Harkoway of Sioux son, and include in their itinerary, Marion Davies Floradora contest ma honored Miss Bess Iipp and Miss of Mr. and Mrs. David Goldman, and City has been visiting here with Niagara, New York City, Pittsburgh, which was recently conducted by the Sarah Riklin who will be August Miss Kathryn Elgutter,. a bride of friends. Washington, and Chicago. They plan Omaha Bee News and other Hearst brides, at an informal dinner at the the fall. to spend a week in New York City. newspapers. Totem Pole on Tuesday evening, Miss Minnette Haykin of Tuesday these visitors and Miss They will return in time for Shirley August 12. Mrs. T. Sherman has just returned Elgutter were honor guests at a City will visit in Omaha fox a week to enter Central High School and for The. committee in charge of the afluncheon that Mrs. Louis Kulakofsky or ten days. Alfred to resume his studies at the from Onawa, Iowa* where she visited fair included the Misses Sarah Kurtzgave at the Fontenelle. That evening .University of Nebraska. Mr. Fied- for a week with her son and daughtMiss Rose Berk of Dttbuque, Iowa, ler is combining business and pleas- er-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Abe Sher- man, Lylyan Chudacoff, and Ann Miss Ruth Kendis entertained for Jonisch. man. Mr. Sherman is the new manthe members of this group when is the guest of Mrs. Moe Isaacson. ure on this trip. ager of the Bee-Hive Store of that Jr. Hadassah Miss Grace Rosenthal, a bride of Messrs. Iz Mosow, Max Rosenthal, Mr. Philip Ruben returned last city. The Jr. Hadassah will sponsor a September, shared honors. and Larry Sampson of Sioux City Sunday from Des Moines where he swimming party at Peony park next Mrs. Barney M. Kully was hostess motored to Omaha last Saturday. Florence Levy, clarinetist and Sunday. spent a week visiting with friends at luncheon for nine guests Wednesmember of the Jewish Community Miss Rose Gold of St. Joseph, and relatives. day at home to honor Miss Elgutter, A. Z. A, No. 100 Center Symphony orchestra, and Miss Flesham and Miss Goldman. was the guest of Miss JJa TeaenA. Z. A. chapter 100 sponsored *n Miss Margie Kaplan left Tuesday Sara Jacobson, cornetist, member of Thursday Miss Kuth Kulakofsky will bhum for a few days last week. for St. Joseph, Missouri, where she the Orchestra and one of the Jacob- all day outing last Sunday at Venice. be a lunchecn hostess for these Miss Vivian Mosow of Sioux City will visit her sister. guests. This evening Mrs. Samuel Katz will entertain at dinner in the, garden of her^iOme^Qiono^Jtier. grandCenter daughter, Miss Marian' Katz, and '".*••' Sixteenth at Farnam Miss Elgutter. \

Members of the Junior Hadassmfc will hold a swimming party at P*onjPark, Sunday, Auguat 17th. The girls will meet at the Jewish Community Center at 9:00 A.M. The Committee in charge for the affair is Ann Bishoff, chairman, Bess Bernstein, Sylvia Bernstein, Sarah Brookstein, Clara Katzman and EH* Marcus.

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PAGE 6—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1930 In 1783, there came to live with him boring towns and who came to Boston his widowed sister and her two, sons, \ at frequent intervals for religious Abraham and Judah Touro. These worship. names have meant much to the pro- In 1842, there were but nine adult gress and welfare of the city of Bost- Jews in the city, and for the tenth, on. Hays, a devout and observant j in order to make the necessary religiJew, lived up to the traditions of his, ous quorum fox* the holy day services, faith. His home was the center for they had to send to the neighboring many of the cultural people of the town of Worcester. In 1843, the numday. His family life was ideal. He! ber of Jewish resident families mountEverbody want to Helen Holzman. was one of the first to conduct a bond- ed to eighteen^ who formed the Con- Sooner or later, there was something ly opposite him in the old-fashioned ing business in Boston. He held the gregation Chaei Shalom, (Lovers of she could do for you. She would living room her parents still called coveted office of Grand Master of the Peace)—the first Jewish Congregation help you make a masquerade costume "the parlor", Helyen plaited her Massachusetts Masonic Lodge. He in Boston,' and the second in New at an hour's notice. She would skill- dress and wondered why Leo had was one of the contributors to Har- England, the Newport congregation fully aid Dr. Wile until a nurse could come to her with such a request. After all, most of the girls she had vard College. Moses Hay? died in being the first. be procured. She would gladly stay gone to school with were already 1805, survived by his five daughters! With the growth of the congrega- with the children if you wanted to and only son, who passed on in 1832, i tion by the accession of members who run into the city with your husband married and she was not. Surely the last of the only known Jewishj migrated from different European to take in a few shows and do some Leo had not overlooked that. Yet, By SIBYL SOROKER here he was, staring helplessly into family of the early nineteenth cent-j countries, ' considerable dissension urgent shopping. space and trying to put into words ury, until the arrival of the few f The year 1930 marks the 300th an- enough to pfove that the spirit of and settled in Newport. Others folarose on the question of ritual, and in Helen was accustomed to helping the strange stirrings within him. niversary " of the founding of Massa- Hebrew teaching as interpreted by the lowed from New .York and the. West Germany colonists about the year 1855, most of the members of German everyone. But when Leo Kaplan If she hadn't known Leo all her chusetts. Bay Colony and the settle- Puritans permeated the foundation Indies. These Jewish settlers, speak- 1840. ! birth withdrew, and formed a congre- came to her, she was surprised. She ment of the city of Boston. With" ap^- and organization of the city of Bost- ing various, languages, .engaged in Like their uncle, the Touro brothers gation of their own, known as "Adath life, gone to school with him and propriate ceremony, befitting the oc- on, we have but to recall the devotion trading and commerce, and soon de- were both outstanding figures. Judah] Israel." In 1858, a further withdraw- had never expected to be asked to tramped the countryside, swinging casion, State and city officials, religi- which these leaders showed to the veloped a considerable trade between left Boston in 1803 for New Orleans,! al of members took place, who formed aid in such a matter. Sitting prim- along campionably beside him, sha ous, racial, and nationalistic groups, Hebrew language and the Hebrew lit- Newport, Portugal, arid the " West where he amassed a fortune in busi-; a third congregation under the name wouldn't have understood whet it C. Ratshesky, also of this city, is political .parties, and1 business inter- erature. Many, like Governor bradford Indies. ness and became one of the city's lead-; of "Mishkan Israel," since changed to United States Minister to Czech- was that Leo wanted. From his ests—Jews; Christians, Greeks, Irish, and Elder William Brewster,—knew M a n v °f these settlers were truly ing citizens. His philanthropies knew j "Mishkan Tofila." vague articulations she had to gather So that today Russians, alike—are entering into the the language well, One of their first captains of industry. Jacob Rivera, no bounds of race or religion. A not-'there are in existence in the city slovakia. that he was in love. Hopelessly, It is a happy coincidence, then, that helplessly in love. And he didn't spirit of how best to express what tasks in this land was the translation who came to Newport in 1745, intro- able gift was his donation of $10,000 their ancestors "did for America." At of the Psalms from the original He- duced the . manufacture of spermoil. (more than one-fifth of the total cost) these three houses of worship, repre- this Tercentenary celebration marks know what to do about it. That's this time of patriotic fervor it seems brew into English. Harvard College Others "followed, until soon Newport towards the erection of the Bunker senting the orthodox, conservative, the 275th anniversary of the landing why he had come to Helen. Didn't prdper to indulge in the pleasures of from its origin made the study of He- had seventeen manufacturers of oil Hill Monument, which sum together and Reform Judaism, grown to tre- of the Jews in this country. It is a she help everyone else? Well, suregroup memories, to taste the pride of brew, and even an address in Hebrew and candles,'and before long enjoyed with an equal amount from Amos mendous proportions, with enlarged happy opportunity to re-introduce the ly he could count on her to help group achievements, to fan the flame at Commencement exercises, obliga- a monopoly of the oil trade in Lawrence, a Boston merchant, enabled j buildings and innumerable members. Jewish pioneers of America to present him. From the beginning of this modern day Jews; to show them the patriotof group hopes and ideals, provided tory. Every morning in the assembly America. the completion of the Monument in Jewish settlement, the Jewish com- ism of the early Jewish settlers; to Helen smiled inwardly. She was theofacts are true that support the President Dunster would read a porAaron Lopez, who settled in New- 1843. His will in 1854 created a sen-. munity of Boston has grown in num- acquaint them with the impartial rec- too wise to point out to Leo that in claims, -and-ihe aims are -high that tion of the Hebrew Old Testament at pulsate through the consciousness of the morning prayers. The first book port, in 1750 was an outstanding fig- sation throughout the world, for he bers, in significance and in civic im- ords of Jewish achievements and dis- love matters she had not been eminthese, groups. . -••••-.-.-. to be printed and published in .Boston ure. Owing to him more than forty bequeathed his princely fortune, en-, portance until today it is one of the coveries in the realms of science, med- ently successful herself. In fact, she other Jewish families settled there ormous for that period, entirely to] leading communities of the Western icine, and merchanics, of Jewish phil- had been a blank failure. Here she ! world. Since 1648, the Jews have anthropies in behalf of the poor and was, twenty-seven, not bad-looking, Befitting the occasion, then, the contained Hebrew words printed in also. He too engaged in foreign charity. Jews of New England, and of Boston Hebrew characters. • Such was the in- trade, and at one time was the owner When his brother, Abraham, died in been useful members of New England, the unfortunate, of Jewish gifts and and still to hear her first proposal!particularly;: have risen to the op- fluence of the Hebraic Old Testament of thirty vessels plying their trade 1822, among other munificent bene- self-respecting, self-reliant, and self- services to education, good govern- Yet Leo was confident she could help portunity' of establishing, securely, on the infant colony! factions, he left 510,000 to the Mas-> supporting. They have held out an ment and world peace. It is well that him. with European countries. permanently, and definitely, their con- The first record of Jews in New sachusetts General Hospital, 55,000 to inviting hand to their wandering they leam again of the influence of "I don't know," he murmured, "I tribution to the founding of the Mas-England deals with one Isaac Abra- The settlement of the Newport con- the Boston female Asylum, ?5,000 to people, who came in vast numbers to their Jewish ancestry, their Jewish thought maybe you could put in a tinued steadily, until according to hissachusetts Bay Colony, where the hams, who in 1648 appeared before a the. Asylum for Indigent Boys and our shores. They came in search of tradition, their Jewish learning—that good word for me. It isnt that history of, the .United States had its notary in Boston to have him witness torians, by the outbreak of the Revo- $5,000 to the Humane Society. Suchj opportunity. They came in search of influence, which made the first Jewish Kuth doesn't like me. Sometimes, start, and ^p-the growth:and develop- a bill of sale of, his vessel. The next lution, there were 1175 Jews residing was the extent of the charities, even1 liberty. They came to join relatives pioneers and our American idealism, when I ask her to go out with me, ment of the^c4ty'\diere'th!Sy^enjoiy:'jer record is in 1645 when 1one Solomon there. Some of the Jewish houses of in those days! ! and friends, to make homes for them- enabling them in turn to enrich, as she does. More often she accepts my ligious liberty to .the fulles£iextent.--' France arrived at Boston with a'cargo that time" are still standing, among One family in the State of Connect- selves, and to help a new country well as to be enriched by our Ameri- invitation and then calls me up the them the" Rivera house, and the Seixas , Conscious /of-the .feeling of exalta- consigned to Major General Edward house, which later became the home icut, the Pinto Family, must also be' grow. can civilization. ; (Continued on page 8.) Gibbons. France wanted to settle in tion at having, survived many, centurmentioned, Records are found of Abra- j They have built more synagogues. of Commodore Perry.^ ies of economic struggle^ahd!>unpar- Boston, but the. Government, desirous ...Is early as 1658, these Jewish set- ham Pinto, a private in the Revolu-; No art, profession, science, or occupaalleled prosperity, ~of social' teinpTa'f fit ^ridding itself-..-of a Jew, voted to tlers established'a congregation and tionary War, of Solomon, who served tion that does not claim some Jews tions and1 of religious discqinforis; allow him six shillings a week forten in 1677 acquired land and opened as an officer; and of William, who1 among its devotees. No civic entergrateful at-having acWevedjjnormS[^ad- weeks, until he could obtain passage their first cemetery. Both the syna- volunteered his services both in 1779 prise or interest for social, communal, justment in«a city and State"whichUt to-Holland. In 1674, there is record- gogue and the cemetery still s t a n d - and 1781. j educational or political betterment helped to build;retaining•:untb\them-< ed in the First Boston Tax List the monuments to the faith, the spirit and Jews were still few in the city of ( that does not claim some Jews among e Jew," selves, during^ ,all, this ^ period,'. those jri^une of Rowland Gideon, ^ T ; its supporters. They have saved the the godliness of these early Jewish Boston and the State of Massachusetts traditional^traits which't Eaite thjoughV. ra.ted at 18 shillings, ahd in 1675, pioneers. until iii the beginning of the nine- city the need of providing for their there appears a court record of a law out history, ennobled the^Jewishi'soulj The Jews in Newport remained loyal teenth century, German Jews began poor by buildings their own instituand enabled Mhe *Jew .to enrich^ the J3uit;by one Barruch, a Jew. And so we have Isaac tions and maintaining their own charto the Revolutionary cause, and when to arrive. world—the ij.ews '-\of Massachusetts Roger Williams, banished frona Mas: Wolf, peddler, arriving in 1837, Peter ities, participating nevertheless in all in the War broke-out,.they closed the feel that they have great;cause,:for sachusetts by'its.^General Coi|rt ! Spitz, cloth cap manufacturer, in charitable endeavor. synagogue, many relinquished much of 1635, for "new' and dangerous opinr e j o i c i n g . ; " ^ 5 ; '• •. •. -/.:^'•'•-:"• ::-";,;r •'•'••-: New England Jews have representipjisiv against, the authority... of .mag:- their wealth, several joined the Army, 1841, William Goldsmith, hotel keeper; ed the people of the Nation, not alone Bernard Fox, his assistant; Charles istrates," drifted to Rhode Island, and and the rest scattered to American strongholds. The first good-sized col- Hineman, peddlar; Jacob Norton, fur- in legislative halls, but as members of or ship bjr liyingfcind fighting, for ithgrS perfe^tjlib^&y in mat- ony in the state of Massachusetts re- rier; Abraham F. Block, fancy soaps; the United States Supreme Court, and Jews part&QiStfitl in thehiHscoyeryrof "sFjWasj granted. sulted, with the Rivera, Lopez, and all in 1842; MoseW Ehrlich, dry goods, ..as- commissioners representing this America. iO»rv«hcestors.;Sfad the vis- I t T ^ s n a t u r a l ^ p r i ^ i e jFeSys to take Seixas families establishing them- in 1843, and shortly after, Bernard Government in foreign nations. For Wurmsur, variety shop, and a few example, Justice Louis D. Brandeis of ion to fuiirojf|'$he; mon^y which' fehr tup settieree^tfffi'SUcKra^pIony, and as selves in Leicester in 1777. ; : v abled ColufeibSa to ujid/ejiake-, -hiss early <as"~~l6_58j *we fin8 tfiat fifteen Moses Michael Hays and his family others, whose names are not recorded, Boston is a member of the highest : ; journey. W|j$e: there had/been stray Je^wish? fai^e9 arHveidfftoiio Holland came to Boston from Newport in 1776. who peddled their wares in the neigh- tribunal in the land, and the Hon. A. Jewish settlers in the earliest settlements of this continent, the first group of Jewish families migrated here thirty-four years after the Mayflower with its band of Pilgrim Fathers landed at Plymouth. It was in 1655, exactly 275 years ago, that twenty-five Jews sailed into the Harbor of New York, then known as New Amsterdam. Two'hundred and seventy-five years later, we have grown to the largest Jewry in the world, at present constituting;4,500,000 persoiisl Of this number, "250,006" are in the State of Massachusetts alone, and about 150,000 in (Greater Boston. Although the settlement of Boston'dates from 1630, with the exception of a few transient merchants'', engaged in the West India trade, of Judah/Monis, who was an instructor at Harvard College in 1722, and of Moses Michael Hays, who was Grand Master of the When you taste foods cooked in the Everhot Massachusetts Lodge of Masons from Cooker you will notice a difference immedi1788 to 1792,>i.weSlfind no mention of other outstanding Jewish residents in ately. Electric cooking is healthful, clean, cool the city's records until the year 1840. and economical. When on the picnic, the foods Before any Jew set foot on "the soil are cooked at home and takea to the grounds of North America, however/the soul in the cooker . . . hot! The Everhot banishes the of the Jewish people was already drudgery of standing over the hot stove. here. Although it cannot be said that the Jews as such took part Jn • the very founding of this essentially-Puritan settlement, it was the inspiration of the Jewish Bible which led those pioneers to these shores, and it was that same Jewish literary guidance •which determined the course of their lives as individuals, and the policy of the Commonwealth which they built up. ' Drugs of Purity For these settlers in Boston and in Proprietary Medicines Massachusetts generally were .devout Prescription Department • and devoted readers of the Jewish Optical Goods scriptures. The Jewish Bible providFlowers ed them with their models and their Cigars, Cigarettes, ideals. They spoke of themselves as and Tobacco Christian Israel, redeemed from the Perfumes, imported Pharoah, James I., escaped from the and domestic . Egypt of England, across the Bed Sea Jewelry, Jewelry Repair of the Atlantic Ocean, to the Promised Cutlery , Everhot is sturdily built and will last many. Land of America. They consciously Electrical Goods years. It is equipped with three pans. Has two and deliberately gave to themselves Rubber Goods heats that assures perfect cooking always. and their children ' Old 'Testament Surgical Goods -^ names. They introduced into the city Fountain—Lunch Counter "Electric Shops" of Boston from the beginning what Etc., E t c " they conceived to be the spirit of the 1 17th and Harney Sts. 2314 M S t Hebrew scriptures. They looked upon Moses a«-their lawgiver, and in the organization '6t thelr-city: and-colony, and in the ,administration of their courts, the? ~ definitely, adapted and Courtesy • Service adopted the "Mosaic' code as their

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PAGE 7—THE JEWISH PRESS/ FRIDAY, AUGUST 15; 1980 ThejCouneil Blfflfs Agwiaa lfceM|» Shall the intellectual take that kind xnore recently, the author of much on Association will hold a Meeting nekt Of religion into the laboratory? fie pschological themes, is, as you raayi cannot leave it out. Shall a man Thursday evening, August" 21, St know a native of St, Paul, Minneso(Continued from Page 4.) take that kind of religion into the the Eagles Hall. ta, where my good friend, Friscn, f j social world? He cannot leave it holds forth with the American -JewMr. ami' Mrs. I*JUis •Ghetnlak de-~ ish World. By F. R. K_ out and still nave the •world a sockl Jewish "Y" in the country. „ : . (Continued.from -Page 2.) \ quered nature he has -lost bis parted, for Los Angeles, Calif., where <r The new building expects to take world. One -of the old secticns of Well, they are. telling this story. He works with nature; he finds its they will spend the next thrc* care of approximately six thousand Approximately thi-ee hutidred perThe second attack is a serious one. laws and lives by nature. That is our literature says: "Hare era the young men. 1 could tell you a lot of Oppenheimer. Last year, he demonths. The intellectuals are not satisfied not conquering nature; that is the laws which I have set before you of other things about the building, cided to -visit St. Paul, after an ab- sons attended the dedication ceremonies of the B'nsi Yisroe] SynaMiss Dorothy Handler of Oskawith current religion—but then I old Jewish principle of: "Thou shalt that ye shall Jive by them." And but as usual, I am interested in the sence of something like a decade. one of the rabbis of olden days, in gogue, and witnessed the laying of "Well, I guess, they 1\ give me a loosa, Iowa, is visiting at the homt; must put in parenthesis that Judaism learn; them shalt know and you 3ha.lt order to make sure that his com- unimportant things. I have always great howdy-do, now that I have be- the cornerstone Sunday afternoon. of her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. likes to keep itself seperate from use." munity understand, said: "Ye shall believed in stressing the unimport- come a celebrity", mused Cppenheim Speakers were O. Hochman, Mayor Herman Meyerson. this attack, because Judaism just like That kind of a religion man can- live by them and not die by themv? ant things. I think they are the im- ja £ n e p a c k e d h i s g r i p s _ 0. H. Brown, W. R. Orchard, Henry the intellectuals, has been attacking not only take into his laboratory but Mr. and Mrs. Mas Shostak enterportant things. 1 think it is more Arriving at St. Paul, he looked for K.. Peterson, J. Chris Jensen, I. It seems to me that the great the current and majority religion it- I say be must take it. What does tained twenty relatives at their worth while to know what a man Morgenstern and S. Shyken. George self for the last two thousand years an experimenter do when he experi- hunger of this, our day, is to have eats, how he plays or how long he familiar faces. "Hello, Jim", called apartment in the Oakland Court -^the intellectuals attack religion it- ments ? Does he have a line of bott- a law by which man can live, by sleeps than what his views on the the Greek proprietor of a fruit store S. Steinberg acted as chairman. Sunday afternoon in Celebration of The cornerstone was laid by Mr. the "Pidgon Ha Ben" for thett Belf, saying of it that its songs mean les, does he have those bottles under which men can fill their lives. We tariff are. His views on the tariff near the station. Then Oppenheim nothing to them,- that the literature a hood and then does he take a fluid are anxious to have the cornet in are generally wrong anyway. So went further, carrying two grips. No Barney Gilinsky, prominent member month-old son, Lawrence Harry. one noticed him. But a block away, of the congregation. Mr. Gilinsky's is outdated, that the teachings are of from one bottle and pour it into an- which we find ourselves completely, why get concerned about them? he espied an old cab man who called son purchased this honor for him The Council Bluffs Chapter No, T another world. The intellectuals in- other bottle and watch and see, oh comfortable. It may be a small corAnd so, I was not so much intersist ihat they are through with the- yes, a nice color. And then doss he ner, but we want to be comfortable ested as to what Membership Secre- out: "Hello, Jim, leaving town?" for $350.00 at an auction conducted of the A. Z. A. will bold a mcetinf ology. Religion and theology have throw it out? What does he do? and humanity is so constituted that tary Moses Beckerman told me about Such is fame. They didn't even prior to the ceremonies. This money next Thured&y evening, August 21. been bound up so intimiately that Does he not have before be even be- it will not tolerate the existence of the building as a little story, he re- know that he had been away full ten will be added the Building Fund for Rev. A. Diamond was "Mohel" for the new synagogue. one cannot touch religion without gins the experiment two things in an overpowering individual who counted of the days when he was years. the ceremony at the "Brith" of the The program vras opened with tlie being pitched, and tarred by. theology. bis mind: first, "something I am look- makes life uncomfortable for the rest making his way through college. FOX AND GOLF week-old son of Mr. and Mrs. A*bc of the world—a Napoleon is ultimatesinging of America by the audience Does that touch us Jews? Does it? ing for"; second: "I can fund it"? William Fox, deposed movie king, and closed with Hatikvoh. Meyers, at the Immairae! Hospital He had obtained a position in an ly eliminated; and we don't have to The intellectual today is worried with And if he has not the second he is s said to be very much interested in in Omaha Wednesday morning. oculist's store. One day, he was one problem particularly, a personal a very poor experimenter. Experi- go so far back in history to speak the organization of a colossal chain helping the optomerrist test some of Napoleon—there may be men in God and the intellectual today says mentation without purpose is not exDr. and Mrs. Isaac SternhilJ enf these midget golf courses. The want of a better name, we call these days who class themselves with customer's eyes. .he "will not have, he cannot have a perimentation at all. tertained the members of their ew, it seems, will not be driven Epirit. Napoleon. The world cannot tolerate "Read the first line", said the 'personal God. I can understand the And that statement: "I can find it" the persistence of such characters, doctor to the customer, -pointing to a >ut of the entertainment industry, And that way, I believe, lies the bridge club at their home Tuesday rebellion of the intellectual. If I is the statement of religion. It is who make the corners of everybody line which read H Z F X P B O . think there must be something eventual cure of asti-Semitism. A evening. : were not a Jew, I would feel com- the statement of religion. It is the else uncomfortable. We are so consychologically significant in that. world made happy will be a world Mr. Louis S. Braunstein is expectThe customer was silent. pelled to answer it. As I say, I can statement of a faith in the power stituted that we find our happiness Once upon a time, we gave the world free of anti-Semitism. It is the ed to return home next week from The doctor switched on a stronger understand the intellectual who has and meaning ox mankind. It is a by the touch with humans, by the eligion to fortify its spirit. And frustrated, who seeks a goat, where- i Pittsburgh, Pa., following m. three " been raises! in & world i» which a statement which is fundamental to comfort that we find with humans and stronger lens. sow ""considering the position of the on to vent their frustration. No o n e i month's stay there during the illBut the customer continued his Deity, has hands and feet, and i s born every bit of work in science. Let the by the interaction we have in friend- silence. ew in the entertainment world—now who has a golf engagement will can- in e s s Eri(i d e a t h of his brother •.•-,.. . in a-family, and lives, eats (and as I scientist today lose that hope; let ly acting individuals. We do not we are apparently interested in en- eel that to attend an anti-Semitic Pittsburgh. "Do you mean you can't see that", hear, in the South they say he made him lose that assurance and every find our comfort in what some of meeting. ertaining its spirit. a serious mistake in changing water chemical laboratory would be dis- us think we do—in the unchanging finally exclaimed the oculist exasper- The Jew senses the importance of (Copyright 1920 by the Jewish TeleNothing is more foolish than fooiated." into, wine) and dies and rises and rupted today and tomorrow would be in the unperishing things of earth graphic Agency, Inc.) ish laughter. —Catullus. taking care of this thing, which for "0, I can see the letters alright, tells his disciples to feel him. That peopled by children who conie into We' live and find our happiness with is an idea of a personal God, per-the chemical laboratory to their own satisfied humans. Ami then again but I can't pronounce the word." sonal in.one sense. And I can under- hurt, to play with a chemical, to we touch the same story, the story of TWO YOUTHFUL stand ..an intellectual who rebels play with a test tube, to see how humanity which we must constantly CHAMPIONS against this sort of thing. The whole the retorts work and in the end perMy private sleuths inform me that of the religion of the middle ages haps destroy themselves. N o ^ t h e keep in mind. And it is the Jew up in Chicago, two youthful chamand much of it still in the modern kind cf science that we are trying and the Jew and his pions of chess and checkers are holdday is just pervaded with this mosaic to build up is a science that looks has emphasized just this detail of ing forth in the lobby of one of the theology.. You .cannot go through purposefully* and. even ideally to- the life here, a life complete only Loop theatres. a European art gallery without com- wards humanity and any man who with others here, a life happy in coAnd as yon may have guessed-^ing 4» the conclusion that ninety per goes into ths laboratory and forgets operation, a life made still happier both are Jewish. They are Sam cent; of the paintings are devoted to humanity has- ceased to be a valuable by the hope of a world that would Eeshevsky, the chess prodigy and be one of justice, of equality, of fair Nathan Rubin, youthful checker the ifamily and personal.accompani- experimenter; fcr this age. ment of the personal :God. We never maestro. For .•whatever :y?e diy-we have an ness. Now there is the Jewish stand had-' this phenomenon in Judaism. eye always towards humanity, as JuThe two youngsters are averaging The whole problem On this basis of a daism has towards it. : ;We experi- It is somewhat different from the a total of 350 games a day. Reshrebglons personal or impersonal God is not merit with dead motels f^humanity; j s t a n d evsky is playing ten people at_ ' have their opinions. We have ours time. a problem in Juadism. We are told we experiment .compounds ri tf' l i witfi' ii d But we think it is a pathetic thing over and over again God is the God fof VhUmaMty; we";j^ It is rumored that Julius Rosenhumans that they who ought to know, they of all the spirits. God has; no form. for .ihttHisnity. •:-7Ffee^tba££thought of wald is taking an interest in the two who are the children of the martyrs We "-are tcld as far as it can be p u t S become do not know, and they say that in youngsters. into1; words, which change in meaning Crtfe^iWell, our Jewish youth may. b«~ essJi Nay, we Judaism "there are absent the thing froin day to dayy that God is .an inadd, therefore, which they want to find in the mod champions, but it seems to me, its fluence, a power, and no further de- when we come to think; of it, to the time for some of .them to get away scription is possible.'yAs.^-* jnatter element of intellect the> element of ern world. Perhaps I am too severe from chess and checkers and win the with Walter lapman. It is a shining of fact one """" ""' _ e, end thct is*the rel|gicus, example arid' when one goes out with tree-sitting or ihe^ flag-pole ,chamof Ike JewisbSmiddle ages, pionships. element. Not intellect, net just the 7T, ides,' made the.-definite statement that intellectual, 1 want the intelligent in- a big stick and sees a good sized We feel quite sure .that many of you' cannot say of God, what. He is; tellectual, and intelligence, as I say, head one finds difficult to resist the them could sit in. a tree as long all that you can saytis/what .He is is the contribution, of the spiritual, temptation. Perhaps I am too severe any • Nordic competitor. . We coulc not; and when intelijefituals attack re- the contribution of the universal out- with Walter Lipman, perhaps I ought ourselves, if the apples were- good. ligion and include Judaism in' the afc-look: it is the contribution of ;relig- to be more severe with a Jewish DIDN'T K N O # H EW A S tack because they fiiid;^pculty ?*fh ionl Tie.iittelfeetael says he wants community that will let Walter a '.^personal"' Godr"1'•••. answer that^if •; to take 'something "-with him into .man -go as Walter Lipman, did go. AWAY . . -,-t?,.?% . • ; _ - , - . , Jewish intellectuals make -the attack social work. Well, here, too he, must Perhaps I~ ought-.to: be,'severe~vvithJa> '"James- Oppenfi^mv;the poet;--and I think it is- pathetic.r_ They .nought not be Just intellectual; because I Jewish community that;has all these to go back t o ' l i e "synagogue. They would like to add to that quality traditions, -Jailvthese'., Cachings, this rary ought to • oe the possession of . ..-The-same high spefed and.powei* performance, will always b i ought to go Tiack'; to ; the school of of intellectual again ths quality of mighty history and^-then turns its every home- - that -has \ a tradition pulpit Into fourth"and-filth rate ^unisomewhere stuckjaway in its.midst, ^-7-: : ^tofl'^ ( Ci^«h:X£gttMl-Gc».v>yesterday, today and tomoiv the- synagogue. They ought to go intelligence. How many of us have : back to its literature and learn what read in the papers columns of fig- versity .extension -.lecture ^platforms— the ^tradition c>f;;a- leariied ancestor. ^ i j d w , always" uniform and unexcelled ^performance. On the hills the; agelong fight: of Judaism has ures about tna general situation in a takes i care of; everybody's vineyard Americsn Jewrj$ijtue strong:-. Jewry ~" v-or-opeai road, the power of Cosden'Liquid' d th i .'startled ' t t l d to t of the world. tKeP: great -financial res-; knd then .is been. ;• '£ commimity. We^have read figures b t U t Own k find that Judaism,"* the "Judaism of ervoir of the Jewish wofId, the .gresit WE FEATURE The intellectuals say that they of statisticians and • intellectuals pure would like a religion that they could and simple have told us how the cost .the Fathers is' not understood. That \ financial reservoir ; of i the -: Jewish! Top Notch Oil take with them irito: the laboratory; e£ "producing "something has "fallen faulty, -intellectuaiism is •. the thing world. America ought to -t begin •; -Gar^ with;low or high, compression motors At AU Cost* tone 1 that ails the Jew. and--his Judaism;. make answer. America ought to; be-; Onr Be W H 1 v : they would like a religion which or how it has risen; how the employService It Gam 1 j 2U8e Cf»«ert-;Ltg^i<f Gas Special . . ,• They ; 6= tbe--Son-g-of Songs put it:.^"Do come the capital, ofthe Jewish: Intel-. Stations Xta rtbtr j would lead them into the laboratory; ment has fallen or risen, in figures, 1 -*^|Eiwap'the~poWer and extra-nii'leage that is they would like a..religion which but wts have Still to see in any one not ,-look at me that-. I . have been lectual world. Its intellectuals should would lead them to certain kinds of of the papers publiEhed during the darbenedr my;, mother's' children have- be fair •. and honest. with - Judaism -~|ix tjiis.VLonderful anti-knock gasdMne. social work; they would like a relig- week, cr during the past week one set" me to keep other's vineyards; its intellectuals should study and ion; that would give them something simple statement that gives all' those mine own vineyards have I not know and tell the traditions and then Judaism would do in. this generation Permit No. t of an inspiration for the gripping of figures new understanding and" gives j r ep . And so we come back again to the what it did in the middle ages: it alii;the fragments of humanity and them life. Do we want to "underfashioning them into a humanity stand what is happening tp the. great need of our Jewish life—the preserved learning, it opened scienreal And religion does not do it. world? Then, friends, we do not .Synagogue ought to become again the tific institutions, it preserved literaBut to say it of Judaism, and again understand through just cold; intel- .school, the rabbi ought "to be the ture, and ought to be able: to help we.^think that when a Jewish intel- lectual figures, they have life t s those teacher, congregations ought to be do that in these days; but if so" we lectual makes that statement, is pa- who have real understandings You learners and the schools should min- think then let us with all honesty; thetic ' find for example that here in this ister to all ages; and a Jewish lib- and diligence keep our. vineyards. Does he want a religion that he industry wages are going do'Wn,- or can1 take into the laboratory ? I will wages are going up. Don't be' satisTWO GRA&ES ~%£Gy$A& & SPECIAL answer it that I shall give him a re- fied with the figures; put side by side ligion which he dare not forget when with them this picture, a statement] he enters the laboratory, a religion you may. seB-in:.Bome books and pa* le24th ana Charieg 40th and Cnming 17th and Jackson 17th anfi Cnss that he must keep with him every pers, i You^ will •jthen read that in K2d and Arbor 19tb and ftodee Sbth and Haraey £5tb and Fernam minute of his searching, or else his a given community when the wages E4tfc aad fi 24ft d Q ' 24th and Fooler 2«tk and Censing searching will destroy itself. He can of the 7 "workers fall and the prices 28fh anfl BroafiTray, Council Bluffs, Iowa take this religion into the laboratory. of cominodities jdd; net fall, but just j In,.my thinking!'it i6 ciily a half ser- the wages, oil the workers fall, that Garage. .4107 S. Htk « . Ot"E DEALERS EAST OCE DEAIERS KGBTH vice to count ^he ages: of &e earth year -more babies will die in that Lonilrei-ac's Garape Market Ciarage f Cth and Pierce Sts. M by? the markings on - the Mck3* I Commcnity. ' And when the wages go ; .ISSB and Capitol 1 m p q Sti, Sam Monjce'6 don't ears how long man has been on- np again you\TO11 find tiabies jdo not . 11th and Hictorj Sts. Serrice Garage . Colfax Garage earth. I am rather anxious as to .die in such -great numbers; they have ; Sictler Garage .....lGth and Lecrenirerth ..4S©7F,S0thSt. what man is doing with the earth a chance to live, ..; ? IStn and Dodge Sts. Unlrersal Motor Co.. ••».*. and the lo'rigsr he is on earth the Bernstein Grocery James Taeanfi .% .4811 S. S«t* Sfc, Would"you be intellectual? iWould more anxious we get. I am anxious 10t4 and 1'lerce Sis. 16th and Crater Late BlTfi. Tinton Oarage you just read figures? My Judaism Cad A, Aadersoa, I B C . . . . . that the days of creation shall be . . . . . . . I 7 i a a n i Vintcm Sta, Kaplan Br&s. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1514 Jones St OUB DEALERS WEST nof limited ^to six; far "T know it in says: Be intelligent and see what the .24ti *nd Corky Sts. OUR DEA&EBS SOUTH Hub Ice and OH Co our praye^Jraqk-we are saying "Thou figures mean, not as a mathematical Kenwoed Garafe ., CronSfi Tire Eenalr Co. 46th Ave. & LeaTenworfli S t createst-^new day after day." l a m problem, but as a human problem .........80th Biifi Larimore 4^®S24»St Anderson Electric the thing must ultimately be solved. anxious for a religion—and 1 dont SSd and Hsnte? Sta. Dnermeyer Gnrage Omaha Garage want anyone to take this religion Now it is juct from that point of Cm. Elraore.. .219 S. S&tb S t view that our Jewish religion has Slstonfi Q Sts. Personal FIBlBg 21th and gtivr&rd Sts. into his laboratory—which says to a StfltlOB... National l i r e Shop .2M and Madison Sts. .....22d and Hurt Stfc man: there may be disorders in na- always seen this problem, from the Basscon Park Gtarage..... Centnrj Garajre .. 1!& and Capitol Are. ture and then that is an act of grace. human and the intelligent point of view. We have cared little for the . .Park Are, and Tt oolirorth 2024 St. Mary's OHitarT Serrice Steti I want a religion that shall teach •-'; HDHtarj Ave. *nd men orderliness. I want men to un- figures; we have cared for souls; derstand that the world goes on and we.have cared little for souls' salva. I do not want them to say they can tiftn, we have cared much for the conquer nature. There is .no fight life that a man must live while here between man .and nature,- that nature he" is. We have, tried "to give oppormust be conquered in .order that man tunity here for life;.Jet the hereafter f must live. I say man and nature are take care of itself. The injustices must be met here; the justices must brothers- -upon., this- earth and •- man OMAHA. must use what nature can give and be established her& 'Beyond-^—it is every time man thinks he has con- not in our hands. Here these things are in our hands.

SCANNING TBE B0R1Z0N

The Clash.of Jtidaism and the Intellectuals

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Roils f©jp Omaha


J»AGE 8—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1930 "You'll have to start taking me - Nights- when the. moon hung low worked perfectly. •= She called me up out", she explained, smiling to cover in the trees as they drove along the again and invited me over. But, her embarrassment. "It doesn't real- winding country roads. Nights when somehow, I didnt want to go. I ly matter who it is. I will do aslaughter rippled over the sleeping wanted to be with you, Helen. I (Continued from page 6.) veil as anyone". lake as they sat in Leo's canoe. was lonesome for you". Leo rose and came toward her, Nights when they did nothing but Helen's heart leaped into her last minute to tell me- she can't go, both hands extended. "Helen,' you stroll arm in arm downtown for a mouth and she could eay nothing. MISS ANNA PILL, Correspondent that she's got a headache or she has are the most wonderful girl in thesoda. Leo stopped the car beside the to stay home and help her mother. world. If you do this for me, you It was after such a night that road. Slowly his arm crept around Oh, I know it" means-'..she's gotten\ a deserve every happiness". Helen decided she could not go on.her shoulders. "It was you 1 loved better invitation from someone who ,.- Helen laughed. Well she knew After all, Leo expected too much of all the time, Helen. 1 can't believe she likes more." .\~. : . . ... . . .we,don't always get everything we her. Didn't he think she was hum-I even looked at Ruth. Do you think ? "And she's so sure of. you,. Leo. deserve. "Now, don't forget", she an? That she, too, wanted someone you could forgive me and love me?" She knows you're there, whenever said, "you're not to invite Ruth any- of her own? She had helped him Helen's answer was a kiss. she hasn't anybody, else." where. You're to take me to the Late that night as she lay happily Three delegates were elected by the Leo's face .brightened. "That's Saturday night dances and driving enough. Already Ruth was showing Members of the Committee of the signs of capitulation, in a subtle, in her bed, thinking over all the wonWorkmen Circle a t their regular bi- just it, Helen. I knew- you'd underJewish National Fund will. distribute Atheltics, Card Games, almost every evening. Ruth will be feminine way, to be sure. Stopping derful things Leo.had said, to her, monthly meeting which was held last J. N. P . Boxes to homes that are at Games and Refreshments stand! You're wonderful! (Now, what sure to see us. I think we can make to talk to Leo when she "happened" Helen murmured to herself, "There's present without them,, next'; Sunday Tuesday evening in the Jewish Com- can I do about it?!'":.'.., . to Be Features up iier mind". to pass his luggage shop. Accident- technique and technique. Leo was morning, according to Mr. Joseph munity Center. They are: Mr. M. "Did you", Helen asked hesitantly, ally bumping into him as he left his beginning to take me for granted". In the weeks that followed, Helen Aizenberg, chairman of that group. Shiloff, Mr. M. Mason and Mr. Max ; The first annual B'nai B'rith PicMr. Aizenberg has urged every nic will be held Sunday afternoon, Dervin. The men will represent the "tlid you ask her to-marry you?" - told herself she really would be hav-boarding house, asking him prettily And she fell asleep with a smile on home to accept one of these boxes if August 17th, at the Shore Acre Boat organization at a Convention which is "Of course I did. • She;told me she;ing a wonderful time if it weren't I to drive her home. Leo did not need her lips. to be held in Omaha on Sunday and wasn't ready to> think of marriage for; Ruth Meyers. It was nice to her help any more, Helen decided. th6y do hot already have one, and toClub, beginning at 2 o'clock. teach the children to" put their pen- This affair which is an innovation Monday,. August SO, and September 1. yet» So all I can do is go on hoping have someone always calling you She had done enough. Let him finnies in them. "This will: not only on the program of the local B'nai Many other members of the organiza- that when she -is aready' she'll take up, making plans for our week-ends, ish the affair himself! Leo spoke.'abjectly. • .. seeing-that you were plentifully supmaterially assist the" Fund" he said, B'jdth Lodge will be, according to tion are expected to go to. this meet- me." When he telphoned her the next "But it will do inuch' toward interest-, the "committees in charge, one of the ing in Omaha, in addition to the three j _ Helen knew R^ttb7'Meyers. It was .plied with partners at the Center evening she told him she was busy just like her to/kjeep Le;o on;the dances. ing the children in" the upbuilding of finest and most successful social official lelegates. and could not see him. He drove string, she thoughi-; It's., just like a Jewish Hofiielaiid." ' r v It was good to see the dark looks | around to her house without calling „ Hues, for the first quarter were colPrague (J. T. A.)—A recommenevent of the year. the dates. If sheLdfeesn't get anyone Ruth Meyers gave her.. Was it pos-'the night after that. Helen met him dation that the Zionists Revisionist*, lected at the meeting by Mr. L Singer. Mr. E. N. Grueskin, who is the she likes better^: she'll take Leo. silbe Ruth viewed her as a potential at the door with her hat on. Shedevelop a political and international vice-president of the Lodge is theMr. A. Rozmofsky presided as chairChoir Is Rehearsing "There's only one thing;for you to rival ? Ruth was so self- assured, so was just on her way out. No, he offensive against, the British policy •'.•'•"' General Chairman for the picnic. He man. For High Holy Days will, do," said Helen alpund. "You've got dashing, so vivacious. No wonder coudn't take her where she wasin Palestine was ;made by Meer be assisted by Leon Dobrofsky sha had been surs of a plodder like going. During the following week Grossman, Revisionist leader, speakMr. and Mrs. Ben Pill are spend- to force her to make-a decision."and Morey Lipshutz on the Publicity Rehearsals of the newly-organized Committee; Reuben Miller, Max ing several weeks visiting in Duluth, "But what if she:says 'No'"? • Lrto. Helen sighed. If only Leo she managed to be out whenever, he ing here at the . fourth world conchoir at Shaare Zion Synagogue, are Friedman, Abe Pill, John Levin and Minnesota. ference of the Union of Zionist ReHelen shrugged hier; shoulders im- wasn't like all.the rest, flocking after called. being held weekly, in preparation Morris "Red" Miller, on the Repatiently. "In thafc case you may asthe others like sheep! And if only It was at the end of the second visionists. Mr. Grossman also urged for the coming High Holy Days, freshment Committee; A. M. Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Abe Agranoff are well know sooner or later". Ruth" weren't so selfish, wanting all week that he overtook her as shethat world Jewry discontinue sendEosh Hashonah ' and Yorn .Kippur. chairman of the Games will be as-visiting at the home of Mrs. Agran"So you think I ought to go to.the men for herself! Surely she was walking dejectedly home. She ing funds to Palestine. Cantor A. Pliskin is directing the sisted by, Ben Sekt, James. Green- off 's parents, in Hibbing, Minnesota. he.- and insist on a definite answer"? could spare Leo to Helen. But, had been thinking of him and when "The Zionist movement", he said, -group which numbers about: ten. stone, Joe Levin, and Robert Sacks. Helen reminded herself. Leo had Helen unfolded the plaits, f "Nothhe commanded her to get into his "is undergoing a period of stagnation Mrs. Joe Levy of Kansas City, They'will assist the Cantor chant which, may endure if Great Britain Features on the program planned Missouri, has bean a guest At theing so simple as that.- She'd bs sure known her before Ruth came to town. car, she obeyed before she had had ' the Holiday ritual on: those days. by Mr. .Davis include Card Games, continues her present policy. If Jews home of her brother-in-law and sist- to say 'No'. What you have to doHe had had ample opportunity to fall time to refuse. in love with her. But he hadn't. is make her jealous"..'„ , send to Palestine just the amounts "This is the first time in two : Athletic and Sport features, and anjer, Mr. and Mrs. Joe. Givot. It .was when Leo came to her glee"Make her jealous? How?" necessary to maintain the small Jewweeks I've spoken to you", he de: Indoor Ball Game. Dobrofsky Family to fully to report progress that she felt ish center there the budget of the clared. Mrs. Irving Goldstein and children For a moment Helen's brow was The members of the Lodge are Attend Family Reunion asked Helen turned on him, her eyes Palestine government and the Arabs to bring basket lunches, and of Chicago, are guests at the home puckered in thought. There had this most keenly. of Mrs. Goldstein's parents, Mr. and been a time when she had expected , ."Ruth called me up. What do you flashing, her cheeks burning. "What as well will suffer. Great Britain Mr. and' Mrs. Dobrofsky and fam- drinks and ice cream and cake will Mrs. Louis Baron. Leo Kaplan to think of her as hethink of that?" he announced trium- of it?" she demanded. "Haven't I the will then be compelled to realize ily, Leon, Barney, Philip and Lillian, be furnished by the Lodge. how important the Jewish contrinow thought of Ruth Meyers. Grow- phantly. "She was so sweet. She right to be busy?" "No Raffles and- No- Admission will motor to Grand Rapids, MichiDelia and Leon Galisky spent sev- ing up together, she had taken him invited me to her house. Said she bution is to Palestine's growth." "Yes", Leo agreed, "but I was gan, where they will attend a family Charge" announced M. E. Friedman, eral days at the Inn, in Okoboji Lake. so much for granted she had never hasn't been, seeing much of me late- used to going out with you lately. Mr. Grossman charged that only reunion. Enroute to Grand Rapids President of the Lodge at the ComI didn't know what to do with mythought of trying to win him. Was five per cent of the Jewish funds ly and she thought we could spend a Mr. Alva Abrams accompanied by they plan to visit Chicago, Detroit, mittee meeting Tuesday evening. Leo wholly unaware of her feelings nice evening together. I tell you, self all the time". raised for Palestine are actually used "This is just a Asocial, summer gethis mother Mrs. Julia Abrams and Gary, and Fort Wayne. Her tone turned sarcastic. "What's for Jewish needs, while the retogether picnic, and we expect a i aunt Mrs. Heyman motored to Spirit toward him? Had it never occurred Helen, your technique is perfect!" to him that she might like him ? Apthe matter with Ruth Meyers? I'm mainder, he declared was used for "I hope you told her you couldn't Lake on' "Sunday, where' they were large turnout." parently not. Otherwise, he would sure she wouldn't have minded your maintaining the administration of come". guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dave DavidTalmud Torah Classes not have come to her with his probPalestine and subsidizing Arab coming around". "Of course. I'm following your inson, at Crandall Lodge. Mr. and Resumed After Vacation iv "No, you're right. Your technique schools and sanitation activities. structions, all right". Mrs. Abe "Davidson of Chicago and lem. . Mr. and^ Mrs. Herman Davidson were After a two week vacation, Talmud also guests at Crandall Lodge for Torah Classes were resumed with' a Numerous parties have '-been • '*' full enrollment. The classes begin a t planned for Mr. and Mrs.' Ellis Bot- the past week. 9:30 and continue thrbughojrt the tingheimer, of Peoria, Illinois, who Miss Shirley Harkoway has been morning until, 1:30 ,Pc:Mi The staff are'visiting at the home of Mrs. Bot- visiting friends in Omaha, Nebraska. is composed of Mr. .Joseph Bell and ghelmejr's: parents :Mr.-and ' Mrs. Max J. Aizenberg. They are assisted Ben -Schulein,-' 2604 Jackson Street. Mrs. S. Katsky of. Omaha visitld by Mickey ManMVwho, teaches a class S?.'arid Mrs. Shuleiri presided a t a at the ihome of Mr. .and, Mr^. E^ in Jewish. The hew term for the He- dinner. last Monday evening in theBaron, 3000 Jackson Street. brew school;,witt begin aft^r the Sioui City Couritry "Club :ctfmplinient- 3\MT; and Mrs. B.. A,j,Simon' and Holy Days. •'-,, ,,: ing Mr;' arid; Mrs. Bottigfiheimer7 and Mrs. -Dave Blacker of Omaha* were Kiand Mrs. Victor Friedman1 of St. guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Gilinsky Louis, who are visiting at the home A. Mazie over the week end. and Mrs. Emil Rosenstock. Heads New Firm of AMir. Mrs. Morris Ghulkin and daughter picnic luncheon was "giveii TuesMargaret of Los Angeles, who have day noOn by Mrs. Herman Miller Mr. Herman Galinsky is the president of "the newly organized Sioux complimenting' "Mrs. Bdttigheimer been guests at the -home of .Mr. and Mrs. Sam H. Shulkin left forv St. ''.-'-''~ .".. City Investment Company which re- and Mrs.' Friedman. Paul, Minnesota. From there they Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Fishgall. preceived its charter this week. Mr. -I. will go td Chicago, where Mrs. S. H. sided at an informal dinner party Miller is the Vice President and Mr. Herman Miller, Secretary and Treasr Wednesday evening in the Country Shulkin plans to join- them -the- follo^ving Wednesday for a week's visit. urer. .. • -.:". •.•.-. * . ; . ; . ; • - ; Club, for Mr. and Mrs. Bbttigheimer After a visit in Chicago, they will and Mr. and Mrs. Friedman. . Goodyear Puncture return to Sioux City before departTemple Library Is Mrs. I. Marsh entertained at a ing for their home. Seal Tube small luncheon in the Davidson Tea Being Put in Order Room Mr. J. L. Levitt departed for ManWednesday noon, honoring her stays up tho' spiked itou, Colorado; where he joined Mrs. guest Mrs. A. Marsh, and daughter The books; in the Mount Sinai Let us show you these new Goodyear tubes which resist puncture Temple Library are being catalogued, Marcella of Madison, South Dakota, Levitt and children who are spending and automatically seal leaks—by powerful compression. Worth the remaining months^ of the summer filed and arranged for the coming who" are. visiting here.there. • many times their price in the safety and freedom from delays they season for the" pupils of the Relig- Mr. Nick Sherman left Thursday ious .School and the members of themorning for Lincoln, Nebr., where he Mrs. Philip Sherman, 1704 Douglas give. Fit all makes of tires and increase tire mileage. Congregation. Street, is visiting in Denver. will visit friends. Over 225 books are contained in Mrs. Dave Mendelsohn of Cleveland, Mrs.' Mory Lipshutz and son Berthe library. These include volumes A 6-PLY GOODYEAR HEAVY DUTY Ohio/ is visiting in Sioux City at the ten have returned from Stevens of the History of the Jews, Fiction Point, Wisconsin, where they visited of interest to the Jew, and books for home of her mother Mrs. H. Berg. TIRE PRICED WITHIN REACH OF ALL! at the home of the. formers parents. reference work.^ : ; -. ; • . and Mrs. Ralph. Rosen of CleveMany- of the,, books have-.been pur- land, Ohio, are visiting friends in They stopped at c Chicago enroute home. ;, chased by the Junior Brotherhood of Sioux City. Miss^Bess Lipshutz has returned the Temple, while the purchase- of home a|ter3pending two weeks visitothers has' been-- made .possible -Mr, Archie Kfoloff, of Chicago, visthrough the Library Fund," - main-, ited at the home of his-parents, Mr. ing friendsLin Chicago. tained by the Temple, and to which andi Mrs. Sam Kroloff, 1926 West 3rd Board members of Davidson'^ gifts a r e m a d e . '-'••• •••-• ' . > r. ••••'_• " Street. Women's Club tendered a farewell Superior to many high-priced, so-called "super" tires. Extra thick, tough Mr. Herman Herzoff will leave for. luncheon to Miss Clara Goldberg, tread. Six*ply carcass of B sturdy Snpertwist Coni—Goodyear patent. Only Auxiliary's Annual 3 his home in Chicago, tomorrow after who has . served in the capacity of the world's largest tire production enables this value. Lifetime guaranteeShow November spending the past twoweeks vsisiting president to the club, for the past careful mounting—and oar all-year service. year. Miss Goldberg plans to make at the. home of his parents, Mr. and her home.in. New .York after a short Mrs. R. Herzoff. Sunday evening, November.. 2nd, has been the date selected by the Miss Mary Lass has returned to hervisit, to her. Jiome in * Elkador, Iowa. FULL OVERSIZE Ladies Auxiliary of Shaar Zipn Syn- home in Chicago, after spending sev- Miss Rose Pill will act, as president agogue for their Eighth Annual Re- eral weeks visiting her parents here of the group for the coming season. The proceeds from the Revue" in the city. Miss Beverly Sacks spent several go -towards the maintainance of - the days visiting friends in South Dakota. Synagogue.. Although Mrs. S. H. Mrs. B. Blecker entertained six Shulkin has not as yet announced couples at her home Saturday eventhe chairman for the arrangements ing, honoring her cousin Miss ShirTubes also low priced and program, it is believed that the ley Frolkin of Brooklyn, New York, Jacob Adler's Family (performance will, be in the form of who is visiting in Sioux City. A to Appear on Broadway a Musical Comedy, "with vaudeville Midnight picnic supper was served •^Yand minstrel acts. New York, (J. T. A.).—The family at Stone Park. Ask for Special Offer on Goodyear Double Eagles, New of Jacob P. Adler, the famous YidMrs. M. Baron was hostess to thedish theatrical star who died a few Heavy Duty All-Weathers and Standard All-Weathers members of her. Bridge Club at a years ago," will appear together on one o'clock luncheon"Wednesday af- Broadway this fall. Last May they ternoon. Guaranteed Tire Repairing , appeared as a unit in a Yiddish pro„ "We, feed the multitude'' duction • at -' the Second • Avenue : W[rs. Victor Raasch and son Milton With Tasty Foods departed last Friday for a visit with theatre. The Adlers will be presented on the formers parents in San Francisco. She was accompanied also by Broadway by George Jessel, wellher sister Mrs..- Seymour Malvin of known American—Jewish actor, who S E F F ' S Cor. 17th and Capitol Ave. Phone AT. 6427 New York who-has been a guest in announced that they would begin an engagement at one of the Shubert RELICXTBSSEN her home. HOBERMAN BROS., Proprietors houses on September 23. The Ad' AND -Mr... H..- EisbgaH and daughter lers will appear in Russian. and YidH dish plays, among them Chekhov's C T0l h MJNCJIES ^ ™**™d.h0™ ***** a "Three Sisters". !P_I_C_N _ IC n ^ i y u w i ^? a , *l of s e v e r a l d a y s ^ Chicago.

CITY NEWS

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J. BL. f BOXES W BE DISTRIBUTED SUNDAY

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Technique

CIRCLE PLAN HRST ANNUAL WORKEN'S ELECTS DELEGATES B'NAl BR1TH PICNIC

URGES JEWS TO STOP SENDING OF MONIES

Society News

Punctures Now Unnecessary!

GOOD

30x3 V 2 S4.55 29x440 $5.50

30x450 $6.00 28x475 $7.10

3X0IIP & SCBAtFER

NATIONAL TIRE SHOP

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