September 11, 1931: Part B Rosh Hashanah Edition

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Resume of Omaha's Jewish Organizations i

• 5691 Was Replete With Communal Activity

Knttri'il ;i8 Si-cond-ClnsB Mnil Mutter on Jntiuniy 27.* 1!I21T at J'oaloffice :il Oumha. Ni>l>r;>skn. under the Act of March T ~*~"

OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11,1931

SECTION

Mirror of Achievements of Various Groups Reveal the Wealth of Our Communal Endeavor A Resume of BaA Orgaiiization

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During a time of economic repression, communal, activities are usually among the first to feel the effects of the troublous times. But in Omaha, the past year, 5691, has marked a milestone in the progress of the Jewish:, communal life of the city. Plans. formulated for the betterment of the community were executed with unhampered success, and in general the work done through the various Jewish organizations continued to enhance the treasure house of •the community's achievements. This bird's eye view of the pan? orama of 5691 in the Omaha Jewish community is presented through the mirror of the accomplishments of the various organizations. A significant foundation for progress was laid in the preceding , two years when forty-five organizations combined into a Citizens' Committee and authorized the Bureau of Jewish Social "Research to make an exhaustive study of Jewish community effort in behalf of the indigent families, the sick and the aged, the orphaned and neglected children, the

wayward youth, and the spiritual needs of normal youth. This, self-analysis, thistaking as it were of inventory of the community's activities, brought to light urgent needs and revealed latent powers in the community with which to meet these heeds. The survey farther helped to formulate some far-reaching objectives, the immediate result of which .was the organization of the Jewish Philanthropies to pool the community' resources in behalf of national and international Jewish causes worthy of support, and to cope with the basic problem of providing a Jewish education for Jewish children.

RESULT OF SURVEY The more significant effect of this study was that it paved1, the way for the coordination of all social work in behalf of Omaha Jewry." There gradually emerged the plan for iihe unification of all organized effort into a single and all-embracing^ organization—^the Jewish "Community Center'and. Welfare Federation.

Since the early part of this year the Jewish Community Center, the Jewish Welfare Federation "and the Jewish Philanthropies have merged and'the work of these- organizations have been unified and coordinated and are now, functioning as departments of the Federation, governed by Committees responsible to - the Executive 'Committee of the Federation. The unification plan has already, despite its brief existence, proven its soundness and practicability: a clearer view of the whole community program is being obtained through coordinated planning; economy in operation and a more equitable distribution of the community's resources are being effected; leadership and active participation of Omaha Jewry in social service activities is being allocated and utilized in . accordance with the requirements of the service, and. the individual interests and capacities of the workers.

gram fell' to Omaha' Jewry's veteran leader, William L. • Hohanan." With him on the Executive Committee are: Henry Monsky, first vice-president; Sam Beber, second vice-president; Mrs. J. H. Kulakofsky, third vicepresident; Harry Silverman, secretary; Abe Goldstein, treasurer. Honorary officers: Dr. Philip Sher, president; Mrs. Morris Levy, vice-president; Harry B. Zimman, vice-president; A. B. Alpirn, Mrs. Herbert Arnstein, Dr. A. Greenberg, J.: J. Greenberg, Abe Herzberg, Harry H. Lapidas, Jack Marer, Harry Malarshock, Morris Milder, Mrs. Louis Neveleff, Irvin Stalmaster, Harry A. Wolf, Isidor Ziegler. Among the leading spirits in the progressive, development of the community social service program during the past five years was Samuel Gerson, who recently left Omaha for a brief leave of absence for further study. The present executive director of the Jewish Community Center and Welfare Federation is Jacob S. Pearlstien of Hew York, former campaign director of the American Palestine campaign and experienced in welfare work. .

THE JEWISH PHILANTHOPIES

The second annual campaign of the Jewish Philanthropies to raise $42,150 for local, national and international needs was inaugurated on May 11. The quota for this year's campaign was less than in the preceding year, although a larger number of institutions were made beneficiaries of the Jewish Philanthropies. This was made possible because of economy in opera- OFFICERS „ tion and careful budgeting. The honour, andthe arduous task The campaign organization includof steering the new. community; pro- ed: General chairman, Wm. L. Holz-

LIST OF INSTITUTIONS

By GEORGE BRANDEIS PRESIDENT B R A N D E I S STORES

. On the approach of Rosh Hashonah, I take the opportunity of extending my sincere greetings to all Jewish people. Looking back upon the past year, toe find it one of struggle and achievement, of tragedy and triumph. On the whole, a year of fulfillment. May the next twelve months mark Jewish contributions to every high human endeavor; may it •marks peace and prosperity in every Jewishhome. man; associate chairman, Harry H. Lapidus; initial gifts, Harry A. Wolf; quota, Dr. Philip-Sher; general solicitation, Abner TTflwrinTi, Philip . M. Elutznick; women,: Mrs. Herbert Arnstein, Mrs. I* Neveleff; organizations, Sam Beber; South Omaha, Goodman Meyersbn, Harry. Dworsky; national firms, Harry Lapidus; pub-

Jewish Community Center licity, Jack W. Marer; speakers, Milton Abrahams; young people, Julius Bisno; luncheons, Mrs. B. A. Simon. A series' of unforseen circumstances have prevented the successful completion of the campaign early in the spring, and plans are being prepared for its completion early in the fall. :

News Strange, Good B i d Assorted Miracles Another Bath Tub Surprise H<s Drinks, Yet He Flies

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, For Omaha and vicinity: Mostly cloudy tonight and Saturday/ probably showers or thunderstorms; no decided change in temperature.

EVENING Only Omaha Newspaper Carrying International News Service and Universal Service—Full Associated Press Dispatches

OMAHA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1931—TWENTY-FOUR PAGES

VOL. 61—NO. 43

- B y ARTHUR BRISBANE— STRANGE. INTERESTING, encouraging and discouraging events make u p a day s news on this earth. Two airplanes -will race across the Pacific ocean. • . Tomorrow Mss. Hoover will baptize the "great dirigible, built for the navy at Akron, Ohio. The dirigible will carry five airplanes, to be released "with machine guns, explosives and gas bombs -when uecded, and is built to rise more rapidly than any airplane. Its sate helium gas will prevent " or explosion. The navy plans to submarines and spend ' on lighting airplanes^ 4>oslng a naval years, m< The -L^ "a. sop ••« little vy congressmen." There congressmen e navy should who know that js under ^ have modern .submarines above the wat pensive fl aircraft, not -r aircraft t targets fore "little navj There gre n g

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Numbers alone do not, of course, reflect either the usefulness or the quality of the Center's program. However, if the total attendance on record for the first six months of this year—73,489 individuals have used the facilities of the Center and have .participated in its activities during, this period—if these numbers are analyzed in the light of some of (Continued on Page 2—Section B.)

HONE

THE WEATHER '

Th« beneficiary organizations are: Local: Jewish Education, Old People's Home, Social Service Committee; National: American Jewish Committee, Bureau for Jewish Social Research; Ex-Patients Tubercular Home of Denver; Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, Jewish Theological Seminary, Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary, Hebrew Theological School of Chicago, Jewish Consumptive Relief Society, Jewish Orphan Home, Cleveland, Leo Levi Memorial Hospital, Hot Springs, National Appeals Information Service, National Conference for Jewish Social Work, National Desertion Bureau, National Forum School, Doyleston, Pennsylvania, National Home for Jewish Children, Denver, National Jewish Hospital, Denver, Training School for Jewish Social Work, B'nai Birth Wider Scope Hillel Foundation, AntiDefamation. International appeals: American Palestine Campaign, Palestine Labor Campaign, Hebrew University, Joint Distribution Committee, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Jewish National Fund, People's Tool Campaign, Mizrachi. * • *

THREE CENTS

I s Omaha «ud lUMIle LUMt

Five Ctnu Elwwher*

CLIFRS AS 'SPIES' Pried

dorsee I'loui/r ild'j TESTOF ME fain

Japan Holds ^HighSpyV Airmen

FIND CAMERA ON OCEAN

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*nd L*jme$

AT,\ Scotland, Aug. 7, fjf)—Secretary ot State Henry IJ. Stimson and Prime Minister Ramsay Macdonald talked together Friday inf the front Toll t h i s - room of the" old farmhouse I ,. hired to protect w>. •-where the American, statesman . -— ..„ from thieves, compelled is spending his vacation. boys, once convicted, to persuade Mr. McDonald later deel" other boys to rob the machine, let- Legal Status Is Questioned matters of state were ting the detectives know when the cussed. robberies -would occur. The detecAfter Revealing $590,400 Mr. and Mrs. Stimson,' Mr. tives arrested the boys thus temptMacdonald and his dan Discount on Issue ed, eent them to jail, improving Ishh.el, walked over the lh» detectives' records for vigiland moors before b' John. ST. McGurk, chairman of lance. Later all but Ishbe' MgT. to the South. Omaha bridge commis- Dornoch for the j£F Jand The western grasshopper plague sion, revealed Friday that Strana- games. recalls one ot the early and gratifving Mormon miracles. In 1847 han, Harris & Co. does not intho fiqit Mormons, mournfully tend to pay $1,840,000 for the •watched grasshoppers destroying ?2,000,000 issue of 6 per cent aU their crops in Salt Lake -val- Omaha bridge bonds, but intends ley:to. exercise an option to pay the Suddenly great flocks of sea city, a smaller sum for bonds at a gulls appeared, ate the grasshop- lower rate of interest. pers, ended the ptague. Plainly Other new developments Friheaven had sent them. Nothing so convincing had happened since day in the bridge project included: I. Revelation that there -will the dove flew down, rested on Mohammed's shoulder.1 whispered be, a court test of the bridge law AKLAVTK. N. W. T., Aug. 7-— in liia ear.. The faithful saw a 6n the grounds it is an amend- Col. and Mrs. Charles K. Lindment to Omaha's home rule charmessage from Allah.: bergh grew restless^ Friday" over They did not know that the ter, and it cannot be part of the the delay of their vacation flight pigeon hacl; 1>ccn trained'to eat law for Omaha until the voters to the orient by continued tad dried pcasitioih the'prophet's'ear. themselves ' approve a charter •weather reports from.the west. change. Comfortable conditions •preOnce id the northwest, a-long S. Statement of Mayor'Metcalfe tray from the Pacific, a"• plague that the city council will stand vailed at this trading, post. 130 Ot ' field liiice was destroying firm to make changes in the pro- miles north of the arctic circle. everything in sight, when sea posed Stranahan. Harris & Co. To the west, however, at Point trulls camd over the mountains contract for the bonds to prevent Barrow,- 53S miles away, their trom the. ocean and ate the mice. any possibility of the city being next .scheduled stop, at Nome, and Mr. Bailey, head of the govern- held liable for payment of the at Fort Yukon, messages said rain ment's smalJ mammal'* depart- bonds if the bridge foil revenues was falling. With, the delay here now more than two days. Colonel ment, in charge of the mice, of- are insufficient. Lindbergtt bas become uneasy. fered no miracle explanation, but». Demand by Commissioner "W«"«re"in a hurry to hop," admired the sea i gulls" intelli- TOKT, that a new »nd more topi : gence. ' ''.' ' • • -r plete traffic survey be taken and be ssfd, "but w e undecided wbicir way we shall "go." The Lindberghs, flying Into presented to 'banks: and bond, Point Barrow, will liave" at their bouses, with the purpose of get- -.. Rested. - from , their long hop the nnlv bath-tub In the ting a- better offer tor the bonds from taker lake, liady. and jlnne

Land 'ermit, But Think Will Be Settled

Bookr • er to Rise io ' %,' M -'INS)—-In .pint ^tot0r «iam FlanDary 4" ._.)•_ gambling jthoritiea Friday «av a .ation of persistent reports .ace Al" Capone is levying ,y tributes on bookmakers tf e a huge fund with which • fight his coming trial in the eral courts. Flannagan. alleged gambler and boss of the r here, iiras kidnaped ' heart of the city ais held for ransom. Two men drove up drew guns and too* their car. . Scores of C - ^ ^ boofcmak have been th' ^ P ^ d -with and kidnar unless the pone, w* underwor Of CW more thi the Cap

upon it tv *Ul*Htm00ll^~ - are

the victims u. ~"mr' . .enes. police said. Bookmakers who •are not members of 1 tie syndicate are bcins forced to contribute as high, as 60 per cent ot their earnings.

however. Reports to police shoir each, night from three to ^lx ot the bookies; .vhe show hesjtaacy are

T6KI0, Aug. 7, OT—International complications arose Friday over the landing here of Clyde Pangborn and Hugh Herndon jr.. American airmen, and a flight of th&e United States naval aviators over Japanese fortifications. The' ^problem ~ created by the landing of Pangborn and Herndoa without a permit and the subsequent discovery of a camera in. their airplane was discussed by officials of the home, foreign, nary, war and communications departments ot the Japanese government. Pangbcvn and Herndon said they were sure they could prove they were not "spies'." It was reported same officials favored leniency toward the American airmen, while others expressed the belief some form of punishment should be administered in view of a recent inci^ HUGH HERNDOV JE. CLYDE dent involving three United States —International Newsreel rholp navy fliers from the f^et.oH CheThe smiles ol Hugh Herndon jr. and Clyde Pangborn turned to a droop Friday whea Coo. Darien newspapers asserted Japanese police^eized their airplane and pondered whether t i e American fliers who flew three American navy airmen flew across the Atlantic should be punished for landing in Japan without a permit and flying over over the Kwangtung fortification* -forts with a camera in their plane. Herndon a n d Pangborn plan * nonstop flight over the itt\d took photographs. The newspapers said the American admiral Pacific to Seattle from Toteo. offered an explanation to t!>« Japanese consul at Tsingtau that the fliers, who had been cruising, bad become lost. -The' Japanese, the newspaper said, did Act cooUder the erplana-

T Humane Society


Mirror of Omaha Jewry's Activities

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'HE growth of the Northern Natural Gas System has been phenomenal since its organization seventeen months ago. The Northern System is constantly eipancling-and operates not only in Nebraska, but also in Kansas and Iowa and will soon operate in 'Minnesota - and ? South Dakota. 1 ;

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The Northern System now has nearly 1,626 miles o | pleted pipe lines. ^

Northern Natural Gas System City National Bank Building, Omaha

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New Year's Edition—ltHE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11,.1931 fred M. Cohen, president of the international order. Several "Stag Nights" were also held by the lodge, at which, bridge was played and refreshments served. Upon the occasion of the visit of President Cohen, a dinner dance was held in his honor and also in honor of an initiation class and the elevamemory generously remembered the tion of Sam Beber to high office at Free Loan Society with a contribution the district conclave. of $1,000.00, Among other features were a Past The total contributions received this President's Night; an A. Z. A. orayear amount to $1,155.50. torical contest on "The Jew in World Peace;" and the installation of the William Holzman class of initiates. A monthly bulletin of the organiza-

Mirror of Omaha Jewry's Activities (Continued from Page 2—Section B.) for a temporary loan of $100.00 or $200.00 and to permit them to pay this off in small installments each month until they are rehabilitated. It is a permanent revolving fund and there is no greater charity than this. Contributions are made to this fund in the name of a departed loved one and in many instances in the name of a beloved one alive. The Committee has expressed its grateful appreciation for the contributions made this year to the capital fund by the following: Max Fromkin, in memory of his father, David Fromkin, $20; the Freeman family, in memory of their father, Harry Freeman, $100; A. D. Hyman of Minot,- S. D., in memory of his •wife, $29.50; Mrs. Sadie Kulakofsky, in memory of Ida Malashock, $5; Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Gladstone, in memory of Bernard Polsky, $1. The committee especially wants to convey its blessings to the children and survivors of Michael Kulakofsky who in his

B'naiBrith

fion's activities * was also published* The Omaha lodge has participated in all charitable functions by contributions and actual work by its membership, which now numbers about 500. It is hoping to educate the publ i c as to the wider scope activities of the-order, as the Hillel Foundation for Jewish college strdents, the A. Z. A. for Jewish boys, anti-defamation, immigration relief, aiding the needy, and helping civic and cultural enterprises. Omahan's have taken an active interest in the national work being, done. Henry Monsky is a member of the executive committee of the Con-

.Page Three—Sectioii

stitution Grand Lodge and gave the key - address at the annual District convention. Sam Beber was elected first vice-president of: District No. 6 of the B'nai Brith at Milwaukee this summer and is also president of the Supreme Advisory Council of the A. Z. A. Dr. A. Greenberg, present president of the local lodge, was named a member of the general committee of this district at .the convention.. Irvin Stalmaster is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Cleveland Orphans Home, a B'nai Brith institution, and Harry Lapidus is first vice-president of the National Jewish Hospital, which is also under

B'nai Brith auspices. Present officers of Omaha Lodge No. 354 are: Dr. A. Greenberg, president; Abner Kaiman, vice-president; Isadore Abramson, secretary, Harry Friedman, treasurer; John Feldman, guardian; L F. Goodman, warden; N. S. Yaffee, Goodman Cohen and Sam Beber, trustees. The executive committee consists of all the past presidents of the lodge, the new officers, and Dr. Sam Stern, H. Franklin, Nathan Fine, Leo Abramson, Sam Green and Dr. O. S. Belzer. The president administration plans to inaugurate- luncheon meetings and

to bring speakers of national repute to Omaha, besides providing a cul« tural program of interest to the members. •

1931-82 holds the prospect of being the most successful year so far ia the history of women's organizations. More women than ever before have become interested in the programs which the various organizations offer—and especially the younger matrons'are showing their willingness (Continued on Page 4—Section B.)

A Thought for the New

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By L. B. TOBIN PUBLISHER, OMAHA BEE-NEWS

Permit me, as publisher

of the OmahaBee-News, to extend my most cordial greetings and all good wishes to the Jewish citizens of Omaha, and the middle west on the coming celebration of Bosh Uashonah. TJce philosophy, culture and spiritual courage of the Jewish people have withstood the test of many centuries and still endure with undiminished lustre as great forces in the conservation of " Kuman liberty and as guideposts to a more perfect civilization and a better understanding of the brotherhood of man. Accept my congratulations and. best wishes for a prosperous and liappy New Tear to the Jewish people and to the Jewish Press.

A good thing to remember, and a better thing to do, Is work with the construction gang, riot the wrecking crew* _ .

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By WILLIAM E. HOLZMAN PRESIDENT, JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER AND WELFARE FEDERATION r

At this time of the year it is in order to extend New Year's Greetings to members of our faith. It should be a time of rejoicing and the offering of good will. While -conditions in our community are not as good as most of us would Ulte them to be, at tlic same time I feel that we have a good deal for which to be thankful . . . In our vicinity we are not suffering as much as citizens of other cities and of Europe are suffering and there is a hope and a promise that conditions will right themselves before long. With this thought in mind it is proper that we should all give thanJes and be charitable and look to the future to bring us that which we most desire. Here as elsewhere we still have our communal problems and the depression of the past two years has caused greater burdens to fall upon those of our leaders who are active in communal and charitable work. It becomes the duty of each and every one of us to now, more tlian ever, Tput our shoulders to the wheel and aid those who are less fortunate—to help them in every way possible—to give \them as much as we can the benefits and the enjoyments "wldch we who are more fortunate are indulging in. My ifelea to the citizens of our community is that now is the time %hat every one of us is to be put to the test. This is a lime when we must give and give more than ever to aid all our communal institutions such as the Community Center, and other worthy institutions. I have confidence in the citizens of Omaha—I know that every one even without this plea will do his duty. : ; -,

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May it Tning to you and your family "health, happiness, peace *wd prosperity. May it tec your hopes fulfilled and may it be rich in the successful: accdinplishment of/ypur highest aims.

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. SAM JOSEPHSON, President

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Jack and Jill Coffee Shop

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Council of Jewish Women

The local lodge No. 354 of the B'nai Brith contributed- its share in the communal activity of Omaha Jewry during the past year, with the presentment of a series of outstanding events. The system of monthly meetings with interesting social and cultural programs adopted last year was again followed out this past season. Among the renown speakers who addressed the group are included Gustave Loevinger, Mac Baidridge, newly-elected Congressman; Joseph Baratz, of Palestine; William Sultan, President of this District; Richard E. Gutstadt, chairman of the. membership bureau of the international order; Simon J. Heller, and Hon. Al-

New Year Greetings

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ge Four—Section !B

New Year's Edition~TBB JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931

Irvin Stalmaster has charge of the volunteer workers. Jtabbi David A. Goldstein of the Conservative Synagogue will be the speaker. this year for the Current Topics -course. The class is held at the. Jewish Community Center on the first and third Tunesdays of the (Continued from Page 3—Section B.) of dates -for the many affairs sched month at 10:30 a. rn. Dr. Frederick uled each month. Clayton, Rector of AH Saints EpisMrs. Max Holzman, Chairman of copal Church, conducted the course to take active part in the work. How can these facts help but assure one the Courtesy Committee and. Mrs; I. last year. of the forthcoming successes and ac- Stalmaster of the Hospitality ComForum. complishments of the many women's mittee, will continue their cooperative Mrs. Kulakofsky and her commitwork this year. They and the memorganizations throughout our city? tee are also members of the Forum bers of their committees, preside and Especially is this true of the CounCommittee. The Community -Forum; cil of Jewish Women. Under the lead- assist at the social affairs. sponsored by the Jewish Community ership of its President, Mrs. Herbert Mrs. A. H. Brodkey, the new Chair- Center and foe Council of Jewish Arnstein, the Council in the past year man of the Peace Department, sucWomen is entering its fourth lecture progressed in its many and varied ceeds Mrs. Samuel Gerson, who reseason. undertakings beyond all expectation. sides in Chicago temporarily. Mrs. Famous speakers presented last A brief review will be given of last Gerson and her group were among year oh the course were Dr. Claryear's activities and with these the most ardent workers of the orachievements to look back on there ganization last year. It was through ence True:Wilson and Clarence Daris no doubt but what each and every the efforts of this department that row, who debated on Prohibition; member will have the inspiration and* Frederick Libby, Executive Secretary Senator Burton K. Wheeler of Mondesire to set new records for the ap- of the National Conference for the tana, whose subject was "Russia;" proaching year's work. ' Prevention of War, was brought to Dr. Julius Klein, Assistant Secretary of the U. S. Department of ComMrs. Mose Yousem, the Member- Omaha. merce; Margaret Sanger, birth conship Chairman, reported forty-six Mrs. Brodkey will carry on the trol advocate; James Waterman new members last year. The present work-as ably as her predecessor, for Wise, and Captain Bruce Baimsfathmembership is 355. . . throughout the past season her Ac- er, English author, cartoonist and Mrs. Robert Glazer,. Chairman of tivity and enthusiasm were a proof the Civics Department, and Mrs. of the interest this; department held playwright. Philip Schwartz, . Chairman of the for her. For this season,- U. S. Senator RobLegislation Study Group, worked toert M. La Follette of Wisconsin heads Mrs. J. M. Malashock is in charge the list. Dr. Samuel D. Schmalhausen, gether a great part of the time. of programs. Early last spring Mrs. educational psychiatrist and lecturer, Their meetings were held jointly and they cooperated in every possible Malashock: was appointed- to the s next. Oliver Baldwin,. Labor memway. These two groups sponsored the chairmanship of this committee. The ber of the British Parliament, will March meeting of the Council. At examples of her work at that time speak in January. Rabbi 'Solomon this time they presented David Fell- are an assurance of the interesting Goldman and Maurice Hindus, auman, associate professor of political and entertaining afternoons in store thority on conditions in Soviet Russcience at the University of Nebras- for the Council this year. sia, will appear later in the season. Mrs. I. Ziegler, who was Chairman ka. Throughout the year an active inMrs. Morton -Degen, Chairman of terest was taken in all civic questions of Farm and Rural Work, is suc- the Committee on Education for Forceeded by Mrs. Benjamin Minkin. and problems. - . . * . • _ eign Born, orgenized classes which This coming season the Legislation Mrs. J. H. Kulakofsky continues as met regularly at the Community Cendepartment will be conducted the Chairman of the Education depart- ter. Besides volunteer teachers the same, but the Civics Study Groups ment. One of the most important ac- Board of Education furnished a paid will be discontinued and the members, tivities in this department is the cir- teacher. will attend the meetings of the City culating library at the . Blackstone Mrs. A. Somberg continues as head Council and concentrate their atten- Hotel. Less than a year in exist- of the Motor Corps. tion along this line. ence this undertaking has prospered Mrs. Julius Newman, Chairman of Mrs. Abe Greenspan, as Chairman from the beginning. The proceeds go Religion and .Religious Education, diof Community Cooperation, continues to the Scholarship Fund. Applica- rected the annual observance of in charge of the calendar. Mrs. tions were to be made for this year's Council Sabbath. Services were given Greenspan's work in this capacity last award, however, up to date none at Temple Israel and at the Conyear was of benefit not only to the have come in, thus leaving the schol- servative Synagogue. Council but to all local Jewish or- arship still open. Mrs. Bert Hene is . Mrs. Reuben Kulakofsky, Chairman ganizations in preventing a conflict in charge of the library and Mrs. of Social Service Committee, and he?

Mirror of Omaha Jewry's Activities

New Year (greetings ^ By C. rA. SOBENSON !ATTORNEY-GENERAL OF NEBHASKA;

I extend greetings. No one creed, class,, nationality, or race, can claim to own our country. It belongs to all of Us who cherish its ideals of. religious freedom, government of the people, and equal opportunity to all. True Americanism does not mean ruthless suppression of various cultures and beliefs brought from across the sea. Our country calls to the Jews, Germans, Bohemians, English, Irish, Italians, Polish, French and Scandinavians, all, to give to their adopted land the best and highest in their cultures and traditions. Then some day out of the commingling of all these different cultures and ideals will come one culture glorious and wonderful beyond comprehension. That we are divided in personal religious beliefs is not of great consequence. The important thing is that we be united in building for our children and their children a great civilization. To that effort the Jews of America will make great contributions. members did valuable work last year in assistanting the Jewish deaf and blind throughout the state. Mrs. Kulakofsky was also in charge of workers for the Community Chest and Red Cross Christmas seal drives. Mrs. Sam Beber remains as Chairman of the School Friend Department. Mrs. Bailie Elgutter is Chairman

of the Sewing Group which meets each Thursday to sew for the Red Cross. Mrs. B. A. Simon, head of the Ways and Means Committee, has charge of the annual rummage sale, and was also sponsor of the benefit bridge party given last year. Mrs. Julius Newman continues as Chairman of the Telephone Commit-

tee and Mrs. H. A. Wx>lf will carry on her duties in the Farm and Rural Work Department. Mrs. Wm. L. Holzman has charge of the Service for Foreign Born,

Omaha Hebrew Club

sical equipment in the Jewish. Community Center; presentation of the First Mother's and Daughter's banquet in the Center this May; assisting the Center Player's Guild; working with the matron in the gynmasium and swimming classes; chaperoning dances, characterizes the splendid work done by the Jewish Women's Welfare Organization. And besides these numerous duties, the organization takes charge of relief work with a sympathy and understanding that is a credit to its sealpus* members. The Jewish Women's Welfare Organization is now in its 30th year—making it the oldest group of its kind in the city. Future plans will bring to light even better work than hsa been done before. Officers are Mrs. Louis Neveleff, president; Mrs. H. Rachman, vieepresident; Mrs. William Holzman, Mrs. J. M. Malashock, and Miss Blanche Zinvman, secretaries; Mrs. Charles Levinson, treasurer. The board of directors includes the officers and the Mesdames H. A. Newman, I. Stalmaster, William Holzman, Philip Sher, S. Frohm, J. Stein, J. Finkle, S. Fish, J. M. Malashock, N. Levinson, Herman Jahr, Mose Yousem, D. Sherman, F. J. Alberts, A. Greenberg, B. A. Simon, Nate Mantel, H. Arnstein, H. A. Wolf, K. Tatle, Frederick Cohn, Dollie Elgutter, David Goldstein, Harry Lapidus, J. H. Kulakofsky, I. Rosenthal, William Alberts, Dave Feder.

The Omaha Hebrew Club, which has the largest membership of any of the local Jewish organizations, has been a potent power for good in the community during its thirtynine years of existence. Since its organization by a handful of pioneer, far-seeing citizens, it has been a blessing to many of widow of a deceased member and to members sick or in distress, besides donating liberally to the various charities. Visits are also paid to brother members who are ill, and night watch has been arranged for seriously ill brothers and for deceased brothers. The year's social activities again kept pace with those of former years. Large attendances have marked the meetings, for many of which prominent speakers were secured. The social picnic was culminated by the annual Omaha Hebrew Club picnic, held this year the latter part of August at Fontenelle with over two thousand of Omaha's Jewry frolicking there for the day. The outlook for the coming year looks very promising. The officers of the Omaha Hebrew Club are Irvin Levin, president; Jerome Kulakofsky, vice president; Sol RosenThe past year has marked another berg, secretary; John Feldman, milestone on the road of laudable treasurer; J. Riklin, Sam Altshuler, achievements by Hadassah, the womand L. Morgan, trustees. en's Zionist organization. At present its members are preparing to resume the past season's activities and to accomplish more than ever before in service for humanity. Organized in 1912 by a group of far-seeing women, its high ideals A long list of activities, among have elevated the organization to one which are the sponsorship of this of the foremost Jewish women's summer's successful play school at groups in the world. Hadassah is the Center; the leadership in forming recognized by the inhabitants of Palthe conference of Omaha's Jewish estine, by the leading Zionists, and Women's Organizations, to become ac- by the British governments as a nective in September; charge of the phy- (Continued on Page 5—Section B.)

Jewish Women's Welfare on

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931 The Talmud Torah has a six-year program^ "which includes a study of the following subjects: Mechanical reading, prayers, customs and traditions, oral Hebrew, writing, spelling, rules, singing, history, Bible, Jewish bistory from Hebrew text book, Taamei Hamikra, Bashi {commentary on the Bible), Pirke Aboth, Hebrew grammar, prophets, Shulhan Aruch, composition, Agadah, beginning of Talmud and current topics. The classes are now organized on a basis which is both modern and traditional.

Mirror of Omaha

'(Continued from Page 4—Section B.) Leon, secretary; Harry Malashock, treasurer. tssary factor in the development of In addition io the officers, the our national homeland. Hadassah board of directors consists of M. E. knows no creed; Jew and Arab alike Chapman, Ben Danbaum, Dave Feder, receive its bountiful blessings. This Dr. A. Greenberg, Manning Handler, vast organization with over 271 chap- Louis Hiller, "William Holzman, HarJudah Wolfson, principal, reports ters and over; ^45,000 members is ry Lapidus, Milton Livingston, Al that the children's work in the classserving all mankind by its fight Mayer, Morris Milder, Harry Z. Eo- rooms has progressed most satisfacagainst trachoma, tuberculosis, and senfeld, Ed Trelleri Harry Wolf, torily. The enrollment at present is about 200, but a large enrollment is other diseases which -were so prev- Mose Yousem, L B. expected during the season of the alent among the poor native populaHigh Holydays for the new semester, tion and undernourished immigrants. •which begins October 1—especially in Luncheons are now served in four-view of the prime importance of Jewteen schools and forty-eight kinderish education in the life of American gartens, and twenty-one infant welThe year 5691 has been one of great Jewry and its necessity for the prefare, stations are under Hadassah's care. Tisiting nurses make about progress for the Talmud Torah, with servation and perpetuation of the 5,000 visits a month. During 1929-30, a balanced curriculum, a thorough sys- race. For the new semester the Talmud 92,000 articles made by the sewing tem of teaching and class work, and a Torah is planning to organize a Parcircles valued at $53,000 were sent, to general all-around improvement. A big change was made in May, ent-Teacher association. This organPalestine. The budget for Hadassah in Palestine is $500,000 for the Had- when the Talmud Torah was moved ization, it is believed, will give the assah medical organization, $40,000 from 20th and Burt to the Community background for harmony and understanding between school and home. A for the Jewish National Fund, $30,- Center. There are eight classes which ad- special plea is made that Jewish parD00 for the infant welfare, and $18,000 for the penny luncheon. As vance gradually. Two sessions are ents will respond to the call of the Hadassah's need is so great this year, held with one and a half hours as the Talmud Torah and make their chilall members and friends have been time of recitation. The Talmud Torah dren's Jewish education an "everyurged to do their bit so that the or- has also been conducting Sabbath ser- day" necessity. The teaching staff: Judah L. Wolfganization may continue its stupend- vices, where Sabbath prayers are chanted and the chapter of the week son, principal; Eiihu Bloch, Isaac «us work in Palestine. reviewed by one of the teachers. Horwits, B. M. Wolfson. The local chapter of Hadassah is planning a very active year for the 1931-32 season. Plans formulated in-! dude interesting'programs for the monthly meetings, purely social gatherings, and several money-raising afXairs, according to Mrs. Julius Stein, president. The first event to be undertaken by ihe group will be an By W. A. FKASER annual rummage sale sometime in .PKESIDEICX, WOODMEN OF WO&LD October, with Mrs. B. A. Simon as jchainnan. Mrs. Abe Greenspan, proIt is a pleasure for me to gram chairman, is making elaborate express through tlie columns ylans for the first meeting of the year, which will be held on the last of the Jewish Press tlie best Wednesday in September. wishes of W. O. W, and The big event of the year is the myself to the Jews of tlie f 10 "give and get" luncheon, which •will take place in March. Mrs. B, A. middle-west for a most hapBleicher is chairman. The annual py and prosperous year. linen shower takes place in January; Mrs. J. J. Friedman is in charge. May Jehovah smile upon Ehe .Hadassah annual booklet will His chosen people tfiis Rosh vgaiit fie published, wiih Mrs. M. F. HasJionah and may He ".Levenson serving as editor. : The officers, board of directors, bring them peace, comfort *nd chairmen of committees of the and happiness. local chapter of Hadassah are: Mrs. Julius Stein, president; Mrs. B. AThe Woodmen oj^. the Simon, first vice-president; Mrs.-;iJ. World isrproiM to^jmmber J. Friedman, second vice-president; Mrs. J. M. Erman and Mrs. J. Stein, tliousmids of Jews among financial secretaries; Mrs. Sam Co- its members, throughout the hen, recording secretary; Mrs. J. Rosenberg, corresponding • secretary; country, many of tliem takMrs. A. Romm, treasurer. ing leading parts in the 'Board of directors: Mesdames Hy- work of our association. mie Milder, J. Blank, Alex Frank, The Woodmen of the World War Memorial Hospital at Jack Kaufman, O. C. Goldner, Joe Goldware, Max Kaplan, David A. San Antonio, Texas, is open to all faiths, as is tlie new Goldstein, M. Minkin, Herman -Cohn chapeland bird sanctuary now being finished on the hospital and H. Keuben. . '' * w « , Chairman of committees: Mrs. B. grounds. Bleicher, Give and Get Luncheon; Mrs. B. A. Simon, rummage .' sale; Mrs. B. A. Simon, yearly luncheon; By D B . P H I L I P SHER Mrs. M. F. Levenson, assisted by Mrs. J. Abrahamson and Mrs. J. M. HON. PEES, OF J, C. C. AND WELFAHE FEDERATION Erman, year book; Mrs. J. AbrahamAND CITY TALMUD TOBAH eon, milk fund; Mrs. I. Grjossman, membership; Mrs. J. J. Friedman, The High Holy Bay motor corps; Mrs. H. Kulakofsky, season is at hand? and .we parliamentarian; Mrs. D. Stein and Mrs. J. Abrahamson, delinquent dues; are thinking in a deeply reMrs. M. Fromkin, cultural; Mrs.. J. verential mood of their solJ. Friedman, linen showers; Mrs. A. D. Frank, social; Mrs. E. Weihberg, emnity and their signifigift fund; Mrs. A. Greenspan, • .procance to us. . gram; Mrs. M. Friedel, telephone; Our New Year's Day, Mrs. J. M. Erman, publicity; Mrs. A. Bubnitz, penny luncheon; Mrs. J. B. Rosh Hashonah, is conseBobinson and Mrs. A. Theodore, crated to self-analysis and courtesy. searching of tlie soul by * * *"

Officers are H. Weiner, president; H. Marcus, vice-president; Joe Tretiak, treasurer; Mrs. L. Neveleff, secretary. Dr. Philip Sher is honorary president and S. Bavitz is honorary vice-president. The board includes these and Sam Beber, Louis Blotky, Babbi N. Feldman, Mrs. M. Fromkin, John Feldman, Mrs. J. Finkle, Babbi D. A. Goldstein, William Holzman, Philip Klutznick, Harry Kulakofsky, I. Kulakofsky, Max Kirshenbaum, Harry Lapidus, Mrs. L. Kneeter, M. Levenson, B. Lockow, Dr. M. Margolin, Jack Marer, S. Biekes, S. Bavitz, Ben Shafton, Dr. Philip Sher, Mrs. K. Tatle, M. Venger, Mrs. A. Wolf, M. Wintroub, A. G. WeinEtein, N. S. Yaffe.

Page Five—Section B

Spiritual Reform. Temple Israel is making preparations to celebrate its sixtieth anniversary this fall, sixty years of progress in which the Temple has been creating good will and a better understanding between .the creeds which constitute the community. During the past twenty-seven years Babbi Frederick Cohn, outstanding locally and nationally and a member of the executive board of the Central Conference of American Babbis, has guided the spiritual attributes of the Temple. He has continued to be in popular demand as a speaker be-

fore all types of organizations, and he has by no means restricted his communal activities to bis own congregation. Babbi and Mrs. Cohn just recently returned from a summer tour of Europe. The Temple Sunday School, under the supervision of Babbi Cohn, has again enjoyed a successful year. The Temple library is being used even more extensively than before. Most of the purposes and ideals of the Temple are carried out through the programs of the Temple Brotherhood and Sisterhood. The officers of the Temple Israel congregation during the past year were Dave Bosenstock, president; Harry Wilinsky, vice-president; Mil-

ton E. Abrahams, secretary; Louis Hiller, treasurer. Trustees include Henry Bosenthal, Harry Bosenfeld, Max Holzman, Sol L. Degen, A. Goldstein, Manning E. Handler, Sam J. Leon. • • # Conservative The year 5691 has been one ©f steady growth for the Conservative Synagogue. The High Holy Day services were led by Babbi Peter Halperin, a senior student at the Jewish Theological Seminary of New York. Babbi David A. Goldstein came to take up bis duties soon after the Holy Day season in November. Services throughout the year were very well (Continued on Page fr—Section B.)

Talmnd Torah

everyone who claims adherance to the faith and tenets of Judaism. Jewish educaThe Highland Country Club has again enjoyed an unusually successtion is the cornerstone of ful season. A number of new members have been added to. the dub Judaism; without Jewish knowledge our race cannot zoster and a greater number of more -varied activities were on the season's endure very long, as our prophet Isaiah says in chapter 5, program. The club house, links and ballroom verse 13 "Therefore my people are gone into captivity for •were improved. The summer saw lack of knowledge." dinners, dances, stags, bridge, parr A Jew ignorant of his Jewishness and of his Judaism ties, and lectures on the program. The outstanding event of the year was the is coming tobe intolerable. One'ofthevital problems coniifth annual Highland Fling, "which fronting us at the present itine is how to inculcate in the was enjoyed by over three hundred Jewish youth the principles of Jewish reHgum, tradition, •members and their guests. The golf tournament was the l>est and education. «ver, Abe Brodkey winning the club I take tlie oppoHunity on this holy occasion to appeal •championship after a thrilling fortyhole match with Bichard Hiller. The to the parents of our children to extend all our efforts to see caliber of golf played at the club has flint the younger generation grows up into the finest type {improved considerably. \, An unusually large number of of citizensthat we have in our country. In order that they nfromen have taken an interest in golf may do so we are obligated to cultivate in our children the itjhis year and many foursomes "were lofty principles of Judaism, thorough understanding of seen daily on the links. The club dining room has again 'American institutions. been in the hands of Mr. John DorThe best place to receive a Jewish Education is in our sey, and has been the scene" of many City Talmud Torah, but if it is not possible for your childlarge dinners. The officers of the Highland Conn- j ren to join the Talmud Torah let them at least attend the

heats,

OMAHA.

Highland

.try Club are: A. Herzberg, president; J Jerpme Heyiw vicerpresident;. Sam I

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.

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4 INCE tlie last reduction in Gas rates, HEATING BY GAS is gaining even greater acceptance. in the minds of f bresighted Omanans . , . COOKING BY GAS is admitted to lie the quickest and cheapest cooking method in Omaha . . • BEFBIGEBATING BY GAS is Omaha's most economical way to refrigerate — less than 4c per 24 hours. Omaha can be justly proud of its claim to "the lowest artificial Gas rate in America.

S

an in any other city in America with Artificial Gas


New Year's Editiofc-^-THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931

Page Six—Section B

catering at all Brotherhood luncheons. The officers of the Brotherhood are: Ben J. Stiefler, president; Louis Sombergj vice-president; Dave Cohn, • • , • secretary; Walter Schimmel, treasurer. On the board of directors are By ABE HEUZBERO Nathan Jacobs, Marvin Treller, Yale Kroloff, AI Lew. (Continued from Page 5—Section B.) High Holydays. The main feature of PRESIDENT, HIGHLAND COUNTRY CLUB the synagogue's work has again been attended, a few hundred people com- the appealing chanting. of Cantor A. 7 consider it a privilege ing, regularly to the Sabbath eve ser- Schwaczkin and his male choir. to express through the Jew* vices.. The seven commissioners of the The Sisterhood of Temple Israel ish Press my greetings to • Rabbi Goldstein preached at every B'nai Israel synagogue are Louis E . Friday evening service and davoted stein, Louis Acker man, Mandel Blank, was organized many years ago when our people on the dawn of t his time to a discussion of funda- Joe Tretiak, J. Riseman, Max Win- Reform Judaism was in ita infancy .and. Temple Israel was located at a Neio Year. mental and controversial issues in troub, and S. Ferer. Judaism. Much interest and considAccording to Louis Harris, presi- 24th and Harney Sts. On the threshold of Rosh Today with a membership of nearly erable debate was stirred up by many dent of the Beth Hamedrosh Hagodol two hundred the Sisterhood of TemHashonah, we have ample of the services, which were further synagogue, 19th and Burt, the synaenriched by a choir of ten women gogual year was successful. The en- ple Israel takes its place with all cause to hope that the econmembers, trained and. led by Mrs. Sam tire shule was redecorated, inside auxiliaries of Temples in the country. omic upheaval of 5691 will Its many phases of synagogue work Beber. On one Friday evening Rabbi and out. • keep the members busy from season H.- R- Rabinowits occupied the pulpit. prove to be but a nightmare A special cantor from New York Members and their friends enjoyed has been engaged for the High Hol- to season. On the' first Monday of. of the past —for just as several highly successful and beauti- idays. A membership drive added each month the organization's meetings and entertainment are held. surely as day follows night fully conducted social functions. The many members to the roll. Each member of the Board has annual congressional dinner on ChanOfficers of the synagogue are: L'. so does prosperity come in ukah and the Purim Ball were the Harris, president; S. Riekes, vice- pledged herself to take care of one the wake of business inchief events. Once a month the Aux- president; Louis Blotcky, treasurer; affair this season. Besides carrying out the, prostability. iliary sponsored a congregational sup- Sam Elewitz, secretary; M. Venger,, per. The programs at these suppers EL Wohlner, M. Minkin and N. Wilf- gramme of the national federation, the Sisterhood has sponsored a new Hope and faith in our were stimulating intellectually. son, trustees. feature. The Young'Folk» Temple Among the features of the year Under the spiritual guidance of future have always led us were a symposium on "What Do Rabbi N. Feldman the congregation of League which meets at the Temple' out of the valley of depresModem Jews Believe?" led by Dr. Adass Yeshurin has again flourished. the first Sunday of each, month. A very interesting program is being arsion. Those savrit eternal qualities brighten tlie coming Morris Margolin, Mrs. J. Kulakofsky The officers: B. Lindenbaum, chair: and Mrs. Robert Glazer; a reading of man; J. Ban, treasurer] J. Kirshen- ranged for the coming year and every year with a beautiful halo and lend substance to my sincere the Megillah in English on Purim baum, secretary; I. Rochman, J. Cohen, boy and girl after confirmation age is welcome. . •wish that 5692be a year of unlimited happiness and unmitand a Purim Seudah followed by a H. Guss, H. Gitnick, Nathan Resnick. This year the Sisterhood is having discussion on the problem of antiThe B'nai Jacob synagogue at 24th igated success for all humanity. Semitism by Harry Silverman, I. F. and Nicholas has also enjoyed a good no outside, educational lectures exGoodman, Mrs.- M. F. Levenson, and year. Last year they remodelled the cept the one Rabbi Frederick Gohn is . Dr. A. Greenberg; Dr. Laurence Plank shule. The officers who served the to lead, so all our efforts are cen- Synagogue touches the women of the have truly not needed to seek elseof the Unitarian Church, and Chana past year include M. Grossman, ~B. tered on:his program and every wom- congregation, it is through the Aux- where for interesting diversion, Chizik, leader of the women, pioneers Shaf ton, Harry Steinberg, I. Schwartz an, is welcome to attend. The lectures iliary. The Auxiliary during the past Numerous new activities have been "will be given at the Blackstone Hotel, year b,as been so full of activity, reIn Palestine, on "The True Meaning C. H. Gilinsky and J. Kaplan. sponsored by this organization among the time ind date to be announced igious and social, that its members J>f Freedom." which were a special Thanksgiving later. Officers of the congregation are J. Harry Kulakofsky, president; Mose The opening meeting of the SisterYousem, first vice-president; Dr. A. hood is. October 5, and the luncheon Greenberg, second vice-president; A. The past year 5691 has found the and programme is in charge of Mrs. B. Alpirn, treasurer; Philip Klutznick, Brotherhood of Temple Israel fol- Abe Herzberg and Mrs. Clarence secretary. In addition to these, those lowing a program of activity which Bergman. »n the executive board are Harry has enhanced the value-and service Mrs, Nate Mantel,, the president, Lapidus, Sam Beber, B. A. Simon, of the organization. has expressed her thanks to each Barry A. Wolf. Meetings are held once a. month member of the Sisterhood, for the with a prominent speaker addressing wonderful cooperation given her. Orthodox the group and with a different ofThe executive officers, of the Sisterhood are: Mrs. Nathan Mantel, The business depression had little ficer in charge. The Brotherhood has a distinct president; Mrs. Mayer Cohn, viceif any affect upon the orthodox synagogues of the city, according to the place for itself in- Temple Israel, for president; Mrs. Max Holzman, recordofficers of the various houses of owr- it is in charge of all men's activities ing secretary; Mrs. Morris Jacobs, and much of the social life of the corresponding secretary; and Mrs. J. ship. The largest of the orthodox Shules, Temple that is not under the spon- Cherniak, treasurer. the B'nai Israel at 18th and Chicago, sorship of the i Sisterhood. The had Rabbi Manuel Laderman of Chi- Brotherhood cooperates with the cago, popular rabbinical student, here Sisterhood whenever possible . to for last season's holydays and is again promote more activity and spirit in When the life of the Conservative bringing a rabbi here for the present the Temple. The Sisterhood does'the

Mirror of Omaha

New Year Greetings

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Brotherhood

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service followed, by a tea and reception, and a Chanukah Sabbath for the children of members of the congregation, to which the kiddies turned out en masse; to enjoy an afternoon of Jewish story telling and games. An annual Purim ball was inaugurated in March of this* past year, all of those attending being enthusiastic about it. Two of the newest activities sponsored by this organization and which have met with undreamed-of success are the Cafeteria suppers held once a month at the Center, and the Oneg Shabbos gatherings for members on Saturdays. The cafeteria suppers, of which Mrs. B. A. Simon is in charge, were started as a means of bringing together, outside of services, members of the congregation as well as the auxiliary, and they have well served their purposes, with approximately 175 people being served each time. The Auxiliary members do the cooking, and a small sum to cover the cost of the food only is charged. The "Oneg Shabbos" gatherings are sponsored by the Educational Committee, of which Mrs. David A. Goldstein is chairman. This group to which all Auxiliary members are welcome, meets at the homes of various members for a varied Jewish program of lecture, discussion, and music. The Auxiliary has not been backward contributing to Jewish charity, and also has been well represented by its members in aiding charitable drives. Many other activities too numerous to mention have kept the interest of members in this organization for the past year, while the program outlined for the forthcoming year is planned to again hold their attention. Mrs. William Alberts is president of the Conservative Auxiliary. Other

officers: Mrs. J. J. Greenberg, first vice-president; Mrs. Irvin Stalmaster, second vice-president; Mrs. M. F. Levenson, recording secretary? Mrs. Benjamin Minkin, corresponding secretary; Mrs. J. Stein, treasurer, and Mrs. J. H._ Kulakofsky, auditor. «• *• #

Zionists Steady, concentrated progress rather than events of outstanding brilliance has marked the achievements of the local Zionist district during the past year. The year was significant in that more and more of the business, professional, and younger element became interested in and aided the furthering of the Zionist objectives and the Jewish National Homeland in Palestine. An ever-increasing number of people are learning the true aims and aspirations of the movement and the accomplishments being recorded in the Holy Land. The outstanding event on the local calendar was the visit here of Jacob De Haas, chairman of the organization committee of the American Zionists and one of the moving spirits in the movement. At a mass meeting he explained the policies of the Zionist organization, the political situation,'and the economic upbuilding of Palestine. During his visit he made many friends and converts to the Zionist movement. A number of important meetings were held during the course of the year. The outstanding of these was the one featuring a discussion led by Philip Klutznick on whether the negotiations with the British government are satisfactory. The year locally was also charac(Continued on Page 7—Section B.)

A

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, ScptemDer » , i»31

"Page Seven—section B

of Omaha (Continued from Page <M-Section B.) similar placque will be placed on the water reservoir upon completion. terized by the fact that the National J.. N; F. box collections and donaFund was included in the i tions are in charge of Mrs. J. Rosen.thropies. An unusual percentage of blatt and Mrs. M. Levinson, who by Zionist members was-active in ,$he this means collected over a hundred Philanthropies drive.' The Zionist 'dollars, most of which went to buy District pledged $100 to the Philanr trees in Palestine. tbrepies in addition to the individual A large dance and bazaar is being1 pledges. planned for. this winter. The annual The year also brought about close rummage sale of the organisation cooperation between the various. Pal- will be held in October. estinian organizations, as the ZionOfficers are Mrs. S. Platt, presiists, the Hadassah, the Poale Zion, dent; Mrs. B. Eisenberg, vice-presithe Pioneer Women,' and the Junior dent; Mrs. M. Braude, recording secHadassah. retary: Mrs. M. Linda, financial secInternationally, the Basle Congress retary; Mrs. J. Goldware, treasurer. held the Zionist, spotlight. This was Mrs. J. Sherman, who had been presifeatured by the election of Nahum dent, had to resign because of illness. Sokolow to the presidency • of the * * * world organization and the resignation, of Ghaim Wejzmann from active.,! leadership. A coalition executive The Deborah. Society is the women's which excluded the Revisionists, has auxiliary of the City Talmud Torah.-j indicated its intention to pursue a course consonant with the ultimate and its 250 members render excellent aims of Zionism, while the economic aid in the upkeep and maintenance of program advocated by the American the institution. Officers of the Deborah Society are Zionists will be put into effect. Mrs. K. Tatle, president; Mrs. A. Wolf, M. F. Levenson was .again elected vice-president; Mrs. J. Finkle, treasio head the ' local. Zionist district. urer; Mrs. Albert Newman, recording Other officers: J. Lintzman, Morris secretary; Mrs. Max Fromkin, finanFriedel, and Dr. 1. Dansky, vice pres- cial secretary. idents; Sam Davis, secretary; Joe * * * Tretiak, treasurer; Max Barish, Dr. O. C. Belzer, Dr. A. Greenberg, Phil Klutznick, Harry Roseman and A. Silverman, board of directors. The Women's Pioneer Organization At the mid-western and south- of Omaha has enjoyed a successful western regional conference held in year during the past twelve months. SL Louis, Levenson was named one This group, as well as the sixtyof the three sub chairmen of the re- odd other similar dubs in the coungion, while Friedel and Klutznick try,'has as its main object the rais•were placed on the administrative ing of funds to aid the various farms committee. and schools of the chalutzoz (pioneer ' . .* * ••* women) of Palestine. The distribution of these funds is carried out through the main ofice of the organization contributed to the delegate fund, to The tslephone rings. "Hello . . . defray the expense of sending deleyes, this is Mrs. L of the Bickur gates from the National Pioneer Cholim Society. Oh, you say your Women's association to the Zionist mother is in the hospital and you can't Congress at Basle, Switzerland; the go fto see her, because your father is Palestine Worker's Fund; the Jewish working? I'll be right over after you National Fund; the upkeep of home. . . no . . no bother at all. Good- contribution boxes; conducting of bye." Flag Days; the Shufe fund; the- PoHundreds of cases; year after year. lMcal ftfrid; and the Teachers' Sem'jina'ry of'*Iew jYork, •' '•. ._... outstanding eveijt -anrltjhe caT appointed tasks."?*jSonieon^ is W, a f$Vl'he .todar of tn£ Omaha g on was strange hospital,- food ;h»t eatable; jbethe visit ? of Mrs cau'se it is not; kosher. Quickly: the Chana Chizik,'-iastf.Mitrch"' ? renbwn ' Chalutzos* efficient member designated, concocts leader of Palestine. Mrs. Chizik came a delicious broth, a succulent piece of from the Holy Land, where she is chicken, and out she goes. There are no 'set hours. Calls may come any- conducting farm schools for girls and women, as the guest of the local time, and they are always ready. Pioneer club. She thrilled several asIiast year the Bickur Cholim. So-, semblies with her fascinating narracieiy averaged 35 to 40 calls a month tive of the splendid work being done to -the various hospitals, sent flowers by tiie Jewish women in the building .to i^the sick, went into the Homes of the needy and tended them. Jill this up of-Palestine. While here she spoke witii chserful willingness, and smiles highly of a bock containing the exthat!; many times accomplished' ps, periences undergone by the various women workers in their struggle to much as their efforts. ^.! simple aim, theirs—to bring a cultivate and develop the Homeland* and .written by themselves. This Toy pi sunshine to those needi: book is now published in the Jewish and a welcome one. Oncers are Mrs. Louis Neveleff, translation, with additions and impresident; Mrs. F. Fish, vice^presjt provements on the original Hebrew dent} Mrs. L. Morgan, treasurer; Mrs; edition. Orders for this volume are MJ> Cohen, Mrs. H. Rothstein, Mrs: now being taken by the Women's Leori Mendelsoh, and Mrs. J. Finkle, Pioneer Club and subscriptions are secretaries. The executive board in- being received by the' secretary, Mrs. duides Mesdames J. Abrahams, J. I. Hurwitz, Webster 1178. Goldberg, J. Finkle, M. Katzman, S. The members of the Pioneer Club WolJsbn, H. Asorin, H; Neisman, F. also take active part in the . local Alberts, J. Glickman, A. Barson, I. charitable work, such as the Philanthropies Drive,: in addition to their Leyiii, A. Seiner, N. Leyinson. ' personal contributions. The National convention of the Pioneer Women dubs of America was held last year at Detroit. The Omaha K|e Daughters of Zion are organ- club reports a most ,. generous cofrom the Jewish'- communiizedifor the purpose of aiding in the; operation r buying of land in Palestine by the ty iti- raising the funds for their Jewish National Fund, which, in re- projects. turn! for their services buys "dunams" Over $600.00 were raised by tiie in tlje name of the Jewish people and club during the year by the followsends the local group certificates of ing means: benefit performance at a the purchase. \ . c . local theatre, bazaar, rummage,sale, Through the work of the Daughters, members' "dues, and miscellaneous doOf this sum, $500 ;were; sent of jZjion a large piece of land was ac- nations. r quired upon which the Jewish Na- to the main office in New (, STorfc tional Fund fbuilt a teachers 'college While, they fell shdrt of their fnll ancl boarding school in Beth Hakerem. quota, $750, they hope to make up The purchase price of $3,000 has all the difference during the coming, been paid for. ; year. '.- •• -:. ••'...'. •• Last year the Daughters of Zion undertook a very worthy project, contracting to install within a five-year peiiod a water supply in a new colony near Behovoth in the Holy t ^ d . jThjey Ancient laws, written thousands of ha- e, already made three payments, years ago, have made the Jewish burial rites things of beauty — the; - tot ijing $1,200. 1 ^ie Daughters of Zion hold ,pror lend,to death the serenity: which, rightgr ins for the various holidays. A few, fully belong to the last rest. Ttather as tjiose for Mothers and 'Daughters than have these sacred rites ridiculed, an 11; Chamisha Oser B'Shevat, were misunderstood—the Chesed Shel Ernes fr< 3 j to the public. A very successful organization was founded eight years coi cert and moving picture was also ago. sponsored by the group. A bazaar Those who can pay—those who canheld in the Center in the spring was not, all are treated alike, bringing to also successful. death the common brotherhood not al The J. N. F. has placed a tablet ways known to man. on the building erected on the land The Chesed Shel Emes is mainbought in Palestina by the Daughters tained by women who have earnestly of Zion commemorating the fact that endeavored to preserve in atmosphere the! Omaha organization made the that makes of the last rites something purchase. 'All visitors there from las sacred as the bond of Judaism has . asked to look this up. A{ (Continued on Page 1—Secti<» B-)

Deborah Society

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Bickur Cholim Society

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Births During 5691 Are'inThis * Section.

JleadoftheTen •* Best Jewish Books >

. t e r e d ag Second-Clnss Mall Hritter on Jniiunry 27,-lwa, at 1'ost office nt Omaha. Nebraska, uuder the Act of Mnrch 3. 1170

OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11,1931 Lewis Browne; Hebrew Reborn, by Shalom Spiegel; Stalin, by Isaac Don Levine; Tin Pan Alley, by Isaac Goldberg; Christians Only, by Heywood Broun and George Britt; Studies in the Literature of Natural Science, by Julian M.' Drachman; History of the Jews in Venice by Cecil Both; and Royal Charles, by David Loth.

Books of Past Year By HENRY MONTOR In, the following comprehensive article, Mr. Montor reviews the literary output of the year 5691 and chooses ten books in Oe fiction and ten in the non-fiction field •which he regards as the outstanding volumes of the twelvemonth period. His comments on the work of contemporary Jewish writers provide an illuminating survey of the status of Jews in the literary world. —Editor. . The noteworthy aspect of the books written by Jews daring the past year is their unprecedented preoccupation with some phase of Jewish life. In Teiews of the literary output of Jewish authors in previous years, it has been necessary to emphasize that such and such a book was selected for inclusion among the best volumes of the year simply because its author was Jewish. And inevitably there followed the observation that writing Jews have no concern with that milieu which should have the most intimate attraction for them and with which they should be the most conversant. . It may, of course, be a coincidence that a greater proportion than ever of the books by Jews published during the past' year have some form of Jewish background. On the other hand, it is undeniable that many Jews who have hitherto remained aloof from the Jewish question and who have professed to see their birth as a pure accident with no relationship whatever to their temperament or their outlook are beeinnine.to nene-

trate beyond the fiction which they set up. The inwardness of the literary Jew may be a natural phenomenon, the climax of a process of normal ..development It is more likely, however, that the outside world is a more potent factor in making the Jew turn to himself for his literary material. The Jew everywhere is being subjected to an extraordinary pressure. Many respond to that force by repudiating their Jewishness entirely. Many more, however, begin to take a closer interest in the factors which oppress them. That makes for a greater percentage of Jewish writing.

THE TEN BEST I have been thoroughly arbitrary in selecting the number ten as the limit for the best fiction and non-fiction of the year. But out of the fiction ten, eight deal, entirely with Jewish life or a Jewish character plays a central role. In the non-fiction list, four are in one way or another related -to Jewish literature and history, past or contemporary. That is the highest percentage that has ever been compiled. It must be said at the outset that the mere fact that a book deals with Jewish life did not give it a place in the selection of the year's best. Almost all the ten in both lists not only compare favorably with the books that might he selected in a general summary but in most instances are synonymous. Tht coincidence might furnish the theme for a long essay on thfe utterly disproportionate number of Jewsin the literary world. What holds

true in the professions, with regard to Jewish overcrowding, is most certainly true in the writing field. It will not be long, perhaps before the Author's league in his country and the P. E. N. abroad will begin considering the problem of clamping a numerous dausus on Jewish writers. This measure of self-protection by Christians will be forgiven in the case of some writers. In the main, however, it is not chauvinism to say that writers of Jewish origin dominate the contemporary world of letters far beyond their proper ratio. The explanation for that will be left to Jewish theologians and to professional Jews who have "worked out some mystic theory as to why and how Jews constitute the Chosen People. The ten hooks by Jews which, I think, emerge from the level of monotonous writing are the following (fiction): Success, by l i o n Feuchtwanger; Last Bays of Shylock, by Ludwig Lewisohn; Fifteen Babbits, by Felix Salten; Samson and Delilah, by Felix Salten; Beloved, by Sarah Levy; Back Street, by Fannie Hurst; The Pure in Heart, by Franz Werfel; Thirty-Onfe Families Under Heaven, by George Fink; A Jew in Love, by Ben Hecht; and Yehuda, by Meyer Levin. The ten most important books in the non-fiction field which include one by non-Jewish authors, selected because of its significance, are the following: Liberty in the Modern State, by Harold J. LasH; Universities, by Abraham Flexner; Since jCabaxjv-by-

In many respects Harold Laskfs "liberty in the Modern State" is the most important volume of the year. Written with graceful simplicity, it is a powerful statement of what the modern liberal can and should believe. It is a book which adds to Laski's prestige as the most competent political philosopher of our time, whose rationality is equalled by his literary felicity. Lion Feuchtwanger's "Success" is an impressive study of social justice in our time. Written with that keenness for detail which has come to be associated with Feuchtwanger's style, "Success" compares with some of the finest work of Theodore Dreiser, and has the advantage of more fluent writing. In "The Last Days of Shylock," Ludwig Lewisohn again reverts to a theme of which even his best friends are beginning to weary. The idea of carrying the Merchant of Venice to Palestine is a brilliant fantasy and might have been convincing had not Lewisohn treated the thesis of the frustrated Jew in his best writing during the past few years.

SECTION F—EIGHT PAGES

HEBREW CLUB PLANS MEMORIAL The annual Memorial Service of the Omaha Hebrew Club for departed 1 members will be. "held on Wednesday evening, September 16, at 8 p. m. Rabbi David A. Goldstein will deliver the main address. Cantor A. Sivowitz will render several selections. These memorial services are open to the public

By REV. E . J. FLANAGAN HEAD OF FATHER FLANAGAN'S HOME FOB BOYS

I want to add my word of greeting and good wishes with those of others and extend through your Press to the Jewish People these wishes for a Happy and Prosperous Jewish New Tear.

through his striking portraits of animal life. He has forsaken that background in "Samson and Delilah," which is a vivid recreation of the Biblical theme. The Jews yearning for freedom, inner as well as outer, have never been dramatized more effectively. OF SALTEN Intermarriage, which has provided Felix Salten is a craftsman whose delicate tracery is as remarkable as the theme for so many novels of sheer his ultimate composite design. It is an bathos, gets its first intelligent treatacknowledgement of his great genius ment in Sarah Levy's "Beloved," the that two of his volumes should find English translation of the original a place on the list of the ten best "O Mon Goye." Written without senfiction efforts of the year. "Fifteen timentality and without any evasion Babbits", gives us Salten, the great of the fundamental problem, "Behumanitarian, whose, comprehension loved" helps us understand the forces of human troubles and whose sympa-: .which compel Jew and^Osristianrrrin thy with~at6B*s~* $Us7~awT transmitted ignore their differences, as

JR. HADASSAH SEASON THURSDAY

well as the forces which accentuate them. Flamboyant Fannie Hurst has written an unusual study of the Jewish mistress in "Back Street." It is a novel which has all the rococo for which she is noted, and yet it breathes a real understanding of those social forces which are hammering away at marriage today. It is an authentic study and convincing. Moody, mystic Franz Werfel has delved into the religious realm in his latest novel, "The Pure in Heart." It breathes a. serenity and a compassion such as few modern writers possess. If it is a trifle verbose, it has the compensating quality of high lyricism. George Fink's study -of shim life in Berlin is called "Thir(Continued on Page 2—Section F.)

The Omaha Chapter of Junior Hadassah opened their season with a meeting held at the Jewish Community Center Thursday evening. Mrs. Morris Franklin, president, appointed the following committees: Mrs. Irvin C. Levin, membership; Miss Sylvia Olander, betterment; Miss Ethel Stoller, regional; Miss Rose Dolgoff, pin; Miss Ida Daytch, Palestinian; Miss Blanche Bienstein, pep; Miss Ruth Slobadinsky, general; Hiss Bess Spar, club newspaper; Miss Cele Wolk, parliamentarian; Miss Annette Bender, employment; Mrs. G. M. Ross, relationship; Miss Sophie Bosentein, cultural. Mrs. A. G. Sebring and baby daughter, Jean, of Chicago, are here visiting with Mr. and Mrs. S. Silver^ man and Mr. and Mrs. D. Eisenberg. Mr. and Mrs. H. Eneeter of Des Moines spent the week-end jvisjtii« Mr. Kneeter's mother, Mrs. Mamie Kneeter.

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WILL open for you the windowsof Heaven, and pour out for you a blessing, witil it be more than enough?

TTH the approach of the Holydays, Jewish hearts are reimbued with the spirit of the Almighty, "and we look to the Book of BODICS for hope and inspiration. As a balm to the world's present wounds are the soothing words of the prophet Malachi: "I will open tor you the windows of Heaven, and pour out for you a blessing, until it be more than enough/' CHARLES SIMON

.This prophetic utterance of some twenty centuries ago is a living vital message today. The clouds of depression will inevitably roll by, leaving the business sky clear and bright* May the opening of the windows of Heaven be soon*** and may His bountiful blessings bring you a life brimming with health, happiness and prosperity.

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New Year's Edition~THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September TI,198Z

e Two—SectioaJf «...

OUTSTANDING JEWISH BOOKS OF PAST YEAR .Continued from Page 1—Section F.) ty-One Families Under Heaven." It has not the doctrinaire atmosphere of Michael Gold's "Jews Without Money" but it shares its frankness. This story of a Jewish mother crushed by her Christian husband who looks down upon her provides an insight into the problem of intermarriage in tiermany, at an angle entirely different from that of Sarah Levy's study of intermarriages in France. Ben Hecht's "A Jew in Love" is not, intrinsically, a great piece of writing. It is included, rather, because Hecht who has sedulously avoided any treatment of that life which he : should know most intimately has finally, decided to use some cf the material at his disposal. His real aim, of course, was revenge rather than remorse. On the same basis Maxwell Bodenheini's "Duke Herring" should be included. But since Hecht's volume is selected as a symbol, it may stand for both bopks, which express the mutual: admiration of these two authors for each other's most repulsive, characteristics, "Yehuda" by Meyer Levin is the most sympathetic and the most convincing novel out of Palestine that has yet appeared in English. It throws more light on the new Jewish spirit and its manifestations than most of the other factual accounts put together.

TQIB

"By RABBI N . FELDMAN 'ADASS .YESHTJBIM: SYNAGOGUE

Tonight ushers in the year 5692 for Jewry the world over. itisMo^Hashxmahj, the beginning ofr a new year. But thexJewtslt people have more than one name"for each of' their Jiolydays. Thus, Passover'is also called the Holiday ofl:Spr^^Sh^ot1iU'^j)\ktiomn as the Holiday of First Fruitsj Succoth is likewise named the Holiday of Harvest. Each of these titles has a special significance, giving the Holydays a double meaning. ! So, too, has this holiday two names. The first is Rosh Hashonah, the beginning of the year in the Hebraic calendar.In addition, in:our holy Torah, in all prayers, and in Kiddushihis momentous holidy is known as tJie day of remembrance. For despite the tribulations and unbearable sufferings of the Jew throughout the centuries of his historical existence as year by year he endured new crises, still the Jewish, people, the People of the Book, who liave stored away such wonderful memories and such rich background, must not despair. It is satisfying enough for him to look on the far distant past, and the remembrances will breathe into his^eart new hopes. On Rosh Hashonah these remembrances of our past lend us inspiration for the future. Cfn this holy day I want to express my sincere best wishes and my blessings from tlie depth of my lieart to all Israel and bless them with a good and liappy year.

"CHRISTIANS ONLY"

filled the bottoms of the pages of his the. accomplishments of modern HeAbraham Flexner has exposed the new books with footnotes purporting brew literature. Don Levine's biograhypocrisies, the inadequacies and the to indicate the -various- volumes he phy . of "Stalin"'. and Isaac Goldberg's possibilities of modern education in read in preparation for the writing of history of American popular music in his great boob, "UnivetsitieB." "Since "Sine* Calvary." But no reader is "Tka. Panv Alley'' are products of careful writing and mature thought. ConCalvary", ia Lewis Browne's somewhat fooled by this obvious stunt. • garish, account of the development of Shalom's Spiegel has written some- sidering the controversially of I>on Christianity. Resenting the charges ofi thing substantial in "Hebrew . Re- Levine's topic he has been singularly his critics that his books we not'born." It gives the layman an extraor- independent in his judgments. "Chrisbased on scholarships, Browne has dinary introduction into the spirit and tians Only," by Broun and Britt, is

horribly, has sufficient material to anti-Semitism viewed by two Chris- tions of the- country. Ferber's study THE tian newspapermen. The material is of the sexual degeneration of a large For the worst l>ook of the year we make it an important volume. comprehensive, but the writing is community needed only more re- nominate "Haym Salomon and the The number ©f vohunes on ^dessloppy. "Studies in the Literature of straint to make it an outstanding Revolution" by Charles Edward Rus- tine that were published during 'the Natural Science" is the finest intro- epic. Manual Komroff is another au- sell. That very eminent gentleman past year should -have indicated a duction to modern scientific writing, thor for whom publicity is being al- was obviously at a loss for material. wide interest in the subject. AH of and at the same time, an excellent re- lowed to make up for ability. He might have done better to inset them were flops, however, from the commercial point of view. The most sume of the development of scientific His "Two Thieves," a novel involv- blank pages rather than filling them thought daring the past century. Ce- ing the two men who are alleged to with meaningless padding. Of course, imposing was the two volume "Holy cil Both has resurrected Jewish his- have been crucified with Jesus, there is competition for Russell in Land Under the Mandate," by Mrs. torical writing-from its normal stod- sprawled listlessly over several hun- "Freud and His Time" by Frit* Wit- Fannie Fern Andrews. Her book repginess with his account of the "His- dred pages of boring writing. Charles tells, who,-has written pompously and resents an impressive collection of tory of the Jews in Venice." David Yale Harrison, who became famous repetitiously about psychoanalysis, facts and makes no attempt to pass Loth's biography of Charles II has hu- with "General Die in Bed," did not dragging in Freud's name by the tail. judgment. The best of the volumes mor, historical scholarship and felici- do half as well in "A Child is Boirn," A number of solid biographies were undoubtedly Maurice Samuel's, "On the Rim of the Wilderness." Its study tous writing. • a portrait of American social justice, written, however. They include the exThere were published during the Stefan Zweig's "Amok" might have cellent "Black Napoleon" by Percy of the Jew and Arab in the Holy Land past year a number of books by au- been included in the list of ten best Waxman, "Roosevelt" by Lewis Ein- is objective, thoroughly informed with thors whose names are more or less except that it is a short story rather stein; "The Dreyfus Affair" by Jac-fact and convincing—as well as easily famous, but who apparently now sub- than a novel . . . Other novels pub- ques Kayser; "Schliemann" by Emil written. The worst of the collection stitute their past laurels for present lished during the year included "Good- Ludwig; and "The Incredible Yanqui" is "The Great Betrayal," by Jacob De Haas and Dr. Stephen S. Wise. Writeffort. A new author came to the bye and Tomorrow," a far above the by Herman B. Deutsch. front in the person of Irving Feinman, average first novel by Leane ZugAmong the essays, the following are ten hastily and in the heat of temper who won the Longmans, Green $7,500 smith; "Pigboats," a naive story of of interest: "God in Freedom," a post- it is no contribution to an understandprize with "This Pure Young Man." submarines by Commander Edward thumous collection by Luigi Luzzatti; ing of British obligations and treachHis writing is cold, studied, dispirit- EUsberg; "The Orchids," a cameo-like "Mencken and Shaw," by Benjamin ery in Palestine. Louis J. Gribetz's ing. For some strange reason the pub- novelette by Robert Nathan; "The De Casseros; "Conversation," by An- monograph, "The Case for the Jews," lishers brought out in English an early Weigher of Souls," a peep into immor- dre Maurois, and "The Contemporary is the finest little volume of which I novel by Arnold Zweig called "Clau- tality, by Andre Maurois;" "A Night and His Soul," by Irwin Edman. know, dealing with the respective dia." It was a waste of paper. in Kurdistan," a saccharine novel by "Civilization and Its Discontents," by rights and obligations of Jews, Arabs "Spawn" by Nat J. Ferber and "Wide Sigmund Freud, added nothing to our and British in Palestine, from a legal & Co."knowledge of contemporary manners. point of view. "About Zionism," by Open Town" by Myron Brinig are two Jean Richard-Bloch, of " excellent novels dealing with frontier fame; and "The Shortest Night," a Dr. Meyer Waxmann's "A History of Albert Einstein, is a collection of American life in two different sec- mystery story by G. B. Stern. Jewish Literature," though written (Continued on Page 6—Section F.) t;viu.jnc.*^^

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NewYearGreetings

New Year's Editian—TH£ JEWISH PKESS—Friday, September 11,1031

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By HARRY A. WOLF, PRESIDENT OF H . A. WOLF CO. AND UNION PACIFIC ASSURANCE CO.

- At the beginning of the New Year it is time thnt we stop in the daily grind that is lAfe and take stock. 'And we should not fear to do so, for though times are hard and conditions seem the blackest "there is strength to be gained in adversity" And it is tliat tone that I wish to be the keynote of my greeting to my people on this our Rosh Hashonah. From the history of our own people we can learn that many times in the past they have risen from the dust to newer and greater heights there to glory in the strength that is learnt only from trial. No one will deny that we are passing thru a period of hard times; no one will deny that the business life of our country seems sunk in the slough of depression, but it is not for us to bewail or bemoan. This period of depression, cyclical as it is, is as necessary to our economic stability as was the preceding period of bloated prosperity, for from this economic stagnation will come anew people, a people who will have learnt the bitter lesson of overconfidence. The bonds of sympathy which draw men together in a common humanitarianism will be stronger, for the rich will liave felt close to them tlie sufferings of the poor, and the poor will liave seen the rich toppled from their hitherto unassailable pinnacle. There will rise in the future a people with a new sense of values, a neto feeling towards their fellowman, a stronger more careful race. Toyovi, my people, I say, take heart on this our New Tear. Rejoice in the blessings that have been given us, and view with calm eyes the future, for the days to come wM again see us in the smiling sun of peace, prosperity and [jiappiness. In this country there are a people numbering a hundred million, a people made sturdy by trial.... with heen minds . . . . inventive genius . . . . and an ability to , exact from the soil their livelihoods; they will not fail and Hlvoughihe present seems dath and troublesome, it is only : the dark that comes before the dawn. By HENRY ROSENTHAL PRESIDENT, USTION OUTFITTING CO.

According to the dictates of custom and the requirements of a more or less highly .complicated existence, ice at the approach of the New Year undertake a summing up of our activities of the past twelve montlis and lay plans for the approaching new year. There are very good reasons for this—Everyone learns best by experience; no one can carry on for a year without gaining valuable Icnvwledge. Therefore, our mistakes should be noted carefully as we progress and necessary safeguards employed to prevent a repetition of same, if possible. Now, let us undertake a short survey based on our experiences of the past year. No, we have not made as much money—but what of that! Is the world any less beautiful and has nature lost any of its wonders? Does not the sun shine as brightly and do not the flowers bloom as heretofore? Have we not continued to enjoy many of the .material comforts of life? The greater effort, the harder - work,ihe necessary self-denial, and the keener application .which may be necessary to accomplish the same, or even. lesser results in the new year as we have accomplislied in the past should be splendid experience for us. "To note a man's true character one must see him in adversity" and I entertain the hope and belief that all of }us will find our stock of courage ample to carry us through .{whatever experiences may confront 'TIS; that our hopes will ^materialize and our highest aims be fulfilled. 5

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Qrnstein to Act for Rabbis 1 Jerusalem. — The Palestine chief T&bbinate appointed Rabbi Isaac Ornsiein to be the rabbinical representative to whom the Palestine government shall issue instructions and other communications regarding the Wailing Wall, the pavement in front of it and the formalities to be observed with regard to the Jewish devotions near the Wall.

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j f \ S each year rolls by, mankind records new adtiievements in behalf of social, economic, and intellectual advancement This continues only because the creative forces of the community exert dynamic energy in such a direction. Nothing comes of languor and indolence. It is not, those who sail and drift aimlessly but those who harness brain and brawn to whom human progress is due. As another year moves on, we may look confidentlyfor the Jewish element of the community to continueits notable achievements in manning the wheels of progress. The pendulum of progress may sway temporarily backward but its base continues to press forward. With the ingenious and creative forces of the community stirring continuously, its future greatness is assured. •^•4;

Berlin.—The second Jewish banking firm to close as a result of Germany's financial crisis is the house of Jacob Isaac Weiler of Frankfort which had been in business for 136 yeare. The Weiler bank was a pioneer in financing Germany's dyeing industry. The Darmstaedter and National bank, headed by Jacob Goldschmidt, had also been suspended, but it was reopened a few days ago.

This Advertisement Paid for by an Institution Interested in the Progress of theJewish People


New Year's Bdition-THE JEWISH PRESS-^Friday, September IX, 1931 •

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arry J. Co »BS%XS«««««««««8«**X^^

YOUSEM PLUMBING & HEATING GO. 2408 Capitol Avenue JAckson 2277

A. G. BROWN Weatherstrips 4554 North 41st—KEnwood 0100

Dependable Weather Stripping 10 Years in Business—Formerly PEARSON & BROWN

Service, Quality and Workmanship

Let us weatherstrip your windows and doors now. You'll save enough on your coal bUl to pay for the job.

GSSSSSSKOKKKS^^

: KSSKSSSSSSSSSSSSStt^^

G.%J|gpBlaraF

Adams & Kelly

Etectrical Service Go.

Company

702 So. 35th—HArney 2131

Manufacturers of

Get Our Estimate on Your Electric Wiring—CaD Us for Any Electrical Service — Your Business Sought and Appreciated.

WELL

13th and

Phone

Nicholas M l L L ~ V W O R K AT. 2041 REGISTERED

HARRY COOPER

•who has been constructing buildings in Omaha since 1910. Many of the finest apartment houses in the city stand today as landmarks of his efficiency and ability.

$SCSSSC3CSCSaCXSK3CSttS$$3CS*X3CSKXX!^^

$$$X$X$S$S$XSS$%S%X%S%XXXXX^

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Lumber & Coal Company 45th & Dodge WAlnut 0300

W. F. HOCH Grading & Excavating Contractors 4506 Ames Avenue—KEnwood 0316

KENNARD GLASS PAINT CO. 1413 Podge St. Atlantic 2388

¥XgsK$ttacs3ttacs3ttC3auttcx$s»^^

CONSOLIDATED Builders &. Supply Co* . Call us for any job of grading, excavating or dirt moving

Building Materials

AT. 742Q

Let us supply your coal needs this winter ; ^ ^

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General Building Material 1816-18 Harney GO ALr

£9tt«XS9C9ttCKX9«S($9tt(3C)ttttS$3«9(S^^

PER CONSTRUCTION C


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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September U, 1931

HING

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Another year has rolled by*-and we frankly take pride in looking back at another year of constructive progress* It is due to the confidence we have in Omaha and the confidence Omaha has in us that we, with the splendid cooperation of the sub-contractors listed here, have been able to help beautify the city's skyline arid help build bigger pay* rolls. It thrills us to know that what the Cooper Construction Company builds, builds Omaha.

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At the present writing we are sending skyward further monuments of progress-the Roosevelt Apartments at 48th and Davenport; the Reida Apartments at 35th and Jones; the Beautiful Condon residence; the Elk City School; and the Mayper Apartments at 53rd and Farnam. Just as in our buildings we tamp brick and mortar into beauty, so too do we hope that the New Year brings you a life of beauty and of service for many, many years to come*

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Norman ft.

Nebraska Stone Co*

3518 Jones Street—HArney

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^873%Iason StiFeet HArney 5105

Pointing Contractor

National Roofing Company ESTABLISHED 1878

Fireproof Roofs

ROOFING CONTRACTORS Slate, Tile, Gravel, Asbestos, Asphalt Mastic Floor, Waterproofing

t e t us bid on your next painting job. This is1 a good time of the year to paint your house—do it now, and help build payrolls.

We are happy at the opportunity of supplying stone blox to H . J . Cooper for his building; work.

OMAHA—COUNCIL BLUFFS—SIOUX CITY SIOUX FALLS

tt&ttSKKS$SSSSKKS?ttttC9^^

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the

ALFRED BLOOM COMPANY Established 1893

Makers of

FINE FIXTURES and MILL WORK

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OMAHA FLOOR & SANDING

Paint 918 Dodge Street ATlantic 1818

F. S. HAMILTON, Manager.

Western Brick & Supply Co* JAckson4325 To Mr. H . J . Cooper—May our relations ivith you in the coming year be as happy as tfcey.have in the past. aatxxsBC^^

Floor Laying Sanding: and Refinishing Cellized Oak Flooring Parquetry Cellized Blox Floors WAlnut 4530.

May ttie year 5692 paint lot' mankind as bright a year as tike brightest of paints we fidL ^


New Yeiar's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September IT, 1931

Page Six—Section F.

Law Offices FBADENBCRG, 8TALHA8TER * BEBEB BSO Omaha National.Bank Bid?. NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION NOTICE is hereby glT*n"thnt the undersigned have this day dissolved the partnership heretofore existing between them under the firm name of Midwest Hatcheries

JEWISH BOOKS OF PAST YEAR some of the scientists very potent observations on the need .for the aims of the Zionist movement. Albert Londres traveled around Europe and into Palestine studying the aspirations of the Jewish people for a National Home and wrote his sentimental "The Ufcw Has Come Home." Angelo S. R&ppaport, an Englishman, has writ"Histiji a thoroughly unnecessary "**. •<=_ tdry of Palestine."

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YELLOW CAB Reduces Rates [Another rate reduction is now in effect, following a year's additional survey of the riding habits of Omaha people. On all trips of more than three miles, Yellow Cabs -will travel

% Mile for Only 10 Cents This is a reduction of 20%

Hour Rates Also Reduced • • • Hour rates have also been reduced 20 percent. Yellow Cabs may be hired now for $2.00 per hour.

5 Can Ride for the Price of 1

3 MILES 0

There is a period of life when we go backwards as we advance.—Rousseau,

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We are happy to have the opportunity of extending toyou our best wishes for-a Very Happy New Year*

GENERAL STATES INSURANCE CORP* C. 0 . TALMAGE, President

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Mr. and Mrs. Harry Perimeter, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Nate Ferer, ia; daughter Mr. and Mrs. David Fertil, a son Mr. and Mrs. Mose Krasne, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Dave Katleman, a son Mr. and Mrs. I. Rozinsky, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Max Weiss, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rochman, a son Mr. and Mrs. Sam Lansky, a son Mr. and Mrs. Dave Braverman, a son Mr. and Mrs. Joe Marcus, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Nathan J. Horwich, a son Mr. and Mrs. William. O. Wiseman, a daughter Rabbi and Mrs. David A. Goldstein, a son Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Pitlor, a son Mr. and Mrs. Mat Klein, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Phineas Wintroub, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Ferer, a daughter . Mr. and Mrs. Sam Beber, a son Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Gerelick, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Moe Venger, a son Mr. and Mrs. I. Pickus, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lincoln, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bohoff, a son Mr. and Mrs. Leo Abramson, a son Mr. and Mrs. Max Shostak, a son Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cohen, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Herman Wise, a son Mr. and Mrs. Irving Perimeter, a daughter. Dr. and Mrs. Isaac Sternhill, a son Mr. and Mrs. Morris Goodman, a son Mr. and Mrs. Sam Katzman, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Tully, a son Mr. and Mrs. Herman Wise, a son Mr. and Mrs. Irving Perimeter, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Poska, a son DrS. Henry and Rose "Mikelberg, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Alperson, a son

Mr. and Mrs. Max Blaugrund, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Clyde A. Krasne, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Sam Newman, twin sons Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Katskee, a son Mr. and Mrs. Henry N. Solig, a son Mr. and Mrs. Sam Brown, a son Dr. and Mrs. Jack Copeland, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Davidson, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Arthur N. Rubin a daughter Mr. and Mrs. David Greenberg, a daughterMr. and Mrs. Leo Schlaifer, a son :, Dr. and Mrs. M. Grodinsky, a daughter . Mr. and Mrs. Meyer Goldberg, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Gendler, a son Mr. and Mrs. Harry Saltzman, a son Mr. and Mrs. J. Raznick, a son : Mr. and Mrs. Irving Hoberraan, a son. Mr. and Mrs. Sylvan Hirsch, a son -•• Mr. and Mrs. L. Shedle, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kohlberg, a son Mr. and Mrs. Irving Schneiderman, a son Mr. and Mrs. Joe Cohn, a daughter * Mr. and Mrs. Ben Schall, a son Mr. and Mrs. Sam Siporin, Jr., a son Mr. and Mrs. David A. Finkle, a son Mr. and Mrs. Morris CacJrin, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. I. Parilman, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Sam Sacks, a son Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rimmerman, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. A. Diamond, twin sons Mr. and Mrs. M. Colnick, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Myer Levy, a son Mr. and Mrs. M. Nachman, a son Mr. and Mrs. Henry Glassman, a daughter Dr. and Mrs. S. E. Ravitz, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Pink, a son Mr. and Mrs. Sam Roffman; a son '" Mr. and Mrs. I. Rosenblatt, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Maurice M. Shapiro, a son

Warsaw.—The management of the Warsaw Hebrew daily, Hazefirah, .the which has been in existence with sev- MON9KY. KATKLMAN A GKODIS3KY, oldest paper of its kind in .Europe, Attorneys 737 Omaha National Bank Bids. will soon resume publication. Finan- eral interruptions to discontinue pub;•; . ' E B O B A T E N O T I C * cial difficulties obliged the Hazefirah lication. In the Matter of the Estate of Harry

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Children sweeten labors; for their cherubic Ipve we willingly sacrifice and suffer. And through them we mitigate the remembrance of death and gain eternal life. We too rejoice with the proud parents to whom an addition to the family circle hasbrought joy during the year 5691. To these parents who announced births through our columns this past year we extend our sincerest Mazeltov :

NOT ALL LISTED

Hazefirah, Warsaw Hebrew Daily, to Reappear

Beauty ia a welcome guest everywhere.—Goethe.

CONGRATULATIONS!

(Continued from Page 2—Section P.)

'; A number of other books of miscellaneous types—some of them very Valuable are: "A Miniature History of Art," by K. H. Wilenski; "Law and the Modern Mind," by Jerome Frank; "Social, and Economic Views of Mr. Justice Brandeis," edited fay , Alfred lief; "Djuka," a study of the Bush Negroes in Dutch Guiana, by Morton C/Kahn; "Can Such Things Be?"an expose of corruption and concealment in.' the newspaper world, by George Seldes; "Jewish Pioneers in America," by. Anita Lobeson; "That Royal Lover," a very scarlet history... ,of amours in Rumania and the sacrifice of the Jews there, by Konrad' Bercovici, "The Gardener's Year," a whimsical monograph for nature lovers, by Kafel Capek; "Law and Literature," by Benjamin N. Cardozo, the most humane judge in America today; "Red Bread," another study of Russia by Maurice Hindus; "Tragedies of Progress," and indictment of modern machine civilization, by Gina Lobrpso; and "Why Recognize Russia?" a plea for the Soviets, by Louis Fischerl ' There were, of course, many other volumes by Jewish writers'issued during the past year. An attempt has been made to mention only those of the widest interest. The others that received no mention should never have been printed. Mercy forbids us from listing them. (Copyright, 1931, by Seven Arts Feature Syndicate.)"

and/or Midwest Commission Company, and the said Morris Holzman remains as the sole owner or the said Midwest Hatcheries and/or Midwest Commission Company. - Dated at Omaha. Nebraska, this 23th day Of August. 1931. ^ ^ H O L Z M A N PHII/ OSTEOV1CH.

for

50 Cents

Home Offices—Arthur Building: — Omaha, Nebraska

29th day of December, 1931 at 9 o'clock A. M., each day, for the purpose of presenting their claims for examination, adjustment and allowance. Three months ire- allowed for the creditors to present their claims, from the 20th day of Sen.embet, 1931. ; * Turek, IWceaaed. ' • >• • Notice is hereby givea that the creditors , „ ' BRTCB CRAWFORD, of said deceased will meet the executor of l-*-sl-3tCounty Judge. said estate, before me. County Judge of Douglas County, Nebraska, at the. County Court Room, in said County on the 29th day of October. 1931, and on the 29th- day of December, 1931. at 9 o'clock A. M.. each day, for the purpose of presenting their claims for examination, adjustment and allowance. Three months are allowed for the creditors to present their claims, from the 2GtH-day of September. 1931. • BB.XCE CRAWFORD. 9-4-3ti' ; i • • ' • County Judge.'

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• "'. ' ' l a w Offlces FRADKNBCBG. 8TALM ASTER £ BEBEB 650 Omaha National Bank Bide. Omaha. Nebr. NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION Notice is hereby given that the Empire Cleaners >&. Dyers, a co-partnership, consisting of I. P. Goodman and L Hchoenwald hag been dissolved: that I. Schoenwald has retired from said pnrtuership, and that I. P. Goodman remains ns the sole owner' of the said Empire Cleaners & 1'yers. and the said X. F, Goodman will pay all of* the outstanding debts of the said Empire Cleaners & Dyers. Dated at Omaha. Nebraska, this 21th day of August, 1931. I. P. GOODMAN. I. SCHOENWALD. 8-28-3V74T., • ,.-' . Law Offices • .. .•..•' FEADKNBCRO, STAtMASTJBR * B E B E B 050 Omaha National Bank B i d e . NOTICE OF INCORPORATION O F EMPIRE CLEANERS * DYEBS Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, I. K. Goodman and Sam. Beber, hare formed a corporation pursuant to the laws of the State ot Nebraska, under the name of EMPIRE CtEANERS & DYERS, •with its principal place of business at Omaha, Nebraska. The general nature of the business to be transacted and the object and purpose for which this corporation is organized nnd established shall be to operate stores and plants for the cleaning, pressing and dyeing of wearing appnrel, doth and material ot nil kinds; to engag in the tailoring business; to buy and selL wearing apparel; to engage in any of said businesses as a wholesaler and retailer; to buy, sell and lease real estate nnd personal property in connection with said business and to do any and nil things incident or in any manner pertaining to the aforesaid business. The authorized capital stock of said corporation shall be Twenty Five Thousand Dollars ($25,000) and nil of said stock shall be common and of the par value of One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) per share and said stock shnll be nonassessable when issued. The corporation shall commence business upon the filing oi its articles with the County Clerk of Douglas County nnd shall continue for a period of fifty years from said date,. The highest amount of indebtedness Bhnll not exceed two-thirds ot its capital stock but thi restriction shall not apply to indebtedness secured by mortgages upon any of the corporate property. The affairs of the corporation shall be managed by a Bonn of Directors consisting of not less than two members. The annual meeting of the corporation shall be held on the first. Monday of January cf each year nt which meeting the stockholders shall elect n Board a Directors and thereupon the Board shall elect a president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer. Any two of said office's n>ay b« held by one nnd the same person. All of theorassets of the corporation may «f «« * t.r»n8*erred hy the affirmative vote of two-thirds of all the outstanding stock at any regular or special meeting o the stockholders. These articles may be amended at any regular or upecial meeting of the stockholders upon the affirmative

I. P. OOOT1MAN SAM BEBEU.

BAKER Self-contained Refrigerating Units are clean-cut, efficient, compact, and adaptable to any Cooling requirement.

REFRIGERATION An Omaha institution which has attained world-wide leadership in it's field,The BAKER ICE MACHINE CO., INC., manufactures refrigerating equipment for every cooling purpose. More than a quarter century of successful engineering and manufacturing experience is behind every BAKER product. V With the IcElecT line of small commercial refrigerating units, recently taken over by BAKER, a complete range of cooling equipment is available, from the smallest meat market installation to the machinery for the largest ice or cold storage plant. REFRIGERATION serves you through the preservation of foodstuffs including milk and other dairy products,, through the manufacture of ice cream, and through'cooling your drinking water—to mention only a few of it's uses. Note below some of the ways by which BAKER equipment can increase your profits, or ndd to your enjoyment of life. AIR CONDITIONING: Clean cool air in your home or place of business—refreshing comfort at all times, no matter how high the thermometer may go in summer, are yours with BAKER refrigerating and air conditioning equipment. The cost is most moderate, results positive. Let us show you how you can profit by the use of BAKER air conditioning. DRINKING WATER: Hundreds of successful BAKER drinking water cooling and circulating systems bear witness to BAKER leadership in this field. Pure water, cooled to just the right temperature, is a necessity in summer—and more than this is the finest, most healthful, most refreshing drink in the world, no matter what the season of the year. FLORISTS: Flowers may be kept as fresh, as sweet snd fragrant as when first cut, and for long periods of time, if the cases in which they are placed have BAKER refrigeration. Long experience in the design and construction of refrigeration for florists makes it well worth while to demand BAKER equipment for this purpose.

Complete Information Gladly Furnished

BAKER ICE MACHINE CO., Inc. General Offices and Factory OMAHA, NEBRASKA

IN THE H r PRESENCE M K L U T Z.OP: NI

£

ATlantic 9000

£&

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MON8KT, KATLEMAN A GRODINSKT 737 Omaha National Bank Bids. PROBATE NOTICE

nfse^? De^Iled Notice is hereby given that the creditors ofa said deceased will meet the admlnia$ *ot «*«»W estate, before me. County Judge ofDonglas. County, Nebraska, at the «?"".*&. 9*°'* .Ko.on».•*»» «aid County, on the 29U» day of October,, JL931, and on the

FURRIERS: Far coats and fur trimmed garments, if stored during the summer in vaults held at freezing temperatures by BAKER refrigeration, gain in beauty as the.seasons pass. If you plan to install a refrigerated fur vault, consult BAKER engineers. When placing your fur coat In storage, make sore that it trill receive the positive protection ot BAKER low temperature equipment. GROCERIES: Dependable refrigeration tor food stores is best—and most economically—provided by BAKER. Close attention to the design of the system, high-quality materials and workmanship, personal service all through the transaction, make a BAKKR installation worth far more than It's moderate cost. It is no more than a matter of good business to consult BAKEK first. MEAT MARKETS: Low temperatures for the storage of fresh meats —BAKER'S supremacy in this field is the result of years of research, and from the experience gained from thousands of successful BAKEK insinuations. Dependable BAKER refrigeration operating automatically nnd at low cost. Is making profits—and saving profits—for progressive me.it retailers all over Ihe world. Your own best interests demand the selection of BAKER refrigeration. Engineering supremacy is a privilege—and also a grave responsibility. BAKER leadership, maintained by constant research, has been for years the safest guide to refrigeration satisfaction.

BRANCHES AND REPRESENTATIVES A U Q R ATXANTA BIRMINGHAM CAMBRIDGE . CHICAGO CLKVKLAND UATT

BEITTEB OSS HOINE9 FOBT WORTH JACKSON KANSAS CITT :. , MTTLE .ROCK IA>8 ANGEUES

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MINNEAPOLIS NEW ORLEANS NEW YOJtK OKLAHOMA CITY ORLANDO P URGH JPKOVIDENCK

^ternationally Better Since i&05"

ROCHESTER SALT X.AKE C U T 8KATXXK 8 * . tOUIB SIO0X CITT WASHINGTON


New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1981

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Seven—Section

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Personal (Jreetings /or RosK Hashonah MB- and MRS. FRANK R. ACKEBMAN extend to their friends aid relatives best -wishes for health, happiness and prosperity for the coming year.

MR. and MRS. M. D. BRODKEY and family, 3429 Webster Street, extend heartiest New Year greetings, to their relatives and friends.

DR. and MRS. BENJ. T. FRIEDMAN and family, 769 No. 58th Street, wish to extend to their friends and -relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

MR. and MRS. SAMUEL I. BUBB and daughter, EDITH, 1929 So. 12th Street, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their best wishes to ail their relatives and friends for a very Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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MR. and MKS. M. M. BARISH, 912 Mercer Park Blvd., wish their friends and relatives a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. MR. and MRS. J. P. BATT and family, 2551 Whitmore St., take this means of extending greetings and hearty good wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to their friends far and near. MR. and MRS. SAM BEBER and son, HARLEY HILLEL extend New Year greetings to all their friends. DR. O. S. BELZER, 902 Medical Arts BIdg., extends heartiest New Year greetings to his relatives and friends. MR. and MRS. JAKE BERNSTEIN and family, 2443 Manderson JSt., wish their friends and relatives, both far and near, a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. LOUIS BERNSTEIN and family 222 Frank Street, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their heartiest wishes to all of their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New L

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MR. and MRS. M. BERNSTEIN, 210 Park Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their very best wishes to all their relatives and friends for a most Happy and Prosperous New Year. :: / MR. and MRS. PAUL BERNSTEIN, 1723 N. 33rd St., wish their friends and relatives health, happiness and prosperity for the coming Year. BIKUR CHOLIM SOCIETY wishes all of Omaha Jewry a Healthy, Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. DAVID BLACKER and family extend to all their friends and relatives their heartiest wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. { MR. and MRS. L BLACKER and family, extend to all their friends and relatives best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. DAVE BOLKER and daughter, LOUISE, wish their . . friends and relatives Health, Happiness and Prosperity for the coming Year. MR. and MRS. JOS. H. BONOFF, and son S. BARRY, Austin Apts. extend their very best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to all their friends and relatives. MR. and MRS. M-BRANDEIS and children, ROSE and NATHAN, 310 So. 52nd St., extend greetings and hearty good wishes to their friends and relatives for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. A. H. BRODKEY and daughters extend to their relatives and friends best wishes .for a Happy New Year. MR. and MRS. BEN BRODKEY and family, 2812 Dodge Street, extend heartiest wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. i

MRS. M. BRODKEY and children extend to all their relatives and friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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MR. and MRS. I. CHAPMAN and sons, 111 So. 49th Ave., extend heartiest greetings of the New Year to their relatives and friends. MR. and MRS. M. E. CHAPMAN and children, BERNARD and HELEN JANE, extend heartiest greetings of the New Year to their relatives and friends. MR. and MRS. DAVE COHN and children, GERALDINE and JULIUS, 2597 Pinkney St., extend sincerest greetings and heartiest good wishes to their friends and relatives far and near. RABBI and MRS. FREDERICK COHN wish their many friends a Happy New Year. MR. SAM CORNBLETH, extends his best wishes to all his friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

D MR. and MRS. M. DAVIDSON, SOU Lincoln Blvd. extend sincerest greetings and heartiest good wishes to their friends and relatives. MR. and MRS. A. DIAMOND and family, 629 West Washington Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, take tills opportunity to wish all of their friends and patrons a •very Happy and Prosperous New Year.

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DR. and MRS. J. M. ERMAN extend best wishes to their friends and relatives for a Happy New Year.

F MR. and MRS. JOHN FELDMAN and family, 609 So. 50th Street, extend their heartiest greetings to their relatives and friends for happiness and prosperity for the coming year. MR. and MRS. IZZY FIEDLER and family -wish their relatives and friends Health, Happiness and Prosperity for the coming year. MR. and MRS. LEO FITCH and, family,* 1600 High Street, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their heartiest wishes to all of their relatives and friends for a most Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. ALEXANDER D. FRANK and daughters, MURIEL and ELAINE, 1008 Martha Street, wish their friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year. DAVE and MIKE FREEMAN wish their friends and relatives a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. MR. and MRS. SAM FRIED and family, 1509 No. 24th Street, extend heartiest greetings to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

MR. and MRS. A. GOLDSTEIN and family, 102 No. 54th Street, extend heartiest and best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. RABBI and MRS. DAVID GOLDSTEIN and sons, JONATHAN, and JEREMY extend to all their friends best wishes for a New Year of Happiness. MR. and MRS. SHROLLY GOODMAN extend their best wishes to their friends and relatives, far and near, for a Happy New Year. MR. and MRS. SAMUEL HARRISON GREEN wish their friends health, happiness and prosperity for the coming year.

MR. and MRS. ARCHIE JACOBS, 406 N. 49th St., wish their friends and relatives a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. MRS, GERTRUDE JACOBS and son, NATHAN, Blackstone hotel, extend to all their friends best and heartiest wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. JOE JACOBS and son, ALAN, 1102 S. 35th Ave-, extend to all their friends and relatives their heartiest greetings and best wishes for a year of Happiness and Prosperity. MR. and MRS. MORRIS E. JACOBS, Blackstone Hotel, wish to express to their relatives and friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous Hew Year.

K

DR. and M«S. A. GREENBERG and children, extend their heartiest greetings for the New Year to their relatives and friends.

MR. and MRS. ABNER KA1MAN and daughter, ELAINE, 4819 Davenport Street, wish all their relatives and friends a most Happy and Prosperous New Year.

MR. and MRS. DAVE GREENBERG and children, JOYCE and BRUCE, extend to their friends and relatives sincerest wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

MB. and MRS. JACK KAIMAN, Theodore Terrace Apts., take this means of extending greetings and hearty good wishes for a Happy and Prosperous year to their friends and relatives.

MR. and MRS. J. J. GREENBERG and LEE JANE and BARTON extend to their relatives and friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. RABBI H. GRODINSKY, 2639 Davenport St., extends his best wishes to bis relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. DR. and MRS. M. GRODINSKY, 310 So. 50th Ave., extend to their friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. WILLIAM GRODINSKY, 737 Omaha National Bank BIdg., wishes all his friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. J. A. GROSS and family, 2612 Fowler Are., wish their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

MR. and MRS. JULIUS KATELMAN and family, 417 Oakland Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their heartiest greetings and best wishes to all their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. MICHAEL KATELMAN and children, 123 So. 34th Street, wish their friends and relatives a Happy New Year. MR. and MRS. SAMUEL H. KATELMAN and family, 601 Willow Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, wish all of their relatives and friends Health, Happiness and Prosperity for the coming year. MR. and MRS. PHILIP KATZMAN and family, 951 So. 48th St., extend to all their friends and relatives best wishes for a year of Health and Happiness.

MR. and MKS. MORRIS GROSSMAN and fainDy, 210 West Washington Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their best wishes to all their relatives and friends for 'a most Happy and Prosperous New Year.

MR. and MRS. SAM KLAVER and

H

MR. and MRS. PHILIP M. KLUTZNICK extend to their friends and relatives a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity.

MR. L. HARRIS, 2859 California Street, extends to his relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. J. HAHN of the American Coal Company extend best wishes for a year of health, happiness and prosperity to their friends, relatives and patrons. MR. and MRS, A. HERZBERG, 104 No. 65th Street, extend to all their friends heartiest greetings for the New Year. MR. and MRS. H. HIRSCHMAN .304 No, 36th Ave., wish a Happy and Prosperous New Year to all their relatives and friends. MR, and MRS. WILLIAM L. HOLZMAN extend their best : wishes to their friends for a ! Happy New Year.

MR. and MRS. MEYER FRIEDEL MR. and MRS. NATHAN HORWICH and son, JUSTIN, SOU and family, 4919 California St., extend their heartiest greetings - . • Lincoln Blvd., extend their best and sincerest wishes to their . wishes to all their friends for a friends and relatives for a Happy" :• Happy and Prosperous Hew i Year. New Year.

son, A. LINCOLN, 706 No. 23d Street, wish to extend heartiest and best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to their relatives and friends.

MR. and MRS. GEORGE KRASNE And family, 125 South Eighth Street, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their very best wishes to all their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. HERMAN KRASNE Apartment No. 3 of the Oakland Court, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their heartiest greetings and best wishes to all their relatives and friends for & Happy and Prosperous New Year:—— MB. and MRS. JAKE KRASNE, 619 Oakland Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their very beet wishes to all of their relatives and friends for a most Happy and Prosperous Xew Yea*

MR. and MRS. LEO R. KRASNE and family, 312 Grace Street, Council Bluffs, Iowa, wish all of their relatives and friends Health, Happiness and Prosperity for the coming year. MR. and MRS. A. L KULAKOFSKY and family, 122 N. 49th St. extend to their friends sincerest wishes for a Happy New Year. MR. and MRS. REUBEN KULAKOFSKY and family wish their relatives and friends a very Happy New Year.

We wish to extend our greetings and heartiest wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to all our friends and well-wishers. LADIES' LABOR LYCEUM CLUB, 22nd and Clark Streets. MR. and MRS. HARRY H. LAPIDUS and family, 2205 Hanscom Blvd^ extend heartiest greetings to their friends and relatives for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. MATHIAS M. LEVENSON and daughters, JUDITH, DORIS and JEAN MARIE extend New Year's greetings to all their friends.

DR. SAMUEL MO«GAN, 617 : MR. and MRS. E. SELLZ and famWorld-Herald BIdg. extends to ily, extend their best wishes to all their friends and relatives for all his friends and relatives best a New Year of Health and. Hapwishes for a New Year of Happiness. piness. DR. NATHAN MUSKIN wishes all his friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

P MR. and MRS. SAM PELTZ, 3001 Haskall St., and sons, SEAMEN SEYMOUR and KICHARD WALTER, wish their friends and relatives both far and near a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. MR. a*nd MRS. JOSEPH C. PEPPER and family wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year. DR. DAVID CAHN PLATT extends to all his friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

R MR. and MRS. HARRY RACHMAN extend heartiest greetings for the New Year to their relatives and friends. MR. and MRS. W. A. RACUSIN wish all their friends a Happy New Year.

MR. and MRS. MORRIS LEVEY extend to their friends and relatives heartiest greetings for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

MR. and MRS. J. RAZNICK and family wish their friends and relatives in Omaha and Sioux City a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

DR. and MRS. PHILIP LEVEY extend their heartiest wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to all their friends and relatives.

MR. and MRS. H. RICHARDS and family extend to all their friends and relatives both far and near sincerest wishes for a year of health, happiness and prosperity.

MR. and MRS. SOL LEWIS and family, 2107 Grant St., extend best wishes to all their friends and relatives for a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity.

MR. and MRS. CHARLES H. RISEMAN, 3918 Cass, wish all their friends and relatives both far and near a year of health and happiness.

MR. and MRS. J. LIEB and family, 1924 Sahler St., wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

M MR. and MRS. M. MARCUS, 601 Willow Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their very best wishes to all of their relatives and friends for a most Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. J. MENDELSON and family, 10 North 28th Street, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend to all their relatives and friends best wishes for Health, Happiness and Prosperity for the coming year. MR. and MRS. HERMAN MEYERSON and family, 127 South Eighth Street, Council Bluffs, Iowa, wish all of their relatives and friends a Joyous and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. SAMUEL MEYERSON and family, 600 Roosevelt Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their very best wishes to all their relatives and friende for a most Happy and Prosperous S e w Year. MR. aa* MKS. HOWARD MILDER extend to their relatives and friends, sincere wishes for a Happy sad Prosperous New Year. U S . and MRS. MORRIS MILDER «f Fairacres, extend best wishes to their friends and relatives for and prosperity for the New Year. '

MR. and MRS. SAM L. ROBINSON and family, 108 51st St., take this opportunity to wish their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MKS. J. RODIN and family, 120 South Seventh Street, t Council Bluffs, Iowa, wish all of • their relatives and friends in : Council Bluffs, Omaha and Sioux City, a very Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. GEORGE ROFFMAN and family, 625 Wilson Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their heartiest greetings and best wishes to all their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. DR. and MRS. PHILIP ROMONEK extend beet wishes for the New Year to all their friends. MR. and MRS. SAM ROSENTHAL and family, 1730 Third Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend best wishes to their relatives and friends for Happiness and Prosperity for the coming year. MR. and MRS. L ROSINSKY and daughter, SALLY, wish all their friends and relatives a year of Happiness and Prosperity. DR. and MRS. A. S. RUBNITZ and children, 5016 Burt St., extend best wishes for the coming New Y e w to all their friends and relatives.

MB. and MRS. BEN I. SELDIN and family, 2336 Avenue G, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their heartiest greetings and best wishes to all their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.

MR. and MRS. MAX SHAMES and family, 1529 Grant Street, extend to their friends sincere wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. VICTOR SHAPIRO wish their friends both far and near, health, happiness and prosperity for the coming year. MR. and M«S. BEN SHAPIRO, 4201 Dodge St. extend best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to all their friends and relatives. DR. and MRS. PHILIP SHER and son, DAVID, wish to their relatives and friends a Prosperous and Altruistic Year. MR. and MRS. B. A. SIMON, 611 N. 50th St. wish their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. LESTER SIMON, Blackstone Hotel, extend to all their friends and relatives best wishes for a Happy New Year. MR. and MRS. LOUIS SOMBERG extend heartiest New Year greetings to their relatives and friends for the New Year. SOSKIN MEAT MARKET, 1552 No. 20th St., wishes their friends and patrons a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. IRVIN STALM ASTER and son, LYNN, wish all their friends a Happy New Year. DR. A. A. STEINBERG, 617 World-Herald Bldg. extends to all bis friends and relatives best wishes for a Happy New Year. DR. S. Z. STERN wishes his relaatives and friends happiness and prosperity for the New Year. MR. and MRS. I. STISS wish their friends a Happy New Year.

MR. and MRS. ARTHUR THEODORE and family extend their sincerest greetings to their friends.and relatives lor a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. MR. aad MRS. JOSEPH TRETIAK and daughters, ANNE and SARAH, 3004 Lincoln.'Blvd., extend to their friends and relatives, both far and near, their best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. M. TURNER and family, 1702 No. 24th St., wish everyone a Happy and Prosperous New Year.^

w MR. aad MRS. A. WEISS and LUCILLE, 301 No. 38th St., wish their friends and relatives a Happy New Year. MR. and MRS. I. D. WEISS and family, 4663 Poppleton, wish all their friends a happy and prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. H. A. WOLF and son JUSTIN, extend to their relatives and friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous Near Year.

SEASON'S GREETINGS FROM THE ZIMMAN FAMILY MB. and MRS. VICTOR ZUCKER, 2514 North 16th Street, extend heartiest and best wishes for the New Year to their relatives and friends.

:I .. I I I I ; I.I:-

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New Year's Editi<Ht-?EHE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, Septembef.il, 1931

public Why buy a second-choice tire, when firstschoice costs no more? For 16 years the_ outstanding /irst-chotec tite of the .automobile owners in thelJnttl States has been Goodyear,

HOW CAR OWNERS VOTED

ON THE

QUESTION

" W H A T TIRE IS BEST?" * • » Based on a National Tire Survey in 1930 by a Neutral Insdtudon « • •

GOODYEAR COMPANY B 13.8 11.3 7.O Mi 6.O 3.7 3.7

That is an important fact* but ah even m6re important one is that_ fpr...the last,-several years this'preference has been growing even rnore rapidly.

Ml

I

2.4 • 1.8

MM

It will be noted that 30.7* of the car owners of AmericB pre« ter CooJjrelSTKreifc' tnls'prelievenee is more'than twice that of any other make of tire. Tiiis tire rarrey was based on a. itfi^*^i|<»<illy mailed onest^on* noire to car owners in trrrrf state in the" coantry and pro* portioned in torn to cities "and now

MM

ALL OTHERS 10.4 NO CHOICE 4.4 TOTAI 100%

DAVID HOBERMAN

BARNEY HOBERMAN

uipnraw.naw : ; 'Accept our hearty appreciation for the patronage you have favored us with during the past year, and may the New Year bring you and yours ' abundance in Health, Happiness and Prosperity.

Today when values are being scrutinized' more carefully than ever before,- public preference for Goodyear is stronger than it ever has been.

The .proof of tire service is the actual pur«* chasipLg choice of, the millions of automobile owners in America. f ; 4 Just

look at the chart shown here and see ; how the automobile owners in the United States voted on the question: "Wliat tire is best?" This vote is based on actual experience and riot oh : engineering claims or advertising assertions, 3 :• •

it

'i •

NEW LOW PRICES BUY NOW!

-•'-•si

4

You are not interested -in how tires are m interested in what service they give.

NATI Corner 17th and Capitol Avenue, Omaha, Nebr. -£

RdAD SERViGE TILL 11 BROS,,

I

Phone ATlan tic 6427


l/Shbhah kosevu VSe- .,, z --- ' chasevu ^Us

Aforc 0/ Omaha Jewry's Many Ac* •v*

.Entered ne Second-Onsa Mail Blatter on January 27, 1021. at Vosi office nt Omahn. Nebraska, under the Act ol March 3, 1879

OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY,

Mirror of

'<»i

WIGHT j as the fierymysi of the dying sun sink into the silvery mists pf ttviMgkt;the bitter disappointments and sorrows vj'the past twelvemonth slip over the horizon . . . forgo%eniih,ihe dawn of a 'New Year.

(Continued from Page 7—Section B.) Pollay, S. Bailen, M. Zusman, S. Zusman, J. Elkin, J. Hellman, L. Rubin. been through the years. Those who die, unwanted, unknown are given de^ cent burial, quietly and unobstrusively, as they would have wished it. ' Officers are Mrs. J.' Milder, president; Mrs. L. Neveleff, yioa-president; Mrs. J. Weinzveg, secretary; Mrs. H. The Daughters of Israel Aid Society R. Milder, treasurer. has borne the brunt of caring for the Old Peoples Home, which is a Jewish Welfare Federation institution. During the past year Mrs. S. Ravite, who was one of the organizers of the The Ladies Labor Lyceum club's Old Peoples Home and for a good work is dedicated to. philanthropy and many years president of the Daughtculture. This organization, which ers of Israel Aid Society, died, and meets regularly at the "Labor Lyceum, special memorial services were held 22nd and Clark Sts^ contributes to- for her at the Home. ward the paying of the building, to Officers are Mrs. A. Wolf ^president; the tuberculosis society, to the Mrs. S. Maizel, corresponding secretPhilanthropies, and to the aid of any tary; Mrs. L Kulakofsky, i group of strikers who need financial secretary; Mrs. Kate Tatle, treasurer.

Daughters of Israel AH Society

\ The old year has been one of. tragic confusion; economic chaos and business anaemia have left ALS bewildered. Caught in the turmoil of despair, we have ridden rudderless the seas of privation and sunken fortunes tossed about helplessljfby blind forces beyond ftuman control.

Ladies' Labor Lyceum Gab

help.

'• But a provident God has provided a balance in life. T^0boM moves in cycles, and just as we have emerged from the abyss of degression before, so inevitably will we witness the prosperity of the future. In the meantime, while we are in the throes of economic sluggishness, we have come to realize and to properly evaluate Gods most precious gifts.... health, happiness, friendship and family.

•."•••

In addition, the organization lias a well-balanced program, including . a series of lectures. The feature adThe Omaha chapter of the Junior dress of the year was by A. Litvak, lodalist from New York. Others who Hadassah, which now boasts of " a ipoke before the organization include membership of 115, has been in exDr. Emily Brandt, Dr. O. Belzer, Dr. istence for ten years. Any girl eighteen years pf age or older is eligible ML Margolin, Dr.TL Hirschman. . . In order to raise funds for its con-for membership. : The outstanding social jaffair of the tributions, the Ladies Labor Lyceum dub held a one-week rummage sale year was l i e Thanksgiving Dance held at the Fqntenelle * Hotel. Kose vn& sponsored several concerts. Officers of the club are Mrs. S. Levin was chairman and Mary C . Pollay, secretary; Mrs.' M.' Crounse, Franklin, co-chairman. The Carnival Frolic was held in treasurer; executive board—Meslames H.. M. Stein, M. Crounse, S. October at the J. C. C. under the

Junior

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Tonighti hope is the keynote of our hallowed prayers* A feeling ofpeaceful content soothes our hearts, and the spirit of God A Imighty inspires us for the future. Before Him we bow in worship, awed . . . . yet somehow confident that we rvillliave His blessing for the New Year to prosper in our ventures and achieve the fruits of our labors—health, happiness and joyousness.

A

U N I O N

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. SECTION &-EIGHT PAGES

11,1931

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R A V E

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Uvities

PsiMu

chairmanship of Bess Spar. Sylvia Olander had charge of the annual organization banquet held at the Paxton Hotel in March. The annual tea dance was held in the same month at the Blackstone. Esther Saks was chairman and Bess Bernstein was cochairman of thin affair.

The P a Mu Fraternity initiated it* winter activities with a novelty hitherto untried by any organization—a series of Sunday afternoon tea dances at the J. C. C. climaxed by a gala selection of the "Queen bf the FraA. Mother and Daughter event in ternity." Miss Goldie Sc^onbrun was the form of an open meeting was chosen. ; sponsored by the Junior Hadassah in A monthly smoker was, held at the May, with Rose Rosenstein in charge Center, including several stags at the of arrangements. various hostelries. The basket ball At the regional conference held at team met the Sholem Aleichem dub Tulsa in May, Tobye Steinberg was of Kansas City. A Mother's Day program was held at the Paxton. elected one of the yice-presidente. Funds for the entry of a baseball During the summer activities were team in the Southern feague were suspended, with the exception of one raised by a dance at the Paxton. A social event a month. These affairs May Day dance was held at the Fontand their chairmen were: a breakfast enelle pavilion, for members only. at Elmwood Park in June, Alice MinThe frat carried off first honors at th« Mn, chairman; a swimming party at Senior Council Rally for the third conPeony Park in July, Tobye Steinberg, secutive year. The group also held a chairman; a dance at the Fontenelle fathers and sons program and banquet Pavilion in August, Grace Rosenstein, and several outings. chairman. Officers: Leo Berman, president; Last year's officers: Ida Platt, Jack Ban, vice-president; Morris Falk, president; Rose Lazarus, vice-presi- secretary; Morris Bloom, treasurer; dent; Bess Bernstein, corresponding Henry Ginsberg, Hymie Weiner, sergsecretary; Sarah Kurtzman, record- eants-at-anns; Herman Giller, reporting secretary; Dorm Markovitx, re- er; Louis Lohrman, parliamentarian. cording treasurer; Bess Kirshenbaum, Irvin Levin is advisor. financial treasurer; Evelyn y*iniaii, reporter; Esther GoldVare, sergeantMore than a half-million copies of at-arms. the works of Sholem Aleichem, famThis year's newly installed officers ous Yiddish humorist, in Russian are Mary C. Franklin, president; translations nave been sold in the SoBess Bernstein, vice-president; Sophie viet Union during the five years beRosenstein, vice-president; Ida Fine, tween 1925 and 1930, according to an. recording secretary; Rose Wilfson, article appearing in the Minsk Yidcorresponding secretary; Fannie Kat- dish. Zeitshrift. During those years leman, recording secretary; Bess 30 works of Sholem Aleichem apKirshenbaum, financial treasurer; peared in Russian translation, 27 in Esther Goldware, reporter; Tobye Ukrainian translation and one in a White Russian translation. Steinberg, sergeant-at-arms.

V I A

U N J O N

P A C I T I C

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4

are $

J

-*

>•

V- l' ' 3l

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\

I2-Million-Dollar Payroll OMAHA AND COUNCIL BLUFFS

pi

Spand — $ 2,35O 9 OOO

FOR FOOD

$ 87O,OOO $ 35O,OOO $ 1,400,000

FOR CLOTH INC FOR FURNITURE FOR RENT

$

FOR FUEL 6- LIGHT

470,000

• • O P W Of H O H f CrMIWlMP^

E WHO LIVE in this area are proud of

beingKthe bright spot on the business map/' We all want to maintain present business conditions, to improve them if we can.

OMAHA AND COUNCIL BLUFFS' •''in

GREATEST INSTITUTION

"'*"•. ;';/'

S H I P

- A ND - ' T " R A V E

V I A

U H I ON

The largest single group supporting home markets and home industries of Omaha and Council Bluffs is the army of Union Pacific , employees—7,144 of them. 5,009 are heads of families^ and with their dependents they total nearly 12% of the population of the two cities.

They pay taxes, they own homes, and their contribution to the permanence of the community cannot be told in dollars and cents alone. Hie continuing prosperity of Union Pacific employees will depend upon whether or not the Railroad prospers. Every shipment made by truck, that can be adequately handled by rail, weakens the railroad structure and affects railroad employment.

P A.

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRES&r-Friday,, September 11, 1931 mer MacDonald government. We are living in a day when capitalism and socialism are engaged in a mighty grapple. Otto Kahn is correct when he says that capitalism must rid itself of its excesses, but it remains to be seen whether these minor elisions will be sufficient. If capitalism can bring peace, .security and happiness to the—multitudes, it is better than socialism with confusion, poverty and slavery.

Telling It In GATH M

By

•;

RABBI LOinS L NEWMAN

JUDAISM IN THE SOVIET

Congregation Rodeph Sholom, New York « H i«"t t •«•'«

ture of a rationalization; people wish to fight, and they therefore persuade themselves that it is to their interest to do so. The important question, then, is the psychological one—"Why do people wish to fight?' These questions in their turn involve a study of the .origins of malevolent passions, and thence of psychoanalysis and th« theory of education.

A MESSAGE FOR THE NEW YEAR

The advent of the year 5692 car-, ries -with it the opportunity to make a fresh start on the solution of the vexing1 problem -which afflict society today. We welcome these milestones, for. they enable-us to pause in our pilgrimage, in order to take stock of the .^distance we have traveled, and the .territory lying before us for con- WAR DOESN'T PAY quest. . The present debacle of mankind -:Keligion can do much today for ihe clearly demonstrates that war does troubled spirit of humanity. General not pay. Woe to the victors as well jen JC. Smuts of South Africa speaks as the vanquished in any modern 0f fie fact that "the tide is rapidly struggle: "I am boring a hole only cpniihg -when any action, even if not under my own seat," said the man in the wisest, will be better than con- a boat, according to the ancient Jewtinual drifting." Apparently a de- ish tale. "Yes," they answered, ^*but termined group of American - finan- when, the water comes in, we will all . tiers; is seeking to take the reins of be drowned." If one nation today goes power in this country and abroad. over the abyss, it draws the others They have endeavored to set Ger- with it into destruction. Apparently many aright; now they have occu- an invisible company of financial popied themselves with, England; the tentates have decided that the time vision of the Versailles Peace Treaty has come for them to set the sorry may be their next interest. scheme of world affairs aright if they ' If international cooperation is to can, by economic methods, with their .j come through economic self-protec- consequent or subsequent psychologtion, it is better than no cooperation ical factors. at all. Bertrand Russell has recently Otto H. Kahn has just issued a remarked: "I have found myself also statement, giving his own panacea for unable to accept the view that the the world's ills. It is palpably a caporigins of wars are always economic, italistic document and is couched in • for it was obvious that most '• of the the language and policy of the rul.people who were enthusiastically in ing class. It is easy for a man of -fivor of the war were going, to lose millions to tell the masses to keep a -money by it, and the fact that they themselves did not think 30 showed stiff upper lip at the same time that that their economic thinking vras he points to the unwisdom of Great biased, and that the passion causing Britain's socialist experiment of seekthe bias was the real source of their ing to tax the rich and cut the role of the poor. •warlike feeling. The manifesto of the British Labor . The supposed economic causes of Party, following the reorganization of war, except in the case of certain the Cabinet, ought make one pause becapitalistic enterprise, are in the na- fore hailing the collapse of the for-

New Year Greetings By REV. FREDERICK W, CLAYTON RECTOR, 'ALL SAINTS CHURCH .

_

: : " - • » «

I lume always been an admirer of the loyalty, integrity, and strong religious, motive which has held together the ancient people of

There has come to my notice the story of the persecution of Judaism and Zionism in Russia. Though in Great Russia the publication of a work by young Russian Zionists on Israel. .' > , ' [ . : '.•• behalf of the Halutzim was permitThe Jews have; made ai ted, in south Russia, anyone reading this document is persecuted and im- notable contribution to the prisoned. There is a strong Zionist sentiment among the Russian youth, world of art, science arid but it is entirely illegal. culture. > '••'] It is said that children and young I send my heartfelt gr'g&tp: people have organized Boy Scout groups which meet in the forests, ings to there to study Jewish history, the He- are about to brew language, the problems of the Jews in Russia, and the fundamentals Hashonah. I\ of the Jewish faith. A spy system that your operates to break down this sub rosa organization, and in many instances an exceedingly luippy one its leaders have been arrested and ex- for you and that the deep iled to Siberia. sense of reality of God's The Jewish section of the Communist party is particularly severe in purpose in the world may. its treatment of pro-Jewish activi- continually abide with you, ties. The Bolsheviks have formed a scheme of oppression comparable to and that religious zeal may still dominate so great a people. the Spanish Inquisition; because Jews are highly sensitive to persecution, But the rumor of Zionism's death, Akiba, the fable and parable were imthey feel its force with particular re- zionism itself can testify, is slightly mensely helpful,as a means of preachsentment. Those American Jews who exaggerated. The corpse manifests ing hope and fortitude to the people are so glib in their pronouncement! amazing vitality, even" in a country '•without incurring the wrath of the that Zionism is dead should hear the where Judaism is prescribed and Zion- authorities. But what a commentary story of the newest generation in ism punished with a malevolence upon the nation which George BerRussia, seeking to preserve with which would do credit' to the Rabbi nard Shaw has seen fit to praise in pride and self-knowledge the herit- Schulman and his supporters in this such extravagant terms: age of Herzl. country. It is sad also that a few Rab- The Zionists have been right in Rabbi Samuel Schulman declares bis who go from place to place are their indignation at Bolshevist persethat Hitlerism and Jabotinskyism are able to preach their social message cutions, and the Basel Congress wiseidentical, thereby placing himself in in the form of parables. Once upon a ly continued their protests. The Jewthe company of Jewish anti-Semites, time the Book of Revelations,, like ish youth of Russia wish to convey who delight to place weapons in the the Book of Daniel before it, and to the Communists the fact that this hands of Israel's enemies. Other rep- Aesop's fables after it, were told in interest in Judaism and Zionism is a rehensive things were uttered by Dr. mystical or legendary form in order mass-movement and therefore entitled Schulman who utilizes his member- to escape the notice of the tyrannical to respect and legality. When Rabbi ship in the Jewish Agency as an alibi government. Samuel Wehl recommends mass-miwherewith to cloak his pernicious utWhen the Romans controlled Pal- gration from Russia as an aid to the terances with a special authority. estine in the days of Jesus and solution of Russian Jewish problems,

he makes a proposal which antizionists cannot ignore. The Soviets have by no means introduced the millenium, and whatever freedom professing Jews have gained in the new state, has come at tremendous cost. I inquired from my Russian friend how H came about that children and young people were turning surreptitiously to Judaism and Zionism. "The power of the Jewish message and the beauty of Jewish culture combine with Zionist ideals to furnish an avenue of spiritual escape to the psychically under-nourished Jews of th« Soviet Republic"

FREEDOM OF WORSHIP Joseph Wood Krutch recently indicated that man is confronted by the human dilemma of finding any and every system he adopts self-contradictory and inadequate. Not even the skeptic is relieved from thi necessity pf making choices, "although he may be aware that he chooses in more ox less haphazard fashion and without that illusion of knowing what he fought' to chose which is so comforting to others." It matters not under what system the Jew lives provided it shells freedom to worship, to obtain opportunity for self-development in the highest spiritual terms, and to labor for a social order which will approach closer and closer to the Messisnic ideaL We have lived under monarchies, Czardome, oligarchies, dictatorships and democracies. The latter for the n.oment seem to have favored us, but sinister tendencies in republics may alter this friendliness. Academic anti-Semitism in the United States is only one indication of the increasing hostility to Jewish competition. What matter it that in combatting the dread infantile paralysis, the names of Jews, such as Landsteiner, Kolk Flerner, Fleischner and others are in the front rank? What matter it that a certain Dr. Moses Zwick has invented a new X-ray for the study of the human kidney? What matter it that Jewish scientists and research-students are extending the boundaries of human knowledge. Blind fear and prejudice persists in erecting barriers against Jews in medical colleges and university teaching. It remains to be seen whether

Jews flourish better under capitalism or socialism; it is undeniably ironic that the most successful projects in the new Palestine have been Tindertaken through private initiative and investment, along the lines that the bourgeois Otto Kahn advocates. We need not be doctrinaire about the forms of government; we are most concerned with the effects of governments, particularly upon minorities, like the Jews.

FOR A BETTER SOCIETY The Messianic ideal of Israel is expressing itself today in the description of Utopias which men of science and achievement are envisaging. Fridtjof Nensen has written in "Living Philosophies" his view of a more satisfying society: "By all modern inventions and progress in science, by better hygiene and medical care, it is certainly possible to improve materially the conditions of life for all classes, to make life fuller, richer, healthier and happier for all citizens, and greatly to reduce the differences between the poor and the rich. "By modern improvements in architecture, lodgings can be made much better and, for the poorer classes, more comfortable. The greatly improved transportation systems—automobiles, motor busses, tramways, railways and so on—make it possible for people to live farther apart, instead o* being crowded together in narrow streets. Radios, movies, phonographs, and other contrivances make it possible for almost everybody to get entertainment. "With the cheap clothing procurable, most people can be fairly well dressed. We have thus the means to create a brighter, more catisfactory existence for all men. It is left to us to use them. We should, therefore, have reason to look with confidence and hope upon the future." Bertrand Russell remarks: "With the problem of poverty and destitution eliminated, men could devote themselves to the constructive arts of civilization—to the progress of science, the diminution of disease, the postponement of death, and the liberation of the impulses that make for joy." Whoever the writer or thinker, he speaks of a society, more orderly, (Continued on Page 7—Section E) ' V

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tfew Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931

Page Six—Section B

Oarrow's Condemnation of Theory of Zionism "Jews ShouldMix With the G&yim, Not Segregate" By CLARENCE DARROW ,- . The.Seven Arts Feature Syndicate But, nevertheless, in its spiritual 'and The Jewish Press present this ex- ecstasy, in its mystic hope, Zionism clusive contribution by America's dis- is primarily religious in its motiva* •'-. languished attorney and liberal think- tion. That is the magnet which draws i er. Darrow's straight from the shoulder condemnation of Zionism as a so- masses of Jews to i t lution of The Jewish problem will But because Zionism is a religions arouse heated opposition; we believe, movement, it must suffer the fate 'however, that a personality of the which overwhelming all religions. stature of Clarence Darrow should be :j given a free platform to speak his They must all sooner or later succumb ,' mind everi if his views do hot coincide to the march of time, to the growth of • with oursi—The Editor. reason, to the widening horizon of • I don't know that the Jews have man in his evalution of things about any mission in this world, or, for that him. matter, whether. any people have a : ". mission1—but if the Jews do "have a SAYS ZIONISM mission, surely it is not to hide them- INADEQUATE ; selves in one forsaken corner of the It is probable that the persecution, universe, but to mix with the world, to which Jews are subject in many lands has added an intentive to the to spread among the goyim. Zionism, the movement for the re- Zionist movement, but that is not the establishment of a Jewish National predominant factor, as some observers : Home in Palestine, is doomed to fail-. have been led to believe. As Dr. Ste; ore, both because of its practical de- phen Wise pointed out some time ago fects and its spiritual shortsighted- in a discussion I had. with him: the ; ness. Zionism is an effort to with- Zionist movement was started on the ;. stand the onsweeping currents of very day the Jews were taken to • time, which are slowly but certainly Babylon. demolishing those fundamental ideas Zionism is a woefully inadequate to which the Zionist movement clutch attempt to solve the Jewish problem. for support. In the concentration upon Palestine, There can be no doubt that Zionism huge sums of money are wasted in an is, at bottom, a religious movement. effort to push millions of Jews into '•• I will be told that thousands of the the country on a project that has no men and women: who to Palestine do promise. In the meantime, the situanot subscribe to the religious tenets tion of millions of Jews in other parts ' of the old orthodoxy; others will tell of the world, where the Jewish prob-r me that a man like Theodor Herzl was lem is immediate and pressing, is in not religious in any sense of the word, no wise improved. as many of the leaders of the Zionist | What drives Jews to a consideramovement today are not religious. tion of Palestine as the remedy for

their ills? ' Is it a political state? Or is it the desire for a cultural center? I remember very well the days when Theodor Herzl started his work. At that time, when phrases were the only possessions of the Zionist movement, grandiose dreams were developed. There was talk of a political state comparable to any European state. But as time has gone on the folly and the impossibility of such a goal has become apparent to ever increasing circles of Jews. I have no doubt that if Jews should make an insistent drive for the establishment of a political state at this time that not many days would pass before thousands upon thousands of Jews would find throats cut And that would not be a sacrifice to attain the final end. It would merely be a vain spilling of blood. You cannot ignore the Arabs who live in Palestine. Perhaps the Jews do have some rights, though politically and even morally the land has always belonged to nomadic peoples — of which the Jews were once a part. But Jews, with a sense of reality, must realize that the 700,000 Arabs cannot be annihilated.

WHY NOT CULTURAL CENTER? And what do these gentlemen mean when they talk of a Jewish cultural center? The phrase is meaningless. What sort of culture could the Jews achieve in Palestine that they cannot achieve elsewhere, or for that matter, what culture could they create that I am not as capable of creating ? When I ask for an exact definition of what this culture is supposed to mean, I hear only stammering and indecision. And then I will be told that the Hebrew language will be revived. But one might just as well talk about bringing back the oxcarts and the sun dials. The laws governing the growth and death of languages cannot be controlled by man's ambitions.

because that is the nature of the soil, Of course, there is much talk these days of developing the industrial growth of the country. But there must be an outlet for industry. The only aavilable markets are in the Near East But that market is not receptive to industrial development. To change the habits of living and the customs of the peoples in. that area would take a minimum of five hundred years. Then Jewish industry in' Palestine might find a real outlet And what are Jews to do in. the_ meantime? : The Jews have tried their hand at developing the country. They have spent vast sums of money in Palestine—so much that the Zionists are never frank about it when I try to find out exactly how much. Certainly enough to have' accomplished some real good somewhere else.

Over the Etnek

The above picture, taken from an airplane, is of Mishmar Ha-Emek (The Watch Over the Emek), one of the latest Jewish colonies established in the heart of the Valley of Jezreel.

There is plenty of light and space, but few flowers. The Palestine pioneers ."keep watch" over the safety and growth Qf the Yishub.

The Irish tried exactly the same experiment by attempting to revive the Celtic language. They are making a brave effort but their failure is already apparent The centuries of disuse, the centuries of acclimatization to new languages, to new vehicles of thought cannot be conquered by some fantastic scheme of national regeneration. If Zionism were not a religious movement, it would not ignore the very obvious fact that Palestine can never be a Jewish homeland. I have no objection whatever to any proposal that Jews as a group settle in some land where they may escape persecution. But it is absurd to settle them in a country which is wholly inadequate. If Zionism had no religious source, the Jews would seek out some area in South America, or Russia, or Africa. If they planted seeds in such countries, they would be sure of getting rich crops. But in Palestine they are not even certain of getting the seeds back. I am what might be called a territorialist, as was Israel Zangwill. Not, however, that I believe that Jews should segregate themselves.

The assimilation of the Jewish people is going on steadily and should go on steadily. All the barriers of creed and dogma, of nationalistic pride and chauvinistic intolerance must ultimately come down. .That way lies the only hope for the solution of the Jewish problem. For the Jews to set themselves deliberately against the evolution of social thought, is not characteristic of their usual intelligence.

INFEASIBILITY OF'NATIONAL HOMELAND But outside of being socially undesirable, the establishment of a Jewish National Home in Palestine is not feasible. Consider the width and length of the country. And on top of that keep in mind the two large mountain ranges. And you realize that there cannot possibly be any land for agricultural colonization — on the scale which Jews have iji mind. Five years ago I visited Palestine and studied the country—but much more of my information has come from a reading of the available documents in the matter. The land is hard and labor-resisting. It is desolate

New Year Greetings .],

By P A U L G R U M M A N N DIRECTOR OFJOSLYN MEMORIAL

Permit me to express my hearty congratulations to you as you approach another year of your distinguished history. I have long been impressed by the richness of your cultural heritage, by'the contributions that-you have made to science, art, and literature* For thirty years it has been my privilege to meet many of your college youth in my classes, where they have impressed me by their intelligence, devotion, and high ideals. In this connection I have come to realize that your arwient culture is not in the slightest danger of extinction or decline.

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There is no room in Palestine for Jews and Arabs both—that is to say, the proportion of Jews that Zionists; would like to bring into the country, Much as Jews would like to forget the Arabs, they can't They have ppr< mitted themselves to be bewitched by the Balfour Declaration, a measura that was issued in the stress of war time. Engalnd was anxious to get Jewish support, and it wasn't particularly careful about the phraseology of the promises that it made. The result is that thousands of Jews today are wearing out their hearts in a vain attempt to solve the Jewish problem, (Copyright, 1931, by Seven Arts Feature Syndicate.)

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, are trave and brilliant words which pass all previous style revues.herd or the • religionist carry". much, stim- Many] original Paris creations "Will be ulus ^and challenge, t - , , featured in the Brandeis Revae by the The Great and Terrible Days oi most beautiful models we can. hire," (Continued from Page 2—Section E) ; meditation, introspection and prayer Miss La.Boschin stated. ,br.gnt to interpret our universe, not are upon us. Let us sfced the trivial Parisian styles that will .be shown ! more tranquil, more ccndBefve'ia> hap-} in' terns of mechanism but'of'plan,: and base; let us enter into the courts include wall-known French style artipiness for the individual, in terms;1 of mind; and' Spirit." '' of God -with humility and forbear- ists, Jean Patou, Maintocher, Vionnet, more' joyous"; and ' complete "liviiQg;1 " ' .Sir James Joens has written: "Fif- ance. Let courage come apon us be- Chanel, Chantal, Lucile Parey and •i AN INDKPJENJSABL&''•^ ;•l^-• ty years agoj +he universe Was gener- cause' we tiring to life • our hearts, Lucien Lelong. : r ally looked upon as a machine; it, was E. G. Wedell, display director of the our. spirits,' and our own unbending F A C T O R - . . " ; - ,.:0;•;:;;...;;i:;- ,:- -",v. Brandeis Stores and in direct charge - These; concepts .s.eem. ,fai, fiojn TOT sai'd that the final aim of science, was and- resolute will. of the Style Ttevue, said today that alisatioB in.- a: year, when, fecpnpmic ,t<-. explain .all the objects in , the world,' including „. Jiving „ bodies,, as the stage settings for the revue: would disaster stalks .through tthe "spprld. ;Yei machines,, as mere jumbled of stone, be the most elaborate that Omaha has the bright hope for >an jimproyed sowhich would • perform mechanical ever witnessed. : cial system should be.held constantly -for a time under the action H. C. Noll, president of the Omaha / before-; .us, •• despite --the: hardships dances of blind purposeless forces and then Radio Trades Association, said today which multitudes are enduring. Men fall back to form a wead world. that he expected the Brandeis Style and women are ooming.to•, see;:.that Revue to surpass any show ever pre"Modem science gives but little they cannot bring to pass the aboliin Omaha." The Brandeis Style Revue which ; tion of poverty and the cultivation of support to such materialistic views. will be presented at the sixth annual sented A model kitchen will be erected on When" we pass to extremes of size.in the high arts of life unless they be Radio-Household Appliance Show will the stage for the afternoon presentamotivated by •what mankind calls the either' direction—whether to the represent an investment of more than tion of the cooking school. Mildred cosmos as a whole, or to the inner spirit of religion. v.* . recessed of thip ttomH-the mechanical $25,000. This statement was made to- Hickxuait, nationally-known economist It may be; disheartening loencouii- interpretation of Nature s fails. We day by Florence La Boschin^ buyer of of Chicago, will conduct the cooking ter the Vicious materialism -with come to entities and phenomena women's wraps and gowns for the school. Madeline Bohlsen and CyriUa •which men and . •women today are. which are in no sense mechanical. To Brandeis Stores. Miss La.Boschrn re- Jordan, home economists of the Nemeeting their synagogue duties. They me. th6y qeeri less suggestive of me- turned recently from New Yorkfyhere braska Power Company, will assist decry religion as a necessity of life^ chanical than of jinental processes; she ma'de 'the elaborate purchases. Miss Hickman in conducting the r ts they declare they can .dispense with; the universe school. Tempting recipes for cooking "• ;**We will 'astound' <)maha with our seeihs to be nearer to a worship, though they axe driven by great thopgh$ than to .3.great ma- gorgeous style revue,'* Miss La Bosch- and refrigeration will be given to all sentiment, superstitatioii br" ieat:^ in said. "We are attempting to sur- attending. chine." ' seek the house of prayer; »." J : At the High Holydays many Jews • Sir Arthur Keith,' another great approach the synagogue as if they English scieniist,. writes in a, similar •were baying seats for a motion pic- vein when he says: "A way of life ture performance, a theatre, a bridge is possible for. man under the new party or a basebal1 game. They hag- dispensation of kn&wledge—but what gle, and bargain as if the synagogue of the ultimate meaning, life? How •were a department store of the old- has life been called into existence ? Why has it culminated in a human By Da. FRANK G. SMITH fashioned, discredited type. form? For what final purpose nave Yet this very vulgarity is a sign we been called into existence ? Surely PASTOR, FIRST CENTRAL CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH that religion is needed as "a chasten- man is part of a great whole! The ing and spiritualizing force in the human brain is a poor instrument to 1 am liappy to express to life of inaividuals. The task of bet- solve such ultimate problems. We you through tlie Jewish tering human character, is never end- have, to recognize its limitations. Yet ed; in moments of crisis the tine es- it perceives how well-ordered all Press my personal pleasure sence of our nature is demonstrated things are and how wonderful are the in the delightful fellowship and never more so than at this mo- inventions of nature. Design is maniment. Unless all of us, Jews included; fest everywhere. Whether we are lay- I have always had with the appreciate as a result of the experi- men or scientists, we must postulate Jewish people of Omaha, ences of the ' last quarter-century, a Lord of! the Universe—give Him many of whom I count that religion is an indispensable and what shape we will. I cannot help ineluctaWe^fattor ."tipuT personal ;aiid feeErig that the darkness in which among my most cherished Bociar activities, there •will be no the final secret of the universe lie; friends; and likewise my progress, but only retrogression in hid is part of the Great Design. This joy that the advance guard the decades before us. world of ours has been constructed The mood of religion is dpminant- like a superbly written novel; we of both Jews and Christians ly the outcome of an understanding pursue &e tale; with avidity, hoping are coming increasingly to of our place in the universal order, to discover the plot. The elusiveness understand each other betahd our resolution to conduct our af- of the chase heightens our ardor, unfairs on the loftiest altitude of th< til the search becomes part of our ter and to appreciate each human spirit; religion. For the secret of secrets re- oilier more in tlie knowledge cedes as we run. The ultimate rea- that they have much in comNEW YEAR CHALLENGE son for man's existenc is the only • It is under the prompting of thi mon in their love and worship of the same loving Heavenly «alted motive ihat many of the fruit in the garden of life which he laenest intelligences of our time nav can never hope to pluck." — Those Father. - ^ # ^ V : . . r ^ R ; # '

Page Seven—Section E

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&' Read Wasserman's Masterful Writing Entered ;is Second-Class Mai! Matter on January 27, 1921, at Post office nt Omnhn." Nebraska, under the Act ot March 3, 1879

The Tragedy "The 'Germany's Leading Jewish Novelist Discourses on Jewish Superi* ority and Inferiority H i e Difference Between W 6erman w and "Jew" By JACOB Author of "World's Illusion," Wedlock,"'Caspar Hauser" etc. '- No other essay by Jacob Wasserman delves so deeply into the inner recesses of the tragedy of the Jewish soul. In this hitherto unpublished chapter of his diary, Wasserman tells of his•: discussions with a Christian friend with whom he took refuge in Zurich, when, as'a young man, he lost his position in Freiburg because his .employer discovered that he was a Jew. (This is the Freiburg incident referred to in these reminiscences) Wasserman's analysis of the "divis^ ion" between German and Jew is strangely timely—although it refers to the pre-war status o£ the Jew in Germany—The Editor.'

SECTION C—EIGHT PAGES

OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11,1931

twenty-four hours. At this cafe we stayed and talked until late at night; then we went home, my friend got into bed and I lay down on a borrowed mattress, and we continued talking until the morning dawned.

The PreTDurg incident was a constant torment to me. My friend noticed that I was keeping something from him, for I had not been able to bring myself to tell him about" it, but had explained my flight as due to some unimportant dispute. With delicate tact he finally managed to make me divulge my- secret, and thereafter My friend's circumstances in Zu- many our nocturnal conversation rich also were strained; having centeredof about this theme. quarreled with his employer he had been forced to leave his position, and That intrinsically minor incident had found no other as yet- Our mode brought us to generalizations and disof life was as follows: We slept all cussions of life as a whole and then day in his room, and in the evenings back again to the strictly personal went to a cafe where a friendly waiter subject of my own existence. And granted us credit. There we drank after we had traveled many such coffee with milk and ate a stupendous roads together a gulf suddenly apnumber of rolls—pur only meal in the peared between us.

HOSTILITY NOT AGAINST INDIVIDUAL BUT AGAINST RACE I confessed to him something to which I could not reconcile myself, something which I had always refused to admit to myself: I felt as a member of a nation, equal to others in human status and civic rights. But if any one could, without adequate reason and without laying himself open to condemnation, treat me as a creature of a lower, order—then either my sentiment was based on error, or the understanding which had seemed to support that sentiment was fallacious and deceptive. He replied that hostility- was directed not against me but against my Tace, against my identification with a foreign body -within theVnation. I was prepared to hear this argument, but could not answer it without feeling a sense of shame and indignation. Granted, I said, that these strang-

ers are your guests—why do you trample upon-all the laws of hospitality, which ure also the laws of humanity? And if we assume that you regard them as annoying intruders— why do you tolerate them and commit the hypocrisy of making humane pacts ? Better open warfare than this living under the same roof in sham peace and hidden hate. Well, was his mystifying comment, the Jews are a part of us;-however things ate, they are a part of us. I protested. 'They are a part of you, and yet you treat them like Tats, like parasites? • •'• He replied: Who would think of such a thing? Only political.and social mischief-makers do that.' Enlightened Germans know what they owe _the Jews and that the the future will only increase their debt to the Jews.' ,. .'.",'.

DIVISION BETWEEN JEWS AND GERMANS

New Year Greetings ByW.

C. F R A S E R

PRESIDENT, OMAHA COMMUNITY CHEST

Greetings and best wishes to the! Jewish people, for their happiness, prosperity and well being during the coming year:— We are going through troublous times, particularly from, an economic standpoint, and in all probability there "will be many more than the average demands for relief and assistance. The Jewish people have always had the reputation of "taking care of their own." Not only do they do this with their own families and peoples of their race, but they are outstanding for their willingness to do their part in all community, charitable and welfare movements. As president of the Omaha Community Chest I extend thanks for your cooperation in the past and express my belief in your best endeavors in the future.

Jews and Germans—I could not 'grasp this division, nor could I forget it: I thought about it long and strenously in order to make it clear to myself. I asked: What is the dividing factor? The difference in faith? But I am not a believer in the Jewish faith, just as you are no believing Christian. " The difference in blood? But who is competent to judge blood ? German blood has been mixed with that of French immigrants, with that of Slavs and Norsemen and Spaniards and Italians, probably also with the blood of the Huns and Mongols when their hordes invaded German territory. • Excellent, exemplary Germans of definite non-German descent might be named—artists and generals, poets and scholars, princes and even kings. Can the two thousand years of the Jews' life in the West have failed to modify their blood? Though it be cape the natural law. Or are they of alien blood have not the air and the a different moral constitution, human soil and the water, history and a com- beings of another cast? mon destiny, action and work in com- That might be so, he answered. To mon had their effect, even if we ex- him they seemed to be of a different clude actual physical interbreeding ? moral constitution, human beings of Despite their own laws and the resist- another cast. Perhaps this was the ance of the nations they could not es- critical point. • .

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Thereupon I : Sorely he did not mean that that insurance agent of Freiburg had not been impelled by a petty, malicious and mischevous prejudice? No, he did not mean that. But what happens on a lower plane is no criterion whereby to judge the views held

on a higher. Just as a legislature cannot be held responsible for trespassing on the part of the executive power. He felt, therefore, that my moral constitution differed from his, that I was a" human being of another cast?,

A JEW OF DIFFERENT CAST? Instead of replying he asked, very seriously and solemnly, whether — word of honor—I really felt as a Jew: I hesitated. I wanted to know the purpose of the question. He lauphed, saying'he could clearly see my difficulty in placing myself. The concept "Jew'' was not easy to define. Of course, I rejoined. No easier than the concept "German." He wanted to know whether there was any doubt as to my mother's having been Jewish, and whether any case of racial mixture, or even the suspicion of it, had ever occurred in my family. When, smiling I answered both questions in the negative ho shook his head and observed that my case was extraordinarily impressing— a most unusual case. I insisted upon his explaining what he meant by "my case." I tried to help him by saying: The fact that among Germans I feel as a German is of no final significance. The German is at liberty to regard this as effrontery or otherwise, to accept me or not. When he accepts roe it is con« descendingly, by way of exception, often only temporarily, because some* thing I have achieved has forced him to respect or like me, or carelessly, negligently, or because it suit his purposes. To be admitted into a social group merely because the usual bars are let down is offensive and undignified for both sides. This he considered. I continued: In my innocence, I had always been convinced that I was a part of German life, of the German people, by birth. The language is the breath of life to me. To me it is far more than a means of communication, something casually learned and used; its words (Continued on Page 2—Section C)


New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931

" 'Page Two—Section C '

The Tragedy Behind "The Chosen People" (Continued irom Page 1^-Section C) RELATIONSHIP OF JEW and rhythm constitute my Innermost life, it is as deeply a part of me as if it had been mine through all eternity. Is not this more important than a listing in a register, than a formal confession of faith, than an. ingrown prejudice, than a stranger's role kept up because of fear and pride on the one side and superstitution, malice and inertia on the other? Yes and no, answered my friend. These arguments threw light on my particular position; but in general matters were not at all like that. I objected, that I did not want to dwell on my situation alone.

SOCIAL AND RELIGIOUS ISOLATION i _ Said he: Let us first examine general aspects of the question.' As vah entity the Jews have never been able to identify themselves disinterestedly with the causes of their host-nations. Within the state they have withdrawn into social and religious isolation, a frozen bloc in the flowing stream. As long as their isolation was forced they could claim martyrdom; but now that the restrictions against them have been lifted their lack of will and capacity for this identification is evident. They still, consciously or unconsciously, lay stress upon the doctrine as false and misleading. And inevitably their undying hate had to turn against .Christianity in particular,, for toward it their feeling was that of a mother whose womb gave birth to a traitor—the betrayer of their people, of mankind, of God. What is comparable to such hatred? What can mitigate it? Only this hate can, perhaps, explain the power of resistance, the patience of the tribe, their endurance of suffering and their unexampled vitality. The determination to wreck vengeance for what they have suffered had probably been rooted in their souls for generations, has penetrated every cell of their bodies, so to speak. The individual who has developed differently can do nothing against this, cannot be taken as proof that this is not so. Instincts of this sort continue their functioning under the surface; no agreement between well-intentioned enlighteners, no sorrow on the part of those who have left the. main body, no example 3et by those who have changed can do away with them. It was painful for me to hear this. I pointed out that this was the tragsdy of the petrified misunderstanding and malicious persecution; but he did not agree, replying that, like so many athers, I was the victim of a cultural delusion. How long, he asked, is it since the Jews have progressed beyond a barbarically low mode of life? Even in the eighteenth century they obdurately maintained their alienation, their gloomy seclusion. The old Goethe regarded the Jew approximately as the American today regards the nigger; this despite Nathan the Wise, despite Spinoza and Moses Mendelssohn, despite the Jewish influence manifest in the rising Romantic i movement, despite his undoubted appreciation of the veneration due to the historic Jewish institutions, the religious and social communities. The childhood impressions he had received in the Frankfort Ghetto were stronger. The Jews always recall the oppression and persecution to which they were subjected when attention is • called to objectionable traits in their racial demeanor. No Jew will tolerate an objective judgment of Jews—not to mention an unfavorable view—not even of individuals, though they be degenerates, the moment the slightest reflection is sast upon Jewry as a whole. The sad result of this fault is the tendency to speak of Jews.in either the glozing tones of the apologist or the hideous accents of slander. Their eulogists - all emphasize the absolute moral purity of the Jews and how unvariably they are law-abiding, as if no Jew had ever stepped over the line. Yet a considerable number of Jews were members of the robber bands that made central Germany unsafe between 1750 and 1820. I will not speak of the Shylocks of every degree, the ruthless usurers and unscrupulous speculators. It -would be absurd to think that these millions of peopl advancing through the centuries in an unsafe social position, almost'entirely unprotected, their lives and propert: always in danger—are under greater obligation than their keepers and tor mentors to conduct themselves irreproachably, that their - criminals • are more abominable'than others. To he entirely just one must take the op posed point of view. The charge against them, however, is of a more fundamental category. It concern their incapacity for spiritual adaptation. Their intellectual adaptability is «xtrao*dinary, even too great for their own good. But spiritually they havens an entity, as a racial identity remained to this day what they, were in Biblical antiquity.

CONDITIONAL

In this sense my friend spoke at great length, defending his viewB almost dictatorically. I remember that I could not escape the logic and force of his arguments. He was inexorable; and I, who wanted to get at the bottom of things, loved him for this unyieldingness, though vaguely I felt that in our united striving for. the truth he set himself above me and that the essential recognition which we finally, reached did not bring him the liberation-and relief that it gave me, to- whom it opened a door, and pointed out a goal. I sensed a subterranean warfare, a shadowy tension, and knew that more and:more he was becoming my opponent. The so-called emancipation undoubtedly marked an epoch in the life'_ of the Jews, he continued; the nineteenth century movement of humanity ended their pariahdom. Every decade brought them closer to us, binding them to us with the—let us admit, external—ties of common political and economic interests^; But save in the case of exceptional individuals the relationship never became unconditional. Why? Is it because they try none the less to preserve their identity as Jews? Again, why? As long as they were despised it "was their privilege. and their duty, their armor and their weapon to isolate themselves, to develop their narrow community, to nurse a half illusory, and hence all the more fascinating nationhood. After the way to a common life with us had been cleared their intellectual character changed with amazing- rapidity; with amazing resilience they made our needs theirs and theirs ours, followed the dictates of the common weal, devoted their .mar?

velous gifts to art and science and social progress. But fundamentally they remained Jews. 1 do not say they should have become Christians, though many did so for reasons of expediency, or because they no longer felt bound to their people, or even out of conviction. , .'.."' The question is whether they can become Christians in any but the superficial sense, as' the majority of Christians are; the question is whether they have, after conversion, stopped being Jews in the deeper sense. We do not know, and have no way of finding out. I believe that the ancient influences .continue effective. Jewishness is; like a strong flavor; a minute quantity suffices to give a specific character—K>r, at least, traces of it—to an incomparably greater massj- Truei they have, in a certlain sense, become Germans. But something opposes this. What might it be? Is it their peculiar spiritual inflexibility, in contrast to th^ir intellectual mobility and fluidity? That explanation is inadequate and incomplete.: Nor it is the power of tradition—not exclusively, at any rate, or no longer. The demands of life modify and overcome tradition; and the discipline of tradition erects a useful barrier against extremism, against radical changes, against excessive individualism with which tha Jews are charged. What, therefore, is that opposing force? I told him that his dangerous mistake lay. in generalization. There are Jews of various sorts. All lump judgments are distorted and lead to exploitation for partisan purposes. Why not look humanly at the individual human being? Fault-finding frequently gives rise to faults, and exaggeration is born of repetition. The Jews must be given time. Many of them, bounded and intimidated, hardly..know, of their right to breathe; others are intoxicated by the unaccustomed expanse* of space and abundance of opportunities.

THE OPPOSING FORCE Yet all the time I felt that my defense could not parry my friend's blows, for I spoke from a much lower standpoint. Only much later, after decades of inner struggle, was I able to answer his questions, his "What is that opposing force '"—that question whose justification I had denied but "which none the less drove me to sincere self-analysis. Frojn the earliest times the Jews have designated themselves the Chosen People. The proclamation of their faith in then? election occurs in all their myths. : Without examining the sufficiency or insufficiency of their reasons for this belief one can yet see clearly that on the one hand conviction clung to so obstinately for thousands of years involves unusually great obligations -which the group can never wholly fulfill and that it engenders an abnormal state of moral tension -whose inevitable result is a series of reactions that fill the group's life with catastrophic occurrences; and, on the other hand, that such an exion, when made the basis of a national existence, paralyzes moral development and supplants it with moral quietism, which leads to arrogance and self-righteousness. The tragedy in the Jew's life is the union in his soul of a sense of superiority and a sense of inferiority. He must live and find a balance in the friction between these two emotional currents. I have found this in almost every Jew I have met; it constitutes the most fundamental, most difficult and most important part of the Jewish problem. From the simple, human point of view, however, the fact that one is a Jew makes for neither superiority nor inferiority. I have come to realize that a race cannot be permanently the Chosen People, and that it cannot permanently designate itself as such, without conflicting with the proper order of things as seen by other nations. The chosen individual always is in a posi-

tion to assume responsibility for his acts; but in the case of a chosen people the individual gradually takes on a role to which he is not entitled and for -wWcli he is not fitted* but which leads him to claim for himself the advantages of the group position the while he shifts his responsibilities upon the group. . Even if we should grant that a single magnificent achievement might entitle a people to call itself the• Chosen People for. all time—how can, such a claim be secured and defended against, criticism, against' the new demands of a new age? Hovf isj the complex "people" to be defined? Can mere progession of a faith suffice for election ? That would be irrational.and immoral. For a people the idea of election is justified only within a temporal limit. To sever it, from its historical context and, so to speak, project it into eternity is iniquitous. -The election

of the individual, however, is eternal The New Song and has its roots in eternity. Washington.—Shortly after George (Copyright, 1931, by Seven Arts Fea- M. Cohan had presented to President ture Syndicate.) Hoover the first copy of "Father of the Land We Love," the song written for the George Washington bi-cenOrt Opens Factories Congressman, Sol Bloom, assofor Jewish Farmers tennial ciate director of the bi-centennial Moscow.—(J. T. A.)—The Ort has commission, sang Mr. Cohan's song announced that it has completed plans for the first time to an audience of for keeping one thousand Jewish farm- newspapermen in the , White - J^ouse ers in thai Crimea busy during the press room. winter xnonths,in its newly established factories therW These "factories wili Warsaw!—The WarsaW municipality, keep the colonists from returning to has informed the Jewish School As* the Jewish towns in White -Russia and sociation that it will be unable ttt subsidize any further the Jewish chilthe Ukraine. ' The announcement also states that drens' summer colonies. This decision means that these colthe Ort has opened new factories for I wood-working, embroidery, hat-mak- onies.'where over 500 ill and undering and toy-making in a number of nourished Jewish school children have Ukrainian cities. These Ort factories been spending their summer will have •Trill give preference to declassed Jews to close unless funds are obtained immediately from another source. and their families. . -

seasons Greetings From

reamery Omaha

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Best wishes for the New Year; I y^ if bring to you and-y6iir'fdmily!healtti;r'i happiness, peace ana prospenfy. ^.Anq..-*. may our relationship in the coining.. year be as pleasent as they have iii the past.

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Page Three—Section !E?

jtfew Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931 $58,000 bequeathed to various Chicago Jewish charities by Fred Mandel. $50,000 to Philadelphia Jewish Charities by Albert Wolf. $50,000 bequeathed to various N. Y. Jewish Charities by Abraham Savada. $50,000 to Philadelphia Jewish Charities by Lessing Rosenwald. $50,000 bequeathed to Baltimore Jewish Charities by Israel Fine. $100,000 bequeathed to University of Pennsylvania by Mone Fridenberg. ' $100,000 gift for unemployed of Philadelphia'by Leasing Rosenwald. $100,000 to Harvard University from estate of Netti Naumberg. $100,000 bequeathed for Bobby Franks Memorial by Jacob Franks of Chicago. $100,000 to Mt. Sinai Hospital from S. S. Prince estate. $100,000 bequeathed to St. Louis Jewish organization by Nathan Frank. . $100,000 bequeathed to Jewish Theological Seminary of America by Dr. William Cowen. $250,000 for auditorium at WorcesDespite the business depression the $100,000 gift to Scranton Jewish Jews of the United States contributed ter Academy by Harry Warner. $56,205,870 to Jewish philanthropies $250,000 bequeathed to Korthwoods Charities by Meyer Davidow. $100,000 bequeathed to Federation here' and abroad and to various non- Tuberculosis Sanitarium by Mrs, Minfor Support of Jewish Philanthropic Jewish causes in the year beginning nie Hayman. Societies of New- York byr Arthur September 1, 1930 and ending August $252,000 bequeathed to nine N. Y. L e i t h . • • . • • ; ; • . _ , , v . v . ; 31, 1931, according to a survey made r ewish charities by Herman Liftman. $96,000 bequeathed to various Spoby the Jewish Telegraphic Agency for $250,000 bequeathed to various Mil- kane Jewish charities by-Mrs. Mary its annual Honor Soil of American waukee charities by Nat Stone of Mil- Jaskulek. Jewry. waukee. $90,000 bequeathed to N. Y. Jewish The figures are based on individual $250,000 bequeathed to Museum of institutions by Mrs. William Salomon* gifts of $50,000 or more given to American Indian by Harmon W. Hend$86,000 bequeathed to various Jewvarious causes, and on the- funds ricks. ' : ; ish charities by Joseph Leblang. raised and expended by various na$200,000 bequeathed to Philadelphia $95,000 bequeathed to various Jewtional Jewish religious, educational, philanthropic, health and relief organi- Jewish charities by Dr. Henry Leff- ish institutions by. Mortimer Schiff. . '•'•;'\ $85,000 gift to Hoover Illiteracy sations, together with their local man. $179,000 bequeathed to various Commission by Julius Rosenwald. units. New York charities by Morris Meisel$81,000 bequeathed to Spokane eduThe sum of $30,340,000 was raised man. cational institutions by Julius Galfor specifically Jewish causes by the $170,000 bequeathed to various pub- land. several national organizations while lic institutions by Albert* Hallgarten. $75,000 bequeathed to Chicago Jew$25^65,870 was given for Jewish and $152,000 bequeathed to various Spo- ish institutions by Albert Kuppennon-Jewish causes in individual bene- kane Jewish institutions by Julius heimer. factions, of which $20^97,120 was Galland. " *'.'' $75,000 bequeathed to various N. Y. contributed to non-Jewish causes. $150,000 collection of Judaica to Jewish charities by Mrs. Johanna The $30,340,000 given by American Jewish Historical Society by Dr. A. Traub. Jews for Jewish causes only.was di- S. W. Roseiibach. ; O ^7 " ";." $75',000 bequeathed to Yonkers Talvided-as follows:. . - $150,000 bequeathed to various Chi- mud-Torah by Isaac Manilla." Jewish Federations and JewishConv- cago Jewish institutions by -Edwin $70,000 gift to Harvard School of munity Funds, $17,100,000. < Meyer. Business by Percy, Herbert ' and , J.Jewish Welfare Board (Including lo$150,000 bequeathed to Christian Jesse Straus. •"•' cal Y. M. & Y. W. H. A/s and Jewish Science Organizations by Jesse Win$60,000 bequeathed to three N. Y. Centers), $5,000,000. burn. charitable organizations by Michael B'nai B'rith and Fraternal Orders, $146,500 bequeathed to various Jew- Friedsam. .11,500,000." . v ..: $60,000 bequeathed to six N. Y. Jewish causes by Mrs. Fanny Henning. " Tuberculosis Hospitals, $1,200,000. $130,000 bequeathed to Chicago ish charities by" Harmon Hendricks. National -Eeligious Organizations Jewish charities by Harry Hart. $55,000 to Newark Community and. Seminaries (exclusive of local $100,000 bequeathed for. student Chest by Louis Bamberger." " synagogues, temples and religious edu- scholarship fund by Ben Selling' of .$56,000 bequeathed to'two N. Y. cational organizations) $1,000,000. Portland, Oregon. charities by Herman Liftman. " . . . National Council of Jewish Women, $100,000 bequeathed by Leo Feist $50,000 bequeathed to several N. Y. $500,000. " . " for Leo Feist Charities Trust . . charities by Joseph Leblang. , Jewish Agricultural Society, $50,-

Yeaf's Honor Roll of American Jewry

$50,000 bequeathed to Sydenham fame and honor in various fields. The Hospital by Leon Schinasi. list of "honors and distinctions be$50,000 to J. D. C. by Felix M. War- stowed upon American Jews in the past year is imposing. A total of 48 burg. Jews in this country and in Canada $50,000 to American Palestine Cam- won honors of national importance; paign by Felix M. Warburg. that is - their achievement in the office to which they were elected or apWhile these American Jews were pointed was not of parochial or local achieving distinction by aiding their significance. Among these 48 were fellow men, other Jews were winning three women.

HONORS CONFERRED New York City shows the way witl 20 of the 48. Canada has three, Chicago, St. Louis, Detroit, San Francisco, Portland, Oregon and Baltimore each have two. Philadelphia, Santa Fe, Atlantic City, Sacramento, Log Angeles, Cincinnati, Paterson, Boston, Cornwald, Canada, Windsor, Canada, Winnipeg, Providence, Montreal, Yon(Continued on Page 4—Section C)

The Roster of Jewish Philan* thropies. Honors, and Deaths of 5691

Jews Gave $56^05,$7a to Various Jewish and Non-Jewish Causes in Gifts of • • ' • $50,000 or More

Accept Our Very Best Wishes for a

Happy and Prosperous New Year

A Silver Swan

poo. r F o r Palestine (including Jewish 'Agency, Hadassah and Jewish National .Fund), $1,080,000. . Joint Distribution Committee,' $1,100,000. ; 'American Society for Jewish Farm Settlement in Russia, $1,000,000. . Hebrew Sheltering and Immigrant Aid Society, $350,000. The American Ort, $280,000. People's tool Campaign, $95,000. Of the total of $25,865,870 contributed by Jews in individual gifts of. $50,000 or more to Jewish and nonJewish causes, the sum of $5,368,750 was for specifically Jewish purposes. Included in this sum was one bequest »f $1,000,000 and 14 gifts or bequests »f $100,000 or more. Included in the $20,497,120 given by Jews in individual gifts of $50,000 or more to non-Jewish causes was one of $10,000,000, five of $1,000,000 or more and 14 of $100,000 or more

way from Kitchen heat ancl drudgery

GIFTS OF $50,000 OR MORE The following is the list of philanthropic contributions by American Jews to Jewish and non-Jewish causes In individual gifts of $50,000 or more for the year beginning September 1 1930 and ending August 31, 1931: $10,000,000 art collection bequeath ed to Metropolitan Museum of Art by Col. Michael Friedsam of New York. ' $1,975,000 bequeathed to Daniel and Florence Guggenheim Foundation an to the Daniel Guggenheim Fund fo: Aviation by Daniel Guggenheim. $1,210,000 bequeathed to Sidney Schwab Estate Foundation by Sidney Schwab of N. Y. C. - $1,059,000 bequeathed by Albert Euppenheimer of Chicago, $1,000,00 \o University of Chicago and $59,00C V> various Chicago charities.' $1,000,000 for children's dental din Jc in Berlin by Julius .Rosenwald. $1,000,000 bequeathed for Max Rosenberg Foundation by Max Rosenberg »f San Francisco. $1,000,000 bequeathed to four JewVh communal institutions in New lork by Morton Meinhard of New $506,000 bequeathed to various nonSTewish'l philanthropies by Mortimer fcchiff. • . $500,000 bequeathed to Federation for Support.of Jewish Philanthropic Societies of New York by Mortimer Bchiff. $400,000 bequeathed to Jewish Welfare Society of Philadelphia by Mone B- Fridenberg of Philadelphia. ' $365,120 bequeathed to Brooklyn Inistitute of Arts by Emil Fuchs. $300,000 bequeathed • to various Baltimore, Jewish charities by. Lee W. ^riedenwald of Bjaltimftro. _ '

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931

Page Four—Section 0.

Year's Honor Roll NewYear Greetings of American Jewry . By J . N . SHANNAHAN (Continued from Page 3—Section C) of the California legislature. PRESIDENT, OMAHA & COUNCIL BLUFFS Sol Levitan—reelected treasurer of kers, Mobile and Madison have one Wisconsin. STREET RAILWAY CO. each. Samuel Levy—elected president; of It is generally conceded that the two Borough of Manhattan, New York. It is both a pleasure arid most important honors conferred upDr. Seymour Lowenstein—named a privilege for me, in behalf on American Jews were those bechairman of the New York Welfare of the thousands of employstowed, upon Eugene Meyer, Jr., of Council's coordinating committee on New York and Dr. Karl Landsteiner ees oft the Omaha, and unemployment. of New York. Mr. Meyer was apCouncil Bluffs Street Railpointed head of the Federal Reserve " Simon Lubin—named outstanding Board and Dr. Landsteiner was award- citizen of Sacramento. > way Company, to wish the ed the Nobel Prize in medicine. Second Leon Mann—voted leading citizen Jewish people of; Omaha in importance was the . election of of Mount Vernon. and vicinity a Happy New Julius Meier and Arthur Seligman to George Z. Medalie—appointed U. S. the governorship of Oregon and New. district attorney for southern New Year. Mexico respectively. York. Those who have studied The full list of important honors, Julius Meier-Delected . governor of appointments and distinctions that Oregon. the history of the Jewish , have come to Jews in the United people know that it is a Eugene Meyer, Jr.—appointed govStates and Canada during 5691 is ernor of Federal Reserve Board. sturdy race, •which has come given below: .. . Isaac Bacharach—reelected to Con- t Mrs. Elias Michael—picked as one through the ages with tradiof St. Louis' outstanding-women. gress from Atlantic City. tions and glories that will Gilbert Bettman—reelected attor- . Julius Mlller-i-elected to New York supreme court. live forever. torney-general of Ohio. Sol Bloom—reelected to: Congress Julius Rosenwald—awarded golden I know of the good work from New York City. ring of honor at Deutsche Museum of of the Jewish Press in proHenry Butzel—reelected chief jus- Munich. tice of the supreme court of Michmoting a wonderful spirit Benjamin Roth—awarded one of igan. first eight soldiers medals by United among the Jewish people Justice Benjamin Cardozo—award- States army. ed one of three Roosevelt medals for •Adolph J. Sabath—reelected to and in wishing to the Jews of Omaha a year full-of hapdistinguished service. Congress from Chicago. piness and prosperity and good health, I also wish to the Emanuel Celler—reelected to ConMrs. Sadie Lipner Schulman— Jewish Press a successful year. gress from New York City. . named to Dorchester municipal Court. David Croll — elected mayor of Berl Schwartz—elected alderman in Windsor, Canada. Montreal. one in his nineties. The ripest years Nyron Borg—New York capitalist . Samuel Dickstein—reelected to ConLeon Schwarz—reelected mayor of were attained by Otto Mears of Den- —65. gress from New York City. Mobile. •. ver who was 91 while the youngest Samuel Brill—New York merchant Morris Gray—elected alderman in Arthur Seligman—elected governor to die was Louis Tishman, Hew York —72. -".;. Winnipeg. of New Mexico. realtor. Louis Bush—Washington capitalist Aaron Frank—named leading citiWilliam Sirovich—reelected to con—60. zen of Portland, Oregon. IN MEMORIAM gress from New York City. Louis Cole—Los Angeles civic leadMurray Garson—named assistant A recapitulation of those who died er—60. Simon Sobeloff—appointed U. S. secretary of labor. District Attorney for Maryland. ' ; showed that American' Jewry lost 19 Mrs. Leah Davis—San Francisco Moses Gomberg—elected president Sol Stroock—elected head of Now prominent philanthropists, 14 political of American Chemical Society. t leaders and jurists, 11 merchants and York board of higher education. Jerome Hahn—appointed to suFelix M. Warburg—elected presi- business men, 8 journalists and writpreme court of Rhode Island. dent of American Association of ers, 8 communal workers, six actors, Harry Haines—named leading citifour Zionists, four professional men, Adult Education. ten of Paterson. Maxwell Weinstein—awarded, one four prominent women, three rabbis, Samuel Hofstadter — appointed of first eight soldiers medals by Unit- two bankers, one physician and one :hairman of legislative committee ineducator. ed State's Army. . •••..vestigating New York City. Dr. Lester Weisberg—wins Carnegie The following is a complete list of Harry Hollzer—appointed to Unithero award. ~_ :^ the more important American Jews id States Federal Court, Los AnPaul C. Wolman—elected national and Jewesses who have died during geles district. commander of Veterans of Foreign the past year: Aaron Horowitz—reelected mayor Wars. Maurice . Abrahams—New York if Cornwall, Canada. composer and publisher—48Emanuel Jack — elected national The statistical record' of the year Dr. Alexander Aisman--Brooklyn ihaplain of Veterans of Foreign would not be complete without a necrology. Many prominent men and Physician-r-3£t > •- ,' W-*«T*"^..*I'-'* Mrs. Florence Prag Kahn—reelect- women were lost to American Jewry Walter Arnheim—New York merid to Congress from San Francisco. in 5691, This roster of the year's im- chant—49. Mrs. David Kriegshaber—named portant Jewish deaths lists 94 perS. B. Asia—Seattle:.--. communal one of outstanding women of St. sons, four of them women. The best "worker—50. ,".' 'Vj •> l-.'-i Louis. known American Jews who died in the Nissim Behar — New York comDr. Karl Landsteiner—awarded No- last year were Nathan Straus, Mormunal worker—83, \>el Prize for medicine. timer Schiff and Dr. Lee K. Frankel. David Belasco—-New York theatricHerbert Lehman—reelected lieuten- The average age of these 94 noted mt governor of New York. Jews at the time of their death was al producer—76. Carl Binhak—New York musician Dr. Phoebus Levene—awarded Wil- 62. Twenty-six died in their seven—57. !ard Gibbs medal of American Chem- ties, 25 in their sixties, 18 in their '.cal Society. Mrs. George Blumenthal—New York fifties, 14 in their forties, seven in Edgar C. Levey—reelected speaker their eighties, two in their thirties and philanthropist-—63. T

Civic worker—50. . Henry G. W. Dinkelspiel—San Francisco Political leadey—64., • Menachem Dolitiky—New-' York Hebraist—75. Bernard Edelhert—New York publisher—51. . Dr. S. EUsberg—New York Poale Zion leader—59. : Rabbi Jacob Eskolsky—New York, rabbi—56. • •' ' Israel. Fine—Baltimore Hebrew poet—83. - • '•-• Simon Fleischman—Buffalo attorney—71, . Isaac Erank—Pittsburgh philanthropist—75. , • Julius J. Frank—New York political leader—79. Nathan Frank—St. Louis political leader—79. ; Hiram Frankel—St. Louis communal leader—48. Dr. Lee K. Frankel—New York social -worker—€4. CoL Michael Friedsam—New York philanthropist—71. , Gustav Frohman—New York theatrical producer—76. Emanuel Furth—Philadelphia political leader—74. Isaac Gimbel—New York mer-; chant—74. Dr. Michael GoUand—St. Louis Zionist—69. Judge Samuel Greenbaum—New York jurist—76. Henry Greenebaum—Chicago banker—76. Daniel Guggenheim—New York philanthropist—74. Moses Hamburger—Los Angeles merchant—70. Charles Harris—New York composer—65. Theodore Hoeffler—Buffalo philanthropist—76. Mrs. Rebecca Hoffman—New York political leader—51. t. Harris Hyman—New Orleans philanthropist—68. Judge Martin Isaacs—Chicago jurist—€0. (Continued on Page &—Section C)

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Five—Section C

.tfew Year!s Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931

the supposed Arab ineptitude for mo-Land of Israel but a Land «f Ish-a view to the White Paper remaining claring that all these declarations bilizing opinion on their side, paying znael. But the best way of parrying unmodified. To some extent they were nothing but dishes containing a greater tribute to Jewish influence political blows, insisted this distin- were encouraged by Sir John Chan- the ingredients of the Colonial Office than it perhaps deserved. While the guished veteran of practical Zionism, cellor, the High Commissioner, who bureaucratic kitchen. Jewish world was up in arms, and was work and more work. He com-claimed to know that modification was PSALMS AGAINST THE with it a section of the enlightened pleted his plans for his American out of the question. PASSFIELD EDICT world, the Arabs found to their con- journey on behalf of the Keren Kaye- The Jewish Agency representatives, The debate in Parliament on Nosort of stocktaking, came to the con- sternation that Arab unity and Mos-meth, while Mr. Butenberg refused to negotiating in London with a cabinet vember 17, highly satisfactory in its clusion that notwithstanding the po-lem fraternity were not all they were go to London to represent, the Yishuv commission which labored under the array of good men and goodwill on in the Anglo-Jewish negotiations. litical blow, Palestine was stranger cracked up to be. flood of disconcerting messages can- the Zionist side, contained one menaand sounder economically than the Egypt, lamented this Arab daily, The test soon came with the 1500alized by Sir John Chancellor, were cing feature in Dr. Drummond Sliiel's majority; of European countries, the was full of its own troubles; Iraq en- immigration certificates the Colonial informed that the withdrawal of the hint that there was something unsucanxiety of the Arab landlords soon grossed, in its struggle for indepen- Office suddenly decided to offer the White Paper was out of the question cessful ii» the drafting of the Manbecame apparent. dence; Syria, on the threshold of con+ Jewish Agency. Less than half the bbt reasonable. modification was pos-date: ' ';' ' • ' • . . • • • • • • • 1 stitutional changes, was awaiting the number cancelled sis months earlier, sibW He did not venture further, but it Cblncrete Achievements Accomplished by theL Their joy, at any rate, was notice- return when immigration was suspended, this of the French High Commisably tampered as the financial crisis was clear to air who pondered his JEtFlSH AND ARAB INFLU, Jewish Pioneers in the Holy Land, Howmade itself more and more felt among sioner from Taris; Transjordan was quota emphasized the division in theENCE, EAST AND WEST words that from such an admission giving undivided attention to its awnYishuv. The Revisionists, and also changes '• in the Mandate need not the holders t>f frozen assets. On the ever, Are Most Encouraging ••*> The interplay of forces which some-; Jewish side, the Agudist view re- petty problems; Hedjaz and Nejd Pinchas Butenberg, then chairman of one described as Jewish influence in prove impossible, even if a change in mained that the British policy ex- seemed unconcerned over the fate of the Vaad Leumi, opposed any conver- the West and Arab influence in thethe Mandatory 'was for the present sations with the British Government pressed in the White Paper was a the Arabs of Palestine. By GERSHON AGRONSKY East, between which the Government unthinkable. Not Until months later, contravention and a farcical inter- This, said "Falastin," left the Pal-so long as the White Paper stood, and saw itself bound to hold the balance, when Premier McDonald's statement The year 5691 in Palestine was onethis warning. It went beyond even pretation of the Mandate. All agreed estine Arabs to themselves and un-insisted the certificates should be re-with Lord Passfield almost unmistak- to Dr. Weizmarin was published on of alarms and excursions. Gershon Dr. Shielg* evasive replies, that the that the Labor government was try-able to stand up against "British jected as a worthless sop. the conclusion of the first part of ably siding with the pro-Aral) group, the Anglo-Jewish negotiations, was Agronsky, the resident Palestine cor- Labor Government had no intention The majority, however, was against Zionist Imperialism.*' ing to perform the impossible feat respondent of the Jewish Telegraphic petulance in politics. The Arabs, on was visible once more. The Arabs this Bpectre removed. Agency, has again written his annual to overlook the fact that the Arabs of breaking the barrel and yet pre-LAND OF ISHMAEL, OR the other hand, held the certificates were almost persuaded they had won Burvey of the year especially for thewere the majority, and -went a long serve the wine. ERETZ ISRAEL? Jewish Telegraphic Agency and Theway towards enthroning the Arabs as indicated a retreat by the British their fight since the White Paper was And the reciting of psalms in Tel Jewish Press.—Editor. ARAB ACTIVITY The faltering of the Arabs conGovernment from the stand in the not cancelled and Zionism, as a re- Aviv and Mean Shearim against the the sole masters. The effect of the unsubsiding storm tinued several months, but failed to White Paper, which they claimed was sult, had been reduced to a petty co- "Passfield Edict," lasting in the case of Meah Shearim no less than forty Politically, 5691 in Palestine began Yet the White Paper disappointed caused some Arabs to wonder if their hearten the Jews, whose opinion in being turned into "a scrap of paper." lonization movement. "with the visit of Dr. Drummond those Arabs who had been led to ex- rejoicing bad not been premature. the main was expressed by Menahem Arab pressure was renewed and the Official explanations in London days and, culminating in the tradiShiels, the Under-Secretary of State pect that it would completely stop "Falastin," among others, deprecated Ussishkrn, that Britain wanted not a •well-known threats refurnished with seemed to justify "Haaretz" in de-. (Continued on Page 6—Section C) for the Colonies. Careful to give no Jewish immigration and land purhint of the contents of the Sir John chase. It Btiffened the Yishuv's opHope-Simpson Report and the White position. The' early establishment of Paper, on which the ink must have a legislative council with the consent been dry when he left London, and of the Jews became patently impostrue to Colonial Office traditions, sible. So united was the Yishuv in its Lord Passfield's second in command, resentment, that even the "British when forced to praise, Jewish achieve- Shalom" group,.irrevocably committed ments, never failed to dramatize the to self-governing institutions, allowed romantic aspects of the Arab villages. it to be announced they would not break the united Jewish front by ofTo both the Arab and Jewish sides fering candidates for election. he delivered homilies on good neighThe Agudath Israel also took its bourliness, but left everybody greatly stand with a united Jewry against puzzled as to the Government's real what Labor described as the "treachintentions. He signally failed to apery, hypocrisy and slander" which pease the appetite of a fact thirsting formed the basis of the White Paper. population, or -state the lust of the politically minded for advance infor- But while the Brith Shalom announcement wss later withdrawn as "unmation. authorized," the Aguda leaders in Palestine remained firm, in spite of STORM OVER WHITE conflicting, sentiments in their ranks PAPER The White Paper and the Simpson abroad. Beport, with their international rep- Greatly rejoicing in their victory ercussion, were not long in coming, over Zionism, which they announced however, and are part of the disturb- was now doomed, the Arab Executive ing record of the Jewish National for the first time in ten years did not f Home during the year under review. proclaim a general strike on NovemThe White Paper did exactly what ber 2,1930, the thirteenth anniversary Jewish spokesmen in Palestine told of the Balfour Declaration. On the Dr. Shiels they could never accept. Jewish side, too, the anniversary Jews can only be asked to sacrifice passed almost unnoticed, but for othfor. Palestine if this sacrifice is- noter reasons. In the economic field, a made dependent on the approval of striking contrast was presented bethe Arab majority, he was specifical- tween the Arab and Jewish reactions. ly warned. The White Paper ignored Whereas Jewish economists, after a

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New Year's Edition~THE JEWISH PBESS—Friday September 11, 1931

Page Six—Section C

phali or Hinkis, the two Jews sentenced for capital crimes after the 1929 disturbances. Attempting to divide the Executive of the Jewish Agency, he openly favored the non^Continued from Page 5—Section C) der hi3 instructions, prevented Dr. Zionist section against the Zionist. Weizmarin from visiting Amman to Lord Plumer had. considered decent continue the friendship with the late administration.! of. the. municipalities, fcional siyum, had by that time run its King Hussein and the Emir Abdullah, as a necessary preliminary to nationc o u r s e . " • '. •" '•' his reigning son, signalized in the al self-government. Sir John ChanSIR JOHN CHANCELLOR'S visit to the capital of TransJordan by cellor, does not appear to have been LAST YEAR Colonel Kisch- and Dr. David Yellin upset by the mal-administration of On the side of the pro-Arab group, a few months earlier. the. Jursalem Municipality.. Nor did Sir John Chancellor proved during the A High Commissioner who told the he consider it unnatural that the year under review a staunch ally. In Jews of Haifa that he saw no good places of the three Jewish city fathers September, 1929, when he rushed back reason for appointing a Jew to a who resigned remained vacant, leavfrom England to his blood-drenched judgeship vaeated by another Jew in ing the Jews without voice.in the .post, he had issued his, historic pro- a town with • an important Jewish management of a city in which they clamation against Arab savagery. At population and not a single Jewish constitute a majority..; Without; the that time he was undoubtedly with judge, allowed • a systematic discrim- Jewish" members'.; effective checking, the British community . in Palestine, ination against Jewish labor in pub- corruption became only more chimerwhich in its wrath had declared the lic works. "Whether or not he had ical than ever. only way to deal with the .murderers been deceived by departmental heads Perhaps Sir John Chancellor's finof Hebron was to shoot one out of whose business it was to implement est act, second only in importance to every ten. the provisions of the MacDonald let- keeping the country quiet, was the Within a week his proclamation was ter regarding the Jews' share in gov- amnesty he arranged in connection devitalized at his own hands when he ernment works, the fact is that even with the approaching census for some tried equally to apportion the blame in the agricultural school built for ten thousand Jews who in the last ten between the Arabs and Jews. From Jews out of the Kadoorie fund, the years were compelled to enter Palesthat moment on, his siding with the number of Arab workers was more tine irregularly as tourists or without Arab "underdog:" was clear to all who than ten times the number, of Jews, proper identification papers. But his had eyes to see. He is the author of not to mention the building of the administration saw fit definitely to the theory in the Simpson Report that school for Arabs erected, out of a Jew- bar from Palestine the tribune of an in estimating the absorbative capa- ish fund at Tulkarm, where as a mattity of the country for the purpose of ter of course Jews were not found on important section of Jews, a member of the Vaad Leumi, Vladimir JabotinJewish immigration unemployment the scene. sky. His solicitude for the poor culamong Arabs must be taken into activator, from which Jews were not excount. BIAS CREEPS IN The Sunday stoppage order for the [ The building of the Rockefeller cluded, was shown in the remission of 150 Jewish quarry men at Athlit was Museum in Jerusalem, also an underissued under his authority, though he taking under government supervision, later rescinded it. It remained for is for the present judenrein. Sir John hini to find Norman Bentwich as a Chancellor used his brief private visit Jew unsuitable to be attorney-general to London in May to harden, among and the enforced leisure of this dis- other things, the tenants' ordinance tinguished British jurist who served so as to render more difficult than under his two illustrious predecessors even land purchases by Jews. and who has since been offered great- ;, In publicity security he displayed er positions in other British posses- firmness, supported as he was by the sions by way of reward for being presence of troops. He dealt enerexiled from the Jewish National getically with incitement, suspending one Arab paper after another, alHome, continued to the end. , In small matters as , well as in though by way of balancing accounts, great, the third High Commissioner, Jewish papers did not escape punishV?hose three-year. term runs, out with ment, although never guilty of provothe present Jewish year, displayed a cation to - violence. His action in bias which must have cramped his promptly shutting down • "Falastin" Capacity for impartial administration. for, its attempt, to revive the blood Owing to some minor incidents on libel, was sound and exemplary. Perfootball fields, he banned for a time secution of, communists was intensiell matches between British troops fied towards the end of his administration. jmd local, meaning Jewish, teams. He defied rulings, of the courts and The Mufti's successful effort to perhaps laid himself open to con- turn' Mount Moriah into a pantheon tempt of justice, in blocking, by ad- for Moslem leaders was begun under ministrative measures, one large land Sir. John Chancellor's administration. transfer after another. Ever indulg- Whether, as "Davar" suggested, the ing his Arab wards, the High Com- genius which guided the coup of the missioner muffled the ball when his Mohammed Ali internment was "diaturn came to carry out definite in- bolical" or not, it is a fact that arstructions from London to bring Dr. rangements for the subsequent burial [Weizmann together with the Arab of Hussein in Jerusalem were secretly fipokesmen in Palestine. He merely made by the Jerusalem government (communicated to the Arabs that such days before the ex-monarch breathed jwere his instructions, but they could his last at Amman. . He pardoned not. of course be forced to do any- several of the aged murderers of Satthing about it unless they particularly ed who were serving life sentences, jwjshed. . but made no move in the direction of And the Chief Secretary, acting un- a retrial or liberation for either Urtil

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Year's Honor Roll of American Jewry ^Continued from Page 4—Section C) munal worker—53. " Max L. Rosenberg—San Francisco Joseph Jaffa—Denver educator— philanthropist—60. 60. . Sidney Rosenfeld—New York playIsadore Kitsee—Philadelphia scien- wright—75. tist-87. . Elias Rosenkranz—Los Angeles Rabbi Louis Kopold—Chicago rabbi jurist—43. •—45. ' • • . - • • Isaac Ruben—Minneapolis. picture Ida Kramer—New York actress— producer—63. ';. " Benjamin Sellinger—Sioux City Joseph Leblang—New York, busi- jurist—71. ness man—57. Jacob Sandier—New York composBabbi Isiah Levy—New York rab- er—78, bi—50. Morris Schaffner—Erie philanWilliam Levy—Baltimore philan- thropist—<?5. thropist—74. Leon Schinasi—New York philanDr. Arthur Lowenstein—Chicago thropist—40. chemist—49. , Mortimer Schiff—New York philanMajor J. Lowenstein—St. Louis thropist—-54. jaewspaperman—69. . Moses M. Schwarz—Mobile physiLouis Mann—New York actor—65. cian—44. Joseph Marcus—Pittsburgh politic- Rudolph Seidenberg—Buffalo mer? al leader—47. chant—64. Otto Mears—Denver empire build- Henry. Siegel—New York merer—91. chant^-70. Morton Meinhard—New York phil- Morris Sigman—New York labor anthropist—58. leader—51. • Edwin Meyer—Chicago philanthro- Ben Selling—Portland philanthroppist—65. ist—78. ; r Hiram Miritz—Binghamton -com- David Sperber—Montreal Zionist ; munal leader—55. ••'.—80. . Moses Mints—New York Zionist— Nathan Straus—New York philanthropist—83. . 7 1 . / • :'•]•• ..-;• " V •---:• Lionel Moses—New York architect S. W. Straus—New York banker— 64.David Mossessohn—New York pub- Solomon Sufrin—New York communal leader—49. lisher—48. Isaac Natkins—New York newspa- Joseph Sulzberger — Philadelphia communal leader—87. perman—47. • Silvain Newburger—New Orleans Louis Swig—Boston jurist—49. Isaac Thalheimer—Richmond mermerchant—58. , Joseph Newburger—New York jur- chant—75. Louis Tishman—New York realtor Joseph Pines—New York philanA. W. Voorsanger—San Francisco Meyer Posner—New York com- publisher—80. Samuel Woolner—New York busiposer—41. ness man—64. : David Radovsky—Fall River Zion- Mrs. Adelia Zametkin—New York ist*-51. communal worker—68. Charles Eayevsky—New York newsSigmund Zeisler—^Chicago attorpaperman—64. ney. Harry. Reichenbach—New York (Copyright,. 1931, by Che Jewish Teleafewspaperman—49. " . "graphic Agency, Lie.) ! — ~ a—Boston com-

taxation at the time the revolutionary legislation about the tenants was rushed through. Before that, on the recommendation of the Johnson-Crosbie Commission, the Government had voted L. 35,000 in agricultural loans for the food and forage for the farmers whose holdings had suffered from drought and fieldmice. No one could have done more than he to coax the Arabs to enter into conversations either in London or Jerusalem over the Development Scheme, and it is no reflection on his cajoling powers that the Arabs in public maintained their sabotage to the end, whatever they may have agreed to informally and secretly. Sir John Chancellor leaves Palestine without regret. His name remains inscribed on a street in Jerusalem, on which stands the health center built by Nathan Straus, and which the Jews will always call Rehov Straus, whatever else the city plan may call it.

YADJUR AND PUBLIC SECURITY But for the ghastly crime near Yadjur in April when two young halutzos and one halutz were killed, and the mysterious disappearance towards the end of the year of a halutz and halutza who started out on an innocent excursion and appear to have been swallowed up, there were no serious disturbances. The PassoverEaster, season, with the Nebi Moussa

dervishry, passed off uneventfully. The clash between the Mufti and the anti-Mufti forces was somehow averted. The Mufti tried to distract attention from his serious quarrel with th Hebron Moslems by arranging a col lection .during Nebi Moussa to erec monuments over the graves of thi only threes among the accused Ara murderers who paid the supreme penalty for their crimes in August, 1929 The breach in the Moslem-Christian camp, deep at the beginning o: the year in consequence of the figh over a cemetery in Haifa and th< murder of a Christian editor, wa, superficially healed towards the end although Moslem-Christian rivalry over the position of Arab advisor on the Development Commission may accentuate the difference once more. A hang-over of the 1929 disaster was the very belated trial and sentencing of several Arabs of the Colonial village accused of attempting to murder the Brosa family at Motza, while they or their fellow villages massacred the Macleff family. This belated justice was rather resented by the Jewish community, who regarded it as an infringement of the peace pact signed at Motza. Attempts to revive the anti-Jewish boycott failed, and the old slogan, "Sell the Jews everything but land, buy nothing except land" fell largely on deaf ears There were several attempts to interfere with Jewish ploughing, and a few

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threshing floors were fired by "per- was added a t the end of the 'year Lord Passfield's dispatch about the sons unknown." Development Scheme, a logical outPLETHORA OP REPORTS come of investigations preceding it. To the plethora of Beports and The Jewish side showed a willingness recommendations, beginning with to accept the Development proposals, Simpson on landlessness, running afw* the Government's intention to through. Strickland on co-operatives, prejudice the new Development DirecJohnson-Crosbie on the condition of tor's work by crystalizing the number the fellah, and the Wailing Wall, not of so-called landless Arabs was sucto mention, the Dowbiggin report on cessfully warded off by the Jewish police reorganization (never publish- Agency. ed but slowly being put into effect), and the as yet unpublished findings The regulating regarding the Wailof the O'Donnell Finance Commission, (Continued on Page 7—Section C)

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Page Seven—Section C

New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931 oranges, lemons and similar products, and "whatever vegetable products they had raised were a negligible factor in the market. But such cities as Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, where the largest Jewish communities are located, had need of vegetables on a large scale. . Through Loans. By This Means Jews Seek to - Immediately after the riots the JewBecome Self-Snffiish farmers realized that if the Jews rient • •were to be a self-sufficient community they-had to raise enough ^vegeSince the August, 1929, disturbance •tables to satisfy the large Jewish pqpJews of Palestine, '• seeking to become nlation. ^ Thereupon truck gardens a. self-sufficient economic unit, have 'were developed in a circle around Tel developed truck farming. An exhibi- Aviv; Old vegetables were planted tion of the new varieties of vegetables and new varieties were developed. grown; by -Palestine Jewish farmers Many of these track gardens -were during the past two years was re- started with funds loaned by the Jewcently .held in Tel Aviv. ish Agency through the Keren HayeBefore the disturbances the Jewish sod. The "vegetable patches were farmers of Palestine had largely de- planted by the Hayarkon, an organivoted themselves' to the - raising of zation of Jewish truck gardeners, i t

PALESTINE JEWS ARE TURNING TO TRUCK FARMING

(Continued.from Page 6—Section C) completed, is the reduction in infantile morality among Jews by 50 per ing Wail were accepted on the Jewish cent, until it is now lower than in side as a gezar din. The Govern- Germany and England, tie Emek-with ment's wariness concerning the Wail- its SO mortalities per thousand holding Wall, pending the new regula- ing the record for the lowest infant tions, was grotesquely illustrated mortality in the world. ' • ' when the Archbishop of Canterbury • ' Perhaps the most important' step was kept from visiting it because the taken by government was "tht Government could not or would;not in January of the agreement^ decide whether Moslems or Jews, or Iraq Petroleum Company. An both, should be on the pavement to cultural council, with official and • receive him. . official Jewish and : Ajsb members, Without adequate reason the Gov- was constituted;by government, holdernment reduced the Jewish Agency's ing out the promise of co-operation, in estimate of 1500 immigration certifi- at least one field, after the governcates for the March-October 1931 ment failed to bring about a voluntarj quota to 500,; making these certifi- agreement between Jews and Arabs cates tenable in the main for immi- on the Wailing Wall, in which :a grants not requiring them, such as Quaker had also, had a hand. relatives and dependants, who may PAPER MIDGES enter without them. If the Bridge to the Jewish NationTowards 'the end of the Jewish yea? al Home could be-built of paper and Arab agitation increased alarmingly, •made to rest on commissions' ••"Hp.fc over the sealed armouries in some of ings, 5691 would have brought TIS the Jewish colonies, after the Mufti's decidedly nearer to our goaL As the effort to fan Moslem passions over Messianic times are ^iiot^ =yet, and the Wailing Wall regulations al^ but bridges.of ^apef cannot~Se expected broke down, and after the strike or- tq suppoirt a movement like ours, the dered on the first anniversary of the irritating facts and figures, findings hanging of the three Arabs all but and recommendations piled up the last failed. ; year had betiier be allowed to pass following on a comparatively un- into the areSiive and 5692 faced with eventful year in which scant pro- fresh determination to do more and gress was made ty Jews and the need •find less, whether we find faults or for retrenchment caused a delay in acts. using the 1500 immigration certificates granted in October, a year Copyright, 1931, by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) marked by drastic reductions in all Jewish national establishments, whose desperate financial situation was the cause of a short "teachers' strike after the Passover vacation, the Zionist Congress at Basle, held at last after many postponements, caused a complete reshuffling in the Executive and produced an important change in the Zionist representation vis-a-vis the Palestine ^administration and the Yishuv. Even before it became clear Johannesburg, South Africa. — (J. that Dr. "Weizmann would not head A.)—So hard hit has South African the movement after the XVTIth con- ewry been by the world-wide gress, Colonel Kisch had resigned his nomic depression that reports oi Jews office. For nine years a man who committing suicide because of finanfelt Jewishly but who had been cial,activities have become increasingtrained as a Britisher, Colonel Kisch y frequent of late and are causing was the Jewish ambassador in his own serious concern to commercial leaders. country. His succession by a non- South African Jewry's long establishBritish Jew is another indication of ed reputation in the Jewish world as the change that has come over the being one of the most y/ell-to-do of all Jeweries, will soon vanish if conZionist attitude towards "Britain. ditirins do not improve. ..Infinitestesimal as the figure.may Nt> better indication of the difficulties confronting the -jTf» b^SteJ-ttSn^tfie ?a"ct1$M South world, Jewish unemployment in Pal- can Jews, who have long been in the' estine continued to cause anxiety, al- forefront of contributors to Palestine though towards the end of July there and other non-local Jewish causes, are was a drop to 2000: unemployed from now increasingly heard to say "chir3000 in,-May. The perennial conflict ity begins at home." At a recent caused by the orange planters, capa- meeting of the South African Board city or willingness to pay and the of Jewish Deputies a campaign was Jewish laborers' irreducible needs launched for $150,000 to aid the poor (low enough as everyone knows) pro- Jews of South Africa. duced clashes here and there, and the The economic depression struck cry "w°rk and bread" followed by ar- South Africa about the same time rests, was heard once more in the that the immigration quota bill, which c • -virtually bars East European Jewish land. immigration, "was passed. In the inMODEST ACHIEVEMENTS terval its - passage and tite To the few concrete achievements date itbetween became operative South Afriof the year belong the modest begin- can Jews hastened to bring-over their nings of the thousand family plan; relatives but the question of whether the actual commencement of the relatives would be able to earn building of two hundred workers* cot- these a Irving her was ; appearently not tages at Haifa; the signing of con- given serious consideration. . tracts with the Zionist settlers colonThus several thousand additional ized by the Keren Hayesod on Keren Kayemeth land; the impetus to the Jews entered South Africa before the local products movement; stabiliza- quota law became' effective. tion of Jewish plantations; the deWarsaw.—(J. T. A.)—The epidemic cision by the Assefat Hanivachim, or Elected Assembly, to relieve world of Jewish,suicides throughout Poland, Jewry to the maximum extent pos- a direct result of the economic suffersible of the responsibility for health ing of the Jewish population, shows and education among the Jews in Pal- no signs of diminution, but on the conestine; the beginning of a return o; trary is growing worse, the Yiddish Jews to Hebron. A salutary fac press here declares. Not a day passes which may be emphasised more clear- but that some Jew doesn't take death ly when the approaching census is | as the best way out of his troubles.

THOMAS TELLS OF TRI-COWRED JEWS .INDIA In his book on "India, the Land of the Black Pagoda^' ' Lowell Thomas, well-inown writer and adventurer, "has Included an interesting section dealing with the Jewg of "Cochin. The Jews of the three towns of Cois the hope of this group to introduce truck! gardening into every section of Palestine, so that the Jewish eomimin1 ities can always have their own source of vegetables. Already truck gardening is one 'of the large industries of Palestine, giving employment to hundreds of men and women.

chin are of three castes: the Whites, According to a legend the White the Blacks and the Browns. Accord- Jews at one time constituted a speing to a tradition current among the cially privileged community, Ih-ing in Black Jews, they arrived first in the peace with their Mohammedan and first century «f the present era by Hindu neighbors. They have preserved their independence throughout way of Yemen and Arabia. Tie White Jews, on the other hand, the centuries and do not intermarry maintain that the Blacks are descen- with the other castes, or join with dants of slaves who had been con- them in synagogue -prayer.' They tiow verted and then liberated. They t3aim number no more than three hundred that they, the Whites, arrived in the souls. ' country first when their "ancestors, The Black and Brown Jews together members -of the Tribe of Menaseeh number approximately one thousand , r. ., who had been, carried into exile by individuals. Nebuchadnezzar, migrated to Cochin. •For a time they were forced from Prague. — Anti-Semitic1 'disCrimins their settlements when : the Portu- tion -such as Ithat long in vogue *1 guese invadedr the Orient sjod horned many summer resorts in Germany and destroyed ' t h e Jewish > colonies. has now begun to worry the Jews ©i Ultimately when the Dutchregained Czecho-Slovakia this' summer as th« possession of the region,1 the-Jews re- result of a number of similar maniturned to their old districts in Cochin festations at Czecho-Slbvakian vacaand rebuilt their colony. tion places this year.

DEPRESSION CAUSE OF SOUTH AFRICA JEWISH SUICIDES

Mi ill Ui m Hi ill UPBffiMK.

our sincere wish thai; the forthcoming year and tHe years to follow will bring you and yours a full measure of health, happiness and prosperity with the joy of a -useful life well lived •-W.

; JOSEPH CpHN, I»r€sideDt 10S-5 South. 12th—JAcltson 4666

WISHES FOR A

HAPPY NEW YEAR I J:

.lit.

-h-

ITEN BISCUIT


New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday* September 11, 1931

Page Eight—Section C

Putting Lord Reading and Sir Samuel Under the Two Jews are Selected itl Coalition Cabinet Formed to Save England in Financial Crisis By

E

it is still more interesting from a hu- "for plucking'the heart out of a subman point of view. It has once more -The' selectibn> of Lord Readings and •propelled to' the center of the Euro- ject," his suavity and his unruffled coolness make him. invaluable. Close Sir Herbert Samuel as members pf; the National - Coalition Cabinet of pean political stage _ two personalities observers of the political.phase of the England has aroused widespread'sat- who for all' their brilliance and record' World war will, tell you that no one isfaction in Jewish circles. It is for of achievement were definitely classi- did more for Anglo-American friendthe first time in modern history that fied as shelved and believed to belong ship in the war than the second son two Jews have been: placed at the same time in. the two. most important to an England of the past. of Joseph Isaacs, London merchant. Cabinet posts of. a government. The Were one to express in a few senauthor of this article reviews the ca- Lord Reading's Public Career tences the qualities which brought reers of these two outstanding "politic Lord Residing in his 71st year cal leaders and. gives us an intimate seemed to have Closed his eventful po- Rufus Isaacs to very top in British . close-up of their characters.—Editor. litical career by his recent marriage politics one could say with one of his biographers: "Lord Reading has The Liberal Party of Great Britain to his former private secretary. His above all the gift of generalization public record was generally regarded is represented by three men in the which has always been one of the disEmergency Coalition Cabinet which as unique in the annals of British pub- tinctive gifts of the Jewish race, ensucceeded the Labor Government the lic life. He held consecutively the abling him to reduce great masses of other day. Two of the Liberal spokes- positions of Lord Chief Justice of fact to order and discipline, the same men are Jews. In a Europe that is England and High Commissioner and racial instinct for a big simple idea, soaked with anti-Jewish prejudices Special Envoy to the U. S. during and immense logical courage. These and'that has consistently followed the the war. At the end of the war, the are formidable gifts, when they are unwritten law of riot more than one King of England rewarded the former combined (as they are in his case) Jew in any cabinet, - Lloyd George's Rufus Daniel Isaacs with the. Viceroy- with the patience which notoriously is "daring" gesture of selecting two ship of India, which position he held riot characteristic of the Jewish race, Jews as the representatives of his for fully six years. patty speaks volumes for the status It may not bz generally known that with humility in the acquisition of of British Jewry. the financial policy that saved Great knowledge, and with singular. simplicity and charm of manners, they That these Lloyd George selections Britain from economic breakdown at are quite irresistible gifts." rest solely on merit goes without say- the beginning of the war was Lord But Lord Reading had retired aping. Sir Herbert Samuel and Lord Reading's. Herbert Sidebotham, the parently for good. Today, however, Reading are without the shadow of a eminent British Journalist, wrote at as one of the "Big Ten" who are .to doubt the outstanding Liberal states- the time: "It was riot that he (Lord solve Britain's economic crisis, he will men, with the exception of Lloyd Reading) alone had the knowledge undoubtedly play one of the leading George himself. His illness prevent- which others lacked, but that he alone roles. As Secretary of Foreign Afing his participation in state affairs, had the courage to insist that his init was merely logical for the "happy tellectual conviction of what was fairs it will fall to his lot to deal with Ittle warrior" to choose two veterans necessary to.prevent a financial crash the political sidelights of internation.-<££ British statesmanship. That these should be expressed in action. Of all al financing projects. His many contwo gentlemen happened. to be Jews the acts of courage done in the war, tacts and social connections in Washwas merely a coincidence. As a mat- the arrangement by which the State, ington, Berlin, Bombay and Paris and ter of fact not one single publication after the moratorium had been pro- the tremendous respect he enjoys in in Great Britain has thus far pointed claimed, agreed to ensure the pay- Geneva will, of course, come in good out this coincidence. Great Britain ment of bills of exchange was par- stead. It is doubtful, however, if the has once more given incontrovertible haps the most remarkable. This was Emergency Cabinet will live long evidence that it recognizes ability re- Lord Beading's doing, and as a su- enough to compel Lord Reading to gardless of racial or religious affilia- preme example -of intellectual courage deal with such intricate problems as it! is sufficient to ensure him a niche the Disarmament Conference, the Paltions. estine Mandate and the India Round Even to us Americans this comes as in the fame of war." Table Conference. Reading is now the a startling revelation. But significant Those that know Lord Reading well dean of British statesmen. He must though the selection of Lord Beading consider him at his best in private and Sir Herbert Samuel may be for conferences. On political platforms be accepted as the successor to Lord the Jewish historians and the review- he was always a comparative failure. Balfour in standing and prestige, but er of the contemporary Jewish scene, In a small group, howaver. His faculty he has most probably entered upon

the last stage of his amazing selfmade career; He will remain in history the great figure in the economic emergencies of Great Britain in* the first quarter of the twentieth century.: •

Sir Samuel's Comeback While Lord Reading's call to office is the" concluding chapter of his biography. Sir Herbert Samuel's assumptoin of the office of Home Secretary in Britain's National Government definitely marks a comeback and perhaps- will signify the opening of a most significant chapter of his career. -Sir Herbert Samuel is only sixty-one years old. I say "only" advisedly, because in English politics the years between the sixtieth and seventieth year are considered the most propitious for political leadership. The great DisraeK was sixty-four when he became Prime Minister for the first time. There is a great contrast between Reading and Samuel. Reading comes from a poor Jewish family, and his success is all of his own making. Samuel is-the scion'of a wealthy family and found many social and financial connections ready-made in his quest for power. In his early twenties he entered the political arena; he was hardly 35 years old when he was appointed Parliamentary Undersecretary to the home office. Not quite forty saw him a member of the Privy Council, and at the age of forty he became Pdst Master General and a full-fledged member of a British Cab-

inet. . At that stage of his career it was freely predicted that the young Samuel was destined for the highest honors in British politics. He was a convincing Speaker and a most skillful party politician. There were few in his party (the Liberal Party) who could compete with his organizing abilities or who had his grasp of economic problems. But, strange to-say, Samuel,' the successful politician, the brilliant party leader was not a popular figure in London's East End. As Home Secretary during the war he forfeited much of Jewish sympathies because of his severe attitude concerning military conscription for Jewish non-citizen residents of England. In fairness to Herbert Samuel it must be pointed out that he never relaxed in his interest in Jewish affairs. When Dr, Weizmann will some day reveal the intimate details of his efforts to obtain the Balfour Declaration, ha will have to give a good deal of credit to Sir Herbert Samuel. Insiders know that Lloyd. George refused to approve or even listen to any Zionist overtures unless Samuel was present. But Samuel's: lucky star started to wans during the war. It is true that he acted in many important capacities during and immediately after the war, but he did not advance much from 1910 to 1920. As a matter of fact, when he was offered and accepted the post of High Commissioner for Palestine Samuel was thought to have definitely abandoned all hope of playing a leading role in British politics. For a Jew the post was full of traps and hurdles. If Samuel's Jewish standing had suffered greatly when he was Home Secretary in 1916, his Jewish stock reached rock bottom in 1920-25, while he was the head of the Palestine Administration.

Now Appreciated Sir Herbert Samuel was generally blamed for the famous Churchill Whit Paper, which was the first British step in limiting the political aims of Zionism. Samuel was also severely criticized by the Zionists for his tendency to be more British than the British and his consistent disregard of Jewish claims. Today, however, after the Passfield White Paper and after the Palestine events of the last six years, Jews have come to the conclusion that Samuel did the utmost with a very delicate and most difficult and ungrateful task. In any case, when Sir Herbert Samuel returned to England he was considered out of the running as regards high political honors. Sir Herbert Samuel, however, proved to possess the patience and the cunning of a Disraeli. He threw himself into party politics with a vengeance, and in 1927 became the chairman of the Liberal Party organization. It is true that the prospects of the party were anything but bright. Its parliamentary representation had reached a low record and its future in view of the continually growing labor strength, was indeed dark. But Samuel worked at the rejuvenation of his party with a fanatic energy which in the last general elections resulted in a complete failure. The Liberal Party elected some fifty members of Parliament, but retained some standing because it held the balance of power between the Labor Government and His Majesty's Opposition. Samuel's personal political future seemed doomed. His leader, Lloyd George, head of the Liberal Party, while older than he, retained enough vitality and lust for action to bar his road to the actual political leadership of his party. Today, however, the situation has

completely changed. Lloyd George's illness has advanced Sir Herbert Samuel to the very highest post in the Liberal Party. When the dramatic fall of McDonald's Labor Cabinet became imminent, it was Sir Herbert who negotiated, in the name of his party, with the Conservatives, the Laborites and the King. He is now one of the strong men of the National Coalition Government. In the inevitable General Elections," which will most probably occur this winter, he will lead his party. While it is very improbable that the Liberal Party will achieve control of the next Parliament it is not out of the question that it will retain the balance of power. Under such circumstances a merging of Conservative and Liberal interests is not beyond possibility. And who knows if Sir Herbert Samuel may not some day before his sixtyfifth year become the second Jewish Prime Minister of England? He has the perseverance and ability to play the political game to a successful end and according to the rule of "who waits long enough wins." (Copyright, 1931, by Seven Arts Feature Syndicate.)

The best moving picture director in the United States in the year 1930— 1931 is Lewis Milestone, whose greatest pictures were "All Quiet on the Western Front" and "The Front Page," according to .252 out of 300 critics who were polled by Film Daily. Milestone received 252 out of a possible 300 votes. Milestone, who was born in Kishiney, Roumania, in 1895, came to .the.. United States as a penniless immigrant lad 16 years ago.

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May 5692 Bring You Bountiful Blessings

Kntwred as Secoiid-jClass Mnil' Mat1«r ou Jnnanry -27, 1921, at TosloIBce nt Omahn. Nebraska, tinrter the Act of March :3. 1S79

SECTION G—EIGHT PAGES

OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11,1931

JewsRankFourth DISSOLUTION OF in Religious Groups at Ohio State Uni. JEWISH KEHILLAH OF WARSAW SEEN

.' Columbus, Ohio. — A survey just completed by officials of the Ohio State University located in Columbus Want it© Turn Its Affairs Over reveals the fact t h a t Jews rank fourth in the religious affiliations of its stuto Government Comdents, which number 15,126. missioner More than fifty denominations were Warsaw,—(J. T, A.)-fThe newly- included in the survey, the largest elected board of the Warsaw Jewish group being the Methodist Episcopal community may be dissolved and a with 4,511 < students naming it as government commissioner appointed their, church. The next group was the to conduct the affairs of the co'mmuh- Presbyterian with 2,055, followed by .••... ityv the Jewish press here suggests. Catholics with 1,149 and Jews 1,093. The first two meetings; of the: board, • 'Seven per cent of students failed to - , i t is pointed out, have^ shown that it indicate any affiliation. The percent. i s impossible for either of the two op- age of Jews at the University is more posing * sides, : the Agudists or t h e t h a n double the percentage of Jews Zionists, to obtain a stable majority in the population of Ohio, "which to".enable i t to form an administra- amounts to approximately three- per tion to carry on the affairs of the cent. community. : The two meetings of the board held .between the Zionists and the Agusince the elections have both been of dists. Shortly before the recent eleca stormy character. A t the second tions, the community board again ber meeting: when the new' executive was came unworkable and it was suggestelected.. Agudists and Zionists several ed that the government commissioner tiroes came to blows, arid some of the' should take over its affairs. incidents, i t was said, may be follow" ed by legal action. The new executive consists of eight Agudists, four Zionists, two Mizrachists and one nonpartisan, r The. Warsaw Jewish community, the largest in Europe, has had a chequered existence since its board has. been a democratically elected- body. The two opposing sections, the ZionBombay.—(J. T» A.)—There is not ists and the Agudists, have always a single rabbi in the whole of India, been more or less equal in numbers according to a writer in the Bombay and deadlocks have consequently been Jewish Advocate who laments the spifrequent. The suggestion that the ritual decline of the Jews of Burma community should be dissolved and a and expresses doubts as to their surgovernment commissioner appointed vival. Criticizing the communal leadto conduct affairs has been made on ers of Burma, the. writer takes them previous occasions. to taisk for their failure to be more The very first meeting of the ke- active Zionist, to establish social hillah after the elections in 1924 contacts between the Jews and to broke up in disorder as a protest provide for the religious training of against the insistence of the govern- youth. '..'.. ment that .the..proceedings should be Characterizing the only Jewish conducted in Polish. No meeting was school in Burma as "the shame of the held for 19 months until Fehraary, Rangoon community." the writer-in 1926, when permission was given for the Advocate points "out that this the -proceedings to be conducted in school, which for 20 years functioned •Polish, Yiddish o r Hebrew. Deadlocks primarily a s a. boys school, where girls . occurred constantly and on one oc-were also allowed to study", has now, casion the budget could not be passed under, new administration, become a ^ for months, so that the executive fin- girls school, which means that the . ally resigned until the deadlock was boys are deprived even of the paltry broken as the result -of a compromise education they had before.

CRITIC COMPLAINS INDIA IS WITHOUT ORDAINED RABBI

Jewish Soldiers Granted Leave By War Department

In Memonam

Washington.—(J. T. A.)—The Secretary of War has issued instructions that furloug-hs be gTanted to members of the Jewish faith in order to permit them to-participate in the celebration Great Future for the Growing Industries of Palesof Rosh Hashonah beginning at suntine down, Friday, September 11,1931, and continuing until sundown, Sunday, September 13, 1931, and of the Day Jerusalem—Because of a potenof Atonement, beginning at sundown tial market of 16,000,000 Jews Sunday, September 20, 1931, and con- throughout the world and because tinuing until sundown, Monday, Sep- Palestine's proximity to aH of th« tember 21, 1931, provided no interfer- Eastern countries gives them an ence with the public service is occa- outlet for Palestinian products, industry in Palestine has enormous sioned thereby. possibilities for growth and expansion, M. Shenkar, president of the Manufacturers' Association of Palestine, declared in an interview with the Palestine Daily Bulletin. Owing to rapidity of transport and travel and relatively low shipping changes, Palestine will be able to occupy the Oriental markets, Hooligans Use Violence in Anti- especially those of Egypt, as well as Semitic Outbreaks in of Syria where commission agents Bulgaria are already distributing1 Palestine products, Mr. Shenkbar pointed out, Sofia.—(J. T . A.)—Plans to drive Palestine's output should also find all the Jews out of Bulgaria were an- ready access to Iraq and Persia nounced by the Fascist and anti-Sem- while the Indian market has already itic organizations, Rodna Saschita in shown that large quantities of Palthe Sofia newspaper, Wetscher. estine products can be sold there, he According to these plans Rodna Sa- declared. schita intends to call a national conThe world Jewish market can be vention in October together with na- of indescribable value to Palestine tionalistic student groups. At this industry if the proper sort of propaconvention definite anti-Jewish action ganda is used abroad, especially will be decided upon. "We must get among Jewish women who should be rid of all the Jews," a prominent leadurged to buy soap, oil, almonds, er of Rodna Saschita explained to a honey and wine made in Palestine, Wetscher reporter. Mr. Shenkbar said. A week ago the Ashkenazic synaMr. Shenkbar urged the establishgogue in Sofia was attacked by hooliment of industrial banks to grant gans and every window in the house long term credits to industry, the exof worship smashed. I t was believed tension of the -department of trade that the attackers belonged to the same organizations which has recent-^ and industry of the Jewish Agency ly flooded Sofia with anti-Semitic so that it may be able to protect the posters. Narod, the Bulgarian Social- interests of Palestine industry, the ist paper, held Rodna Saschita re- reopening of the government departsponsible for', the synagogue . attack ment of industry and Zionist assistand for the anti-Jewish propaganda. ance in the development of exports by giving bounties, finding new m a r S. Radeff, Bulgarian minister to kets, and establishing agencies fa* the United States, in a letter to t h e the distribution of Palestine prodP Jewish Telegraphic Agency, declared ucts, especially in the neighboring that "I am in a position to assure you countries. that any attempt to disturb the Jewish community will be repressed with public opinion would tolerate any a merciless hand by the Bulgarian harm to be done to our Jewish citiauthorities. Neither government nor zens."

O hearts that never cease to yearn! O brimming tears that ne'er are dried! The dead, though they depart, return As though they had not died!

SOFIA FASCISTS PLAN TO DRIVE OUT ALL JEWS

Yea, Hope may whisper with the dead By bending forward where they are; But Memory, with a backward tread. Communes with them afar. The joys we lose are but forecast, And we shall find them all once more; We look behind us for the Past, But loJ'tis all before! Louis Bnbin, 75 Harry Garelick, 60 Abraham Wolowitr, 83 J u n e s S. Erraan, 10 Hanna P . Sirgel, 88 Skolnik Moses, 65 Sam -Gentis, 65 Morris J . Gotsdiner, 27 Fred B. Cherniss, 47 Ida E. Haykm, 53 Hikel Rodinsky, 99 Molly Kice, 83 Harry Singer, 70 Emanuel Yaks, 69 Ural J . Moskovitv 26 Sarah Stein, 21 Tobie Lundin, 78 Lottie Friedd, 86

Ignatz Moscovitz, 60 David Bsbender, 67 Baby Wisegard, 4 days Max Kurtzman, 51 Fannie S. Blumenthal, 53 Becky Rudennan, 45 Annabel Rothschild, 65 Salomon Hannel, 68 Any Schlaifer, 49 Shirley Plotkin, 28 Isaac Zorinsky, 51 Nathan Kramer, 38 Alexander Frank, 66 Bertha Sacks, 53 Sarah Epstein, 72 Sarah Srasne, 59 Rose Ferer, 64 Mral Abraham Whitman, 56

" Joseph Lewis, 62 . Esther Arbesfeld, 59 Nathan Bernstein, 29

74 64 Jose.Cohen, 10 months

SAYS POTENTIAL MARKETS CREATE HUGE POSSIBILITY

Andrew Goodwin^ 70 Asher Keiser, 60 Benjamin Utman, 55 Addie N . Frank, 60 Max Klein, 58 Mrs. Louis Harris Rachel Krantz, 54 Nichaina Ravitz, 60 Rebecca Feltman, 55 Sarah Lerner, 48 E t U M. Klein, 26 Jacob Milder, 69 Bernice Kraft, 9 Lenard Forbes, 4 Sarah Roth, 71 Solomon Siegel, 66 Bess Fogel, 51 Harry Turek, 69 Anna Saitzman, 75 Carrie Cohen, 74 Jake Simon, 50

ANNUAL CONGRESS OF MINORITIES IS HELD

May the New Year Bring Health, Happiness and All the Qood Things of Life to You, Your Family and Your Friends

Geneva.'—(J. T. A.)—Several days "before the opening of the Council of the League of Nations, the seventh annual congress of European nationalities, the Minorities Congress, will be held in this city. Representatives of Jewish minorities will participate in the session with Dr. Leon Motzkin as their chief spokesman. The congress will take up reports on the present day conditions of the minorities about which the permanent secretary has prepared a special report. The Congress will also debate the minority rights in Esthonia which the minorities in the other countries have also pointed as a model of its kind. Finally the congress is expected to deal with the question of disarmament and its special relation to minority groups.

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AT-7227


Year/6 Edition—THiE JEWISH PRESSU-Friday, September 11, 1931

Page Two—SectionfC

es of the Governmeiite A Survey of the Status of the Jewish People in ManyLan AmbassadorViewpoint Official Representative of t h e Foreign Govennents Find Jewish Position Satisfying Kf By the Ambassadors arid Ministers , Herewith the. Seven Arts Feature Syndicate and the Jewish Press present a strikingly unique estimate of contenjjjorary Jewish life, which forms a n admirable, supplement t o the reviews of the Jewish year which are nbw current. In the following article, the official representatives of various lands, which have been in the n e w s lately, describe either briefly or a t length the condition of the Jewish population in their respective fatherlands. Some of the observations .are in. contrast to current events, while others- harmonize with them. A t any rate,, this presentation of the " c a s e for the governments" ; is both interesting- and informative. Included in this symposium is a brilliant .statement on the position of the J e w s in Belgium by Ambassador Paul May.— Editor. ;

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But, strange as it may seem, t o the governments involved the protests are without foundation. That i s the practically unanimous story of the official representatives of some of these governments in the United States. Interested to know how they view t h e Jewish status in their lands, the Seven- Arts Feature Syndicate made an inquiry among the Ambassadors, Ministers a n d Councelors in Washington, and N e w York, asking them to give their own estimate of how the Jewish people i n their respective lands are treated. The results of that inquiry are contained in this article.

who was Chief Justice and so on. iThere are in both Houses of the Italian I Parliament a great number of;Jews and among them several have co-operated with Signor Mussolini in the study of constitutional - reforms which have been made since the establishment of Fascist Regime. ,, The, Italian people are full of admiration for] Italian Jews, who have always been faithful citizens and good soldiers." A most timely statement is made by Charalambos Simopoulos, Minister of Greece, who insists that the. reports of the recent anti-Semitic disturbances in Saloniki were highly exaggerated.

MINISTER OF GREECE

| He points out that.there was only one person, killed during; the recent riots, and he a Greek. Ti^t !« in stnrtling contrast to Jewish news disPRAISE FROM patches which have emanated from -Poland, Rumania, Austria and even ITALIANS Greece in past weeks. Greece have been much in the news ; Perhaps the wannest of the com-, ' "The' Jewish population in Greece recently in connection with reports.of meats was made by energetic Am- enjoys the same rights as the rest of the Jewish status in those countries. bassador de Martino of Italy, whtf the Greek citizens. There has never H i e general impression conveyed by has nothing but praise for the jews been an anti-Semitic feeling in these dispatches i s one of discrimina- and points out that his country: has Greece, and on. the contrary, Greeks tion and even persecution. Jewish counted Jews among its foremost and Jews have always collaborated in leaders confer about the situation; the statesmen and scholars. the most friendly way. The recent disJewish masses protest. Nevertheless, j "There is no Jewish problem in ex- orders in Salonica have been greatly the years g o on and dispatches of a istence in Italy and Italian Jews are exaggerated by the press and as it similar nature continue_ to emanate entirely equal to Italians of other was stated by the Premier, Mr. Venirom some of the European countries. creeds in all respects. izelos, they have been caused by un-How do the governments of these j There is no feeling against Jews, justified protests of, nationalistic stuitodB view the Jewish problem which who have held in the Kingdom very dents of Greece against the particiconfronts them? Or do they regard high and responsible positions. I pation of a member of the Maccabee she; Jewish population as a problem? may recall Signor Luigi Luzaatti, Association of Salonica at the celeChose questions have rarely .been once Prime Minister and several times bration of the same association held hfe Jewish papers appear Minister of Finance and of Agricul- at Sofia, in the course of which a Bulafter week with stories of eeo- ture; the cs.se of Signor Sidney Son- garian member of the Maccabi Assoaeimic disaster for Jewish minorities, nine, twice Prime Minister and Min- ciation spoke in favor of territorial sitrogation of civil rights,; and: even ister- of Foreign. Affairs, also daa&g) claim* :«f his own country. The hews interference with religious, customs. the World War; Senator Mortara, regarding the incident was greatly

exaggerated. Apart from certain material damage there is to deplore only one death, that of a Greek. The Minister of Justice proceeded to Salonica immediately, delegated by the Government in order to investigate. Public order has beep completely established and all political parties, supported by the public opinion, have unanimously approved the categorical declaration of the Premier before the House and have disapproved' the disrders. I wish to add that since then i. committee of Jews and Greeks in Salonica has been formed BO as to dissipate any misunderstanding and to establish: still better relations."

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SOUTH AFRICA Ever since the South African National Assembly passed a bill rigidly limiting the immigration to that part of the world, there have been recurrent rumors of anti-Semitism in South Africa. It was said with assurance at the time the bill was in the reading stage thai its provisions were aimed almost solely at the Jews. . . . -The Minister of South Africa to Washington^ was vehemently . indignant "when it was intimated to him that there is anti-Jewish discrimination in his country. When it was asVed whether it was at all possible for anti-Semitic outbreaks to occur there, he very vigorously remarked f that "the, contingency is so remote tff&xt no special measures for coping jwith it have been considered." He pchfttacterued news dispatches teSine of anti-Semitism is South Africa "alarmist ard erroneous."

Carol A. Davila, the Rumanian Minister to the United States, who has, during the past few years, often figured in-the pews in connection with anti-Jewish demonstrations in his country, is very happy to point out that "w disturbance of that kind has occurred during the yast year." He says: "Jews of Roumania enjoy full and (Continued on Page 4—Section G)

Just one year ago we announced to Qmaha Jewry through the New Year's Edition of the Jewish Press that we took over the management and ownership of the Consumers Company.

CZECHOSLOVAKIA

Discrimination in Bulgaria ? Nonsense, say* S. Radeff, Bulgarian Minister to the United States, who assures the Jews of America that their co-religionists in Bulgira, "have always been irreproachable citizens." "Jews in Bulgaria enjoy exactly the same rights as the other citizens in the country. There is no discrimination whatsoever against them. They are received in all the clubs. Jews have oc•cupied distinguished positions in different branches of administration including the army and the Foreign Office. There is no Jewish political organization in Bulgaria. Jews enter the Parliament as members of different political parties. For their spiritual life the Jews are organised in religious communities which are completely autonomous. The Bulgarian government pays the salary of the Great Rabbi and his staff. The Jews have always been irreproachable citizens. In peace and in war they have given to Bulgaria innumerable proofs of devotion and loyalty. They have stimulated the economic life of the country and contributed to the progress of learning and of arts. No other race in Bulgaria surpasses them in philanthropy, It is with a real pleasure that. I avail myself of this opportunity to express the feeling and the appreciation of my country for our Jewish fellowdtizens."

ROUMANIA

nnouncing Our First Anniversary

France has no Jewish problem, Ambassador Paul Claudel believes. He dismisses the suggestion that Jews are anything but an integral part of the French people with the remark: 'There is no such thing as a particular political status for the Jewish population in Francs. Since the French revolution in 1789, the Jews have the same rights as the other citizens without any distinction. In 1848, the Minister Cremieux gave the French citisenship to all the Algerian Jews."

The Jews have proved their loyalty to Czechoslovakia, and, in turn, find themselves partaking of every phase of. that country's development, according to Dr. Ferdinand Veverka, Czechoelovakian Minister at Washington, who says: " "In regard to the true political status of the Jewish population in zechoslovakia, 1 should like to recall that Czechoslovakia recognized the Jews as a distinct nationality and granted them full rights of citizenship:; and complete equality in attaining the highest offices in the State. We have quite a number of Jews in the Czechoslovak National Assembly and seviral Jews have become members of the Government. There are two memers of Parliament Dr. Ludvik Singr of Prague, and Dr. Julius Reisz of Bratislava, whom in 1929, have been elected on a Jewish ticket. Other ewish members of parliament have been elected as members t>f Czechor lovakian parties. The fact that the Jews:have siic:eeded in electing two. members of Parliament, representing,l&rrtjof all, he interests of their race, shows that Czechoslovak electory system affords i racial minorities ample ^pportuni;y of. 'maintaining - and 'developing their political and racial individuality. I may add that the Jews'hive proved loyal and-good citizens of the Republic BO;ihat^ the course of justice and equality which Czechoslovakia has taken has been fully justified."

Seeing that Jew* in common with the rest of the citizens enjoy equal liberties, and privileges, they are able to maintain their own culture and schools, practice their own religion* and in general, adhere to their own customs. Their minority rights are respected and are adequately protected by the common laws of the Union so that no special measures of protection are called for.

1

NO PROBLEM IN PRANCE

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There is a world of difference between smart buying and .cheap buying. Take flour for example. Some women think that by buying cheap flour they can save money. But i nothing could be -farther from the" truth. Baking failures are common when cheap flour is used. You waste not only the flour but all'the other ingredients astjwiBU. pheap flour is cheap because it has neither the qual-

"No discrimination whatever exists against the Jewish race and no special disabilities are imposed on them. In other words, Jews are equally eligr ible for appointment to all public offices and as a result, many well respected members of the Jewish community are filling important public posts such as Senators, Members of Parliament, Judges of. the Supreme Court, Advocates, Lawyers, Medical Doctors, etc.

During this past year it has been our good fortune to supply a good many of the Jewish homes of Omaha with their coal and oil needs. In the sincere hope that the coming year fills to overflowing your cup of happiness and success, we extend to you and yours our heartfelt appreciation and wish you a joyous and prosperous* New Year.

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New Year's Edition—THE1 JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931

PROFESSOR FINDS SEMITES INVENTED PRESENT ALPHABET

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Disagrees With Theory That Phoenicians Devised System Chicago.—(J. T. A.)—The alphabet invented by Semites, not by Phoenicians, as scholars have thought. This is the conclusion reached by Professor Martin Sprengling of the University of Chicago, who has deciphered the inscriptions on Mount Sinai, •where according to the Bible, Moses received the tablets of the Ten Commandments. Dr. Sprengling has published a monograph on the subject. Dr. Sprengling believes that the alphabet was invented between 1850 and 1800 B. C. or more than 3,700 years ago, by a Bedouin mine foreman who was working in the Sinai desert for the Egyptians. This, Bedouin believed to have derived a simple system of twenty-one symbols in order to keep records of mine operations and to have discarded entirely the complex system of hieroglyphics, or picture symbols, then in use by the Egyptians. Dedicatory Inscriptions There are fourteen known example of the Mount Sinai inscriptions. Professor Strangling has shown that most of them are dedicatory inscriptions to Baalat, the feminine form o: the god Baal, against whom Moses and the Israelites warred and a priest of whose cult the prophet Elijah Jailed. While most of the inscriptions ex press thanks for -favors rendered by Baalat or are petitions for favor from the goddess, there are also some reference to Seir, the land just to thi east of Sinai, proving that the peopl who made the inscription and wh< •were working the mines under Egyptian direction were from that land One inscription Professor Sprengling translated to read: "I am the badger (miner) Sahmilat, foreman of min shaft No. 4." Took Alphabet Along Professor Sprengling believes thai * friendly Egyptian scribe taught ai ambitious Semitic foreman the rudi ments of the hieroglyphic method s that the foreman could keep the rec ords incidental to his work, bnt tha: the simple.Bedouin, nnable to maste

I Family life is the basic pillar of civilization, and marriage is the cornerstone of family life. Because of the sanctity attendant to Jewish marriage, the home life of our people has set a standard worthy of the highest praise. We therefore welcome with pride the increasing nuptial ties and congratulate these additions during the past year to the Press's ever-growing list of marriages: Miss Annette Riklinand Mr. Perry A. Silverman Miss Ruth Pregler and Mr. Max Trochtenburg Miss Marian B. Fantle and Mr. Abraham Q. Schimmel Miss Beatrice.Light and Mr. Stanley F . Levin Miss Eugenia N. Goldman and Mr. Samuel H. Green Miss Helen Sherman and Mr. D. David Nefsky Miss Ann Gotler and Mr. Morris Friedel Miss Jeanette Katleman and Mr. Sam Ban Miss Celia J. Nitz and Mr. Charles Hermanson Miss Kathryn Elgutter and Mr. Walter Schimmel Miss Ida Fleischer and Mr. Abraham L. Frank Miss Frances Melcher and Mr. Stanford Kohlberg Miss Rose Fine and Dr. Irwin Osheroff Miss Betty R. Levinson and Mr. Nathan Roth Miss Fannie Epstein and Mr. George M. Cohen . Miss Belle Richards and Mr. Leon -G. Gross Miss Mildred Sobel and Mr. Herman E. Rosenblatt Miss Marie Klein and Mr. Lou Elewitz Miss Reva Kaplan and Mr. Max Phillips" Miss Jennie Gross and Mr. Richard Wright Miss Lillian Blumenthal and Mr.' Morris Brick Miss Freda Bolker and Mr. Howard Milder Miss Mildred Ban and Mr. Ben Wine Miss Anne Kaiman and Mr. Lewis Corn Miss, Jane Katz and Mr. A. Shapiro Miss Ida Jacobsen and Mr. Al Wolf Miss Frieda Adler and Mr. Isadore Elewitz Miss Esther Budefsky and Mr. Paul M. Forbes ; Miss Anne Jonisch and Mr. Sam Katzman Miss Flora Pittel and Mr. Frank Brookstein Miss Lylyan Rosenblatt andMr. Mark A; Raymon . Miss Reva Noddle and Mr. WilHam Greenstein Miss Gertrude Kroloff and Mr. Ben Herzoff : Miss Helen Winer and Mr. Harold Siegal Miss Ruth Kaplan and Mr: Nathan Turner. ,- Miss Rose P. .Weiss and_M£ Harry; Grossman Miss Neoma Fregger and Mr. Abe KJots - .'-.

Page Three—Sction. (j

of cunning works," and has created instead a living art in his religion. Of Religious Significance. The articles in the Jewish museum numbering sixteen hundred pieces in all, are invaluable not only because they are rare examples of ancient vitual accoutrements, but because they constitute one of the most important exhibits of Judaica now on view. Gentiles as well as Jews have shown a keen interest, and in fact, so enthusiastic has been the reaction of the non-Jew that attendants are continually questioned regarding the religious significance of the various objects. Jews tiie world over owe a debt of

fflGss Edith MinMn and Mr. Abe H. Cohn Miss Ida Babior and Mr. David R. Weisblat Miss Ann Zabrack and Mr. Sam Bender Miss Adelle Kurs and Mr. Joseph Spector Miss Alyce Greenberg and Mr. Morris Leaf Miss Svlyia Adler and Mr. Frederick Brodkey Miss Lillian Praglin and Mr. Abe Babior Miss Helen Chait and Mr. Ben Zogut Miss Rose Beechen and Mr. Jack Levensky Miss Esther Zusman and Mr. Jack Broscow' Miss Yetta Wright and Mr. Abe Markovitz Miss Sybil Adler and Mr. Ben Fineman Miss Sylvia Saltzman and Mr. Philip Rosen Miss Sara Katz and Mr. Eli M. ZalkLn Miss Manya A. Valdo and Mr. Philip I. Lehr Miss Hilda P. Gilinsky and Mr. Sam S. Rochman Miss Lee Grossman and Mr. Sidney Miller Miss Esther Saks and Mr. Max Greenberg Miss Eva Harwich and Mr. Ben Passer Miss Rose Cohen and Mr. Saul Bloom Miss Bertha Kutler and Mr. Herman Wolf Miss Sally Greenberg and Mr. Ben D. Zaretsky Miss Elizabeth Kats and Mr. Jack Kaiman Miss Ether Lustgarten and Mr. Henry Hirsch Miss Constance Goldberg and Mr. Hyman Garber Miss Rose Kropman and Mr. Iz Harold Weiner Miss Rose Lazarus and Mr. David L. Krantz Miss Florence Lewis and Mr. Meyer Kaplan Miss Lucille Baker and Mr. Harry Trochtenberg Miss -Gertrude Siegel and Mr. Lester Simon Miss Ula Albert and Mr. Abe J. Goldenberg Miss Cele Moskovitz and Mr. Max Zelen Miss. Betty Jacobson and Mr. Nathan H. Kraft Miss Lillian Lipsey and Mr. Elmer Greenberg Miss, Edna Shiff and Mr. Sam'Tatelman Miss Alice Minkin and Mr. Peter J. Heeger Miss Pearl Brown and Mr. Jack M. Freed .

gratitude to Schachne Moses Salomon, through whose perseverance and generosity this collection has been made possible. Mr. Salomon, who is a well known art collector, has designated part of the International Art Galleries (also known as "Salomon House") as the temporary home of the Jewish Museum. Eventually the British Government will acquire these treasurers, bat it is Mr. Salomon's hope that his collection will, in the long run, find itself in its rightful home—Jerusalem. Many of the articles date back to the fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries, and are rare examples of their kind. An ancient

Torah unearthed in an obscure celar inl Poland, an ark curtain dug out of the earth in Spain, a Torah crown found in Portugal, a "Finger of God" from Venice—they are all the remains of a persecuted people who, driven from their homes, their very lives in danger, still found "the courage and the time to bury their holy relics to save them from the desecration of the infidel. If in dollars and cents Mr. Salomon values his collection at $3,000,000, then its historical value is almost incalculable; He has lately purchased from the Soviet Government many of the objects they confiscated from synagogues

Ti%e Schimmels wish you a ^ and Prosperous New Year

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the, intricacies of the Egyptian picture language, took a bold step and produced an alphabet by representing actual single sounds, with a single symbol which might be combined with others. When an industrial depression hit the Sinai region, the desert people, migrating in all directions, took the "alphabet with them, according to Professor Sprengling. One group, he lielieves, went to

Palestine and Syria, becoming the Canaanites and the Phoenicians, whom the Israelites encountered 350 years later, while others went into southern Arabia, becoming the'Minareans, and a third group went north, to become the Arameans. The latter group, he believes, carried the alphabet to India, and this same branch of the alphabet was taken by the Arabic conquest of 650 C. E. into Turkey and Europe.

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Dr. Emanuel Neumann. Dr. Emanuel Neumann, New York lawyer and banker, and President of the J. N. F. of America, is the American Zionist member of the five-man executive committee of the World Zionist organization selected at the 17th Congress held in Basle, Switzerland. He has bean a member of the administration of the Z. O. A. for the past ten years. He resigned from the Ltpsky administration in 1927 after playing a leading role there,:-and was re-elected on the Brandeis-Mack ticket at the 1929 Cleveland convention.

A Happy New; Year

RARE COLLECTION OF JEWISH ART KEPT IN LONDON London.—(J. T. A.)—What is perhaps one of the most singular collec-. tions of Jewish, art objects. ia the world is to be found in the Jewish Museum, housed at the International Art Galleries in London. The ancient and invaluable Torahs crowned in jewelled splendor and covered with cloths of the most intricate and delicate embroidery in gold and silver, the carved candelabra, the equally delicate and beautiful Menorahs, the brass aiid gold candles, the gold and silver Kiddush cups, the Chanukah lamps of quaint and beautiful construction—they all stand in silent defiance of the popular assumption that there" is no Jewish art. If Jewish art is to be measured by paintings, etchings, sculpture and the like, then Jewish art as such is only now awakening to conscionsness and artistic creation. Jews have adhered too well to the commandment T h o u sbalt not make graven images," so that like "Bezaleel, the son of TJri, the son of Huri, of the tribe of Judah" the Jew has devoted himself rather "to devise works, to work in grold and in silver and in brass and in the cutting of stones, to set them, and in carving of wood, to make any manner'

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New Year's EditfoBr-THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11,1931

Page Four—Section O

tunities Austria offered .them? Is there any profession or business in Austria which is not open.to Jewry and in which Jewry does not actually share in a much higher proportion than their comparative number could justify claim? Also the faculty and students of the University of Vienna comprise a far higher percentage of Jews as compared with the proportion of the Jewish population in Austria."

Viewed Through Eyes of the (governments

(Continued from Page 2—Section G) rights restricted • on account of his origin, religion or nationality." Beequal political, civic and religious sides that, in the Lithuanian ConstirigKts as any other Roumanian citi- tution there is a special provision zen-—Certain regrettable incidents safeguarding the rights of national penetrated by anti-Semitic organiza- minorities to the extent, that nationtions have been fully checked by Gov- al minorities of citizens have the BELGIUM ernmental measures and I am very right autonomously to administer For a portrait that has color and glad to be able to state that no'dis- their own national cultural affairs form one must go to Paul May, Minturbance of that kind has occurred arid avail themselves of an appropri- ister to the United States from Belduring the past year—Every unbiased ate portion of funds, which are as- gium. Here is no abrupt dismissal of Roumanian statesman considers Rou- signed by the State and administra- questions, no condescending defiance manian Jews are hard-working and tive communities for the needs of ed- of the right of any one to challenge the attitude to its Jews of any govorderly element who hve repeatedly ucation and charity. ernment. given proof of their loyalty and patrir Even during the short existence of otic feelings toward their country. the newly-reborn Lithuanian Republic "A famous portrait artist once said it has been sufficiently demonstrated that the hardest, face to paint is the that the Jewish population of Lithu- one that has no outstanding features, LITHUANIA no special characteristics, no noticeA most illuminating statement was ania have adequately availed them- able defects or virtues. By the same made by M. Bagdonas, Charge d' Af- selves of the political equality grant- token it is hard to describe the treatfaires of the Lithuanian Legation at ed by the basic law of Lithuania. On ment of the Jews in Belgium. They Washington, who is sufficiently in- the other hnd, the Lithuanian Govern- are merely treated like all other Belterested in American Jewish public ment always has been determined to gians. Equal rights before the law is opinion to have provided a rather treat its citizens equally not only in not merely a "paper-principle" in comprehensive resume of the history theory but in practice as well, be- Belgium, but a fact, a living reality. of the Jewish status in Lithuania, cause, as Benjamin Disraeli said: The position of the Jews in Belemphasizing that "the Lithuanians "Justice is truth in action." gium therefore, is perfectly normal. and Jews have lived side by side in a There is no "Jewish question" in Belfamily-like way." LATVIA gium. Politically, economically and "In Lithuania there are about 170,- Feeling that questions in regard to socially the Jews are the equals of 000 Jews, who constitute over 7 per the Jewish status in his country are all other inhabitants. cent of Lithuania's entire population superfluous, Arthur B^JLule, Consul At;the present time there is within within her present boundaries. General of Latvia at New Yorki says: the Jewish group in Belgium a very The Jews and the Lithuanians are "The rights of the minorities are decided division between the old and no strangers to each other. Their ac- amply safeguarded by the Latvian the new. The older Jewish inhabitants quaintance dates back to the XII cen- constitution and law, and the Jewish •of Belgium were somewhat perturbed tury, at the very birth of Lithuanian population of Latvia enjoys -all po- over the conditions which followed statehood. Since those ancient times, litical rights." the post-war influx of Jews from the Lithuanians and Jews lived side Eastern Europe, The "newcomers" by side in a rather family-like way. did not readily amalgamate with the Of course as in any family, through AUSTRIA existing "communities," For instance, all these centuries the Lithuanians Anti-Semitic hoodlums in Vienna in Brussels there are two organizaand Jews had some differences, but it may oust Jewish students from the tions—-the- old and the new Jewish is certain that the Lithuanians have local university; they may act so Communities. In Antwerp there are never hated the Jews; that in Lithu- rowdily that the institution must be three—the old, the Polish and the Sepania there has never been a really closed. But that is only prejudice on hardic Jewish Communities. serious difference or dififculty be- the part of individuals, and does not, However,-this division between the tween them as between nations; that by any means, reflect the attitude of "old" and the "new" Communities is, there has never been a single real the Government. That is the assur- so to speak, a family affair between "pogTom" for which the Government ance given by Edgar Prochnik, Minis- themselves. It has nothing to do with or the Lithuanian people, as a whole, ter of Austria at Washington, who the Government or with the country says: ' . '. .'[.-. - . / as a whole, where Jews of whatever rould be held responsible. The Lithuanian Jews, on the other "There is no need to say that the Community, receive the same treathand, have been sympathetic to Lithu- Jewry of Austria enjoys all rights and ment and; consideration as other citianian national aspirations, and help- privileges, in short full equality with zens of different faiths. ful • in reconstructing the newly- the other citizens of the Republic The newcomers have contributed established Lithuanian Republic. We onstitution and law knows no dis- materially to the welfare of their and them not only a loyal national crimination whatsoever between adopted country.They have developed minority, but a minority which with- Christiana and Jews in my country. the fancy leather goods industry for )tit hesitation took their stand side by Race riots, -whenever they occur, are which Belgium formerly depended on side with the Lithuanians in the time not only not tolerated but promptly Vienna, and contributed to the activijf great national strife and worked and severely suppressed and the Jew- ties of the diamond trade—that great jCgether for an independent Lithuania. ry finds nowhere higher protection industry for which Antwerp has been ?fae strength of every independent than in Austria. It is for this reason world famous for centuries." Itate primarily depends upon the po- that Vienna before and after the War etical equality of all its citizens. This always has attracted the Jewish popus especially true with regard to na- lation from all parts of Europe nd JUGOSLAVIA tional minorities. In this respect the offered them an asylum as well as Confronted with the statementthat Constitution of the Republic of Lithu- an. opportunity for their education and there have been rumors of anti-Semiania provides that "all Lithuanian cit- uplift and prosperity. How many Jew- tism in Yugo-Slavia, Radoye Yankozens, men and women, are equal be- ish physicians, scientists, artists, mu- vrtch, Consul General of that country fore the law. Special privileges may sicians, authors have sprung into in; New York, declared: not be accorded a citizen nor hjs prominence owing to the many oppor"I -am>truly, surprised, at -the al-

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leged imputation of intolerance concerning Jews in Yugo-Slavia, which is known to all the civilized world as one of the most liberal countries, •where Jews enjoy full political and economic equality, not only in theory but in practice. For further confirmation of my statement I beg to refer you to the Chief Rabbi of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia Right Reverend Alcalay, »t Beograd, Yugsplavia.

and Gentiles, which has as the only purpose, to study the present economic situation of the Jewish inhabitants of Poland and to the outline means and remedies for betterment. It can be expected that the Jewish group of Polish population will be among the firat to benefit from the

results of the ever-increasing efforts of Poland's gqyernment in the economic field. In order to assure the Jewish population of a normal and peaceful development, the Polish Government not only cares for their rights and privileges inside the country, but also in-

tercedes in their behalf on the international terrain, as numerously happened in the recent times, when official representatives of Poland did not hesitate to shield the Jewish interests in foreign lands." (Copyright, 1932, by Seven Arts Feature Syndicate)

DENMARK \'-'-The^C3iar^'.d'Affaire8'i»r..*<h«; Danish Legation at Washington, H. Wichfeld, conscious that no anti-Semitic disturbances have afflicted the Jewish population of his country, said: "I beg to state: that according to the Danish Constitution all Danish Citizens enjoy the same political rights notwithstanding their color, race or religion.

HUNGARIA G. Linzboth, Acting Hungarian Consul General at New York, made a detailed statement to this effect: According to the census of the year 1920, there were 473,310 Jews living in Hungary, Which number comprises 5.9 per cent of the total population. Hungarians have always been on the best terms with their Jewish population, who enjoyed and are enjoying every political right granted to any other Hungarian citizen. Several Jews have been elected to the House of Representatives during the elections held this past July, and in the Upper Housa, besides individual Members, the Jewish Congregation is represented by two special members. The anti-Semitic feeling of the Hungarian population which was noticeable after the war, but which is practically not existing at present, was due ta the reason that the short lived communistic government of Bela Kun, which claimed a great many victims from among the Hungarians, was led and directed almost exclusively by Jews. This anti-Semitic feeling was further the result of the immigration of a great number of Jews' to Hungary from Russia, Galicia and Roumania before and during the war, but the feeling against these immigrants was not aroused therefore because they belonged to the Jewish faith, but because they have been foreigners, taking away in many instances the means of livelihood of the native population. It is sometimes said that the socalled "numerous clausus" law passed after the war, restricting, the .number of students in the Hungarian Universities, had the intention to bar the Jewish students from the Universities. This law, however, was not an antiSemitic measure, but was due to the fact, that Hungary deprived of twothirds of its former territory through the war, was unable to support so many professional men as formerly. Therefore, to give an equal chance of learning, this law prescribed that the percentage of students of the different races should correspond to the percentage of the total population. This law has been altered, however, to the effect'that, it limits only the number of students enrolled in each University, admitting the students to the University according to the result of their previous studies. That this law does not make any ] discrimination against the Jews, can be seen from the fact, that while the Jews constitute only less than 6 per cent of the total population, their percentage in the Hungarian Universities varies from 12 to 20 per cent.

POLAND An exposition of the official status of the Jews of Poland was given by Dr. T. Raezynski, Acting Consul Genferal of Poland at New York, in the following statement: The protection of the religious liberties of Polish Jews is assured by, the maintenance at the Ministry of Religions and Education in Warsaw of a special Jewish Department staffed mainly by competent officials of the Jewish, faith. The so-called czaristic laws, inherited by re-born Poland and the old •Russian regime, which restricted greatly the human and social rights of Jews, have recently been abolished by the Polish Parliament The Jewish masses of Poland, numbering over 3,000,000 are living mainly in cities and towns and they make their living by maintaining small shops, and trading with peasants, who form 65 per cent of Poland's population. The crisis of the world's agricultural markets affects also the Polish peasantry, reflecting strongly on their buying power and causing great recessions in the trade of small Jewish merchants. The Polish Government of Marshal Pilsudski takes • most seriously the plight of those Jewish merchants and Artisans and. gives numerous proofs of serious efforts to alleviate their situation as for instance promoting exports of Polish merchandise and by reducing the State budget in order to diminish taxation. Furthermore, the Polish Government brought to life an impartial Committee consisting of both Jews

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 19S1

Five—Section Gf

4

tally prepared to absorb their import young people learned to admire great musk of their own , performed THE BIBLE But in a Jewish center the audiences philanthropists rather than great by boys and girls untrained and unIt is a book, a world, a heaven? -often have not the necessary back- golfers, to read great literature rather skilled. ground for such lectures, with the re- than the so-called "best seUer** of the The great original aim—the teach- Are those 'words, or flames, or shining stars, sult that what is said goes over the day, to see and hear great artists ing of Jewish and American cultural listeners' heads—and attendances rather than to give "poor-to-middlin" values—must never be lost sight of in Or burning torches, or clouds of fire performances themselves of great these Centers. And if it is kept in What i«3 it, I ask ye—the Bible? place where the stress supposedly lies dwindle. sight and closely followed we shall on cultural values. But these faults Then there is the pursuit of ama- plays or compositions. are relatively minor, and perhaps in- teur theatricals. The great dramatists For in those •days—^now we come to near less of the drifting away of our Who inspired those jafinits truths? Who spoke thrcmg-h the month of the should be studied by the young, their the crux of the situation—the -direc- Jewish youth from the fold. evitable. prothet? tors ©f such centers were men picked works should be seen—but the perFAIL m CULTURAL (Copyright, 1931, by Seven Arts FeaWho mapped out the hiphwaye of for their experience in the communal It is in the cultural field that these formances should be played by com- field and their gift for organizing ture Syndicate.) institutions often fail most tragically. petent actors, not by boys and girls groups for a specific purpose. And The glorious lines of the Scriptures? As I have said, the original aim of in their teens whose experience is not today the director of a "Y" is picked yet sufficiently ripe to enable' them the founders of the Centers and "Y's" for the breeziness of bis sales talk; Agudists Elected to All Offices Who planted the flowers of wisdom was to teach our youth cultural values to understand the deeper sense of the if be is young, presentable and cap- in Warsaw Kehillah In this sacred soil of the angels? plays they produce. Dramatic art both Jewish and American. But -what able of talking the board of directors •Warsaw,—Eli Mazur, Agudist lead- O dream of eternity—Bible— should be studied by those gifted for means are employed to reach this into employing him he gets the job. er, was elected president of the Warend? Lecturers galore appear before it; but let no one suppose that a per- Not that these young men are not sin- saw Jewish community, the largest in O Light that is all and for ever. formance of a great Russian play afMorris RosenfelcL the forums of the centers, lecturers cere in their belief that they are fitted Europe, at the meeting of the newlywho often are erndite and always ter a half dozen hasty rehearsals by for their work and that they are able elected executive of the community, know their business. Yet—what is untrained youths and maidens is art. to give something to the young people under the chairmanship of Heschel there Jewish or American about the Neither the actors nor their audi- whom they are to direct Nor do I Farbstein, former president of the There is nothing settled in manphilosophy of a INietzsehe or the psy- ences benefit from such presentations; mean that they do not do their level community and now a member of the ners, but the laws of behavior yield chological and physiological deduc- little culture is absorbed by either. best But it takes more than good World Zionist Executive and of the to the energy of the individual.— In the larger cities, furthermore, intentions to manage a cultural in- Jewish Agency Executive. tions of « Freud? Such lectures have Emerson. their place in a general university, where the immigrant youth presents stitution successfully; h. takes knowlwhere the group of hearers is men- a Teal problem, the Centers and "Y's"edge and experience and background, also prove themselves woefully lack- and a special gift for organization not ing. Classes in civics and American granted to every breezy young man history are held all too rarely—the who applies for the position of Cenimmigrant boy or girl might well ter director. .imagine that Americanization consists Two Hundred Seven South Fifteenth Street of learning to dance to the tune of PSYCHOLOGY NEEDED the saxophone and to do fancy diving The director of a Center or a "Y" stunts in the Center's swimming pool. must know the psychology of young Serious Americanizaticn, that process people and of different groups; he which changes the immigrant youth's must know how much Jewish philosoentire outlook upon life, which teach phy and how much dancing his particMm that he now lives in a land where ular cross section of the Jewish comevery one is free, where many battles munity can assimilate; he must know have been fought in order that free- what they need to learn about Ameridom might be achieved—that sort of can institutions and about the Jewish Americanization work is neglected. past and present Immigrant groups, for example, need American history CHANGE IN ATTITUDE As for Jewish cultural history — more than lectures on Yiddish literahow many of the members of our Cen- ture; native-born groups are none the ters and "Y's" learn much Jewish cul- worse for a little knowledge of Zionture there? Some, possibly, may at- ism and the rise of modern Hebrew tend lectures on Jewish lore; but few literature. Nothing should be .stressed lecturers know how to present ab- too much—but essentials must not be The graceful Hi-Arch of Peacock struse subjects in a lucid manner. The neglected. And it is the job of the Shoes lends a note of smart inresult is that most of these young director of the Center to see to it that dividuality in the interpretation of the group in his charge is given what people remain entirely ignorant of the the correct modes of the season. glorious periods of post-Biblical Jew- it needs. Excellently made of the finest quality materials, in the newest ish history, and at best can only re- Once these cultural needs are taken colors and combinations. cite a list of names Jewish in sound care of there is little cause for worry. and prominent in the arts of other Groups absorbed in learning the Attractive Styles . and Values equally attractive peoples. meaning of American freedom will not It has not always been so. Years be made overly frivolous by an ocago when the center movement was casional dance, which then furnishes ART IN FOOTWEAR new throughout the land, young peo- valuable relaxation without causing ple did become imbued with the spirit young immigrants to regard jazz as II of Jewish culture in these fine build- the same of Americanism; groups ings, young immigrants' eyes were busy studying the great Spanishopened to the beauties of American Moorish period of the Jewish past will living and thought. Those were the not spend too much time in the swimdays of the Julius Goldmans and oth- ming pool; groups who are given an to near /great singers and er such great communal workers, who opportunity T ^ T & W i o teaeK youth an3 what to other musicians wfllnol read and teach i t ; Those were the days When spoil one another's ear with so-called

Analysis of Our Y's This- analysis of the situation now obtaining in Jewish Centers-and " Y V is "Written by one of our veteran American Jewish communal workers, to whose effort hundreds of thou. sands of Jewish refugees during the World War owed their lives. Mr. Bero here speaks frankly on a subject with whose every aspect he is thoroughly familiar.—The Editor.

lectures, gymnasiums where muscles may be developed and reading1 rooms where minds "may grow—alt are part of these fine buildings. Those who inaugurated the wave of Center and "Y" formation were actuated, by the finest of motives; these buildings were to be centers where American Jewish youth would learn to Every city that has a sizable Jew- appreciate Jewish cultural values and ish community now boasts its Y. M, where immigrant Jewish youth would H. A. building, or its Jewish Center, become Americanized. A noble puror both, or even several of each. Tall pose. But how has it worked out? and proud they stand, these Y. M. and Many of the members of these CenY. W. buildings, symbols of the days ters and "Y's" are attracted chiefly when Jewish communities were pros- by the social phase of the institutions' perous and eager to give their youth activities; I mean the dances, the teas all the advantages due young Ameri- and the like. Athletics also tend to cans and young Jews. Swimming be overemphasised; while they are pools and basketball courts, dance well and good in their place, since halls and auditoriums suitable for sound minds dwell in sound bodies, amateur theatricals as well as serious yet they should not predominate in a

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931 Cast thy bread upon the watersj depression. We are infinitely better in the candy store that fed and shel- how crowded their houses are, and for thou shalt find it after many daya, off even today than our fellow Jews tered them. what big expenses they've got. Well, in Eastern and Central Europe, and —Ecclesiastes. Morris's eyelids quivered over his "we can talk about it again. First our aid can be a distinct contribution flattening eyes. He was the oldest. chance I get. Try to make yourself "It can be done" was the comment I won't quarrel with my bread a n i that may live in history as a symbol He was the head of the family. They comfortable. Shirley's ordered your would all be like his children. He dinner to be sent up from the res- of Cyril J. Ross~ the Macy of London of what Western Jewry can do for butter.—Swift. pictured himself slipping gently into taurant downstairs. The children are England, following his visit to this World Jewry as a whole. country and his study of the Palestine Buffoonery is often want of wit.—• hi3 old age, watching their fortunes, still at camp." PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS La Bruyere. directing their, fate. They would The dinner Morris Klein had piccome to him for advice, trusting to tured to himself all the way across his wisdom he had gathered in his the continent, turned out to be a soliyears of wandering. tary affair, served to him on a card NEW YEAR GREETINGS Why hadn't he gone home before? table in the corner of Harry's modBy NINA.KAYE Morris asked himself. And he could ernistic living room. And a week from not answer that question. The days Even those more fortunate years had slipped into years, there was a later he was on a train, speeding toGoing home for the Holidays! when a kindly Jewish family had tak- man to see in this town, a store to ward the places he thought he had Home! left behind forever. Could not everyone in that crowded en him unto themselves for the High auction in that. Wandering across On the day of Atonement he was train read it on his face? Couldn't Holidays, could not be measured with the face of the earth, chasing the they see-he was beaming like a boy? this one, to which he had looked for- penny, snatching at the ever elusive lucky enough to be in a middle wesComplete Direct Mail How could he sit here on this green ward all his life. Home, with his dollar. His life had gone in doing tern town of 60,000 population. Lucky, because he was able to go to Advertising: Service plush seat, elbow on the window sill own family. His own brothers and just that. . synagogue, to be among his own peoand gaze out at the flying landscape, sister! Oh, he would burst if he sat Acme Letter Service—Acme Printing Service But now, he puffed on his cigar and when every part of him longed to be here thinking about it, without some- idly watched the smoke, now it was ple, at home. Acme Merchandising Service - in action with the train? If he could one to talk to, someone to tell about all over. The train was already (Copyright, 1931, by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) only forget his dignity and run his good fortune. • 18th at Jackson Jackson 5792 crossing the Jersey meadows. He Morris slipped out of his seat and would soon be with his family, at the through the crowded cars, it would overcome this feeling of futility, of swayed down the aisle toward the head of the family> where he be- Governor Names 10 Jews *$&SS$$$$$$I^^ Cyril J. Boss • powerlessness. While his heart leap- smoker. Surely, there, he would find longed. ,';.-• Trenton, N. J.—Governor Larson ed ahead, faster than any moving some kindred spirit, another Jew, The clang of the train sliding into added twenty-seven persons, among Land Plan calling for the acquisition train, he could do nothing' but sit homeward bound to join his famliy the tunnel, sent him scurrying for his them ten Jews, to the 77 previously and reclamation of an area of 200,000 THE FINEST OF FUELS here, motionless, crowded into his side for the.holidays. baggage, meagre baggage indeed to named as members of the state com- daunms of land in Palestine for the Only a few rawboned yokels greet- bring home after twenty, years. .Made mittee for the Washington Bicentenof the seat by a stout country woman who held a wicker suitcase clasped ed him in the smoking car. Morris a living, that was his record of a nial Celebration next year. The Gov- J. N. F. Mr. Ross is chairman and managsighed and slid into a seat. Perhaps, lifetime. And now he was going ernor's action came as a climax to steadfastly in her lap. Sold With An Absolute Guarantee Morris Klein closed his eyes against if he smoked, he would be calmer. home, to spend the holidays with his a threatened state-wide protest on ing director of Swears and Wells, Ltd. But he could not stop thinking family^ To spend the rest of his life the part of the Jewish citizens of and many other department stores in the blurring landscape. He wanted his mind to dwell solely on what lay about Sarah and Harry and Sol and with his family. the state because they were not rep- England. He is also treasurer of the ahead of him. To look at the maze Manny. They had been hardly more resented among the original 77 ap- Jewish National Fund for Great Britof trees, the occasional farmhouse, the than children when he went west. There was no one at the station to pointees. The Italian, Polish and ain and Ireland. meet him, although' he had sent a dingy stations, was to recall the past Now they were all married and had telegram The Finest Money Can Buy; "English and American Jewry are from Washington. He Negro elements who also were igtwenty years of his life—a life spent children. He tried to remember how [earned afterward that Harry had nored, also get representation. quickly recovering from the economic in a country he hated, far away from many children there were. Well, sent his car, but the chauffeur had EXCLUSIVE AGENTS his relatives, far away from any of never mind, it was quite a family. not been able to pick him out among Quite a nice little afmily would be the passengers arriving. ' his kind. . How many holidays had he spent gathered at Harry's house . BEST WISHES Morris took a taxi to Harry's adwith Jews ? How often had he sat in What did it matter he had no chil- dress. He was suddenly shrunken for a some stuffy hotel room in a sand- dren of his own ? That he had never, KEnwood 7121 arid shrivelled by the great city which M. ALLEY R. A. BURNS colored western town and gone about in his life of wandering, settled down, he had almost forgotten. He blinked HAPPY NEW YEAR his solitary devotions? How often married and fathered children? There at the sun gilding the massive buildhad he ' been at an American plan were his nieces and nephews. There ings,—at the ribbon of river beside .hotel and startled the management by were his brothers and-sister whom he which the taxi sped. * refusing to appear at meals on the could only remember as growing chil"I'm Mr. Klein's brother,',' he anday of Atonement? dren, when he had helped his'mother nounced meekly to the butler at the Rich Home Made amazingly grand home which his Ice Cream brother's address turned out to be. Diffidently, hat in hand, he followed JOE ADLER'S Delicious Steak Served the man across deep-piled carpets, listening waxed floors and through KOSHER DELICATESSEN AT 8946 2401 Farnam an iron-grille gate. : A beautiful young girl, so she apWishes All His Friends a Happy; and peared to Morris's country eyes, came forward to greet him. "How do you Prosperous New Year do," she said in the softest of throaty GREETINGS oices, "Harry had your telegram, but he was to play golf this afternoon For Genuine Satisfaction with an important customer. I'm "BeWue—Adler-iz" I Buy Your Furs at afraid well rather have to neglect you this evening. We're expected at a dinner and it is too late to cancel 151B North 24th Street WEbater4959 now. I'm sure you'll be perfectly comfortable here." : ; Morris blinked. "But tonight it is ^H^^*^^™ ^^^»^*^»^^^»^^^fc^^^»^^^k^^^^^^^^^^^%^^^B»^^^fc^^^^^^Wi^^^h^^^^^K^^fc»^^^^^^B^^^^^^k^^^fcj^^^fcp^^^fc^^^fc>^^^»^^^»^^^*^^^*^^^^ the beginning of yomtov! Surely' the AT. 1441 1808 Farnam whole family will be at the dinner. I will go along." The woman who was Harry's wife looked perplexed. "A. family dinner! Why we haven't had one of those *SXK*SS**X***Stt»Ott^^ 1618 Harney Street things since I've been in the family. Three Outof Five Men And that's fifteen years. Harry sees ana M. O'DONOGHUE, Manager his brothers downtown, once in a Prefer Chocolate Ice" Cream while—" Her voice trailed off. SEASON'S GREETINGS Hat in hand Morris gazed about tha flower filled room. "Then j will ,go to Manny's for tonight. Maybe there I will find Sol and Sarah and their ; families." ''•' ^ She shook her head. "Sol's in We have been selling reliable merchandise in Omaha RICH CREAMY Europe and his family haven't gotten for 40 years. Our salesmen are all experienced in fitting and we carry a very large and complete stock back from the country yet. Sarah of dependable merchandise to select from. '. lives somewheres in Jersey. I don't Our Boys' and Childrens' shoes are purchased from, ; even remember which town. Nobody the best. of makers and you may expect the maxi«.r in the family talks to Manny now." mum of wear. Morris was" in the room which had Style, Comfort and Wear Will Be Found baen assigned to him. He sat upin Our Shoes. right in a chair, his dazed eyes wandering about the unfamiliar, angular Is the Answer to Their furniture. He heard a slight commotion in the house about six. . Then \ ., Heart's Desire : bis door opened' and his brother Harry came into the room. He was in his "The Home of Quality Footwear" bathrobe and his cheek were glowing. Ask Your Druggist or Confectioner for a 1419 Farnam Street "Morris!" He greeted him affecQuart or.Pint of "Family, Pak"—Filled is delivered in 1932, it will be interesttionately, but quickly his eyes were t»tl«»ffl«ttWW Direct at the Freezer clouded over. "Gee, Morris, you came ing to compare prices prevailing" at at a terrible time. I'm busy as, as. that time with the present market a hen with new chicks. I've got a customer in from Ohio and I've got quotations. to land his concern if I want to keep on the black side of the ledger this year. 111 be running around with him W e will be particularly interested in all week, I don't know if I'll get a chance to see you again before you comparing the Sept. 1, 1932 prices go." Remember:-* of United Founders Corporation "Before I go?" Morris repeated the words. "I told you in my telegram I there is no safe Stock with the present quotations. was going to settle in New York. I'm substitute for-itired' of the road. I want my own home. I want to be near my family. May we show you why we believe I want—" United Founders Corporation ComHarry interrupted him impatiently. "It's no use. You can't make a liv-" mon Stock is an outstanding purching here. A man yQUT age hasn't got a chance these days." ase today. "But, but—" Morris sputtered in his eagerness. "I have a little, enough Ice is not only the safest form of for my few needs.- I thought, with refrigeration-;—it is the ONLTG such a grand house, you could let me safe and dependable form. live "here—" This was no way for Never gets out of order. the head of a family to be talking. Morris knew. But he was completely overawed. "I tell you, Morris, you Wouldn't like it. We live a hectic life, you've 210 Farnam BIdg., Omaha, Nebr. got to in my game. Out all night. Successors to Lionberger*s And- then the children, with their Phone JAckson 5065 friends—I tell you, it's no go." 2220 Harney — AT. 1373 Phone AT. 1297 MA. 007« "But Sol or Manny—I could live in the country with Sarah.'' I "They'recomplaining all tKe time.

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A Complete Resume of the Past Year, 5691

Read the History of the Jews for 5691

Entered as Second-Clnas Mail Matter on January 27. 1921, at JPostoffice at Omaha. Nebraska, under the Act. of March 3. 1B79

OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11,1931

SECTION D—EIGHT PAGES

of the PastTwelvemonth Sorrow Mixed With Progressm Jewish People^^M^ History *

*

"

•-.

their resignation from those offices. Nor was the letter of Premier Ramsay MacDonald to Dr. Weizmann made public in February, 1931, which, in explaining the White Paper, softened some of its harshest provisions, greeted with much enthusiasm by American Zionists.

VISITORS STIR ENTHUSIASM

The interest of American Jewry in Palestine matters was kept alive also by the visit to this country in December, of M. M. Ussishkin, head of the Jewish National Fund, in connection with an intensive campaign in behalf of the Fund, and by the arrival, in March, of Dr. J. L. Magnes, Chancellor of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, who came for the purpose of arousing increased interest in that institution. Mr. Ussishkin toured the country in an' effort to secure pledges for contributions to the Jewish National Fund, over a period of five years, sufficient for the purchase of 200,000 dunams (46,140 .acres) of inquiry into Palestine immigration land in Palestine—this tract to be and development possibilities, which divided into sections to bear the name had been conducted by Sir John Hope of each community which subscribes. Simpson, and the declaration of Brit- At a national conference, held in ish policy which was to be based on Washington, D. C, on February 9, a the report, would be favorable from a new instrumentality, called the Keren Jewish standpoint. The more pro- Kaymeth League, was created to profound, therefore, was the disappoint- mote the project. ment, and the more violent the proDr. Magnes also succeeded in aroustest which greeted the publication on October 20, of the Simpson Report ing much enthusiasm. He announced and the accompanying: White Paper plans of the organization for an inin which, the British Government,1 ternational Society of Friends of the pointing out that the Mandate im- Hebrew University, with chapters in posed upon it the duty not only of many cities in all parts of the world, facilitating the establishment of a the organization to serve two purNational Home for the Jewish people, poses—first, to stabilize the income but also of protecting the rights of of the University; and second, to prothe existing population, outlined a vide the institution with a means for land and immigration policy which keeping the outside world informed of was, in the opinion of many, calculat- its activities. ed to paralyze any substantial effort A, report made public in August, by Jews for the development of Pal- 1930, by David A. Brown; chairman estine. ••••••"; of the Palestine Emergency Fund, Immediately following the publica- which' was set up, one year before, tion of the White Paper, Dr. Chaim for the aid of victims of the Arab Weizmann, President of the Jewish outbreaks in August, 1929, a total of Agency for Palestine, announced his $2,083,818 had been contributed to resignation from that office, and that fund in the United States, beFelix M. Warburg, Chairman of the sides $150,000 which had been sent Administrative Committee of the direct by several individuals, the fund Jewish Agency and Lord Melchett, had been increased by some $30,000 chairman of the Council announced interest. At the same time it was reported by Dr. Maurice B. Hexter, one of the members of the special committee appointed to disburse these funds, that a total of $2,945,000 had been received by the committee from the United States and England, and that the funds had been employed to rebuild ruined communities, to establish new colonies, to construct roads, to make loans for rehabilitative purposes, to purchase land, and to care for widows and orphans.

Comprehensive Review of Year Shows Interest of World Jewry During 5691 Centered About Events in Palestine By This abstract of the annual review of the Jewish year is prepared for the Jewish Telegraphic Agency and The Jewish'Press from the survey made by Harry Schneiilerman, editor of the American Jewish Year Book and assistant secretary of the American Jewish Committee. Mr. Schneiderman's yearly review, which has come' tor.be a regular Rosh Hashonah feature, covers the period from July 1, 1330, to June 30. 1931 and is based chiefly on the dispatches of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, the Jewish and general press and reports of many organizations.—Editor.

Dinted States

HARRY SCHNEIDERMAN

was not as full, as was its precursor, of highly significant events abroad. As in the preceding year, Palestine stands first among these lands outside of the United States which held our attention. It will be recalled that, in May, 1930, just before the beginning of the period under review, when the .temporary suspension of the immigration into Palestine of certain categories of persons was announced by the British government, much indignation was aroused in the United States, as in other countries. A more optimistic feeling followed the publication of the report of the Permanent Mandates Commission of the League of Nations, which was somewhat critical of Great Britain's discharge of her duties-as mandatory, and this feeling grew when, at the meeting of the Council of the League of Nations, in September, the rapporteur on the Commission's report upheld its criticism, and the British representatives accepted the rapporteur's conclusions, which were thereupon adopted by the Council.

While continuing to give much attention to -events affecting their brethren in foreign lands, the Jews of the United States, did not, during the past year, watch the situation of their, overseas co-religionists with the same concentration as in the preceding' twelve- inonthfl. This recession iji the interest of, American Jewry ifa foreign affairs was owing chiefly to two factors, namely first, to the "world-wide depression, which reached a very low level, insofar as the United States is concerned, during the OPTIMISTIC HOPE past year and lay a heavy restraining DISAPPOINTED hand on all communal effort; and, The turn of affairs gave ground second, to the_ fact that the past year for the hope that the report of the

POLARINE SAFEGUARDS MOTOR POWER

FUND RAISING ASSUMED NEW ASPECT Fund raising for Palestine assumed a new aspect during the past year. At a conference, on January 17, 1930, between representatives of the Joint Distribution Committee and the American Members of the Jewish Agency for Palestine, an agreement was reached for conducting an Allied Jewish Campaign, to terminate on December 31, 1930, for $6,000,000, of

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with the return of Prince Carol, and of the Federation of Polish Jewi his accession to the throne in June,' pointed out that changes which are 1930. Pronouncements by him and rapidly taking place in the economy Mr. Maniu, who, after a brief re- of Poland, have resulted in the wide tirement, returned to the post of displacement of middlemen, a ' disPremier, indicated a strong desire to placement which has had a disastrous suppress anti-Jewish violence. But effect especially upon the Jews, who, on the heels of these benevolent dec- because of a historical development, larations, a violent agitation began in happen to be, to an overwhelming exthe southern districts of Bukowina; tent, middlemen, and that theiT sufattacks occurred in many places, and fering has been aggravated by refor a long time, a state of terror strictions and by unfavorable disexisted among the Jews of the dis- crimination. A plea was made for trict; the situation reached its climax the repeal of the Tsaristic laws, for in a conflagration, undoubtedly of in- the opening up of state monopolies cendiary origin, in the large village and state-owned enterprises, to Jews, of Borsa, which rendered fifteen hun- and for a change in the taxation system which now imposes a dispropordred Jews homeless. tionate burden upon city-dwellers. The American Jewish Committee had, in the meantime, directed Morris HITLERITES CAUSED D. Waldman, its secretary, who had ANXIETY gone abroad to examine at first hand The phenomenal gain of the Nasome of the major problems concern- tional Socialist Party (Fascist!) in ing European Jewry with which the the German Reichstag election in the committee' is dealing, to proceed at middle of September, 1930, and the once to Roumania. After two visits anti-Jewish riots which occurred on to that country, Mr. Waldman gave the day the new Reichstag- assembled, out, at Geneva, a statement to the violently drew the attention of AmerJewish Telegraphic Agency in which ican Jewry to the situation of their lie asserted that the press reports of German brethren, because the prothe outrages had not been exaggerat- gram of this party, which is led by ed; that they had been unquestion- Adolph Hitler, bristles with threats ably instigated and organized by anti- against the Jews of Germany. Semitic agitators, who, because of the Considerable interest and some miseconomic depression, found the peas- giving were aroused by the disclosure antry, normally friendly to their Jew- of the fact that active Hitlerite cells ish neighbors, fertile soil for their exist in the United States, engaged propaganda; and that these excesses in preaching the philosophy and de"would not have occurred had it not fending the policy of the German been of the government's support Fascist movement. Such groups were INCREASED ZIONIST of students* organizations and so- found in a number of cities, including HARMONY called patriot congresses and the govThe realignment of Zionist forces ernment's reluctance to suppress il- New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Debrought about at the convention of legal anti-Semitic propaganda, out of troit and Milwaukee. During the year, the Zionist Organization of America a mistaken emphasis upon the liberty also National Socialist newspapers in Germany frequently devoted space to in July, 1930, had resulted in in- of the press and assembly." attacks against American Jews—atcreased harmony within the Organization. The new administrative Com- MUCH ACTION ON POLAND tacks which were generally absurd and fantastic. mittee under the chairmanship of Although reports, early in July Robert Szold, showed ^determination 1930, of anti-Jewish outbreaks at MEXICAN AGITATION to intensify organizational activities Kovel and Zdunska-Vola, Poland DISQUIETING in many directions. caused some apprehension in America In May, American Jewry was comthe Jewish community here was more pelled to turn its eyes to a foreign WALDMAN PROBED concerned over the very bad economic country much nearer home than GerROUMANIAN SITUATION Hope for improvement in the Rou- situation of the Jews in the country. many. Beginning in November, 1930, The representatives of a committee (Continued on Page 2—Section D) manian situation was reawakened

which $3,500,000 was to be used by the Joint Distribution Committee, and $2,500,000 was to constitute the American share of the 1930 budget of the Jewish Agency. The termination of the joint effort at the close of 1930 and the launching of two separate drives was announced, late in December, by Felix M. Warburg and Cyrus Adler, on behalf of the Joint Distribution Committee, and the Jewish Agency respectively. The announcement declared that while the joint drive had resulted in the creation of important communal values and the laying of the foundation, in many communities, for enduring cooperation on behalf of Jewish causes, yet "the increasingly pressing need for immediate funds for the achievements of both organizations, the differing budgetary requirements, and the advisability of permitting as much freedom of choice and support as possible during the present trying economic period, have made it desirable . . . . to separate their fund-raising activities." Following this agreement, the American Palestine Campaign of the Jewish Agency for Palestine was inaugurated on January 25, 1931, at a conference in New York City of delegates from many communities, a fund of $2,500,000 being set as the objective; the campaign committee appointed was made up of both Zionist and non-Zionist members of the Jewish Agency.

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931

Page Two—Section D

every local federation in the country 1930, and January, 1931, of repre- not immune from, the effects of the began in July and threatened per- mittee of 25 (later increased to 65) manently to split orthodox Jewry of rabbis and laymen to draft recombusiness depression. was. compelled to reduce its budget. sentatives of national Jewish organif While the record of the year was that city, was not settled until De- mendations for the better enforceIn January, the officers of the Chi- zations, called by the B'nai B rith, cago Jewish Charities announced that, which resulted in the formation of not altogether bare of the building of cember. A similar dispute, which ment of the law. for the first time in history of that National Conference on Jewish Em- new synagogues, it was notable rath- had been raging in St. Louis, Mo., On the other hand the Board of federation, had they ended the year ployment, of which Alfred M. Cohen, er for mergers of existing congrega- for over a year, was decided in Aug- Jewish Ministers of Northern Caliwith a deficit. In the same month a President of the B'nai B'rith, and Dr. tions. The list of such mergers in- ust, 1930, while another broke out in fornia vigorously opposed a bill inconference of representatives of the L M. Rubinow, executive director of cludes two orthodox congregations in Newark, N. J., in February, 1931. In troduced in the legislature making unleading federations was held in- Cleve- that body, and Estelle M. Sternber- Galveston, Texas, another two in pringfield, Mass., the authority of lawful the misbranding of terefah \ and at which plans were elaborated ger, executive Secretary of the Na- Worcester, Mass., and two ^Reform a rabbi to order shohetim to refrain meat as kosher, dn the ground that (Continued from Page .1—Section D) trated to supply Jewish artisans in in two directions, namely, first, to tional Council of Jewish Women, were congregations in Cincinnati, Ohio. from slaughtering cattle for a local such legislation unnecessarily injects dealer ' in - kosher meat,- because the a religious issue into the laws, that Eastern Europe with tools and ma- tap hitherto undeveloped sources of elected co-secretaries. The participatsomewhat disquieting reports "had chinery, and with financial assistance RELIGIOUS CONVENTIONS dealer had violated Jewish law, wasthe rabbi are conipetent to handle the ing organizations, besides the B'nai been coming from the neighbor, re- for the construction and operation of support, and second, to introduce ecoIMPORTANT Sustained, in May; by the courts, in a matter, without such legislation and B'rith are: the American Jewish connomics by such devices as would not public, Mexico, indicating that' an factories. ' ' Besides those already referred to, decision; in ai suit in equity brought that the proposed law did not desig. . lower the efficiency or reduce the ef- gress, the Jewish Welfare Board, the anti-foreign agitation was afoot ^n two conventions of the year in the by the-dealer.^ nate who was, to pass judgment on National Council of Jewish Women, that country, with the small Jewish . The Hebrew Sheltering • and Immi- fectiveness of the work of the agenfield of religion are noteworthy. The the food in, question. The bill was In Chicago, a similar situation was and the United Hebrew Trades. cies. • trader as its chief target." On April grant,. Aid , Society, • (H1AS) another first was the 32nd Biennial Council handled by the local community" with- passed andt it became law in June. Several important Jewish instituorganization, which works for the eco10, came reports that the municipal EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES of the Union of American Hebrew out the direct aid of civil authority. I authorities of Mexico City had'forc- nomic recovery of; Eastern European tions were seriously affected by the HARD HIT LITERARY A N D CULTURAL Congregations, which took place in In New York City dissatisfaction SIGNIFICANT EVENTS Ibly expelled several hundred of these Jewry,; found .itself faced with a, de- business depression, especially those One of the most tragic, aspects of Philadelphia in January. with the Kashruth situation became '. traders. . . . . •. •-. ;, ficit in. October, and :was compelled tp which fhad recently shouldered obliga- the business depression was its affect The other convention was the 42nd widespread during the year, the pre- A number of events of Jewish litermake a special appeal for funds. In tions because of new buildings. Partary and'cultural interest deserve reF U N D RAISING EFFORTS December, Dr. Myron Kreinin> presi- y .as a.result of the hard times there upon some Jewish educational agen- annual meeting of the Central Con- valence of bribery of enforcement of- cording. In -August, a National Jewcies." In October, at the annual conference of American Rabbis, at Wa- ficials by butchers not complying UNABATED dent of the United.Jewish Emigra- were, during the year, a number of ish Book «f the Month Club was orOn March 21 and 22nd, the reor- tion Committees of Europe (Emigdi- mergers of Jewish-social service agen- vention in New York City of the wasee, Ind., in June, at which a re- with, and frequent and flagrant vioganized Joint Distribution committee rekt), arrived in the United States to cies. .Two hospitals in Newark, New Agudath Ma'Norim Ha'Jovim (He- vised hyftinal upon which a commit- lation of the State law on the sub- ganized in Chicago, usder private held a national conference in New consult with the officers of the HlAS Jersey, three societies in Omaha, Ne- brew Teachers Federation), the eco- tee of the conference" had been at ject'being'charged. Late in May, af- sponsorship, and in October a YidYork City which inaugurated the cam- regarding t the further prosecution of braska, and two institutions in Jersey nomic situation of many of its mem- work for the past five years, was ter a conference'between Jewish rep- dish Book Club was established as one paign for two and a half pillion dol- the emigration work which was being City, New, Jersey, were among those bers was represented as extremely adopted after a long debate as to the resentatives and Mayor James J of the activities of the Yiddish Kulunfavorable, and much dissatisfaction inclusion of Kol Nidre and Hatikvah, Walker, the latter appointed a com- (Continued on Page 3—Section D) lars for the work of the. Committee conducted jointly by the two brganizak .which- combined. was expressed with the reduction of the Zionist anthem, the outcome of for 1931, which Rabbi Jonah B. Wise tions and the Jewish Colonization AsSITUATION NOT salaries and the drastic cutting of which was that it was decided to insociation (ICA). of New York as national director} ENTIRELY BLACK staffs. In December, a report sub- clude the traditional melody of Kol Albert Ottinger, formerly attorney' While the situation was somewhat mitted to the executive committee of Nidre for "Its sentimental value," but general of the State of New York, CRISIS IN SOCIAL WORK gloomy, it was not altogether black. the National Committee for Jewish not the words, and a motion to exThe situation of HIAS was typical was selected chairman for New York The Jewish Federation of Boston, for Education indicated that the Hebrew clude Hatikvah was lost by a vote of of that which, faced every Jewish soCity, which was assigned a quota of cial service organization in the coun- example, reported in May that the Schools in thirteen of the largest 54 to 42. one million dollars. preceding year had been the most cities had suffered a considerable fall Together with a number of Lands- try—the facilities and services of all successful in its history. At one con- in income, necessitating, in many MANY RITUAL CHANGES of them were in demand as never bemannschaften, the Ort, an organiza- fore, and yeti at the •same time, their vention, in June of the National Con- cases the reduction of teaching staffs A number of interesting events in tion which seeks'to stimulate the in- resources were drastically reduced. ference of Jewish Social Service in and the consolidation of classes. connection with Jewish ritual dsserve dustralizafa'on of the Jews of Eastern As a result, these institutions found Minneapolis, Miss Frances Taussig, Early in April it was reported that to be recorded. In July, an orthodox Europe, held a national conference on it necessary to adopt emergency executive director of the Jewish So- the Hebrew Theological College in congregation in Seattle announced cial Service Association of New York Chicago was in danger of suspending the abandonment of the separate November 30th, at which it was, measures. agreed that efforts would be concenFaced with deficits, practically City which engages largely in family its activities owing to a lack of funds. seating of men and women in its relief work, reported that the Asso- At the convention, in May, of the synagogue, and in April, a Conserva1116 Harney AT. 4842 ciation and other family relief agen- Union of Orthodox Rabbis, the pro- tive Congregation in Detroit ancies had ~ succeeded in maintainingposal was made that all apiritually- nounced that in its new" synagogue their standards in spite of the de- minded orthdox Jews impose a val- then under course of construction propression; and at the annual conven- untary tax of five dollars a year on vision had been made for both mixed tion of the National Association of themselves for the preservation of and separate seating. In Boston Jewish Center Executives held at Orthodox Judaism, and it was de- Orthodox, Conservative, and Reform Lake George, New York, in June .its clared that unless the yeshiboth are congregations joined in the celebraSeason's Greetings president, E. J. Londow, reported that supported disintegration threatens tion of Hanukah in December. March, the history, ceremonial and the Jewish Centers had been able to Orthodoxy. At the conference of the continue functioning in a healthy National Council for Jewish Educa- songs of the Passover Seder service manner. tion held in Pittsburgh at the end of were broadcast by radio in Cleveland While several new communal build- May, a report of a study of Jewish under the auspices of the religious ings were opened or dedicated during education in fifteen cities with a com- school of one of the local congrega"THE COFFEE MEN" the year, these were, in most cases, bined Jewish population of 3,000,000, tions. JAMES DILLARD, Proprietor financed by endowments, or by funds, was presented, with the comment that KASHRUTH DISPUTES gathered during the period of pros- the survey indicated that the Jewish FREQUENT perity. In October, the Jewish Theo- school is confronted with the problem The subject of Kashruth gave rise Hamilton Hotel 2408 Farnam JAckson 2142 logical Seminary in New York ded- of saving the standards achieved.over to a number of disputes during the icated a group of new buildings, in- many years of effort and at the cost year. A conflict between two factions Latest Shoe Repairing Equipment cluding the Jacob H. Schiff Memorial of millions of dollars. over the control of the Va'ad HaLibrary, given by members of ths The Teligious institutions also were Kashruth of Paterson, N. J., which Schiff family, the Unterherg Memorial Building to house the Teachers' SSSSSKXS^^ Institute,, the gift of Israel Unterberg of New York in memory of his SEASON'S GREETINGS NEW YEAR GREETINGS parents, and the Louis S. Brush Memorial Dormitory building, profrom To Our vided for in the will of the late Loois S. Brush. FRIENDS and PATRONS In June, in connection with the commencement exercises of the Hebrew Union College, in Cincinnati, a new library building erected at a cost of $250,000, contributions toward TOLEDO SCALES CO. which had been gathered eevera FLORAL DISPLAYS r 1520 Faidley Building years earlier. In April, was dedicated 5808 North 24th Street KEnwood 1688 314 South 13th Street the Pauline Sterne Wolff 'Memorial Importers of Danish Hard Hammered Silver Home for the aged and orphaned at Pewter Ceramic and Swedish Glass. 8 -S Houston, Texas, endowed by a bsquest of Mrs. Wolff who died in 1921 was opened. In May, the cornerstone was laid of a new building to house the Jewish Young Men's and Young Smartest Versions of Empress Eugenie Women's Associations at Rochester, Types Are Found in NEW YEAR GREETINGS New York, for which a building fund Compliments of over one million dollars had been pledged in 1929. In the following To Our of the Season month the new building of the BialyExcitingly Different Hats stokev Home :f or the Aged which had Fascinating: Beauties -^ New Derby FRIENDS and PATRONS and "Over-the-Eye" effects, as xvell "cost a half million dollars was dedias the new profile silhouettes — cated in New York City. fashioned of fine ielte in the prevailing colorings. Aft .bead sizes. SLUMP AFFECTED JEWS Beautify Your Home AND THEPRE PRICED THE LKE Several special factors operated- to rxnv increase the suffering among some Aquila Court 1508 Farnam Street 1627 Howard Street sections of American Jewry from the slump in business. Chief of these were the failure of banks in which Fourth Floor Securities Building 16th and Farnam a very large proportion of the depositors and investors were Jews, strikes in trades employing many ± Jews, and discrimination as against Jews seeking employment. Not only NEW YEAR'S GREETINGS PRESCRIPTIONS tiid Jews participate in all civic ef7 Compliments forts to relieve suffering in general, from DRUGS — LUNCHES but Jewish organizations also estabof the Season lished special agencies to help meet ffie crisis. In Detroit a kosher kitchen was opened, in San Francisco, CongregaOFFICE MATERIALS .i tion Emanu-El decided in November EJR JS E- D E L I V E ^ Y to transform its gymnasium during Inks Carbon Ribbons ANYWHERE I N THE CITY 1622 Cuming Street the ensuing winter, into a dormitory for jobless, homeless men, should the Paste Greeting Cards ;; 18th and Jackson Sts. emergency warrant; in Baltimore, th 309 South 17th Street JA. 1789 Jewish Educational Alliance estab lished an employment bureau to sup plement the placement work of the Jewish Society Bureau; in New York, • i , 'M' the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations organized a series of mass JBESt WISHES SEASON'S GREETINGS meetings and concerts to raise funds for the benefit of the unemployed, anc FORA from V the New York Board of Jewish Ministers appointed a special committee HAPPY NEW YEAR to organize the congregations of the city to aid the workless; and in Los Angeles, a Jewish group decided to ]' 18th and Nicholas—N. 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Page Three—Section U

New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931

This agreement establishes the full Taconio, Washington, would offer~ a country during the year -did much to ish organizations, which, . however, the measure as a wedge toward the course in Hebrew and another on counteract the good-will efforts of had not made public its activities up secularization of the school system. equality of Jewish and Protestant modern Palestine. In April, Frank past years. In some cities Jewish to the time this is being written. The Protestant School Board, while children, gives the former the right tody, superintendent of schools in representatives succeeded in having not opposing tfce creation of a sep- to attend any Protestantic School in Detroit, announced the introduction the play banned, by appeals to Chris- IMMIGRATION LEGISLAarate Jewish ftenool system, in prin- the district in which they live, proof a course, in Hebrew in one of the tian leaders. This was the case in TION IMPORTANT ciple, yet expressed disapproval of it. hibits this segregation from the Protestant children, recognized thirteen high, schools, beginning in the fall. In Savannah, Ga., in September; in As in previous years the Jewish Jewish holidays when Jewish children Massachusetts, the University Exten- Washington, however, although Eab- community watched with lively inter- JEWISH SCHOOLS ISSUE sion Division of the State Department bi Abram Simon succeeded in per- est the progress of immigration leg- The party in opposition to the gov- may be absent without loss of grades, of Education again offered a course suading the Bible Class Association islation in Congress. Owing to pub-ernment made the separate school pro- concedes the right of Jewish children /(Continued from Page 2—Section D) The celebration of an annual "He- of lectures in Yiddish by Dr. A. A.to withdraw its sponsorship, the play lic concern over the unemployment posal the basis of an agitation against to be excused from studying the New brew Week" was inaugurated in situation, the proposal was made in the liberal Party, and, although it tur Gesellschaft. In the same month April, by the Histadruth Ivrith, whicli Roback, this time on Yiddish poetry was. nevertheless produced. In Eo-the United States Congress that im- had been in control of the province Testament, and pledges the Protestant School Board not to discriminate chester, N. Y^ where a motion picture the Yiddish Scientific Institute held a also issued in June the first volume and drama. migration be suspended for two years for thirty years, so violent was theagainst Jews in the employment of version of the play was shown, the conference, in New York City, at of a Sefer Ha-Shanah, a Hebrew year SCHOOL RELIGIOUS TEACHexcept for certain groups of aliens agitation that the leaders of the party teachers or their promotion. The protest of Jewish rabbis and laymen now •which isome sixty societies were repre- book, under the Joint editorship of ING STIRS PROTESTS exempt from the quota. Subse- felt driven to announce their intensented, and decided upon a coinpre- Menahem Ribalow and Zwi Scharf- There were a number of interesting was endorsed by Christian clergymen quently, at the suggestion of thetion to abrogate the provision of the Protestant School Board also grants hensrre study of all phases of Jewish stein, containing poetical ancj prose developments in connection with the and the Committee on International State Department, this proposal was law, permitting the creation of sep- to the Jewish community the right life in America. Another significant contributions by some forty writers. perennial question of religion in the Preindship of the Federation of changed to one providing for a hori- arate schools for Jewish children; in to use two schools in the Jewish district, after school hours, for classes Churches issued a statement agreeing conference was that of representaHebrew gained further recognition public schools, during the period un- with the Jewish position that "any zontal cut of 90 per cent in the quot- doing this they took advantage of the in Hebrew, Jewish history and relitives of the Yiddish press in theas a subject of study during the year. der Teview. In Waterbury, Conn., the as, without any exemptions. The fact that the Jewish School CommisUnited States and Canada, of the Yid- In July the recommendation of Dr announcement of the educational au- such presentation which attaches measure aroused a great deal of pro- sion had reached an agreement with gion. dish stage, and of various cultural Henry L Getting, superintendent of thorities, in July, 1930, that begin- blame to the Jews of today for atest on the P a rt of both Jewish and the Protestant School Board for the On the other hand, complete consocieties, which wa3 held in the met- schools in St. Louis, that Hebrew be ning with the fall term, religious in- crime committed centuries ago is non-Jewish organizations interested in Education of Jewish children in the trot of the school will remain ex1 most reprehensible." A similar attiropolis in April. (Continued on Page 4—Section D) introduced as an accredited language struction would be given for one hour tude was adopted, in May, by a pas-bringing about changes in the present Protestant Schools. law which would facilitate the re•Financial difficulties in the main in the high schools was approved by each week in the public schools to all tor whose churches cancelled arrangewere responsible for the suspension of the Board of Education. In Septem- children whose parents desired it, was ments for the presentation of the Pas- union of members of families, some of whom are in the United States the publication of The Jewish Tribune ber, when the course was inaugurated, greeted with violent protest by thesion Play. while others are still abroad. In a weekly which had been founded in .more than 100 pupils enrolled in two Jewish population, and also by many Goodwill was also responsible in spite of protests on the part of these Portland. Oregon, in 1903, by the Rev. high schools, and Dr. Gerling pro- Christians. The authorities ignored I>r. Nehemiah Mosessohn (1853-1926) nounced the experiment a success. In the protest, whereupon Jewish leaders great part for the success attending organizations, the ninety percentum and had been published in New; York the same month announcement was announced their intention to seek an many of the efforts of the anti-De- reduction bill passed the House of famation League of the B'nai Brith Representatives, but "did not come up City since 1918. made that the College of Puget Sound, injunction in the courts. A similar to bring about the cessation of unfair for a vote in the Senate because of proposal made in San Antonio, Texas, was defeated as the result of a pro- and scurrilous references to Jews in lack of time before 'adjourning:. test movement led by Eabbi Enhraim books, newspapers, and other publiConsiderable interest was also cations. Frisch. . • aroused by the passage in the legislature of the State of Michigan of a The Board of Jewish Ministers of COLLEGE BIAS AROUSES law providing for the registration of Northern California also voted in De- DISCUSSION cember to oppose the passage in the Two cases of alleged discrimina- all aliens in the state. The measure legislature of a bill permitting the tion by universities aroused public included a number of provisions which, it was believed, would give same practice. discussion during the year. In. Sep-rise to the oppression of aliens in the' The question of Bible reading in tember, Cleveland Jews charged that public schools was brought up in Sep- Western- Reserve University was state, especially of those who cannot tember xn the; State of Washington guilty of this practice, and a letter prove that they had been legally adwhen a group of parents and their was produced from the director of mitted to the country. Jewish citichildren filed a petition with the State the nursery school maintained by the zens of the state took an active part Board of Education, to make reading School of Education of the University, iin protesting against the law, and sucand teaching the Bible compulsory in slating that a quota had been estab- ceeded in securing a "temporary inthe public schools After a public lished for Jewish children. As thejunction later. hearing on the petition, the Board of university is maintained in part by Education adopted a resolution that it the city, the School Board insisted had no jurisdiction to pass upon it. upon the immediate abrogation of the The petitioners, .thereupon, took the quota. The dean of the school asmatter to the Supreme Court of the serted that the form of the letter in State which decided adversely, but question was inaccurate, as "there is It will be recalled that early i n permitted them to take the matter up no policy which has been determined 1930, the Quebec school question had I ERNIE, LESTER and EDWIN MEYER to the Supreme Court of the United upon -which would reflect upon any been placed on the path of settlement V States. Up to the time of writing, group who wished to secure admission by the appointment of a Jewish GEO. CROCKER that tribunal had not published itsto the University, School." The case School Commission, with the power decision. Agitation for Bible-reading of Kutgers College in New Brunswick, General Agent provide schooling for the Jewish was -carried .DB:'.during, the year in N. J., was even more flagrant. Here, to children of Montreal, either in ProTennessee and in Michigan; in this the authorities admitted that they testant schools, by arrangement with latter state, a bill providing for Bible- were*limiting the number of Jews "to! Protestant School Board, or in sepequalise" the proportion" and to pre1015 City National Bank Bldg. reading in the school .was: opposed by arate Jewish Schools. The new law the Board of Education of Detroit. vent the University from" becoming which had heen sponsored by the l i b "denominational." The matter was eral Party of the Province, aroused GOOD WILL MAKES taken in h-.nd by a committee of repthe anger of the, Conservatives and PROGRESS resentatives of local and national Jew-; the Catholics, the latter denouncing A somewhat novel step in the di rection of fostering a better understanding: of Jews on the part of Christian children was taken, during July, 1930, by the Eamsey County Sunday School Association in St. Paul, which conducted, in twelve church vacation schools, courses beginning with a study of ancient Hebrew life as depicted in the Old Testament, running through present-day conditions, and concluding with studies of the lives of Outstanding Jewish scientists, philanPrompt Attention Given thropists, philosophers, and rabbis of to M A I L ORDERS today. The children were also taken to a synagogue •where Jewish worship Was described and Jewish symbolism and ceremonial explained. Other efforts to promote good will between Jews and Christians included study circles and seminars, and steps on the part of school, college, and university authorities to prevent embarrassment Exclusive Distributor for to Jewish pupils and students desiring 1415 Harney Street Phone JAckson 2196 to observe Jewish holidays. Another example of good-will was the formation in a number of cities of "Pro-Palestine Good Will CommitSPORTING GOODS tees" to promote a better understanding of Zionism among non-Jews and to enlist their aid for the rehabilitaMusic tion of Palestine. Luncheon . Not all gestures of good-will on and 1903 Farnam JAckson 2061 the part of Christians were wholeheartedly welcomed by the Jewish Cafeteria—1513Farnam community. Thus, when in December, the North American Home Missions Congress adopted a resolution •expressing good will and friendly feeling toward the Jewish population deploring the long record of injustice and ill-usage on the part of professed Christians, and calling upon Christians to oppose anti-Semitism in every form, Rabbi Israel Goldstein of New [York who had, three years earlier, addressed the same body on the sub• ject of the proselyting of Jews, expressed doubt as to the sincerity o] the pronouncement, and the view, that the motive of its suggestions was the hope that "an attitude of good-will and friendly feeling toward the Jew ••• •would be a more effective means o ^winning him to Christianity." Kabb Tbis Evening Ss$O p. m. Goldstein's suspicions were apparentTO ly supported by the fact that, at the convention, in January, 1931, of the Foreign Missions Council of North America, Dr. John R- Mott, president Arrive 7s3O a. m. of the International Missionary CounSapreme—4n Comfort, Convenience «nd HEScient Sen to* cil, declared that its international SIMILAR SERVICE RETORNING committee. on Christian Approach, to Leave Chicago 82S p . m. ArriTV Chnnhoi 6^7 au m. the Jew "will foster deeper underFor ticfcvta «r tymertmticm*, colt, p k standing and mutually helpful fellowJOHN LATENSER A. D. Mnrtin, Gen. Agt. P»«V Dent., Rock blund LfaM» 701 Woodmen of the World Bid*., O n d u , N«b. ship between Christians and Jews," Phone Jadwoi>6SS« tm JOHN LATENSER, JR. and that "missional work among Jews 1 was a duty in spite of all protests. FRANK LATENSER

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH ^RESS—Friday, September 11, 1931

l?age Fout—Section

institution in which both secular * in the meantime, says the White Pa- a view to remove "certain misconcep- were also in difficulties and their sitreligious subjects "were taught, * uation was a source of gravft anxiety per, the Jews can develop "the large tions and misunderstandings which reserves of land in their possession." have arisen as to the policy of His to the Australian Jewish Land Settle* and which received a subsidy from the government. / The White Paper also criticized ad- Majesty's Government with regard to ment Trust. In the face of these conditions, the versely some of the methods and pol- Palestine, as set forth in the White UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA Jewi*h Board of Deputies opened a icies of the Zionist Organisation and Paper of October, 1930." The letter of the Jewish Labor Federation in reaffirmed the intention of the gov- Reports of f-lmilar condition* came campaign in May, for an endowment Palestine. ernment to adhere to the Mandate, from the union of South Africa dur- fund of $150,000, the income of which: repudiated any desire to crystallize ing the year. Discou ragnment and in to be used to stabilize and expand Immediately upon the publication LATIN AMERICA Jewish development of Palestine at apathy characterized the public atti- the activities of the Board in safeIn December, the HICEM (HIAS- of the White "Paper, Dr. Weizmann its present stage declared that Jewish tude toward Jewish communal effort, guarding Jewish interests. The work ICA-EMIGDIKECT) issued a warn- announced his retirement from the immigration would not depend on thealthough the Jews continued to show of the organization, it was pointed ing against, any bulk immigration to presidencies of both the World Zionist employment conditions -of the Arabs, some interest in Palestine upbuilding. out, is becoming increasingly importArgentine, because of the unfavorable Organization and the Jewish Agency but upon the absorptive capacity of While a campaign of the Jewish Na- ant in view of recent indications ot business and employment conditions and Lord Melchett made public Hs the country, that by 'landless Arabs" tional Fund to raise sufficient money anti-Jewish feeling, of which the pasthere. As a result of these condi- resignation as chairman of the Coun- the government understood only such for the purchase of 15,000 dunams sage of the immigration restriction tions, many Jews in Buenos Aires cil of the Agency. Several days later Arabs as can be shown to have been (3,460 acres) of land in the Sharon law of 1930 was the most significant. formed societies for the purpose of Stanley Baldwin, leader of the Con- displaced as a consequence of land Valley in Palestine, in the name of establishing themselves on the land. servative Party and former Premier, purchases by Jews, and that such pur- Sooth African Jewry, was a complete Austen Chamberlain, former Foreign success, plans for inaugurating a land BRAZIL IMMIGRATION CUT Secretary, and Leopold I. Amery, for- chases are not to be restricted, mere- settlement project in the Dominion, The increasing number of foreignIn Brazil, revolution and.economic mer Colonial Secretary, published a ly controlled by the government; ad- which had been under consideration era, especially Jews from East Eurdepression were responsible for cut-statement in which they charged that mitted the right of the Jewish for years, had to be temporarily laid opean countries, entering French uniting the immigration of Jews in 1930 the government would not be doing Agency to employ Jewish labor ex- aside, for lack of the small fund re- versities gave rise to minor clashes from 5610, the figure is attained in its two-fold duty under the Mandate clusively on enterprises financed by quired to maintain it; the Employ- in some of these institutions, during 1929, to 3,605. In December, the gov- by crystallizing the Jewish National Jewish capital promised to consider ment Bureau maintained by .the Jew- the year. While it was not as great ernment issued a special order which Home at the present state of develop- the claims of Jewish labor for dueish. Board of Deputies, which had had as that of other countries, France's share of employment on public works; ment. drastically restricted immigration. and denied the intention of criticiz- notable success in placing both immi- unemployment problem also caused On the same day General Jan Chris- ing adversely the labor policy, Jewish grant and native Jews, was compelled some anti-alien grumbling, which was A total of 1,374 Jewish immigrants entered Cuba in1930. The reduction tian Smuts, former Premier of South Labor Federation and the Jewish to close. A similar fate overtook the aimed at foreign Jews as well as at Hebrew high school in Johannesburg, (Continued on Page 5—Section D) of immigration as a measure to im-Africa, and, as a representative to the Agency. prove economic conditions was resort- Peace Conference, a collaborator in ed to, in May, also by the Cuban gov- originating the Mandate system, In February, the government anernment, which established the re-cabled to Lord Passfield, declaring nounced that it had sent another comquirement that all applicants for ad-that the new policy was an attempt mission to Palestine, this time to inmission must have at least $200 cash to alter the Mandate and that it could vestigate revenue expenditures and COMPLIMENTS in their possession, and must be able not be put into effect without the general administration organization OF THE SEASON to put up a bond of $100, guaranteed consent of the participating Powers. in both Palestine and Transpordania. by a responsible businessman. The On the next day David Lloyd George, Australia had Reform Jewish serCuban community showed a sign of Premier of Great Britain when the vices, for the first time in the history stability when, in February, a Cuban Balfour Declaration was published, of the community, during the fall associated himself with Baldwin, High Holidays, when Rabbi Jerome Hadassah group was organized. Chamberlain and Amery, in their pro- Mark, a graduate of the Hebrew JEWISH VENDORS test against the new policy, and wasUnion College in the United States, OUSTED joined the next day by Winston officiated for a newly-organized libThe event which has aroused grave Churchill, author of the famous White eral congregation, formed with the concern in the United States concern- Paper of 1922. WEbster 1029 encouragement and support of the ing the relations between Jews and The government had, about the World Union of Progressive Judaism. non-Jews in Mexico, took place on middle of November, invited repre- The services were crowded and were April 30 in Mexico City. On that day sentatives of the Jewish Agency to broadcast over the radio. Incidentala squad of policemen ousted the Jewly, Rabbi Mark was not welcomed by ish vendors from- the Laguinilla mar- confer with the cabinet in order to the Rabbinate. With one exception clear up doubts and misunderstanding ket, not giving them time to remove they declined to participate in a contheir wares. The action of the po-which had been raised by the White ference on the religious situation of COMPLIMENTS lice, it was first explained, was based Paper. At the conferences which fol- the Jews of Australia. Rabbi Mark's on a government decree, promulgated lowed, the agency was represented by public utterances and some of bis acOF THE SEASON some weeks ago, providing that no Dr. Weizmann, O. E. d'Avigdor Gold- tions evoked criticism from the local foreigner who came to Mexico as a smid, president of the Board of Jew- rabbis. laborer, be permitted to engage in ish Deputies, Dr. Selic Brodetsky, and trade, and that all foreigners admit- M. Namierj Arthur Henderson, For- Because of depressed conditions, ted as traders, must register and have eign Secretary presided; the confer- which affected Jewish businessmen their licenses renewed by April 28; ences began about November 1, 1930, with special severity, many congregait was alleged that the licenses of the and continued, with interruptions and tions and other communal organizaAgent Jewish market men had not been re- recesses, until about the end of May, tions were compelled to reduce the • salaries of their rabbis and other ofnewed. In May, a special correspon- \931. dent of the Jewish Telegraphic While these conferences were in ficials, some of the smaller congregaMetropolitan Life Insurance Company; Agency to Mexico stated that Jewish progress, publicity was given on Febr- tions . could not pay the salaries of WEbster 5748 circles considered the Mexican press uary 13, to a letter from Prime Min- their rabbis, and several rabbis emiister MacDonald to Dr. Weizmann with grated. Jewish agricultural settlers responsible for the propaganda* which had led to the ousting of the Jewish peddlers that the agitation would not stop there but would spread to other Jewish activities and asserted that the government had taken no action to COMPLIMENTS NEW YEAR GREETINGS suppress the dangerous propaganda, but that open disorders were unlikely OF THE SEASON and would meet with stern repression From by the authorities; the propaganda is motivated chiefly, and almost entirely, by economic competition, the racial and religious elements being employed merely as pretext; the corresponv 1411 Hartley Street Omaha, Nebr. dent warned against regarding the situation solely as an anti-Jewish 1620 Harney Street JAckson 3144 demonstration because Turks, Arabs Photostat Your Important Papers and Chinese, and other Oriental races and even Spaniards, are also the targets of denunciations. ican Jewish Congress in the United States. In the same month, a conference of representatives of orthodox congregations, also held in the Canadian metropolis, decided to form a union, of orthodox organizations,- to regulate the organized religious life of the Jews of Canada.

Panorama of the (Continued from Page 3—Section D) ECONOMIC DEPRESSION

OBSTACLE

clusively in the hands of the ProtestWhile the routine communal life of ant School Board. The agreement is the Jews of Canada went on functionto be in force for fifteen years. ing normally during the year, the economic depression was an obstacle to ANTI-SEMITIC CAMPAIGN any considerable progress. IN PRESS Largely as a result of Montreal Meanwhile several French Canadian newspapers carried on a campaign of Jewry's experience in connection with scurrility, slander end boycottage, the school question, and of the antiequalling in virulence and shameful- Semitic campaign which was waged ness the worst output by the German around that question as a pretext, Hitlerites. Some of these papers Montreal required a new Jewish orwere financially assisted by the May- ganization during the year. In June, or Houde of Montreal, leader of the twenty-two national Jewish organiprovincial Conservative Party, in re- zations and synagogues met in Monturn for the aid given him by these treal and organized the Canadian papers in the election, when he advo- Jewish Board of Deputies, with obcated the repeal of the Jewish school jects similar to those of the American Jewish Committee and the Amerbill.

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The affair reached its climax on, and rapidly died 4owri after, Jnns-1^ 1931, when a large procession of from 15,000 to 20,000 persons paraded in Mexico City. Ostensibly the proces sion was held as part of a celebration of the first annual "Die del Commercio," but many of the manifestants carried banners and placards bearing expressions of - anti-foreign sentiment, some of them specifically directed against Jews. The authorities had evidently feared outbreaks of violence, for the paraders were surrounded by police. ' In his final dispatch before leaving Mexico, the special correspondent of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, expressed the view that the agitation was not likely to extend and may even gradually die out because first, the government has recently indicated its disapproval, and, second, the agitation could not extend much further without involving business and commercial interest of foreigners who are nationals of Great Britain, the United States and other friendly countries.

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931

Panorama of the Past Year-5691 (Continued from Page 4—Section D) tural organizations in Bussia; $75,000 had been' appropriated for the reother groups. There were also small lief of sufferers from the Palestine riots staged by Royalist partisans, riots in 1929; $65,000 had been em•whose press is continually agitating ployed for the relief of Jewish stuagainst Jews- Feeling ran unusually dents in various countries; the rehigh during the production of a French mainder had been applied to orphan version of a German drama based on work in Poland, material aid in Eouthe Dreyfus case, and disorders at the mania, and' the like. At the same theater occurred at every perform- time, the Alliance had maintained its ance; after about a three weeks' run, educational work in the Orient. the play was withdrawn at the reIn December, a group of emigres quest of the police, but when its pro- from Bussia announced the publicaduction was resumed several weeks tion beginning in January, 1931, of a later, the disorders were renewed. Jewish weekly in the Bossian language In January the Alliance Israelite Universelle made public a report in which it was shown that during the decade 1920-30, the organization had After xenturies of the sleep closely disbursed $300,000 for Jewish welfare resembling: death, which followed the work in Russia, Poland, Eoumania, mass expulsion of 1492, Jewish life and Palestine; one-third of this sum began to stir in Spain, after the dechad been allotted to rabbis and cul- laration of the new republic on April

Spain

Page Five—Section D

14,1931. Early in May, members of constitutional and must be withdrawn. gave Holland Jewry a poor-relief the new cabinet stated that within In April, the Thuringian Landtag problem, for the first time since the the economic possibilities of the coun- voted no confidence in Dr. Frick and World War. In December, the munitry the new regime will make no re- the coalition which had placed hfan in cipality of Amsterdam established strictions of any kind regarding the a position of power fell to pieces. Kosher kitchens for the Jewish unimmigration of Jews to Spain. In a Improvement in economic conditions employed, where a meal was served statement issued by the Spanish con- in Germany will not only go a long for a. penny, and, in March, a commitsulate in Cairo, Egypt, it was made way to destroying the despair psy- tee was formed to supply Passover clear that the republican government chology afflicting so many millions of food to impoverished Jews. "has no intention of encouraging Germans, and thus reduce the influmass immigration or the creation of ence of anti-Semitic agitators; it will DIAMOND SLUMP AFFECTS a new national home for the Jews, also be a great material boon to the JEWS The slump in the diamond trade as the conditions in the country would Jews of Germany, who, along with the rest of the population, have been also had a bad effect upon the situamake this impossible." tion of many Jews in Antwerp, BelVirtual recognition of the Jewish all but impoverished. Many Jewish gium and caused a noticeable exodus lommunity was seen in the dedication bankers, merchants and professional to other towns, and even emigration. on May 1, of the first synagogue men, formerly well-to-do and reliable At the same time, owing to had times, established since the expulsion, al- supporters of communal activities, immigration to Belgium was virtually though the synagogue had been legal- have been reduced to the ranks of suspended by a government decree. ly opened on December 24, 1930, ow- wage-earners, and some of them Many Jews, formerly employed in the ing to ths efforts of Ignacio Bauer, driven to seeking aid from the very diamond trade, turned to peddling and Madrid banker, who was chosen pres- institutions which they formerly help- to selling goods in public markets, ident of the congregation; the muni- ed .to with the result that clashes with the cipality had also given a plot for a DIFFICULTIES OF older vendors took place; in Merxem cemetery. Jewish communities, com- MIDDLEMEN and Elzern, seaport towns, the muniposed chiefly of Moroccan. Jews, had In the German Jewish press there cipalities expelled the Jews from thfc also been in existence for some time were lively discussions on the ques- markets, but they were permitted to in Seville and Barcelona. tion of the need for the Jews to return. In June, the government was change their vocational habits, partic- engaged in drafting a new law for ularly their tendency to engage in the. regulation of markets, intended professional pursuits. In April, at a to ^prevent a recurrence of such In October, 1930, the Italian Cabconference of the Federation of Jew- episodes. In January, when the inet satisfied the sew law defining the rights and regulating the func- ish Communities in Prussia, speakers municipality of Charleroi granted a tions of the Jewish communities of expressed the view that, aside from piece of land for a Jewish cemetery, Italy, and in January the law was the world-wide economic crisis and its the fact was brought out that this is published in the gazette and thus effects, the underlying causes of the to be the first Jewish cemetery in tame into effect. In the opinion of economic problem facing the Jews of Belgium; the Jews of the country had Dr. Angelo Sacerdoti, chief rabbi of Germany are fundamentally the same been burying their dead in Jewish Rome, the new organization of the as those which are affecting the Jews cemeteries in Holland. Jewish community will prove of great of Poland—the annihilation of the benefit to the Jews of Italy, as it middlemen, the concentration of capwould mean the strengthening of Ital- ital, the formation of co-operatives, ian life, the preservation of historic and discrimination as against Jews in and artistic treasures, the encourage- employment. ment of the culture, the maintainence The Jews of Austria were much of cultural and spiritual communicamore harrassed and badgered than tions with Jewish communities abroad According to a report from a corre- ever before. During the elections in and, most important, the unification spondent of the Jewish Telegraphic i November, the Jews were worried lest of Italian Jewry. In May, a delega- Agency, almost sixty per cent of all' the Heimwehr, the anti-Semitic milition of Jews presented medals to the Jewish marriages in Denmark are tary organization which is the counKing:, to Premier Mussolini, and to mixed marriages, and the children of terpart of the National Socialist Alfredo Eacco, Minister of Justice, in the Jewish Immigrants who came into Party in Germany, should acquire recognition of their sponsorship of the country from Russia -and Poland control of the government. -the new law. are fast assimilating its languages During the elections emapaign, the and customs. Also, the German Na- Jews were attacked by tne extremists tional Societies have begun to make at both ends of the political alignment—the radical Socialists and the Owing to the tremendous vote poll- inroads into Denmark. ed by the National Socialist (FascAccording to statistics published in Fascists. The election resulted in a ists) in the elections to the Reichstag, .January, 44 per cent of all Jewish parliament with no party having a in September, grave concern was felt marriages in Holland, during 1930, majority, and with Fascists winning by Jews all over the world for the were between Jews and non-Jewsj the only 5 of the 115 seats. During the fate of the -German Jewish commun- percentage of mixed marriages in oth- election campaign, the Fascists reity, because, during the first shock er cities were: Utrecht, nearly 24 per jected anti-Semitic slogans and made over the Nazi victory, the belief was cent; the Hague, 21 per cent, and a bid for Jewish support against the widespread that there veas great dan- Amsterdam, 13.3 per cent. The world "Marxists," and a few days before ger that the National Socialists would wide depression, which has tremen- the elections, which took place on Noobtain control of the government. The dously hurt the diamond trade in Am- vember 1, a sensation was created by results of the elections caused a varit- sterdam, largely in Jewish hands. the announcement that a Jewish unit able panic among some Jewish groups in Germany, and a number left the country; the exodus from Bavaria was greatest. That there was no reason for such hysteria was the view of Jewish leaders, including Professor Albert Kin stein, who pointed out that the huge increase in the votes for the Nazis, did not indicate a corresponding growth of anti-Semitic but was rather a sympton of despair in the face of depressed economic conditions and unemployment.

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of the Heixnwehr has been formed. But this did not prevent a clash between. Jewish .students of the University of Vienna, who were electioneering for a Zionist candidate, and a group of anti-Semitic students. In fact, there were anti-Jewish outbreaks of students at that institution and in other schools, several times during the year. In February, when the courts declared unconstitutional the ruling of the former rector of Vienna University, requiring the students to organize as national groups, with the German group as supreme, the rioting1 was so severe that the University had to be closed. There was no change in the situation of the Jews of Hungary. A graphic statement of the plight of the Jewish communal organizations of Budapest was given in May in a report from the correspondent of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. The number of applicants for assistance is mounting steadily—from 6,436 in 1928, to 17,572 in 1929 and 19,475 in 1930. The number of inmates in the House for the Aged has increased from 100 to 500, with 1800 applicants

rejected for lack of room; the proportion of free burials has increased from between 40 per cent and 50 pei cent, to 80 per cent; other institutions have large deficits. At the same time the income of the community is waning; no fewer than 17,000 of the 26,000 members of the Hebra Eadisha are in arrears in their dues. As a result, the communal organizations have been compelled to make drastic cuts in their budgets.

ASKS CONTINUED SUBVENTIONS In July, at a meeting of the council of the Budapest community, Baron Kohner, the president, appealed to the government, which had expressed the intention of discontinuing such sub* ventions, to continue state support of religious and cultural work of Jewish communities, as in many places, these were on the verge of collapse. Anti-Jewish student attacks occurred at the Universities of Budapest, Pacs, and Szeged, during the year. The outbreak at Pecs was said to have been started when one of the professors praised the industry of the Jewish students. Great excitement was caused in (Continued on Page 6—Section D)

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RIOT WHEN REICHSTAG OPENED "When the Reichstag opened on October 13, Berlin Jews were attacked and the windows of shops owned by Jews were broken, but the police were able to prevent looting. These riots increased existing disquietude in Jewish circles, because of the fear of similar occurrences in other cities, and, led to a resumption of the flight of Jews from Germany. This outbreak, the responsibility for which the Hitlerites denied, did much to cast discredit upon the party, which their antics in the Reichstag and, especially their walking out in body in protest against the passage of rules against obstructionist tactics, went very far to increase. Both before and after the Reichstag elections, Germany -witnessed the same exhibitions of anti-Semitic fury and folly as have come to be universally associated with the Hitler movement—street attacks against Jews, molestation of Jews in cafes and theaters, disturbance of religious service in synagogues and of Jewish meetings of all kinds, desecration of synagogues, and pollution of cemeteries. The spirit of desperation which underlies the support of the National Socialists is also prevalent among the students of Germany, and there were clashes at several universities be* tween Fascist students and Jews, as well as demands for a numerous clausus for Jewish students.

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New Year's Editiorf—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931

Page Six—Section D

culate warnings to employers to make leaders while the immigration of foreign rab- are without work. A survey ia May I uanian Jewry is miserable is a well- sure to have only Lithuanian workers Anrests; of A known fact. Up to March 28, 1931, were frequently mads during the year bis is forbidden, the Government does df the timber industry in which the a total of 4,000 persons in Kovno before January 1, 1932, and to obtain but the. government Could hot secure not aid in supporting the rabbinical breadwinners of 10,000 Jewish famfrom alien Jews signed pledges not t* seminaries. According to the govern- ilies are employed, and of the grain alone, had applied for Passover re- seek the permits required by the law; their conviction. . . After'an unsuccessful attempt hy ment statistics, made public in Sep- trade, in various branches of which lief. it was reported that non-Jewish aliens In the meantime the government wera not troubled in this manner. an eighteen-year-old student, on thetember, one-third of the 4,137 foreign 100,000 Jews earn a livelihood, indilife of Emariufil Socor, editor of the students in Czecho-Slovakian higher cated that, owing to "dumping" by had filled many Jews with fear by Protest against the law became alSoviet Russia, of both timber and the passage of the employment law influential newspaper Adeverul, schools are Jews. grain, these two groups were in a of July 14, 1930, requiring all aliens most world-wide, and in March, at a (Truth), the government made a sudIn January the organization of one conference with a representative of very bad plight. desiring to do business or to obtain the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, the den show of activity and announced Jewish party for the whole of Czecho(Continued from Page 5—^Section D) a new series of measures, upon the slovakia was effected at a conference In March a report from Lodz, once work in Lithuania to secure permits Minister of the Interior issued a stateof representatives of existing parties, /urging, it.was saidy of the King. the greatest textile center in Eastern from the Minister of the Interior be- ment that the law would be enforced During a greater, part of the period November, when, at the dedication of Anti-Semitic societies, it was an-but it is significant that Ludwig Sing- Europe, indicated that the number of fore January 1, 1932. The law wasonly with reference to those aliens under review, the outstanding fact in banners of- the Hungarian Order of obviously intended to give preference nounced, were to be dissolved, anti- er and Julius Reich, the Jewish memHeroes at Keckskemet, Minister of the life of the Jews of Roumania ap- Semites to be classed with Commun- bers of Parliament, are to remain licenses to trade taken out since the in the matter of employment to Lith- who entered Lithuania after July» beginning of the year was from 30 1929, and that the pledges obtained War, Gomboes declared that he would peared to be the almost daily attacks members of- the Social Democratic to 40 per cent lower than for the uanian citizens. Inasmuch as there from the workers by the police would ists, and to be tried as rebels when 1 upon them in one part of the country ; oppose the admission of Jewish war same period of 1930; a total of 40,- are today in Lithuania from 9,000 to not be considered. or. another. The scene of the. past accused of disorders; students con- Party. .veterans into this order. victed of participating in anti-Jewish 000 unemployed are registered, but 10,000 JewB who are Staatenlos, i. e., In April much dissatisfaction was In October the Senate approved a year's anti-Jewish outrages was chief- disturbances, were to-;be expelled from the actual number of jobless i3 be-not citizens of any country, there was JEWISH CULTURE aroused among the Jews of Slovakia law regulating the status of "state- ly in the agricultural section of south the universities, and inflammatory 1 lieved to be far greater, while not all a veritable panic among those of them AIDED less" persons, many of them Jews, Bukowina and Bessarabia, and, to a publications were to be liquidated. by the passage of a law providing for those who are employed have steady who were engaged in business or were Jewish culture was aided by the complete Sunday closing in the provand placing them under the protec- lesser extent Transylvania. Raids were actually made by the po-ince. As a consequence several Jew- work. As a result no fewer than 15,- employed by others. government when, in January, the g Taking advantage of the depressed lice on the headquarters in a numtion of the state. In the same month 000 of the 40,000 families are on the Not long after the passage of the ish merchants in Bratislava (PressMinister of Finance granted the Diit was reported that during the pre- condition of the peasantry, agitators ber of cities of the organizations charity list of the Jewish community. law, the police in Kovno began to cir- (Continued on Page 7—Section D) burg) began to keep their shops open went among them and incited them to ceding ten years, 11-7 Jews, who had known as Iron Guard and Archangel been. converted to Christianity, had do violence to Jews, to whom the agl Michael, where arms and ammuni- on Saturday. One of these shops was In Warsaw 5,000 families filed applireturned to the fold, chiefly as a re- tators pointed as the cause. of the tion were found; and hundreds of high attacked and almost wrecked by a cations for free coal with the Jewish Jewish mob, which was dispersed by community. sult of the efforts of Eabbi Sigmund agrarion depression. school students, found to be members a detachment of mounted police. One of the grievances of Polish Grossman of Budapest. In March, As a result the Jews in the villages of a secret anti-Semitic society, were New Year Greetings representatives of peasant organiza- were subjected to a veritable reign of expelled .from the schools. Jewry touched upon at the confertions sent an appeal to Parliament terror, being in constant fear of atences referred to was the survival, in In April the Jorga government, to Our Patrons and Friends urging- that they be permitted to sell tack, when not actually subjected to which came to power as a result of Although there was no perceptible the region formerly known as Rus-, land to Jews, as the prohibition of assaults involving physical injury, de- the elections, announced its intention improvement in the material lot of sian-PoIand, of certain anti-Jewish such sale has restricted the market mcjlation of their,homes and shops, to suppress all outbreaks against any the Polish Jews during the year, the restrictions which were a vestige of and caused a fall in prices of land. and looting and pillage. section of the population whatsoever. results of the elections in December Tsaristic rule. The hope of the AmSince then, reports of outbreaks have which gave Marshal Pilsudski and his bassador that these were to be shortparty a working majority in the Sejm, ly abolished, was realized in April, become less frequent. aroused hope for better times. That when both houses of the Sejm ap1722 North 24th Street these hopes have not been realized is proved the necessary legislation, after NEW YEAR GREETINGS an effort on the part of Jewish repowing, probably, to the fact that while The Jews of Bulgaria number 48,- the sad plight of the Jews is trace- resentatives which began in June, WEbster 4636 431, according to the census of 1927, able to the working out of the policy 1919. the results of which were published of Etatism upon which Poland emin , February, 1931. A comparison barked almost immediately after the OUTBREAKS FEW with the 1920 census shows both an restoration of the Republic, it was Thanks to the enlightened attitude absolute and relative increase in thealso, and to a large degree, one aspect which has been maintained by the Polish Government since Marshal Pflnumber of Jews engaged in. industry of the universal depression. and a, corresponding decrease in the During the past year the Central sudski took over the reins of GovernBEST WISHES TO OUR number occupied with commerce; an Government did not take any import- ment in May, 1926, the record of PoOFFICE DOOR AND WINDOW increase in the number of Jewish em- ant step in the direction of State con- land during the past year was sullied FRIENDS AND PATRONS LETTERING ployes, as laborers, and clerks, is also trol of industry, or the organization by very few of those disgraceful incidents which were all too plentiful in marked. While the attitude of the of state aided co-operatives, with : 314 Patterson BIdg. i AT; 9316 government toward the Jewish popu- their resulting dislocation of business, Roumania. lation is friendly, dissatisfaction was especially trade. rife during the year because of the WHOLESALE failure of the government to grant MILLIONS OF JEWS Economic matters were in the foresubsidies to the Jewish schools. Rus- UNEMPLOYED ground of Jewish life in Lithuania sian emigres and Bulgarian students According to government's statis- during the past year, owing to natwho have attended universities in tics 325,900 out of the total of 2350,- ural causes, but a}&>, to some extent, 505 SO. 11th ST., OMAHA PHONE JA. 3716 Germany, Austria and Poland, were 000 Jews were out of employment on to several measures proposed, or actsaid to be responsible for what slight January 1, 1931; Jewish leaders say ually i«rt into effect by the governTO OUR anti-Jewish feeling exists in Bul- this number is a gross under-estimate ment at Kovno, or by municipalities. SZX. garia. and that actually over 1,000,000 Jews That the material situation of LithFRIENDS and PATRONS The struggle against anti-Semitism the right of Gentiles to be converted, to Judaism, the issuance of Jewish prayer—and text-books, and the NEW YEAR GREETINGS NEW YEAR GREETINGS establishment of a Jewish museum 'were among the matters discussed at To Our 141? 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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931 tion of national industry. .Discrim- youths are employed in metal factorination in government employ, -was ies at Dnepertrovsk, alone, and large the subject, in October, of a three- numbers of girls are going into texthour debate in Parliament. \ ile mills. That conditions in some In . June the Latvian Parliament factories where such youths were empassed a law abolishing the numerus ployed were so bad as to induce some clausus on foreign students which had of the young men to run away, was been in force at the University of brought out in April. The youths Latvia. complained of poor housing conditions (Continued from Page 6—Section B) ' condition of those Latvian Jews. who In March, a Latvian National So- being compelled to work as common had formerly contributed toward its cialist Party, preaching the doctrines laborers instead of being taught rectorage of the Hebrew Real Gym- work, the international organization of Hitler, was organized; its program trades and anti-Semitic incidents. nasium in Kbvno a building loan of Qrt may have to suspend, its activities calls for the usual measures—expul- MORE COMFORT FOR $35,000 on a new gymnasium build- in Latvia, where, in 1930, it had been sion of Jews who came to the coun- WORKERS ing, then in process of construction, giving. 400 children technical train- try since 1917, confiscation of the The Central Executive Committee which is to be named after Edward ing and had spent $100,000 for. ma- property of Jews, and the like. took cognizance of these conditions M. Chase, of Manchester, New Hamp-; .•chinery ;and-.tools. , In June, it was and ordered the Comzet to pay greatshire, who contributed $25,000 for the reported that the work of the Jewish er attention to the physical comfort construction of the building, and co-operatives, of which-nearly half of The Hitler movement showed great of the Jewish workers. That the "whose. Student Aid Foundation pro- the 96,000 Jews of Latvia are mem- strength in the Free City of Danzig; problem of the Jews settled in small vides tuition, board, and lodging for bers, was becoming more difficult. when, in the November, 1930, election towns is still unsolved to a large ex62 poor Jewish students in Lithuania. The wretched.situation of the Jews to the Volkstag, the National Social- tent was brought out at the All-Ruswas brought about by-a number of ist Party polled-34,394 votes, twenty- sian Conference in December of the factors,7inchidm"g government monop- four times the 1483 they had in the Ozet, the society for settling Jews on •That the economic condition of the olization of the flax industry, discrim- 1927 election campaign, there were the land, which, it was reported in Jews of Latvia also is wretched was ination against Jews 3 in government street attacks upon Jews by Hitler- May has 300,000 members, more than indicated by the long-line of appli- employ, "the:'^Jumping ' of shoes from ites. Later, after they gained con- half of whom are non-Jews. It was cants for free coal -which was being Czecho-SIovakia and of lumber from trol of the Volkstag, the disorders be- pointed out that while the five year distributed by the community during Soviet Jiussia; land the revocation by. came more frequent. In protest industralization plan has somewhat the past winter. In April, it was re- the government of loans extended against these attacks and against the relieved the economic pressure, only ported that, owing to the depressed some time ago to stimulate the crea- failure of the senate to punish the the s -n of a±-'ians are ad .-nitted into perpetrators, Henry K. Strassburger, the large factories, while the dePolish High Commissioner in Danzig, classed Jews and their children are resigned. still not provided for. A total of 280,000 Jews are now working on the land in the various The past was a relatively quiet and parts of the Union of Socialist Soviet uneventful year for the Jsws of Rus- Republics. These farmers are settled sia, with the letting-down of the anti- in four autonomous Jewish regions religious drive, and the slowing up of and hundreds of little communities; the collectivization campaign. In the eighty per cent of the Jewish farmers meantime, the continued struggle for are members of collectives. the adaptation of the Jews to the eco- Settlement in Bira Bidjan, in the nomic scheme of the country was the Far Eastern Republic, was not popfact that was uppermost in all the ular among the Jews of Rassia, and events of the year. The edict of the the official in charge of the project preceding- year, according, more rights was compelled to seek recruits for it A fancy creamery butter, made in the to the lishentzy or declassed, which in Latvia Lithuania, and even Argenheart of the ;piMucm^ was expected by some to bring about tine. In February, it was reported a great improvement in the condition that only 2,700 Jews are settled in Nebraska cream. of those who were neither peasants Bira-Bidjan. nor factory workers, does not appear That the work of the Comzet in You can depend on it to have made a great deal of differ- settling Jews on the land is someence in the condition of these former times hurried and done without due pariahs, but there is hope that with preparation, was indicated in April -Hthe opening up of some of the large when the Agro-Joint, the American There is no substitute for Good Butter industrial plants, now in course of Jewish society, was compelled to conconstruction nnder the famous Five- duct widespread relief activity among Year Plan, many of these former newly-arrived Jewish colonists in the traders, agents and professionals, will Crimea, a number of whom were be able to qualify as workers. found to be unsuited to farming. Barracks not Teady to receive some The same istrue of the kustars, of thewere colonists, there was a lack artisans who have been working in- of transportationand facilities. 1315 HOWARD STREETdividually in their own homes, and of whom there are said to be 100,000 Dr. Joseph Rosen, director of the among-the Jews. Legally, their lot Agro-Joint, at a press conference in has become easier what with the re- the Berlin office of the Joint Disduction of taxes and wifti certain tribution Committee in May, outlined forms of government aid, but actual the necessity for maintaining and improvement in -their condition has until now been slow, although1 there are signs that, because of the increasing need for industrial workers, the rate of improvement will be accelerated. Such a sign was the law promulgated in October, providing that government labor exchanges register for work not only members of trade unions, but all persons applying, even if they had never worked before. This new edict opened up opportunities for 815 So. 16th Street the former declassed Jews, but there are no figures available as to how Quiet—Convenient Service Unsurpassed many were actually benefitted. The status of the artisan was elevated somewhat by a decree in November, E ABE serving the T>est 60 cent opening up to their children the same Merchants Lunch in the city daily educational rights as had until then from l l a. m, to 2 p. m., and serving: -been accorded only to the children of Special Sinner every Sunday $L25 per ^factory workers, and giving to the plate, four courses complete, from 11 artisan equal treatment with those a. in. to 8 p. m. workers.

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Page Seven—Section D

strengthening the Jewish agricultural and the Rabbi,of Lubawitch," as well in our review last year. (See Vol. 32, position in Russia because of the posZionism. : pp. 128-129). Those elements which sibility of a future movement to the While there were not a.s many re- support this policy were .greatly irriland by a number of the Jews who ports of anti-Semitic incidents dur- tated and shocked during the fall of are now engaged in industry. The ing the past year, as in preceding 1930, when Ali Tethi Bey, leader of Agro-Joint is not only aiding the col- ones, such as have appeared indicate, the Liberal Republican party in the onists in developing their farms, but that anti-Semitism is still a serious municipal elections in Istanbul, the is also assisting in maintaining the problem with which the government first opposition in -seven years, invithealth of the Jewish population by is endeavoring to cope. In an inter- ed the co-operation of national minorsubsidizing local societies engaged in view, in January, with the correspon- ities, and the Greeks, Argenians, and this work. dent of the Jewish Telegraphic Jews of the city, to the number of Agency, Joseph -Stalin, de facto dic- some 240,000 manifested their eagerSPEKT 4,846,000 RUBLES tator of Russia characterized anti- ness to support that party, and put During the five years 1924-29, a Semitism as "the most dangerous sur- candidates m the field, but while the total of 4,864,000 rubles were expend- vival of cannibalism," and declared Liberal Republicans succeeded in polled by these societies, and an annual that in the Soviet Union it is rigidly ing 25 per cent of the votes cast, they average of 1,017,000 persons were as- prosecuted as a "phenomenon pro- were defeated i>y the popular (Kemasisted. The need for this work is foundly hostile to the Soviet regime." list) party, with the result that aniurgent, because government medical As a matter of fact, the Soviet auth- mosity against the minorities inassistance is extended only to mem- orities did look into many complaints creased. bers of trade unions, government' em- of anti-Jewish persecution, -and meted In November one of the leading ployes, and .basic classes of the peas- but seVere;"' pu|rishinent io persons newspapers demanded that the govantry, ' ' found iH^ ' ernment take steps to prevent the Along with the struggle for ecofurther exodus of Turkish Jews who nomic adoptation went desperate ef"are distinguished for their creative forts for religious adjustment to the Soviet milieu. At the anti-religious The situation, of. the Jews of Tur- intelligence and productive activity." Jewish Congress, held in Moscow at key did not improve during the year. The decline of the once flourishing: the end of March, some of the meas- The policy of Ottomanization of the Jewish community of Turkey beures being employed to save Judaism country continued to be followed by. came more evident during the past were referred to. The Jews of Lenin- the Kenialist government, with the year, with Jewish institutions harder grad have decided to admit women to depressing effects on. Jewish initia- put to it than ever to support comthe choir and to participation in the tive and progress which we described (Continued on Page 8—Section D) management of congregations, and have abolished separate seating iil the synagogues. In smaller cities, free Hebrew schools have been established and teachers are offering private tuition in Jewish subjects free of charge. Itinerant preachers follow groups of colonists and others migrating, and establish moveable congregations for their use. All the rabbis in Russia are willing, it was said, to reduce the number of ritual observances if they can save the essence of Judaism. An example of this was the approval given by the rabbi of Briansk for the baking of Matzoth with rye flour, because of the scarcity of white flour and the fear that many Jews would 2554FARNAM consequently abandon the use of matzoth at Passover.

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The drive against religion continued during the year, although not with the speed and vigor of the year before. Reports to the Ernes from a number of towns and villages, indi cated that many anti-religious societies in these places had ceased functioning, leaving the field open for an "unhindered revival of religious propaganda." In March, the first atheist magazine in Yiddish began publication in Moscow, promising to give battle both "to the Pope of Rome

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XAW AIDS ARTISANS In the same month another law offered further privileges to those artisans who would organize artels of co-operatives of jio fewer than thirty individuals. Such artisans are to receive the same food allowances, to pay the same low rents, and to enjoy the same pension rights, as factory workers. A further boon was given to these artisans, in May, when a reduction of one-third in their taxes was decreed. . • In December a "five-year plan" for the economic transformation of the Jewish artisans and former lishentzy was announced by • the Comzet, the government agency for settling Jews on land and for industralizing them. During the next three years, 135,000 Jewish youths, in addition to the 30,000 already being trained, will be absorbed in industrial enterprises, while the 30,000 subsidized students will be increased to 65,000; at the same time, 50,000 Jewish artisans will be converted into factory workers and 10,000;Jewish professional men will be trained for productive labor. Altogether 450,000'Jews,are to be turned to Industry, while 145,000 are to be absorbed in government employ, and 65,000 more are to be placed in agricultural collectives. That a change has already taken place 'in the economic life of the Jewish ^population was indicated in a report* presented to the All-Russian Ceniial Executive Committee by A. Mefezhin, vice-president of the Comzet.; J According t o ' this report the number of Jews in the metal industries exceeds those in the H£e«5$ . tra3es?"leather working, and other traditional Jewish occupations; of the total Jewish proletariat, 43 per cent are in heavy industries; 10,000 Jewish

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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931

Page-Eight—Section If

(Continued from Page 7—Section D) mission to the League of Nations made public in August* because that munal activities, and especially with document was, in some respects, a the falling off in the-attendance of counterbalance to the profoundly unJewish children at community schools. satisfactory report of the Shaw ComAfter'an interval of eight years, the. mission which had investigated the Council of Jewish Communities held a Arab riots of August, 1929. meeting in May, and listened to a The Mandate Commission found gloomy report of the serious economic that two of the four general conclusplight of the communities. ions of the Shaw Commission were open to a question that the Palestine administration had displayed, a lack The primary and almost all-absorb- of insight on the eve of the riots in ing interest of the Jews of Palestine, spite of a number of premonitory during the period under review, was, symptoms, that the Mandatory Power of course, the discussions surrounding had reduced the protective forces too the formulation of its Palestine policy rapidly, for a country situated as is by the Mandatory Power, as outlined Palestine, and that it had also handled in the Pasafield White Paper, issued the Wailing' Wall controversy in a in October, 1930. But before that manner which was not calculated to document saw the light, Palestine improve, relation between the two Jewry, was deeply stirred by the re- groups.. Going back to mare remote port of the Permanent Mandate Com- causes of friction between Jew3 and

Palestine

Best Wishes for a

Happy and Prosperous New Year

•Aia6s> which lay; in the'failure of. the t a hold the Torah, while it is being sections of the Palestine population. air a cost of over $500,000, with the that the plans had been completed for Mandatory in given satisfaction to the, readj rriay ba brought to the Wall The authorities took extra precautions financial assistance of the Mortgage the Jewish agricultural school to be to prevent disorders on the anniver- Bank of the (American) Palestine built with funds left by Sir Ellis aspirations of the two races, the Com- only on stated occasions- . sary of the outbreaks of August, 1929. Economic Corporation, the Keren Kadaarie of Bagdad; a similar school mission expressed "regret that on cer- -The Moslems,-on the other hand, tain points the Mandatory Power has are forbidden to disturb Jewish servr Processions were forbidden, but syna- Hayesod, the Palestine Emergency for Arabs will be built with funds not succeeded in giving full effect to ices and to make any structural addi- gogue services were permitted. Rela- Fund, and the Hassneth Insurance from the same source. all, the provisions of the Mandate. tions to the Wall which may inter- tives and friends of Jews who had Company. In the satne month, prepThere were 230,000 catalogued vol"The .Government's lack of firmness fere with its use by Jews. The area been killed made pilgrimages to their arations were well under way for the umes in the Hebrew University Liand consistency. in applying all its before the Wall is hot to be used for graves. In Tel Aviv all places of settlement of one thousand Jewish brary when its collection was removed provisions" inevitably leave the ex- political rallies. The Commission on amusement were closed. A few days families on small holdings in the from the city to the new Wolffsohn tremists in both camps to seek . . . . the Wailing Wall had sat for several before Tisho b'Ab (August 3) the orange growing zone along the coast- Building on Mount Scopus. to obtain what the Mandate, loyally weeks in July ,1930, in Jerusalem and authorities announced unprecedented al plain, on land belonging to the JewINTERNATIONAL MATTERS interpreted and energetically carried held public hearings, at which Jewish restrictions for the observance of that ish National Fund. In connection with the question of In January, the King David Hotel, fast before the Wailing Wall. out could not give them." While ex- and Arab witnesses were heard. two hundred rooms, embody- minorities, it is interesting to note The Arabs, on the other hand, com- of nearly pressing approval of the Mandatory's The failure of the negotiations was 1 intention to restrict immigration in only one symptom of the continuing memorated the fortieth day after the ing all modern hotel conveniences, that the establishment of a permanent proportion to the country's power of strained relations between the two execution on June 17, .1930, of the was opened in Jerusalem.' It had been minorities commission in the League absorption, the Commission neverths- communities during the entire year. three Arabs sentenced to death for erected at a cost of close to $1,250,- of Nations was suggested at the conless asks "whether the obligation to On the one hand, the Jews had not their 'part in the 1929 riots and the 000, provided, in part, by the London vention, in September, in New York encourage close settlement by Jews on forgotten the riots of August, 1929, leaders suggested that the anniver- Economic Board for Palestine and the City, of the International Law Assothe land, does not . . imply the and, on the other hand, the Arab sary of the riots be marked by a Palestine Economic Corporation. In ciation, attended by representatives adoption of a more active policy leaders would not abandon their de- strike, but the government forbade the same month the Polish Immi- from twenty countries. Both Poland which would develop the country's mand for the abrogation of the Bal- the publication of the strike call. The grants' Bank of Palestine was opened and Roumania appointed special uncapacity to receive and absorb .'immi- four Declaration and the Mandate. Arab Executive called a strike also in Tel Aviv, partly with capital sub- der-secretaries for minorities in their grants in larger numbers without ill Arab bitterness was increased by the in protest against the reprieve of Jo- scribed by the Polish Government, as governments. In the same month, the effects ? " Such a policy has merely definite and firm rejection by the seph Mizrachi Urphali, the only Jew the bank will function chiefly in the World Congress of Palestine Workers been outlined in a small way; "it is Permanent Mandates Commission of sentenced to death in connection with direction of financing imports from took place in Berlin. In April, there Poland. In February, the cornerstone took place at Nijon, Switzerland, the quite clear, howeverj that the Jewish Arab demands in this direction; Jew- the 1929 outbreak. 1 There were some effort on both was laid of the Citrus Experimental second international student confer-' National Home, so far as it has been ish bitterness was increased by the sides to reach an understanding, as Laboratory at Rehoboth, on land of ence on anti-Semitism in universities, established, has in practice been the provisions of the White Paper. sponsored by the International Stuurged by Harry Snell, one of the the Jewish National Fund. The Arabs hailed this document, work of the Jewish organization;" the In April, announcement was made dent Service. Mandatory has shown itself "unable and, when the parleys between the members of the Shaw Commission to provide the essential condition for British Government and the Jewish who suggested the establishment of the development of the Jewish Na- Agency were taking place and ru- bi-national committees in all towns ^^t^^IS tional Homfr—Security for persons mors of a possible retreat were rife, and villages where the two peoples the Arab leaders sent frantic mes- live. In a letter to the Brith Sholom w and property." sages to London/ urging the Govern- Society, whose president is Dr. J. L. RAPS MANDATORY'S ment nbt to weaken/ and expressing Magnes, Chancellor of the Hebrew FAILURE the belief that "explanations" of any University, Mr. Snell made forty-two ; The ill effects of the inaction of kind will cause general excitement concrete proposals for co-operation. the Palestine Government have not among: the Arabs." They denounced When Mr. Snell's letter was publishbeen restricted to Jews. "The- Arab the letter of Premier MacDonald to ed, one of the Arab newspapers said element might have found its that the Arabs would agree to an interests safeguarded by the govern- Dr. Weizmann as restoring the Bal- entente on certain conditions, includfour Declaration; in a memorial toment agricultural policy, including ing the abandonment by the Jews of riot only public works to develop cul- the British High Commissioner, the their "dream" of a National Home. president of the Arab Executive stattivable area, but also the organization Solemn peace pacts were entered into of, agricultural credit, land credit co- ed that the letter "has ruined hope of between Jews and Arabs in a number operative societies and" an educational a policy of co-operation between the of places. campaign." Had such a policy been Arabs and Jews, if there existed such followed the fears' of the Arabs, see- a hope, and has rendered the pos- ECONOMIC SITUATION ing the land passing into Jewish sibility of understanding between the NOT SO BAD HALFTONES hands, would have been largely al- two parties absolutely impossible;" he In the midst of all these preoccuZINC ETCHINGS-COLOR PLATES went on to state his intention'of prolayed. The' Mandatory had also neCOMMERCIAL ART pations often in spite of them, normal PHOTO RETOUCHING-ILLUSTRATIONS glected to take any steps to bring the posing a boycott against all Jews in life went on- The general economic all matters. two sections into closer association, situation was not as bad in Palestine by setting up economic institutions, In March, the Arab Executive pub- as in many other countries. Public open to both sections, the Mandatory, lished ah appeal to the Arabs for an revenues showed a surplus of $209,left the establishment of all such in- anti-Jewish boycott. "Sell the Jews 500 for the first ten months of 1930 everything except land and buy nothstitutions entirely to the Jews. In that year industry used almost 50 The British Government took sharp ing from them," was the slogan per cent more electric current, supissue with these and other points in adopted.' Finally Arab bitterness was plied by the Ruthenberg plants, than the report of the Mandate Commis- once more increased with the publi- in 1929. In November, 1930, the sion and filed a long answer, to the cation of the report settling the. Wail- drainage project on lands of the Jewtons of which the Commission ex- ing Wall controversy. ish National Fund in the Haifa Bay pressed objection. On September 8, MUTUAL HOSTILITY section which had cost $125,000, was however, when Hjalmar Procope, rap- CONTINUED completed and the cornerstone was porteur on Mandates for the Council The year was full of symptoms of laid Of a . Workers Suburb of two of the League of Nations, presented mutual hosility on the part of both thousand cottages, to be constructed his report upholding the views of the Commission, his observations and report were unanimously adopted by the Council after Arthur Henderson, British Foreign Secretary, had made a brief declaration, which was interpreted as an apology for the asparity of Great Britain's answer to the Mandate's Commission. What is property worth?

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This development was greeted with satisfaction in Palestine Jewish cirProperty is not .worth what somebody asks for it, cles and raised high hopes in antinor is it a guess. cipation of the anxiously awaited new statement of Great Britain's policy* The consternation with which the Passfield White Paper was received Property has a value, and if purchased, at that was the more profound. Not since value, it makes a sweet, sure and safe investment. the riots of 1929-was the Jewish Community so aroused. The resignation of, Dr1. Weizmann front his dual presidency of the Wprld Zionist OrganiFor a nominal fee you can obtain an expert appraisal, zation and the Jewish Agency was based on new explained and illustrated methods, that will tell you what a property is worth. interpreted as a serious defeat" of World Zionism. A meeting of the Va'ad Leumi (National-Jewish Council) was called at once, and Pincus Rutenberg, on behalf of the Council, and Colonel Frederick Ktsch, representing the Jewish Agency called on Realtor the High Commissioner and exAPPRAISALS pressed indignation at what Palestine Jewry regarded as the complete exJAckson 0667 305 Patterson Bldg. tinction of the Balfour Declaration. 17th and Farcam Street At its meeting the Va'ad Leumi adopted a resolution rejecting the statement of policy, and refusing to ;3tta($%SSS$$KS$$%KSCSKK)tttttt^^ take any part in the formation of the legislative council proposed in the White Paper.. Feeling ran high in Tel Aviv, where an anti-British street demonstration took place, and black flags were hoisted in "mourning" for vthe Balfour Declaration.

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Wfien in June the report was pub-* lished of the Commission on the Wailing Wall, appointed by the British Government with the approval' of the League of Nations, the Jewish community, though dissatisfied, accepted the Commission's decisions. The Commission ruled that ownership.of the Wall is vested solely in the Moslem church, but that, subject to certain restrictions, which were clearly set forth, Jew3 have full access to the Wall at all times for the purpose of devotion. The use of benches, chairs, curtains, screens, etc., is barred, as is barred also the' blowing of the shofar, while the Ark and a table

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Council Jfltiffs News in This Section

What Sioux City Jewry Have Achieved

Entered as Second-Class Mall Matter on January 27. l!>2i~-at JVistofllce :it Omaha. Nebraska. nuder_ the" Act of March 3.1S7»

SECTION H—EIGHT PAGES

OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11,1931

fewry Active Co Work of g Evidence of Leadership and of Civic Harmony A Resume for the Past Year 5691 Another year in ihe life of the Jews j „ p r o v i d i n g a cultural and recreathroughout the world is brought to tional center, has an unrivalled place & close. It has been a year of joy in the heart of every individual in tempered by sadness, a year of sor- the Jewish Community. rows, a year of rejoicings. During; the The. work of the Federation has •year 5691, the Jewish community of been intensive and far reaching dur1 Sioux City, with a thrilling con- ing the year 5961. sciousness of its relationship to world Jewry—facing, as every other comCOMMUNITY CENTER munity is, times of uncertainty—has The Community Center, which is kept proportionately in pace with maintained as the principal project other communities in its unselfish of the Federation, is the home for a aims, in its altruistic strivings, and great number of clubs, activities and in its goal for cultural advancement. social events. The rooms of the CenSioux City Jewry can point with ter are utilized to their greatest pospride to its highly developed com- sibility, and a check of ihe attendance munal life. Tie many organizations, reveals that 54,675 persons visited the whose aims are philanthropic, cul- Center during the past year. The tural, religious, or social, are real play room is open to children all day, evidences of splendid leadership and and the library is constantly in use. The social hall was used for a great civic harmony. Some of these groups have com- number of large banquets and dances, pleted, with the close of the year, both private and public.* A kosher ambitions programs. Other programs kitchen is maintained and its facili.have n0 * heen so intensive. In any ties will accommodate 300 people. case, the existence of each and every During the last year a new supply organization has been more than ! of silverware was furnished through the co-operation of a number of outjustified. side organizations. The youngsters do An account of the work and activities of the local organizations is hot permit the limited quarters of sufficient evidence that these groups the Center to curtail their active will not be content to rest upon their sports, and as a result meet weekly laurels of previous years—that during for basketball and gymnasium work, ihe1 coming year they will achieve as at the gyms in- the public schools. The Center secured this accommodagreatly. tion through the courtesy of the Board of Education.

The Federation

CLUBS The Federation of Jewish Social 350 boys and girls enrolled in the Service, organized nine years ago by a group of far sighted Sioux Cityans, various clubs and classes sponsored who were conscious of their responsi- by the Federation. The Dancing bility in caring for the needy, as well Classes met with Miss Mary Kaplan

and Miss Lena Ginsberg. Miss Eose Tesler and Miss Ann Singer were in charge of the expression classes, open to boys and girls. The Intermediate Dramatic Club was under the Direction of Miss Eva Maron, and Miss Florence Coates directed the activities of the Masque and Wig Players. The Girl Scout Troop had as its leader Miss Dorothy Moscow. Miss Dena Baron assisted in this troop. rs^ A. H. Baron led the Brownie Pack.: The Newsies d u b is perhaps one of the most interesting groups. It is composed of all boys who sell papers, regardless of their religion. Mr. IL N. Slotsky was the advisor of the club. Their annual Thanksgiving Banquet again received the support of Sioux City's Business Men. When the funds of the club were tied up in one of the local banks, Mr. Barney Baron made it possible to serve the newsies with.cocoa and rolls during t i e winter months. ' . The Boy Scout troop was led by Mr. Louis Slade. Mr. Frank Margolin was the advisor ofLthe Maccabee Club, and Mr. Edwin Baron gave his services as advisor of the Hawkeye Club, both boy's organizations. Miss Freda Albert was the advisor of the Deborah Grab and Mrs. Arthur Sanford and-Miss Marcia Robinow were respective leaders of the Epsiion Phi and Sigma Iota Sigma sororities. The Business Girls Club held its dinner meetings every Wednesday evening, were hostess at a meetirg ta the other business girl's dubs (Continued on Page 3.)

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The miracle of ihe survival of the Jewish people is unprecedented in the history of the World. Persecuted* robbed, and massacred by every nation among whom they Synagogues and Temple to Have Appropriate Services for lived since their dispersion up to the present time, yet are they in the front rank of every Holidays endeavor of civilization, be that science, art, industry, finance or commerce. iTkey are and inspiring services liberal contributors toward the alleviation of the needy and sick. Many< o^/itieir leaders at Appropriate the Temple and Synagogues thia evening, will usher in the New Year. are among the world*s outstanding figures. Services at Mount Sinai Temple will begin at 8 o'clock tonight. Rabbi Lewis will address the congregation on the subject "Let us Have Faith." Saturday morning, the service will begin at 10 o'clock. The sermon subject will be "The Price of Life." Shaare Zion Synagogue will begin its Rosh Hashonah Service at 6:30, this evening. Rabbi Rabinowitz will chose as the subject of his sermon God We Are Here!" SaturIt gives me much pleasure to greet the Jewish citizens of our city and ihe Jewish "Thank day morning the services will begin people generally on ihe occasion of their New Tear's Day—a day of great solemnity at 7:30 o'clock, and the sermon will be and of self evaluation in communion with their Maker, and to sincerely wish them a full "What About the Spiritual Depression.** Saturday evening:, Rabbi Rabmeasure of happiness and prosperity. inowitz will speak on "Judaism in Wholesale," and Sunday morning his subject will be "The Character of Rosh for their home in Phoenix. Mrs. Krol- Hashonah in the Twentieth Century." off was formerly, Miss Sara Mosow. At the Shaare Zion Synagogue, Cantor Pliskin will chant the ritual. Rabbi and Mrs. Lewis will be at Mr. and Mrs. Preston Heller of Rabbi Rabinowitz will give the interhome to members of Mount Sinai Chicago, and Mrs. Babette Shakman pretation of the ritual prayers, and Congregation, Sunday, September 13, The first B'nai B'rith meeting of at 1927 Heights Avenue, from three of New York City, guests in the Ben Dr. S. Kline will blow the Shofar. Schulein home, were honored at a din- Tephereth Israel Synagogue will the season will be held in the Jewish to six o'clock in the afternoon. ner party Tuesday evening, when Mr. have Cantor Edward Schiff chant the Community Center, Tuesday evening, The Holiday Season will bring a and Mrs. Emil Rosenstock and Mr. holiday service. Services will also be September 15. Burnell Eoolish, bril- number of guests to Sioux City this and Mrs. Hyman Fishgall entertained held at the Beth Abraham and Adas liant Sioux City orator and debater week end. at the Sioux City Country d u b . The Yeshuren Synagogues. will speak on "American Delusions." evening was devoted to bridge. Xoolish, who is a law student at the University of Minnesota, won a mon- Mr. and Mrs. Archie Herzoff, whose Bertha Heshelow at her home Friday etary prize last year, speaking on marriage was an event of this week evening, on the occasion of her birthMr. and Mrs. Ben Schulein and Mrs. will come here from Chicago, to spend this subject. day. S. Schulein entertained 30 friends at the Holidays with the former's parBridge and dancing formed the evePlans for the corning year will be ents, Mr. ana Mrs^A. M, Herzoff. a 7 o'clock dinner in the Country Club, discussed at the ^meeting. - Commit- lira. Herzaff was formerly Miss Thursday evening, honoring: their ning's diversion. " •' tees will be announced for the Annual Marion Lowenstein. guests, Mr. and Mrs. Heller and Mrs. Yom Kippur Dance, which is schedulShakman. The Misses Leah and Sophie Rezed for Monday, September 21, at the The evening hours were spent innick of Chicago, visited friends and Mr. and Mrs. Joeffrey will stop in Hotel Martin. formally. relatives in the city, Labor Day. Sioux City from Chicago enroute to to their home in Phoenix, Arizona, visit with Mr. and Mrs. Herz- Miss Dorothy Gelson and Miss Shaare Zion Religious also. toMrs. Hiss Florence Major is visiting Strauss was Miss Leah Mary Edelman entertained at a bridge with friends in Chicago, this week. School Registration Herzoff, before her manage last Sun- party, Saturday evening, honoring Ida Edelman and Mary Rozofsky, who will day. Registration for the Religious Mr. and Mrs. Jules Kroloff will ac- leave for Iowa CSty next week to Ben Pill, of Chicago is visiting1 at School of Shaare Zion Synagogue, company Mr. and Mrs. Straus to visit resume their studies. the home of his father, Mr. Max Pill which opened September 7, will con- with Mrs. KrolofFs parent's, Mr. and in Le Mars, Iowa, and friends in Sioux tinue on Sunday morning, October 20. Mrs. Sam Mosow, before departing A number of friends surprised Miss! City. The teaching staff includes the Misses Sadie Ginsburg, Both Bernstein, Frances Emlein, Ida Heshelow and Evelyn Kuntz.

If proof were needed of the indomitable spirit and energy of the Jewish race, their recent achievements in their ancient homeland under the most trying natural and political obstacles, furnish it most abundantly. Malaria infested swamps converted into orchards laden with golden fruit, modern garden cities and villages springing up as if by magic. Hospitals and health centers established throughout the country at their own expense and by their own efforts, but free to the non-Jew alike. Such is the spirit and achievement of the Jewish people if given but a small chance and opportunity.

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"The Jasz Singer" a widely known musical melodrama will be presented here in November, under the auspices of the Ladies Auxiliary of Shaare Zion Congregation. This organization sponsors a revue each year, the proceeds of which are turned to the Synagogue. Announcement of the cast, which was chosen this week, will be made in an earily issue of The Jewish Press. Mr. H. H. Buntley will direct the presentation.

AS PRESENTS) BY

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Year Greetings

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ROSH HASHONAH SERVICES ARE TO START TONIGHT

Prague.—(J. T. A.)—The Jewish Colonization Association is urged by the Czecboslovakian Jewish newspaper, Zidovska Zprevy, to launch Jewish color ition movement in the Carpathian section of Czechoslovakia, for the purpose of relieving thousands of Czechoslovakian Jews in large and small towns from starvation. The settling of Jews on land is the only, way left for saving the Czechoslovakian Jews from extreme privations, the paper asserts. At present there is stall some free land left in the Carpathian part of Czechoslovakia which can be obtained from the government for low prices. The Jewish Colonization Association is therefore invited to establish a contact with the Jewish communities in Carpatho-Russia, in order to obtain that land for Jewish settlement, also to co-operate with the government so as to make sure that no legal difficulties will arise.

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To all our friends—of every faith and creed—• whose good-will and patronage has played such an important part in the gratifying success of this first year of the new management, we offer our hearty thanks and our sincere assurance that during the coming year, as in all years past— You Can Always Do Better at

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New Year's .Edition—THE JEWISH FRESS-rFriday, September IT, 1031 ^

Page Two

By R A B B I H.OEl. RABINOWITZ

THE STORY OF JEWISH LEARNING IN SIOUX CTFY

Slant City an3 Council Bluffs Section local Talmud Torahs after the reg-Bar Mitzvah. The results of the ular school hours. The curriculum Talmud Torah courses are far from of the Talmud Torahs goes no satisfactory. The attitude of infurther than the Pentateuch. And difference on the part of South among those who do attend the Tal- African Jewish ' parents toward the mud Torahs only a very small portion question of Jewish education it continue their Jewish education after largely at fault for this.

ByRABBI THEODORE N . LEWIS '.One of the many beautiful Talof MOUNT SINAI TEMPLE mudic legends tells us that when God was .about" to give the Torah to the Grave and immediate ' Penetrating students of people of Israel, He asked them for 1 danger confroMs the religphilosophy of history exa , pledge, or guarantee that ih*ey would consecrate, and hold the, Torah iousj educational, and cliar?plain the phenomenon of as their holiest and most sacred pos- itable institutions of AmeriJewish survival throughout session. tlie many centuries of traThe ancient Israelites replied that can Israel. The depression they would give, as .a guarantee the has caused a serious shrinkvail and agony to be tJie reFour Mothersof Israel, Sarah, Rebesage in their incomes. Many sult of the deep sense of opca, Kachael, and Leah. timism and hope that cliar"The four mothers of * Israel are donors have cut drastically dead," God replied. "I cannot accept their contributions, and acterizes the Jew from time 201-221 W. Riverside Ave. them as pledges of faith in the some have eliminated from immemorial. The Jew in the Phone 87555 Torah." ."Accept, then, the prophets of their budget all charity. siough of despondency Israel! They will be our pledge of \iiever gave up the hope of 'American Israel should faith and loyalty to the Torah." winning the. battle of life. not permit its necessary in' "They, too, are dead," God cried. fOur children," cried the fathers The optimism of being an stitutions to suffer, nor comWASHING OUR JEWISH FRIENDS of Israel. "We will give thee our eternal people buoyed the pel them to curtail their our children! They shall be our guarA HAPPY NEW YEAR antee. By their lives shall we keep various activities by stringdrooping spirit of Israel the Torah sacred and holy. By iheir .even when the clouds were ent and harmful economies. lives shall the light of the Torah be so impenetrable to the rays Our schools should continue to function as effectively and perpetuated throughout the ages." From generation to generation have extensively as before. Our philanthropies should be enof the hiding sun that the fathers of Israel kept their prom- abled to dispense aid even more liberally than previously. gloomy prophets predicted ise. From the child who first, learns Distributors the total eclipse of the sun to be permanent. the Aleph Beth to the grown pupil Our synagogues should be generously supported in the OLDSMOBILE CARS who can recognize the beauty of the Bosh HashonaJi focused this sense of profound optim- ancient Talmudic lessons for himself, future as in the past, so that they may continue their work 313-19—7th Street Sioux City, Iowa ism.so as to become almost tangible. With the arrival of the ranks of Jewish children who unimpaired, and bring the message of hope and religious have studied the Torah unceasing- inspiration to the millions of American Jews. Bosh Hashonah the eye of the Jew peeped, into the distant ly throughout the march of years, atWe liave faith that the New Year will be a happy one. &XXSStt9ttattCSSX3ttttC%KS£X^^ and obscure future beholding bright visions of righteous- test to the truth of this beautiful We have faith that the gloom that now envelops humanity &SSS»iXSS&$SSXX%SSS^^ ness and truth becoming salient forces in the life of man- legend. In every city of any size religious will soon be dispelled and that light will follow in if* stead. kind. On New Year the keen, realistic and practical sense education Best Wishes for a is becoming increasingly Of the Jew gave way to an idealistic and poetic one. In one significant. The children of Sioux Let us act on this postulate of faith. Let us support genHAPPY NEW YEAR sweep he surveyed the entire panorama of life, and saw City are fortunate in having Hebrew erously and willingly, the local, national, and international teachers who are idealists and cul- institutions which we Jwve erected in the course of many From that despite the many failures and ugly stains there was in tured Talmudists. it much •woi'thwhileness to be hopeful for and even bleed for. With excellent tutelage a number years at a great expenditure of energy and effort. The of Sioux City boys, attaining the age more we give the more will we receive. Never did Bosh Hashonah bear so much meaning to of thirteen, have celebrated their Bar {he Jews of the world as the present one. Our cup of suf- Mitzvahs during the past' year. Another important Jewish inthem are Newton' Sacks, Isa- and of the local population, mostly 500 Perry Street fering is overflowing; our back is almost breaking with the. Among dore Shindler, Jack Merlin, Jacob British, a certain number is leaving stitution has been closed here reSIOUX CITY, IOWA load of grief and humiliation wiiich an unkind world piled Zeligson, Benjamin Levine, Meyer the country. Emigration exceeds cently because of lack of funds. This immigration. Even among those upon it. Our body politic and social is full of sore spots. Shafer, Marvin Cohen, Lester Lazrio- Jewish immigrants who managed to is the Hebrew high school. The ICE CREAM wich, Walter Woskoff, Melvin Rosenquestion of Jewish education is one The many plasters applied by astute politicians and good feld, Henry Greenberg,' and Joseph enter the country before the quota of the most serious of all problems law went in effect, some had to go of South African Jewry. Jewish will preachers make us nigh a laughing stock in the eyes of Devine. back, since they found it impossible education here is at a very low A large class completed the course the world. We therefore look forward to 5692 to bring us to establish themselves in South plane. A comparatively small numoffered by the Talmud Torah, and •• true medicaments which are prescribed in the.great Medical were graduated with appropriate ex- Africa. ber of Jewish children attend the ercises. The graduating class included Book of Man, the Bible, "love thy neighbor as yourself." A HAPPY NEW YEAR Tillie Shindler, Annabell Emlein, TilWe pray and hope that ilie New Year will bring lieal- lie Franklin, Sarah Sadoff, Isadore ing to the entire human family, and especially to suffering Shindler, Irving Maron, Jack Merlin, BEST NEW YEAR WISHES Perry Osnowitch, Lester Lazriowich, Israel. May we all recognize the divine blessings of peace Benjamin Sacs, Nathin Feinberg, From and righteousness, whieh our social order stands in such Henry Ginsberg and Archie Kantor. I. G. JACOBSON Mount Sinai Religion School, holdgreat need of. ing its sessions every Sunday mornFur Designer ing offered its pupils a course in Hebrew in' addition to the customary in. 702 Pierce St. Phone 86497 money, from a number of husbandArrest Schadchen Who Took Money But Found No Husbands seeking women whom he failed to struction in Jewish history. Seven MILLER AND GREENBERG provide with mates. One woman children were confirmed in the latter New York.—(J. T. A.)—Max Hoz- charges him with having taken $1,- part of May. The class included Lil1212 Fourth Street faisky of Brooklyn is a laundryman by 300 on the promise to get her a hus- lian and Annette Baker, Norman Irade and a schadchen by desire and band who, failed to materialize. Six Brodkey, Abe Cohen, Bernard Marks, SIOUX CITY, IOWA this desire got him into trouble when other women have made eimilar Harriet Rosenbluna and Melvin Rosenfeld: he was arrested on charges of taking charges.* Eleanor Prusiner was the winner «SXXSXSSXSSSXX^^ Best Wishes for a of an essay contest sponsored by the Sunday School. HAPPY AND New Year's Greeting^ The Religious School of Shaare Zion Synagogue, with its instruction PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR Heartiest Wishes - t o our .«:'•in Jewish history and ethics, conFrom ['„.•'.•*"'.'.'. firmed the largest class in its history. _ _ • , - •*.*_' FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR The class included Dorothy Mazor, Jexvish Friends and Patrons ~ Ethel Shindler, Fanny Zifkin, Rosabell Wigodsky, Leah Herman, Inez Leaff, and Goldie Devine. The conr firmation exercises took place on ShaSIOUX CITY, IOWA buoth eve. Miss Dorothy Mazor was president" of the classi • V r

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DEPRESSION HITS JEWISH PEOPLE OF SOUTH AFRICA "Land of Gold" Finds Amount of Charity Steadily Increasing Johannisburg, South Africa—The general* economic depression which holds sway in Europe^ and America hasn't passed South Africa by. Overproduction in farm products and the lack, of markets have brought South African agriculture to a precarious stage. From the farm the crisis ha3 spread to the whole city, where the Jewish population is a prominent factor in the economic system. Here, the crisis has assumed a different form from that in Europe I or America. There Is no white laboring class here, since all menial i work is done by the blacks. XJnemI ployment therefore among whites is j not so evident. But on the othet hand the number of "poor whites," as they are called here, is quite considerable. The closing of the country to Jewish immigration' has hardly improved the situation. On the contrary, the situation today is even worse. Statistics show that after the passage cj£ the immigration restriction laws the white population has declined. New immigrants are not arriving,

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New Year's Edition—-THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11,1931

Fage Hiree dent; Mrs. L H. Levin, secretary, and the "playground of the congregation" sponsored one of the largest social Mrs. S. L Skalovsky, treasurer.

events of the season, a dinner dance. The affair, given in the social hall of the synagogue was presented in In addition to its monthly meet- true Russian style from decoration* ings held in the Shaare Zion Syna- and program to the menu. gogue, fee Kadima correctly styled as (Continued on Page 4.)

The Kadima dob

FELICITATIONS i (Continued from Page 1.) of the city, and gave their annual Mother and Daughter Banquet. :, The Alumni Hebrew Club was under the direction, of-Mr. J. Aizenberg and Mr. Louis Schilling, while Mr. Isadore Mirowitz led the group of boys in the Marshall Club.

CHARITY 225 families, involving 510 individuals, received material aid from the Federation. Food, clothing, tent, and coal were supplied to these needy people. 12 of these families were dependent upon the Federation for absolutely every necessity in life. Others were given aid for short periods. Twenty people were provided with hospital care by the Federation. :The Free Loan Fund has been instrumental in re-establishing 17 families. This is a commendable undertaking since it lessens the suffering and hardships of those in need who could not bring themselves to accept charity. A great number of- national institutions are given an annual allocation by the Federation, which serves as a clearing house for the Sioux City Jews in this instance. The Talmud Torah is also subsidized by the Federation.

THE BUILDING FUND With no other means than the Annual carnival for raising funds, the Building Fund is accumulating a sum which is bringing the realization of the building of a New Community Center, nearer, as each year goes by. Mr. Max Friedman was the general chairman of the Annual "Carnival/held last May in the Auditorium. "•••..•'.--..'

OFFICERS

ing staff is conducted with dignity and pride; The registration numbers over 100. The following young women made tip the faculty last year: Neomi Horvritz, Johanna Weinberg, Bozena Sacks, Rosalie Sacks', Anna Pill, Beatrice Pill, Gladys Weinberg, Sadia Shulkin, Ruth'Marx and Freda Albert.

:... In the course of the past year, it was the privilege of . the Jewish Press to carry in its columns the announcements of a number of marriages. To those who chose the year of 5691 for this sacred event, the Jewish Press extends its heartiest congratulations and good wishes for all that goes toward making marital happiness.

The Sisterhood The membership of the Mount Sinai Temple Sisterhood met last year on ihe first Friday of each month. The meetings were opened with a one o'clock luncheon, and included the business meeting and program. The Sisterhood is organized in the interests of the Temple, and no incident is too small, nor any problem too weighty to occupy its attention. The group entertained members of •flie Omaha Temple Israel Sisterhood last winter, at the annual reciprocity day. Later in the season a number of the members spent the day in Omaha where they were guests of that Sisterhood. One of the most worthwhile projects of. the year's program was the organization of the Book Review Circle which met once a month!. Current books, both fiction and non fiction, were discussed at these meetings. Other affairs of the year included a card party and a cafeteria supper. Mrs. J . H. Greenberg Is the President of the Sisterhood,.Mrs. A,~I. Sacks, -vice president; Mrs. L. Goldberg, secretary, and Mrs. H. Fishgall, treasurer.

Mount Sinai Brotherhood

The responsibility borne by the officers of the Federation is tremendous. These men and women have given unstintingly of their time and energy. The co-operation of the entire Jewish community has made their work joyous and successful. . Mr. A. M. Davis served the Federation last year as President. Miss Rose Lipman has just completed her third year as superintendent. Other officers include E. E. Baron, Mrs. E. E. Baron, A. L. Galinsky and Mrs. E. H. Einlein, vice presidents; Mr. Max Brodkey, secretary; and Mr. Mike Skalovsky, treasurer.

Miss Rose Shamberg and Mr. David Katzman Miss Bess Greenberg and'Mr. Abe Kavich Miss Bloomye Weinstein and Mr. Sidney lindenbaum Miss Betty Zelinsky and Mr. Henry Krasne Miss Rose Brodsky and Mr. David Grand Miss Dorothy Chisen and Mr. Charles Qsheraff Miss. Marion Fantle and Mr. Abram Schimmel Miss Elizabeth Singer and Mr. Meyer Epstein Miss Bertha Mittenberg and Mr. Abraham Still man Miss Gitil Levin and Mr. Harry Falk Miss Rose Dale and Mr. Joe Rosenberg Miss Molly Glatstein and Dr. J. M. Krigsten Miss Mildred Lew and Mr. Joe Miller Miss Thanya Broscow and Mr. Leon Shulkin Miss Lucile Rubenstein and Mr. Maurice Kaplan Miss Gertrude Kxoloff and Mr. Ben Herzoff

Shaare Zion

does not mark an important event in speakers Rabbi David Goldstein of Omaha, Rabbi C. H. Kovar, of Denthe activities of the Synagogue. Despite economic conditions, the ver, Rabbi Harry Jolt of Lincoln, and membership committee, : which was Rabbi Herman Cohen of St. PauL headed by Mr. Max Friedman, en- Other outstanding services during rolled fifteen new -members in the the year have been the Mother Day congregation. According to Mr. Fried- Service, The Junior Congregation man, the committee has not yet com- Service and the Confirmation Service. pleted its work, but is still active. Through the generosity of its Large congregations on Friday members a new Canopy was given to evenings, capacity audiences on the the Synagogue, and a large ChandeHigh Holy "Days; and an encouraging lier, which was goven by the Eruegattendance at all social functions of er family in memory of Mr. J. N. the synagogue are in harmony with Krueger, was installed. Rabbi H. R. Rabinowitz, spiritual the great interest the members have leader of the Synagogue has repredisplayed during the past year. A unique part of the year's pro- sented Sioux City Jewry at a number gram provides for Saturday morning of meetings and events during the services for the children of the Con- year. During the State Convention of gregation. This Junior Congregation the Woman's club, held last winter, meets every Saturday morning when he spoke before the Literature Divisthe Seniors have completed their hour ion on the Jew in Literature, of worship. Jack Merlin headed the Junior Congregation last year. Other officers included Idbbie Olensky, vice president; Jennit Shindler, secw retary, and Isadore-Shindler, treasurThe zeal and enthusiasm of its er. The entire service is conducted by the children. Joseph Maron acted as Cantor during the year. The Religious School plays an important part in the work of Shaare Zion. 115 children are divided into s i classes. On the faculty are the Misses Dena Baron, Dorothy Merlin, Bhuna Olensky, Ida Edelman, Ida Heshelow, Dorothy Moscow and Frances Emlein. Shaare Zion Synagogue was privileged to number among its guest

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Brotherhood, comMount posed of the members of the Temple congregation, held monthly meetings during the last year. A regular feature of the program was a brief discussion of Current Events !>y Rabbi Lewis. The second night of Passover, the Brotherhood sponsored a Congregational Seder. Children of the Religious School participated in this, joyous; event, which was the first of its kind for many years. During the inid winter school vacation, the Father and Son Banque.t, an annual event, was held. Mr. Stewart Gilman addressed the audience at this affair. Mr. Morris Pill is the president of The religious year of Mount- Si- this group. nai Temple opened auspiciously last fall with the High Holy Days services, and the large attendance on Much of the religious, social, and those days, set a high standard for cultural life of Sioux City's Jewry the entire year. The Temple's entire program dur- finds its center in the Shaare Zion ing 5691 was marked with unusual Synagogue. No month passes by that enthusiasm and interest on the part of the members and the affiliated organizations, the Brotherhood and the Sisterhood. Recognition was given the large increase in membership when Rabbi and Mrs. -Lewis tendered a reception during the month of May, honoring To please and merit your confidence to the extent the new members. that it wiH be otar pleasure to supply your complete One of the. outstanding events of table requirements in the year, was the Rotary Service. This service was held in the Temple, and all local Rotary members were GROCERIES invited to attend. Reverend Austin FRESH AND CURED MEATS Pardue of the St. Thomas Episcopal FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Church and Rabbi Lewis, both Rotarians, spoke. The service was significant because of the opportunity it gave so many non Jewish Sioux Cityans to witness a Jewish hour of worship. Rabbi Theodore N. Lewis, spiritual leader of the Temple, was paid signal honor, when the Graduating Class of Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota, Minnesota Central High School chose him, by a large majority, to deliver the Baccalaureate Service, during Commencement week. His eloquence, sincerity and kindly nature make him ever in demand as a speaker, and during the past year he fulfilled 35 public engagements for both local and out of town organizations. The Religious School of Mount Sinai Temple, with its carefully planned curriculum and paid teach-

Mount Sinai Temple

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Page Four,

New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESSrrFriday, September 11, 1931

Sioux City and Council Bluffs Section of the J. N. F. Council. Other offi- Mr. if. Lazriowich, treasurer. An e x cers include Mrs. J. N. Krueger, vice ccutive body of ten members assists president; Louis Schilling, financial in directing the activities of the secretary and treasurer, and Mr. Abegroup. Stiilman, recording secretary. In ad dition to the officers, a governing directorate of 18 members assists in plans for the year. The Pioneer Women's Club, part of a national organization, worked together with the Poale Zion, and N a . T h e Poale Zion, gathering at thi tional Workers Alliance during the homes of members once a week, de- past year, and has achieved much tovotes its meeting to discussions on wards its goal in giving assistance to Hebrew culture, activities, and ideals. the Chalutzos, Palestine's staunch : Mr. L Levin is secretary of th hearted women, who are working togroup which is one of National or ward the upbuilding of a Jewish ganization. The. purpose of the Poali Home land. Zion is assisting in a material way (Continued on Page 6.) in the re-establishment of a Jewisl Home Land.

Active Commtvncdly

Pioneer Women

" (Continued from Page 3.)

distress, the interest of world Jewry as well as that of the individual mem The Kadima club also sponsored her of our race, is deeply imbedded the Kiddie contest which revealed in his heart. Because of this conmuch . talent among the children. sciousness of the brotherhood of man, Morey Lipshutz heads this active is the work of the B'nai Brith Lodge group as president. I. H. Levin is so far reaching and so commendable. the vice president; Mrs. Eli Robinow, The Sioux City Lodge has done its secretary, and Mr. Eli Robinow, share in the work of the National treasurer. organization. Its program during the year has been inclusive enough to stir the interest of a great number of men. As a result of an intensive membership Mr: and Mrs. Harry L. Bonus, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Rubach, a son Mr. and Mrs. Max Friedman, a son Cultural and Social meetings make campaign a large number of candiMr. and Mrs. Eli Robinow, a son Mr. and Mrs. Philip Fein, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Rodin, a daughter up the year's program for the dates were inducted into the lodge. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Fish, a son Mr. and Mrs. William Raskin, a son, Daughterhood of "Shaare Zion. This Mr. William Sultan, President of DisMr. and Mrs. Abe Finkenstein, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Singer, a son group of young women provides a trict Six, was the guest of honor Mr. and Mrs. Henry Harlow, a son Mr. and Mrs. Paul Silver, twin sons The National "Worker's Alliance at this large meeting, which was held common interest for a number of Mr. and Mrs. Max Jacobs, a daughter Rabbi and Mrs. H. R. Rabinowitz, a daughter exists primarily for tbe interest in the Davidson Tea Eoom. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Kaplan, a son Mr. and Mrs. Sam Sperling, a daughter Jewish girls. The club, which is pracmaintains in Palestine. The members Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaplan, a daughter Mr. Max Kroloff spoke at the Anr Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Stern, a daughter tically a Junior Ladies Auxiliary, cenMr. and Mrs. Mark Krueger, a son carry insurance, sponsored by the Mr. and Mrs. Morris Stein, a son nual Banquet held in the Communrty ters its interest in the Synagogue. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Lesser, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Morris Sperling, a daughter National Workers Alliance, which is 'enter. At this affair, which was atMrs. A. H. Baron is the advisor Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Undenbaum, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Max Washerman, a son a chapter of the national organizatended by 300 members and friends, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Levin, a son of the group. The Daughterhood Mr. and Mrs. Morris Miller, a daughter tion. The profits go toward the upMr. and Mrs. Milton Mushkin, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Ben Adelstein, a son was headed last year by Miss Bluma Mr. Hi. N. Grutskin was initiated as Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mushkin, a son Mr. and Mrs. Dave Ginsberg, a son building of Palestine. President. Other officers are Morey Olensky. Other officers included Rose The local chapter meets twice J Shiloff, vice president; Jessie Slut- Lipshutz, vice president; Leon Dobmonth, and it can truly be said iha sky, secretary, and Delia Shiloff, rofsky, corresponding secretary; A. these meetings form one of the fin uttleman, recording secretary, and treasurer. ,. Abe Pill, treasurer.; Trustees include est of Sioux City's cultural groups, The club sponsored the Mother's the following: H. Levin, A. I. Sacks, The programs are given over to de WS9^S)KC%£**KK*K$)tttttti^^ Day Program held in the Shaare Zion bates, lectures and studies in Hebrew Synagogue last spring, and its mem- and B . H . Emlein. Rabbi H. R. Rabibers were hostesses to the mothers nowitz and Rabbi Theodore Lewis are cember. At that time the Judas Mac- tion of the members, the year was bers sponsor a Flower Day, an annual culture, as well as plans for raising at a reception following the service. Honorary Trustees. cabeeidegree -was conferred on sev- brought to a successful close at a Flag Day, J. N. F. Stamps are sold funds for their work. The Dramatic Club sponsored by lral members. A. 2 . A. Sabbath was dinner in the Sara Davis Tea Room. before the various holidays. the Worker's Alliance has successful zelebrated at Mount Sinai Temple. Other officers last year included Ann A number of benefit bridge par- ly presented several Yiddish plays Two: dances were given last year, and Pill, vice president; Elizabeth Raskin, ties are given during the year by the during the year. Mr. Jack London served as presi- ilans are now under way for the preThree orthodox Synagogues provide recording secretary, and Sally Gor- young people. Officers are Mr. Louis Shilling, rei place of worship for the older dent of the Talmud'Torah Board dur- sentation of a play this winter. chow, corresponding secretary. members of Sioux City's Jewish Com- ing the past year.'Other officers in- . The Sioux City chapter sent a basMr. Joseph Aizenberg is president cording and financial secretary, and naunity. Rabbi M. Braver occupies clude J. Rodin, secretary, and R. H. etball team, a debating squad and a the pulpit of the Adash Yeshuren mlein, treasurer. The Board of Di- representative in the oratorical diSynagogue, located at Seventh and rectors includes Rabbi H. R. Rabin- vision, to the district meet held in The outstanding activity of. the Wall Streets. Mr. M. Levich served iwitz, A. Stillman, Sam Lipman, A. Lincoln. Zionist Organization last year was the congregation as president^ last W. Kaplan, M. Lazriowich, William Isadore Mirowitz is president of the Protest Meeting, held in Shaare year. Oiher officers were A. Kozberg, Kantor, Barney Baron, A. Mazie, M. ;he organization. Morris Lefkovich is Zion Synagogue, following the andee president; J. Kaplan, secretary.; Hendlyn and A. Greenberg. nouncement of the Passfield White Two large functions are sponsored vice president; Sam Berman, secre- Papers. The meeting was attended by Max Holland, treasurer. Mr. M. Karitrovich, Mr. I. Lelchook and Mr. M.by the Talmud Torah during the tary; Morris Marsh, treasurer; Sam over 500 people. Mr. Wallace Short Rozofsky are trustees. _•'••••' ear. The first tihe Annual Dance, is Epstein, senior sergeant at arms; and Rabbi H. R. Rabiuowitz were Ray Barish, junior sergeant at arms, Mr. Paul Kaplan served the Beth )ne of the outstanding, events on the ,nd Lawrence Silverberjp, reporter, among the speakers. Abraham Congregation lr.st year as ocial calendar. The young and old, be Beechen is chaplain. Mr. Edwin Shortly after the death of Nathan president. Other oficers of the Syn-alike, attend this affair, the proceeds Baron and Mr. Frank Margolin are Straus and that of Lord Melchett, the i gogue, which is located at West »f which are turned over to the gen- advisors of the boys. Zionist Organization sponsored a Sixth and Cook streets, are I. Frank- ral maintainence of the school. Home of the Two Pants Suit large memorial meeting. During the summer the Annual iin, vice president; Joe Gorchow, sec620 Fourth Street Mr. Dave Robin is the president of retary; Sam Denberg, treasurer, and Talmud Torah Picnic provides a the Zionist Organization. Mr. Nathan means of raising funds for the school. John Lewis, financial secretary. Sadoff is vice president; Louis ShillDetailed description of the work of ing, recording secretary; M. Hendlyn, The services of Mr. Edward Schiff, The Mothers Club is instrumental in *wnwigijararNWiiyip'iiui^ young and well known cantor, have both instances in the far reaching in- the Senior Hadassah, necessarily en- financial secretary; William Kantor, tails a lengthy account of the prog- treasurer. The executive committee been secured for »,he High Holiday ;erest and success of these events. ress in Palestine during tbe year, for includes' Rabbi H. - R. Rabinowitz, .worship at Tephereth Israel Synathe heart and soul of the Hadassah Rabbi Theodore N. Lewis, Mrs. H. A. gogue. Mr. Schiff made his initial member is entwined in the work of Rabinowitz, Mrs. J. N. Krueger, Mrs. ippearance as cantor of the congreThe local Aleph Zadik Aleph making Palestine a true home land R. H. Emlein, Mrs. B. Baron, Dr. B. gation this summer, and evoked much favorable comment. Mr. H. Lazero- Chapter, intent on making last year 'or the Jews of the world. In this gi- Courshon, H. Lazriowich, R. H. Em•vich is the President of Tephereth a worthy one for the organization, gantis task, assumed so earnestly by ein, J. Aizenberg, A. Greenberg, M. fsrael. Others who assist in govern- succeeded! admirably. Its program the Jewish women of America, the Brodkey, A. Goodsite, J. London, S. ng the policies of the congregation rarying from studies of Jewish cul- Sioux City chapter has indeed shoul- Slotsky, H. Miller, B. Shiloff, Sol ire Mr. Sperling, Mr. Gelfand, Mr. ;ure and tradition into the forensic dered its burden, and faithfully ful- Falk, B. Baron, I. Kuntz and M. Seff. It. Lazriowich,, and Mr. Sam Ratner. . 'ield and the realm of sports, was filled its obligation. diversified enough to hold the inter"The Healing of the Daughters of est of a great number of young ineh. My People," truthfully describes the Mr. Philip Klutnik, Omaha attor- purpose of the Hadassah, for its outney, was the principal speaker at the standing purpose is the upkeep of "When the Ben Brith is meeting a Eighth and Pierce Street brother member in good fellowship, International A. Z. A. Day, held in he health institutions in Palestine. During, the past few . years, the ts second purpose is to maintain and Jewish National Fund Council has bear ,when he is aiding a fellow Jew in the Shaare Zion Social Hall in itimulate interest in Zionism in come one of the foremost organizaAmerica. tions in the Sioux City community. The local chapter used several It is affiliated with the national J. means to obtain funds towards this N. F. organization, whose purpose it work, and a number of interesting is to redeem the land of Palestine for programs were presented last year. the Jewish people. In accordance with The first meeting of the season was the Ussiskin Five Year Plan, memiri the form of a luncheon at which bers of the Council have pledged to Mrs. William Lazere and Mrs. Barney raise $5,000 during the coming five Baron presented their reports on the years to purchase a tract of land in Distributors of convention of the previous year. The Palestine. They have set their an<> second big event on Hadassah's cal- nual quota for the next five years at DIAMOND AND NEVERNOX ETHYL GASOLINE endar was a card party. On Purim, $1,000 and if the enthusiasm evinced the Hadassah members held their an- by the workers is an indication that FULL KEROSENE FURNACE OIL nual bazaar, and the season was goal will be reached. The J. N. F~ closed with a luncheon, at which Mrs. CouncH distributes boxes in every Operating 11 Service Stations 819 West Fourth Street W. P. Witchner, of Kansas City, f«es- Jewish home for small collections 1 ident of the Southwest region, was during the year. In addition to this the principal speaker. Regular meet- means of raising money, the mem* ngs were held in the Jewish Community Center once a month. Mrs. William Lazere served the Hadassah as President ' last year. Other officers include Mrs. J. Levme, vice president; - Mrs. Harry Wigodsky, secretary, and Mrs, Charles Raskin, treasurer.

The Jewish home, made joyful by the presence of children is indeed a blessed one. Through them is the light of Israel perpetuated and the hearts of many made glad. It is with sincere congratulations, and true pleasure that the Jewish Press records the following births, during the year of 5691:

Daughterhood of Shaare Bon

Orthodox Synagogue

PoaleZkm

Jewish National Worker's Alliance

Talmud Torah

Zionist Organization

WISHING YOU A HAPPY NEW YEAR

610 Fourth St

A Happy New Year TO ALL! WATCH OUR WINDOWS

MORREY'S

Senior Hadassah

QREETINGS

Aleph Zadik Aleph

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NEW. YEAR'S GREETINGS

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Junior Hadassah Jewish young women of America, affiliated with the Junior Hadassah, have surely earned the description."A Joyful Mother of Children," for this large group of serious minded girls have undertaken the support of Meyer. ShVai, a children's village in Palestine. The local chapter of the Junior Hadassah ranks with the other chapters of the country in fulfilling the ancient injunction of caring for the orphan. Numerous money raising events were sponsored by the group to raise i t s quota for the year." Perhaps the largest project last year was the Orpheum Ticket Sale. Other affairs in eluded a large benefit bridge at the Martin, a benefit bridge at the Shore Acre Gardens, and numerous smaller benefits sponsored by individual

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Year's Edition—-THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September n ,

Sioux City aDd Council Bluffs SecHoa

Sioux City's Jewish Students Make an Impressive Record Jewish Youths Do Remarkably Well in All Fields of Endeavor

InM.emoriam Immortality o'ersweeps ' All pains, all tears, all time, all fears, and peals like the eternal thunders of the deep, Into my ears this truth— Thou livest forever! —Byron.

Eiaff jn addition io those who play In the orchestra. ! Among those singing in £he school choir are Bernard Lazriowich, Sam Schxihnan, Harry Zifkin, Harry Kan«fsky, Rose Shfloff, Dorothy Friedman, Charlotte Gelfand. The boys' glee dnb includes Henry Salzman, Abe Epstein, Ginsberg, George Shindler, Philip Mirken. The following take an active part in the Girls' Glee club: Rose Tester, Sarah Kaplan, Annette Baker, Inez Leaff, Rosabelle Wigodsky, Fannie ZSfkin.

Jennie Bolstrin, 50 Harry Marsh, 37 David Davidson, 67 Sidney Stein, 9 Louis Friedman, 37 Nellie Snovsky, 39 Louis Gutterman, 46 Jnlins Sirken, 50 Baby Kriv Feiga Sperling, 71 Zipa Krolof f, 67 Peter Wigodsky, 39 Ike Karp, 41 Bernice Leone Wolfson, < Jacob Kaplan, 68 Joseph P. Zelinsky, 50 Ben Manoeistam, 60

The past, year has added a great 1 The Jewish students have brought number of honors to those already many an honor to Central High won by the many Sioux City stu- School in the fieltl of debating and dents who spent their time in col- oratory. Abe Singer and Arnold Barleges, universities, and the local high' on won the decision for the Chrestoschool I t is a general role that Jew- mathian Club in their debate -with the ATHLETICS ish students rank high in scholastic Civic fraternity. Loyal Keir was a Martin Kronick, Isadore Liberman, achievements, and Sioux City stu- member of the winning Chresto team, Sam Epstein and Sol Kronick won dents have done creditably in the when it debated the opposite side of distinction by their outstanding fields of music, forensics, and ath- the same subject. The school debating achievements in Athletics at the Unisquad numbered in its members Arn- versity of Iowa. Epstein won his letics as well as scholarship. Miss Delia Galinsky, daughter of old Baron, Loyal KeiT, Marvin Jflass monogram in Basketball, while the Mr. and Mrs. Herman GaBnsky, and Max Maron. two Kronicks and Is Liberman won lish banking and financial circles. head of the firm of E. D. Sassoon and achieved unusual distinction by her Such action, when carried out, will Company he controls banking intermedals for their track work. MUSIC graduation from the School of MediAt the University of Minnesota break a continuous link of business ests, real estate enterprises, cotton "The Richest Child Is Poor With-] cine at the University of Iowa. Miss Leonard Weiner won the University activity in India which the Sassoons factories and a considerable mercanout Music" has indeed been the slohave maintained for over a century, tile venture in exports and imports. . Galinsky is the only young woman of Doubles Tennis Championship. the Jewish community to complete a gan of Sioux City's Jewish boys and Not content to let their older broth- and which has brought them to their Of late he has shown a great interest medical course. She has not made girls. A great number of them are ac- ers claim all honors, Centralites did present distinction as one of the out- in aviation. During the war, Sir Victive in the music circles of Central tor, though handicapped by a bodily definite plans for her interneship. their share in the school's athletic standing families in the Empire. High, and several have brought hondeformity had joined the colors as a Sir Victor himself is noted as one program. Herbert Baumstein, half FORENSICS or to the school in recent contests. member of the Eoyal Air Force. of the wealthiest of Britishers. As back; Abe Epstein, end; Joe Goldber, Burnell Koolish, a student at the Gisela Pill represented Central in guard; and Sidney Baumstein, team ^University of Minnesota, continued the sub district music contest in the manager, did much toward helping his brilliant scholastic career by win- 'Cello division. After winning first the football team win its victories. ning one honor after another in the place in ihis contest, she represented Herbert Baumstein also played on the field of forensics. He placed first in the district at Ida Grove, and by basketball team. the University Orator: f~l Contest winning there was entitled to play in Epstein and Baumstein won monowith his oration on "Am* can De-the State tournament at Iowa City. grams in the track meet, the former lusions." When the students partici- Both she and Herman Wolf were in the shot put and discus throw, and pated in the University Extempo- members of the String quartette the latter in the javelin throw. Arnraneous Contest, Burnell captured which placed third in the* State Con- old Baron was a member of the the prize, speaking on "Communism test at Iowa City. Chresto basketball team. -.Threatens the United States." He JOURNALISM Others who are active in music at went to Columbus as a member of Marvin Klass and Dave Wigodsky the University Debating Team, and Central include Sam Osheroff, Leah participated in the Big Ten Oratoric- Herman, Sam Janowitch, Irvin Lunin, were on the Central High Annnal sl .contest at Madison. Koolish is Earl Novich, Lucille Kronick and Board. Loyal Keir, Abe Singer, Julia j president of the Minnesota chapter of Will Kaplan. These boys and girls Bereskin were on the Record Board., At the close of the year Sulamith ; the Menorah Society and the Sigma play in the school orchestra. Alpha Mu Prternity. The band personnal includes Jay Bereskm was elected Editor of the High School Board. In addition to these students, Neoma Sacks was also a member of the Journalism Honorary ety. •

Page Five

Hicem Prober Gives Report on Mr. Aronstsin nas already reported on Santiago de Chile, the capital city. Immigration PossiBis present report deals chiefly with bilities Valparaiso. Valparaiso is toe second largest New York.—(J. T. A.")—AnotheT re- city of Chile, with a population of port on the immigration possibilities about 300,000. It is the chief export available in the Republic of -Chile, center of the country. The Jewish South America, has been received by residents are for the most part enthe local office of the Hias from I. gaged in trade, either in the far inAronstam, representative of the com- dustry, the furniture and dry goods bined Hias, lea and Emigdireet (the business and in the export trade. Hicem), and has just been made pub- Many of them are small merchants. lic The piece work system is well estabThe following extracts from the TC-lished here. A capable carpenter or port are specially stressed: "In al- tailor can earn as high as 15 to 25 most all the provincial towns there pesos a day; a shoemaker from 12 to is a dearth of skilled workers. There 18 pesos; a baker from 12 to 15 pesos; is also room for several small indus- and a mechanic or electrician from 20 tries, which could be introduced by to 25 pesos. The cost of living is Jewish handicraftsmen, living con- lower than in Argentine, especially in ditions are very much more reason- the cost of living accomodations.

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YEAR GREETINGS

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ART Morris Gordon, a student at the University of Nebraska, was the founder of the Sketch dob, which is now a part of the schools curriculnm. Gordon is on the art staff of the school's humor magazine, and a member of the Art society.

DRAMATIC ART DANCING. BMl.iotiQi'ZHnxttr

Florence J^arie Johnson Teacher of

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SEASON'S GREETINGS

A Happy New Year

SASSOON MAY SHIFT

To

FROM

London.—(J. T. A.)—The rumored] intention of Sir Victor Sassoon, emin-J ent British Jewish capitalist and a : distinguished member of the Sassoon] family, to transfer his business in-| terests from India to China has led to j many expressions of regret in Eng-

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Sarah J* Hanson Teacher of Piano

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Sioux City and Council Bluffs Section'

New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11, 1931

Page Six

Sioux City Jewry

the Jewish faith, the Budapest rab- gogue. In some cases the secession from the Jewish community was due binate declared. During 1930, a total of 393 Jews left to intermarriage. the Jewish faith in Hungary, the statement by the rabbinate points out. Nothing is stronger than aversion, Jewish deaths in Hungary average —Wycherley. one thousand a year more than Jewish births. Beauty without grace i s the hook The rabbinate also stated that no less than 30,000 members of the Jew- without the bait. Beauty, without ish community . never attend syna- expression, tires.—Emerson.

Yanks Are Coming

Hebrew Ladies' Friendship Society

Mrs. Sam Mosqw headed; the: Heirew Ladies Friendship Society lksb ear. Despite the fact that much of ;he charitable work of;; this pioneer (Continued from Page 4.) purpose of. raising funds for the organization is taken care of through Chalutzim and Chalutzos in Pales- >ther channels, i t holds its meetings ;wice monthly, and a number of womAmong the organizations import- tine.' have maintained their interest in ant activities in 5691 were the lunchattCXXXSttttttOtttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt^^ Mr. J. Baratz, a resident of Paleseon and mass meeting at which Miss tine, was one of the outstanding ;he group throughout its existence. Chana Chisik was the principal speak- guests " of the' Committee Ias$ year. . Mrs. Sam Iapinan is vice president er/ a Palestinian Bazaar, and a He spoke before a large group at a f the H. L. P. S, Mrs. Joe Shulkin is recording secretary;-Mrs,J. Bird, raffle. banquet held in the Jewish Communiwrresponding secretary; Mrs, B. Mrs. N. Widesky is the recording ty Center. aecretary.of the Pioneer Women; Mrs. The committee was successful last: iherman, treasurer* M. Sperling is the financial and cor- year in raising the sum of $825 toresponding, secretary, and Mrs. J.wards its goal. Among the means of fihindler is the treasurer. "The Yanks are coming!" is a cryi of the first group of American Chalraising the aioney were a bazaar, The Hebrew Mother's Association Flower Day and various small events. s not content t o rest on its laurels not of war but of peace and it is utzim from Detroit, Mich, heard nowadays in Palestine on the The above is a group picture of the w a y s in Pa Mr. Joseph Aizenberg, faculty >f years gone by, but is ever striving Detroit Pioneer Group. member of the Talmud Torah, arid for the betterment of Sioux City's occasion of the recent arrival there Hebrew SchooL The education of the The Geverkshaften Committee is ardent Zionist, ia president of the children has always been the Jewish retary, and Mr3. A. Maron, treasCommittee. Mr. Louis Shilling is vice mder the auspices of the Jewish Na103 Pearl Street Council Bluffs, Iowa tional Workers Alliance and the president and Mrs. Abe Stillman, mothers deepest concern, and the He- urer. brew • Mother's Association has done Poale Zion, and is organized for the treasurer. much toward this end. A bus haa been maintained by the organization to take the pupils of the During, the year; 5691 the Ivre club Talmud Torah to and from t h i was responsible for one of the largest school. The dub provides books and and inoet important social events" of material for the children of the the year, the Ivre Conclave. RepreFROM sentatives and members of the Ivre Rabbinate of Hungary Reports ichool. a Gra6<al Decline lub from Omaha, Lincoln and Des During the; summer the Hebrew There ffothers Association gave a picnic for Moines met for their annual meeting in Sioux City, this spring. Tours of he children of the' school, and also assisted -with the plans for the large the city, luncheons, smokers, and a Prague.—(J. T. A.)—The Jewish formal dinner dance were on the pro- population of Czecho-Slovakia has inAnnual Talmud Torab. picnic. gram of the conclave. creased from 353,978 to 365,768 during the last ten years, the statistical 21 Pearl Street Phone 219 Council Bluffs—Phone 147 office of the Czecho-Slovakian government announced. Giving aid and assistance to deCOUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA Omaha—Phone JAckson 6611 lassed Jews in "Russia, helping Its Three well organized groups of the The announcement also reveals that own members when in need, and fur- younger set, leave all worries, cares in the last decade 9,237 Jews left nishing' a worth while cultural pro- and business matters aside when Czecho-Slovakia for the United States. gram- for- those affiliated, are but a they meet and gather primarily for The highest point of Jewish emigra^Vj:i»£t3/2^vw^^^ few of the purposes of the Work- social purposes and recreational past tion from Czecho-Slovalria to the men's Circle. The local'branch, No. times. United States was reached in 1921 664, is-a chapter of the national orThe most elaborate social func- when the number of Jewish emigrants ganization. tions are sponsored by members of numbered 4,160. In 1930 there were FROM Sioux City's chapter of the Work- he' Question Club. Each holiday is only 233 Jews who left Czecho-Slomen's was instrumental in bringing a another reason for a Question Club vakia for the United States. number, of nationally known, speakers party, and interesting novelties are o the city. Officers of the group are introduced at each affair. Bhdapest.— The Jewish population^ dr. I. Singer, financial secretary; Mr. The Phi Epsilon Tau Sorority in Hungary generally i s decreasing Sokolsky, recording secretary; M. meets weekly at the homes of its owing to an increase in the death rate Shiloff,-loan secretary; Max Dervin, members, and has spent many a over the birth rate and the increas6th and Boadway Phone 327 treasurer,, and B. Rifkin. pleasant social hour during the past ingly large number of Jews who leave The executive board consists of M. year. ..>. . . . . ' . COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA ShiloffjE. Rosinofsky, L.Sfcolsky, E. Members of the Iota Tau Sorority The high light of this sorority's soYOU SAVE AND ARE SAFE TRADING HERB Elkin, J. Guttleman, B. Rifkin and I. are equally eager to make the most cial year was a semi-formal Yacht linger. of_ its time for, recreation, and meets Party, given on the verand^ of the weekly at the homes, of its members. Shore Acre Gardens.

'A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL!

f

MAYNE ENGINEERING COMPANY

Mother's Association

Electric Bine Printing Municipal and Drainage Engineers

Geyerkshaften Committee

CZECHOSLOVAKIA POPULATION OF JEWS INCREASES

i 5 | !

New Year's Greetings...

NEW YEAR GREETINGS

BIWDER-WcCARGAR CO. INSURANGE

Ben L Seldin Insurance of All Kinds

Workmen's Circle

Social Gabs

NEW YEAR GREETINGS

Taffe Drug Go.

Council Bluffs Furniture Department Store

We Lead In Prescriptions

FINE FURNITURE INTERIOR DECORATING

L

Workmen's Circle Auxfliary

Best Wishes for A Happy and Prosperous New Year

E. R. McDonnell Company INSURANCE OF A L L KINDS 120 South Mam Street Phone 1133 COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA

Buy Deco Goal SMOKELESS — — SOOTLESS LOTSOFHEAT

May the New Year of your fine racial and religious traditions bring to you all the joy and happiness that you have always wished ours to bring to us.

CLARK DRUG GO.

Very Sincerely,

Joe Smith & Company

THE

414-416 West Broadway Phone 92 COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA

2860 DROGE

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W E EXTEND TO YOU 1 A MOST CORDIAL NEW YEAR'S I GREETING 1

| Greenshields & Everest Co, | I | |

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.. Insurance of All Kinds' ^ ^ | : r

551 West Broadway COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA

Phone 151

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Best Wishes for A Happy and Prosperous New Year

I |

The Councfl Bluffs Mutual Bunding and Loan Association

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E. V. GUSTAFSON,Secretary 18 Pearl Street COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA

Phone 187 I 5 S

The Farane Auxiliary is organized for both charitable and social purposes. Last year funds were sent to a number of worthy institutions among them, the Denver hospitals. Mrs. Max Dervine was president of the Auxiliary during 5691. Other officers were Mrs. J. Lefkovich, vice president; Mrs. I. L. Klass, financial secretary; Mrs. M. I. Braver, recording secretary, and Mrs. H. Herman, treasurer.. One of the important events on the Auxiliary's calendar was a picnic held this summer in Riverview Park.

Daughters of Tephereth Israel The small group of women who organized the Daughterhood of Tephereth Israel have concentrated great deal of effort and enthusiasm during the short time they have been organized. With the interest of their synagogue, paramount in their mind, they have done much toward creating renewed, interest in the congregation as well as materially assisting this house of worship. In the thre* years of its organization the Daughterhood has complete ly refurnished the kitchen of thi synagogue. 250 can be accommodated with all facilities for banquets and dinners. Officers of the group are Mrs. Wm. Lazere, president; Mrs. I. Levin, vice | president; Mrs. M. Laziiowitch, secretary; Mrs. Levich, corresponding see-

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STORE

Phone 418 504 West Broadway COUNCIL fJLUFFS, IOWA &<!a^

The chief project of the S. C. Ind. 'arane is the upkeep of the Hebrew lemetery at Graceland Park. The or;anization first met in 1923. Officers include: E. L Stein, president; M. Kantrovich, vice president; B. Kaplan, financial secretary; Max Dervin, corresponding secretary; Morris Hall, treasurer, and H. Friedman, fabii.

Farane Auxiliary

Council Bluffg, Iowa

To Our Friends and Patrons A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR

A Happy New YeartoYou

Independent Farane giiiiiiifliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiS Best Wishes for A Happy New Year

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In addition to assisting the Workmen's Circle in i t s projects, the Ladies Auxiliary have taken it upon themselves to supply material aid to number of National Institutions. During the last year, the Workmen's lircle Auxiliary sent substantial sums to the Denver, Los Angeles and I i b jrty Sanitoriums. Mrs. L..Kaplan i s secretary and Mrs. J. Shapiro is treasurer of the group. A new chairman i s appointed for each meeting.

I

Best Wishes for a Happy New Year A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL!

ANNUITIES and

LIFE INSURANCE

KIMX

REAL ESTATE—LOANS INSURANCE

Equitable Life Assurance Society of United States

22 South Main Street Phone 162 COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA

Antone E. Johnson, Dist. Mgr,

Council Bluffs, Iowa 610 Bennett Bldg. Telephone 3620

A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR ,

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FREDLAINSON

For All Kinds of Printing

FLORIST

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AINSWORTH PRINTING COMPANY

1300 Canning Street Phone 2900 COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA

Masonic Temple Bldg. COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA

Phone 94

A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL!

GREETINGS THIS NEW YEAR

The Zurmuehlen Company

Harry QCrowl Go* Real Estate—Loans Insurance of Every Kind Broadway Theater Bldg. COUNCIL COUNCU BLUFFS, IOWA

Phone 628

Goetz Country Club Wholesale Cig-ars Tobaccos and Candy Only Exclusive Tobacco House in Council Bluffs Phone 353 103 So. Main St. COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA

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freshman year at the University. of Wisconsin. Miss Margaret Marcus will leave soon for Des Moines, Iowa, to enter her freshman year at Drake University. _ "

Council Bluffs News By F. RL K.

The Writer of this Column -wishes to take this opportunity to wish all the.readers of this column, both far and near, a very Happy New Year. . May the coming New Year be a Joyous one, bringing glad tidings, good fortune, and contentment to all! FANNIE E, KATELMAN.

Milton Krasne, Albert Harding, and CoUman Yudelson. At the University of Nebraska at Lincoln will bV Helen" Steinberg, Ruth Bernstein and Maurice Pepper, Miss Lucille .Krasne will leave September 22nd for Columbus, Ohio; to attend the University of Ohio. Miss RaeyBernstein will leave soon for Madison, Wisconsin, to enter her

Services for Eosh Hashonah Trill commence Friday evening, September 11th, at 6:30 o'clock, at the new ChevraB'nai Yisroel Synagogue at 618 Mynster street. On Saturday, the morning services will begin at seven o'clock, and afternoon services at four o'clock. Sunday morning services will start at seven o'clock. Gantor J. -Fleischer of Omaha will conduct these services.

.- ? CLUBS The; Council Bluffs Lodge No. 688 ^IliilllilllHlIIIIIIIIIlUlllllUllllUIIIIIIIlllllltlUllllllUlllllllllllIllIllllllllUlllllifltUil!: of the Independent Order of the B'nai Brith will hold a meeting next Monday evening, September 14fh, at the Eagles Hall.

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A Happy New Year To All!

IT'S WISE CHOOSE A SIX

co-operative banks, which the peddlersMave also organized. This admirable spirit of co-operation is also evident in purely Jewish ommunal affairs, said Mr. BotachanyAltbough the Jewish settlement in the Argentine is only 40 years eld, ews are already beginning to take a prominent part in the general political and cultural life ,of the country, Mr. Botachansky farther stated.

Bucharest.—The New York Day and the New York Forward, two of the leading Yiddish dailies in the United States, were barred from Roumania in an order issued by the Roumanian ministry of l i e interior. While no esjplanation of the order was given it is believed that the papers were barred because of .editorials and articles criticising: Roumanian jwlicy toward the Jew*. •>••• ' t;' •''

The Council Bluffs "Chapter No. 7 of the A. Z. A. gave a Stag Party Wednesday at the home of Harold Saks. This affair was in honor of the A. Z. A- members who leave soon for College. The Council Bluffs Agudas Achim Association will hold a regular meeting nest Thursday evening, September 17th, at fee Eagles Hall.

We Extend to You a Most Cordial New Year's Greeting

CITY ICE.CQ, Tenth Avenue and Twelfth Street. Phone 618 COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA XX9»C«CSCW«X3t3»£X3C«SCX3»CS«^^

I am glad at this time to send greetings not only to the Jewish residents of my city but to the Jewish citizenry of my state "who are among the outstanding merchants and business men of our larger cities. Accept my congratulations and best tcishes on the occasion of the approaching celebration of the Jewish New Year.

GREETINGS and

BEST WISHES

ARGENTINE JEWS DO NOT SUFFER ANTI-SEMITISM

are the three hundred thousand Jews who live in the Argentine, according to Jacob Botachansky, prominent Yiddish writer of the Argentine and one PERSONALS of the editors of the Buenos Aires Mr. and Mrs. Abe Bear and son, Yiddish daily, "Die Presse," who has Aaron David, of ueavenworth, Kanarrived in the United States to studs sas, arrived today to spend the HoliJewish life here. days visiting at the home of Mrs. "The pride of Argentine Jewry are Bear's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Julius Country Is Second to Palestine the twenty thousand Jewish farmers in Percentage of I&telman. who at present own about 600,000 hecFarmers tares of land," said Mr. Botachansky Mr. and Mrs. Abe H. Marcus and to a representative of the Jewish TeleNew York.—A happy Jewish comchildren of Fairbury, Nebraska, argraph Agency. "The movement to rived Sunday to visit over the Holi- munity, which doesn't suffer from settle upon the land recently receivec days at the home of Mrs. Marcus'1 anti-Semitism and which prides itself added impetus among Argentine Jews upon the fact that it has the largest parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Saltzman. percentage of Jewish farmers of any because of bad economic conditions in country in the world except Palestine, the cities. Upon their own initiative without any outside help, many Jews 1 153-157 West Broadway Phone 669 | Mrs. Max Steinman of Winnipeg, Canada, who spent the past three in Buenos Aires have formed societies | i; COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA 1 weeks here visiting at the home of linois returned to her home Tuesday for the purpose of establishing themher mother,-Mrs. W. Seigel, and sis- following a. several weeks' visit here selves upon the land." nininiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiUiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiii'.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiHmtill ter, Mrs. J. Rosen, left Sunday. She at the home of her uncle and aunt, Great Spirit of Co-operation. was accompanied back to Winnipeg Mr. and Mrs. M. Yudelson. A large percentage of the Argenby her daughter, Miss Esther Steitine Jews, especially ©f the recent imman, who made her home here for Miss Dorothy Handler of Oska- migrants, still consists of peddlers, the past year. loosa, Iowa, returned to her home said Mr. Botachansky. But even the Monday after spending the past Jewish peddler in the Argentine is of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schwartz of month visiting relatives in Omaha a very much different character from Chicago, Illinois, arrived Sunday to and Council Bluffs. Jewish psddlers in other countries. spend a couple of weeks here visitHe is more of a traveling salesman ing at the home of Mrs. Schwartz's Mr. and Mrs. Leland Goldberg of than a peddler and is deeply imbued sister, Mrs. George Hoffman, and Mr.Shenandoah, Iowa, will spend the with the spirit of co-operation. All Hoffman. Holidays visiting Mrs. Goldberg's the Jewish peddlers in Buenos Aires parents, Mr. and Mrs. Abe Gilinsky. are shareholders in big co-operative Mr. and Mrs. Julius Barren and son retail stores, which occupy huge of Shenandoah, Iowa, are spending Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Cberniss buildings. The peddler visits individthe- holidays visiting Mrs. Barron's and son, Edward, returned home ual homes and only displays samples parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. Markovitz. Tuesday following a "week-end visit of the goods which these co-operative stores have to offer. After a cuswith relatives in Chicago, Illinois. tomer orders something from the pedHenry Mendelson has returned home after spending a few days visPaul Krasne, son of Mr. and Mrs. dler, the co-operative store does the iting in Des Moines, Iowa. George Krasne, underwent an opera- rest. The co-operative stores extent tion for appendicitis at the Edmund- credits to the peddlers, while the stores themselves receive credits from Miss Estelle Udoleh of Chicago, D- son Hospital Tuesday.

Six-Cylinder Smoothness at Low Cost

|

Rowaama Bars "Day'

IIOSH HASHONAH SERVICES

Messrs. Harold Saks, Leonard MANY STUDENTS LEAVE FOR VARIOUS COLLEGES Krasne, Seymour Cohn, Leo Hogg,

JJJ

New Year Greetings of (X H* Brown Mayor of Council Bluffs

' Miss Ida Xrasne will enter her freshman .year at the. University of Illinois a t Cfaampaigne. - , . . Yalet Meyeison will leave Monday for Lexington, Missouri, to-enter-the Wentworth -.Military Academy. '

A New Year's Greeting!

With the beginning of the New year, many members of the younger set are leaving their homes bent on a higher education. Council Bluffs will have representation at various colleges, both far and near. Among -those who will attend the University, of Iowa at Iowa City inclue Miss Helen Whitebook and

Page Seven

Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11,1931

Slbnx City and CouncU Bluffs Section

Hughes Motor Co* |

for a

Happy and Prosperous New Year

I

CITY NATIONAL BANK COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA

"A United States Depository"

We Wish You a Very Happy and Prosperous New Year

/

We Wish'You AH ctppy and Prosperous New; Year

Council Bluffs Savings COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA

COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA CAPITAL

The

SURPLUS...

First National Bank

...$150,000.00 _ .$200,000.00

PROFITS AND <RESERVES

Council Bluffs, Iowa

$100,000.00

Established 1865

"Member Federal Reserve System9

A STRONG BANK SINCE 1856

COAL New Year's Greetings ••••

The State Savings Bank COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA

Capital * * $150,000.00 Surplus - • • $150,000.00

GREETINGS May the New Year Bring Happiness, Health and Prosperity to All

"Somebody must sell the Qood Things!" A Happy New Year to Qur Esteemed Patrons in Omaha and Council Bluffs

The John Beno Co*

"Strength With Security*

Too Lively to Stand Still B. P. WICKHAM, President H. L. THKLEY, Cu&kr W. S. BAIKD, Vice President find Trnst Officer

Phone 2621 1426 South Main Council Bluffs, Iowa

Council Bluffs Department Store

1


'New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Friday, September 11. 1931

Pagfr Eight

Newman received many votes for AHAmerican quarterback. - Other football players who attracted attention were Bromberg of Dartmouth, Grossman of Rutgers and Schneider of N. Y. U. Arnold Horween, head coach of Harvard, finally resigned and retired to business but the Big Three are not yet Jewless as Benny Friedman was ciation of America. This organiza- appointed backfield coach at Yale for tion although in existence many years j the coming season. undertook a huge program which will JEWISH BALL PLAYER be brought to a climax at the 1932 BREAKS IN Jewish Olympic games in Palestine. Professional baseball saw the addiDuring the past year branches of the tion of Lou Brower to its ranks. The Maccabee were formed in Boston, Chi- Jewish boy started his baseball on the cago, New York and other cities. sand lots of Cleveland and now he is Various meets were held and an ef- the regular shortstop of the Detroit fort was made to collect under the Club in the American League. He banners of the organization the lead- played ball in the Michigan Ontario ing Jewish athletes of the country. League, and then Oklahoma City finSuccessful thus far it is highly prob- ally ending up with Kansas City in able that Jewish sport in America, will the American Association from which receive a much needed impetus from team he was sent to Detroit. He is the growth of the Maccabees. twenty-three years old, throve and MANY BASKETBALL STARS bats right-handed.

Reviewing the Year By GEOBGE JOEL The past year in sport among our Jewish athletes has been replete with startling performances. New champions have been crowned, reigning ones dethroned. New personalities' lave made themselves felt in the

sportlight. Many of the old favorites have passed into obscurity. The scene changes.but the basic pattern remains. The Jew is still interested and active in athletics. The most interesting athletic happening of the year was the sudden coming to life of the Maccabee Asso-

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GAIN PROMINENCE

REESE MAKES GOOD

If there was any one sport in which the Jews led it was basketball. The St. John's basketball team, a Catholic institution had the best team in the country. Captain Max Posnack, Begovich, Schuckman and Gerson were the Jewish boys who brought this school its victories. Eddie Horowitz, Captain of the Yale team, was another basketball leader. Lou Bender of Columbia led the Eastern Intercollegiata League in- scoring. Among the other stars were Hayman of Syracuse, Weiss of Michigan/Kramer of Dartmouth, Cohen of Pittsburgh, Trupin, C. C. N. Y. and Weiss of Fordham. Lloyd Rosenbaum of Anderson, Indiana, was elected captain of the Princeton basketball team and "Cy" Aaron was given the same honor at the University of Detroit. Aaron is the first Jew ever to gain that distinction at the Jesuit College.

The best Jewish player in either league was Jimmy • Reese or Goldschmidt of the Yankees. After three seasons of utility play he got into the Yankee lineup and .won his spurs as a real infielder and hitter. Rosenfeld and Brooklyn and Rosenberg of the Giants, both started off the season with their respective clubs but before the campaigning was half over both boys were shipped to the minors where they met two other Jewish players, Hy Greenberg and Ike Goldstein, two Detroit rookies. Last year Greenberg was the sensation of the training camps but simply could not make the grade. Jonah Goldman of Cleveland failed to hit and was finally sent back to the minors.

SINGTON OUTSTANDING FOOTBALL PLAYER The outstanding all-around Jewish athlete of the year"was Fred Sington of Alabama. Playing his last year of collega sport the "big fellow was the greatest football tackle in the country. He was the only player to receive the unanimous choice for AllAmerican honors. Besides football Sington pitched for the ball team. Next year he will coach, at Duke University. Another fine- football player was Newman of Michigan. A sophomore, he successfully stepped into the shoes left vacant by the graduation of that other Michigan star, Benny Friedman. Newman, unsung and unknown, broke into the game with what was supposed to 'be an ordinary team and through his efforts he was able to make it a real Conference threat.

EXCITING FIGHT YEAR It was an exciting year for the Jewish fighters. Al Singer lost his lightweight title faster than he won it. Three months after knocking oat Mandell he was knocked flat himself by Tony Canzoneri in one of the strangest fights seen in this decade. Singer was dropped in the first round. Since then Singer has been attempting a comeback but the beatings he received from McLarnin and the new champion seems to have slowed up the Jewish boy.

BERG STILL A NEAR CHAMPION

er of the synthetic junior-lightweight title failed to climb up to the lightweight throne when he had the chance Favored to win front the champion Tony Canzoneri, Berg was knocked out when the two got together. Berg was thought to be the best lightweight in the world. His defeat was a great disappointment. Maxie Rosenbloom continued to

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FREEMAN THE WRESTLER A word about Herbert Freeman, peer of the Jewish professional wrestlers is in place. The sport itself has had a revival and is outdrawing boxing. As a major attraction, Freeman* a New York boy, son of a restaurant owner is one of the leading grapplers in the game. He won his way through a series of bouts to a match with Londos, the champion and was promptly thrown by that gentleman but then so was everyone else. The new interest in wrestling attracted many, new performers and among them were a number of Jewish matmen.

TENNIS TITLES SCARCE Another lean year for the Jewish tennis players. Jay Cohn of California won the Boy's National title and Marco Hecht, of New York, a new name to the game, captured the junior indoor crown. These were the only national titles won by Jews. No Jews got a first ten ranking in the senior events and Willie Jacobs of Baltimore was the lone junior to make the grade. Julius Seligson, the peer of the senior tennis players, did not show any improvement and the only hope for the Jews in the big circuit is Eddie Jacobs, star of the Pittsburgh University tennis team.

IRA SINGER WON Jackie Berg, the English Jew, hold- NATIONAL TRACK TITLE

Totality

ZENITH MODEL 91

reign as light-heavyweight champion. The tendency among Jewish ath- means that more and more of our The Jewish boy fights all comers and letes to enter and excel in the minor people are devoting their time to athhas been trying desperately to get a sports is a most healthy sign. It letics for purely physical reasons. chance at the heavyweight crown but the fighting commissions will not give ths mauling, slapping boy a chance. The year has been an "almost" one. A new Jewish fighter, Ben Jeby, a middleweight, was hailed as a coming champ only to be knocked out by Vic Dundee. He still seems the most likely of the Jewish middleweights. Jewish heavyweights had a most disastrous season. Maxie Baer, the heavyweight from California, went through a series of loses—and definitely eliminated himself as a contender. Ted Sandwina continued his losing habits and is out of the first ranks for good. The question of Benny Leonard's return to the ring again occupied the thoughts of the sporting public. Although'he has made an annual announcement of his return, this year was the first in which it was taken seriously. There is a strong possibility that he will be seen in action before the next year rolls around.

TONE-TOTALITY... an entirely new conception in radio which means everything for which radio designers have striven . . . and it belongs to ZENITH alone. TONE-TOTALITY is that peculiar ability of the ZENITH audio system to render precisely as it is broadcast, every tone that instrument or voice can utter . . . high or low, loud or s o f t . . . and the countless infinitely delicate shadings that ordinary radio loses completely. Tone-TOTALITY . . . which you can get only in ZENITH . . . is beyond description. It is so human, so real, so lifelike, so completely lacking in all the crudities that people expect even in fine radios, that it must be heard. And hearing TONE-TOTALITY casts a spell of fascination so strong that it will make you want a ZENITH hard enough to buy i t

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For the first time since the days of Al Miller of Harvard, a Jewish boy won the 100-yard dash in the indoor national track championships. Ira Singer, a sophomore of N. Y. U. who but a few years ago was attending a Brooklyn High School, was crowned king of the dash men. He is the only Jewish sprinter in the United States who is given any chance of becoming a member of the Olympic team. Sammy Behr of Wisconsin broke the shot put record during the year when he heaved the lead ball more than 49 feet to win the "Big Ten' indoor championship, but lost the outdoor title. He is, however, one of the best weight men in collegiate circles.

JEWS EXCEL AT MINOR SPORTS : Three minor sport titles were won by Jews during the past year. Harry Wolf of New York City retained his title as national amateur squash champion. The 23-year-old boy has become the greatest racquet wielder in the game. Seymour Alexander beat Benjamin Yedlin for the one wall handball championship of the country. Together these Jewish boys hold the doflble titles. The third title to be won by a Jew -was the Ping Pong championship which was carried off by Marcus Schussheim. He won his title at the first national tournament ever held in the sport.

SOBEL MAKES WATER POLO RECORD Another record breaking performance was turned in by Jess Sobel, captain of the C. C. N. Y. Water polo team. He broke the all time scoring record by making 283 points in one season. The old record was 195.

HAKOAH HAS BAD SEASON A review of the year in sport would not be complete without some mention of the all-star Hakoah-Soccer team— alas the all-Jewish team had its most disastrous season, finishing last in the league standing and failing to win any cup. During the year the team made a South America tour which was not entirely successful from either a playing or financial standpoint. The team is expecting some replacements from abroad which they hope will strengthen the lineup for next season.

WOMEN IN SPORT There is very little to report about our Jewish female athletes. In tennis, Baroness Levi, nee Maude Eosenbauitn of Chicago led the way and in golf, Mrs. Leo Federman of New York was the outstanding player. Neither lady won a national title but both are top notchers. Mention must be made of the tennis playing of Caroline Hirsch, a fine performer, and the failure of Clara Greenspan to develop into a player of anything but "ordinary merit, must also be sadly noted. .

On

TKe Mew Year May success be your fortune, May prosperity attend you, And may happiness be your lot. We hope that the coming season will be one of unlimited good fortune.

Start the New Year with a big or may' be a bigger Bowl full of Georgie Porgie Breakfast Food. What's good for your health is good for your pocketbook.


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