October 9, 1931

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In the Interests of the Jewish People

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OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 19S1

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iintertd as Srcond-Clasa Mail Matter on January U1— at I'ostoIEce at Omaha, Nebraska, under the Act of M sS.'-o-.

Government, Befigious, Educational Heads Issue

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Zurich.—-(3.. T. A.)—Aiming at a "conquest" of Switzerland from "within, the Hitlerite Party of Germany has established a special Nazi Secretariat"in Zurich, it is announced here. Finding that Nazi anti-Jewish propaganda organized in5* Germany has failed to find root in Switzerland, the. Hitlerites have determined upon a new campaign with the Swiss city as their headquarters! : •': Max von: Monstadt has been appointed director' of the new secretariat. The new centre will direct operations not only in Switzerland, but in bordering countries. The anti-Semitic' propaganda of the Nazis, conducted over a long period has thus far failed to take effect, Swiss patriotism and Swiss national consciousness being thoroughly im: mune. ,- ' " - . . ' ..-

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89 Per Cent of New York Corporations "Prefer Christians"

Two Hundred MilUon Dollars Worth af. 'Kosher Food in Yea,

Out-for j . c. C. Championship Team

York.—(J. T. A.)—Two hun- j

- Tryouts for the Community dred million dollars' worth of I-Ioslier j Center debate team, vvhich will food is consumed annually by the represent Omaha in the mid- • Jarv Forests^ Sleeps Through I Jewish population of Isew York, it is western debate league and interTrial; Held for Itlancity series against Kansas City Samuel Uottenbuerg, "vice-chairman of j and St. Louis will be held at the the Mayor's Hashrath Committee. j J. C. 'C. this Sunday morning, Flans for the proper supervision of | Prague.—(J. T. A.)—Karl Horak, Xashmth in New York are now being [ October 11, st 10 a. is. former corporal of the Czecho-Slova- discussed by the Committee. A formal j Anyone under 25 years of age kian Legionnaires, was acquitted cf report will shortly be submitted tc | •who is not at present a member the murder. of two Jewish families Mayor Walker and to the Jewish, com- j of a college varsity team' is consisting of seven persons, but held j eligible to try out.

New York.—(J. T. A.)—Figures on Berlin.—(J. T. A.)—Leaders of the the growth of discrimination against government, municipal authorities, Jews in employment have been rereligions heads and University ProOTssoTcti ihy t h e Cf>Tn.T"«Ti.i'.y I vealed by Sabbi J. K- Cohen, chairfessors united in issuing a Joint call 11. !>P hf\A ni t h e JpT'T^h Coirmusmman of. the Committee on Economic to German, citizens to defeat the counby the court on the charge of man- j The committee hopes, among ether j Ccpf.et next ^V«t^ios?>8.3 evening. Discrimination of the American Jewtry against the anti-Semitic encroachslaughter. ish Congress. An investigation' carments of the Nazi Party. .. things, to centralise IlaEhmfii super- j The jury voted unanimously for Ho- vision, taking: it out of the hands cf J ried on by this committee, disclosed •£eferring to the recent anti-Semi.he rostrum rak's acquittal on the murder charge individuals. It will recommend that j that 91 of 100 Employment: Agencies tic escesses perpetrated by Nazis, the .Arr Fi«-SvH despite the fact that .soldiers who took thorough supervision be extended j Tex" visited Iby Jewish investigators - poscall asserts that Germany's recovery part in the shooting in December of from the source of production to the | „ Arae.-icsV ing, as applicants for positions as of world prestige is gravely retarded 1919, testified that Horak had ordered consumer, in order to eliminate t h e ; l r i T hi? x>e~. bookkeepers, clerks, stenographers, by the acts of barbarism of- the Nazi them to fire on the defenceless, man- possibility cf fraud. and the like, informed them that they Party which has become the second i spf^.kir.jracled victims and was himself theJ were unacceptable because they were strongest movement in Germany; first to fire. Later the jury by a vote ! v-m bs "Every German must consider-the Eighty-nine per cent* of 400 prompeace and safety of the country," deocb^fr thrJ. A. Gross is general chairman of of seven to five, declared Hera!: guilinent corporations and business estab- the twenty-sixth annual Omaha food ty of manslaughter. clares the appeal. "Duty to the Fath.V An anti-Semitic demonstration was lishments in New York prefer Chris- show, which will be held at the city erland requires that all courage be tians only as their employees, Eabbi auditorium during the week of Octo- staged in the court room when the announced to combat anti-Semitism." •K-RE reported tins I the tarn;... attorney for the defense asked the Cohen declared in an address de- ber 12. Quoting Wjlhelm I as having de! ws court to forget the murder, which he livered over station WHN. These figclared that it is the duty of the PrusThis year's food show, under 1~T\ .rSiST* v.ve V CV Biispsceg. of t h e ures were compiled by Mm in an in- Gross's " direction, is expected to be described as. one of the many injussians to mate moral conquests in ! Comrmnity Forum OK the evening of vestigation of the files of an agency the most elaborate and successful in tices arising from the. World War, Germany, the appeal goes further and i October 20which served the corporations men- the city's "history, trith seventy-four which had better be forgotten. Youths -says: "It is Germany's duty to make fln-ppaeinn TT™~< j>:^^^i^-t^^ j^p^n^t j Herman K. Auerhach. chair-roar, of seated in the gallery rose and ap• D moral conquests of the world.; But Project W^l Be Realized in 1933, tioned. exhibitors already having reserved plauded the defense attorney's words. Until recently, stated Rabbi Cohen, spaces. while we are fighting to regain GerIt Is Believed a number of agencies carried placards many's prestige in science and art, we be a play- The demonstration was so outspokenA special feature " i ^ u o M v u * '..luik.. j James IJ. West, publicity ch.iirmn.ri of p ly anti-Jewish that the judge was reading, "Applications not accepted are disgraced T>y acts of barbarism." d nursery ffor'children under compelled to order the court room room and Moscow.—(J. T. A.)—Reiteration of commitfcee from Jews." One of the committee's The appeal concludes by throwing New York.-(J. T. A.)-Je^Ish edu- \ * ! ^ ^ ™ & U " e p u b " C promise to. establish a Jewish re- investigators reported that his appli- the sponsorship 'of the Campfire cleared. !|_ the responsibility\ior Germany's fate his rational agencies in the United! ' ' t ' ^ T ^ u " ^ — letter of Girls. Cash prise dra-sings will be public, in Bira Bidjan, was made by cation blank was thrown into the Dr. Biel, representing the Leapie j upon the Nazis. Michael : Xalinin, president of the waste basket -when it appeared that held daily. grocers have for the Eights of Man, asserted that y Independent p Union of Socialist Soviet Republics, he was Jewish. ik h i h i t l the th customer t t • t h e verdict w a s invalid, and asked t h e ; ;_ tickets -which''entitle to a reduced price for evening admis, in; a statement" to' L. Leyin," Secretary Discrimination against Jews, be as- sions. . . - • - court to set it aside, on the ground of the Bira Bidjan, Regional Com- serted, includes those whose names A n all-electrie cooking school will that the foreman cf the jury slept report submitted by Alexander li, j munist Party. appear foreign, and children of mixed be held in conjunction with t h e food throughout the judge's charge. Dushkin, the executive director of the j -rs£. Dicluitsson," This pledge was warmly endorsed marriages. Jewish, men and women Jewish Board of Education in Chiea- j show a n d will T>e conducted b y one by Peter Smidovitch, vice-president of find - great "difficulty in being, regisgo, to the National Conference cf j When Senator LsFo'npU'e- arrives of America's foremost authorities. the Soviet Union and head of the tered. When • in desperation they Jewish Social Service. ife TiTeflnrgi'iPy. lie- v.TJ be greeted The annual food show " p e p " dinner ConGet, government department for change to non-Jewish sounding names The economic depression, the report | by a personal friend, Stat^ry K.alisl\, settling Jews on land and in industry, they find the going easier, provided w a s held Thursday a t t h e Fontenelle, states, has already affected all Jewish j former Kaclisor;, "Pis.. nr-v-spnpeT man with over three hundred in attendwho participated in the conference they can also "pass" in other respects. scnoois. its eliect has been consider-• v>iio is ITOV 7itT;Ki;iJC .•;">?- noTiif nerr, ance. 3. A . Gross, general chairman, Jewish Mother and Catholic with Mr. Levin. "Conditions will become even more ably most disastrous upon those j Aiiuisii JS a Kcri-nv-isw <">•/. .iopf>ph C Grandmother Battle "We shall make every effort," de- serious unless definite remedial meas- was toastmaster a t t h e dinner. schools which are not affiliated with i Fradennurf.: of the- Fmnpnl-mrg:. stalL a s t year over 42,000 attended Che for Child clared the Soviet leaders, "to further ures are evolved," he concluded. central- communal organisations. In j master <S: Bcbo^ Irw firm, food show and this year they hope to the Socialist development of Bira Bidthe case of the us-eoordii»£.ted nudiin-1 The corc^vrfivr inrnrr, i= spnnpored break t h e attendance record. The food Montreal.—(J.-T. A.)—The tragedy jan with the view to ultimately.realizJewisli Youths Post Signs h j affiliated g Jewish schools, the.-teachers | jc-intly by the Cowncn of ^e^ish ¥ n show is staged • exclusively by t h e of mixed marriages again came to ing our pledge to establish a Jewish . Opposition Fearing LegisOmaha Retail Grocers' Association. the fore and found an echo in -a local republic there." iative Council court "when, a young Jewish "mother, While the possibility of proclaiming fought her Irish Catholic mother-in- Bira JBidjan a Jewish, republic, is reTel Aviv.—(J. T. A.) — Thirteen law /for the possession of iher son, and mote,: the Jewish Telegraphic .Agency Jewish yeuths were -airestea for postlearns that' highest government ciring- signs against "the-Palestine cer.-| cr-61d boy, is cles are seriously considering estab-crc sus, scheduled' to b-egin in November, j Declares Jewish Religions Law Denow an iHinate• of the "Hebrew Or- lishing' Bira Bidjan as a Jewish ter\ The posters carried the slogans: , mands Mohel Perform Rite phans'. Home ? m r Westmpunt, fromj ritorial unit. • Trcr "Dora with the Census!" "Down their inability to carry on. ; where -he. w&sivirjtually Hdnaped durShould Jewish immigration to Bira with the Enumerators!* Bosion, Mass.—J. T. A->—A stormy Moscow.—(J- T. A.)—The "free ing the Day ; of -:' Atonement. The; Bidjan continue at its ^present rate s situation is better in the \ While every preca-ation is being j ^ grandmother found her plan feasible the Jewish'population there will num- protest against' the performance of transplantation" of land settlers to taken to make the census, the second owing to' the fict that the attendants ber 80,000 a t the conclusion of the the Jewish rite of circumcision by remote' agricultural districts was •under the British Administration, as communal educational agencies. In j ". A.)—A split, m *J\e were spending the day at the syna- Piatilefka in 1933, it is stated by Mr. physicians has been raised by the strongly prohiibted in a special decree fool proof as possible, the iliteracy cf some of taese schools the proportion j ' Paris.gogue. Levin, who has just returned to Mos- Vaad Hoir, Jewish Communal Council -issued jointly by the Comzet and the the bulk of the Arab population' and ox free schools has risen to about CO I ranks ©£ the liiomsL JUevisionisi, party cent of the total school registrs.- j has been avoided as 'die result of a Collective Centre. The story begins to unfurl itself cow from Bira Bidjan. "It is then of Greater Boston. the noraadic nature of the Eedoidn per' ticn. The income from taition fees j two-day conference of the licvisionlsl Insisting that the rite is a-fundaEighteen thousand Jewish families tribes, will impose difficulties. with the decease of the Catholic hus- that we shall be able to proclaim Bira has in rnasy cases decreased to £5 ; Exscutive in Calais, ii F S J officially band of the young Jewish wife. Ueing Bidjan a Jewish republic," he as- -mental Tequirement of the Jewish re- who have organized collective holdThirty-eight hundred enumerators, ligious law, the organization strongly ings near, their native villages "Kill working -under 200 supervisors, will per cent. I s communities like Chicag-o | maaouncsd here. left in straightened circumstances, serted. New York, Detroit and Baltimore, the j JaboiinsK?' svncl liie foliowcrs liave condemns its performance by those be affected by this decree which is conduct the canvass. the young woman had no alternative who have not received the qualified expected to have far reaching effect ' The difficulties forseen owing to subsidy to cossra-unal edna&tional i agreed tc d:-op ili-air demand for sebut to go to -wofkj .Her child she gave religious instruction. The criticism of over to the care of* the parents of her In the last several years, the neces- the fear that Arabs would be likely to edacational agencies was reduced ty ! cession .from the ^Torlil Eioni:-!; Orj 10 per cent. On the other hand ii> I <panization and the cres.tio'n of an inthe Vaad Hoir is levelled equally sity -of finding settlers for districts give exaggerated -late husband,.who had him baptized cf their cities like St. Louis, Cincinnati and j dependent Zionist lioclv. On. the otlier against Jewish and non-Jewish phy- in Crimea and Bira Bidjan has im- population in orderfigures and named Turn Patrickto inflate their Boston, the coraracnity funds £1*8 so-1 hand, Eioriisi licvisionists will, in the sicians. pelled oversealous Jewish Communists number After four years the urge of mothas against the number cf radically Effected, that educational i future, be T>oiiiiitLcd to ('"iiooKC for b i th g The organization has organized a to use pressure to force Jewish seter-love drove'the mother to take back 1121 Cantor Araham Schwaczkin, "who Jews, are discounted by Eric •• 1121s, budgets have been reduced iy SS per J ihcmse'.ves isuU.viABfili.ly v.i>r-uiet or widespread campaign, circularizing tlers near villages to liquidate their her;child, and her Jewish conscious.has been cantor and director of th< Superintendent ' of the Census, who I cent and over. j not they wish to become Pi-embers of hospitals as well as the entire Jewish holdings and" migrate to distant reness being aioused, she had him cirAras for many years Chief Secretary j Fifteen communities, which include \ the Vorid'Zionist. Or£'?.ni;;eiUo^ and cumcized and gave Mm the zname "of choir at the Congregational B'nai community, appealing to them to gions. .Abraham. But being unable to sup- Israel for a number of years, will di- employ, only licensed Mohelim. "• The decree issued denounces these of the Palestine Gcrreruiseiit. Mr. jail the large Jewisli cities in tlis ! par the sliskel. rect the Hazomir Choral Society, acbelief that the j United States in which some S,000,000 ] The eoHierence also dr-culcd. thai; port the child she iad Mm enter the It has prepared a. list of Mohelim methods as aimless and inadmissable, Mills expressed the •off the p cording to announcement made today. whose services it endorses, which it and ensures the position of the.Jew- natural reticence h Arabs A b Is i __ __ make for s. ten- American Jews reside, hava reported ; the London headquarters of the Eevis-• Jewish Orphan Home. matters I t is the purpose of the organiza- has made available to .the community. grandmother ish colonists who have, settled In t l i e | ^ n c y to suppress rather"than to'in- that the income from central com^; ionist; Party is to candnct political g g inn court tfie aged tion - and- the cantor to present to Ch -vi-cinity • of their homes. The single \ fkte certain figures. Some Moslems, rcsunsJ funds or sdniiiar sources li£s. propaganda iiidcjsciidcrit ol tlio World. pleaded that/the, child l is a true Catho- Omaha Jewry Jewish folk songs into JJU per cent, me- i exception noted in the decree is in the t e stated, are not likely to advertise aecreaseci rrc lic having been duly baptized, in termingled with the traditional music event that there is not sufficient land the number of their wi-es, while the man decrease tiain? L-v •^••~-r cr-r<t. Church and ' produced the • necessary of the synagogue. They are planning or dwellings are lacking. Such a sit- mare Ignorant will hesitate to give ] baptismal certificate, but the defense to present in the near future a reguation may bs remedied by the emi- truthful information about males of j argued that the mother has prior ular Jewish Hour over one of the gration of individual members of the military age for fear lest the census; ilgnts' on the child and he must there- city's broadcasting stations. Dr. Victor E. Levine delivered the collectives the decree states. fore be returned: to the Orphans' he preliminary to conscription. j Among the leading voices in the opening address at the Congress of Home. ' . To insure correct results the figj : Hazomir are included Gloria Pollicoff iipfii : The court ruled in favor of. the and Mrs. Ben Minkin, E. Sellz and Physical Therapy, which met at .the ures of the first count will be checked Jewish mother, but did ;not close the Jack Barber, tenors; David Slobo- J'ontenelle Hotel from Monday to three or four ^eeks later. If en the i rf V~Z C~""""" I™ ~- r - -~ \ or door for the Catholic grandmother for dinsky, L Tepilinsky and Eenry Thursday, of this week. His paper check up discrepancies appear in sr.y was. entitled "The Detoxicating Efan appeal to" higher justice. district, a recount-of tbe nrhole cisMagzamin, basses. • fects of Ultraviolet." trict Trf!l follow. The officers elected to liead .the He delivered a second paper at the London.— (J. T. A.)—"Zionism in 111 ~ PTpfl %fil I Hazomir are Harry Bender, presi- opening session on Thursday. It its "spiritual sense is a lofty aspiraTdent; Mrs. Ben Minkin, vice presi- dealt with the relation of sunlight to tion, but' Zionism meaning the reoccuThe food sale spc-xi dent; Jack Barber, secretary-treas- disease. / : ' pation of Palestine has no attraction ._ prer; David Slobodinsky, correspondDr. Levine was chairman of Public for me," declared Mahatma Gandhi in Henrietta Szold Girls Et the Brsncieis Store Saturday, proceeds cf •which KO ing secretary; Henry Magzamin, pub- Relations for the Congress. He is as- an interview here. ... the Jewish Philanthropies, was i >, — „,-.. . ~-= r licity manager. The organization sociate editor of the Archives of "I understand the longing of the to very successful, the club reports. The meets every Monday evening at the Physical Therapy, the official JBW to return to Palestine," he conS Montreal.—(J. T. A.) — Jewish Center. ly publication of the Congress. tinued. "He can do so, provided it is sale netted SS7. butchers selling non-Kosher - meat as done without the help of "bayonets be- j .Kosher will be excommunicated from longing either to Britain or the Jews. I the Jewish faith, it is announced by In that event the Jew would proceed the Montreal Jewish Community : to Palestine peacefully in perfect Council. friendliness with the Arabs. The ban of excommunication car^ ^ % ^ t e . s ^ ^ ^ - a^. **esf m • "Eeal Zionism, which lies in .one's .ries with" it exclusion from any Jewheart is a thing to strive for and die ish congregation or other ..religious - Warsaw.—(J. -• T. A.)—American j Jeiu , .. , body; the refusal of Jewish clergymen and Polish Jewry were urged to rally he asserted, "because it is lacking in for,"-asserted Gandhi. "It is the ahode j £L" ideologic background. ; of God. The real -Jerusalem is the for tne^post cf presiders c.-j,to officiate at marriage ceremonies., their forces-to prevent the utter as-! preme Moslem Council, 1 e'~ : jrer 1222 ~Z '." " c r - »-"" — z spiritual -Jerusalem. " Thus" the Je"^ : "A salcage legion must be created," •or in the circumcision rites of male similation- of the Jews of the Diasfc-y the Grand Mufti cT J ~ r " ~ t I : ~ . -,",";., children, and exclusion from burial in pora, by Chaim Nachman Bialik, fam- he Tirged,"to save American and Pol- can" realise this Zionism in any part •Ameenel Husseini, is e^rcrtc^ v; ~r " ': ish Jewry- from the fate of -Erestern of the world." Jewish cemeteries. . the'expiration of his n ^ t - ^ r i . r t s r ~ 1r~" ^ — T * Cc": ous Hebrew poet, now on a visit here. Europe -which is resigning its. JewishThe action of the Council has been shortly. r. i, c - » » • " " ' " ' " ; At a conference with the press, Mr. ness ;for;the; sake of freedom." dictated by the prevalence of Jewish The Colonial office > c i r -- 5 "~" ~^ Bialik expressed a pessimistic outlook butchers who sell non-Kosher food proved the proposal to r z. : •under the shield of Kosher signs. A on the present situation of Jewry, de- Buys Play,'RIglits.: -v ' claring that the'Ooutlook for the fulong campaign has been conducted by • • •" :.. .. • ! reneir t h e term of office TT Hew York.—The British, rights to the Kashxuth authorities to bring ture, as'well,-was'extremely grave. • All proceeds of" the Ea-Hon novelty! c ^ ' s president. . "The ancient centers of Jewish scithe English version of 'SholomAldabout a change in the situation, but ;-dance-at t h e . J ; C. C. Sunday after-]j The Grand Mufti of . "~ all past efforts at conciliation have ence in France, England, Spain and ehem's play, "If I~Were .You," have noon, Oct. 11, at 3 p. m. Germany have entirely disappeared," been p purchased by Ernest Milton, the Philanthropies. -Unique, es- j permanent president of opi failed. Mr. Bialik pointed, out,-"and are en- B ii C l in 1921. produce it in tertainmant -will dfcsnished end! Supreme Coiincil British actor, who tirely lost for .Jewry,, while Russia is London nest fall; > ,1 v f !t many novelties given ai^ay. There is ;ion of inquiry, however Moscow.—Vlndmir Malore, director completely cat off from the rest of The play, -which has long been one a surprise for every person .tttand-! Herbert himself *~as l r - zl.a d Herbert of a brick factory in Chernichoy, the v/orld. Only a young settlement of the -outstanding •. recommended that g successes of the ing. Ukrainia, was relieved of his post and remains in America and Poland," he Yiddish ii title The ccmr.-1v.c2 in Art Theater under •will be placed on trial for conducting stated. of "Herd to Be a Jsn,-," is r.c7 bains anti-Semitic propaganda ct tho fac"The practical assimilation o£ the pel-formed ia English by Ila'^rlss i , .lory. entire Diaspora is the more tragic," Sch.v.Trj:!:n at tbs AraLaszaclor tit-tcr.

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PAGE 2r-THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1931 ence is so striking because Dr. Holmes himself. lives what he preaches. He passes through the fiery furnace of personal experience by which his own soul has been tempered like steel. Those soft-spined clergymen and layfolk who imagine all is well in society because al is well with themselves should take heed.

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Office:;4?0 Branded Theater Building DAVID BLACKER - - - - - - - - r Business and Managing Editor FRANK E. ACKERMAN - - - - -•'. - - - - - - . r - Editor FREDA BOLKER MILDER - - . - - - . - -r Society Editor FANNIE KATELMAN, Council Bluffs, Iowa - - - - Correspondent ANN PILL - -•- - - - - - - - - - Sioux City, Iowa, Correspondent

;;

INTERNATIONAL WORLD CONGRESS

The proposed calling of an international world congress for (all Jewry will be considered at the forthcoming American Jewish Congress which convenes at Philadelphia next week-end. Proponents of this plan saycithat^iicH-J a .Congress is necessary bemuse of the exta-aordinary tragic clondi^ns of Jews? abroad, declared to be tile^ worst1 in thd history of!Judaism.! ,; The prevailing need of strengthening the economic basis of Jewish hie and preserving our spiritual values has,admittedly reached an acute stage. The suffering in Eastern Europe, the industrial boycott of Jews everywhere, the struggle to maintain the legal status of our people in'many quarters—all tend toward increasing the gravity of our mammoth1 problem. More frequent anti-Semitic outbursts have added salt to an open wound already poisoned by the uncertainty and .unsteadiness of Jewry's economic •life. As is usually true, the breakdown of the economic and social structure threatens Vto engulf our cultural and religious possessions. The pressing'.criticahiess of the "general depression has brought as a concommitant evil a cynicism and moral indifference which has seeped into our outlook of bur status. It is accordingly-vitally necessary that steps be taken to dispel the clouds of despondency ^hd intellectual lassitude-which bodes ill for the future, at the same iame facing fully the darker aspects of the horizon. ^:: j , ' • We have always maintained that one of the biggest failings in world Jewry's make-up is the lack of a central group which could speak authoritatively lor all Israel. One body assumes to speak in the name of Jewry, and a few.days later another will claim the right to voice Jewry's opinion with an.opposed view. The need for a clearing'house for Jewish thought is today more strikingly felt than ever before. But, "while we agree upon what is needed, the question: which musfc be carefully gone over at the American Jewish Congress is "wiieth^r the proposed world Congress will serve .^$%n4.,^Leaders of European Jewry want such a Congress, but ar0i!lbok£6g;t6?the t)nited;Sfeates to take "the" initial move in bringing together^11 i^fe-viteVfoirces^ in Jewry for the advancement of the commdn^goo'd. But,: i)e^remembered that when the Jewish Agency ^a^fornie^,-it :ioo;was gdirig to glowingly accomplish unity of actipn md.thoughtM regard* to P^estine, was going to be a clearinirh^^ reason or other its success did not come u p ^ eXp^tafions^^ft; might be well to analyse the cause and see iit,*this wo]iild not,apply to an international* world Jewish C o n g ^ l , a factor whichHmust be carefully considered by the delegates.; > ; "^ J ^ :; • U:\ However, if all obstacles Can be surmounted -and the Congress san furnish, the manpower. t^rmS0 tHp status of; Jewry, instead of merely furnishing pretty phrases "and/useless; speeches, we too would heartily favor a world organization which would serve its beneficient influence both on the Jews of Europe and of America, at the same time giving new force and substance to the ideal of a restored Jewish Palestine. ^

TRAGEDY OF ASSIMILATION . The tragedy of assimilation is never ending. Jews who have taken their place before the baptismal font in their desire to escape persecution and boycbtts have found that their conversion did not solve their problems, have found that it even»increased some of their troubles. " : ; ; _; . In Warsaw last week a conference of Jewish converts to Christianity was held and the difficulties they faced were discussed. Speakers at the conference emphasized that the converts are completely isolated from both the Jewish and the Christian groups. Cut off from contact with the Jewish people by their own renunciation, they have not been accepted to. parity by the Christian people. This segregation has reached such a point that Christains of Jewish origin are compelled to marry among themselves. Terming their isolation unbearable, the, majority of the delegates to the conference concurred in the resolution to form Union of Christians of Jewish Origin "for mutual consolation." We actually pity this withered branch of Judaism.They have lost their identity, in their eagerness to build a house of mere worldly power, forgetting that their efforts would leave them spiritually unsatisfieGL Having drifted from their moorings of faith, they now flounder helplessly in a s£a of doubt The lesson to be learned from this Warsaw conference should strike a responsive chord in our more or less disillusioned and defiant younger generation supposedly in the grip of a world cynicism. Amidst spiritual chaos, our youth would do well to consider twice the plight of Jewish souls wasting away in Ezekiel's valley of dry bones. They should think twice before essaying a step which will hurt them deeply later^oni As for the older generation worried over those wandering from the flock, let us remember that assimilationist tendencies have cropped out before, that it is a mere passing phase, a temporary loss of consciousness. The prophetic spirit cannot be crushed, except for a time. So, too, the prophetic people have always through time immemorial regained consciousness in its own despite, and will continue, as ever, into eternity. Legion of Honor to Guggenheim's Widow

The international aviation library at the Aero Club is the gift of the late Mr. Guggenheim.

parjq The decoration of the Legion of Honor last year awarded.to Literary Association Strllcea Shoals the late Paniel Guggenheim of New Warsaw.—The Jewish Literary As York, by the government of France, sociation, only European center OJ v;as presented to his widow. Jewish journalists and writers, was Tl presentation ceremonies took compelled to give up its premises and * thp Aero Club of France in. faces complete "liquidation as xi resul S e S o f high officials and lead- of the financial crisis.

aeronautics.

RECENTLY WE VISITED TEMple Emanu-El's beautiful building. In the Isaac M. Wise Memorial Auditorium auxiliary services had been held on the occasion of the High Holydays. Near the doorway stood a large canvas sign on which, had been painted the "word: "Exit," underneath was a large red arrow, and below it in Yiddish characters the word "Oisgang;" What a world of meaning this simple word in "Mameloshon" <»rried! Everyone who dares assert that Temple Emariu-El closes its doors to noncongregants should ponder this miracle! It is obvious that so many Jews of non-Reform outlook attend the "Cathedral Synagogue" that direct tions in Yiddish must be furnished them. On the wall of the auditorium is a portrait of the late Rabbi Isaac M.. Wise, leaning upon his cane. If memory stands me aright, was there not a slight criticism of Yiddish a few years ago by a member of the historic imily? But time and tradition roll inexorably on, and in the sanctuary of Reform Judaism "in excelsis," stands a ;ign with the word: "Oisgang." DR. STEPHEN WISE RECENTly narrated an experience in an Italian synagogue. He was called to the Law . and "schnoddered" an amount for the Shuhl. The Shamnias asked him: "When are you leaving the city?" "Tonight," answered Dr. Wise. , . Thereupon the Shammas continued! "I cannot accept the money today, but if you will place it in this drawer now, I will pick it up this evening." Dr. Wise obeyed the Shammas' insistent plea? the gift was insured to the Shuhl, though it was Shabbas, and the Mitzwah was recorded in the Heavenly Heights. COULD; A N Y T H I N G MORE aptly exemplify the attitude of the little girl in the Religious School who ;aid to her friends, about to enroll: "You'll hate Hebrew, but you'll love the Principal." RAYMOND DANNEBAUM, THE} gifted publisher of the San Francisco "Jewish!Journal" has written a v^sermon on /boilerplate.' " " .' "Ostensibly," he says, "Judaisnt has little to do with boilerplate. Yet, through | the medium of Jewish journalism i| has more to do with boilerplate th^n ever ii ought. Boilerplate is used tp pad the pages of a publication. Boilerplate is harvested with shears from the clip-sheet, from ither, more enterprising publications, or out of the indiscriminate produce of a news agency." Mr. Dannebaum makes a plea for more originality in Jewish journalism. He is heartily to be commended for his words. Too much of the material that fills the pages of Jewish periodicals throughout the country comes from "smart aleck" • scribes who write with pens dipped in venom. Disgruntled at the difficulty of finding employment o,r adequate remuneration—which in its own right awakens sincere sympathy in everyone—some of these "syndicate writers" fill their columns and articles with outpourings which betray their own envy and spleen. Some of these "writers" conduct press and publicity agencies and seek to make propaganda for the reputation of vain persons who enjoy seeing their name in print. : If such tactics are abhorred or public attention comes to a person without artificial stimulus or solicitation, these "syndicate writers" emit their rage in their self-poisoned and reckless essays. They are mere spacefillers, mere hack-workers of the lowest order. They degrade Jewish journalism. They seek to imitate high-priced columnists like Walter "WinchelJ. If the writers were to find steady employment either on the staff of periodicals or in established organizations, they would sing as sweetly tomorrow as they sing sourly today. •'; ? Readers of Jewish weeklies should not take them seriously; these writers are **shell-shocked" by the depression. .Their cure lies in the return of reasonable prosperity which will, we predict, speedily banish the gangrene in their, souls. "

cale for an anti-Jewish campaign, displaying all the features of anti-Semitism in all ages and in all lands. Some Jewish writers have been seeking to belittle the anti-Jewish propaganda, but Miss Brenner makes it umistakably clear that tbe-ssseient hunt in its characteristic fury is once more directed against the harassed children of Israel. • Why on earth should some American Jews seek to minimize the danger to the new Jewish settlement in the nation to the south of us? Why should they adopt "pianissimo tactics?" A noted. Jewish publicist has correctly written: "If the events in Mexico are not to be described as anti-Semitic because no religious considera*tions enter the picture, then in the future at any time when an attack upon Jews occurs, Jewish property destroyed and perhaps a few Jewish skulls cracked, we shall have to make an inquiry whether it is purely on religious or any other grounds that the performance has been staged. • I don't think there is any new contribution to the sociology of the Jews to point out that in most anti-Semiic outbreaks there are hidden and perhaps -unconscious economic motives. That was probably true of Russian pogroms, or the present situation in Roumania, and even of the latest attacks by the Nazis on the streets of Berlin." MANY OF OUR WORTHWHILE organizations, notably the Bnai Brith and the American Jewish Congress, have done admirable work in seeking to alleviate the distress of those afflicted by Mexican anti-Semitism and in protecting Jewish rights. Jews cannot be too forthright in the safeguarding of their barely-won civil and economic privileges. The attempt to hush-up the outbreaks in Berlin is another index of the endeavor to complicate Jewish self-defense. There is a type of Jew who imitates Skippy's famous words: "Always belittlinV All power to those organizations like the Bnai Brith and the American Jewish Congress^ which are not squeamish'* sin their endeavours for hounded Israel." The times call not for, chicken-hearted champions, but for those who will stand in the frontline and give back blow for blow. "IS GOD RUNNING THIS PANic?" is the title a mid-western Rabbi has chosen for a "discussion of the world crisis." Perhaps we may be permitted to say of this Rabbi's sermon theme, in the lingo of the collegian: It's a panic, too."

FROM MY DAY-BOOK tip in the "yawning," and to the office. Picked up the morning paper and noted Brother Winchell's animadversion that the fellow who wrote "Ireland Must Be Heaven Because My Mother Came From There" was a Jew. And moreover his mother didn't come from Ireland, but must have come from Germany, because the author was a German Jew. Yes, and that's the way of the world. Dixie was written by a northerner. The tune of "America" is of British origin, being the same as that of "God Save the King." The tune of "Hatikvah" is not Jewish. The fellow who wrote "Down By the Swanee River" never saw the Swanee, picking the name from an atlas, and the Jewish boys, who wrote "I Want to Go Back to Michigan" always stay in New York, though God knows there is nothing to stop anyone from going to Michigan.

NO JEWS IN SIAM? Heard today of a Jewish writer who sent a note to King of Siarn when latter was in New York, asking for an interview on subject of "Jews of Siam." The king replied very courteously that he would be glad to accord interview, but that it woud be futile, as there are no Jews in Siam. That is, we presume, he meant with the exception of the Jewish ambassador from America to Siam, Mr. "Kauffman. Yet we can hardly believe that the king is correct. If there are no Jews in Siam, what does Mr. Kanffman do, when he wants to "bench" with a "mezuman?" If there are no Jews in Siam, who collects money for the-Zionists there? I ask you. If there are no Jews in Siam, who are the tailors there, who calls the protest meetings, who writes the songs about the red hot mommers of Siam, whose rich are black-balled from clubs, and whose poor are hit over the head with clubs at Socialist demonstrations, who rave about Freud, who pack the concerts? The .King of Siam must be mistaken. - Let him look around. "We dare say his own ministers. There that fellow Abi Sin Koo must have been Abie Sinkowitz—when he lived on the East Side.

of whose merit I am suspicious, I generally borrow a baby to take along." "If the shew is rotten, I slap the baby—the baby cries, and they put me and the baby out—of course refunding my. money." It's a system.

with the story I told. "Of course not." I replied, "I an. not telling it apropos of anything But you 'know there is a depressior in the land, and it will cheer you up.' "Depression, jroixf! It's all mental," he replied.

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By the way, said Hoffman, did you hear the Ftory of the lawyer who came to see Morris Hillquit. "Mr. Hillquit," he said, "if you do not take this case, I'll get Coolidge for my lawyer. Yes, Coolidge knows me. I shook hands with him two years ago."

As the advertising man left, I de cided he was right. The depression is all" mental, and hereafter, I go back to the silver-lined standard. Every cloud has a silver lining, There, how can there be a depression, with all of these new things starting up. • Thei'e are plans on foot for instance GIRLS AND STOCKINGS for a half dozen publications. There, At Times Square collided with the friend, Askwith, formerly of the venerable advertising- man, S. Golden. my Menorah Journal, is now back of a "What's happening?" we asked. to launch a daily school paper "The same thing that happens to a project New York. To present and intergiri'Vho wears cotton stocking-s," re- in pret the news in a manner suitable plied Golden. the school child's cerebration. "We bite," we replied. "What hap- forSome well known men are aspens to a girl who wears cottou sociated very with the enterprise, and it stockings 1" "Young man," he replied, "don't seems to carry the portent of great you know that nothing ever happen?" .promise. to a girl who wears cotton stockings." THIS AND THAT THere was something to that, and Israel Goldberg and Dr. Benderly of to give a quid pro quo, we asked the Jewish Education Association Golden, if he had heard the one about have completed third volume of their the Communist. history and anthology. The work will •Which one is that? go to twelve volumes . . . . Dr, Joseph Tenenbaum has just finished another .COMMUNISTS AND CLUBS book . . . . Charles Kesnikov, author A fellow was standing last Satur- of "By the Waters of Manhattan" and day night at Union Square and hit- now Hollywoocling has just married ting- - himself over the head with a• . . . . Inter-Racial Press plans to do club. some Jewish broadcasting- . . . . B. A crowd gathered around him. Weintrpb of the Chicago Jewish "What's the idea?" they asked. He Chronicle is in Sussia. . . . kept on lemming his head with the (Copyright. 1981. by the Jewish Teleclub. graphic Agency, Inc.) "Say, what's the idea?" Finally he explained: "Well, you Buenos Aires. <*— Persons brought see, I am a Communist, but I was not over to Argentine by their husbands able to attend the last meeting of the or wives or nee.r relatives, will be exCommunists, so I irissed the police beating. I've gotten so jfjsed to them empted from payment of visa fees imthat I miss them now. So I am try- posed on all .immigrants, according to a decree promulgated by the governing to make up for it." ment here. But that story has nothing to do

DR. HADAS EXPLAINS Up to the Hebrew Union College, for Teachers, to meet Dr. Moses Hadas, its principal, who also teaches Greek at Columbia. Discussed my recent reference to the poor anthologies of the Talmud, and Dr. Hadas agreeing, attributed it to the fact that the authors of these anthologies were largely trying to prove that the Talmud ethics was as noble as the Christian. Thus, they were disposed to print everything of a trite and benevolent nature, but completely ignored all of its racy, subtle and more profound observations. The Talmud, said Dr. Hadas, is the most misrepresented of books. Hadas, by the way, has just finished a translation of Sefer'Shashuim—Book of Delight—a Hebrew classic of the twelfth century, which Columbia University is publishing. Also I hear, Abram I. Elkus, fatherin-law of Hadas, is planning to write Memoirs.

JOHN HAYNES HOLMES OF the Community Church has returned to this country, bringing with him the superb vitality and high-hearted vision which are his dower. At the head of his message to the members of his church, he places the words of Walt Whitman: "Forever alive, forever forward . . . Alons! The road is before us." ; I have read many messages of clergymen to their people within the past few weeks; but none is. so moving as that of Dr. Holmes, because none has been based upon so rich and engrossing an experience. "Again and again," writes the minister of the Community Church, "as I passed this summer from London to Berlin to Moscow, and as I. journeyed felt tremors of dissolution beneath PREJUDICE my feet, I found myself thinking of. In the street we encountered S. the doom of Rome, and wondering if Wallach, who tells us he is engaged still another of the civilizations of in some work for the Committee on mankind was coming to an end." Good Will of the Federal Council ot~In discussing the needs of mankind Churches. for religion* that will heal and save, Good luck to him. This Dr. ClinDr. Holmes continues: 'What have chy, heads the committee, is we done, or prepared- to do, that tnost who sincere and fine of persons, but matches us with the ideals-and pur- somehow have little faith in all poses we would make our own? To these goodwewill efforts. For prejuserve great causes js to. lay down dice is of the toughest consistency. great sacrifices of ease and pleasure. It is by its nature irrational It is-to take from ourselves what we can you fight irrationality? and how would be using for ourselves had we not been caught by; this vision SZK! Remember the Talmul story of the pledged to this work i"or we can- Jew who passed in the streets some not claim association with some brave oriental king ? As he passed, the Jew movement for a better world and a averted his glance. The Jew was sum: nobler humanity, and then go on liv- moned before the king. ing- lazy and self-indulgent lives as "How dare you, you Jew, fail to though nothing had/ happened! We1 salute the king?" Off went his head. must prove our words with deeds, our ideals, with personal surrenders and Later another Jew passed, the king. sacrifices, that we may" make clear As he passed, the Jew graciously saANITA BRENNER'S ARTICLE: our goal,; and -attain it in our time luted .the king. He was haled before the despot. "Making Mexico Jew Conscious" in j ^ h e ' e a r t b ' , " : , •„.•; "We • strive to -"What : .^do you mean, you Jew, for the Sept. 9th issue of "The Nation" Jtoday • what 'was : doner.in • earlier get so'"famiiiar?" throws a flood of light upon the world y_5 by .those who • dsired sad suffered daring;-te§ And off went his head. "!/• , Jewish situation.' Hoffman Nicker- alJ'for-humankind. Can:"vre dars titson in "The American Rich" described tle, or suffer less, and stillJay claim And' that' is £he way cf prejudice.' with prejudice and hatred the pvocvsss to" fellowship -with this august com- If a person is prejudiced against you, by which Jews are invited to a new pany? Not so! If vrs^puld find <rar anything.;yea do ••will displease ,him, ',' i . country only to become shortly a dis- lives, we must lost thess" lives. And unless .you consent to die. And he would probably even object tinct '-'problem." -Nickerson vjelcomed to lose them is.to/glyetfreely of cur this situation as inevitable,, except fttr money,'time snd^sircnsrGi to the fcr,ve to that, as; tending to give you a little k the fact that countries with a small which 5v6 nave ourstlvi-E;''cXrc:) fcr i HOFFMAN HAS A SYSTEM!'' ' Jewish population should take warn- our -service." • .:••"' ing, and not lay up for themselves a These are glovnns and chaJIcn^insj With Hoffman, pabliolty masag-er Jewish "peril." utterances. They echo the heroism of" the Jewish Ensemble -Theater, to Because of the ; vicious anti-immi- that is in the soul of Dr. Hofees him- see a Broadway show. gration laws of the United States, self. They put to shame everyone • As the; show progressed, Hoffman Cuba and Mexico have r/itnessod'the who would be "at ease" in his par- sighed: "I -wish. I had isiy baby with • • • entrance of a large number of Jews ticular Zion. They are prophetic in me." who hope to make the* jump across their summons to undertake the "Your Tjaby—I never knew you the boundry or shore-line into this labors of humanity at this crucIrJ were a father." .country.- Mexico ha& becoms the lo- hour in modern history. Their influ- "I'm not» but when I go to a show:

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PAGE 3—THE JEWISH PRESS, -FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1031 DANCE PATRONS __ and was.workicg for the lightweight Patrons and patronesses for. the Fa- championship of the school. Hon dance next Sunday at the Jewish Cornmunity Center. - include Mrs. L. Miss Evelyn Marks" left for Chicago. Neveleff, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Frank- to enter CMeagb" universitjr. lin, Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Levin,' and Mr. and Mrs. Philip ill utznick. Yom Kippur fell en October 12.

move from-fire. Add dissolved jello and one. large can salmon shredded. Add 1. green pepper chopped ."fine. Turn into a mold dipped in cold water and chill. When ready to serve turn out in. a nest of cris^> lettuce leaves. .

"The congregation of Teuiple Israel were .planning a" larger celebration to be held during-the naiadle of-November to observe- the fiftieth anniversary of-the founding of the congregation. Three -former -rabbis were invited to attend. '

SORORITY ENTERTAINS The Theta Phi Sigma Sorority -prill entertain at a bridge tea at the Fontenelle Hotel on Sunday,' October 18, honoring Miss Lillian Steinberg-and Mrs. Sam Katzman. -•".-'Miss Steinberg is" leaving for Arizona for the ""winter, and Mrs. KatzAT STYLE REVIEW \NEVELEFF-FREE5IAN man, of Kansas .City, Mo., formerly Mr. and Mrs. Abe Herzbarg ar- Miss Anna Jonish. of this city, is visENGAGEMENT Mr. and Mrs. Samuel H. Davis ranged" a no-host table for 14 guests iting here "with her parents.' Miss Tobey Flax is chairman of the announce • the engagement of their at the Paxton hotel style revue Sataffair. ' sister^ Miss Lillian Freeman, to Mr. urday evening. . Herbert Neveleff," son of Mrs. LtSuis ; Nevelefr. ..-•••• SOCIAL NOTES : The wedding date has been set for Miss. Bertha Strauss of St. Louis .Mrs.:Sam Katzman, formerly Anne October 27. is the house guest of her cousin, Miss Jonish, of Kansas City, Mo., and her NelLMarks. Miss Strauss Avill be" a small daughter, Jean Ruth,- are visitJOIE KALIS AND FRANK bridesmaid to Miss Marks when she ing With Mrs. Katzman's parents, Mr. BLOTCKY ABE WED becomes the bride, of Irving Eubinow and' Mrs: A. Jonish: They will stay -Mr. and Mrs. Louis Elotcky, 1305 of Pittsburg, Kansas, on Sunday, Oc- here about a month. South Thirty-fourth street, -will be at tober 11,- at the Birchwood club. JUNIOR HADASSAH home on Sunday, October 11, from 3 Junior Hadassah "will entertain at until 5 o'clock and 7 until 10, in honor Mr. and Mrs.' Abe Bolker and sons, of Mr. and Mrs. Frank'Blotcky/ who Norman and Joseph, and Mr. and-Mrs. a theater- party at the Orpheum on were married in Lincoln last lues-' Howard Milder' motored to Lincoln October 22. It will be followed by a supper party at the/Paxton hotel, day. No cards have ! been issued." ; last Sunday. where a surprise will be in store for Mrs. Arthur Katskee entertained 15 Miss Eva Lipsman returned Mon- everyone. All members and prospectguests at luncheon at the Fontenelle, in honor of Mrs. Blotcky, Miss Huth day after spending several weeks in ive members are invited to attend. Miss Lee Shames is in charge of this • Kohen gave a Sunday supper for 24 New York City. affair. guests last week, and Mrs. Sam. ApIt has also been announced that the plemari entertained at a dinner for The Mesdames Julius Abrahamson, 15 guests at home Tuesday for the Sam Cohn, Julius Stein, and Joe Gold- Junior Hadassah will hold their an: Thanksgiving dance Thanksgivyoung conple. ware will be hostesses at a bridge and nual 1 mah Jong party at the : Community ing evening. Committees have already •enter on .Wednesday, October 21..'-.. , been appointed. . ANNOUNCES-PLANS . - . . ; . : This>yill,be for the "Give and.Get'.'; Attendants . have been chosen "and plans made for the wedding of Miss luncheon of the Hadassah..-All are ALPHA TAU Euth Hofner and Hymie Philip JMild- urged, to make up a table and phone v The first of a series of rush, parties er," which will take place in the. Pax- one of the hostesses for reservations. of the Alpha Tau sorority held at the home of Libby Abramson Tuesday ton hotel hall room on Sunday, OctoMr.- and: Mrs.' Allen Burke -have evening was.an informal open, meetber 18. JA reception and. dancing will moved to their new home- in. Kansas ing.. The twelve rushees were enter follow the ceremony. . ,.: • Attending .the bride will• be Mrs. C i t y , . M o . - - • ' - . . ; • ; . - • • / • > ; - : - v : . ; tainedby the members. • Many-affairs have been pla'nned Howard Milder; matron of honor,-and for "the rushees. , . _ . ,. s^,Nathan Turner, Donalsoriville, Mrs. Leo Milder, Miss Nina Bassin of ; Kansas City, and Mrs. David - Bern- a., formerly-Miss Ruth -Kaplan fof this city, is visiting;with her parents. SIGMA KAPPA CHI stein, bridesmaids." " -"• ! ;" The Sigma-Kappa Chi sorority will •Howard Milder will serve-his broth- She- intends, to__stay.lhefe_l for three hold a regular meeting on Tuesday, she.will 4eave for er as~ best man, and Leo Milder, Aba more ;weeks,;when ; . Oct.; 13 at 7:30 p.- m. .Installation of h Segall," and David - Bernstein will- be Chicago . and - Chattanooga, Tenn., officers t and a discussion of a berieg ushers.. .- - -.-• .. •- ••-•;•; '-•'•• T whe're-'sh&.'wHl^^ visit -withwith relatives fit bridge will feature. Light refreshPhyllis Milder and Harriett. Cohn and friends, ments will be served at the conclusion ; will be flower girls. . -" of the meeting. . . ' . . . . . : Dr. and .Mrs. "M. 'Grodinsky and Miss Hofner has been the recipient of many ^beautiful affairs. OnjrHufs- daughter,' Bela May,- are making their TEN YEARS AGO . day Mrs.JJohn.Corby was hostess;at hbme.'at ,the Austin' apartments until. N a t h a n E. Jacobs of Omaha, stuNovember 15 at which, time the "home an Orpneum theatre' party, and on Monday Mrs. B. Canfield will" enter- which' they" are - building at Firty- dent of journalism a t the University tain at an' afternoon-bridge. .Mrs.; eighth "and "Vyebster'streets will be of Missouri, was selected as one of the 10 sophomore assistants for the Sa'Harry Segall: will" give a bridge on : 6 m p l e t e d . - " " . ' " vitar staff.- The Savitar is the uniTuesday, and; Mrs. Izzy Fielder will be . \ { hostess in Miss Hofner's . honor on BIRTHS. . "".-.".'"_ • .. ' ;_J versity year boolc. ^ Thnrsday.-.' " , ' ' . " . - " . Mr. • and Mrs. Robert Glazer an-; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Q. Marx, who niounce ' the birth of a daughter oh returned after visiting several months Tuesday, October 6. " FOR MISS MARKS in Louisiana, were accompanied here Miss Nell. Marks, whose marriage by Mrs. A. Goudchaux, formerly Miss to Irvin Hubinow will take place on MISS EONELL IN MOVIES Mollie Singer.. .. ".""•; next Sunday, was honored at-a bridge Miss Ann Rohell, daughter of Mrs. last Sunday, afternoon when. Miss Cele -Morris Rosenblatt,-Austin apartments, Eabbi Frederick Cohn spoke before "VVolk was hostess. Omaha, was* on .the screen at - the the Political and Social Science deOn Tuesday Mrs. A. M. Greenbaum State ^theatre last .week in the new partment of the Omaha "Women's club. entertained" for Miss Marks " "at" a series of Hollywood sidelights. •.: bridge-luncheon for 20 guests at the . She sang and played the piano in a Oscar Weinstein was chosen quarKnights of Colnmbus.' A color' scheme scene with./Walter Huston. -Miss Ro- terback on the football team of Kem\. of pink and green was carried out in riell is the writer pf "Baby's Birthday per Military school. Mr. "Weinstein J " - the table decorations. Party" and."The.Candy-Parade." also showed much ability as a boxer

l£/A,_y^

Israel Zarigwill had just completed the dramatization of his book, "The King of the Schnorrers~." Joseph Kessler, eminent Yiddish actor, announced that a season of Yiddish drama was planned for Omaha.

.I- WEDDING OF INTEREST f Word has-been received of the i forthcoming marriage of Miss Millie V Arrow",' daughter of Mr. and Mrs. "Hiirl-iss'- Arrow, of Brooklyn, New- York, j and Philip'. S / Mandel, of-JSTew- York', •-.son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Mandel, di i O m a h a !

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G The-.wedding will take place Octo"zer 10'at the home of the bride's paf• ents, 811 -"Westminster Road," Brooklyn, with Rabbi Lazar Schoenfeld pf' ficiating1. A reception will follow the ceremony. .-."... \ Out of town guests will include Mr. land Mrs.'-.i-ouis Mandel of Omaha; ; Harry. Mandel of San .Frandscp, Calii forniav brother of the groom, who will ; be the best man; Mr.: and Mrs. Ralph •I R Cohn of Dixon, JU.; .Mr. and.Mrs. 1 Jack Kosowsky and Hershel A. Soskin ; of Washington; D. C.

J:

u§i Arrived——

Messiah". tc sn Ths" story cf Sabbatai Sevi's i firic the ure, his conrsrsipn to Islam, the gloom i ber of Cormnerce and Ipdr.stry here. and despair which darkened the Jew- I : ish horizon at this news of their clay- j footed idol, the "breaking away into a separate sect cf those Jews who could Cheerful mih Jscvr Famt not believe that Sabbatai's conversion j to Islam was not done with a pur- i pose, all these fascinating and vital Phonep—AT. 4744—JA. 7855 episodes are related with a. clarity and an understanding that mate Dr.

Kitchen Chats By Sirs. David M. Newman Chinese Molds 2 eggs, 1 cap milk, 1 cap cooked rice, 1 cup grated cheese, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1-2 teaspoon pepper. Beat eggs, add milk and remaining ingredients. Mix thoroughly and put in greased custard cups .and place in a pan of hot water and bake in moderate oven. May be served in molds or turned out and arranged on a platter with slices, of beets. , Salmon Meld Soak ltablespoon jelk> (lemon) in cold-water.- Beat 2 yolks of eggs, add 1 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon dry mustard, a few grains of cayenne. Add 11-2 tablespoons melted butter, 2 tablespoons -vinegar, 3-4 cup milk. Cook in double boiler stirring constantly until "mixture thickens. Re-

"The Messiah cf Is^iir Sabbatai Zed"' By Joseph Kastein. . One of the most interesting of the recent books with a Jewish appeal is "The Messiah of Ismir "Sebbatai," by Joseph Kastein (Viking, $3.50). Some might say the boolr is controversial, but it tvould perhaps be more appropriate to say that it tended to reinterpret a certain phase -of the history of Judaism, that phase which had to do. with the welcoming cf Sabbatai Zevi, seventeenth century Cabbalist cf fame,' whose family rose

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POLIKOY-HUTLER : .. : ENGAGEMENT Mr. and Mrs. B. Polikov announce the engagement of their daughter, Zena'i toSam Kutler," son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Kutler of "this city." No date has been set for the wedding. Mr.'and Mrs. Kutler entertained at home in honor of the engaged couple ") on last-Sunday. • " - -

' .•"." Batter_ Scotch'Cream 1 cup canned milk diluted with 2-3 cup water, 3 tablespoons cornstarch, 1-4 teaspoon salt, 1-2 cup brown sugar, 1-3. cup* cold, water, 1 tablespoon butter, 2 eggs, 1-2.: cup chopped dates, 1-3 cup :'• chopped walnuts, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Scald milk, combine corastarch, salt, sugar and mix with cold water. Add to diluted milk. Cook over hot water 15 minutes. Stir until thick. Add butter, pour over beaten eggs, return to boiler and cook 2 minutes longer. Add dates, nuts and vanilla. Chill.

from poverty to wealth "by trading, as j Kastein's volume doubly important, the Messiah for whom the long-perse-[ both from the sUu'RlpoInt of.-its htcuted and anguish-filled Jews felt i erary value and becsnse of the EiUtlvthey had waited long- eno-agh. j or's ability 'to view the Messiah move* - The story of Sabbatai Eevi &nd the \ meat in its larger pliSses, not merely mission 'which he preached tc Jews | as the i'aiiure of a cliai'lstan iinu 3, throughout the world is a fascinating j poser. one. He caused raar.y eTews to re- ! •

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Weizmann chair of International Law and Peace at the Hebrew university, it was annoxTnced here. • The chair was established in July of 1SS1 through a S75.000 endowment by Sir Montague Burton, primv.nene lirtmiinen!;TTJ% p - f T r v! by l\\*t M ^ ' I British Zionist, and •named for the J L W W — - J i f ( ? r m e r p r e s i d e l ; t o f i h e VvorM S o j , . . presme

1st Organisation.

A plan which "would enable AmeriI'.lr. Bentvich is expected to arrive can Jews who have suffered financial in Palestine either in the winter or losses as a res-alt of the current eco-r the early spring. nomic depression but have still moderate sums sufficient to help them OITK ADVERTISERS earn a livelihood by settling in Palestine as the owners of orange groves was recommended to American Zionists by Dr. Akiba Ettinger, jwell" v ^.«i knowa Pales-tine agricultural expert and Land Director of the Jewish Na• I tional Fund, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency has learned. When conTonight Jewish Women's Welfare Rabbi Goldstein "will speak on summated the plan will provide an r v Association f opportunity for at least 1503 Ameri* i * The opening meeting of the Jewish. "Genesis, or How It All Began." can Jewish families to settle in. the Women's Welfare Federation was y-f f^^r r^p Palestine Orange Belt and would inSaturday Morning: l held a t the Jewish Community Cenvolve E.n investment of private capAt services this Sabbath we-recite itsl in the amount of $4,750,000. ter Tuesday, October 6, with Mrs. P Louis Neveleff, presichnt, presiding. the Rosh Ch.ode.-h prayers. Rosh Ths Jewish National Fund, Dr. A very interesting talk was given Chodesh Heshvan is this Sunday and Akiba Ettinger stated,.is prepared to ssnpnp by Rev. Laurance- Plank on "The Monday. We begin the reading of the place at the disposal of American Significance of Social Welfare Work." Torah with Parasha B'Reshis. middle class settlers' units a subSTEFAN ZWEIG DAVID EWEN Mrs. Irvin Stalmaster was elected stantial area of its estate known as vice-president for the unexpired term Vadi Havareth, situated in ths heart g Although I do not come from a What was to be his destiny? Palestine there will no longer.be wars as not caused by the resignation of the forof-the orange zone along the Mediterrigorously Jewish family—my mother is now in the making-r-will that be so far-distant; with the same optim- mer vice-president. Tea was served an All-Star Cast in ranean coast, in the Valley of Sharon. and father -were Jewish only through the future of the Jew? Will assimila- istic eyes I look forwa; i to the future following, the meeting. The area has come into t h e possest an accident of birth—I have been tion swallow him up like some whirl- when one will not suffer because one sion of the Jewish National Fund vitally interested in Jewish problems pool? Will Judaism bloom or fade?" is a Jew. Xi Lambda all my life, vitally aware of the Jew- Is it mortal or immortal? These The Conservative Synagogue is in- through the financial assistance of (Copyright, 1931, by the Jewish - The Xi Lambda fraternity an- stalling a Question and Suggestion Canadian Jewry. The entire area is ish blood that is in me, as long as I questions fascinated me most. The young- Cantor, Lebelr Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) nounces the election of the following box for the convenience of its mem- irrrgabls and has a rich, supply of can remember. What it was that JUDAISM IMMORTAL Waldman, with, Kis Choir water in a depth of only 20 to 30 feet. officers: Ralph Nogg, president; drove me towards a deep interest in bers at the J. C. C, "where its servChanting. Twenty years of close contact with Morris Fishar, vice president; Arthur ices are held. Jewish matters, it is hard to say. A considerable part of the land is Lipp, secretary; Sam Cackin, treasSome would say that i t is the "call Jewish life have, quite naturally, sugMembers are invited to write ques- most suitable for ths growing of citurer. of the blood"—although I doubt it gested answers to me to these questions or make suggestions pertaining rus fruit such as oranges, grapefruit, seriously. I suppose that i t is rather tions. That Judaism is immortal can Among the highlights of events in any way to the synagogue, auxili- lemons and ethrogim. The rest of the because of an intellectual interest in not be doubted. There is an indestaged by the fraternity under the ary, or Sunday school on matters of area is fit for mixed farming—dairy, n all human problems, and what human finable "something" in every Jew's outgins; administration, headed by religion, conduct, decorum, etc. poultry, banana, cantaloupe growing, Deborah Society heart which neither time nor oppresproblem can be quite so important as Additional adjacent areas rn.ay|?S These letters need not be signed by] etc The opening meeting of the De- Sam Finkel, were included a moonthe problems of a race to which; one sion can hope to extinguish. It is as borah Society will be held next Tues- light hike, and a'"Ball and Chain" thee writers, and the box rfill b'ejbe added at a later period, creating) and the box will b b eternal as life itself. Judaism inevitis born? dance held at the Highland Country opened at the monthly the middle •nthly spons-1 further opportunities for th of the suppers spons day afternoon, Oct. 12, at the Jewably must live. club. There was another influence in my ored by the auxiliary, the first of class settlers, when the Ussishkin ish Community Center. But concerning the fate of the Jew, The new administration is plan- which will take place the end of this Five-Year plan is carried into euect. life that made me a Jew in heart Mr. Judah Wolfson, principal of Conducted hy Mr. A. RubIndividual settlers will receive 20 and in soul, as well a s through" birth. I hope that I will not be considered the Talmud Torah, "will speak. Sev- ning to hold the club's annual treas- month. ' ensteJTi, photographed in p, dunams or approximately five acres • I allude to a very dear friend of mine, a pessimist if I say that the Jew eral children of the Talmud Torah ure hunt soon, and a formal dance talking picture for the first sufficient to yield a living for the | Theodore Herzl. His beautiful nym- has no fate. I am really not pessim- will demonstrate the work being on New Year's eve. Sam Garrop is time. FOR" RENT pholepsy, his inspiring idealism, above istic about the Jew. I think that taught there. Tea will be served fol- a new pledge to the group. cultivating family, on the te-rms of a j» all else his nobility of -soul—all this the Jew has something in him which lowing the meeting. Beautiful Furnished Apartment renewable 49-year lease. Living room, dining room, 2 bedin turn revealed to me the poetry of inevitably tends to produce greatness. R-Na C!ub Omaha's Premier Foreipr rooms, kitchenette, pantry, 3 our race. I am indebted toTheodore It is not merely an accident of fate The first meeting of the season of Talking Picture Theater that the most alert and living spirits clothes closets, tile bath. "Also Conservative Auxiliary : Herzy for many things. F o r one the R-Na club was held Sunday morn- gas, heat, electricity included. throughout the world—in culture and A formal installation of the newthing, because he it was who made ing at Temple Israel. Gertrude RothAdults preferred. References. possible the publication of my first art and science—are Jews. It is not ly elected officers of the Woman's kop was installed as president; Joel 319 No. SS-Ave. an accident that Jews have contributAuxiliary of the Conservative Syna- Cherniss, vice president; Bess Goldbook—a book of essays in which t e Jerusalem.—(J. T. A.)—Norman j g ed so monumentally to advance the gogue will take place a t its next regwas deeply interested and for which ware, secretary; Phillip Laserowitz, Bentwich, retired Attorney General g world's civilization. And I am optimular meeting on Wednesday, Oct. 14,treasurer, and Lillian Koom and he exerted all his efforts. F o r anfor Palestine, nt>^ in London, will re-j5f istic enough to believe that much at 2:30 p. m., a t the Jewish Comother thing, I am grateful to him for Ernest Pricsman, sergeant-at-arms, turn to Palestine to occupy the Chaim ||J iiiD£% I. L, a beautiful friendship. Most of all, greatness will yet be produced by munity Center, with Rabbi David A. and Una Gross, reporter. 3?OT>P K E 182 Jewish blood in this world of ours. Goldstein presiding. I am gratfeul to Dr. Herzl because Standing committees appointed by he showed me the greatness of our RACE AND NATIONALITY JIArf & MOXSKV, Following the installation, there the president for the coming year are <?££, i ' !« ^ f j " ? ? \ "^ race. From that friendship, really will be a program consisting of a membership, Herbert Marks, Phil NOTICE O F AliTICT/ES O F And yet, I feel keenly, that the Jew stems my keen and intense interest rOKATION" O F tiATE CITY has no future. By that I mean that group of selections by Esther Silver- Laserowitz, Ernest PHesman, Lillian T M t l i CO. I N C . in Jewish matters. the Jew will tomorrow be as he is man, readings by Dorothy Friedel and Koom; lecture, Una Gross, Isadore KNOW ALT. MKX r \ 1 ' r^ Nevr and Old K N T S : That th«> lindor--.. vrr ' « Naturally, the problem that fascin- today, scattered throughout the world, a play review by Mrs. Herman.Jahr. Ricklin, Esther Horwich; program, i i a oorporjiti(ui innlor tin 1 ^ ated me the most, in Jewish life, was borrowing much from the world's Tea will be served at the close of Jerald Batt, Herbert Kaplan, Bess of Nt'lir.-islc;!. The linn <> i- i ' j i F f l l X I T U U K CO., INC.. v 1, , - P - n the problem of the fate of t h e Jew. culture, contributing, more to it; con- the program. ;•.-.'• ; . . . . - . ' Goldware, Harold Stern, Paul FrumAt Keasonablc I'ricee JK place of business in tK> < •(* <> «'i 1 i Plans a r e being made for a bigger group this year and a larger program, to bring about a deeper, more essential consciousness of Jewish things in general as. well as the "well known works of Hadassah. Safebath Services Candle ligkiing time, Friday, Oct. All these who would be interested in joining a r e asked to call Mrs. Max 9, 5:10 p. m. Saturday morning services, 8:30 Fromkin or Mrs. Martin Blass. This group will meet every second Monday a. m. Friday evening, services, 8 x>. EL at the Blackstone a t 12:45.

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World-Famous Author Finds Golden Rays Which Line the Recent Depressing Glouds By

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Kol Nidre

Question Bos Is Planned by Conservative Synagogue

Organization News

Eli*

RADIO STARS

JEWISH HOUR

Bentwich to Occupy Hebrew Peace Chair

VICTORIA International

VIOLINS

santly and inevitably being-blended with his. surroundings and environment—and yet never surrendering his heritage and the spark of Judaism in him. Palestine can never be a solution-for the Jews' problems. I am convinced — notwithstanding all of Herzl's zeal and efforts—that not in Palestine lies the future of the Jew. The Jew will remain a German arid an Austrian and a Frechman and an American. And! he will also remain a J e w .

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And why should it not be so? Wherein am I pessimistic if I express such an opinion? Too long, already, have we been confusing Tace and nationality. Race ; is one thing; nationality is something else again. I do not know why the Jew, as a race, c,annot harmonize in and with Germdny, as a nationality. One does not clash "with the other. On the contrary 'one can very easily blend with the other. One can readily be a good German, and. also a good Jew. In fact, a good many people I know are both.

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But not only am I not pessimistic •when I say that the Jew has no fate other than is his today, but I 'am really vary optimistic. For this .is the Jew's most productive state.! I said before that our most creative men, our most penetrating minds, are Jewish. I said also that this is! no accident of fate. It is not. I frankly believe that the Jew has reached superiority in art and culture because of the mixing of heritages. He borrows from the German heritage, or the American heritage; he adds I his own Jewish culture and civilization to it—and the result is a strange, inex-tricable mixture which produces a new type of culture and art and thought. The Jews, when they were a self-sufficient civilization in Palestine, produced very little of heir own in art and thought. It was only when they were forced into the foreign world, forced to absorb foreign culture—that they Were the creators. This, I feel, is an important pcint. I feel that if all the Jews were collected into one country, there to produce their own civilization and to lead their own lives "far from the madding crowd" they would lose their superiority as-thinkers and as artists. Only when v they mix and blend with the western civilization — mixing and blending the two heritages—can they produce a unique culture whicn v/ill enrich the v/orld. O£ course, I will be asked: What about anti-Semitism? If the fate of the Jew is to remain precisely the same tomorrow as today—does that mean that the JeV7 is always fated to suffer the hatred of outsiders? Being an optimist by nature, my answer is most emphatically "no!" Being an optimist by nature I feel that antiSemitism cannot exist much longer. I feel that education, civilization, culture will make human beings of all of us. I look forward to the time h

kin, Joel Cherniss, Rose Mendelson; social, Helenf Fried, Lillian Koom, Ernest Priesmanr Phil Laserowitz. An extensive program has been planned for 'the coming year under the sponsorship of Mrs. Max Fromkin. The organization is open to high school and college students who have passed their 16th birthday. Any Bikur Cholim young Jewish person who would be A regular meeting of the Bikur interested in Joining may call the Cholim Society will be Held on Mon- secretary, KE 5123, for further inday afternoon, Oct., 12, at 2 p. m. at formation. the 25th and Seward St. synagogue. Very important business will be Campfire Girls transacted. All girls between t'*e age of 11 and All members are urged to come.

Xlio c o r p o r a t i o n ^ nu!h> -oi1 •" '' - - * •'

... Through error, the name of- Mrs. Julius Stein was omitted from the list of board members of the Conservative Auxiliary published last week. Mrs. Stein is chairman of the -Sick Visiting and Congratulation committee.

13 wishing, to join Campfire are asked to come- to the Jewish Community Hadassah Cultural Center on Tuesday a t 4 p. m.—meet The Hadassah Cultural group will in t h e lobby.

begin its second series of luncheon meetings on Monday, October 12 at 12:45 at the Blackstone Hotel. Mrs. Max .Fromkin, chairman, announces the following program: "Domestic Relations," an address by District Judge Herbert Rhoades; a review of current Jewish events by Mrs. J. Rosenberg, and , talk on the High Holidays by Mrs. A.Komrn. \. \ ; ; This/group, "which Was inaugurated last year, has been most successful in carrying out their program along cultural lines. Interesting and well informed speakers have been addressing this .enthusiastic gathering.

Change in Policy Every Wednesday, Saturday ; and Sunday v,/ ;

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Jerusalem.—(J. T. A.) —The hope •that his administration will help to create material prosperity in Palestine is expressed by Lieutenant Commander Arthur Grenfell Wauchope, new High Commissioner' of Palestine, in a letter received by the Agudist Vaad Hayir, Jerusalem, City Council of the extreme orthodox elements. Acknowledging the congratulations which the Vaad Hair sent him, t h e new. High Commissioner expresses "his fondest hope that his term as High Commissioner will cease material prosperity for all Palestine citizens, and that he may do something toward it." ; Lodz.—The ^Lodz Tageblatt," oldest and largest Jewish daily in the provinces, which had suspended due to financial difficulties, has resumed publication. The "Lemberg Tageblatt," the only Jewish daily in Galicia has suspended publication because of the lack of funds.

lGrh and Douglas OJIA1IA DXSCES" . , . - ; •

Wauchope Expresses Hope to Help Build Palestine Prosperity

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FEEE EUBBEE KEELS In the County Conrt cf Douglas County. WITH ALL ViAl-V KOLtOS la the Matter of the Estate of John H. Ken's EaJf Soirs f;1.0!l-?1.25 Bath, l.'ecenscd. All vemons interesietl 3n said estate are Ladies' Ka!f Soles ...,S .75-S1.00 hereby notified that a ppfition has been filed 'in said Court, prnyins for the pronatc of a certain instrument: now on file In said Court, purporting to W the last ;?4 Sonfl? Stri will find iestfiment of sni<I deeense<l. «»d thnt u liearins will !>e had on said petilionhefore s:iid C'oiirt on tho 17th day of October, 3fol, P.nd that if they fail to aiipeii1at said C'oiirt on (lie sai<! I Tf b (lay 0 October, 1JUJ1, at J) o'clork A. M.. to con-j ji test the probnte of said will, the Conr | * may allow find probiito Kisid will nm. » srant adnsission cf said esfnte tf The , ' Omaha National Bank or some oilier ^i i able person and proceed to -s seltl i n n ' thereof. r.UYCJG CRAYTFOK1' ' 0-25-."l-"t. County .Tin c I l i V I N € . L E V I K , Attornej!H>1 E5ectr5e ISntliUn-c. XOTICK O F I X C O K F O K . I T W ? I T VNITES> CLEASEKS, I>:i'. Notice is hereby civen that the i n ' .<:£ned bnre fissocintiv} themselves o 5,eilier nud Iinve o r s m t s m l n cfrpo-i io» I'lHlcr the laws of tlie Stnte of _>>el> I"-K 'J he r.nuie o£ this corpcrntion is 5 ' ' ''" Clenners, Inc. T h e principnt pi act- o£ I - M s a c t i n s i t s linsiness shall i>e Omalia ilT"-«sfe-i ' - f the Kent""'! Ti'i*"i'w> n. (he I >'^- ^ Cf

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PAGE 5—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1931

Guild Tryouts The

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I enipie

Soviet Makes Unusual Religious Concession >

A View of the jewis

on in Soviet Russia

By ELIAS TOBENKIN MOSCOW SYNAGOGUE

black eyes were tinged with suffer- the synagogue he somehow suggested a great lawyer issuing from a court ing. The old men in the synagogue were room where he had just delivered an all old ghetto fathers whom their important plea. sons, working In Moscow, had brought In one respect the Moscow synato the capital to live near them. They gogue is thoroughly Russianized. In were what in Russia is called "inzdi- the court yard were a line of beggars ventsi," that is, parents living upon who mutely extended their hands to bounty of their children. Many of the worshippers as they passed them. them boasted of sons who were high The clothes of these beggars were up in the government service. They tattered and entire sections of their were the parents of engineers and bodies were stark naked. Their managers of government industry. broken shoes were tied to their feet There were no signs of physical priva- with pieces of cord. The "Blahodtion in their faces, but there -was aru" (thank you), which they mutsmoldering disappointment in their tered npon receiving an aim, was eyes. They were still capable of mov- scarcely audible, as if they were too ing mountains, as one of them had re- weak to talk. marked to me, hut were kept^by law from doing anything. The* thing called "business" had dropped out of Russian life and there was no call The most powerful enemy of the for men with ability in that direcsynagogue at the close of the nine- tion. teenth and the opening of the twenti- THE CANTOR eth century was the procurator of the It was an ordinary Friday night, Holy Synod,- Pobiedonostseff. He fought tooth and nail to have it but there was a sob in the cantor's closed. And in the year 1902 he suc- voice. I asked the man standing beceeded. The synagogue was closed by side me the Teason for this sadness the order of Grand Duke Sergei Al- in the cantor's singing. "He is a lishenets,'" (declassed), exandrovich. Jews were forbidden to By Br. V. E. Levine. professor of bio-chemistry and nutrition, have their house of prayer in the my neighbor said simply. "As a clerthe Creishton University School ancient Slav capital. The synagogue gyman he has been deprived of his i of ESedicine. stood closed for four years, till 1906, citizenship; he has no vote and he is •when the 1905 Revolution brought denied a "bread card", that is, he can(Ed. Note—Readers of this newsabout a change of status. The Jews not buy bread in government stores! •were permitted to reopen it. Lov- and at the government price. He must paper may receive answers to any ingly it was redecorated and with buy his bread in the open market questions regarding the general subgreat pomp and genuine sincerity and that comes to a rouble a pound. ject of nealth by sending a stamped Moscow Jews resumed their weekly If a man has two or three children self-addressed envelope with their to support, you can imagine that it questions to Dr. Victor E. Levine, services in it. is not easy. He may well sob. Every Creighton University, Omaha, Nebr.) THE CHORAL SYNAGOGUE day is judgment day for him.!1 - . And then, as if fearing that he The only time to see the Choral SAVE YOUR HEART Synagogue in action is on Friday may have talked unwisely to a strangIn this large scale civilization we er whom he does not know, my neighsight. But who can tell, in Moscow, when it is Friday and when it is any bor obviously calculated to weaken lave organized and systematized work and recreation. We need less high other night? The seven-day week bis first statement. He added: has been abolished in" Russia and a "It is not so bad with the declassed pressure, less hurry and "worry, less five-day week instituted. Four days any more now. Things are becoming draining of our physical energies. "We as a nation suffer from hyperpeople work and oh the fifth they stabilized all around. The elergy, rest. It is not a universal fifth day, both Jewish and Gentile, are begin- activity. Too many of our best mindbut a variable one. Every day in the ning to be looked after better by their ed men, men of affairs and leaders week is "vichodnoy," or "off day/* congregations. For instance, if I find in their community, axe lost to •usefor some part of the population. Peo- that I have saved out one or two fullness through sudden and premaple forget what day of the week it extra bread tickets, I take it up to ture death. The newspapers are filled with reit; they only know that it is the fif- the president of the synagogue and teenth or seventeenth. leave it with him. He gives it to ports of such misfortunes. Such tragedies usually befall men, not Several times-when I thought it the cantor. Others do the same. He women.. According to statistics eight does not go hungry, but it is an inwas Friday and decided -rto visit the men meet sodden and early death to synagogue that evening, I found, upon secure and painful existence." one woman. This difference is due to "Why doesn't he take up some other looking at the daily newspaper, that the fact that women as a rule lead it was some other day. In this man- profession?" I inquired. My neigh- less tnmultuous and less strenaons bor seemed offended by the suggesner my visit to the Moscow synagogue lives, and that they have learned the tion. . was postponed from week to- week. value of the recuperating power of .Late one afternoon, as I was har- "A CITIZEN BEFORE GOB" relaxation. The large number of men rying along one of Moscow's winding "Why doesn't he?" he repeated. who succumb to heart disease is proof Pereuloks, or narrow streets, off the "You may as well ask why the Jews of the fact that we must learn to main thoroughfares^ I came upon a all through the ages did not give up let tip. All •work and strenuous play building that had a peculiar famil- their religion and by fusing with the may make the heart a dull and uniarity and seemed oddly out of place majority solve the question of perse- responsive organ. It must be rememin itsj surroundings. People were cution, of anti-Semitisc. It is a mat- bered that in an individual in comentering entering it one by one. They ter of conviction. If you knew our plete rest the heart does 50 per cent were familiar people: Jews with the cantor, you would not put such a less m>rk than •when the individual stamp of ghetto still in their faces, question, To hirt) his calling is bis is at work. .Treat your heart to a in their dress, in the insecure man- life." •• holiday and give it the benefit of at ner with which they walked Moscow's As we were leavizrfr the synagogue least 25 if not the whole 50 per cent. streets—streets that had long been I observed the cantor. A man in his From time to tim*» in the iistory forbidden them. I followed them and early forties, with fine Semitic fea- of,mankind some one disease or anfound myself in Moscow's synagogue, tures and a massive beard, he carried other has been looked npon as a huon Friday night. •;•• \ himself with distinction. His face man' scourge. Today it is heart disYOUNG PEOPLE PRESENT .was charged with deep emotion. It ease. was evident that the service he had Heart disease is one of the most Near the altar, at right and left of just concluded had not been perfuncvital, medical, sociological and econthe Cantor, stood half a dozen Jews, tory; he had felt deeply every word omic problems of civilised races. the remnants of the old Hebrew aris- uttered. But his face "was not merely Two per cent of all persons extocracy of Moscow, who had weath- that of the dreamer. There was amined by insurance coiapanies axe ered-the Revolution. They wore their strength in it and asseveration. His rejected for heart disease. Two per Stiff'black hats and faded Prince Al- look seemed to say, "I am a 'lishecent of all industrial workers have berts, so utterly out of -place in the nets' (declassed) here, but a citizen heart disease. One and one-half per proletarian r -roblie, not defiantly, but before God." As he walked out of cent of our children suffer frosS the •with a remruuit of old authority. The rest of the congregation consisted of ghetto Jews who had come to the synagogue directly from their work, with soot in. their faces and dust on their clothes. Some were coatless, but all wore hats. Their work-day appearance was in reality a matter of precaution. Common laborers and small-scale mechanics, they had a status under the proletarian government which might be injured by their dressing up on a Friday evening to go to the synagogue. Saeh "bourgeois" action might be reported by some overzealons "bezboshnik," or member of the atheist society, to their trade •onion, or even to the manager of the factory, where they were employed, and cause unpleasantness.

I had promised myself a visit to the Moscow Synagogue, the "Choralnaya Synagoga," as native Moscow Jews still speak of it proudly. There which is variously embroidered, but one of whose "versions is this: It seems that the ground that the Synagogue stands on was wanted by one of the' Grand Dukes as a stable for his horses. One of the Moscow Jews, a Vissotsky, or a Poliakov, the legend is not clear on that point, had determined upon the same spot for a synagogue, and there "began a battle of wits between the Jewish merchant and the Grand Duke, with victory on - the side of the Jew. The Grand Duke had to build his stable elsewhere and the synagogue was built on the place where it now stands.

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GOOD THINGS TO EAT

There was a surprisingly; large number of young men among the visitors to the synagogue: Jewish boys and youths from what was formerly the "Pale." ' They prayed with fervour and delight. It was "as if they found that old singsong something reminiscent of other times and' other d a y s . ' Their thin, often emaciated faces, glowed "with colour as they rolled the ancieaj Setrew tonesj their

Moscow.—(J. T. A.)—The Soviet Government has granted permission to the Moscow Jewish Community to import, free of duty, an automobile for the conveyance of its dead to cemeteries. This is the first tiiae in its history that the Soviet has made concessions to the religious traditions of the Jews. This concession is of great significance for two particular reasons: First, the Soviet has never before permitted the importation of articles for traditional religious v.se. Secondly, the importation of the hearse automatically permits the ex• psnditure of foreign currency, since Russian rubles are not accepted abroad. This is normally strictly prohibited by law. same disease. In New York City alone children of school age with bad hearts number 20,000. In the last war, out of five million men of military age, two hundred thousand, or four per cent, were disqualified for service because of heart disease. In the United States over two million persons are afflicted with diseases of the heart. Over ten per cent of the bed capacity of our hospitals are given over to heart cases. The death rate for heart disease is mounting higher and higher with each passing year. Heart disease causes more deaths than tuberculosis and more deaths than cancer. If we realize that one out of fifty employed in industry has a bad heart, we get a glimpse of the danger to our lives. If there occurred in the midst of our community an epidemic of yellowfever an extraordinary panic would overtake us, and the newspapers would carry large headlines on the front page. But the slow but sure sapping through heart disease of the vitality of our country is allowed to pass wholly unnoticed. We are indifferent to personal and community health problems. We have not as yet taken up the conservation of health and the prevention of disease with the same enthusiasm and wholeheartedness with which we carry on our industrial ana Commercial enterprises.

All-TaHdng^ Jewish" Program Is Booked Harry Stern, directing ths Victoria International Theater at 24th and ? ort street, has booked for showing m October IS, 14 and 15, a program :onsisting of Shulamith as the feature "unit, and three short subjects unong them bsing the' rendition of 21i, Eli, and Kol Nidre. These foreign dialogue programs it the International Theater are meeting with tremendous enthusiasm on the part of theater-goers.

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TFaeiev* LecL-e. Tiee coin.* c" . rr.r.r\ TICK nev merr-lc *E ci t.,t€ iiwl«3. Polish Consulate in Chicago, vrho j Those interested may try out: at 2 associated vitli Tytras Sysser ip, 7ii. Sunaz.;; Oct. 11."*;, thr J. C. C, •when the latter -heroically saved nany Je-wish lives clt-rfeg- the Moslem I „. riots of '29 in Palestine, will be an tie for the colonies1 independence. holered goest tad speaker r.t the rd'tcr having- becom;? Tip.riio^is th roughTonight PKISSICI Memorial program to he held :Cr-r his efforts in PolRabbi Frederick Colin will deliver at the South High school auditorium a sermon on "Our Jewish Heritage" i Tytus Sbysse-^ski v a t scheduled to at the services at Temple Israel this memorial is beteg held -pursuant to s. I appear here himself, but duties in procl£s3£.iioi2 issued by President [ Chicago presented RV.C! his associate evening. Hoover and Governor Charles Eyran, j Trill take his place. B?" opening- the Other speakers on the program Till 1 doers of the Polish enssnanle to the Tomorrow -Morning include Mayor Richard L. Metcclfe j Je\:~s hi Jernsiuerr? •Ov.ring t h e outHis subject for tomorrow morning and Congressman Ivl&lcom H. Bald- j breaks he risked Die lives of himself is "Creativeness." ridge. The Omaha Police Glee club jvnd his men ;n w<ler to protect fill and s. group of children dressed in ! who Eov.pht refuse. Kaddislt Polish cost-omes will also take part in Kaddish trill be recited this Sabthe program. A. Saieski vrill preside. bath for Eva Kirschhrann. Count Pulaski vron immortal fame j Chance is inevitable in a progresla America's history for the assist- S sire country. Change iss constant.—" Sisterhood Course ance he gave Washington in the bat- j TVV-....OThe first of a series of lectures on current topics and book reviews to be given by Dr. Cohn, under the "BC.T fh e CosI auspices of the Sisterhood, will be held on Tuesday morning, October IS, It is < T ,.•pest at 10:30 a. m. at the Blackstone. He In tfc will review Will Barant's "Adventures in Genius."

OUS SPECIAL '

Attends Board Meeting Eabbi Cohn vras expected back this morning from Cincinnati, vhere he has been attending a meeting at the Hebrew Union College of the Executive Board of the Central Conference of American Rabbis of -which he is a member.

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Government Stops •Anti-Semitic Union Warsa-R-.—(J. T. A.)—The Polish National Students Union, kno-wn for its anti-Semitic character, was declared illegal in an order issued by the Minister of Education and despatched to all university authorities. All activities of the union are prohibited. The Union, which had no Jewish members, was the stronghold of the National anti-Semitic national Democratic Party axsd conducted an active campaign against the present government. The Union persistently demanded the introduction of a imraerus clacsus against Jewish students in Polish •universities.

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Discover That Hitler's Sister Chief Cook at 9 Jewish Students House

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•- Vienna.—(J. T. A.) — A- sensation has been created in Jewish circles here with the discovery that Frsu Haubal, the chief cook for a number of years at the Vienna Jewish Students' House, is the sister of the antiSemitic leader, Adolph" Hitler. The revelation of Fraxj Haxibal's relationship to the Nazi leader comes a year after she left the service. Speculation is rife concerning the motives which prompted Fran Ea-abal j to undertake the duties of cook. It is not known whether she was forced by poverty to accept this post, or whether she was acting- ES a spy ia her brother's behalf.

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PAGE 6—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 19S1 bring the Jewish people to a closer unity. Discussing the . anti-Semitic question for the first time in his public writings, Mr. ' Schnitzler's letter which appears in the "Neue Judische Monat5ehau," declares, "if the Christians hope to destroy us by tfreir attacks against us, they should take note that their onslaughts serve rath- Ner, Little Known Community of : r jt er to develop our resistance and 171 'crS Several Hundred in Ix strengthen our unity. Never are we bec Htstorj Jews more strongly conscious of our Africa endurance as. a. race than when we -Jerusalem. — {J. T. A.)—Furfche then 1 rebuilt. Durinp the ^rriod of. Vienna. (J.T.A.)—-The life of a are under attack." material of interest to Bi Biblical lical histo histor- ! King Rehoboaro. son of Kiiip Solc: The article has had • a tremendous little known . community of several ians has been reported today from • BIOTL, the city vas hcrvi'v populated hundred Jewish cave-dwellers in repercussion, throughout the city and The following committee heads is widely discussed in' literary ' circles. Beth Zuiythe ancient Palestinian city} been announced, to take care of th< Over 150 women are expected to Southern Tripoli was .graphically , . During the MaccaV>ear> revolt the eighteen miles to the south of Jeru: arrangements for the production of attend the luncheon meeting of the described by Hermann Gorge, an I city was the object of many battles salem, where an expedition under trie the "Jazz Singer," which will be given Ladies Auxiliary of Shaare Zion Syn- Austrian engineer, who has just reI vith the Syrians. It vas finally capauspices of the Jerusalem School c-f The Annual Congregational meeting in i November under the auspices of agogue, Tuesday noon, October 13. A turned from a North African trip. Oriental Research and the Chicago i tursd "by Simon Maccabeus. Lnter the of Mount Sinai Temple will be.held the Ladies Auxiliary of Shaare Zion luncheon at 1 o'clock will ' open the How these Jews came to be cavePresbyterian Theological Seminary town declined rapidly until at the Tuesday evening, October 13, at the Synagogue. program. ; dwellers is not known even to'them, opening of the present ere it v;r>s al« Mrs. Robert Sacks is-the.'publicity recently concluded its excavations. Castle Court Inn; located opposite Little Miss Dolores-Ebert will ap- although their rabbi said_that their Production manager i pear in two dances. She will be acCentral High School. The meeting j chairman. _ most totally abandoned. The reported finds include a picture will be preceded by .a dinner, which ; Mrs. S. "H; Shulkin. Mrs. Louis Sin- companied bySEtrs..Lois Wilson. Miss. ancestors fled to Tripoli after ths According to Professors Q. E, Solcarved on a piece of bone which has Senior Hsdassah to'.Meet* Next "will be served at 6:30.. . Jibin, Mrs. Morey Lipshutz, and Mrs Mildred Ruth ;Baron will offer two destruction of the Temple in Jeruj lers and W. F. Albright, v'hc con. '' . Wedaesdsy Afternoon. - Features of the evening will-be re- Joe Krigsten are • in charge of th piano solos, accompanied at the piano salem and have been livings there J ducted the excavations, it is planned Ticket sales by. '.Mrs. -Maude" "Fleetwood Johnson, ever since undisturbedly, i These eaveports of the ;progress ?of. the congre- ads for the program. The Council- BhrfTs -Chapter- of the effort. The picture is estimated to to resume the diggings after a three: have been done 1,000 B. C.. E., at a gation, which, Mr.;A. -M.. Davis, presi- will be in charge of Mrs. Dl Mazo: Her selection i •.will ill be "Trees"- and dwelliHg Jews 'make a livelihood by Senior -Hadassiih; will7i6! d'-their first dent,, indicated;w,ouW;-,be bothifavor- and-Mrs. Mike Musbkin. Mrs; Lester "For You. Alone." Miss Ruth Bern- the manufacture of olive- oil, cattle meeting of .'tHe'':;seasbn-v Wednesday time when the Egyptian Hyksos dys able ond gratifying. ' •: • s i ^ ; .. Heeger ; is treasurer, and Miss Serene stein will "present a reading "Eight raising and farming,' the iroisen afternoon,;"'' October 14,'". at-the. Hotel nasty exercised considerable influence Six new.members wilt-be elected-to Barrent will be • in ^ charge- of the O'Clock Sharp" by• Mrs.-.Elma Erlich weaving carpets and making shawls. Chieftaliy;Miv, J, A..-'.1tnie/'Si3.per- over Palestine. Other finds of irathe Board of--Directors, to serve for specialty jiumbersv iijtenderit".'of~tlie local" Pal)Iic'"'Schoo!s,: portstsse have beer} a collection of 20? P l a n Ec©si€Biki3" t o Levinger,- and Miss Anna Pill • \vill While, their cultural level is] corawillr, -be"---tKfe_-principal" speaker'.;and coins dating chiefly from the Persian speak on- Mrs. Elma. Levinger's reFollowing the ^Congregational meeU i "b cently published book "Grapes of paratively low, they are faznilar .frith f i o n ^ r e d ^ t ^ i ' - ^ t i } i j t i l ili--. "be ing, a meeting of .the. Brotherhood the .Talmud to which they devote all •**ShadowsA:and "'Hope8 - A l l members and'Hellenic periods. .Fourteen of the • Jerusalem—(J. T. A.)—A lump Canaan.'- • coins bear Hebrew inscriptions dating of the Temple will be called to order, Committees who are in charge of their spare time. Their synagogue, are urged to attend. from the time of King John Hyr- saving to the British government of and officers for the coming year will the arrangements are Mrs. M. Lazere, reputed to be over 2,000 years old, is £125,0D0 a 3?e&r will be made if a ; • • be elected. • • -.;.'. "•'•"_ Mr. .and Mrs. M. Eocklin announce chairman of the dining Toom, who will also in a cave. Several hundred The, Council''Bluffs Chapter "No. cahus. ' recommendation of the O'Donnell A social hour w i l l f o l l o w ; t h e m e e t - the;... engagement of their daughter be assisted'by Mesdames' J. ;M; Krig; • -.' • CatepsElts Fornd. Economic Commission is adopted, years ago, these people "say, hostile 688 of-the -Independent' Order, of the ing. '. -•': .-' ••;•• -'.••-•- .. • • > - .', Hannah, to Dave Hurwits, son of Mr. sten, Joe Kutcher, S. Davidson, M. A. B'nai Brith will hold a meeting next eliminating the "Cost of living alArabs set fire to the synagogue and Other discoveries have been of catsand' Mrs., C. Hurwitz. -A! reception Weiner, M. Epstein, Eli Robinow, S. Monday, October 12, at the 'Eagles , ^ i, , . -. 14. lowance" to.Administration officials, was tendered by Mr. and Mrs. Rock- H. Shulkin,. M. Daskovs'ky, H. Fishj partially destroyed it. Though it Hall at eight .o'clock. All-members- p a l t s ^ e d apparentjy by a beseigmg it was reported here, l i , ; Sunday afternoon, announcing the Leon Shulkin, H. Falk,' and: M.' Lip- has never been restored "it still^serves (Beth1 /Zur. was second 1T> is 1 armv 7 are urged -to attend.:.. .•::.:. : , ' T wonly ' '" " a e C""N*Wduring ' *"" • The O'DoTtnel! Commission -was apengagement. as a daily meeting" place. portance to*Jerusalem the shutz. pointed several months Rgo by the The Ladies Auxiliary of the.Tal- struggles cf the second century B. C. Colonial Office to ascertain what 1, These Jewish cave-dwellers know mud ToraJi Society held their first The Question Club will,open its little of the outside world. A few; of meeting of_ • the season Wednesday E.) Ptolemaic pieces of money in sil- economics could be intrduced in the v ver and copper, and several skeletons. administration o£ Palestine. Plans for the opening meeting and Social Season, Sunday evening, with a them have some slight knowledge of sfterqpoa, October '7, at the: Chevra Hafd Time Party in the Sioux Apartluncheon of the Senior Hadassah Italian. Many of their" women a r e B'nai Yisroil Synagogue. An election Chapter, were announced $t a recent ment Ball Roonu Paul Ross and his classic beauties while the colony as of officers was Jield . and the same meeting- of the. organization's Board orchestra will furnish music for danca whole is extremely hospitable and officers were re-elected for the ening. Refreshments will be served Cantor Philip Pinchik will appear of. Directors. . ....... . , - - . , ' . ' takes a keen delight in displaying, suing-year. ,, " ;. „. „ "during the evening. in concert Sunday evening, October Mrs. Sam Mosow will Have .charge Plans are being '-ina'de for a The; committee in charge, includes its handicraft. ^ ; / '' 11, under the auspices of the Workof the menu for the luncheon, which' The caves,, in - which they live are Eummage Sale to be given " very is scheduled for Tuesday, October 27, Milton Bolstein, Cecil Seff, Larry men's Circle, No; 664. The concert Anyone who has a bundle at the Jewish Community Center.' Sampson,, Lawrence Baron, Ephriam will be given at-tie City Auditorium, cylindrical, ten meters in diameter shortly. to donate should call Mrs. Abe GilBaron, Jack London and Leon DoSeventh- and Douglas Streets, at 8:15 and between 15 and 20 meters deep. Mrs. Joe Levine and Mrs. S. Levitan -'•. o'clock. Proceeds o^the musicale will The entrance to them-is-'not"'easily insky, phone" 1779, and it will be will be in charge of the dining.room. brofsky. • called for. be given to the People's Tool CamEeseryations for the luncheon will be found, but once found one has to Miss Sara Appelang was hostess paign for Jews in Russia. in. the hands of Mrs. Louis Agranoff, Miss Jeanette Baron left Sunday Cantor Pinchik came to America crawl through the labyrinth which and Mrs. Barney Baron will have the to 12 friends Sunday afternoon, in her home. Bridge was followed by re- from Russia in 1927, and has made a obtains light and air through a num- night, for her home in Kansas City, arrangements for the program. •-.•;. tour af this country under the aus- ber of galleries. After reaching the Mo., following a two week's visit The luncheon will be; followed by a freshments. pices of the Chicago Concert Bureau. bottom floor of the cave one stands here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. business meeting, at which time plansJoe. Baron. . • • The Chat and Nibble Club held it? He studied Snusic in Russia arid Italy. before the entrance to a home. for the year will be outlined. meeting last week at the home of Miss Every cave serves as a dwelling The Council Bluffs Agudas Achim Hazel Kanterovich. Miss Leah Herfor two families.- The rooms have Association will hold a regular meetman was' ch'osen as advisor of the been hewn out of. the solid rock; The ing next, Thursday evening, Oct. 15, group.1 'Refreshments.concluded the homes, so-called, have no doors, the at the Eagles Hall. . n meeting.^ / ' "Z'-. v<\ entrances beih^ covered by rags. Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Cherniss Furniture in the,ordinary sense of Mr, and Mrs. I." Mirken will enterentertained. the members of their An evening of clever entertainment tain twenty-five guests at a dinner The bare A number of social events for the the -term i s . unknown. .-.••was.-.afforded a select audienceT"Wed- and.reception honoring their son, Mor- coming; year were announced at the ground is used -for a bed. In one Evening Bridge Club at their hoiae Tuesday evening. nesday evening, when Booth Tarking- ris, whose Bar Mitzvah will be cele- meeting of the Temple Sisterhood, ton's "Seventeen" was presented brated Saturday" morning. Morris will held last Friday noon in the Temple corner are huddled chickens, sheep, Mrs. Julius Kateiman spent a few goats and occasionally a donkey. under- the auspices of the A^ Z. A. be hostess to a number of his friends Annex. .; ' days this week in Leavenworth, Kas., chapter, at North Junior High School. at an .Orpheum' party, celebrating the Among" them- are a *Dinner and Card when she visited her son-in-law and The well selected cast took their parts o c c a s i o n . " • ' • " ' ' ' . '• •_' .-.'.•• Party,: to be held October 21, with daughter,. Mr. and Mrs. Abe Bear. : with keen understanding of the charMrs. B. E. Baron and Mrs. Ben Rosenacters they portrayed. . Leads.were Mr_ and Mrs. Harry Bramberg Mmebers of the Iota Tau Sorority blum co-chairmen; 'Bazaar,' Novemtaken by Miss Harcella Levicti, Hiss met Thursday evening.at the home of Ijer 23, with I Mrs. J. H. Greenberg announce the birth of a daughter, g f Sylvia Friedman, and/ Arnold Baron. Miss Mi Rose.' R T. i gl "Bi Bridge was fol- and Mrs; William Lazere, co-chair- '•'•'•••••. S t a m i n a o f J e w s born ...Tuesday at the .Edmundson e Others in the cast included Lou SlotsHospital. men; Social evening, January 20, with lowed by a damty luncheon. ky, Morris Bernstein, Sam Berman, Mrs. A. M. Davis and Mrs. Sam Green- Vienna—Arthur Schnitzler, famous Marvin Beechen, Alfred Levich, IsaThe C. B. Chapter No. 7 of the Miss Bess Lipshutz returned home stone, chairmen, and -Mother and Austrian novelist, in an open letter dore Mirowitz, Rose' Shiloff, Lillian this week after spending the summer Daughter Banquet, May 11, with Mrs. addressed to Christians informs the A. Z. A. will hold a meeting Sunday Magaziner, Hozena Sacks, Leonard months visiting with friends in Cali.--... Christian world that continued, ex- afternoon. J. Galinsky; chairman. , ' Baumstein, and Kate Raskin. cesses against the Jews will only fornia. Enroute ta S.ioux City* Miss Lipshutz spent a . week visiting in >ATRdNlZE OUR ADVERTISERS strengthen the Jewish stamina and PATRONIZE. OUR ADVERTISERS Phoenix, Arizona, with Mrs. Jules Kroloff and Mrs. Joeffrey Straus. &

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MISS ANNA PILL, Correspondent

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.Schnitzler-'Says ••:.:: Attacks'Build Up

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Maccabees, Cfialk Up Another Grid Victory

A fighting Maccabee Football team, handicapped by the absence' of- four regulars, from the. line-up, through injuries, won their second game of the season, by defeating the powerful Northern Stars, Sunday afternoon at Hubbard park. The score was 14 to 0. Sensational defensive work of Bra. verman v e r a n for or the winning team was • —••outstanding.

Alumni Club (Chooses Committees for-Tear A play committee consisting of Si Reznick, Rosabell Wigodsky and Paul-Sperling, were chosen at the last meeting of the club. • Mr. Joseph Aizenberg, advisor of • the group, will have charge of the productions. At the same meeting Bernard Lazriowich was elected secretary, Isadora White, captain of the football team, and Inez Leafr, publicity director. The club is planning an active program of debates and sports events.

The National Workers Alliance and Poal Zion Club held a joint Simchath Torah Party, Sunday evening in the Jewish Community Center. A social hour'was followed by a buffet supper.

Rabbi Lewis will speVk this evening on the subject "Does Science Need Religion." The service begins promptly at 8 o'clock.

Reports of the past year's activities were made at the Jewish National Fund Council meeting, Monday. evening at the Jewish Community Center^ Over $1,500 of the budget for the'past year was reported raised. The following committee was chosen for this year's activities: Mr. and>Mrs. E. H. Emlein, Mr. J. Aizenberg, Mr. Abe Stillman, Mrs. B. Baron, Mrs. J. N. j Krueger, and Dr. B. Courshon.

proves Goo&yccr Tires The reasons are: Motoring experience—the acid-test Gbodyear's greater prodacticn permits of greater values. We can. demcitsttrstc iliis VQ you Here's suoer-vahss p Goodyear builds million^ .snoi^e tires. ' ' "o.'ther

Serene Barrent Meads , • Phi Epsilon Tail Season With Meeting The first meeting this season of the Pioneer Women's Club was held at the, home of Sirs. Morris Sper' ling, secretary of the group, recently. • - Among numerous plans outlined for the-'yeai* were! decisions to hold ' future' meetings i j.at the homes, of " Site- members!'jActive co-operation witbl .the,S'.J"esirjsu; National Fund - Council- is' ; : also -planned by the Pioneer Women. .Mrs. N. .Sadoff, Sirs. H. Slirowitz, "and Mrs. M. Leaff trere chosen =as representatives to the J. N. F . Council. The .decision was also reached to 1 give a certain percentage of the proceeds of the various enterprises planned, to the Jewish Federation.

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"We feed the multitude "With Tasty Foods •

Miss Serene Barrent was elected president of the Phi Epsilon Tau Sorority held last week. She succeds Miss Bernice Levine. Miss Bernice Goldstein was elected secretary, "and Miss. Ida Levey, treasurer. Outgoing officers are Miss Rogie Kozberg, secretary and Miss Serene Barrent, treasurer. The newly elected officers were installed Wednesday evening, when- the sorority met at the home of the Misses . Margaret and Eogie berg.

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iv • Final days for registration at the Talmud Torah have been sst for next Sunday and Monday. No child can b:> registered for the fall term later than those days, according to Mr. Joseph Aizenberg of the faculty. The registrations up to date iiumbar one auadred and twenty^ children,, ,_«-r.

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