Interests of^tke Jewish People
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Jerusalem.—(J. ' r. A.)—The intro\ i r- £ Sunday afternoon matinee dances duetion of a levy cf about 14 mills, ; \yill again be held at-the'Jeftish Com- approximately czrtn certs, ca eceh ! «. *. uo- *t . munity Center -auditorium, starting bos of citrus fruits exported' from tMs Sunday at 3 p. m. Thej^Avill once Palestine is bolr-jj considered, by the more' be under"- the auspices of -the Department of A^ric-lture sr.a ForAn cr r Psi Mu and will b"e sponsored .by the ests, it was leam?i r -re. Jewish Women's "Welfare Federation: The inclusion cf a s mall charge on i Mrs. L. Neveleff and'Mrs. Irvin Stal- each" box'of "fruit esr^rted to defray i rnaster will be in' charge." "the cost of publicity and advertisingIce 11th Enrf.il rather sr , The object -of the matinee ~dances Palestine citrus in England and "else- "banquet will bs held ih:s ,-cc -The Jewish.Women's Welfare Oris not to raise revenue and sb the ad- where has long been -urged by glow- Sund ganization has "become formally afr' mission charge is just enough to cov- ers and shippers.' ish CoHinvr-ty C~rrr. 1^ '-?.-' fiiiated trith the'JeVish.Community er expenses. The Crerghtonians Service Corr.n.iTee cf the Tc-isrsz ~r Center, and Welfare. Federation, it v play the-first Sunday. The Psi Has be ioircd t :? r e ; - >-- -~<? "rz •was announced today by, Wm. L. have also obtained the master of cereHolman, Fresident of the Federation. monies of the Rose! and to give sev/The "women's organization, which" eral popular vocal numbers and play '~Md been active for'the past 25. years the guitar. ' ~ - - . . . in * many phases' r of Jevrish" Social Many novelties and prize's have Whiie the creels cf tre ."Work in Omaha* mil enlarge Its been arranged for the series by the • functions and "will participate in the Psi Mu. -> •work _ of the" Federation; "including y family relief, child-ease, social servn a n will b3 tcrrtnrstcr cf New York,—Ef-i. Melscn Kuttenice, Jewish Commnnity Center, Philberg, Deputy Po!:c» CorrmiEioner of Anticipatir.s rn -a—cr; anthropies, and such other activities crjre New York- City, v c» Buanimously attendance zX the b-T^uct X as the Federation may engage in. . c •- I _ ^ dJ elected • President of the Jewish Na- .niittee decided to set a ccf:*i:re cf:~i:te "ir—x This action was taken at the^retional Fund of America, the agency for the Euricr cf rc?:rrct^7F t-> h" Mrs. L. /Neveleff. qnest of the 'President of. the Federa.of -the_ Zionist movement devoted to accepted, £rd C".ED Z ccfi^'tc dct? f-r tion at the' • meeting of the general President Jewish Women's Welfare the acquisition and. reclamation of the TaEking rescivctio"?. ^ e cr: ^:tte: ;'•••••";• F e d e r a t i o n ..'• •membership ..of the Jewish Women's soil - in •' the HOIF Land ss national felt this to b3 r.ccc:""- in crfrr •: • : Welfare-Organization, held last TuesJewish property. . Eepresentatives of eliminate the prss:b"i:ty " " " day. \The affiliation. of the -women's Preliminary Peace Pact Agreed all Zionistr groups '"arid parties" in" the -crowding cr confu;::ri duo t? ".-• ?: • organization with the Federation "was •••-•• U p o n to B e Sal>reservations. " later approved by "the" Executive Com• .-•••-• B i i t t e d - • : - . Filial Dale for Ceccri clicrji mittee of the Federation at a meeting held the same day. '• ... . Thursday. Nov. IS, wii: l*o ti c V.T.C. New York.—(J.T. A.)—The Comdate to make reservations for th.3 j ; Lauds Their Work mittee of Sis, appointed by the Ex; ecutive Committee of the Zionist Or"The Jewish' Women's Welfare :OrThe coxizrAizee m c: ganization of America, to prepare an ganization had for many years been irclrde I>r. 32; Jewish Candidates Contested agenda for the forthcoming Zionist affiliated -with .the work of-.the "Jewchairraan : the SDC-.^I Scr^-ict Cor^- I Convention, in a statement issued, for Seats in British ish Welfare: Federation and thereby mittee o tl. 2 Federsticn: Pr^ A. ' disclosed that a preliminary pact has . materially aided in the- development • •' *' " - ' Election' - '"'.. - '. Lie 5 Greetiberg, presirert cf i.i« been agreed upon between the conof the-Jewish Social Service in OmaB'rith lodge; I Irs. I>. Nevclcff. London.—(J. T. A.)—Sixteen Jew- tending factions, which will bring ha," said Wm. -K Holzman,.in*arident of the Jewish Werner.s V, Jio-oncing the action of the-Federation ish candidates'""were "elected "to the harmony within the ranks of the British: Parliament.'-in'- the general Zionist organization if. approved by board. .• • . . members C'Z the crsar:=-t.-r:F ^ " r e 5 " elections, which resulted; in a. Conser"In.;recent months the Jewish1 Wel- vative landslides Eight . Jews- were the delegates meeting in Atlantic ted in the ba~^iiet: Tlrs. T. A o"rts. fare Federation had joined the Jew- elected on.the' Conservative lists and City, Nov. 8 to 10. Sirs. W E . Albert*. T^ps I^^rlrh. Pr. The statement -which is issued unish Community Center'and Jewish "eight"on-the Liberal ticket.-No' Jews Mever Bebsr. P^bbi - roJcr.d; Ccr.r,. Philanthropies, in forming the Jew- •were elected on the; Labprite ticket, der the signatures of Eobert Szold, Rabbi David A. Go'IsicIn, rhi"?_:'Louis Lipsky, Israel B. Brodie, Abrais;i Community Center and Welfare making all sixteen Jewish ParliamehFederation consolidating- the work of taiiahs now elected supporters of the ham. Tulin, Hon. Nelson"" Ruttenberg, T'. Hr?"ri> r.tr. J. and Judge William M. Lewis of Phillasnoc.-c. these organizations in^Omaha. . . . National Government. * ~ V • "•'; adelphia declares: r T :•••". .'•••. "We believe it fitting and proper i master asd TJrs. A. •> o.i. In spite, of ;the defeat ofitheiLabor *'l. The committee is preparing for y that the Jewish Women's Welfare Orcandidates," with"four Jew:s/-Michael submission to the Convention a pro/ganization, as - the auxiliary of _the" old Jevrish : Welfare. . Federation, Marcus,; Harry Day, Marion . Philips gram of work for American Zicrosts should like%ise>: become .part ^of the •aixd" E.- Shimvell, losing their seats", for the coining, yeary 'in ihe -nature of, Unite-J States, :r;cL-j '. r.~ tlic d<zjz'.^ j • new Federatibni . As we are no^r" en- the iumber; of . Jewish members:: of s ' platform• "tip'on.,,T?'hich_all.Siouists cf the Zionist Or^^i-J^Inim cf . ' o i giic^I^in -completing the Tedrganiza- Psrliaraent".has""beerr. increased "from linay stand Ossified - in - their ^ practical ica., the Hisrachi, O i d Zii . ' • • ' * . efforts on behalf of the Jewish Nation, -ere invited the ladies to affect fourteen to. sixteen. • Organization and' the Pcale Zion, I The eight Liberals elected are: Sir tional Home, regardless of past dif- Zionist Socialist Labor Party, Officers for t i e C:tr T--r..J ' ,the formal.affiliation, - : • ..-•_ j ~~ "I am happy.indeed that this; was Herbert Samuel,*" James de Eoths^ ferences "of viewpoint and former •wise- divided, joined hands in* the will ba elected ct a s-peclal rr ^ accomplishM~by':the mutual consent; child, Major H. L. U^than, P . A. Har- group affiliations. election of. Mr. Ruttenberg vrho is to be held on Tuss'I^r e v e r t s * ' Oris and Barnet Janner, all adherents "2. We are considering 'proposals t of the respective boards. The ladies succeeding. Mr. Emanuel Keamann, vember 10. d the .T- C. C rt Z r- " } have done for more than- a-quarter.of of Sir Herbert Samuel, and E. A. for Constitutional amendments which the recently elected American member A special rrcgrcn :--? beer z."Z'Z' ' "• a century splendid work; I know they Straus, E. H. Bernays, L. Hore Belish^ •will provide for a National Commit- of the World Zionist Executive vrho for the evcrir.r. The finvvz'z. ?c=~. affiUated with Sir John rShnon. tee of 150 members, to be elected by tary will also gi->-e a co-r^t= roper will continue their -useful service," The eight .victorious^ Conservatives tht direct vote of the' respective dis- is leaving soon to take .up Ms duties "As this rrsct-Ir.r: rr.rar.s rru;> TC include: Sir Philip Sasson, under- tricts throughout the country, and an in London and Jerusalem. the :future cf ths 1^"-^l Tcr-h. ".i : The choice vras effected at a meet- urgent thrt c'-I cr O~a*-= Cov-rr secretary of State for Air in the last Administrative Committee -of approxing of the Board of Directors of the national cabinet, ilajor I. Salmon, B. imately thirty. Jewish National Fund held at the Samuel, A, M. Samuel, Dudley Joel, "3. The. Committee of Sis is also A. 2rL Lyons, I. Levy and L. H. Gluck- discussing the names of possible mem- Pennsylvania Hot-el under the chair- president. manship of Mr. Neumann, who res t e i n . . . . . . : : '••'•". -.-"••. bers of the Administrative Commit"- r The most surprising \-ictory in the teo which it is', proposed to" submit-to ported .that during the past three election is that of Sir Herbert Samuel, the Nominating Committee' of the years - of his administration, the Liberal leader, Home Secretary in the Convention for their consideration so Fund received contributions from hist national cabinet, who carried his as to harmonize and linite all exist- American Jews exceeding 81,000,000,The "Kaplan Five showed under the ex-champions, A. Z. A. No. 100, with old constituency" of'; Darwen, in the ing factions and bring to an end all 000. .s z.vz —crt: £ • : : : 4.rr£H":?e~ shot3 from all angles, winning 22-6 Lancashire textile area by a majority past differences and misunderstandthe forty-£l cr.ri-s cr.-irr ecl:" "z of 4,287. This is ten times ^raore than in the initial game of thepre-season ings g "that niay have existed in the tion of the ci IsrccI E}~; basketball league at the Jewish Com- he won in the last election. Sir Heri k be held en ' :r.ul:£i., cr. t \ ; C " ^ ~ " ' bert's election "was questioned at the Zionist ranks. Center Wednesday night. recognizes the jT g ^ """*" * '^— y The Committee of' Becesibc •* P outset of the campaign in view of the h In the second entanglement of the strong conservative opposition and in sovereignty of the Convention iin the Milder, chd:r:tv Ir v IV 1 evszing, the Herman, Cigar Store view of the fact thathe had split with affairs of the Zionist Organization of free to the en! quintet battled the Psi 3Iu boys in David Lloyd George when .he consent- America, and that any program or rauaity. one of the most sensational games ed to ^consider a tariff as a possible plan of Administration which the Araons t].12 :fci-turc; v II" ever played on the Center court. The solution of the economic difficulties Committee may submit, will he subject to the action of the Convention." final score tallied Psi Mu 26; Herman of the country. Al Baird, violin, c r l H^i:\-1:^I:» " Cigar Store 24. • Sponsors cf junior ar.d sensor clubs pi£.no. The uirvices c£ t^ic ir.tiii—'-... "• Thirty-two Jewish candidates rep- Batch" llizraeM May •The final' game was also played resenting all shades of political opinat the Je"wish CozEisunity Center have al Four, hoxirled b™ Jti-tli IFrlcJc^,1 i^i, fast and furious from whistle to ion in England contested in _the elec- Secede organized at a meeting held last also been cbtclns^. Tli;s3 s;-- ,^;.:: wfcir.le, the Deep Kocks of Nebraska, tions, including candidates who had . Amsterdam. — An extraordinary Monday evening Nov. 2, trader the and fillisters g;t tliclr r.ar^c Iic.^i 'J..\ •£b<i former U. S. Oil team, winning served in previous Parliaments and convention of the Mizrachi organiza- chairmanship of .- Philip E3utsnick, four • different s.itL-n£LiIcs rcpii.:!*-!.tion of Holland to consider resigning h has charge cf club activities at ove the A. Z. A. No. 1, 11-9. those standing for the first time. . The split -which'occurred in the Lib- from the World llizrachi organization the Center. eral party resulted in seven Jewish has been called. - Wm, L. Holzman, -president' of -the i The Mizrachi of Holland propose to Jewish Community Center and Wel-i Vienna.—A ir~*i ~r,-^Js," va=. is~j?lcandidates declaring themselves supporters of Sir Herbert Samuel, while follow the recent action of the, Ger- fare Federation, in a s address before ] ®! to Safbl Zhrcr-fe".-\ Grc; T.r' four followed Sir John Simon/in his man Mizrachi who seceded from, the the group' stressed -the importance of cf "Travels in Foreign Lanasj" the opposition to Sir Herbert; Samuel's parent body, because. of the anti- developing d u b work oa a high, plane cf i ,Weizmann"attitude of the last Miz- in order that the hundreds of young j nitic >f her services to Austria. moving pictures taken by- William policy. Holzman during "his . Teceht "trip men "and -viroiaen. interested 'in tiiclr j abroad, will featui-e the meating of clubs,may not CBIV have a"-good ilr. ; j L"'-" O the Omaha Hebrew Club to be held but. also-: develop their potentialities, at the J. C. C. Sunday -afternoon, ks citizens aria learn to assair.; tl.c'.r I starting at 3 p. to.-sharp. -" • xesponsibilities -as saembers cf tl.21 .""=" The -meeting and the travelogue is community, open to the general public. T h e club leaders' cosamittc3S rr'.'l\ __ The sum of $80,573,242 has been of ?13r711^9f, and the Maurice sad. endeavor -Among the scenes are some j'shots" to organize a series cf Iceof the Wailing Wall, center "of much contributed by Jewish benefactors for Laura Falk -Foundation" with a capital tares on club problems as part cf r. cf f IO,OOO,OOD.; , ' ; . recant controversy, and of Tel-Aviv, the establishment of Foundations in The single foreign foundation wliieh, Club Sponsors*, training eotn-se. A _ the only all-Jewish city in^ the world. America for general education, social 'committee' consisting .of Bfilfo- Abrc- J "il welfare, public health, business: indus-. operates in/the United; States^is the "hams, .chairman;-Miss Lsura Ecrc"ii^" •Jewish'-Baron ie-Hirsch'Fund, which try promotion, agricultural.". research, the development of physical sciences has s capital f of . $4^31319- - Other and Miss Grace Bosessiein -vr^s ; > j ^-^^Z' and the promotion of racial relatioiis, Jewish Foundations are the D. and F . pointed "to outline the program. Milton-Abrahams "was elected --"« according to, statistics supplied to the Guggenheim-Foundation with a cap: r A class for men and women who Jewish Telegraphic Agency by the ital of $S;600, 12S^. the John _ Simon CQEirraan. of th e .group.', The •Guggenheim-.'^Memorial Foundation ing- sponsors ^ere present, ex ilt3i are anxious to prepare for naturali- Twentieth Century Fnrid, Inc.t h e ' t u - meeting: PM1 FeWis.au,..(X-L); H..~zation as United States citizens will • This sum which represents the total with--a capital ;"of..'-$4,790,080; : Ins^ ry. Cohen, (A.-.Z. A. Ko. 1 ) ; :i:Itci, be organized by the Jewish Communi- capitalization of eight of nine Jewish dus .N.'-'Iittauer'- Fooadatkinfi, : in the United States, is , {'A. Z.'A.' Ko."10:) '$1,100,000'and "the A;.C. Satshesky ty Center in cooperation with the Foundations : something:over 10-per cent of a total .Foiindation, v?hosa capitalization i a s M, Kateliaaa, f A. S. A, No. 7; Council of Jewish Women. L Sternhil], (A. S. A. No.'7;; The first meeting of the group will of approximately $900,000,000 com- :not.-been'ascertained.' "be held ne:rt I'londay evening, Novem- prising-the; capital of 122 Foundations : ."•During'' the:-past, year the 'sum of J. S. Pearlstien, (Alpis Tan); ••••': §3,929/790 wasespesded-by the M. Graca Bossnstein, {Henrietta £ ber 9, at 8 p. m. Men and women in- throughout "the country; • c r "- " — terested in the study of Civics and Four Foundations, established trfth and .3L. GuggenheiiH" 'Fotmdationv' the Mrs. I. Weiner, {P. A. L , ; ; Laura Break,- Fa Hoa); : > English in preparation for citizenship fends supplied: by Jewish; benefactors D., and F. GaggenheiEs .Fo-iiadatit may enroll in this class without fee. are among the largest which exist in 'the- Baron de Hirsch'-Fund, the Lucius Levin, (Sigma' Eappa Chi); I The class will meet once a week, but the United'States. These1 are-the Alt- N., Littauer FouadaitDn snd the Julias C. Platt,-'(Boj Scout Trcrap 2>. David . Fishmsa, (Boy Scout T the day of the week on which the xnan Fonndarion with a capital--of : •class will meet will be decided at the 380,000,000,; the ' 'Mary . and ! Lsorde Bosenwald Foundation; • This repre- No. 72).; Miss Ann. Listsaar, fir'fc meeting ne?:t Monday evening. Guggenheim Foundation "«ith a cap- sents about 17-per cent, of a total .of Scouts); Kiss The evening mass convenient to most italization -of • $14,140,080, the Julius $52,000,476 • disbursed-'in grants dar- Ccraptsr Ca:: Fire Girls}: Uosernrald Foimdatloa v/ith a capital ing" "fes past year. of the irrouu will ba selected. Peasistrez. ar
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PAGE 2—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1031 honor bestowed on a faithful servant rogarcl to Jews serving the state and land fall into his hands, lie feets the of the state, a man who had gained they have duly bencfitted by this lib- grandeur of the charge and seeks to, Jewish diplomatic .secure what he believes to be her Imgreat renown as a jurist, publicist, eral attitude. debater and;what is even raver in skill, political g'cniue aru] sagacious pcrif.l place in the work'."' And Viscount Brvce r-flrriiiinrl iht-i "in the politics, as an honest political leader. have brought pevaor. Andrew D. White, in his "Seven rcnov.'n to fcoveriil British Jews v.iio j long r,nr,£ English Pr.rliaGreat Statesmen," calls Lacker "one have, however, a ttayK placed their j ment there was no more strikin figof the foremost statesmen of hi?; country'/-; welfare bove all other in-1 lire." time." The brilliant service of Ferdi- tercets;, no that England continu George Jess' reat a grea I jiAbrayanel, so Joseph Nasi, later nand Lasalle to Germany's -working c-ntru&t her great rrnde the Duke of Naxos and of the class is too welt kn&vvn to titicd recital.. with at positions of cud s.1- i rnathcrn-iticfeii,, &. b.ofanfsf: p.itd ruplaces in then her fullest COB- j thority on Hebrew 1'trcrp.tTtrr, Cyclades Islands by Selim II (six-And in our own time, Walter Ilalhoteenth century) represented the high- rau rendered Germany fidence. And England is of J great rcnowii r-,s ?-:'nstcr of the Bolls,' esl distinction attained by any Turk- service and he in today more than J their service. One cannot help but j and greatly influenced English law. •ish Jew- Joseph Nasi served with ever regarded as one of the few truly roly contrast this spirit of magnanimity j Sir David SalomonTCSthe first Jew • great .distinction both Suleiman the great personalities of oar time, a and liberalism with the narrow ixicll- j to be Lord Mayor of London. A n d Magnificent and his son, Selim II. He genius of finance, a peerless econo- vidualisra and destructive distrust j others have since followed him. played a Strategically brilliant game mist, an original political thinker and which prevailed in Czarist Hussia But fierhaps theg reatest and most "of diplomacy against Venice and a creative and inspiring philosopher. and is dominant today, particularly phenomenal career of all is that of France and he was personally courted But his life was snuffed out by a in Rouiaaiiia and also in Hungary Lord Ecading rose f"om cabin for favors by the Emperor Ferdinand fanatic's bullet. Rathenau was mur- and to E.n extent in Poland. I boy to Chid Justice cl -Great Britain, of Austria and William of Orange dered because he was a Jew. So his The extraordinary and useful ca- j special ambassador and "nlenipol'enand almost all the European ambas- assassin, acting for German anti- reers £ Disraeli, Melchett Heading i tisry^ extraordinary to the United Semites, frankly admitted. Thus and Samuel are too well known to! States, Viceroy of India, and Minissadors. .': v j- ; :,; When ICasi's influence declined, Germany lost "one of its most gifted need rehearsal. Yet we may quote a j ter cf Foreign Affairs in BJacDonalcI's due to Selim's^ death, his place was and most loyal sons and Jewish superb though biased passage from Kational Cabinet. An amazin career! taken by another Jew, Solomon Ash- readiness to serve the struggling- Viscount Bryee on Benjamin Disrae- And there is Sir Herbert Samuel, one kenazi, who was the power behind German state was rewarded with a li. The eminent British authority of the strongest men in Bristish polithe Turkish* grand viziers. Joseph crown .of thorns. Nevertheless the writes of Lord Beacoissfield: "What tics today. EEe has a tremendous had begun the var against Venice virtual fraraer of the Republican a wonderful career! An adventurer, power in Parliament; lie served as and Ashkenazi, in the role of an am- German Constitution was a Jew, foreign in race, in ideas, in temper, Home Secretary during the War. He bassador plenipotentiary, brought it Hugo. Preuss, who died but recently. without money or family connections, was High Commissioner of Palestine to a conclusion. Ashkenazi helped Another Gentian' Jew of importance climbs."bypatient and unaided efforts, and later played & leading' role in flenri of Anjou become King of Po-in th"e critical days when the Repub- to lead a great party, master a pow- settling the famous coal strike of .a There is no single great work yet sc because of his knowledge of lan-Mohammedan rulers. '.Even Charle- land. He also negotiated treaties be- lic was being formed was ; Hugo erful aristocracy, sway a vast ern- few years ago, and nov;- was -Home available dealing vrith the singularly guages and peoples, acquired throj%h magne, included a Jew named. Isaac tween Spain and Turkey. Ashkenazi Haase, who together with Ebert( the pire and. make himself one of the four | Secretary in SlacDonslcrs cabinet, significant role played by Jews in endless wandering. m the embassy, of three diplomats he was the progenitor of a long line of first president and Seheidemarin. ac- or five greatest personal forces in the j The late Alfred Mond (Lord. Melthe field of statesmanship; in all -its Hence, it should really be no ."sur- spnt, in 7973 to the illustrious Caliph members of this family who were of tually brought the Republic into be- world. His head is not terned by chett) also a cabinet minister, ramifications daring their long so- prise to us when we hear of Sir Her- of Bagdad, Haroun Al-Rashid. The great distinction in the rabbinate and ing before the National Republican his elex'ation. He never becomes a great financial genius vdio controlled' journ in'the "Western World. People bert Samuel and Lord Reading, oc'cu- other two representatives died on thealso in statesmanship. For a time an Assembly at Weimer. Other Jews ocordinarily think of the Jew as essen- pying positions of first importance in way, which was long and arduous. Ashkanazi was. Polish representative cupy important positions of- trust un- demagogue; never stoops to beguile vast interests, was called by Lloyd the multitude by appealing to sordid George "the best brains of England." tially a commercial agent in his re-the political life of the world British Isaac remained the sole ambassador. at the League of Nations. Turkey der Hindenburg. instincts. He retains through life a 1There ha\-e been, and there are today lations -with non-Jews, but history Empire, of Leo Blum; Walter Hath- Up to the year of the expulsion, Jews produced several famous Jewesses of certain amplitude >f vievf, a due sense j several ier JC^E vrho have been does :record a magnificent service on enau,' Hugo Preuss in Germany; were the indispensable advisers of the great influence such as Gracia Men- Modern Italy of the dignity cf his position, a due j povrerf cl personalities in British the part of Jews who have served Baron Sonino and Luigi Luzzatti in rulers of Spain and Portugal. In the desia and Reyna' Nnsi, the wife of In Austria may be mentioned J. every nation - and government -of Italy; Trotsky, Kamenev. and- Jaffe tenth cent'iry Hasdai ben Isaac Ibn the Duke of Naxos; Esther Kieta Mannheimer who became President of regard for the traditions cf the an- statesmanship, indicating the trust Europe, and also the United States, in Soviet Russia, and Justice Bran- Shaprut was virtually minister of p'ayed a great role but met with a the Austrian Diet in 1848. Gabriel cient assembly •which he leads, and and confidence of Britishers in their when at last, the destinies of Eng(Continued on Page S.) in august political posts-, asi plenipo- deis, Judge Cardoza, Judge Mack, Dr. foreign afairs of Moslem Spain, the tragic end. Riesser, Freiherr von Winterstein, tentiaries, ambassadors and royal Stephen S,. Wise, Prof. Frankfurter, ^ Caliphate of Cordove, and took a Adolph Fischer, Ludwig Bamberger The sixteenth century which in and even pontifica' counsellors. Baruch, Guggenheim, Kornfeld, Mor- leading1 part in the negotiations with many respects was one of the great- and others who took a prominent role The story of the influence of Jew- genthau, Ratshesky, Bernstein and the embassies sent to Cordova by the j es*; in history, was~ particularly sig- in Austrian afairs of state. ish jurisprudence is a chapter of gig- many still lesser lights in the arena B y z a n t i n e Emperor, Constantine : Modern Italy has a noble tradition j antic proportions in itself. ' Take, of American statesmanship. And it VIII and by the German Emperor, nificant and rich in glory for Turk- of eminent Jewish statesmen. Isaac : isii Jewry which was essentially an for example, the powerful influence has always been so during Jewish mi- Otto I. In fact, in the year 941, he Pesato Maurogontaot was an eminent | of Maimonides on Crocius, the father grations in the wide Diaspora—the became the diplomatic emissary of outgrowth of Spanish Portuguese im- Parliamentarian, a great lawyer who j migrants. The background and the of international law. In this article best elements, the finest talents were Abdul Rahman III. Samuel Ibn Naglater became Postmaster General of j it will be shown, in the barest outline, attracted to state service if the rul-dela, in the eleventh century the ut- slory of Joseph Nasi is admirably Venice and also Minister of Finance j NOT GOING OUT OF BUSINESS.. told by Ludwig Lewisohn in his ing power was magnanimous and sathat our contemporary Jewish minister confidence of ing Habus, of "• -ast Days of Shylock." In the and Commerce, and after Italy was I We are Closing Out our entire stock of shoes ranging ters of state and ambassadors are.not gacious enough to utilize this force to Granada; and his successor Badis. he became a life Senator. A | in price from $12.50 to 822.50. We are going to rea new phenomenon, but rather con- bulwark the state, increase its wealth For thirty years his counsel was eighteenth century, on a canvas of unified native Roman Jew of political emi- j stitute a direct line of a long chain of ar.dl enhance its prestige. And the sacroscant. Several Spanish Jews misfortune, stands out the name of nence decorate and install all new fixtures and carpets. We Samuel Alatri, who was j honors and positions of trust be- Jews invariably proved tried and served, as ambassadors under other Daniel de Franseca, who was chief called was by Pope Gregory XVI "our j must close out the entire stock in order to do this. Here stowed upon the Jew because of great trusted servants of their masters, Spanish rulers. Amran IBn Shalbib court physician and had some politiinfluence. He was of importance Cicero." A statesman and aristocrat indeed is a collection of shoe fashions the smart ii-omen and incontrovertible^ loyalty to the even to death and destitution. was dean of the diplomats in thecal the political negotiations with of great renown was the faithful Jew state he served, and perhaps also .bereign of Alphonso VIII. In the in tcill not ignore. Peacock's KCIC styles for fall and XII of Sweden. Voltaire Yuigi Luzzatti, who came from an cause of a keenness of intellect and Back in 797 twelfth century, King Alfonso Rei- Charles toasts his friendship. .Jews conold Jewish Italian family. Luzzatti tcintcr wear. Before you- -make any shoe piirchascs, a superb analytical power, due to an For centuries Jews served as the mundez made one Ibne Ezra prince tinued to serve the Porte in minor powas regarded as one of Italy's greatingrained mental development and al- intermediaries between Christian and for military prowess and later maryou must come and sec this wonderful array, and at offices such as consuls, but the est as a scholar, jurist and statesshal of the King's court. Don Meri litical prices so viarveloudy lota'. er of dazzling brilliance had gone. man, as well as philosopher. He was de Malea was treasurer to Alphonso a minister of finance and finally V. Alphonso XI made Don Joseph de Holland Statesmanship Sizes 2 to 10—Widths- AAAA to C premier; Baron Sydney Sonino was Ecija treasurer and privy-councillor. In Holland there has been a noble another eminent Italian Jewish ENTIRE.STOCK ON SALE Don- Pedro of Castile had as his private adviser on- political and financial tradition of -distinguished Jewish statesman. In 1&06 he was summoned matters, Don Samuel be Meri Alavi. service in the domain of statesman- by the King to form a cabinet, having But-.Spain was becoming narrow, ship. Isaac Suaso,- gladly advanced attained renown as a diplomat, repselfish,, obscurantist andj distrustful, two million guilders' • to William of resenting Italy at Madrid, Vienna Let Us Lift the the brilliant days were on the wane; Orange and for*otiher; political ^erv-i ani Berlin and also with Luzzati at Don't take a chance of catching a bad cold, the fires of the Inquisition were about ice was created,-' fearon A verve de the Versailles Peace Conference. trying to do a family wash in cold weather. tt be enkindled. Nevertheless, we rGas; Francesco.'. Melio,.-..De Pinto, 20" South 15th Street Jews have been of great political Try any of our services. Dry. Wash 5c per see the climax of Jewish Spanish Texeira and others were of great service also in France. With the compound. statesmen'in Don Isaac Abravnal, the service, but of special distinction is ing of Napoleon when talent was the CUAS. brave, brilliant financial expert of the Asser family of jurists and' prerequisite for service and advanceEverything washed spotlessly clean and the S13ION Alphonso V of Portugal, who wasstatesmen who for more than a cen- ment "la carriere ouverte au talents" entire bundle, dried. Rough dry 8c "per both a great statesman, an authorita- tury have played an important role Jews gained recognition in the army, pound.-' , ! tive Bible commentator and an origi- in the Netherlands. Moses S. Asser at the bar and in statesmanship. SevEverything carefully washed and dried. nal philosopher. This man deserves and Carl Asser were significant but eral names stand pre-eminent. Isaac - ' The flat work ironed and folded. a biography such as only a Lord Mor- the greatest. member of the family Adolphe Cremieux was one of the ley could have written, or a Professor was Tobias Asser wlgp received the most celebrated lawyers of France A Trial Will Convince You. "Volfson of Harvard can write. It is Nobel Peace Prize in 1911. When and gained a national reputation as more inspiring and unforgettable to still.in ; his 20s he, became celebrated a remarkable orator when Ye was but CHAS; SIMON RECOMMENDS THE . read of ihis venerable aristocratic in. jurisprudence. - At the age of 37 30 years old. " He was a member of Brakes and Wheel Alf.cniiient Jew who enjoyed abundant wealth he was assistant Secretary of State, the Chamber of Deputies, when he and high social status,' and how heand served in this capacity for 18advised King Louis PhiHpps to abdiAre Important I shared the tortures of his afflicted years he became a member of the cate. He was minister of justice Are Your Brakes adjusted even? brethren and personally looked after Council of State. He was a delegate twice and when France lost the war Does your car steer hard ? their relief. He served Portugal and in the Peace Conference at the Hague of 1S71 against Germany, he personDoes your car shimray? then the house of Castile, and when in 1890. In 1895 he became chairman ally donated 100,000 francs toward Does your car weave in the road? the evil decree of banishment was of the Diplomatic Congress on Inter- the payment of war indemnities. .It Do your tires wear on the side ? • • pronounced cpon the Spanish Jews, national Law. His works on interhe exerted supreme efforts to avert national law have been translated in was then a considerable fortune for PLAY SAFE—DON'T TAKE CHANCES it, and when this proved futile, he all the European languages. Also a lawyer. Finally he became a life senator. Be it ever said to his eterSee YsKjsejs joined his brethren and abandoned an proud and heroic Belgium has shown l \ T e r k UjificDr S -INSPECTION FEEE ungrateful ^md niggardly; land. He great liberalism to the Jew. One of nal memory that amid the honors JOB Gf.sr.A.V ? r went to Naples and there entered the its leading statesmen for years has and glories heaped upon him he never $13,080 of ? > « r-<T, king's ^service and after more wan- been Paul Hyman, and its present forgot, the people from whom he derings due to the vicissitudes of for- ambassador to the United States is sprang. Creimieux was always a valient detune, he died in Venice where he a;, observing Jew. f m fender of his fellow Jews when they helped drift a treaty of commerce beIn Germany Jews have held high were falsely- accused and maligned. tween Venice and Portugal. Amid many state "activities he managed to positions of trust.. There were sev- Together with Sir Moses Montefiore, write about sixteen important He- eral Hofjuden \ or Court Jews who the magnanimous philanthropist and rendered excellent service to their re- Solomon Munk, the phenomenal schobrew works. spective princes and also were "Stad- lar, Cremieux made a memorable tlenin" or intermediaries in behalf of journey to the Sultan Majud in ConStrangely enough many of the their stricken brethren. Joseph Suess stantinople to intercede in the famous refugees from the Iberian peninsula, Oppenheimerj the financial and poli- Demascus Affair of 1840 when the who fled from the Catholic Inquisi- tical adviser of the Duke of Wuertem- local Jews were falsely charged with f -.'tion, found refuge in Italy and were berg, is a good example. Lion Feuch- the infamous blood libel cf having <' ~ befriended by several popes, namely wanger's book, "Power" is an admir- killed a priest for ritual purposes. , r 1*2? *-ET e"~~li Alexander VI, Julius II, Leo X. Cle- able description of the society of the The Jewish community and its lead-1 r. ', - I - ' ment VII and Sixtus VII, and sev-day and of the role of the Jev*? as era were in- dire danger and vaoz^ \ '<• Lvil eral popes had Jews as their physi- well as a masterly portrayal of the cruelly assaulted. . An inyestigatic- \ ' \ cians and, also as their political and development of" character. Frederich was made and- after much suffcrlr^,-."., financial advisers. While Spain and j Stahl was the first German Jew to the Jews were proven to be inr.cccr.t YOU r Portugal were expelling or burning attain distinction in diplomacy. King and the charges utterly, baselesc. their Jews, Turkey proved a haven, Friedrich. Wilhelm of Prussia made a Q-zx S AchilJe Fould was four times_":*iof refuge and there several Jews rose life member of the Herrenhaus 2924 Lsavenworth to great influence and service. Jews (House of Lords). Lord Acton, the ister of Finance under Louis Napolheld important positions under Murad eminent historian often spoken of as eon. He finally became Sender, JAckson 9408 II (15th century). H e i a d a Jewish one of the most learned men of the Minister of State and was made a physician^ Ishak Pasha, and thus nineteenth century, rated Stahl's Commander of the 'Legion cf Ecrscr. there began a long line of Jewish ability and influence even above Also Leon Gambetta,- -one of the very greatest patriots and orators _cf physicians at the Turkish court who Disraeli's. had great influence. Murad's succes- A statesman of the first order.no France was of Jewish-Genoese cosor, Mohammed, had as his financial doubt was Edward Lasker, the idol scent and had served as-secretary lo A Flour knbwu^for its marvelous baking qualities. adviser (defter-dar), a Jewish phy- of the Gerrian working people and an M. Cremie-a%. David.Raynal, E. S. Tbe favorite^ svhere economy : is watched. For Omar sician named Yakub, and an his per- authority on Prussian constitutional Maillaud, Jules Simon are some cf j 1 Flour babes mor9< loaves, par sack — and eliminates sonal physician a Turkish Jew, history. He was one of the founders thn Jews who have served France i.s j ,* senators and ministers• of State. _-n,; costly"baking failures. \] . •.,'•]• Moses Hamon, who, with his son, JoT" the National Liberal Party and our own day, Maurice Bokanowshy, j ; seph Hamon, served the Turkish of It Is Cass.pesi was a champion of German 'unifica.J court well. Suleman the Magnificent, tion and long the friend of Bismarck who was killed in an airplane acci- • la tfee Long Reir" dent and Leon Blum, great sc.ic^r : of the sixteenth century had as, his. until the Iron Chancellor sought • to faithful friend, physician and coun- curtail free speech -and was-an ac- and- orator,- stand out among F^cic \ , .patriots, representing ^the^type _""'', OUR SPECIAL sellor, Moses Hamon II. Jews now. in financial irregularities. Jews serving France with distir crc- I occupied a very significant place a t complice became Bismarck's dreaded in. -the realm of statesmanship. ,' the Turkish court and Christian am- Laster antagonist. Bismarck never forgot it, bassadors often could obtain conces- and not. tmchivalrously >»• li* • carried ; his jIn .England sions from the Ports only through vengeance even beyond the for - England has produced a- galaxy cf them. Nicolo Nicoli, chamberlain to when Lasker .died while ongrave a:vis>t to. notable J-evdsii . statesmen^ £" the king.cf "France, who acc'biftpanfeet America .and the House of E-epre'sen- whom we know particularly Ben: -: We V , th<? French ambassador .to the:Turk- :"tatiyes; sent its condolence to-Ger- Disraeli, as.-Lord Besconsfield, ar~ ish, court, speaks-of Hamonfi, ss^'a 'many,. "Bismarck" sever brought- the our own' day, Sir Alfred Mos \ person" of great Jionorj-great activi- message-"before -the" Bach-stag''- and Lord Melchett, Sir Hui\is lszs.c:^ ty, great renown, and great; wealth,". .sent it:bac!c .to the' Houseof. Rep-re-. Lord Reading and Sir Herbert ^ •As .the ,politic.al honors enjoyed :fey 'sentatives requesting it .to tsel. The." British people hsve h •Iberian Jewry •were culminated in and atmredath-e IT. F Gtm business."5* T i m s - w a s p o s t h u m o u s ' m o s t
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PAGE 3—-THE JEWISH PEESSrFPJBATf,-NOVEMBER 6, 1931
Hadassah
(Continued from Page 1) . " •Sqmberg, Mrs. Julius Newman, Mrs. Joe Meyer, Mrs^ S. G. Saltzinan, Mrs. Chas.' Ijevinson, Mrs.. Dave Ferer, Mrs. 1. Chapman"," Miss Sara Ferer, Mrs. Philip Levey, Mrs. S. H. Singer, Mrs.c N. G. Sammel, Miss Blanche Zimman, Mrs. H.'A. Wolf, Mrs. Sam Appelman, -Mrs. Sam Eohinson, Mrs. Paul,'Bernstein, Mrs.' .Wm."Alberts, "Mrsi. Ed. Kraus, Mrs. Benj. Stiefler, Mrs. Win. Boasberg," Mrs. Mose" You"sein,-Mfs.!Max Fromkin, Mrs. I. H. Weiner, Mrs. Clarence Bergman, Mrs. 'Archie Jacobs,' Mrs. M. L Gordon, Mrs. Harry Schunow, Mrs. S. Berwitz T&rs.- Morris Ferer,. Mrs. Hyinan Ferer, Mrs. Jules M. Newman, Mrs. "EL A.' Shapiro, Mrs. H. A: Newman, Mrs. Sam Wolf,~ Mrs. Al Newman, Mrs. Lester Lapidus,'Mrs. AlSpeier, Miss Charlotte, Heyn, Mrs. L M. Weiner, Mrs. Chas. Simon,' Mrs. Hymie Milder, Mrs. I. Fiedler,' Mrs. A. Bolker, Mrs. Louis Neveleff, -Mrs. J. J. Friedman, Mrs. Reuben Brown, Mrs. Sam. Ban, Mrs. L Cassman.
Committees are working hard on the ball and card party to be given at the city auditorium by the Daughters of Zion on. December 6. Biany new volunteers have been added to the announced list of workers, including Mesdames J." Eosenblatt, A. Wolf, A; Weinberg, J. Goldware, Mas Goldstein, A. Greenberg, M. Braude. . , :" Ail proceeds will go to the Jewish National.. Fund. -The - r.-^snlzation hopes for the cooperation of Omaha Zionists and Omaha Jewry at large. They have chosen an appropriate time, for a general gathering, Chanukah, and have arranged for a progTam which would appeal in SCKSS phase to all. There will be a variety of choice, from dancing to cards and games of all sorts.
Mrs. Joseph Goldware, chairman of tho Hadassaa Milk Fund, anr.0onees the following donors: F. Hollander, Ben Gorlic!:, W. L. Banner, F. Ycraucka, F. W. Grahe, IL Swope, MrsCooper, Mr. Pentcti, Mr. Bergman. Mr. Ainsworth, Mrs. D. Stein, A. Wood, Mrs. J. Goldware.
The Omaha Daughters of Zion an-1 nounce th* following donations to the Jewish National Fund: H. Dolgoff, in honor of a grandchild, M. D. Potashniclr, Mr. and Mrs. B. Lustgarten, in honor of their silver wedding anniversary, Mr. and Mrs. N. Sidman, in honor of a grandchild. • Box - collections are announced from M. Somit, p . Herzberg, M. Arbitman, S. Platt, L Friedman, T. Jacob, D. S. Mendelson, D-^eivis, M. Shapiro,-;N. Wishbow. . N*" Announcements were made by Mrs. L. Rosenblatt, treasurer."
Chess-Club :.;
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On Monday,.Nov. 9, -will be held the first regular session'of tlie J. C, C. Chess club.-'Nathan .Fine will again lead this activity. l - ;Anyone interested in either the playing of chess or in learning to plsy ches3 should attend, instruction will be provided for those who cannot play
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Wrecked Cars Rebuilt Curtains and Upholstering Doors Tightened to Fit Woodwork and Painting Radiator Repairing
AUDITS SYSTEMS INCO1METAX
16th and Cuunng Sts. . JAckson 7640
852 Brandeis Theatre Bldg. JA. 4811
. .- Council Current . Rabbi David A. Goldstein of. the Conservative Synagogue addressed the ' first meeting of the Current Topics Course, Tuesday morning a t the Jewish Community Center.. • . . T h e education department'of the Council of Jewish Women which sponsors this activity has conducted the" course for several years. This is the first year that Eabbi Goldstein has been in charge. . "The" Chinese-Japanese Quarrel over Manchuria," was Dr/Goldstein's subject. Babbi Goldstein brought out that should there, be a war between these powers or any others the United States would be almost sure to be drawn in, because the world now is so small that what affects one would affect all. "At present there are 29,000,000 Chinese living in Manchuria. The Japanese are so crowded in their own domain, that they want to get possession of Manchuria. - They, have their troops stationed there, and refura to withdraw them. The League of Nations has demanded that by Nc7. 16 the Japanese troops must be recalled from- Manchuria," said Eabbi Goldstein. With the terrible conditions in the world today, the Japanese are trying to assert themselves. Europe and America, sunk in" the great economic depression, are too busy with their own.troubles to pay much attention to Japan. China in the midst of the disastrous floods she has suffered recently is "concerned with fef own people, especially with 80,000,000 of them suffering because of these tragic conditions. This class in Current Topics will meet next on Nov. 17 at the Jewish Community Center at 10:30 a. m. The subject will be "GhandL"
Bowl for Your Health's. Sake Alleys Open Day and Night
Before Buying A New Automobile It Will Pay You To Consult Max Barish
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The. next regular meeting of the Women's Auxiliary of the Conservative Synagogue will be held on "Wednesday, Nov. 11, a t 2:30 p. m. at the Jewish Community. Center. . As this date falls on Armistice Day,~ an" appropriate, program. has been arranged. A symposium ; on peace will be presented with Mesdames David A. Goldstein, A. D. Brodkey, and L F . Goodman taking part. .The program will close with several piano selections b j \ Abraham Dansky. A board meeting at 1:30 will precede the regular meeting.
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ELLIS aad LA RUE, Proprietors
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AK-'SAR-BEN-'
BOWLING ALLEYS ' ' . 16th and Harney—3th Floor
2562 Farnam JA. 1997
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J. M. CALABRIA. Barber and Chirotonsor, Scalp "and Facial "Manipulations Mrs. Theodore N. Lewis. The November luncheon-meeting;,of the Cultural Group of, the Omaha Chapter of Hadassah will be held on Monday, Nov. 9, a t 12:45 a t the Blackstone" Hotel. Following the. luncheon, Mrs. Theodore. N. Lewis of .Sioux ..City will give a talk.^ on "Hadassah in Palestine." Mrs. liewis. is qualified to speak, on this subject_as_ she._ has "traveled through Palestine and has made a deep, intensive study of Zionism and its branches. All- are invited, non-members as well as members.... Reservations can be made by calling Mrs. Max.Fromkin, Harney 2671, or Mrs. Martin Blass, Harney 7123. -
The Hazomir Society under the direction of Cantor A. Schwaczkin "will i>2 presented in their first concert Sunday "evening, Dec."13,"at the" Jewish" Community Center auditorium, as one of "the features' of "Sunday is C6ntef Night." . - • - - .The' Hazoihir Society is the pioneer organization of Jewish folk "and traditional music in Omaha^- " A symphony orchestra of 20 pieces Trill accompany thechoir. Center Scliwaczkin was for 14 years cantor of the Orthodox synagogue a t Pressberg, Austria, and cantor for four years in the largest syna^osne in Philadelphia. He studied harmony and directing in the conservawries in Warsaw and Berlin. Many of the selections to ha presented are iiis own a r r a n i
Arthur Baiiaine—203 So. lSUl Down Stairs -
A. MARCHESI
The Sign of Good Workmanship
Barber—For Those Who Are Particular Past on Billiard Barber Shop v 16th & Farnam
National Tire & Battery . Batteries Serviced " Sold and Guaranteed 17th end Capitol Are.—AT.' GS37 •. Yoor Pstronase Sollcltesl
Offices Brandeis Theatre Bldg •••-'•
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d a s . R. Boclierty Conunerclal Artists j j 'Photo Eugrsvers ; ;
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507 So. 12 Street ATlantie 1122
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For All Occasions
s3—24 Gv^izsz 10c—Xcna Batter
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JCLi Et-—TTTT. 51=
.frS^WS *J-S1*^ 1OSD:
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Electrical Appliances Eefrlgerators Jewelry
Ziagerli Floral Co.( j •i'L J w ^ W l
Floral Displays Our Specialty S5C8 3fo. S-S'h Street—EE. 3SSS "SET It With. Hewers" -^•*
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Free Estimates Given, st -Your Home On any-Slip Cover. Brapery cr Curtain Work
NO. BONES—NO WASTE -' 1 0 2 T O r s NEXT COAX. '
INVESTliENT TRUSTS
'TTHEES QCALITX IS .E. g, Prop. - « - •*- Vr-
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Bris!: Uzzl E Purest u::d Fi
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IvG^s A* Feterscn i
Jllli Irene Beauty Shop Facial Blemishes "Keisoved
for 'Your Hom
•• Stop or Phone For Your Delicatessen Needs . Always on Hand i j Fancy Groceries • Fresh Kosher Srr eked • 2Iest
Specialising . in . : Scalp Treatment ..CZ2
LL Electrical Contractor SOS Electric BIdgr. JAcfcsou 1945
Each week in this space we' wifl print a few iaterestiBg jottings, about oae of our Handy.' Sen-ice Gaids adfertisers, _ fesea . in 'order.
18th aad St. Mary's—AT. 7227
HAEFEE 1IETHOD SHOP
And Can Assure Yon of •£, Pleasant Business
A. Marches:, of the Partou. Billiard. Barber Shop, 16. and Farn s n , has had long experience in barbering in all its phases. He has been a barber for the past twenty-three years, and has been at his present place" for four years. He also did barber work at the Edwards Hotel Shop, previously . operated a shop s t 10. and Mason, and "was manager. of the Brandeis Barber Shop for two years. Marchesi, vrho is knovra as "the young man's . favorite," is very popular.- The shop's slogan is "for those -who are particular." Marehesi's barber shop is kno-svn for its nice appearance and cleanliness. He s.sks only for' a chance' to "satisfy". .He invites Jewish patronage.
4420-22 North.20 ' KEnwood 1500
Super Servica Station
Dewey.
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J. II. Calabria, whose barber shop can be found at 203 So. IS. Street, downstairs in the Arthur Building, has been in the barber game since 1887. He has been located in the same block where he is now. since 1918 and has been in his present" location for five years.' Calabria has a degree as chirotonsor specializing in scalp and facial manipulations. He does excellent work in everything connected with barbering. He has done barber work on outstanding men. cf "the city, and also does work on the court house officials, having been connected with the court house- as superintendent, of the building. Calabria caters to Jewish trade.
CLEANERS DYERS ~. •'" HATTERS' TAILORS
Batteries as Low ns ?5.S5.Berrice Anytime—We Never Close
Harry Mendelson of the School^ of Pogressive Education is inaugurating a very interesting series of lectures, discussions and book reviews contemplated to" give a "bird's eye view of contemporary civilization.", The first of this series, which is being held at 3509 Dodge S t , will be given on Wednesday morning, November 11, at 10 a. m. In starting this course, Mendelson feels that "leisure without knowledge is a curse, with it your greatest blessing." The" subjects he has chosen are especially adapted for adults who are seeking education and culture. Among the subjects are: : Why Educate'Adults? Conquest of Happiness,.B.;Russel;.-T| Human Nature Changeable;; ThefNew Generation—-(Best symposium on' Modern Education), Calverton" and Schmalhausen; Creative" Powers •. in" Children; - This : Believing Worid, L. Browne'; The New Leisure-r-A Curse or a Blessing? Men and Machines, S. Chasa; A Planned Society; The -Russian -Primer, llin; The Depression and the International .Crisis; The Mind in the_Ma!dng,-J.H.Ilobinson;- Fascism, Democracy and Socialism; Sex in Civilization, .Calverton and"'Seimalhausen; Contemporary Europe;";Humanity Uurooted-and Bed Bread, M. Hindus, Crime ami-..Racketeering;..The .Savage in Civilisation; -Ri--Fbsdic¥;-"'Psychology and . Self-Realization; Living Philosophies; The Place of-.Russia in Contemporary Life; Whither Mankind and Towards "Civilization, .. Chas. Beard; Crime—:Its Cause and Prevention, C- Darrow; Our Neurotic" Civilisation; Bernard: Shaw Looks at ..Russia; The.-ATtoi•-Living.; A Look Into the .Future, B. Eussel; Padfistic Ac-| tivities and . Militaristic Imperialism; Individualism, Old and New, --'John
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Conservative Auxiliary
i,y tne organization. j program. . The approaching Senior A party - i s honor of ths new i Council Carnival was discussed president is being given Sunday eve- '< tickets distributed,
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The next regular meeting of the Bikur Cholim Society will be held ^ext Monday afternoon at 2:30 p.m. at the 25th and Seward St. synagogue. • Matters of great importance will be discussed. All members are urged to a t t e n d .
At the last meeting of the Fa-Hois Sorority, Miss S D S 3 Lindenbaum jrus \ elected president to replace . Eosu
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. Pioneer Women __ The organization's big bazaar will be held on December 6, with the workers starting out next Monday. " The regular meeting of the Deborah The public has been asked to aid in Society will be held on Tuesday, No- the bazaar, as the local grtmp must vember 10, at 2:30 p . m: a t the J . by this means raise its quota for the Chalutzos in Palestine. C_ c . c . . . ' Several children of the Talmud To*ah -will take part in the program.
1 nmg at the" home of Miss Tillye Segal.
F
and stiff competition for thos hose who can. If sufficient interest is shows there "will be,s checker club held is connection ."with the chess club. All those- addicted to either the ancient game of draughts or the royal game of chess should plan to attend. A chess and checker tournament will be held about Dec. 15, 1933.
EXCLUSIVE CUP.TAD:
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Bridge Luncheon
PAGE 4—THE JEWISH PRESS, FEIDAY, NOVEMBER 6,; I931-.
THE O L I ¥ E BRANCH •",'.
Alas for hopes that tern to ashes. BERGER AND DEBS I dare say, Fels would not be so- en- But let's keep turning the pages, thusiastic about the little Welshman Thex-e—the newspapers scream witK today. j the arrest cf Eugene V. Debs. Debs
The beat of the drums, the deafening burst of shrapnel, the heart-rending moans and groans Published every Friday at Omaha, Nebraska, by WHEN ERAUS WAS FIEEB at the time was a Trade Unionist. But of wounded soldiers dying on strange fields seem. THE JEWISH PRESS PUBLISHING COMPANY Ah, what is this? A reminiscence he is thrown into prison, • a hideous nightmare to us today, though WedSIOUX CITY OFFICE And Victor Bercrer, a Milwaukee by Adolph Kraus. You remember Mm, JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER—308 Pierce Street nesday marks thirteen years that have sped the one-time leader of the B'nai Jew, begins to visit him. Ami soon Debs says, there is something "humB'rith. swiftly by since the signing of the Armistice Subscription Price, one year - » -.' • - - §2.50 ming: in his FOUL'J Bcvger }ms c o n \ By When __raus came to this country, Advertisinj? rates furnished on application which ended a bloody orgy. The peoples of the he obtained a job in a little cigar verted Debs to Socialism, RABBI LOUIS L-NEWMAN world had just finished what was called a "war plant. :PEES.. THE CONOffice: 490 Brandeis Theater Building He worked a short me, to end war," Thousands upon thousands of huthe Congregation Rodeph Sholom, New York Telephone: ATlantic 1450 boss said to him: "Adolph, you betDAVID BLACKER - • - - Business and Managing Editor man beings, living flesh and blood, had been sacAh, you begin to believe that all ter get a ' job somewhere else. You FRANK R. ACKERMAN - - . - -•.-.- . . . . . - - - Editor rificed on the altar of war for the sake of a , these Jews of the nineties are all haven't -got brains enough, to be a FREDA BOLKER MILDER - - - - - - - Society Editor i leading the radical socialist moveTHOMAS EDISON'S FAITH IN A the cognoscenti that he had been cigar maker." FANNIE KATELMAN, Council Bluffs, la.. Correspondent mighty principle, peace among nations. II. For there is a He did get a job somewhere else, J meats—bu Supreme Intelligence was sufficient ANN PILL - . . - - - - Sioux City. Towa, Correspondent of a deception, and the remainluia J e maker. He is workThirteen years is a mere fleck on the clock to place him among the religiously- guilty and became publisher of the Chicago t J / ^ " f ing lectures in the course were canp KC P Labor conservaof time. In perspective we have barely finished minded, but it by no means made him celled. Inter Ocean, cue of he bgreat dailies!,. conventional churchman. Like jtive. ins name i Sr.nmel Gompcvs. In Jewish life we describe this cor- of the nineties. the World War—its lesson should be seared into aLuther all this diBurbank before him, and like * De Leon is laughing rectly as a /'Hillul ha-Shem." The 5692 193X our minds. But we forget easily. The dread Albert Einstein today, Edison •was ethical code in the matter of tiles SILVER THREADS AMONG vision of he crafts respectable epable *Eosh Chodesh Kislev , Wednesday, Nov. 11 spirit of militarism, so universally denounced thir- prepared to express' intimations of re- cannot be too strictly observed, and THE GOLD trade unionism. The botllemakers, the 1st Day Chanukah . —Saturday, Dec. 5 teen years ago, is rampant thirteen years later. ligious belief, but he hesitated to clergymen should be^,the first to ob- There was another similarity be- iron moulders, etc. De Leon who can them articulate and specific. The serve it. Otherwise they bring their tween the nineties and the current- always coin a g-ood laugh adds face*Rosh Chodesh Tebeth_ Fidday; Dec. 11 All too many of those same people who fought make scientist today who places confidence whole calling into disrepute. epoch, and that is the agitation about tiously: "The horse tail scrubbers. Fast of Tebeth ••' .' Sunday, Dec. 20 a "war to end war" still thirst for hatred and in the methods and results of his regold and silver. It began before t h e pretzei polishers. Rosh Chodesh Shebat __ Saturday, Jan. 9 rapine. In a time when the economic debacle search declines to rely upon any short- "POPULARIZATION"' IS A course Bryan. A crisis in the monetary sit- BRYAN AND SIRS. COHEN to religious truth. He prefers to of contemporary life. Because one uation was reached one day in the *Rosh Chodesh Adar ___ Monday, Feb. .8 equalled only by the bloodthirsty debacle of the cuts We turn the pages again. It's tne deal with the evidence before him, and Rabbi or ex-Rabbi or near-Rabbi has Cleveland administration, when the ~Rosh Chodesh Ve Adar -Wednesday, Mar. 9 World War, should unite all mankind more strong- to interpret it point by point as it re- written a "best seller," bona-fide Rab- gold reserve of the ' government end of the nineties. The beginning the twentieth century. The DemoPurim ' '•' ___ Tuesday, Mai*. 22 ly by fraternal bonds, the poison of hate is af- veals new principles but he is un- bis must follow suit. The dissemina- dropped next to nothing. And it of crats are in convention, enthusiastic willing to make any mystical excurRosh Chodesh Nissan _„ Thursday, Apr. 7 fecting man's mind and polluting his soul. Com- sions into the realm of the unveri- tion of knowledge in a style the mul- seemed as though the government for Bryan. would have to do just what England can appreciate is a praise1st Day Passover _ Thursday, Apr. 21 panionate to these -are bigotry, prejudice, and fied. In this spirit, Edison's view- titudes It's a -new century, and women are worthy undertaking. But the major recently did—abandon the gold stand- ] coming- into their own. Susan B. An7th Day Passover . — Thursday, Apr. 27 naiTow-mindedness—-all deadly enemies of the point towards religious matters must domain of the Rabbis should be schol- ardd The story how J. p. Morgan saved thony and Lucy Stoncr and the bi'•'Rosh Ghodesh Iyar _ arship. They must not vulgarise Saturday, May 7 Jewish people. The greatest lovers of peace, be understood. that situation has freeuentlv been cycle—perhaps , , . most of all, the biLag B'Omer ________ ___ Tuesday, May 24 these same Jewish people fought valiantly and _ The organized church can be justi- their talents for the sake of a trans- told. Morgan's C de? a r e h i^ain adjuvant hi that " ™^Z »*>*»* this femfied if it does not endeavor to claim ient literary reputation. lTUn Rosh Chodesh Sivan Sunday, June 5 gloriously in the war for peace. They wanted Edison as one of its saints merely be- Popularization is a drag which business was a Jew, August Belmont, ! w<s * " " ^ " P 5 ? " " 5 - Ami of course part. And leave o-OTt nof f +h* <Tews ^ ^ <io our part. the I?^WMUc Rothschilds. | Shabuoth . Friday, June 10 peace, yet they led all nationalities in the per- cause he was a. great visionary, a eventually enslaves its victim; it is an Sagent it to Mrs. Cohen to do it. Personally, I can not gat enthusii dreamer, an intuitioaist of the most ailment which grows hy what it feeds 'Rosh Chodesh Tammuz ... Tuesday, July 5 centage of enlistments. They were not fighting remarkable i You don't «' who -, Cohen powers. Modern liberal The writer on religious subjects, astic about that deed ,as some have, j . pages. There is is".' Just turn the pares. _ Thursday, July 21 ah enemy people; they were fighting war, bigotry, religious groups are oftentimes too on. Fast of Tammuz _.. It seems to me that the idea that ; having attained a seeming success, y Bigelow describing the enready to compromise the religious passes over to scientific subjects and individuals, however powerful, being Poultney - Wednesday, Aug. 8 prejudice. Rosh Chodesh Ab position in order to draw into their attempts to persuade the public of his necessary to save the government is thusiasm a:fter tlie nomuip.tion of circle men who in their lifetime pre- omniscience. But Lincoln was right: | a l i t t l e b ' : t absurd. To assume that. _>ryan. The World War was just the beginning. The fer ent a wornon delegate who to stand outside. part is of the' cannott b be ffooled t h epeople ' l l d all ll is " to * assume that "1~~" the " '' greater j _ on the platform ami spoke Jews find today that they must join other peace- At the same time, however, Thom- all _,„«. , -PPeareu of the time. Rabbis should not than the whole. But let that p; P aSS - | inaudiblv in avor of ?.Ir. Bryan." She The chaos which has paralyzed the United lovers in the unceasing battle for peace. To for- as Edison must be regarded as a dis- abandon pristine standards and should We are not discussing economics. j was Icnullv chesved, because she was States and the rest of the world economically has tify themselves in their struggle, the Jews can tinguished humanist, whose opinions not publish pot-boilers or tabloid ver- DE LEON AND LENIN EO A ND L ENIN la woman'and- had wavy hair. My may be classified as spiritual, if Hu- sions of knowledge. recently shown the .incomparable value of lead- look back into history. Ideas of inter-national manism The nineties were, as yon have al! chewing gum neighbor said that the deserves the title of a reliready gathered, hot and bothered |^«sband of me the Utah woman was ership. We have come to the sad realization that amity were advanced by Jews in Biblical da.vs and gion. Edison, like Spinoza and Einwith labor troubles and fertile with waiting tor her outside with the baby. stein, was saturated with a sense of all too many of our idols had feet of clay and that were written into our law. Abraham's "Let there There was old At any rate, here was a woman tlelethe majesty and wonder of the unip ! i social panaceas. the "men of power" had not possessed the qual- be no strife, for we are brethren" was followed by verse. Cohen by name, for the first He was blessed with the genDaniel DeLeon, a South American prate time i n ities we pictured but instead had been riding on lesson after lesson teaching peace. The Midrash, ius to wring from the unknown many JJew ffor instance, with his Socialist i o r r n c a history ascandmjr the platBy DAVID SCHWARTZ Labor philosophy. j^ ^ national convention in isupthe c-est of the prosperity, wave. The result has the Talmud, the whole Jewish literature are full of_i;-s choicest secrets. He was conDeLeon had stalled out as a mi!djP o r t °f a candidate for the presiscious of the co-operation of a Unibeen that we recognize now that this country of prayers glorifying the desirability and beauty versal Intelligence which in sudden sort of radical. Addressing popular j deiu-y." BACKWARD meetings, Eenry George g^tjierines) "People pointed to her from the * should not look to the financial barons buc else- of peace. The daily Jewish prayers re-echo the flashes of revelation made clear to his LOOKING A rather friendly reader cf this and the like. DeLeon, by the way, i P^eries. Look r,i the woman, but mort_l mind the forces reserved for where for our leadership. •'••.,-". consistent Jewish cry for peace. Through the the shouted Rtid trotted Immortal Presence alone. In an column, Mr. Jacob Turner of Chicago, Q_ j sfse lavig'nen In a mention of the intellectual giants who ages Jewish leaders have advocated peace, and attenuated sense, Edison may be con- some tims ago, indicated that his apthe philosophy I R~i0RF v i t h t h s mime, happy as a for this department waxed as lead the modern world in thought and in guiding even the common Jewish greeting of "Sholom sidered a religionist, if the crusading petite olshevik father s c h o o ! c h i l d o r ; t h e ' ™ i c it became historical. Give us some of Lenin. The great Bol "What's with the new and questing impulse of scientific readmitted as much. m our destiny of .tomorrow, we cannot overlook Jus- Aleichem" means "Peace be uporf you." Jewish search may rightly be designated us more of the old diggings, was his woman ?'' ted the men ir. the gald t plea. DE LEON'S RETORT tice Louis D. Brandeis of the United States Su- peace apostles of modem times are also numerous, akin to religion. leries. Well, we have been browsing And here—what is this? Ivice lit"She's preme Court, in the observance of whose birthday as mention of a few of the outstanding illustrates. through the meadows of the nineties tle anecdote of the days, when De in reply find went OT>. with the on ^November 13 many festivities are being There was Ivan vonBloch, whose monumental ALL LOVERS OF FREEDOM OF —in the old magazines and newspap- Leon was addressing Popuiist gather- j raagnols, When she "had danced and hail Thomas Edison for his ers of the Library of Congress. So planned throughout the country. Justice Bran- Encyclopedia of War Jis said to have influenced thought ings. Speaking before a Populist re- j yelled herself tired she perched on disdain for - superstition and hypo- here is a column for Mr. Turner. vivsl in Minneapolis. | the edge of the platform and redeis is one of the great thinkers of the present the calling of Hague Conference of 1899; Lazarus crisy. His cricism of the spiritualist After the speech, an old whiskered i marked to a delegate, as she arranged THE _ NERVOUS NINETIES era.- The opinions handed down by him and bis L. Zamenhof, founder of "Esperanto," the inter- movement more than a decade ago j her. dress: Various phrases have been used de- Pop-olist ups and says: in keeping with his demand for associate, Holmes, on social problems ax-ernaster- national language which it was hoped would lead was "Mr. DeLeon, you havo made a fine but wasn't that hot stuff?" rigorous adherence to scientific tests. scribing the nineties. For some reapieces.. It is said by authorities that their min- to international amity; David Lubin, American His refusal to accept the descriptive son scarcely satisfying to me, some speech. You have made a beautiful Then, while adjusting hairpijis, she speech. But 1 want to ask YOU some- leaned over and called to R reporter. ority opinions in dissent have far more; weight idealist, with his co-operative marketing idea; term of "Gnd" in place of "Supreme have tagged the period—the "gay thing." "Say, are vou for Ervan?" nineties." Others have called it" the is typical of the honesty and influence upon the rising generation of law- Dr. Alfred H. Fried, Nobel Peace Prize winner of Intelligence" "Go ahead," said De Leon. "You bet I" of f.is mind. At the same time the suffering nineties." The latter, it yers and students and legislators than the offi- 1911; Tobias Asser, another Nobel Peace winner; religionist seeks to find a clue tc, the seems to me, is more correct. But "I want to ask jo-a, If you would "Shaka. And the 'OOIK! was sealed." your life for the cause?" Let's all shake Sirs. Cohen's hand. cial decisions themselves. Brandeis was a pro- Oscar S. Straus; Salomon 0. Levinson, of the Kel- reality of a spiritual clan in the uni- perhaps for alliterative reasons I pre- sacrifice Of course, he would. Everybody Ths first women to ascend the platverse thiough thp. words of Mr. Edi- fer the "nervous nineties." phet whose views were ahead of the time of their logg Peace Pact fame. ' in a nation. 1 convention. In many ways the nineties seem was expecting him to answer, bat De son concerning the "vital entUies" deI "VVe're a. great, people—we jews. Do utterances, views which are rapidly becoming the -~ The Jews are still pledged to the ideal of spite the inventors •refusal to believe very kin to our own present decade. Leon didn't. Instead he said: "One live man is 11 hear someone say: 0. yeah! mr has a soul or that he lives There was the great depression of sound philosophy of the country. world concord. However, all peace advocates that worth a million dead men for the (Copyright, iffSl, by the Jewish after death, cvea. in spiritual form. 1893 you remember for one thing. On his seventy-fifth birthday, Brandeis can must contend with the militant aggressiveness so The chief comfort religionists can derevolution." Telegraphic Agency. Inc.) look back upon the scenes of a stirring struggle apparent.. .Nations spending^ over three-fourths rive from his VJ*WS is that thoy were COXEY'S LAWYER It was the year of the march of eminently humanitarian, libers] and against political powers that be. Brandeis's abil-,: of their national taxes to man bristling warships hopeful. Coxey's Army of the Unemployed to ity was always admitted, but he refused the of- and deatn-dealing armies. On the anniversary of Washington. I have been looking to Bertrand Russell is condemn- see if there was any Jewish angle to fers of "big business" and fought zealously for the Armistice we must take stock of ourselves— ingToday Eddington and Jeans for their that famous Hegira. Ah here I have the smaller units of civilization as opposed to we who in war must fight and kill—take stock readiness to speak in terms of reli- it. The lawyer for Coxey—this felstandardized bigness; The records still ring with while the cuts and bruises and scars of the .World gion though their scientific discover- low Samuel Hyman must be a Jew. ies give them little warrant for this his successful battles in the national railroad War have not healed, focus values in their time practice. Arthur Keith and J. B. S. As Coxey comes to Washington his hordes of hungry unemarena. Brandeis was President Wilson's first light, and exchange the 1 olive branch for the Haldane likewise are adopting the •with ployed, the conservative authorities of choice for secretary of commerce and his selec- sword, so that another Armistice may never be terminology of the liberal church. the capital, of course, do not like it. Russell seeks to indicate that some tion was sidetracked only by political and high needed. How to get Coxey is their probreligionists prove God's existence from lem. At last, in their foolish, way pressure. Indeed, Brandeis's unwillingness to the fact that the atoms do not obey they arrest Coxey and some' of the the laws of mathematics, and others ' subserve his ideals to the interests of the money from the fact that they do obey these leaders for leading the unemployed powers almost led to a rejection in the Senate of laws. Russell would have small cause army over the grassy lawns. Coxey is arraigned before municihis appointment to the Supreme Court bench, and for complaint regarding Thomas Edipal court of Washington. Lawyer son's consistency, for, to the very end, it was only after a most bitter- struggle that his the inventor reaffirmed his acceptance Hyman is his counssl. confirmation was obtained. This seems like a bad of a "Supreme Intelligence," though WHEN STRAUSS WAS dream when one in retrospection thinks over the .^LIBERAL MEDICAL SCHOOL he hesitated to define it further. YOUNG constructive ideas he has advanced to improve One of the important accomplishments of the An agnostic with pronounced hu- What is this? An old magazine, our business activities from the standpoint of re- American Jewish Congress, which met in Phil- manitarian sympathies is . the title called the Verdict. Edited by Alfred Edison?';'most, accurately de- Henry Lewis. I turn the pages. lation between big business and the government, adelphia last week, was the decision to establish which serves. .He, h;as added to, not sub- There is a picture of Nathan Straus. and his constant fight for the interests of the gen- a liberal medical school in New York City. The tracted from .the spiritual riches of But so young looking. It must, be Greater Values Than - 2ral people in contrast to the "mighty" few. He discrimination against Jewish students in the mankind, andj hence all of us, reli- in the days when he was a great racgionists included, delight to honor ing enthusiast. Ever think of Straus represents the great devotion, to the peoples' in- medical schools of the metropolis has been most him.^ We wish he had gone further a great figure of the turf? Yet terest and his gift of creative thinking about com- pronounced and many young men and women of in his religious attitude, but, never- as he was. But here is an article by theless, we hail him ss one of the Straus on philanthropy. munity life is helping to shape our destiny. our faith have been forced to seek a medical edu- benefactors of the human race. He urges the establishment of pubBut Justice Brandeis is endeared to us not cation in foreign lands. The American Jewish lic laundries for the poor. Sounds Select j~c;r* -<-v, yr" 7c< :>liat alone for his great contribution to our country Congress is therefore determined to establish a "EVER SINCE THEY STARTED rather strange' today, bat my mind world's l:zZ"iz; i\y^-~--<Y lors juristically.. He is a lover of his people. His medical school where students of all races and to call the Rabbis Doctors Judaism goes back tcr what the East Side must has been sick." This is a well-known have been In the days of the nineties. s u e t coi_" J I ^ ~ . iik. j_i. T..X. __m, * ui religious persuasion will be accepted on the basis greatness did not divorce him from the Jews; it bromide of several years standing. The congestion, the squalor, the pov—values J.h_l rvz ' \ \ - " ' -" but gave him the power to aid them. Unknown of merit only. Men acquire the "Doctor" title in erty! various ways. Some take from 'the Public laundries must have seemed bo most people, he has for years poured money While this ; project cannot be easily earned bills Sieiscr,. 7Tc'lcr; „ E:vzc':n:to them the "Dr." after and a very needful thing in the nineties. and energy into the upbuilding of Palestine as out at this time we believe that the American placesent it before their name; some dee.n& Knos Hats ;he Jewish National Homeland—even though the Jewish Congress will perform a tremendous ser- clare: "My congregation persisted in SOAP AND SINGLE TAX party he favored was not holding the reins. And vice to American liberalism if it will launch a calling me 'Doctor,' so I just took the I turn the pages. Ah, there is old It is told that a conscientious Joseph Fels. Young Joseph Fels then. _ow when the Brandeis-Mack ideas have triumph- powerful campaign, for its realization. In <ffiis title." young Rabbi explained at great length It's a mistake that young people alid, the great woi'k.which he has been carrying democratic country publicity is a matchless wea- to his congregation that he was to be ways have—tills thinking . that old Nebraska, on is even inci'easing to meet the stress of the pon. Academic institutions have dared adopt ^re- called either "Rabbi" or "Mister," and people were always old. Just look that he had not yet received his doc- at these pictures of Straus'and Fe!s. Special iimes. ; Such devotion as is manifested in the actionary practices only because they thought tor's degree. -At the conclusion-of his They' look as young as you, and you PaU Hate leadership of so high an intellectual and moral that the public would not be aware of them. No earnest discourse, an enthusiast rush- and you. force gives our youth an anchor to steady them- higher school of any importance would be ready ed up and greeted him with congrat- Mr.' Fels made a fortune selling a saying: "What a wonderful soap. selves, an illustrious soul who is a spiritual haven to admit publicly that it is practicing discrimina- ulations, address, And now fee wants to clean out pov:rom the crass materialism which threatens us. tion. The widespread publication of the facts oberty with-Henry George's sapolio. ESPEST HAT KEN TO SERVE YOU But ' •what does the article say 1 DESPITE i THE TEMPTATION, '/ Through his work oui% youth can j:lean a glorious tainedbythe American Jewish Congress with re- Rabbis T EJjrfs—3J»Sn Fleer should repudiate the "Doctor" % eli, it says that Fels is just back opportunity for service^ arid they /would do well ference to the "psychological tests" of the medi- title until they have rightfully won from a visit to London, where he has to'study the life, the thought, the achievements cal schools in New York City would clear the at- it. Failure to do so opens the door seen Lloyd George, who has just to the fore on the program of of 'this great leader in Israel and to draw upon mosphere to'such, an' extent that the step to to many difficulties. Recently a stepped clergyman allowed himself in an an- land reform. It is said that Fels liberal center for medical edu- nouncement of courses to be desig- heavily contributed to this first camthat iich source for inspiration and guidance, not establish a truly ; cation mighi. vi#iin a short time prove to be un- nated as "Doctor." His first address paign of Lloyd George, believing that ' 'only--in Jewish- affairs but in all the problems of on a scientific subject of which he was it was the opening wedge of the necessary.—Sentinel • lifeiin: a day of world bewilderment; >:; •'• ~- 7 ---^ manifestly ignorant demonstrated to single tax. .i._o
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PAGE 5—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1531
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1 family, for sissy years residents of Omaha, left fcr Texas Tuesday, November 3, Trhere they will make their home. Last Sunday, a dinner sponsored by ijjj iie members-cf the Adas Yeshnrin |m synagogue, was given for the Gots- jjj! diners a t the home of Rabbi N; Fela- ijjf man. About 20 members cf the syna- jjlj gogne attended the dinner. Kr. Gots- jpj diner, who for the past 15 years has |jj been an active member cf the syna- jjj gogue, was presented "with a beautiful | jH gift ii!
WEDDING Many affairs were given in honor THEATER PASTY HOSTS At a beautiful and impressive cere- of the couple and. the groom's mother Among those who entertained st mony, Miss Minnette Margolin be- and sister. Mr. and Mrs. Gail Margothe gay and capricious comedy, "The came the bride of Lawrence Finkel lin entertained at an informal dinner Vinegar Tree," were: Mrs. Sol Begezi, of St. Louis, Mo., Sunday evening, at home for 25 guests, as did Mr. Mrs. Sara Werthebner, Mrs. I. Zieg:November 1, at* 6 o'clock at the home and Mrs. Nathan S. YafFe, and Mr. ler, Mrs. Shrolly Goodman, Mrs. 21. of Dr. and Mrs. Morris. Margolin. and Mrs. I. Hurwitz. Mrs. Louis Krasne and Henry Rosenthsl. Only members of the family attended Margolin entertained at luncheon at the ceremony a t -which Rabbi David the Paxton hotel followed by a theaTEN TEAKS AGO Goldstein and Rabbi H. Grodinsky of- ter party, at which Mrs. Louis Fogel The Brotherhood of Temple Israel ficiated. •was hostess. Miss Anne Ruback engave a stag dinner in. the vestry tertained at a bridge party and Miss The ceremony was followed by a rooms. Following the dinner, a dedinner a t the horns, of the bride's par- Helen Adler at a luncheon. Mrs. Ruth bate was held to which, wives and ents,' Mr. and Mrs. Louis Margolin.•'•• Stirling entertained a t tea. families cf the Brotherhood were inThe bride wore a beautiful French Mr. Finkel and his bride will make vited. model of white lace and a matching their home in Omaha following a Announcement was made of the turban. She carried an old-fashioned short boneymoon trip. engagement of Miss Ann Ackerman -bpquet of bride's roses. and Herman "White. Out-of-town guests included Mr. Miss Dorothy Letween of Lincoln and Mrs. J. H. Greenberg, Mr. andEASTERN WEDDING entertained twenty g-jests at her Mrs. Ben Friedman, Mr. and Mrs. Announcement is made of the marfather's farm en Sunday evening. Max Haiigman, Mr. and Mrs. Aberiage of Miss Edna Lucille Smith, Friedman and daughter, Helen, Mrs. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry ill . Bertha Rutstien, Mr. and Mrs. SamSmith of New York City, to Michael Snofsiy, all of Sioux City, la., Mr.Irwin Stern, son of Mr. and Mrs. HarWindow Glass! and Mrs. Max Moses and daughter, ris Stern. ; Complete l i n e c£ Ail Sizes Annette Riklin. Estelle of Lincoln, Mr. and Mxs. Gail Installation EECI Delivery Sen-ice Mrs. Stem attended Cornell UniFriedman of Harlan, Iowa, Mrs. Anna versity at Ithaca, New York, and was Annette Riklin, dancing instructor, Classes are now being organized for SHRIER PAINT AND Finkel and daughter, Lillian of St. graduated from the University of who for the past four years taught children ages 6 to 14 and will begin WALL PAPER CO. Louis, Mo., mother and sister of the California at Berkeley. She is a dancing at the Jewish Community Friday afternon, Nov. 13 at 4 o'clock. groom. Phone AT. 4744 member of the Alpha Epsilon Phi Center, will again take charge of Registrations for classes are being sorority. Mrs. Stern attended the classes. University of Nebraska and was gradMiss Riklin will teach ballet, acro- taken at the Center and will conuated . from tha Colorado School of batic, and various solo dancing. tinue all through next week. Center Calendar Mines-at Golden. He is a member of Zela Beta Tau fraternity. tO El loonce Friday, November 6 Sam Wertheimer is suffering a Senn hospital on Tuesday, November mr. and Mrs. Stern are residing in S. Sirs. Rothkop was formerly Miss broken shoulder as the result of a that Review cf tbe play "Adam," by Lewiston, Maine. fall from a horse. Rabbi David A. Goldstein.— Dorothy Kavich of Fremont. i. JOE 8 p . m. { Mr. and Mrs. Abrarn Colin celebratENGAGEMENT OF INTEREST Mr. and Mrs. Sam Swartz annow with the Sunday, ^November 8 . ed the "Brith" of their son last SunMr. and'Mrs. I. Rosenthal announce nounce the birth of a daughter on Psi Mu Dance—3 p. m. Center the engagement of their daughter, Saturday, October 31, at the Luth- day at home. ballroom. Sponsored by Jewish Anne, to Hyman Zeitlin of New York. eran hospital. Women's Welfare Federation, Mrs. Mose Yousem has returned Mr. and Mrs. Rosenthal were formerCall Mm at under direction of Mrs. L. ly from a three-weeks visit in New of Lincoln, but now reside in New Dr. and Mrs. L H. Stein announce Neveleff and Mrs. Irvin StalYork. York. " the birth of a daughter on Monday, master. § HArney 1102 November 2, at the Nicholas Senn A to pick tip rtnzr next bnijiile Tuesday, November 10 GOTSDINERS HONORED RETURN FROM HONEYMOON hospital. Talmud Torah Annual Meeting, RIP Mr. and Mrs. Vv. Gotsdinsr and : Mr. and Mrs. Hymie Philip Milder SOOAL NOTES 8 p. m. have returned from a honeymoon trip Sid Glick of Chicago spent last Wednesday, November 11 on which they motored to Chicago, Saturday in Omaha. Conservative Synagogue AuxilSt. Louis and Kansas City. They are iary Meeting. Board meeting, now at home at the Nottingham Miss Sally Ginsbnrg of Sioux City, Omaha's Style Center 1 p. m. apartments. la., -was the guest.of Mr. and Mrs. Regular meeting, 2:30 p. m. Abe E. Milder last week. Commercial Basketball League, SEVELEFFS AT HOME 8 p.m. Free to members. GenMr. and Mrs. Herbert Neveleff eral admission loc. have returned from a southern honeyThursday, November 12 moon trip and are at bome at 2867 B'nai B'rith. meeting, 8 p. m. Vane street. Guest speaker, Mr. Ralpt Keed. ALBERT BATT HOST AT STAG FOR YOUR Orpheum Opposite Albert Batt was host at a stag party last Wednesday evening at the Coming Events Paxton hotel in honor of David ForSunday, November 15 man, wbose marriage to Miss Bertha Psi Mu Dance—3 p. m. Center Batt will be an event of next SunBallroom. day. Wednesday, November 18 Community Forum — MarguerBIRTH ANNOUNCEMENTS 16th and Howard ite Newmeyer of St. Louis. "A Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rothkop announce Social Worker Looks at Mar- the birth of a son a t the Nicholas riage and Divorce." Thursday, November 19 B'nai B'rith Meeting—8 p. m.' Gnest speaker, Dr. Abraham -i-e Seen This Tear Sacher, of University of Illinois. . '. -• • Sunday, November 22 Psi Mu Dance.—3 p. m. Center Ballroom. Father and Son banquet. 6:30 p. m. JTNKEL-MARGOLIN
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"Sunday -Night Is Center'-Night". . An educational program for the Jewish People of Omaha, every Sunday evening, begin- . ning November 15, 1931. Free to,active and senior members of the Jewish Community Center. Sunday, November 15 "Adam," a play by Ludwig . Lewisohn. Center Players Guild. 8 p. m. Sunday,.November 29 Lecture — Maurice Samuel, lecturer and author. Auspices Center Committee on Adult Education, 8 p. m.
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PRE-WAR MEMORIES—Memories of the pre-war days are brought back by this photo of the former Crown Prince Wilhelm of Germany and his wife, heading a procession of royalty at Potsdam during the commemoration of the 100th birthday of Kaiser Friedrich III. Behind Wilhehn are his two brothers, Eitel Friedrich and Oskar. Observe the salutes of bystanders. MOST BEAUTIFUL DAHLIAS—G;£nt d&h'Jas, v Ivch took f.rst rrirc at a state-wide exhibition in Utah, £re cispiayed by Pliriarn Eerr;f>r,. Srlt Lake City.
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LARGEST AMEBICAN MAIL PLANE—An all-metal, mail plane acquired J>jr the depart&ent of commerce, undergoes tests at Roosevelt., Field, N. Y., before being put into service. It is Uncle Sam's largest mail plane, carrying 800 pounds of mail and five passengers at more than 150 miles per hour.
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U:cvfei tr here been ccc-i. • " oJ c..i."" i TWINS PLAY SATIS FAET IN PLAY—Needing someone to take two parts -ia' a-play ; th^-!md a "roistalren Identity" angle to it, the Little Theater of Memphis, .Teim., selected thsse pretty twins, Jean and June Boyer, This is not a-dual personality—ss you think when you look at these twins. Can yon tell * them apart?" JeaB is the girl on the left. t ^
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PAGE 7—THE JEWISH PPwESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1931 Tuesday morning, November 10," a t ,ra.£n and-Mrs.'Nathan'Mantel •wi 20:30 a. as. as the-B]ackatoaa_-,Hotel.l theOnjaiia delegates..... His subject will be "The Moscow Sisterhood Biersorial Tribute : Rc'ad." Sirs. M % L. Colin Tail ..be in charge•. - . .' ". /. .
] Those desiring to cojame'stioriite i loved, onei; •will please communicate ! with Mrs..Louis EHIer, cfcairman of I the. ISerrioriai Fund.
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Donations ATere received'last month : Cantor Joseph Malek, formerly of Sisterhood-"'Conventionn.:- ,-| iit":Eierft'ory o f Addie Gross, Sarah Omaha; has been invited to give anThe Convention-.'of the Sisterhoods j Zmjm'ZTL,.NoTusan Roihhdlz iiu^ '.Jlrs, other, concert here this coming weekof this District rrcilLbe.held -this' year j D.avs Sampson. • :!?!. the Motter cT t h e I-s::>:e of .ToLn II. end.- He; mil conduct the services at -at J^eavenxzoizk, Esiisss, on I Novesi-1 the Beth Haraedrosh Hagodol Synaher 9 and 10.- Mrs,:.William, L. Bolz-i gogue, 19th and Burt, this evening O f flees • : •• f&'nl (?st;ue, before m»\ Ci-uuty Jiu'.£t oi starting at 4r45 p. m. and "tomorrow :, STAJUXIASTER & BEBEK ' i»ousrlss Coti»?TT N«'!>r.-!?k:i. j?r the <J'ii:n!y XetionaJ Baak Bias-"Omaha. Court Iloonii- in ^sniil •Comitj", c« t h e "4:r. morning at 8:30 a. m. OF. IXrOKPOOAT3(« ' C:F: tl;;j Pi' 3ipeoirib<T, jii'-'i. and on ti>c »--;L On Sunday night, November 8, he <lry of Fern-nary. 3KC. HE. !) o'clock -A. ,YL, X O T I C E ' - ©IT S A T E • • : . ; : I . J OIL co^irA^~S'-' Candle lighting timfi,-JFriday, Ko- "will giv.e a concert at the Beth Hame^acb .<::iy. for t.be jrarrtost; o£ T-reseiinr.^. Tonight »V1"s"v \ I n t<i•e" 'District: Conrt '-of. liouj;l:iS-Coiisly, AI,I; >IEN ra THESE F S I ; ? : ilifir tlairiis for- ^sr.iriinf-tio'ri, n i l j i ^ ^ p i ^ t ; vember 6, 4:30 p. m., ' • : ' • • • - ' • " •"" : drosh Hagodol synagogue, starting at : , t^ihe imdfrsi^rjietl have iorjXieil n This evening the pulpit dt'Tesrple Nplinska Eiictriince. Tlsreo inoKthss are uilovred - By -virtue- ofur tlocres cntl ordt-f of sala-1 •u«iri>oratipu' under ihf -liiv-'s^l ihe ^hits? of ::ml l o r lUe creuiTCrs to r>;'i*t-iit. Jiieir <:!iii'si£. 7:30 p. m. He will be aided by other Israel will be occupied by Rabbi 'Jacob iscc?d Services ^Tonight : " or.t :<Jf;-r th«i': l*istrict , Court ' • of I iNfl>r;i?IiT! . -The- tinm»> of the ^wlrortuion t r e i n the "1st tiny nf" Nov>'tT!l«ff, jP"i, : County,; Nciii-csta, aiill iu'pnrsa-"- -sh-al! .5>e "JJILDEK OIL COKPANI" -a-Uli J. Ogle, Rabbi of Congregation B^Ti&i _l>oc£ktF Rabbi Goldstein . . preaches on talent of merit. of said" decree nf said Court in an iits.principal place of "business nt O a a i a , Last Sunday Cantor Malek's con- Jeshurun of Lincoln, Neb. His subject ajK'e "Adam." The play by Ludwig Lewinction therein indesert at Appeanmce I ^Nebraska. The objecrs of said corporKl'ion pockef No. 27T:ina :it l^age TCo. "IS. where-'•:slssH 1* tfi operate 5IK<5 maintain i*.u esSiiiisohn 'will be presented Sunday eve- cert brought, much praise. He was ac- will be 'Thoughts for Armistice "Bay." in-.L'Uilip :iJ, Klutzsiict is phuutilf and! ijeSnnent for the Siipdliiig in all Trays oi. JFRADENBTEG, & BT.T,T1V We bespeak for Rabbi Ogle ra:large Nebraska" ning, November 15, by. the Center companied at the piano by Mrs. Investxneiit" St-curiiies Comnauy, l 'iibric:iliTip: oils, preast'S, ?asoliB>? iiuu Jic— Attorneys a- cort>oration, is <le&iu]:iut, I will at 10 'troleam protiacts «f every kind and uv.Uire Players Guild as part of the Adult Henry Monsky." Eabbi Frederick Cohn attendance to listen to the interesting .o'clock m. on the "Rtb day. of November, ! -•md all iLindred nrtifles and 10 aciir.ire ~l}y and valuable message that...-ha will. I'MV, ata.ihi> «-ast frant -doer of the Doug- I p'jrcknse or oi herwise . snd t o . dispose <<f NOTICE BV -FUEL! CATION «K r£'T?.Education program.-, sponsored by 'the spoke at the concert. las County'. Court "JJonse of tbe City of in any • msjmer stock, bonds, dt'Ut'nrurcs tiing us. Be sure tr> come with your Otuaha, Douglas T1ON T O B SLTTLEMENT « F TIK.%1 Jewish Community Center. , ".->.. County. Nebraska, sell at ai»d securiries of eTery 3i5»d ;nul flescripAD3£ZSZSTJl&TI<ys SCCOCNT. family and friends to meet and greet public auction to the highest. bidder for tion and to exercise, all the .rights, potrtrs ; I n the County Court of P o u p l n s Coui.ry, ! a Lash the following described property all Iand privileges. <if ownership 'thereof ":nul Nebraska. Rabbi Ogle. I represented as stock ef ihe Fidelity Old. to lend money an<l negotiate Io;ins, Ttpon On Friday November 13, Eabbi Line Insurance Company, a Nebraska cor- any securiry; lo 3>i;rchnsp, lense, liire or - I n the Mntter of t h e Estate of .Tolm A Tomorrow Goldstein \dll give a post, armisticeporation, the certificate numbers < of said otht-rvrtse acquire real and per'sumsl ijircip- Ilicker, I'eceascCL. All per^on.s intort'sreii in s:; i and the number of shares represent- erty or any iiiterest thereiii and sell, tlisSaturday 'morning Rabbi Ogle will Mock day sermon on "The World Advances i\ * < ed by each certificate being set out as t>ose, Iw.so. convey, jnortgapre o r ' o f h e t - lierehy notified t h a t on tiie also conduct the services. His sermon i I Toward Universal Peace." .; follows: •svise *!icuniber tbe. said i>roiH>rty or <ir.y Ociolwr. lil.'il, Xoi'ic. Hicfcer V. i n said County Court, prr.y ! topic will "be'''Some Illusions A"bout Certificate No. tliereof ;mtl any improvemeuts tnereNo. of Shares part 'i Book of .Remembrance' on. and to -do each und ereverythins neces- final a d m i n i s t r a t i o n account. the Jew.7* 1 120O Jtl'K! sary, convenient or p!"C-P to carry out the )>e settled r.mi allo-n-ed. ami With the formation of the Bappv • Omaha, Nebr.—For the first time •twi Uischareefi from h<?r t r n s t ii* t I objects herein specifically euuniera!ed "imi! SisterJkoGp, Lecture 1 i Day Memorial Bmlding :Pnnd; it has in the history of Jewish youth move••-•- , . , "HK7 particularly the operation of business fcr t r i x and ihnf. n h e a r i n g v:V I i i < -. 1203 . ireti the handling of all kinds of pctroleom Raid petition lief ore said Cotir become necessary to provide a Book ments in America, schools for the in- Rabbi Frederick Cohn will deliver n a y of Novemlxr. IBC1, nnd 1 i products TrDether wholesale or retail. oi i 120.-V __ of Eemembrance in whlcb the names struction and devalopmeht of club the second in Tps^ 'course of lectures JKi7 The authorized capital stock siiiiill be fail to eppenr before saisl < Sij.CXW.OO and nil of said ' stock shall )><• p.-afl H s t tiny of Noveinl>or of the donors will-be inscribed togeth- leaders will be instituted this month under the auspices -of the Sisterhood o'clock A. ~h\.. :mo coiuest pni( n it nofyr "0 common and of the pr.r value of .$100.(K! . IMS f er with the names of those honored. on a national scale by Aleph Zadik j»er share. Said stock shall l>e fully paid Court may g r a n t the p r a y e r « <• I -Offices tion. enter u decree of Loir!;}! l n *w> \'l> and non-assessable. The corpor.ition Mr. Harry Kalakofsky, president of 1\ •1211 . of the B'nai B'rith under the -TBADESTJCEG. STJXMAfeXEK & BEBEE Khali commence tloinp business npon the such other ::nu furthor order the congregation, is. .purchasing the Eleph_ •inn - . SIKi fiiin<; of Its artk-les with the County Clerk nnd decrees, us to fhis Co«~ C50Omaha National Bank Bide-, Omaha. direction and personal supervision of propt-r. to The end tlyif. cV. ^ •"• i of liouglas County, Nebraska, an a shall Bcok in honor of hisvlate' father, Philip M. Klutznick,'executive secre•• 1213 : ni2 conrinue for a period of fifty years from lainip.f: to said state may be 1 XOTICE OF INCORPORATION OF Michel Kulakofsky. . - tary of the. Supreme-Advisory Coun- •"SAJIGOM* said date. The hiphest Emount <if indebt- j;nd di'termined. SIILtlNEKV CO3IPAKT* T E S I C E CIiATTF.~l. \ edness -shail not exceed fcro-thinls of its KNOW AXL M E N V,X T H E S K PRESThe first contribution to the fund cil. County riTf.'' 1210 ~1 IT . . capital stock. i)Gt this restriction shrill not H>-"fV-3t. ENTS, .iha.t.*he undersigned have formed was made by Miss Blanche Zimman apply to indebtedness secured by mortunder The laws of the State A series of four lectures will be aof corporation 1218 gages or liens upon any of the corporate Nebraska. The name of the corporaas a. tribute to the memory of" her delivered property. The affairs of this corporation by Klutinick on:"Chaptef tion shall be ••SAMGOL1> MILLINERY mother, Sarah Zimman, whose Yah Programs," -"Membership," "Finance" COMPANX" with its principal plnee of 1220 001 shall be mannjred by a Eosrd of I>ir«-torE of not less than fvco n^enil>ers. The anrzert -was observed last Friday. .'"• : and '^Relationship .With; B'nai B'rith." business at Omaha, Xeliraska. The genj^J nns nxinl meeting: of the corporation shrill be eral nature of rlie business to l>e tran..."••V ' Contributions to this Fund will be Four hundred members representing sacted and the object and purpose Tor t?Id on the second Wednesday in January l " - i 1001 of each year, at which mrt'tinp: the srnck1224 : which this corporation is organized and gratefully received hy either Mr. E thirty-five holders shall elect a Board of IJirertors chapters of _ Junior B'nai established shall be to lease, own, control Meyer or^ Mr. Dave Cohn. . 122G sen and thereupon the Board shall elect a operate the business of wholesaling or B'rith will congregate at four east- or President. :: Vice-I'resident, ••! Secretary ._ SS4 retailing, clothing, millinery and ladies' jLaarfV v^y^sJ Vet-'fc^r-Hwf^Ai ern cities for instruction^ '...-..' ready-to-wear and general merchandise. Also one certain surplus note in the sum mrd'n Treasurer. A::y Two of eaiA office;;, Name Streets After or to carry on ths trade or business of of ?4,«>43.2i) made and expctited by tiie excepting: those oi President and ViceThe first school will open in New manufacturing, producing, buying, sell- Conservative Casualty Insurance Company Pr^sldeiit may be hrfd by oue raid ibe Jewish Leaders Those nrririe? may tie York City on November 10, and con- ing, importing, exporting and otherwise to the Nebraska Investment Swurifii-s Cor- same person. nt any Tepriilnr or special ineetLemberg.—The municipality of t h e tinue for three days. On November dealing in any and all kinds of clothing poration, dated December 21. 3W9, and amended and merchandise; to buy, own, sell, lease, signed by Kees Wilkinson, President, and ii'.S of The stockholders by a two-thirds township, Trembovle, Galicia, has de- 15, the second school will be conduct- improve or otherwise deal in and -with H. E. Benzel, Secretary; such sale tn satiH- vore of the outstandinc strict. cided to name three streets Tor Dr. ed at Worcester, Mass.; on Novembsr real estate of every trnd or character and fy the judgments, liens .-rnd encnmbrnncrs i IN TTITNI3SS TTHEKEOF. the parties i personal property including the in said decree Bet forth :?nd to satisfy nil hereunto subscribed thoir nr.mcs this 2Sth Herzl, Dr. Leon Reich and Chaim 16, the third at Hartford, Conn. The •witb stocks and securities of other corpora- costs accrued and ncrruing costs, all as day o£ October. -1HS1. Nachman Bialik. tions; to loan and to borrow money and to provided for in said decree. ' EI-TJi. MII.PEU. fourth will last from November 17 to make, execute and deliver mortgages, P^VE BllAUNSTEIN, Dated at Omaha, Nebraska, this 23rd tiny The decision was adopted upon the 20, at Philadelphia. bonds and other ..securities, to secure the of October, 1931. In the prespnee of: i-L •^
repayment of any money borrowed and recommendations of the Jewish memto take as security for the payment, of any bers of the municipality. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS money loaned mortgages, bonds and other
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securities, -and to do any and all othpr things necessary to the carrying out of the principal purposes above enumerated and to do any and all things pertaining TO the carrying on of 'the business above described. . • The authorized capital stock shall be ".,000.00 and all of said stock Kh.-Ul be common and of the par value of S300.H0 per share and alL of said stock shall be fully paid up and non-assessable. Said stock may be issued for cash, "real estate, personal property or personal services. The corporation shall commence doing bnsiness upon the filing of its articles with the County Clerk- of Douglas County. Nebraska, and shail continue for a period of fifty jyears iroin said date. The highest amount. of indebtedness shall not exceed two-thirds of its capital stock; but this restriction shall not apply to indebtedness secured by mortgages or liens upon any of,the corporate property. _. ~ —^ThtrTtffairs of this cornorrffT&i) "shall be managed by a Board o t Directors consisting of not less. than, tvfo members. The annual' meeting of the corporation, shall be held on The first week day of January of ejtch year, nt: which •mfeetiujr the stockholders shall elect a Hoard of Directors and thereupon the.Board shall elect a President, a "Vice-Presiuent, a Secretary and a Treasurer. Any two'-of said offices may be held by one and rhe same person. These articles may be''amended at any regular o r : special meeting of the stockholders by a two-thirds vote of the Outitanding stock. IN "WITNESS WHEREOF; the -parties have hereunto subscribed their ..names this 30th day of September. 1031. JULIUS KAMtTELSON, i=AM L. GOLDBLATT. In Ihe presence of: ll-G-31
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NOTICE OF INCORPORATION OF J E W ISH COJtUCNiTX CENTER AND W E I r r A E B JFEDEEATIOX •':.-'•> Notice is herelij" given tliut a-corporation has beea- formoil under the .;latrs' of the State of Nebraska pfoyiaiijg-fQr cliaritable and fraternal" societies.^ "" " :• i :? Tiie name of-tlw, oorpomfion Is Jewish Coramunif}' Center' and "Welfare Federation; ~ " ". ' , ^ ". •'.._.• The principal place, of :transactins it's bnsiuess is tbe City, of O B U I B , Douglas County, Nebraska. - .-.-., . ••. The objects: and pnrposes for. which' the corporation "is organized and ro •which all of its property" imd - assets shall be devotcS, a r c : -(a) To "engage in social, beiie-1 voleiit, philanthropic,- and ednentionnl activities; fb) T o -centralize fund-raising activities for philanthropic, social and educational purposes, and to make contributions to siich Jewish institntions. causes and agencies entitled to support," fimncinl or o t h e m l s e ; :{c) toiesteblish -atid maintain in Omaha, a Jewish Co^Im^!^3t^ Center Building, for -.tie "poxp'ose; of -perforniing generally,'the functions: of a social center;- <il)- the-corporation slia31 ha^e tbe right to acfinire Ijy-pnrcliasd, leaso, ,gift, devised or othersvise, and to bold and manage any and all ^property, real or personal, convenient or necessary for the accomplishment of any of its objects, with the right, power and authority ^ t o sell, alienate, encumber and dispose of said property or any part thereof, when ana if such action may be necessary to accomplish any of its-objects; <e> AH'property. unless the same he held as trustee for some specific benefit, shall constitute a trust fund for the uses and purposes hereinbefore, stated.; ...' "-..;. : . --. The torporatioa shall cominence business upon filing of its Articles of Incorporation with the'.County Gerk of Douglas: County, Nebraska, ajid the donation of the corporation shall be-perpetual. The membership stall-consist of all persons who contribute to-svnrtl or pay*, membersliip fees to any of the following;- The Jewish Conimunity Cenier -of Oinaha, the Omaha Welfare Federation" and Community Chest and the Jewish JPhilanthropie1;The managemprit of -the affairs of the corporation shalj hre "ie'.tec^ in an Executive Committee to-consist of 23 members. In addition to the officors rnd Kxecutive Committee, there shall be a_ Board Gf (Jo-ifrnor1! on Tvhica each Jewish orjr.iniration in Omaha which Lan been in existence for more' than - one rear, shall be entitled to represenfation. '.;.These article" ianr he : m r : « ! r j at any annual or spfclal rri^ting caljfd for that purpose, aftpr snl.-ax--.->n of propospj amendmetit, signed !•.:" ct \ 'ast 2."i ~.cEili«rs, thirty days in cCrans-o cf : uc'a E!.c;:ng, to the Exeentive Comirittf s. • •Dated tit Omahn, ZvJir..'ia, iLIs CC.h day of October. 1031. WILLIAM I_ HOT.Z3i.lS HENP.V •• ' SAM 3IES. S-irilK P. HAKSY SIIA'EKMAN ABB GOLr*PTEIN
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M E S . iTKiinr.nT A. GBi:i:Nr.i:r.G j . .T. Giii;r:Nr»7;i:C ABB IinUZF.CT.G HAURT LAPIlirS JACK W. MAEEK. HARRY 7.IALAKH0CK 5IOBMS MILDER MBS. LOUTS.NETELEFF. lEVIN STAX^tASTEB TTARItY A. 'WOLF MRS. H .A. TVOLF ISIDOE ZIEGLES
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natural negotiators and trusted plcri. Ty, Lt-'ics Azv?'? . - ' ^ - - '"V-i potenti~ri_j c£ all th3 satior.3 cui they have often intsresdod in behalf of their oira people when tbors v t a no orscri"2d Jd'risli ration," until finally, ia'cur own scneicticn Vnich savr ths dawn of the Zionist rr.ovecc-rcr:cs c~-"< msnt, there appeared gssufca Jewish *^Z?*iJ I S »i. diplomats end statesmen like Dr. wcrthy of the hor.cr cf housii:? tho pc>rtwi;liy t •3 t i t, - v/ v- . Theodore -Herzl, Dr. Cfcsim Wisraar., future Peace Pc.la.ca than Jerusalem, tepcrei Nahum Sokolov,-, Dr. Stephen S. the city of poaso, whore tl'J divine | Wise, £.nd Justice Louis D. Bran^is. visioa was first b:hcld end T,'II:C>. vrcs j Only the futiira can foretell vhet always regard, d as ths cc::Lcr cf i\*; j -^-.:-.1 1 " . " "WCl'ly V superlative service, s^saciouc' ccu:.;-ol : : : ; (Continued from Pc cjid; lofty idealism t h x i er;criti;;lly of' tl"c"''GivitaE Y^:''\l^ 'C }i Vf; r"£ Jewish diplomats v!;o v;5ireo:::2 fron; Nancy Bich, G year old daugter of (Copyright, 1931, by ths Jewish. j °"'L •Mr. and Mrs. Si Rich, celebrated, her JeTrish citizens. There seems to be the,'Jewish Natlcnd Cdmeiand in Palestine-, will offer ns their coritri- '> rcglrje A-cr.rr, Inc.) j •: A carefully trained cast of players birthday Sunday at a party, enter- an. almost natural b'ond. between the I '-t ccr.taining 14 children. Games and sup- two peoples, so.that we can thus the under the _• direction of Mr. H. H. 1 per occupied the evening. better understand England's acceptBanttey, presented the."jazz Singer ance of the. Palestine Mandate, which before a capacity audience, last SunMrs. H. Homowite and daughter will undubitably be carried out honday-evening. .The , production set a ii ! new standard -for amateur produc- Miriam have returned" to tlie city orably despite some of the petty - l — L . V> A . <. tions in the community.- William Ze- after spending several days visiting spirits in oficialdom. It was Lord linsky took the title roll' of the jazz in Chicago. They are guests ^at the Birkenhead who had remarked on his By .singer, or-Jack-Kobin:-Miss Charlotte A. L'Pinkus home. ' visit to the United States that EngSalldn was seen as the mother, and land even excels America in the so,O.r;£ C.u^ v u iv .r-. d r.r f-eSovel Heshelowythe father. Mh Nick Miss Frances Emlein has returned cial and political opportunities far Talmud Torch S^iricr to Sherman's • characterization of- Mr. home after spending a month visit- service' that are thrown open to the ths Free Public L:brs r/, v,-il; bs the j i Yudelson, cleverly supplied the com-ing in New York City, and Philadel- Jew. • " The Council Bluffs Talmud Tirab guest speaker. H;r t:pic wi.l 021 edy'for the performance. phia. Enroute east, Miss Emlein was Sunday Schfcol vriil start the r.stv "Boolts". Plan for a r.-_^-.ar.o 2alc j '. Other, players were Max Levin, the'guest of the Sigma Delta Tau In Our Qrra Country; season Sunday - raornif.^, Ncrirr.bar to be held tha lattar--?•' ' ' •t "5'' '' The United States has'several Jews Frank' Margolin, Ephriam - Baron, sorority at Columbus, Ohio. Sf-at ten o'clock z% the Chevrr, 3'r.ai mor.th \ull also I s cite ofgreat, distinction in public life." Albert" 'HercfoftY Morris Rubin," Eva are urrcd to : Yisroel "Synagogue, G18 riyr.c-.er St., First and foremost .today is justice Ldpton, •' Lou Slotsky, > Lee- Herzoff, Mrs. M. Chudakoff and son are Louis D. Brandeisj pre-eminent- as a according to Mr. J.'-Z. Stcdlah,' who g Sidney Iihdenbaum, Morris Slotsky, guests' at" the home' of the former's jurist and economist, who like his will be the principal in charge of The first cl fee scries _of Eoc".: Charles Siiindler, - Jay" Eiaff, Fred parents, -Mr.' and Mrs.. A* Levin. great British contemporaries ' also the Sunday School. - Teachers chosen Reviews giver, by Kcfobi Frederick j Fr""cvi".p r pr.r; "'-lie pi.'-ol;c. He'rzoff and,Bernard Passman. for the various classes will be I'Irs. Cohn of Omaha, spcr.sered .Try th? 'Tczcfr, Ztrr-'^.:. T< ycrr: r\'., di«f Three Choruses preceded the play, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Levy of Kings- maintains an active interest in the J. Z. Stadlan, and • the: -Misses Sadie- local Hadassah, vras held Tuesday afThursday evenir.^:, in a locnl hospiand were directed by Miss Serene ley,' Iowa, visited in the; city on Sun- welfare of the Jewish people, particu- Endelman, Eose Fox, Toby Satel- ternoon "at the Strand Theatre ball larly the Zionist movement and the M ZZarctcr was in the shoe'retal.l Mr." Barrent. • •.- '• day. ' ,; . . " . ' . . . . upbuilding of Palestine as the Jewish man, Euth Shyken, and Sarah Solo- room and a large crowd attended. pair business. The play was .presented under the Philip N. Kresne National Homeland. Then there are The second of the series-will "not-be ;. •• • A native of EUPSIS, Mr, Saretcr auspices of the Ladies' Auxiliary "of Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Rodin and son given until December 1, instead of Inent. attorney, Harry S. Scheinman, came to Sioux City sixteen years the Shaare Zion Synagogue.—(G. K.) Sidney are visiting, with friends in Judge Julian W. Mack, Judge BenJamin N, Cardoza, Judge Joseph Nov.. 18 as originally announced, due in Los Angeles. Ego.' He is survived by his widow, a Milwaukee and Sheboygan, Wis. Proskauer and the late Louis Mar1 Mr. KrEsae^ is a graduate of Lin- son, Charles," and tve'daughters, v-rho to a previous" engagement for Sabbi ! shall, who are among the greatest coln high school and of the •univer- live In New York Citv. Cohn. • Mrs. S. Leubowitz and Miss.Kate jurists of the land. Dr. Stephen S. sities of Michigan and Southern • CaliRaskin entertained a group of Wise, though a rabbi and preacher, by : Isadore "Cherniack of Stamford, fornia. ' . - . • - . . : friends honoring Miss Frankie Good- virtue of his singular character and Mr. Krasne originally went to Lot, k..! Connecticut, is spending the ' week i man on her birthday. brilliant oratorical gifts, has been a Angeles as" a national finalist ^r. t, £ here visiting Ms mother, Mrs. L. ] With both teams "out for the vic! vital and powerful factor in Amerioratorical contest on the .cons- tu.Ho%' V c T'ovnt Cherniack. i tory, the Maccabee Football team decan political life,- being on terms of Mr. Morey. Montrose of Chicago is ; ia the summer ' of . 1£?25. ; As c-c r" i t feated the Alumni Talmud .Torah intimacy particularly /with President i The Council Bluffs Chapter No. 1 the national' finalists W.vas l ' : s team,' with" a score of 12 to 6, on visiting at the .home of, his parents, Wilson and a host of other dis;n cf the A. Z. A. will hold a meeting representative "of the 'seven etnas.1 Mr. and Mrs. L. Montrose. Sunday afternoon. tinguish American political leaders. next Sunday afternoon, .Nov. 8, at the states of the United States. _ _
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ANNA PILL,Correspondent
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Braverman started the scoring for Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Levich visited the Maccabees when he, was on the in Kansas City this week. receiving end of a' short-pass from Grueskin, a few seconds before the end of the 'first quarter. In the last quarter, aided by -good interference of Maron and Schindler, he swept down the field for a 52 yard dash and a touch down. Schulman scored for the Alumni team. Over 300 wit- Shaare Zion Congregation will hold nessed the game widen" took place at ts annual election, Wednesday evening, November 12, at the SynaGilman Terrace.
Coriference' Monday Members of the Zionistic organizations! of the city will hold their first conference, Monday evening at the Community Center, to begin plans for the Palestinian Bazaar which will be held December 13, under the auspices of several local groups. Organizations which will sponsor the bazaar, and whose, representatives will_ attend' the conference" Monday, are: Senior' Hadassah"; Junior Hadassah, Zionists, Mizrachi, National Workers Alliance, Poale Zion, and Pioneer Womens Club. • The tentative committee in charge of Monday's meeting are Mr. Louis Schilling, Mrs. J. N: Kxueger/ Mr. E. H. Emlein, Mr. Joseph Aizenberg, Mr. M. Kaplan, Mr. H. Mirowitz, Mr. M. Lazriowich, and Mr. I. Levin.
gogue, following .a dinner at\ 6:30, One .half of the Directorate .will be elected..at this time.: " : Mr. Sovel Krueger,:_ chairman of the - evening.-has announced that the
dinner will be only a means to bring the congregation together, "and that it will not be. a money raising event. " Eeports will be made by Mr;. John Lansberg, president of the congregation, and Mr. Eli Eobinow, treasurer. Brief talks Will be made, by; several laymen of the congregation. Approximately 200 members and their wives are, expected to attend.
Mr. Henry C. Schull, attorney at
law, will address members of the Mount Sinai Temple Brotherhood, Monday evening, November 9, ; at their monthly dinner meeting. Mr. Shull will speak on his. experiences as a member of the Board of Control of Iowa University. A dinner at 6:30 will precede the program and meeting. The affair Sixty "young women signed up for will be held in the Temple Annex. membership in the Junior Hadassah Mr. Morris Pill, president of the organization, at -the' Tea' given by Brotherhood, will introduce' the th3 club: Sunday afternoon i n ' the speaker. Mr. Morris Skallovsky is Martin Hotel. in charge cf reservations.
Sixty New Members
Miss Elizabeth Raskin, .president, was the hostessl • The-,-first ineeting of-the season will-bex".heldr Thursday evening, November 12, at* the. Jewish Community Center.
Larry' Sampson to ?*arry Sampson was elected president of the Question Club, at their election which followed a stag dinner, recently. Other officers elected were Charles Urbach, vice-president; - Dave Hcrwitz, treasurer, and Cecil Seff, secretary. • . : . New board members elected were Milton Bolstein,' Barney Dobrofsky, and Lawrence Baron."
Reverend Davies^ to >n
Several Jews have sat in the American senate and house of represenatives; a fewhaye bsen governors and mayors, and many, of course judges." Several have been ambassadors; Oscar Strauss, Agram Elkus and Henry Morgenthau, to Turkey; A. Ratshesky to Czecho-Slovakia, Rabbi Kornfeld to Persia,. Daniel Guggenheim to Cuba and Herman Bernstein to Little Albania. A personality of singular interest is Judah P. Benjamin, distinguished as a jurist and statesman of the South; he served as senator irom Louisinana, attorney general of the provisional government of the Southern Confederacy and later Secretary of War, and finally, Secretary of State—the- right hand man of Jefferson Davis. Charles Sumner regarded him as "the most brilliant orator in the United States." When the Civil war was over, Benjamin's estates were confiscated, and a ruined man, he fled to England, where at the age of 55, he began life anew by practicing law. He showed such gifts, and ready adaptability that he soon became Queen's counsel and a recognized leader of the English bar. If not for the Civil war, he might have risen to the greatest heights of service and distinction in the United States.
Plenipotentiaries A hundred or more famous Jewish names might be collected from among the great political leaders of the v/esterin world during the last 400 years or more. Some of them no doubt, attained the pinnacle of renown as servants of the governments and peoples of Europe and America. Invariably they have shown a remarkable sift for the higher duties of political life, particularly jurisprudence and statesmanship. Centuries of keen intellectual training arid uncompromising moral discipline have produced admirable qualifications for the highest statesmanship and the wisest diplomacy which require truth, honesty, sincerity,-wisdom, vision and cultured refinement. . For centuries Jews have been the
Reverend J. J. Davies, minister, of the Whitfield Methodist Church, will speak before members of the Mount Sinai Temple, this evening at the regular Friday night service. Reverend Davies will speak on "Immortality." Laymen of the congregation will read the ritual. < Rabbi Theodore N. Lewis will speak this evening at the Reform Temple, Lincoln, Nebraska. He will speak this evening in behalf - of the Union' of American Herbew Congregations. , .-. • '•
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In Charity Drive
Miss Ann WoskofF was elected The Jewish Federation of Social president at the first meeting of the Service, will participate with four- Pacemakers Club, held recently. > teen of the Social Service Agencies in Other officers elected were.Ann Rasa city wide Charity "Drive, which will kin, vice president; -Kate Raskin, secbegin next week. The Charity Drive retary and treasurer, and Frankie , is taking the place -»f the Community Goodman, publicity chairman.' ••" * Fund which was abandoned this fall. Dancing and bridge concluded the A- number of workers from the evenings meeting. . „ , .. Federation, who will -work on the drive include Mesdames A- M. Davis, ' JS. E. Baron, -Hyman Fishgall, M. N. Pioneer €ard Party,'London, William Lazere, ilbrey Lip. shut::, Milton Elushkin, J02 Fried- Tlie Jewish Pioneer Women will man, Jack Bobinson, 'Abe Baron,' E. hold a -benefit- bridge <par$y, -Wed-. • N. Grucilrin, Joe Levin, Joe.Kutcher, nesday, November 11, at the home J. H. Greenberg-, and A. J. Galinsky. '6f.Z%rs. S: Sperling, "923 £owasSfr. Mrs. N. Widesky will have charge of the raffling of an electric lamp which v/ilJ take place at th.9 time. Mrs. 31. Manalrer xmd Mrs. M- Leaf arc in charts of th*i card party arrangements. "V/3 fed the multitude" Proceeds of the afternoon will be With Tasly foods'' jjiven to the Chalutzos of Palestine. Refreshments v/ill" bo "carved.
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Chevra B'nai Yisroel synagogue, 618 Mr. Krasae has taken a verj act^c i-Icr.5;. fci the A I.CLXL rnJ &on ijan« Mynster Street- All members are part.la Jevrish philanthropic and so- quet, which is scheduled for Decemurged to attend. cial circles in Los Anireles. He is at- V'- os cill be • discussed.
J. Z. Sladlin raonov%\ Every Jewish child is ur^ed to be present at the first Sunday School class Sunday morning. Sir. Stadlan, -who is the new Talmud Torah teacher, has formed a Junior Congregation, and " the first sen-ices held last Saturday rcorrir.g at the synagogue •were enjoyed very much by tha children, who attended and since thsn • 210x2 children have expressed the desire to attend. Services for tha Junic : v Congregation rdll be conducted a-ain this Saturday morning at the synagogue by " r . Stadlan, and every child who can read Hebrew, even though slightly, is especially urged to ba present every Saturday morning. Classes for the daily Hebre~ School are also being reorjrarized. and new children are coming daily to register with Mr. 2nd Mrs. Stadlan. Eegistrations v.-ill close en Nov. 16. Therefore, all children are urged to register as soon as possible as ncne will be'accepted after that date. Mr. Stadlan mates ~ a special appeal to th.3 parents stating "The new- term has begun.. Do not neglect the opportunity for " fostering tha Jewish consciousness • of your children end enroll them' now, r«s the time to give a' child ''Jewish education' is " when he is • young." The, Council Bluffs -Led~e No. 6S8 of ' the .Independent Order "of the B'nai Brith will iiold'a regular meeting next llonday evening, 2"<\ £?, at tlie Eagle3 Hall. Dr. A," qtcof Omaha will ba a £*cist and all'iaenibsr? r.re urrrsd J,^ , • The -Council; Bluffs Chapter the Senior Hadas;i;h vcill hold a.rrjcting next Wednesdav afternoon, Nov. 11, at 2:30 o'clock* at the Eotcl Guef-
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